May 29, 2006

Memorial Day


I think the state of our nation this Memorial Day is like the flag in this image. I did the collage not long after 9/11/01. The country was bruised, a bit tattered, and angry. This was before the retaliation wars. Before Afghanistan, and before Iraq.

Four and a half years later, it is the middle and working class citizens of this country who are feeling battered, bruised and angry. What are we so pissed off about? We're pissed off about being lied to, used to make others rich, and for making us ashamed to be American in the eyes of our fellow citizens in the world. I'm pissed off about those things and I know many others who are as well.

A war wages, people - Americans, Brits, Iraqis - are being killed for something that never happened, while people like Dick Chaney, the Bushes, and some others get rich off a war with no purpose and no end. CEOs, arrogant and priveledged, are stealing hard earned pensions from the working class, and they may or may not go to jail for their crimes. Lobbyists buy off our elected representives, who scramble to maximize their income from a job that pays $100,000 a year, selling America to the highest bidder and selling out their constituents.

So this Memorial Day, while I mentally honor and pray for those individuals who sacrificed their time, energy, innocense, youth, and in some cases, their lives to defend this country, I also honor those Americans who get up everyday and try to live decent, quiet, caring lives. I honor those Americans who wade through knee deep corruption and despair to go to work, pay their taxes, and try to find a moment in their day when they can love their families and friends. I honor those Americans who will wake up on November 6, 2006 and make arrangements to get to a polling place to cast a vote for a politician they hope won't sell them out. I honor those Americans who say "screw the big guys, real life happens down here in the trenches" and get on with their lives anyway.

May 23, 2006

Rhythm

Everyday is a new day, even when they feel like the same old day. Work, home, sleep, work, home, sleep.... Stuff in between, but those three things are primarily what my life is about. Every once in a while something happens to change the rhythm of the day.

This week my nephew and his wife are visiting from NY, and my parents are visiting from S.FL. Neither couple is staying at my house, as we no longer have a guest room. Both visits are joyous occassions I don't have the energy for. Like a long drive on a highway, I'm accustomed to and comforted by the steady sound of the tires on the seams of the road. This week is like driving off on a different road with a different seam pattern. Louder and coming more frequently, I long for the quiet steady thud of my usual highway noise.

I know some people would find this a mere existence or a death knell. I don't. I like it quiet and steady. There is so much unpredictable about life. There are storms, and wars, and threats of mass annihilation, global warming, Russians selling nukes to the highest bidder, the next Al Qaida attack on the US pending, people who disppear from your life, death by car accidents and heart attacks on golf courses. There is so much that can't be predicted or planned for. I like the steady rhythm of my usual drive. Sometimes it's the only way I know everything is ok. Sometimes the changing rhythm is the only time I know something is not ok. I can be that way.

The next few work days begin the rhythm of the summer. School is out as of tomorrow, our teachers off, 10 weeks before the start of the new school year. Some of the work I do will change, the pace in which it has to be done will change, the number of people I will interact with will change. Just as I get used to it the change to the pace of the school year will be here. So you see? Just when you're getting used to something and feeling comfortable in it, it changes. The older I get the older it gets. I can be that way.

P.S. A Quote

If you want to know the past, to know what has caused you, look at yourself in the present, for that is the past’s effect. If you want to know your future, then look at yourself in the present, for that is the cause of the future.

-Majjhima Nikaya

May 15, 2006

The Big Sacrifice

Today is Monday. Or is it? If we never adjusted the calendar by incorporating leap year what day of the week would it really be? I get weird on Mondays and so I don't like them. Monday is the start of the big sacrifice. The big sacrifice is time, my time, hours lived doing something for money. I like my work and my co-workers but if I didn't need to work for money I would not work. I would not work anywhere. I would do what I loved.

I've often envied ball players. Not just because I love to watch and play baseball, but because major league ball players get to play and make money at it. Football too. Grown men, making serious money, playing. Yes, they work hard. Yes, they are disciplined and do a lot of things to stay in shape so they can play at their best. But no matter how they feel about it or how well they do it, it's called play.

Frankye is fond of reminding her friends that Native Americans have no word for time. She says this anytime we get on her about being late or not paying attention to time. As a Nanticoke Indian she believes she has a genetic excuse for her lack of adherance to a clock. She's right. I wish there were no word for time in my culture as well.

I was talking to a friend today about visiting restoration communities. My favorite period of American history is the colonial through the revolutionay war period. One of my favorite places is Colonial Williamsburg and I also enjoyed a long ago visit to Old Sturbridge Village in MA. I would have loved to live in America in that time period. As a believer in reincarnation I'm sure I lived somewhere, if not on this earth than at least in the Bardo. Alas, I don't remember any of it. And since menopause there is much of this life I don't remember either.

