Saturday, July 11, 2009

The Buddha on Miracles

WQ and Bmsm.org/my (The Life of the Buddha, Section 26)

The Buddha was once staying in the City of Nalanda, in Pavarika Grove. Kevaddha came, bowed respectfully, and said: "Bhagwan, Nalanda is a successful city. The people living in Nalanda are prosperous. They have confidence in the Blessed One. Lord, it would be good if the Blessed One appointed a noble disciple to work a miracle. In that way, the people of Nalanda might become even more confident and place greater faith in the Blessed One."



The Buddha replied, "Kevaddha, I do not teach the Dharma to my disciples in that way." Kevaddha repeated his entreaty up to a third time as the Buddha gave the same reply. Thereupon, the Buddha explained that there are three kinds of miracles:

  1. The marvel of paranormal displays -- to be one and appear as many, to pass through walls unhindered, to walk on water as if on land, or to fly through the air, and so on. These are all things many ascetics are able to perform
  2. The marvel of reading minds
  3. The supernatural power to guide people, according to their development, for their own good, using suitable methods of instruction to fit their abilities
The first two powers, if displayed for their own sake merely to impress people, are no different than the performances of tricksters and magicians. A disciple who practices such worldly marvels is a source of shame, fear, and humiliation. Such actions may well impress and win over converts. But they in no way bring about enlightenment that puts an end to suffering.

The third kind, however, is indeed an invaluable power in that it helps people overcome suffering once and for all.

These, then, are the only miracles fit to be practiced:
  • When you see someone full of passion, craving, and greed, use your powers to teach that person to be free of passion, craving, and greed.
  • When you see someone who is a slave to hatred and anger, use your powers to help that person control that hatred and anger.
  • When you come across a person who is ignorant and unable to see the true nature of things (that everything is radically impermanent, vulnerable to suffering, and impersonal; in other words, that things are deceptive because, while seeming otherwise, they are in fact passing, unsatisfactory, and void), use your marvellous powers to help that person overcome ignorance.
These, indeed, are worthy miracles, fitting marvels, appropriate magic to perform and display.

This advice to Kevaddha was added to the Code of self-discipline (Vinaya). It rules out for monastics the performance of miracles to gain converts or impress people without helping them become enlightened. This became very clear in the case of Ven. Pindola, an enlightened disciple of the Buddha.

The arhat Pindola Bharadvaja was famous for his miraculous psychic powers. On one occasion, a rich man wanted this bhikkhu to prove he had such abilities. So he placed a beautiful bowl [monks bowls at that time were commonly made of clay, and the Vinaya has many rules regarding their care so that they do not accidentally break] at the top of a high pole. He challenged any holy man to get it. If he could, his reward would be to keep the prized bowl.

Pindola Bharadvaja, rather than trying to bring the bowl down, flew up and easily took it from its perch. He did this not so much for the bowl but to prove to the rich man that there are in fact saints (arhats) in the world, which the rich man did not believe.

When the Buddha came to know of this incident, he called for Pindola Bharadvaja. And there in front of a large assembly of bhikkhus, he broke the clay bowl to pieces saying: "It is not fitting that one should demonstrate psychic abilities. One must never show off with miraculous displays simply to impress people.''

MODERN BUDDHIST MIRACLE: Local villagers crowd around an amazing image of a revered Buddhist monk that survived a devastating blaze at Paknam Temple in Thailand's Rayong Province. The fire destroyed the 100 year-old sermon hall but left this image untouched and still beautiful (Thai Rath).

The Pindola Sutra
(Inspired Utterances, Udana, IV.6)

Thus have I heard. On one occasion the Buddha was residing near Savatthi at Jeta's Grove, in Anathapindika's monastery. At that time Ven. Pindola Bharadvaja was sitting not far off, his legs crossed, his body erect -- a forest dweller, an alms seeker, a rag-robe wearer, an possessor of only one set of robes, of few wishes, content, solitary, unentangled with the world, persistence aroused, advocating the ascetic practices, devoted to the higher mind.

The Buddha saw Ven. Pindola Bharadvaja sitting there....Then, on realizing the significance, he exclaimed:

Not reviling, not injuring,
Restraint in line
with the Patimokkha,
Moderation in food,
Dwelling in seclusion,
Devoted to the higher mind:
This is the Teaching
of the Awakened Ones!

