hold to the center…

A monk asked Xinghua Cunjiang, “What should one do when things come from every direction?”

The master said, “Hold to the center.”
The monk bowed.

The master then said, ” Yesterday, as I was on my way to a dinner in the village, I was caught in a sudden storm with heavy rain and violent wind, so I headed for an old shrine and found shelter.”

~ Entangling Vines: A Classic Collection of Zen Koans,
trans. Thomas Yuho Kirchner

I read the above story in the latest edition of Tricycle Buddhist Review, from an essay written by Wendy Egyoku Nakao Roshi.  I was moved by this story and inspired to create the artwork above.

Where do you find your center?  What anchors you as the waves crash around and against you?  Where do you find your ease and calm as turbulent winds swirl around knocking you off balance?  How do you keep awareness focused, when distractions vie for your attention?

For me it is my meditation practice, it is nature, it is the tenderness of an open heart, it is love.   It is staying with all that is and bearing witness, anchored in my breath and them from a place of compassion, moving into some sort of action that feels beneficial, that hopefully serves love and light.

I suppose everyone’s center may be different.  It seems increasingly important to know what it is.  There seem to be some who are intent on knocking us off balance repeatedly, wearing us out.  But what they have forgotten, or may not be aware of, is that there is a place for each of us where we can find our balance, our focus, and a calm resolve to stick with it for the long arc.

~j
05.11.17

#MayDay2017

The President has called for May 1st to be a National Day of Loyalty.I agree. But being that this is not an authoritarian state (yet), rather than being loyal to one man, the office of the Presidency, or the government, let’s be loyal to the causes that speak to our hearts:

justice, equality, compassion, generosity, empathy, and peace.

And in light of those causes, let us remember the real focus of May 1st, or May Day – Immigrant and Workers’ Rights.
~j
#MayDay2017

the world is burning…


no doubt humankind has contributed to climate change. to deny this is to deny the very nature of life, of existence, which is to say that all things are interconnected and interdependent.  another way to say this is that our actions affect our environment and our environment in turn affects us.  this is the law of karma, of cause and effect.  the seeds we plant, will grow.

but nevertheless, if a house is burning, we don’t stand around arguing that neither we nor anyone we know has started the fire as the house burns around us. it would be insanity to do so. instead, we get to work on putting the fire out.
the world is burning.

can we break our addiction to consumption?
can we find the lasting joy and peace in contentment?
can we reconnect with a sense of reverence for all life including the planet herself?

we need to. we are being called to.

will we answer?

~j
04.29.17

keeping it real…

hello friends and meditators ~

here is a blog post from my teacher, Susan Piver.  I adore her.  She keeps it real and I so appreciate it.  I think many people see someone like the Dalai Lama, or Thich Nhat Hanh or Sakyong Mipham Rinpoche and they see someone who exudes equanimity – they relate that somehow to being numb or not affected.  But as Susan taught us in class and as I have found in my own practice these past 9 years, this is the opposite – they feel everything more fully due to the practice.  However, also due to the practice, they are able to “be” with what they feel and choose how to act in relationship to it, rather than react out of it.  this is equanimity, this is awareness, this is an open heart.

not a quick fix, not a wave of a magic wand.

it is a journey, and a settled rump on a cushion.

bows of gratitude always please read Susan’s blog post below.
~j

Will Meditation Make You a Better Person? Not really. OK, maybe.

April 25, 2017   |   11 Comments  |   FavoriteLoadingAdd to favorites

This morning, a friend forwarded a link to a recent NPR radio show about meditation. It was called “The Meaning of our New Mindfulness.” The focus was on how “mindfulness” has given rise to a host of apps and programs and is being used at companies like Aetna and BlackRock (?!) to…what? Increase emotional intelligence? Improve complex thinking? Reduce health-related absences? (Whatevs. The bottom line is always to increase the bottom line.) It was also mentioned that companies like Google and Aetna have installed meditation rooms and that this is simply one more sign that mindfulness is becoming Americanized.