Not remembering allows me to engage in fantasies when I am reading about that time period. Of course, my fantasies don't include bathing in ice water, or not bathing, toileting in a hole in the ground, or working longer days for survival plowing and harvesting food, making my own clothes from sacks, etc. What I find attractive is the solitariness of the day. The privacy from phones, neighbors on top of you, traffic, constant electronic input and news. I'd like a society that doesn't adhere to a clock but instead responds to the rising and setting sun.

I think about how I can make my life simpler. I could lose the phones, the television, and radio. It would make me more oblivious to what's going on around me, not necessarily a bad thing, but not a guarantee that my life would be simpler. I could never buy anything again unless it contributed to my survival, food, clothes as needed, etc. I could spend my non-working time reading, meditating and sleeping more. I could live in a one - or two-room house. I could not travel more than 10 - 15 miles away and be content to spend more time at home. Somehow I don't think these things would make my life simpler in the way I long for. I think simpler to me means less regimented. Adhereing to a clock is regimentation. Mondays, and what they represent, is regimentation. Maybe I just need to ignore Mondays.

May 13, 2006

Hurricane as Metaphor

Life is about as predictable as a hurricane. Through modern technology, satelites, doppler, infrared imaging, etc. we know it's coming, but until it actually arrives we don't know where it will land or how destructive it will be. Life is like that.

We know from a very early age that life comes and goes. As small children we witness the loss of pets - turtles, goldfish, dogs. Sometimes children lose parents or witness their own parents losing a parent or another family member. We always know death is there, we just don't know when or how close it's going to hit us.

Not all hurricanes cause death and destruction. Not all deaths cause loss of life. Sometimes dreams die, or opportunities, or relationships. Sometimes it's easier to pick up and move on after that kind of death. Sometimes it's harder. It depends on how attached we are to what we have lost and how willing we are to let it blow away.

Picasso said, "Reality is to be found in lightness and darkness." So are hurricanes and so is life. The transitions are tough sometimes, the calm before the storm, the loud, violent winds and rain, the return of the calm, even after the most horrible of hurricanes, even after the most devastating deaths and losses. If you stay, and it doesn't kill you, it will pass. That's the cycle of life.

May 9, 2006

May 8, 2006

Home Again

We are home again. Home from South Carolina. Home from the awful news and experience of Todd's death and burial. We arrived to a clean home, a refrigerator and pantry full of food, chores that had been done and cats that had been lovingly cared for. An hour after our arrival our closest friends, the givers of the above, came by with our dogs and prepared and served dinner. They stayed several hours, way past their usual departure time, and were loving and caring, and sympathetic. They are the best.

When they left it was Frankye and I here, with our animals. We are both tired, emotionally drained, and sad. There is almost an echo here in the house. Todd was not my son, not my brother or nephew, and I hadn't spent a lot of time with him. But when I did, it was most often in this house. He installed all the ceramic flooring in this home and did several other jobs around the house for us.

Whenever Todd Lynn were going to be near the Jacksonville area they'd stop in and see us or we'd meet up with them at the Cracker Barrell near I-95 and have a quick breakfast as they made their way home. Todd and Lynn came for Frankye's 60th birthday weekend and it was wonderful for everyone to have the whole family there and a great gift for Frankye.

The hard part is going to be the days and years ahead for Frankye. Coming home, leaving Todd's home, seemed to reinforce the loss of him. There is no seeing him anymore. Or hearing his voice on the phone. Or listening to Shannon retell her latest communication with Todd.

We have a beautiful 8 x 12 professional photo of Todd and Lynn that's been on our dining room credenza since he gave it to us this past Christmas. It was a recent photo and is exactly how he was the last time we saw him. That's where it will stay. Todd will remain forever 42 and strong and funny, and amazingly gifted and capable. He was happy when he died. He was excited about life, about his future and he loved living in Pelzer, South Carolina. That's where he died and that's how he would have wanted it.

May 5, 2006

Sorrow Transcends

Frankye and her family had a most difficult day yesterday. They were confronted with the undeniable evidence of their loss. Knowing something is true and then seeing it's true are two different things.

Frankye, her daughter, and I went to a private viewing of her son's body. We went a little later in the day allowing his wife and children to have time together there. Without planning it we arrived at the same time as Frankye's ex-husband and his wife. Frankye and Bryant were married for 15 years and had two children together. There was a lot of pain in their break-up, as there often is, and their lives went separate ways, living in differenct regions of the country.

Yesterday those two lives converged again at a funeral home in South Carolina. Upon seeing each other in the parking lot they embraced. It was as if seeing each other there at the same time made it even more real. Something neither of them wanted to believe.

We all entered the funeral home and made our way to where Todd was laid-out. Bryant couldn't go in at first. Frankye sat and talked with him and assured him that it was ok if he didn't go in. Frankye and Shannon and I went in. They were devastated by the evidence of the awful truth about Todd. Their pain just over flowed. I watched as Frankye, with trembling hands, stroked Todd's face and hair. She spoke to him and wept deeply. She read scriptures that he loved and wept some more.