NOTE: It is said that Ven. Pindola Bharadvaja, in spite of the Buddha's inspired utterance, did not in fact enter nirvana in that lifetime. That is, he was not actually an arhat but rather a noble disciple of a lesser degree. He was persuaded by the Buddha to stay on and teach. Source

Spirituality and parking spaces

Jen Weigel (ChicagoNow.com, 7/10/09)


Did you know that you can always find a parking space in Chicago? I can see you rolling your eyes, but I'm serious. I have been successfully parking in the city for years. But there's a secret to getting that key place at the corner of Ohio and Michigan Avenue, and here's how it works...

You have to thank the Universe in advance for your spot. Again with the eye roll? I'm serious. "Thank you in advance for the parking space right where I need it." Say it before you even leave the house, and you will get your spot. But there IS a catch: You have to believe it when you say it...


Hey, where am I supposed to park my yana ("vehicle")?

Where do I come up with this cr*p, you might be wondering. My husband blames it on my "woo-woo" books. I was reading Neale Donald Walsch's book Conversations With God several years ago, and while a lot of his writing is kind of exhausting to me, one part really stuck. He says that if you continue to say "I want" or "I need," you will continue to create more want and more need in your life because the Universe is just delivering what you are asking for -- it's the energy behind the statement.

I want a new job. I need more money. I want a boyfriend.

But if you thank the Universe in advance, as if you already have everything you could possibly want -- then you have more luck.

Thank you for the perfect job that pays all my bills. Thank you for this cupcake digesting perfectly without adding any girth to my thighs or butt.

I had a hard time thinking that I could create the perfect job just by changing my vocabulary, so I decided to start small with parking spaces.

Thank you for the parking space right where I need it.

I actually kept a note pad in my car to document my progress when I started out with the experiment in case people didn't believe me. I would drive to every single appointment I had, whether it was three blocks away, or three miles -- just for the case of the experiment.


You're Mahayana, I'm Vajrayana, this guy's Hinayana. Doesn't matter! Like the sign says, ALL VEHICLES will be towed.

I stopped counting after 243 rock star parking spaces IN A ROW! No kidding. That was 2002, and whether it's been for a Cubs playoff game, or a meeting at Tribune Tower, I have been finding perfectly placed parking spaces ever since.

I tried to do the math on this (look out because I was a theater major in college, so adding isn't one of my strengths). If I drive downtown an average of three times a week for seven years, that's over a thousand parking spaces.

So give it a shot....The only thing you have to lose is all that time you spend circling around looking for a d*mn parking space. Source

US Gov't has massive surveillance program


WASHINGTON, D.C. (AP) – The Bush administration built an unprecedented surveillance operation to pull in mountains of information far beyond the warrantless wiretapping previously acknowledged, a team of federal inspectors general reported Friday, questioning the legal basis for the effort but shielding almost all details on grounds they're still too secret to reveal.
The report, compiled by five inspectors general, refers to "unprecedented collection activities" by U.S. intelligence agencies under an executive order signed by President George W. Bush after the Sept. 11, 2001, terror attacks. Just what those activities involved remains classified, but the IGs pointedly say that any continued use of the secret programs must be "carefully monitored."

The report says too few relevant officials knew of the size and depth of the program, let alone signed off on it. They pa rticularly criticize John Yoo, a deputy assistant attorney general who wrote legal memos undergirding the policy. His boss, Attorney General John Ashcroft, was not aware until March 2004 of the exact nature of the intelligence operations beyond wiretapping that he had been approving for the previous two and a half years, the report says. More>>

Friday, July 10, 2009

Bruno: Gay vs. "Gay" (comedy)

(WQ) Coinciding with the annual Outfest is the Los Angeles premiere of Sacha Baron Cohen's "Bruno." Outfest is an authentically gay cinematic celebration of all things homosexual, whereas Cohen brings the second of his triumvirate personality schema comprised of Borat/Bruno/Ali G.
A few years after racist America got its pride handed to it on an Eastern European platter, here comes British comedian Cohen to peel back the veneer on American attitudes towards homosexuality. Gays are unhappy, but it's bound to be a dramatic revelation.



