With Palms Together,
Troublesome thoughts: opinion is not fact. Feelings are not fact. Thoughts are not fact. Yet most of us, i believe, consider our subjective perceptions, thoughts and feelings, to be fact, fact that we act upon.
With Palms Together,
Troublesome thoughts: opinion is not fact. Feelings are not fact. Thoughts are not fact. Yet most of us, i believe, consider our subjective perceptions, thoughts and feelings, to be fact, fact that we act upon.
With palms together,
Today, December 8th, is the day in history Siddhartha became the Buddha, the Enlightened One. We call it Rohatsu, "the eighth day of the twelfth month." It is said, after practicing zazen under a tree, on the eighth morning he looked up and saw the morning star and in that instant became fully awake: "Anutarra Samyak Sambodhi" complete unexcelled awakening.
With palms together,
With palms together, No matter what you may think of my fellow priest Rev. Jundo Cohen, he is a force to be reckoned with in today's Zen world. He has taken on the institutions of Zen, created an awesome international Zen Community, and now produced a masterful text on Master Dogen Zenji's shobogenzo, a text as relevant and inspiring as any I have ever read.
With palms together,
Good Morning All,
Today is a day to offer our gratitude for the wonder that
is our lives. We were born human beings
capable of great good and great evil.
You each have the great opportunity to be as fully human as possible,
Giving, kind, and compassionate, you are the seeds of things to come. Please
consider on this day the many gifts you have received and acknowledge them with
your gratitude.
May we each take that gratitude out into
the world around us.
Happy Thanksgiving, y’all
Daiho
With palms together, Good Morning All,
“You cannot be a hero unless you are prepared to give up
everything; there is no ascent to the heights without prior descent into
darkness, no new life without some form of death.”
Armstrong, “A Short History of Myth,” P.37
There is no shortage of this mythic truth. Gilgamesh, Jacob,
the Hebrews, Buddha, and Jesus all descended into darkness, wrestled with that
darkness and emerged changed in dramatic ways. It is no different today with
each of us. We are struggling in the
darkness of a pandemic, a world threatening ecological disaster, and a threat
to our democracy. Some of us put our heads in the sand, some of us hold up
signs, some of us do nothing but get through our day. What we do reveals our character.
The Three Pure Zen Buddhist precepts teach us we are to be
responsible human beings. We are to
cease doing evil. We are to do good. And
we are to bring about abundant good for all beings. Let these resonate for a
bit. Let them arise from within us. Let
us each, then, explore the meanings.
What is evil? What is good? How can we assist others by bringing about abundant
good?
I am not here to answer these questions for you. They are yours to answer for yourself. What I can say is that to address these
questions with integrity requires us to struggle with our own moral foundations
and it is in this struggle that we gain strength, clarify our understanding,
and are able then to set forth on the Eightfold Noble Path. We die to ourselves and are born anew; we become
bodhisattvas.
May we each establish a daily intention to step into our
darkness and rise into the light.
Daiho