After a short time Bryant came in and was also overwhelmed with his grief. Then Bryant and Frankye, apart so many decades, sat side-by-side a foot from Todd's casket and holding hands wept their pain in front of the man they made together. Sorrow transcended into love and into forgiveness.

Today is the funeral and there are more people coming. Frankye's siblings will arrive, her ex, Kerry, and her son, Jack, who grew up with Todd arrived late last night. All the grand children, but one, will be there. A large community of friends, many of whom wept openly at Todd's casket last night, will come for the funeral. We'll all be there to say goodbye to Todd one last time.

It's been an emotional and draining time for everyone, including me. Watching people you love in so much pain is difficult. Not being able to do anything but offer slight comfort is also difficult. Frankye said it was the second hardest day of her life. The first hardest day was Tuesday, the day she found out Todd had died. I can't make any of this un-happen. I can only hold her hand while it is happening.

May 4, 2006

On the Front Lines

Living on the front lines means dying on the front lines. Everyone who is alive lives on some kind of a front line somewhere. Thoreau said "most men lead lives of quiet desperation." Quiet desperation is a front line, as is a battle field, as is an operating room, a pulpit, or a receptionist's desk. Each of us has our own front line, no matter how hard we try to avoid the rawness of life, it is there, either in quiet desperation or in living, bloody color.

Tuesday afternoon, Frankye's son, Todd Windsor White was killed in a car accident not 10 miles from his home. He had just left his home, his wife recovering from surgery, and he on his way to a part-time job. He was killed when a vehicle went through a stop sign and collided with his SVU causing it to roll. He was ejected from the vehicle and died instantly. He was 42 years old. Father of 2, stepfather of 2, husband, son, brother, uncle, nephew, friend of many.

Todd was good looking and funny. He was an intense man who loved the things he loved with a passion. He loved his wife that way, and his family. He loved the woods, and bow hunting and fishing. The walls of his home are adorned with stuffed trophy kills, each one with a story he recounted with pride. He ate what he killed, and he cooked it well and shared it with others. He was a skilled craftsman and took pride in a job painstakingly done well. Our home has a ceramic tile floor carefully and beautifully installed by Todd.

Todd loved his church and the South Carolina community he had recently moved to. He had friends there, some old friends, many new friends. He had recently incorporated his new construction business and was looking forward to his brother-in-law, his new partner's, arrival from Massachussettes. He had plans for the future and had simultaneously made amends with his past. While opening new doors Todd had closed old doors. He made right old errors, bridged gaps too long gaping, and let those he loved know he loved them.

That was the front line Todd Windsor White lived and died on. He will be mourned, and loved and remembered by those who knew and loved him. We've gathered here in this small town of Pelzer, South Carolina, from different states, FL, VT, MD, NC, MA, and TX to his front line to remember him and let him touch our lives one more time.

April 30, 2006

Watching

I spent time with my sangha yesterday, Chenrezig, Amitabha, chanting, listening, thinking. Our sangha is studying The Essence of Buddhism by The Venerable 9th Traleg Kyabgon Rinpoche. It's taken our sangha 2 months to get through 21 pages. Yesterday we began chapter 3, Meditation. The book is so good, each paragraph worthy of contemplation. Often it's the discussion after the reading that opens so many doors and prompts so much more contemplation on my part.

Yesterday we read a brief description of shamatha meditation. Shamatha is silent sitting meditation where you try to focus the mind on your breath. When thoughts arise, as they will, you just label them "thinking" and let go of them. It's not always easy to do. There are times I find myself deep into a fantasy before I remember to shut it down and focus again on the breath.

When I can focus on my breath and not engage in daydreams I become aware of my thoughts as thoughts. They flow freely, unsolicited. I let them pass. It's almost like sitting on a train and looking out the window. The train is moving rapidly and you're not allowing your eye to focus on anything in particular. Just watching the essence of the scenery go by. You can notice when there are trees, or mountains, or dessert, but not individual trees or mountains. After meditation I'm often struck by the degree to which my thoughts center on me, my importance in the world, or my lack of importance. My self centeredness becomes apparent, my paranoia and greed embarrass me.

Post meditation is often a humbling experience. Having spent 10 - 20 minutes alone with my own mind watching the seeds of insanity that have driven my behavior throughout the 54 years of my time here, I'm amazed that I have managed to survive this lifetime this long. Insanity is not too harsh a word. The thought that I am the most important person on this planet is an insane one. And yet, I, and billions of others, do just that. Everyday. My earlier post about the state of the country and my distress about that is the end product of such ego centricity. Even in deploring the results, it is my own distress of it that is most important to me. It is the endless circle: I think this, I feel this, I do this, which makes me think this, feel this, do this, which makes me think this, feel this, do this...