(Clevver.tv) Crazy funnyman extraordinaire Cohen comes back from his stint as a Kazakhstani television personality to present us with a whole new running joke, "Bruno." Can lightning strike twice for Cohen? Take a look. Cohen's character Bruno is a fashionista par excellence, who brings his unique brand of Austrian fashion to the United States. He finds himself neck-deep in style makers and major names. Look for Bruno to run into, among others, Oprah-protege Rachael Ray and frequent presidential candidate Ron Paul. Check out the trailer.

Tibetan Buddhists support Muslim Uighurs

Exiled Tibetans participate in a candlelit vigil in Dharmsala, India on July 9, 2009 expressing solidarity with the Uighurs in China's Xinjiang province. Hundreds of Tibetans gathered to protest the violence towards Uighurs i "East Turkestan." At least 156 people were killed and more than 1,100 hurt Sunday. Uighurs say security forces gunned down many of those killed (AP/Ashwini Bhatia). MORE PHOTOS
URUMQI, China – Boisterous crowds turned up at mosques in riot-hit parts of this western Chinese city, ignoring orders canceling Friday prayers due to the ethnic violence that killed 184, and police quickly broke up a small protest nearby.



Nearly a week after riots by Muslim Uighurs in Xinjiang province unleashed a massive security response, the U.S. national security adviser told Chinese diplomats on the sidelines of the G-8 summit in Italy that President Barack Obama expects Beijing to act with "appropriate restraint."


Chinese security forces get ready for the day with guns, batons, and tear gas ammunition around the ethnic Uighur's area in Urumqi in China's Xinjiang Autonomous Region July 10, 2009 (AFP).

Late Friday, officials provided the first ethnic breakdown of the deaths in the fighting. The official Xinhua News Agency reported that
  • 137 of the victims belonged to the dominant Han Chinese ethnic group.
The Han victims included 111 men and 26 women, the report said. The rest of the deaths were
  • 45 men and one woman who were Uighurs along with
  • 1 man of the Hui ethnic group
Xinhua said, citing the information office of the regional government. The report said the total death toll rose from 156 to 184. [Now women are leading the protests.] More>>

Enlightened Prostitution: Ambapali

WQ and bmsm.org.my: The Life of the Buddha, Part II, Lesson 18
Ambapali the courtesan offering (dana) in her mango garden and listening to the Dharma

The courtesan who became enlightened
VESALI, India — People of all castes, exalted and untouchable, female and male, educated and illiterate, powerful and powerless — all sought out the Teaching of the Buddha. He gladly received them. To the Buddha there was no caste by birth. One's status was determined by action (karma), that is, what one did in this life.

When the Buddha and his disciples stopped at Vesali, a rich woman named Ambapali offered them the use of her mango garden just outside the city, giving them a place to rest in the cool shade of her grove.

Ambapali was as beautiful as the golden sun rising out of the ocean but lacked the virtue of the third precept, abstaining from sexual misconduct (kamesu micchacara). She had not intended to see him, but her servant called out:

"Lady, the nobles and other folk went by foot to the mango grove yesterday! When I asked them why, they answered that it was because of the man resting there. There is none like him! He was the son of a king who gave up his status and kingdom to go in search of the Truth!"

Always eager for the new and interesting, Ambapali leaped to her feet, got on one of her coaches, and rushed towards the garden, all the while casting proud glances about her. Arriving at the gate, she alighted from the coach and walked through the palm and mango trees. It was very quiet. Even the leaves did not stir. Beneath the deep shade of trees, the Buddha was seated with folded hands and feet. And behind his head an aura glowed like the midnight moon.

Ambapali stood transfixed, forgetting herself, her beauty, absorbed by the arresting sight of the Buddha. She wept, and her heart melted, flowing away in a river of tears. Tentatively, respectfully, she approached the Buddha and fell before his feet, setting her face on the earth.

The Buddha asked her to rise and take a seat. And he spoke the Dharma to her. She listened to these momentous words with parched ears. She drank the Dhrama the way the hot sand absorbs the rain. Having received the Dharma and bowing at the great seer's feet, she invited the Buddha and his disciples to a meal (dana) on the following day. The Buddha accepted her invitation.

