Showing posts with label how to behave in front of monks nuns monastics. Show all posts
Showing posts with label how to behave in front of monks nuns monastics. Show all posts

Friday, May 1, 2026

Conversion? How to become a Buddhist


(The Pause) How to become a Buddhist: the truth about conversion. [How would a Westerner become an official "Buddhist"? As in any of the Dharmic religions, people convert to Buddhism. Here is a list of prominent converts.

People new to adhering to Buddhism, traditionally, do so at a minimum by Ti-Sarana ("Going for Guidance" to the Three Guides) and adopting the Five Precepts.

This is frequently mistranslated as "Taking Refuge," expressing confidence in the Three Guides, Three Treasures, Three Gems or Jewels: Buddha, Dharma, and Sangha) in front of a monk, nun, or similar representative often of the monastic community (sangha), the  nobles ones (Ariya-Sangha), and the community of practitioners (other Buddhists), in attendance.

Throughout the timeline of Buddhism, conversions of (adoption of Buddhism by) entire countries and regions to Buddhism were frequent, as Buddhism (the Buddha-Dharma) spread throughout Asia. For example, in the 11th century in Burma, King Anoratha converted his entire country to Theravada Buddhism.

At the end of the 12th century, King Jayavarman VII set the stage for conversion of the Khmer people to Theravada Buddhism.

Mass conversions of areas and communities to Buddhism occur up to the present day. For example, there was the modern Dalit Buddhist Movement in India. Indeed, there have been organized mass conversions.

Exceptions to encouraging conversion may occur in some Buddhist movements. In Tibetan Buddhism, for example, the current Dalai Lama discourages active attempts to win converts [35, 36]. In fact, Buddhism is not evangelical and does not promote pushing religion on anyone. However, Buddhism was the first missionary religion, long before Christianity, and sent out "apostles" who taught and won many people over to this path-of-practice and way of being, which many can argue is not even a real "religion." Of course, that depends how we choose to define "religion."

The Truth is true no matter who believes or does not believe, who adheres or does not adhere, who converts or does not convert. The Buddha was a representative of Truth, and many were attracted to him and what he was saying. It was, in fact, the first "world religion," a universal spiritual tradition that accepted all. But the Buddha did not go around trying to make anyone a Buddhist or a follower. He only wanted them to realize what was true, knowing that the Truth sets one free. Have you considered Hinduism? More: Religious conversion

Saturday, September 16, 2023

Seattle: My kid ran off to Buddhist monastery


What to do if your kid goes to a monastery: A Buddhist monk interviews his parents
(Clear Mountain Monastery) Sept. 13, 2023: Clear Mountain Monastery Podcast In this session, Ajahn Nisabho interviews his parents, Sarah Conover and Doug Robnett, about their experience having a son in robes and their own spiritual journeys.

Tune in with fellow practitioners every Wednesday evenings from 6:00-6:45 pm or Saturday mornings from 9:30-11:00 am for a Dhamma Talk and Q&A with Ajahn Kovilo or Ajahn Nisabho.

Saturday mornings begin with a 30-minute meditation. Wednesday evening Q&A's are followed by a discussion on Zoom from 6:45-7:30 pm.



Sept. 16th: Saturday LIVE at St. Mark’s in Seattle: Meditation, Dharma Talk, and Q&A | Ajahn Nisabho
(Clear Mountain Monastery) Started streaming 9/16/23 Clear Mountain Monastery Podcast. To join via Zoom on Saturdays, visit Clear Mountain Monastery's website and click on the link for the Saturday Morning Meditation, Teaching, and Coffee Social (clearmountainmonastery.org... )

To participate in the Saturday chanting, use this PDF: cdn.amaravati.org/wp-content...

Sunday, July 9, 2023

NPR @ Empty Cloud Buddhist Monastery

Rachel Martin, Enlighten Me with Rachel Martin (NPR.org, July 9, 2023) at Empty Cloud Monastery, New Jersey; Ashley Wells, Dhr. Seven, CC Liu (eds.), Wisdom Quarterly
Nun Ayyā Somā (center) and monk Ven. Suddhāso, co-founders of Empty Cloud Monastery

These Buddhist [monastics] want their [spiritual path] to be known for more than just mindfulness
NPR Host Rachel Martin
Rachel Martin: Mindfulness (sati) is mainstream. There are mindfulness retreats that could set one back thousands of dollars. Entire sections of libraries and bookstores are devoted to the subject.