Better to sit quietly and watch my breathing and label my mental halucinations as thinking. Better to just sit and not think (read dwell), not feel (read wallow), not act (read react). Better to just watch.

April 27, 2006

Scrap IT

I haven't written in several weeks. I have a variety of excuses and reasons. I've been busy at work, zapping my energy, I've been busy in my life, zapping my energy, I've been focusing on artwork, completing 9 pieces in 2 weeks, thereby zapping my energy.

Aside from being stressed and busy and then exhausted, I think I am also numb with disbelief, anger, and a sense of overwhelm by the news of the day, every day. The level of dishonesty and incompetence by our government is frightening and enough to drive me into a severe case of apathy. There is no way of getting away from it. It effects our lives everyday.

There are some things the government does that we can't always see in detail. Farm subsidies to large food corporations, pork spending projects, undefined defense spending. Then there are the things we can see clearly: Gas prices that effect every one, rich or poor; men and women dying, daily, in foreign lands for confusing, unclear reasons; tax breaks for oil companies that bilk the American people and earn billions quarterly in profits; elected officials and political appointees that commit crimes and bend and bastardize laws to fit their own agendas and personal greed; a President who is so over his head and beyond his skill level that after 6 six years in office his ineptitude is reflected in every aspect of American life.

Today the Senate panel reviewing FEMA has recommended scrapping the agency:

"Our first and most important recommendation is to abolish FEMA," said Maine Republican Sen. Susan Collins, chairwoman of the Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee. "FEMA is discredited, demoralized, and dysfunctional. It is beyond repair. Just tweaking the organizational chart will not solve the problem."

Well, that's festive, on the eve of hurricane season. No FEMA or a useless, dysfunctional FEMA. Never before in the history of the USA has FEMA been more needed. Scientists have recently reported that global warming is indeed a problem in the here and now, not the future, and as a result the tumultuous and extreme weather of the past will continue and worsen. We will see more Katrinas. We will see more cities destroyed. We will see more Americans suffer and die with no reliable relief or protection.

That brings up the issue of apathy. Apathy, as defined by the American Heritage Dictionary means:
"1. Lack of interest or concern, esp. in important matters. 2. Lack of emotion; impassiveness."
I'm not apathetic as I am greatly concerned. I'm not without emotion as despair is clearly an emotional state. But I am overwhelmed with a sense of hopelessness not unlike the hopelessness expressed by the Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee today. I'm trying to put it aside. Not let it effect me. Not let it drain my energy or my enthusiasm for living. Trying to put it on the back burner -- until Tuesday, November 7, 2006.

April 9, 2006

Loving Kindness

I had a very interesting experience yesterday. That's an understatement. What I actually had was the privilege of witnessing a moving, loving, and very emotional interaction that took place between two families.

Frankye and I were invited by our neighbors, Wayne and Roxanne, to attend a ceremony at the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints here in Jacksonville. The occasion was the turning over of a newborn infant from the birth mother, their mentally impaired daughter Kerri, to the adopting parents.

Kerri, who is mentally impaired due to a childhood illness, is extremely child like. She lives alone in a little cottage within walking distance of her parents. She comes to visit them daily and still does chores and errands for them. She also has the "job" of wheeling our garbage cans down the dirt road lane the night before garbage pick-up and then returning them to our house after they are emptied. Kerry is loving, kind, and a very gentle soul. She got pregnant as a result of an encounter she had with a co-worker of her father's, who was a trusted family friend. She gave birth last Thursday, 5 weeks prematurely, while visiting an older Mormon friend. She had the baby on the woman's couch.

Just to say a little about Wayne and Roxanne. They are our neighbors, people we would probably not encounter in any other way. They are quiet, mind their own business, friendly, helpful and a bit outside the mainstream. Wayne has 4 children, 3 of whom are mentally impaired. His eldest son is married and has 2 lovely children. They are Mormons. They have never proselytized. For 4 of the 6 years we have known him Wayne kept his red hair in a long, thick ponytail. A robust, barrel chested man, he looked like a biker, sans tattoos.

Frankye and I had no idea what to expect yesterday. Neither of us had ever been to a Mormon Temple. Neither of us knew whether or not this ceremony was a Mormon practice or something unusual. All we knew was that Wayne had made it a point to come over and invite us to attend, and he never comes over unless it's something important. We decided that if it was important enough to Wayne for him to extend the invitation then we would go. And we did. And we were so happy we went.

We went into the Temple and were directed to a small conference room. There were seats set up in an arc around a podium. There was a table set to the side with a variety of cakes and pastries and beverages. There were about 30 people there. Wayne opened the ceremony by introducing an older woman who said an opening prayer. It turns out that she was the older woman whom Kerri was visiting when she gave birth. Then Wayne spoke.