Why was I not on this show, my friend wondered? I don’t know, but if I was, I would have been a total wet blanket, an awful guest, a meditation grump.

Meditation is not meant as a path to “Get Balanced, Get Blissed,” nor is it a way to make more money, a brain-exercise to improve memory, a system to reduce stress, or what have you. Yes, maybe one or all of these things will happen as the result of a steady meditation practice, but they are still not the point. (We might hope to achieve “bliss” but do we even know what that means? When asked what bliss felt like, Tibetan meditation master Chogyam Trungpa Rinpoche said, “to you, it would probably feel like pain.” Go figure.)

I guarantee that the meditation rooms at big corporations are empty, or will be soon. Why? Because this is what I have observed when I give talks at companies with such rooms. Without a way to understand the path that begins to unfold as a practice develops, it will become just another item on the to-do list. It will lose flavor.

Flavor is important because, at some point, meditation will become boring and difficult. I’m sorry, but that is just the way it is. Anyone who tells you otherwise is doing you a disservice.

There is a lot of mystery about how the practice really works, a gazillion neuroscience studies notwithstanding. Some days it is pleasant and on others it is excruciating. There may be days of insight or breakthrough, but these are the exception. The results evolve slowly and they may or may not be what you expect. In any case, they do not materialize during practice, they arise in your life. It takes insight to attune to and understand it all. It is the spiritual teachings that give the practice context. Without context, it becomes confusing and even frightening.

Meditation is a spiritual practice.
Though it will help your workaday self, self-help is not its primary purpose. It goes way beyond that. Meditation reveals your true self. It dissolves conventional thought. It connects you to the unique power of your life. And it doesn’t just make you more mindful, it makes you more aware — and this, awareness, is the secret sauce when it comes to, well, everything we like: love, creativity, insight, innovation, communication, and so on.

To work with awareness is to make a connection to the spiritual realm, yet we insist on stripping the spiritual bits out. This makes me very sad because it renders the practice lifeless. To practice meditation as a self-improvement technique is like standing next to Brad Pitt at Madame Tussaud’s and pretending it’s a date. It’s that crazy.

Meditation is a path to love.
It is not about safeguarding against emotional pain or getting everything you want. It is actually about opening your heart, first to yourself, then to others, and to the world. A meditation practice lowers your guard so that the world can touch you. Sometimes this is awesome and other times, not so much. But this particular drawbridge only has two settings: up or down.

Meditation gives you the feels.
Have you ever wondered why Buddhism is so famously associated with compassion, kindness, and love? Why His Holiness the Dalai Lama begins his day with three hours of such practices? It’s not because meditation reduces the stress hormone cortisol or minimizes corporate healthcare costs. It’s because the practice removes everything that stands between you and the ability to feel. These practices stabilize one in this state of openness.

More feels may or may not be your cup of tea. That’s cool.
Most people begin a meditation practice to feel less. Less stress. Less heartache. Less anger. Less, less, less. The truth is actually more, more, more. More love. More sorrow. More confusion. More brilliance. More awkwardness. More insight. More longing. More genuine.

That last one is a piece of the great disconnect between how meditation is portrayed by the media and how it actually works. We may think we want to be more authentic but we turn towards what we really feel (and feelings, not ideas, are the root of authenticity), we don’t know what we will encounter. We may find it terrifying. We may find it insanely empowering. There’s just no telling and we really, really want to be certain of the destination before we begin the journey. I’m sorry, but meditation will not help with this. We find that what we feel is raw. Unfiltered. Awkward, yet full of grace. (The aforementioned Chogyam Trungpa also said “the greatest elegance is vulnerability.” Go figure.)

This is not your normal “sell” when it comes to self-help techniques. I mean, when considering a practice that promises more discomfort and uncertainty, most of us tend to look for something a bit sexier. Short-term sexier, that is.