My kids learn mindfulness and meditation techniques in their public elementary school. Before my weekly yoga class starts, the teacher says a bunch of stuff about mindfulness, setting intentions for the downward dogs and plank poses to come.

On the whole, I think mindfulness showing up in our culture in new ways is a good thing. However, I do think there's something off-putting about the "mindfulness industrial complex" -- the expensive getaways and self-proclaimed gurus, who make promises about personal transformation they can't necessarily keep. And I've been looking for something different.

I wanted to understand the basis that birthed the modern mindfulness movement. I wanted to understand how, by training our minds, one could actually create some kind of spiritual connection to ourselves, to other people in our life, or even to a higher power.

Let's save the planet as Engaged Buddhists
In all this spiritual seeking I'm doing these days, it was time to go deep on Buddhism.

My mom [Mrs. Martin] was a lifelong Presbyterian who served as a church deacon and hung artisan-made crosses around her house. But I also have clear memories of her sitting on her black meditation pillow in front of the window in her bedroom, eyes shut, breathing deep and audibly.

She had books by the Dalai Lama and Thich Nhat Hanh on her bedside table. Like a lot of Americans, she didn't see Buddhism and Christianity as contrary to one another. They are complementary.

I wanted to understand what that could look like. My mom died 14 years ago, and I can't ask her, so I have to figure it out for myself. That means doing my own research and having my own experience with Buddhism.

And what better way to do that than spending time at an actual monastery? Now, I do not want to suggest that showing up at a Buddhist monastery for three days taught me everything I need to know about Buddhism or mindfulness. Obviously not.

But it did help me understand why more and more Americans are converting to Buddhism, or even if they don't go all in that way, they are finding elements of that tradition that they can incorporate into their own spiritual life and identity.

So where does one go to learn about the ancient wisdom and revelation of the historical Buddha (Siddhartha Gautama)? New Jersey of course, to a monastery called Empty Cloud, which seemed perfectly on brand.

Yes, I, too, want to be like an empty cloud! So my producer Lee Hale and I drove five or so hours from Washington, D.C. to West Orange, New Jersey.

Two Buddhist monastics run Empty Cloud. Their names are Buddhist nun Ayyā Somā [an Italian of indistinct gender, possibly an deactivated lesbian, tomboy, or nonbinary butch gal] and Bhante Suddhāso (a fay American ally).

Empty Cloud Monastery in West Orange, NJ (courtesy of Empty Cloud Monastery/NPR)
.
Ayyā Somā is Italian, and before she shaved her head and put on the robes, she was a fashion journalist.

Bhante (the Pali word for a monk, which translates as "venerable sir") is a soft-spoken guy from Colorado with small, round glasses.

He grew up in a conservative Christian evangelical family and found Buddhism after college.

They welcome us with tea and give us the basic instructions for staying there:
  • No makeup or any other physical adornments.
  • No fancy clothes.
Buddhsit monastics always eat before the lay people like us who stay there and, even when it's not an official silent meditation time, everyone needs to walk around sort of quietly and keep conversation at a moderate volume.

I spent most of my time with the Empty Cloud monastics inside the monastery for meals, meditation, and Dharma [Buddhist] talks — which are like sutras, stories (with a central thread or suture), sermons, parables, Aesop fables, or spiritual lessons.

But we did take one field trip — just a few miles away — to the campus of Rutgers University, where five of the monastics walked into a frat house.

Yes, it sounds like the beginning of a problematic joke. Even the monastics recognized how surreal the scene was. They went to campus to collect "alms" (pindapata) given by donors, meaning they hold a bowl and wait for people walking by to offer them food, since monastics of the Theravada Buddhist tradition can't make or buy themselves meals.

They've all got shaved heads and they're wearing traditional saffron/orange robes with sandals. Modern Tevas seem to be the preferred brand in this group. They situated themselves in a line in front of a shopping mall full of retail shops and casual dining options.

They definitely stood out, and at one point the mall manager came out to see if they were staging some kind of protest. She let them be, but the monastics weren't having a lot of luck.

