I attended one session of BuddhaFest at AU. Sensei Ryomen spoke and then we watched the movie, The Colors of Compassion. There was also a panel after the movie. Here are my notes from the session. They are for me to organize my thoughts but also I felt like there would be friends who would want to know what I learned.
We are One and the Many. Of many one (just like Masons). The relative and the absolute. We need to look intimately at differences. Intimacy is great related to Zen. The teacher asked the student, What is the business beneath the patch robe? Studying the Buddha way and not reaching the realm is a painful thing. The student did not know the answer. Teacher says, Intimacy. And the student was awakened. The Teacher asked, "Can you hear the birds sing?". Can you hear the beating heart? We should be focusing on how we are to each other than how to do precepts.
Ban-sho is a famous Haiku in Japanese.
Into the Ancient pond, frog jumps
waters sound
in 1995 a book called 100 frogs was published which was 100 translations of this poem. Endless translations.
Reonin - on death bed poem
66 times these eyes held
changing autumn
only listen to the voice of the pines and cedars
when no wind stirs
(what's underneath that patch robe?)
Realizing life with no division. There are so many differences, experience the impact of them. There are daily micro aggressors and anticipated rejections.
We are all hungry for a loving embrace. Buddha had taught 84,000 teachings. The path to transformation and liberation.
We need to learning our own sufferings, learn compassion, and kindness and forgiveness.
The one and the many. Steady in out practice. Cultivation of focused attention. Fearless compassion.
Core spiritual ailments: Privledge, power, and oppression ( from ignorance belief that others less, numb from sufferings of others, blinded, one hurts - all hurts)
Antedote to ignorance, cultivate an open heart.
Some people are greedy and seem to think it is deserved.
Delusion of something to protect, grasping false security ( us versus them)
Antedote - deep confidence and endless trust - in ourselves
Mashumiroshi poem
Difficulty of undivided life
chopped into endless differences
all this diversity, dichotomy
nothing other than undivided
life manifesting as differences
mutual respect and appreciation
dharma, unconfined life
I have arrived, I am home.
no more suffering
With our conditioned mind, how can we be free?
Through practice.
Breathe in - relax
Breathe out, smile
Qui suis je?
Don't let your skin confine you
Chance to break free to home
Collective energy - mindfulness
Feel not, take the pain of suffering - embrace the pain do not stop, see where it leads what feelings it tells you, fear not the pain of suffering, accept and you will be free
Practice walking - freedom and solidarity
Ancestors are alive in me, If I am free they are free
Liberation revolution
Flower - see into it and you see the cloud, the rain, the sunshine which makes it be
Touch the sun by touching the flower
To be is to be inter-be
Be by yourself - alone
Skandhas
Form is emptiness and emptiness is form.
Nirvana
Steeping in their voices. Together we are one.
It wasn't me - to release the pain
5 or 14 mindfulness trainings
Interconnected me and world
Real dept of homeland secuirty
four noble truths
-there is suffering
transform for myself and mother
Buddha is not God.
Lead from the heart.
Embrace anger, touch the pain, suffering
lead from vulnerability
lead from suffering
then you will achieve liberation.
Monday, June 21, 2010
Wednesday, June 16, 2010
what is happiness?
Is happiness what you feel in a given moment? How can we make promises for happiness when we do not know how time will change things. I don't think happiness is a constant. But than how do you know if you are unhappy temporarily or worse? Do things have to change to get better or do you have to change or will things work it self out? What if everything is a process and not a result? Than can we really define what happiness is? Maybe a happy moment is a path to unhappiness or vice versa?
planets and stars
So his dad bought him a glow in the dark planet set and hung them from the ceiling. What touched me was that he also adhered tiny glow in the dark star stickers to the ceiling next to the planets. After seeing them over and over again many times, I just realized that his dad actually put the star stickers on with exact placements of where the stars are at night; I located the little dipper and the big dipper, orion, etc. Sometimes you just don't see what is in front of you until you take a breather. Same thing happened the other week when ucci and I went to go eat brick oven pizza on a school night. We walked to a nearby park afterwards and it was so hot and humid I wanted to leave. Ucci insisted we stay and look for turtles and fish but it was obvious to me there were none. I tried to get him to go but he refused. Finally once I relaxed and sat down, I started noticing things. I actually noticed tons of small fish that were invisible to the eye, and then we found three crawfish too. It was fun pointing them out to ucci and he appreciated the experience. Why is it so hard to enjoy the moment and relax?
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About Me
- Mama Jung
- mommy, wife, and full time "donut" maker (time to make the donuts!)