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Friday
Jan042008

Either Way—It's Us

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Everything is manifested by the mind and altered by the consciousness. In other words, with our thoughts we create the world.

As Buddhists, we learn that our thoughts of craving and greed result in floods. Angry thoughts result in fires, and ignorant thoughts are the cause of disasters involving wind.

Causality: every cause will have a result. As we continuously crave more material goods and experiences, the results will likewise intensify. As we become more frustrated and upset by our failure to gain all these objects and experiences that we want, we become more angry.

Look around. What are you seeing more and more? Recording-breaking floods, hurricanes, tornadoes, fires, drought.  

The other way?

It's another way of seeing the causality. The more electronic gadgets and more exotic goods we want, and the more we travel looking for new experiences, the more we're impacting the environment.

Negatively.

We buy more "stuff." This "stuff" comes from nonrenewable resources, which are being rapidly depleted. Producing "stuff" creates toxic waste that seeps into the earth, works it's way into our rivers and oceans, and is spewed into our air. The exotic foods have to be shipped halfway around the world on ships, planes, and trucks that belch toxic fumes and pump more carbon dioxide into the atmosphere.

Non-Buddhist cause and effect. The more we buy, the more we destroy what is natural and in it's place leave our garbage and waste.

Thanks to our greed, we're destroying our world. We. Together. All of us. With our greed, whether you look at greed from the Buddhist perspective or from the scientific facts.

Either way you look at it.

It's us. 

 

Thursday
Jan032008

Freeing Ourselves from This Prison

956849-1218443-thumbnail.jpgA human being is part of the whole, called by us “universe,” a part limited in time and space. He experiences himself, his thoughts and feelings, as something separate from the rest – a kind of optical delusion of consciousness. This delusion is a kind of prison for us, restricting us to our personal desires and to affection for a few persons nearest to us. Our task must be to free ourselves from this prison by widening our circle of compassion to embrace all living creatures and the whole of nature in its beauty.

~ Albert Einstein

 

Wednesday
Jan022008

Not Waves or Surf, But Water

When we, as ordinary people, look around us, we see only the illusory, ever-changing phenomena, not the truth of these phenomena. It is like looking at a stormy sea. We tend to see waves and surf. We forget the truth. What is the truth? The truth is that the waves and surf are water.

We see that the universe is ever changing, and the changing never stops for a second. Buddhism calls this “instantaneous arising and ceasing.” When the tide rises, it is “arising”; when the tide ebbs, it is “ceasing.” We usually see only the constantly changing phenomena, but we do not see the noumenon that manifests these changing phenomena.

Although all phenomena arise and cease instantaneously, and are constantly changing, the noumenon of the universe that manifests and makes changes possible does not change at all. It has the qualities of neither arising nor ceasing, neither coming nor going, neither eternal nor impermanent, and neither one nor many. These are the qualities used to describe the noumenon of the universe. It is our “original face before birth.”

The terms suchness, the absolute, self-nature, the true mind, and the fundamental substance all refer to this noumenon as well. Why did the Buddha use so many terms to refer to the same thing? Because he wanted us to not be attached to any term. All these terms are expediencies to help us understand the truth. We only need to know what they refer to and should not be attached to the terminology.

~ Based on Ven. Master Chin Kung's 2003 lecture series on the Amitabha Sutra

 

Tuesday
Jan012008

Think "Kaleidoscope"

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As children, we delighted in looking through kaleidoscopes. What we saw changed from moment to moment. We never saw that change as bad or upsetting. To the contrary, it was the changing patterns that so fascinated us.

With each change, we ooh’d and ahh’d at the beautiful combinations, so caught up in the current one that we didn’t miss the one that was gone. Nor did we worry whether the next would be as beautiful. We just watched as though entranced, thoroughly absorbed in the moment.

This was mindfullness without regrets or expectation. In innocence, we did it as children. With practice, we can do it as adults. 

 

Monday
Dec312007

Everything Will come Back to Us, and More

Patriarch Yin Guang repeatedly emphasized the need for people to understand cause and effect. Li Bingnan was a student of the master and he too emphasized the need to understand causality. As did his student, Ven. Master Chin Kung, who is my teacher. So I come from a line of Chinese Pure Land teachers who stress that people need to understand that their thoughts and behavior will have consequences.

Everything we think, everything we say and do will at some time come back to us.

Everything.

But there is more.

If I say something and another person acts based on what I said, I’m connected to that action as well. For example, if I tell someone to steal a piece of jewelry and they do so, I am linked karmically to that theft and I will also experience adverse consequences. This is one of the reasons we NEED to understand cause and effect.

Our one action can have a seemingly endless chain of consequences.

And my point is?

Think first before you say or do something.

Consider what the retailing analyst Victor Lebow said after the end of World War II about the US economy: “Our enormously productive economy. . .demands that we make consumption our way of life, that we convert the buying and use of goods into rituals, that we seek our spiritual satisfaction, our ego satisfaction, in consumption. . .we need things consumed, burned up, replaced and discarded at an ever-accelerating rate.”

American business took this idea and ran with it. What are the results? The depletion of the earth’s resources, the extinction of many species, the contamination of our air and water, and the suffering of countless people. Mr. Lebow had a hand in all of this. The consequences he will undergo are truly frightening.

We must learn from this.

We need to be aware that our speech and behavior and can have far-reaching consequences.

We need to think before we speak and act, and then, proceed responsibly and wisely.