Wayne is a reserved man. I use that word because he does not wear his emotions openly and is not very animated. It was clear he was very emotional. He read a statement he had written, because, as he said, he didn't think he could successfully get through it without notes.

Wayne proceeded to welcome guests, singling out the adopting family and then began to talk about the circumstances under which Kerri had become pregnant. While clearly hurt and angered by the actions of his friend, the most vile thing he said about this man was that he visited Kerri's cottage late one evening "like a thief in the night." Whether Kerri consented to his advances or not, is not known, but this man was knowledgeable about Kerri's limitations and clearly took advantage of her. By any measure, Kerri's baby was conceived through rape.

In a moving and often emotionally halting speech Wayne told the story of how Kerri made the decision to give up her child for adoption. He talked about the pain his family has gone through during this period, he talked about the comfort of supportive friends and about the gift that this child is to both his family and to the adoptive family. The love and compassion he expressed extended not only to his daughter, granddaughter, friends and the adopting family, but to the "perpetrator of the events bringing forth the activities today." He fought back tears throughout his eloquent statement and I wept openly while I listened.

I was so moved by the gentle, loving way this family was handling this difficult, painful experience. Wayne explained that he didn't care if this was an usual way of dealing with this event. He felt that the birth of this baby, and the gift of her to a new family, desperate to have another child, was to be celebrated, not hidden, not secretly transacted and never spoken of again. He was so right.

After Wayne spoke, a friend of his spoke about the friendship between his and Wayne's family. The adopting father got up and spoke and barely was able to get through speaking of his gratitude to Kerri and her family. He wept openly and appreciatively. Then Kerri got up and spoke briefly, and in her simple manner told how she knew the adopting family could be far better parents to this infant then she could. She said it was a hard decision to make and she made it after seeing a movie on television about a young girl growing up without a father. She presented the adopting parents with a white baby blanket she had purchased for them that was embroidered in white satin with the words "God's Gift of Love." A Mormon elder said a closing prayer and then refreshments were served.

Needless to say I was exhausted at the end of it. I was also surprised to learn as we were introduced to people that many of them knew of Frankye and I being neighbors of Wayne and Roxanne and that many knew that Kerri "worked" for us taking our garbage down the lane. Mostly, I felt very grateful to have been included in this extemely personal, but very open interaction between strangers that concerned the most important thing in the world, the future of a 2 day old child. I know that sounds corny as hell, but witnessing such raw emotions handled in the most loving way I have ever experienced was a true gift.

April 3, 2006

Home From the Hills

Back home and adjusting to the flatlands of Florida after a week in the mountains of North Carolina. Frankye and I spent a lovely week at the Kanuga Conference Center with the Kanuga Watercolor Workshop. I took a class in acrylic painting with an accomplished artist by the name of Rick McDiarmid. Rick is a sweet man and an encouraging and knowledgable teacher. I enjoyed being in his class.

This is the 3rd year we went to Kanuga. I enjoy it so much but do not come home rested. I am rested mentally and emotionally, but not physically. Physically I am challenged in a way I am rarely challenged in my usual life. I walk up and down stairs and up and down hills, and across dirt and plod along rocky paths. Actually I did much better than I thought I would and better than I did last year. I did better this year with no phone and no tv also.

I love making pictures and doing art but my life does not afford me the opportunity to make art 6 - 8 hours a day 5 days a week. When I go to a weeklong workshop I am both exhausted by the focus on art making and exhilerated by it. I ended each day tired and excited. I brought my laptop with me and each evening Frankye and I watched an episode of "Prime Suspect" on DVD that I borrowed from the library. It was just enough entertainment to chill out the creative exhaustion I felt each night.

So now it is Monday and I am back at work. I was ready to come back. Well, that's a lie. I could have used a few more days, then I would have been ready. But it's ok. I like my work and I love the agency I work for and so coming to work is a feel good thing, not a stress thing.

March 23, 2006

Contradictions

Contradictions are not easy for me. I like things to be neat and predictable. I realize as a Buddhist that I have a long, long way to go because life is not predictable, or neat, or fair, or without contradictions. Things change all the time whether you want them to, approve them or even see them coming. I accept that as a living being. I do. But I have difficulty letting go of my expectations that there are some things in which we can expect consistency. The U. S. Supreme Court taught me today that that may not be a reasonable expectation either.

I'm not a lawyer, and I don't know much about the law butI have a curiosity about the workings of the U.S. Supreme Court and often follow rulings made by the court that could effect my life and the protection of individual rights in America. I understand the importance of the court as the interpreter and guardian of the U.S. Constitution. The Supreme Court ensures that all Americans, regardless of social standing or economic position, will receive equal justice under the law. I don't always agree with the court's rulings. In fact there are times when I fear for the constitution's power in guaranteeing individual rights to citizens.

