quotes
connect…
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remember, our resistance is not to people, but to the harmful ideology that is being pushed and enacted. an ideology of separateness, scapegoating, ignorance, fear, and aggression.
the antidote to these is inclusivity (a recognition of our interdependence), community (and equanimity), truth and awareness (or wakefulness), courage, lovingkindness, tenderness (open heart), and compassion.
~j
#MeditateAndResist #Resist #StayWoke #StayOpen #TheLongArc #PlantingSeeds #OpenHeart #NoMuslimBan #NoBanNoWall #NoDAPL
grace…
from love, we act…
we must find our inspiration and motivation within love if we are going to last and succeed in resistance.
what we are seeing is a lust for power and money. a grasping (though meticulously planned and manipulated) at all costs and at the expense of anyone who gets in the way. light a bunch of fires in many directions, and quickly, one after another. a divide and conquer that will exhaust us and diminish us.
what they aren’t counting on, and perhaps have no awareness of, is that Love is inexhaustible. and our Love put into action for the benefit of those suffering (including ourselves) is compassion. and what we need is a fierce compassion that is in for the long arc, knowing that Love will win.
Love is not weak, quite the opposite. and their ignorance to that will eventually be their downfall.
but it will take us, all of us, as a community – a sangha – working from our love, putting our fierce compassion into action. peacefully, but disruptively and persistently.
~j
#MeditateAndResist #Resist #TheLongArc #LoveWins #FierceCompassion #Bodhisattva #OffTheCushionIntoTheWorld #Peace #SocialJustice #Heal #Love #PlantingSeeds
self-care and care for others in dark times…

Recently I wrote that the world is in need of heroes, spiritual warriors, and bodhisattvas.
Given the state of things, especially in recent weeks, it appears that WE must be the heroes, the spiritual warriors, and bodhisattvas that we seek and that the world needs. We cannot wait, as most of us have done in the past, for spiritual or secular leaders to rise up and rally, to galvanize and gather on our behalf.
This is a good thing! It is incredibly inspirational to see hundreds of thousands, and in some cases millions, of people around the globe standing up for the oppressed, the marginalize, and the most vulnerable â speaking truth to power with words and actions alike.
There has been a call. Have you felt it? The misdeeds and harmful actions of those in power has brought forth, for many, an almost instinctual â from the bones â reaction to resist and work towards an alternative. And it does seem that what we have perhaps taken for granted in the past, cannot be taken for granted any more, but must be worked for and served.
People are in need and suffering. We can offer ourselves â our talents, our skills, our words, our hands and feet, and our hearts â in service to relieving and healing that suffering. This is what many Buddhists participate in, the Bodhisattva Vow, âSentient beings are numberless; I vow to save them all.â Of course we cannot save anyone, much less everyone, but within this vow is the recognition of self-lessness, of interdependence â the idea that I am because you are and what happens to you also affects me. So, meditate on the softness of our heart, the tenderness that rises up when we think of a loved one, of someone dear. We then extend this good will that has arisen toward others, knowing that they are someoneâs loved one and they too are dear to someone.
None of us escape this journey unscathed by pain and suffering. We all will experience illness, aging, loss, and eventually that great mystery that is death. Isnât this enough to draw out empathy and find common ground and open our hearts? Our love and care when put into action is compassionâŠand in the current state of things we need some FIERCE compassion. If we want our cause to be successful, we cannot be consistently motivated by anger. We will burn out and burn everything else with us. Our motivation MUST come from a place of love and fierce compassion working towards the noble causes of justice and peace.
There has been a lot of fierce compassion lately. I saw it at the Womenâs March and Iâve seen it in subsequent marches and peaceful protests as people stand, walk, and speak in the footsteps and voices of heroes, spiritual warriors, and bodhisattvas.
This can be and has been EXHAUSTING. And when we are exhausted and diminished, we can get angry, irritable and then our words and actions may move from being beneficial to harmful. Ends do not justify means. The means are the end. We must be what we seek.
So, how can we put that fierce compassion into action, if we are diminished, if we are exhausted?
When we take a bodhisattva vow, or make any commitment to serve others, to work towards an end to suffering, we must also include ourselves. Self-care so that we can care for others. This is what makes this a spiritual act. Self-care only, is simply self-help. This can be beneficial and good, but I am talking about something different here. Self-care so that one can also care for others is a spiritual practice (even if you are agnostic, humanist, or atheist â no need to belong to a specific religion or belief system). We practice as a benefit to ourselves and others, to reduce suffering in the world – even for those who are supposed “enemies” who may be on the opposite side of issues, even seeking our harm to support their desire to be “safe.” Of course, none of us are safe if any community or group of people are scapegoated as “other.” To paraphrase a quote by Diana Winston, “…there is a big difference between loving our enemies (those who’d harm us or others) and letting them get away with their wrongdoing (harmful actions).” [additions mine ~j]
As a Buddhist (though one does NOT need to be Buddhist), as a meditator for the past 9 years, and as a meditation instructor I suggest and stand behind (âŠor is it sit behind) a regular meditation practice, as a beneficial support to self-care, so that one can also care for others.
A friend of mine recently asked me to share information about meditation practice with others in a post, because she has seen what many of us have seen â people exhausted and diminished by a deluge of negativity and overwhelming changes from those in power, pulling the ground out from under us. She felt it would be a benefit and I do as well.
A note regarding meditation practice. It isnât a quick fix. This may be disappointing, but the goal isnât to attain some blissful or peaceful state (but whatâs wrong with that?!). When we practice meditation, we are practicing to be present in this moment â our mind and body together in one place â no matter the situation or what we are feeling. In this way, with consistent practice, our hearts begin to naturally open and build a capacity to be with life as it is, without immediately reacting to it. We are making space and in that space, we have the ability to choose our words and actions thereby benefitting the world, rather than adding to its suffering. A short period of sitting every day is more beneficial than a long period of sitting once a week. Donât be discouraged. After 9 years of meditating, I have noticed growth in my capacity to be with life and have seen my heart open more and more. I wouldnât have sought out instruction to be a teacher, if this werenât the case. And it is humbling, because other than committing to sitting and breathing, I have done nothing else to make this happen. This is a nod to our true nature, which I believe is essentially good, that when we simply sit and allow the noise to fall away, to arise and then pass, the goodness of our hearts eventually comes forth.
I have recorded a brief 10-minute guided meditation as an introduction and instruction for you.
If you are new to meditation, I would also like to suggest my teacherâs book:Â Start Here Now: An Open-Hearted Guide to the Path and Practice of Meditation by Susan Piver.