As the nobles (khattiya) of Vesali were arriving, they met Ambapali on the road. She told them that the Buddha had already accepted her invitation for a meal the following day. Jealous, they snapped their fingers and cried out to her: "Sell us the honor of his company for gold!"

Ambapali, glowing with joy, replied: "Sirs, even if you were to give me Vesali and all of its territories, yet I would not give up the honor of providing this meal."

Rejoicing in Others' Good Fortune
Rather than being happy for her and thereby sharing her merit (pattanumodana kusala), in anger, the nobles snapped their fingers and approached the Buddha. They requested the honor of offering dana. But he informed them that he had already accepted Ambapali's invitation.

The following day, Ambapali set sweet milk-rice and cakes before the Buddha and his followers. She herself attended upon them in great humility. After the Buddha had eaten, Ambapali sat respectfully to one side. With folded palms (anjali) she said, "O, Holy One, I present this garden to the Sangha. Accept it if it is fitting."

The Buddha accepted her great gift, seeing the purity of heart that offered it. He then gladdened Ambapali with the Dharma. Her mind calm and brightened, her heart grown great with generosity, this was the turning point in Ambapali's life: She understood the profound Dharma and became a virtuous person.

She later entered the Order of Nuns (Bhikkhuni Sangha), and with the heart of wisdom strengthened in her, she became one of the arhats. Just as a lotus springs from muck and mud and blossoms above the water, Ambapali managed to achieve the height of spiritual development despite her past.

The Buddha and his disciples moved on to the small village of Beluva, where he decided to spend the final rains retreat (vassa).

Our Culture of Rape

MULDERSDRIFT, South Africa – Dumisani Rebombo wasn't circumcized, did chores considered girls' work, and was sick of being taunted for not being a "man." So at age 15, he took the only course considered "manly" in his rural South African village: He raped a girl.

Twenty years later he searched for the woman to beg her forgiveness — a rarity in a nation where a culture of sexual violence is deeply embedded in society. Rebombo agreed to share his story with the Associated Press on Thursday as researchers presented findings at a conference on sexual violence that show more than one in four [1/4+ = >25% (in excess of twenty-five percent)] South African men surveyed admitted to committing rape.

"Rape is an expression of male sexual entitlement," said Rachel Jewkes, chief researcher for the survey conducted by the government-funded Medical Research Foundation. "South Africa is an immensely patriarchal society. The history of the country has shaped the dominant forms of South Africa's racially defined masculinities."

Many human rights activists were not surprised by the survey's findings, saying they underscore the deep cultural roots of sexual violence in a country blighted by crime and the devastating emotional, social, and economic legacy of Apartheid's brutal racial segregation. "This tells the story of many boys, of many men," said Rebombo, who is now 48 and works in community outreach to try to raise awareness of and prevent sexual abuse.

A recent report published by Interpol says South Africa has the highest incidence of rape among its member states. Some 54,000 rapes were committed in 2006, according to police statistics — nearly 150 per day, or one for every 925 people in the country.

And that does not tell the whole story: Advocates say many attacks go unreported because of the stigma associated with rape. By comparison, Americans reported one rape for every 2,642 people in 2006 — roughly a third of the South Africa rate. More>>

Dumisani Rebombo holds a mirror he decorated in his office, July 8, 2009. A shocking percentage of surveyed men admitted to committing rape (AP/Jerome Delay).

Japan slams into (inhabited) Moon


The Japanese lunar orbiter "Kaguya" has completed its main mission. But there's one final scientific endeavor: It will slam onto the moon's surface at about 2:30 p.m. ET (18:30 UT) on [7/9/09].
The impact is expected to occur on the near-side of the moon, in the dark area close to the limb, at lunar coordinates 80°E and 64°S, said European astronomers, who have mapped out the expected impact site using images from the the European Space Agency's SMART-1 lunar orbiter, which was also purposely crashed into the moon in 2006. More>>
  • UPDATE - 10:32 a.m. Thursday, June 11:
    The Japanese Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA) confirmed the planned crash landing has occurred: "Kaguya was impacted to the south-east of near side of the Moon on June 10, 2009 (GMT)," the agency said in a statement.
  • UPDATE - 11 p.m. ET Wednesday, June 10:
    The Japanese Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA) has not confirmed whether Kaguya hit the moon. But as is done on election night broadcasts, and after much anticipation, SPACE.com is declaring this impact a done deal as of 11 p.m.