The current social climate, with a clear and strong agenda proposed by a conservative minority, has taken some steps away from the individual rights interpretation of the constitution that has permeated the Court since the 1950's. In yesterdays's ruling onGeorgia v. Randolph, the Court voted on whether police could search a home when one occupant, who is present, gives consent, and the co-occupant, who is also present, does not give consent. The Court voted 5 - 3 for police needing consent of all present occupants. Good news for those of us who are proponents of individual rights.

In thinking about this ruling I couldn't help but contrast it to a ruling the Court made on June 23, 2005 on Kelo v. New London . In that 5 -4 ruling the Court voted to allow use of the power of emminent domain to force the purchase of individually owned properties for the sole purpose of building businesses that would create jobs in the economically depressed New London CT community. In the past eminent domain has applied to use of property deemed for public use only. This ruling, conceivably, allows big business to legally confiscate properties in preferred areas for the sole purpose of promoting their own profit making opportunities. And, oh yea, it will create a number of service jobs as well. Visions of smaller homes and communities being dismantled along the coasts of America by large casinos and resort operations are easy to conjure with this law.

Sometimes I don't know what these people (the justices) are thinking. In the course of 9 months they have voted that police cannot enter without all occupant's, if present, approval, BUT a company can come along and force you to sell to them at their price if they can prove it will change the economic outlook of the community. So, no one can come into your house without consent, but your house and property can be confiscated and demolished without your consent.

Buddhist or not, this does not make sense to me.

March 20, 2006

A Word From Merton

In technological society, in which the means of communication and signification have become fabulously versatile, and are at the point of an even more prolific development, thanks to the computer with its inexhaustible memory and its capacity for immediate absorption and organization of facts, the very nature and use of communication itself becomes unconsciously symbolic. Though he now has the capacity to communicate anything, anywhere, instantly, man finds himself with nothing to say. Not that there are not many things he could communicate, or should attempt to communicate. He should, for instance, be able to meet with his fellow man and discuss ways of building a peaceful world. He is incapable of this kind of confrontation. Instead of this, he has intercontinental ballistic missiles which can deliver nuclear death to tens of millions of people in a few moments. This is the most sophisticated message modern man has, apparently, to convey to his fellow man. It is, of course, a message about himself, his alienation from himself, and his inability to come to terms with life.“

From Love and Living by Thomas Merton

Footnote: Thomas Merton died by accidental electrocution in Bangkok, Thailand, while attending a meeting of religious leaders on 10 December 1968, long before public access to the internet and the common use of email.

March 18, 2006

The Antedote

"Often we see other sentient beings as hassles: "This mosquito is disturbing me. Those politicians are corrupt. Why can't my colleagues do their work correctly?" and so on. But when we see sentient beings as being more precious than a wish-fulfilling jewel, our perspective completely changes. For example, when we look at a fly buzzing around, we train ourselves to think, "My enlightenment depends on that fly." This isn't fanciful thinking because, in fact, our enlightenment does depend on that fly. If that fly isn't included in our bodhicitta, then we don't have bodhicitta, and we won't receive the wonderful results of generating bodhicitta--the tremendous purification and creation of positive potential.

Imagine training your mind so that when you look at every single living being, you think, "My enlightenment depends on that being. The drunk who just got on the bus--my enlightenment depends on him. The soldier in Iraq--my enlightenment depends on him. My brothers and sisters, the teller at the bank, the janitor at my workplace, the president of the United States, the suicide bombers in the Middle East, the slug in my garden, my eighth-grade boyfriend, the babysitter when I was a kid--my enlightenment depends on each of them." All sentient beings are actually that precious to us. "


--from Cultivating a Compassionate Heart: The Yoga Method of Chenrezig by Bhikshuni Thubten Chodron, published by Snow Lion Publications

March 17, 2006

The Wit and Wisdom of Kurt Vonnegut

Here is a lesson in creative writing. First rule: Do not use semicolons. They are transvestite hermaphrodites representing absolutely nothing. All they do is show you've been to college.

I don't know about you, but I practice a disorganized religion. I belong to an unholy disorder. We call ourselves "Our Lady of Perpetual Astonishment."

Evolution is so creative. That's how we got giraffes.

We are here on earth to fart around. Don't let anybody tell you any different.

Do you think Arabs are dumb? They gave us our numbers. Try doing long division with Roman numerals.

The highest treason in the USA is to say that Americans are not loved, no matter where they are or what they are doing there.

There are two things about American culture no Martian would ever understand. What is it, what can it possibly be about blowjobs and golf?

Life is no way to treat an animal.

My Father said, "when in doubt, castle."

~all quotes from A Man Without a Country by Kurt Vonnegut

March 16, 2006

A Dangerous Mind in a Powerful Position


President Bush reaffirming his strike-first policy against terrorists and enemy nations: "If necessary ... under long-standing principles of self defense, we do not rule out the use of force before attacks occur."