You may also want to connect with her teaching and instruction online at The Open Heart Project.
If you are interested in further exploration of the intersection of contemplative practice and social action/service, Iâd also like to suggest The Road Home: A Contemporary Exploration of the Buddhist Path by Ethan Nichtern, who is also a teacher I admire and follow. The last few chapters explore this more deeply.

Ethan has also written a wonderful 7-Point Practice Plan for Engaged Mindfulness to assist in self-care as we care for others in this difficult time.
Wishing you all well as we journey together.
May all beings be happy and at ease.
May all beings be free from suffering.
~ j
01.30.17
a love that lights the whole sky…
this is my comfort poem, my favorite poem. i fell in love with these words the first time i read them. like a thunder clap, these words woke me up.
i bring it out now and then to remind myself of the true nature of love – completely generous and inexhaustible.
this is where we must pull from, this is from what we must find our strength – love.
it is the only way we will outlast those whom we are standing up to.
by the way, this poem is written by the incomparable Shams-ud-din Muhammad Hafiz who was Persian and Muslim.
~j
#NoMuslimBan #NoBan #LoveWins #Resist #StayWoke #TheLongArc #PlantingSeeds #StrongerTogether #ForwardTogether #interdependence
#Hafiz #Persian #Muslim
rise up and resist…
this is the moment to practice…
Interdependence, from MLK Jr to today…
“It really boils down to this: that all life is interrelated. We are all caught in an inescapable network of mutuality, tied together into a single garment of destiny. Whatever affects one directly, affects all indirectly…Before you finish eating breakfast in the morning, you’ve depended on more than half the world.
We aren’t going to have peace on Earth until we recognize the basic fact of the interrelated structure of all reality.”
~ Martin Luther King, Jr
The quote above is one of the dearest for me in the pantheon of MLK Jr quotes. So many of his words still reverberate with sharp wisdom and prophetic knowing. But this one cuts to the heart of all of it.
Interdependence.
A word not just at the core of Buddhist understanding of life, but of life itself. Any close examination of life bears witness to it. We are not who we are or where we are through any single doing of our own, but only through the generosity and service of so many who have contributed to the circumstances that find us who we are and where we are, some knowingly and some unknowingly. And we too, each of us, play a vital part in othersâ lives, sometimes knowingly and sometimes unknowingly. Check out the film Itâs A Wonderful Life to see a fictionalized version of this told for the holidays, or watch Back To The Future.
MLK Jr understood this, and understood this at the core of what brings us together â a mutual understanding that we NEED each other, that our every action influences and affects the lives of those around us sometime near and sometime far. There is a ripple that plays out in ways we may never know. Words matter. Actions matter. How we treat each other matters.
Iâm a little late this week in writing a post about Martin Luther King, Jr, because Iâve been a bit stalled by illness. But, the timing still seems right. As we head toward the end of this week and the final day of President Barack Obamaâs Presidency, the contrast between our current President and the President-Elect could not appear more stark to me in light of this quote.
Perhaps this is why I am most concerned. While President Barack Obama is far from perfect and there will be criticism by some and debate about his Presidency, he has repeated time and again â even in the face of consistent and mean-spirited criticism â that he believes that deep down people are good and that with our work together, progress continues to move forward (sounding similar to another MLK Jr quote), often giving credit to the team around him for any successes that may have manifest. By contrast, our President-Elect has built his campaign singling out individuals and groups with a level of public degradation, always surprising and at times alarming, all the while promoting himself as the only solution to Americaâs problems.
Life is interdependence. No one does it alone. Any honest examination, bears witness to this. This isnât opinion, it is fact and truth, even in a post-fact and post-truth ârealityâ celebrated and fueled by the President-Elect. To not recognize interdependence is to not recognize life and this is the great danger to the success and livelihood of human society and perhaps life as we know it on earth.
As Martin Luther King, Jr states in the above quote, we arenât going to have peace until we recognize this.
So, if this recognition doesnât come from the top down, then we will live it from the bottom up. We will stand, sit, march, sing, shout, write, and paint to bear witness to interdependence, to bear witness to life.