People walked by and smiled, but they didn't really understand what was happening. So a young woman who's staying at the monastery called up a friend of hers who is a student at Rutgers. He rallied his frat brothers, and they showed up a couple minutes later to escort the monastics a couple blocks away to their frat house, for takeout tacos.

A handful of college guys, mostly wearing pajama pants and hoodies, show the monastics into the main living room — and yes, it is a SCENE.

Red solo cups are lying in one corner. A box of Franzia wine and random hot sauce are on one table, a bong on another. The whole place smells like weed. [Rutgers scholars smoke recreational cannabis?]

Ayyā Somā makes small talk with the young men and asks what a fraternity is really about.
  • [She's Italian, so the concept of guys living together, getting drunk, high, and chasing skirt must seem oddly reminiscent of a Berlusconi (the recently deceased leader of the country, Italy's own Trump) fantasy].
Just to be clear — she doesn't understand what a fraternity is because she's Italian, not because she's a nun.

Monastics visit fraternity near Rutgers University in New Brunswick, NJ, for lunch (Lee Hale).
.
One of the frat boys answers. His name is Michael Porucznik: "It's like a social group, mostly, I would say."

To be honest, all this feels sort of awkward. I'm a little worried these frat boys might be messing with the monks.

But they're respectful and they're asking legitimate, thoughtful questions [about Buddhism, sprituality, and monasticism]. The mom in me is sort of proud of them – even though it's clear that some of them are ditching class [which are optional to attend once one gets to college in the US].

Ayyā Somā asks the students what inspired them to make these offerings. Michael sits up on a worn-out red couch and sort of stutters into his answer: "I very much admire people who discipline themselves to like a specific aspect of life. And I feel like it's also good karma." Everyone laughs.

"We also think it's good karma," the nun Ayyā Somā replies. Chatting with a bunch of monastics for a half an hour isn't likely to turn these guys into Buddhists [or reduce their pot and alcohol abuse]. But who knows what seeds the conversation has planted in their 20-year-old brains?

And that's sort of the deal with Buddhism. There's no proselytizing. In the car on the way back to the monastery, Bhante Suddhāso tells me it's just the opposite:

"Buddhists play hard to get," he says. This is maybe why it's appealing to a lot of people: Buddhist monastics might end up at your frat house eating tacos, but they're not going to knock on the door to try to convert them.

In fact, most of the time, they're at their monastery doing their own individual spiritual work. Just before the pandemic, they moved their home base from Queens to this center in West Orange.

They got a great deal on the place (the monastery grounds) from the Augustinian monks who had lived there before.

The Catholics were downsizing and moving west, and Ayyā Somā and Bhante Suddhāso, the co-founders of Empty Cloud Monastery, needed more space.

"They were just really overjoyed that another group of monks wanted to take over the monastery," Bhante Suddhāso told me.

The building itself has a medieval castle vibe. There's a stained-glass window in the meditation room with an image of Noah's Ark on it, and there's a cross on the roof.

For now, the monastics jokingly say the cross stands for the Four Noble Truths — which Italian nun Ayyā Somā says can be distilled to this from the Buddha's teachings:

"All he ever taught was [what is] suffering [or dukkha, "disappointment," lack of fulfillment), [what is] the cause of suffering, [what is] the end of suffering, and [what is] the way out of suffering. So that's all we are practicing. [What we are practicing] is that, um, for the cessation of suffering."

This sounds great, right? No one wants to suffer. I don't want to suffer.

The joy of renunciation
There's happiness in letting go to be free.
But I needed to understand why pulling away from modern life, the way Buddhist monastics do, alleviates suffering, because it's no joke what they have to give up  to be monastics:
  • They pledge to live in celibacy.
  • No meals after midday.
  • No intoxicants [that occasion heedlessness] of any kind.
  • No pop culture. No [handling] money.
"The word renunciation [letting go, not being clingy, nekkhama] for some people has a negative connotation," Bhante says. "But for us, renunciation means recognizing that we don't need something in order to be happy."

For example, he explains, "When I was a lay person, which was a very long time ago now — 15 plus years ago – I needed to always have music playing."

If it wasn't music in the car, he was listening to headphones. "Like, it was just constant. And so, then getting into this [monastic] life, it's like, well, one of our rules is that we don't listen to [recreational distraction] music. So, clearly, I thought I needed that, but I don't need it."