CHANDRA, Akasha Devaloka (WQ) - The Moon is inhabited. In any case, according to Richard Hoagland (enterprisemission.com) it has in the past been inhabited. There are visible buildings and structures on its surface. Both the American and Russian governments have long known this. China, Japan, and India now know it as well, having successfully sent their own probes to orbit it. According to Stewart Swerdlow (expansions.com; stewartswerdlow.com), it is possible to use an earth based telescope to see moving lights and activity on the lunar surface -- part of secret program that have continued these past three decades since the US set out to land there.


LINK: Stewart Swerdlow - Moon

Greenpeace unveils Mt. Rushmore banner

Greenpeace protest at Mt. Rushmore
Greenpeace activists break laws to post a message to President Obama on Mt. Rushmore. What they want
Photo
G8 leaders vow to fight global warming

Survey: World's Worst Tourists

Reuters Life!
Worldwide, the French are now ranked as the worst tourists finally taking the crown (of thorns) from the stereotypcial "Ugly Americans."

PARIS, France – French tourists are the worst in the world, coming across as bad at foreign languages, tight-fisted, and arrogant -- according to a survey of 4,500 hotel owners across the world. They finish in last place in the survey carried out for internet travel agency Expedia by polling company TNS Infratest, which said French holidaymakers don't speak local languages and are seen as impolite.



"It's mainly the fact that they speak little or no English when they're abroad, and they don't speak much of the local language," Expedia Marketing Director Timothee de Roux told radio station France Info. "The French don't go abroad very much. We're lucky enough to have a country which is magnificent in terms of its landscape and culture," he said, adding that 90 percent of French people did their traveling at home.

"So when they're on holiday they can be a bit stressed, they're not used to things, and this can lead them to be demanding in a way, which could be seen as a certain arrogance." French tourists are also accused of generally spending less than other nationalities when abroad. De Roux said the French, not accustomed to leaving large tips at home where a service charge is automatically levied on restaurant bills, can seem "tight-fisted" compared with other nationalities.

The Japanese ranked at the top of the Best Tourist survey, with the British and the Germans judged the best of the Europeans. But French tourists received some consolation for their poor performance, finishing third after the Italians and British for dress sense while on vacation.

(Reporting by Joseph Tandy; editing by James Mackenzie)

Why Palin is Resigning


Hillary must be laughing. Why did President-to-be Palin resign? Greed, hubris, ambition, and costly ethics investigations are part of the reason as are offers to feed a narcissistic personality disorder.

Mary Pemberton (AP)

ANCHORAGE, Alaska – Levi Johnston, the former fiance of Republican Governor Sarah Palin's 18-year-old daughter, says he thinks he knows why she is resigning — concerns over money.

The 19 year old, whose wedding to Bristol Palin was called off earlier this year, says he believes the governor is resigning over personal finances. Johnston says he lived with the Palin family from early December to the second week in January. He claims he heard the governor several times say how nice it would be to take advantage of the lucrative deals that were being offered, including a reality show and a book.

"I think the big deal was the book. That was millions of dollars," said Johnston, who has had a strained relationship with the family but now says things have improved. Palin has a book deal, but compensation details haven't been disclosed. The governor has said she is facing more than $500,000 in legal fees. "It is interesting to learn Levi is working on a piece of fiction while honing his acting skills," Palin family spokeswoman Meghan Stapleton said in an e-mail to The Associated Press.

Johnston made his comments at a news conference Thursday at the office of his attorney, Rex Butler. He came forward, Butler said, because Alaskans want to know why Palin has decided to resign. She made the announcement last Friday. Johnston is also pursuing his own book deal. He is working as a carpenter while also pursuing a movie deal. Source

Thursday, July 9, 2009

Animal Consciousness

WQ editorial staff (proposed Wikipedia edit of "Animals in Buddhism")

The position and treatment of animals in Buddhism is important for the light it sheds on Buddhists' perception of their own relation to the natural world, on Buddhist humanitarian concerns in general, and on the relationship between theory and practice.

Animals are regarded in Buddhist thought as sentient (feeling) beings. They are different in intellectual ability but no less able to feel than humans. Animals are cycling through rebirth (Samsara) just as humans are. According to Mahayana Buddhism, animals possess "Buddha nature." In both cases, they possess the potential of becoming enlightened.