It’s up to you.
OK, I get it. I understand why one would choose the latter option. That’s cool. I choose it off and on every single day. If you want to feel safe, accomplish conventional goals, and impress others, I really do NOT suggest meditation.

However, if you want to love yourself, others, and your life with your whole heart, be singularly brilliant and creative, suffer defeats and celebrate joys fully, discover who you really are and have the confidence to show that true self to others, I highly recommend it. All of these things — love, creativity, emotion, authenticity — exist one step beyond conventional thought. That’s just how it is. So please prepare to feel very, very dorky for a long time. Please also get ready to fall in love with everything.

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bearing witness for the Earth…

On the morning of the Buddha’s enlightenment it is said that the great tempter and deceiver Mara after many failed attempts to deceive and distract the Buddha, asked the Buddha, “What gives you the right to be enlightened?  Who are you to awaken?  Who bears witness to this?”  Silently, calmly the Buddha took his right hand and touched the Earth and in that moment the Earth shook, bearing witness to the Buddha’s enlightenment.  With this, Mara disappeared.

And so it is with every step we take, our feet touching the ground, that the Earth also bears witness to our right to be here and to awaken.

It is now our turn to bear witness for the Earth in her time of need.  The Earth has given us life and sustains us.  In fact, science has shown us that we have the Earth’s elements within us.  Without these elements, without the delicate balance that is our Earth, life as we know it would not be – we would not be.  The only appropriate response for such gratuitous love, is gratitude, a gratitude that manifests in reciprocal love.

Our relationship to the Earth, is just that, a relationship.  How do we show our love?  How do we show our gratitude?  How do we pass this relationship on to our children and grandchildren?

Let us take some time today to touch the Earth.  Feel the dirt between our fingers, feel the ground beneath our feet as we step.  Are our steps, steps of love?  Let us step out into nature and listen, look.  Allowing in all the life that is sustained by the Earth, allowing it into our hearts, blessing it and sending it back out with love.  Let us make new choices that bear witness to our love for the Earth and all of life.

~j
04.22.17
Earth Day

 

let the mind stay…


The world is swirling around, a sound over here, a sight over there.
Confusion is an easy companion of distraction.
Where is balance and harmony, when the mind wants to run?
Let the mind stay…

~j

Song of Paldarbom
by Shepa Dorje, the yogi Mila Milarepa

I can contemplate the sky,
But clouds make me uneasy.
Milarepa, tell me how
To meditate on clouds.

“If the sky’s as easy as you say,
Clouds are just the sky’s play.
Let your mind stay
Within the sky.”

I can contemplate the sea,
But waves make me uneasy.
Milarepa, tell me how
To meditate on waves.

“If the sea’s as easy as you say,
Waves are just the sea’s play.
Let your mind stay
Within the sea.”

I can contemplate my mind,
But thoughts make me uneasy.
Milarepa, tell me how
To meditate on thoughts.

“If your mind’s as easy as you say,
Thoughts are just the mind’s play.
Let your mind stay
Within your mind.”

 

 

the kindness that transcends…


it seems, we may need this now more than ever. so much going on that encourages division, that encourages anger and aggression, that encourages the dismissing of individuals as well as whole groups of people.

the good news is that this kindness that transcends is always available, right here, right now in your very own heart.

~j

Palm Sunday reflection…

doing lovingkindness meditation today for so many at the receiving end of horrific violence including Egypt today, and Syria.  sitting with the darkness of such anger and violence, in contrast to the Palm Sunday message of Jesus’ entrance into Jerusalem on the humble donkey as a prince of peace, as opposed to a king of war.

the transformative message of the deep and lasting power (love) present in openness and vulnerability – seemingly powerlessness – is still waiting to take hold. it has to take hold in each of our hearts first…  
#LovingKindness #metta #meditation #love #vulnerability #peace #PalmSunday #Jesus #war #violence #anger #darkness #light #TheLongArc #PlantingSeeds