President Bush in reference to Iran, March 15, 2006

FROM THE NATIONAL SECURITY STRaTEGY MARCH 2006

The new strategic environment requires new approaches to deterrence and defense. Our deterrence strategy no longer rests primarily on the grim premise of inflicting devastating consequences on potential foes. Both offenses and defenses are necessary to deter state and non-state actors, through denial of the objectives of their attacks and, if necessary, responding with overwhelming force.

Safe, credible, and reliable nuclear forces continue to play a critical role. We are strengthening deterrence by developing a New Triad composed of offensive strike systems (both nuclear and improved conventional capabilities); active and passive defenses, including missile defenses; and a responsive infrastructure, all bound together by enhanced command and control, planning, and intelligence systems. These capabilities will better deter some of the new threats we face, while also bolstering our security commitments to allies. Such security commitments have played a crucial role in convincing some countries to forgo their own nuclear weapons programs, thereby aiding our nonproliferation objectives.

Deterring potential foes and assuring friends and allies, however, is only part of a broader approach. Meeting WMD proliferation challenges also requires effective international action – and the international community is most engaged in such action when the United States leads.

From Section V: Prevent Our Enemies from Threatening Us, Our Allies, and Our Friends with Weapons of Mass Destruction, 4. The Need for Action


This man could get us all killed.

March 14, 2006

What a Dump!

Bette Davis said "what a dump!" was her favorite movie line. I don't think I ever saw the movie she actualy said it in but I did see her do a parody of her own performance of that line when she was between 80 and death.

The line comes to mind after several days of hearing tragic news about the war in Iraq, the death of Slobodan Milosevic, the murder of an American hostage in Iraq, the genocide in Sudan-Chad which no one is doing anything about, the AIDS pandemic in Africa, the "spin" our American President puts on it all, and the total incompetetance and lack of concern of the United States Congress. All these things make me feel this world is a dump!

I cant remember a time in my life that I have been this disgusted with politics and the American democratic process. Angry? Yes, but not disgusted. Spurred to action? Yes, but not disgusted enough to walk away from it all and not give it another thought. Right now I am at the point of doing just that. I am so disgusted (I can't think of a better word) with the level of dishonesty and bullshit being spouted on all media outlets by the people who are entrusted with resolving problems. All I see is that these poor stewards are creating more problems rather than solving some that are unavoidable.

I think in the old days - you know, when everything was in sepia tones - people didn't know so much about what was happening in every corner of the world and they were able to focus more on what was happening in front of their own faces. As overwhelming as personal and local problems can be, when you have them and the burden of millions being slaughtered several thousand miles away, it can be numbing to the point of detachment from your own humanity. The sadness and anger and grief can be so overwhelming as to render one useless. Useless. I guess that's how I feel. A long believer in one voice-one vote can change the world I no longer believe that is true. The dump we call our world is bigger than my one vote and one voice.

This is a rather pointless blog. I just needed to rant a bit about my disgust (again, the best choice)with the news of the world.

March 13, 2006

The Benefits of Meditation


This past Friday evening, Khenpo Ugyen Tenzin held at public talk at FCCJ Kent campus entitled, "Benefits of Mediation."

TheVenerable Khenpo Ugyen Tenzin is a Tibetan Buddhist scholar holding an Acharya Degree (Ph.D. equivalent) and is the new Abbot of KarmaTriyana Dharmachakra in Woodstock NY.

Khenpo Ugyen began his teaching with a recitation of the Mahamudra Lineage Payer. Following are my notes from that evening:

Meditation is a vast field covering a variety of topics of meditation, such as tranquility, faith, loving compassion, kindness, and suffering, to name a few.

The basis of all meditation is Shamatha Meditation - the meditation of tranquility and Vypashana Meditation - the meditation of insight.

Suffering - physical, mental and emotional suffering - are all the result of manifestations of the mind. In essence, suffering does not exist. Most beings do not understand that suffering is a mental creation. In that same way, peace of mind is also a mental creation. We don't understand that suffering and pleasure are mental creations and so we seek external ways to recreate these manifestations.

In order to achieve lasting peace we cannot achieve it through external or material means. Our material bodies are not permanent. We fill our lives with jobs and all kinds of activities seeking peace and happiness. But we can't find peace in material things because they too are impermanent. An example: When a house is demolished so are the drawings on the wall of the house. So we can decorate the house however we like, but because the house will not last forever, neither will the decorations. All material things do not have true existence because they are impermanent.

If we seek happiness or pleasure from our mind it will be true or lasting. Our mind is what is permanent. We can achieve peace and happiness in this life and in future lives.