Tibetan thangka representing the various states of existence in Samsara. The rudimentary depiction of the Animal Realm shows this plane collectively rather than attempting to depict its staggering complexity (bodhipaksa.com).

According to this doctrine of rebirth, humans (due to their karma or deeds/intentions) can be reborn in the animal world or other unfortunate destinations. The human world is regarded as the lowest "fortunate" destination. Animals, according to their store of past karma, may be reborn as humans or in worse worlds.

Karma and Rebirth Destinations
  • Animal rebirth results from lapses in Five Precepts and:
  • delusion, excessive greed and/or annoyance
  • meat-eating, behaving like an animal in this life.

For instance, in one discourse (MN 57; PTS: M i 387) the Buddha cautions that Dog and Ox Duty Ascetics will, by their practice, gain rebirth among dogs and oxen. This accords with the general view that deeds -- that are willed, performed, and accumulated -- more associated with animals than humans result in rebirth in a plane or condition appropriate to experiencing the results. What are such deeds? Behaviors and habits that are slovenly, brutal, dull, vicious, base, lascivious, gluttonous, petty, cruel, and so on.

  • Human rebirth achieved by Five Precepts.
  • Lower celestial rebirth achieved by Eight Precepts.
  • Higher celestial rebirth is attained by 1st-4th Jhanas.
  • Formless rebirth is attained by the 5th-8th Jhanas.
Like all living beings, animals are ceaselessly wandering on in Samsara. This goes on for so long that it is difficult to meet anyone we have not already been related to countless ways. In an unbounded series of lives, with beings interdependently related, it is from time to time possible to sense and experience the "oneness" of all -- the deep relationship or spiritual empathy (mudita) that sees no separation.

The Buddha explained that sentient beings -- even those born in the animal realm -- have been in past rebirths been our mothers, brothers, sisters, fathers, children, friends, and associates. One could not, therefore, make a hard distinction between moral rules applicable to animals and those applicable to humans; ultimately humans and animals were part of a single family. They are all interconnected.

In cosmological terms, animals are believed to inhabit a distinct "world," separate from humans not by space but by state of mind. This realm is called Tiryagyoni (Sanskrit) or Tirac-chānayoni (in the exclusively Buddhist language, Pāli).

Rebirth in the animal realm is considered an unhappy rebirth since it usually involves more suffering than relief, whereas the humans generally enjoy a balance of the two. The Buddha compared it to someone wandering through a desert.

S/he is parched and comes across a nearly barren tree, and moving on comes across a shade tree, and moving on comes across an oasis, and so on. Each station represents, very generally, various rebirth destinations from the world of hungry ghosts to animals to humans to celestial beings, and so on for a total of 31 general planes of existence.

Buddhist commentaries literature depicts the great variety of suffering associated with the animal realm: Even where no cruel and desperate human beings are present, animals are attacked and eaten. Other animals attack them, and they live in fear. They are forced to endure environmental extremes, and they have no security of habitation.

Those that live among humans may be treated as pets or slaughtered for their bodies. They may be worked, beaten, experimented on, or otherwise tormented. Moreover, they suffer from ignorance with little opportunity to understand what (or why) these things are happening. With so little clarity or culture, they are unable to do much to better their state, relying instead mostly on habit and instinct.

Crystal Singing Bowl Sound Meditation

MacKenzie Pause (NY Yoga Examiner)


If you've never experienced a singing bowl, now is your chance. Ethereal sounds move through the body, clearing channels of blocked energy, allowing mind and form to feel renewed and re-energized. Restorative yoga poses will bring one into the moment, moving through the chakras with mantras and guided meditation, followed by an extended savasana to relax to the tones of quartz crystal singing bowls.

(goldenomyoga.com)

Let the sound vibrations clear the clutter, leaving participants mellowed. New York's Golden Om is a beautiful studio offering low price yoga classes, workshops, and a monthly yoga brunch. Visit facebook event page for details. Source

WHAT: Crystal Singing Bowl Sound Meditation
WHERE:
Golden Om Yoga, 778 Lafayette, Brooklyn
HOSTED BY: MacKenzie Pause, All You Need Is Love Yoga