If you meet a person who has harmed or hurt you, or will harm or hurt you, your mind can conjure thoughts of hatred or fear. Thoughts of hatred and fear is suffering. Physical suffering is also a mental creation. When we cannot protect ourselves we feel fear and we suffer. Mental anguish produces physical suffering. If you give up thoughts of hatred, fear, and retaliation you will have peace whether the person harms you or not.

Mental conceptions produce anger. Suffering is produced from attachment. If you are content you won't develop fear or anger.

If we meet people who are equal to us and we try to be competitive with them to be better than they are - that is attachment. Attachments brings suffering. If we meet people who are better than us and we become jealous and competitive to be as good as them or better - this is attachment. These thoughts will bring you no peace or happiness, only suffering.

When we cannot feel satisfied and are motivated by jealousy and restless thoughts it results in suffering.

If we learn to be satisfied with what we are, who we are, and what we have we can let go of competitiveness and jealousy and suffering will not appear. If we are satisfied we will have no hope. Hope breeds fear - fear of not achieving our goal. If we let go of all this we can have peace.

If we let go of all thoughts and concepts of attachment - anger, jealousy, craziness (negative emotions) - we can have peace in this life and future lives.

The purpose of meditation is learning how to let go of these thoughts and negative emotions which produce suffering. Through meditation we can train our minds to let go of these thoughts. Meditation means to let go of negative emotions and focus our mind single-pointedly on wholesome thoughts.

At our present stage our minds are so restless, like the waves in an ocean or a candle in the wind. Our minds are always distracted by thoughts of the past, present and future. Our minds are not able to rest for even a single moment.

Meditation pacifies all kinds of upset and emotions and agitations. Through meditation one can get stability in one's mindfulness.

If we encounter suffering while practicing meditation it is the result of one's past karma. This kind of suffering can be overcome.

Through training, utilizing the meditation of tranquility, and focusing the mind on the breath, we can achieve stability of our mind. Don't reject thoughts, just let them come and then turn your mind back to your breath. Through this, negative emotions will be suppressed and they will subside.

We will not be able to completely eliminate negative emotions through tranquility meditation alone. To get to the root of the negative emotions we must also practice insight (vypashana) meditation. During insight meditation we analyze the "I" and "mind." What is mind? Is there an I? What is ego? Who is asking the question?

If we do insight meditation without the stability of tranquility meditation it will be like a candle in the wind - not lasting. Inseparability of tranquility and insight meditation is absolute bodhichitta (ultimate nature of the mind).

If we meditate we can pacify the sufferings of this life and future lives.

These are my notes on the talk. Any thing that doesn't make sense or is not correct is my error, not Khenpo Ugyen's.

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"Hard to hold down,
nimble,
alighting wherever it likes:
the mind.
Its taming is good.
The mind well-tamed
brings ease."

-Dhammapada, 3, translated by Thanissaro Bhikkhu.

March 6, 2006

Emotions

I am often filled with emotion. I take medication and it doesn’t seem to alleviate the malady. To be more specific it is better, it’s just not fixed. I can go for long periods of time with my emotions appropriately in proportion to every thing else in my life. And then there are those other times when my emotions seem to have a life of their own and they loom large in my daily life. I hate the fluctuation of my emotions. I don’t hate that they are constantly changing, I accept that as the nature of the beast. I hate that the volume pumps up periodically and really disrupts the peace of my life.

In Tibetan Buddhist teaching there is a distinction between emotions and feelings. Traleg Rinpoche teaches that “feelings are associated with the body and emotions are partly mental and partly physical. Emotions can be skillful or unskillful. Feelings cannot… Our thinking and our experience of emotions are intimately related; we cannot separate the two… What we believe in and how we think has a direct influence on the emotions we experience.”

There are times when I am completely, almost to the point of incapacitation, filled with emotion. My emotions can rage to the brewing over point, with all the fortitude my mental justification can muster. I keep thinking it is situational; that it is situations in my life and relationships that cause the flare-ups. Maybe that’s true. I don’t know. I need to find out. That is what my quest is at this point. Maybe it’s a fool’s quest.

Maybe it doesn’t matter why it happens. Maybe the key is in controlling it no matter what the stimulation. I don’t know the answer to that either. I do believe that my thoughts effect my emotions. I do know that if I change how I think my emotions will change. Is it merely an issue of looking at situations and realizing what I think is happening isn’t happening? I don’t know. Is there ever a case when situations or environments can do nothing but create raging thoughts and emotions in a person? I don’t know.

I think of people who experienced horrible atrocities, like war, extreme poverty or impending annihilation. What about their emotions? Are extreme emotions appropriate and healthy in that situation? Is it possible in those situations to find peace within yourself and control of your emotions regardless of the suffering imposed by the situation? If it is appropriate in those situations, when, or at what point, do they become inappropriate?

I don’t have the answer to any of these questions, certainly not in an experiential way. But I want to find out.