"Do you miss music, though?" I ask. "No," he replies with a laugh.

Nun Ayyā Somā chimes in: "Essentially, from the 'fear of missing out,' from FOMO, we go to JOMO, the 'joy of missing out'."

They point out that this level of renunciation only represents about 1 percent of Buddhists worldwide [the ones who ordain to become celibate monastics].

I still don't understand exactly what these two get out of this really restrictive life. What is Buddhism freeing them from personally?

And I really want to know what they make of the fact that when I Googled "Buddhist retreat," a whole slew of places popped up where I could probably also get a hot stone massage and a facial peel.

Empty Cloud Monastery practices with members of the public. Its doors are open (Suparman W).
.
As I was about to ask this question, we hear a bell ring, and Bhante Suddhāso tells me we can take up the matter in the Dharma hall. Turns out, monastics are highly scheduled people.

It's time to move to a different room, where we join the other residents — the lay people who stay at the monastery for days or weeks at a time.

We're all situated on individual meditation cushions, with the monastics facing the rest of us at the front of the room.

Everyone sips tea and eats small pieces of cheese and dark chocolate...the only approved afternoon snacks.

There's a big golden statue of the Buddha on the mantle above the fireplace. Bhante Suddhāso pets Teddy, the black monastery cat, and I get another swing at my question: I ask him what he makes of how mindfulness has made its way into the mainstream of American culture. Like, is that a good thing or a bad thing?

"I think it's mixed," he tells me. "The Buddha does identify mindfulness as being a wholesome characteristic of mind, so wholesome in the sense that it's, it's [so] beneficial that it brings happiness, it leads towards awakening," he explains.

"But it's still only one factor of the [Noble] Eightfold Path. So if one is only practicing mindfulness, then at best you're practicing, uh, 12.5% of Buddhism, which is not a complete path to awakening. So it's kind of like if you're making a cake and a cake calls for eight ingredients, and you're like, well, I'm just going to leave out seven of those ingredients. Well, that's not a cake. That's a bowl of raw eggs."

Here at the monastery they're interested in the whole cake, which involves rising before sunrise, chores in the house and the yard, and finishing all meals [except for allowable snacks] before noon.

Being on this path also means letting go of the big things you can't change and focusing on what's happening in your own consciousness.

I've dabbled in meditation over the years. I started as a way to deal with my own grief after my mom died from kidney cancer.

But the longest I'd ever sat and tried to meditate was, maybe, 15 minutes. So when it was time to go down to the meditation hall for an hour of silent sitting, I was a bit freaked out.

I situated myself on my meditation pillow, my eyes closed, and took in some deep breaths, like everyone else was doing. This wasn't a guided meditation for beginners.

There were a few monastics in the room with about six other residents, and it was clear they knew what they were doing. Me, not so much.

Bhante Suddhāso had told me to come up with a mantra and just say that over and over. He suggested the words "loving kindness," so I went with that.

Breathe in, breathe out. Loving kindness. "Yes," I thought, "I am killing this meditation." Then it started to unravel: "Are they seriously not going to feed us dinner? Did my kids get a ride to baseball tonight? How am I going to sleep here?

"Wait, no...Loving kindness. Loving kindness. Kindness. Do the monks get to pick out their own robes? Does Ayyā Somā miss make-up? It's really hard to do a smokey eye."

Needless to say, I didn't reach any higher level of consciousness. But there were people who seemed to have.

When I snuck a peek during the meditation, I caught a glimpse of this young woman named Katie McKenna. She's not a monastic, but she was sitting perfectly still, no fidgeting. And she was always smiling.

She had definitely figured something out. I caught up with her later, and we chatted for a bit. She said she's been a Buddhist for about 10 years. She was laid off from her tech job earlier this year, and after that happened, she hightailed it to her happy place -- the monastery.

She tries to visit Buddhist monasteries whenever she can. She used to suffer from a lot of anxiety, but she says Buddhism has changed that: "I hardly ever have anxiety anymore. I just feel a lot of joy."

"I grew up in Indiana," she continued. "So, there's a lot of Christianity around me. And I feel like people would just proselytize and tell me, like, this is the way. So I feel like I've just had this innate trust with Buddhism because there was this teaching – to come and see for yourself."

I asked if there was any part of her that wanted to go all in and become a monastic. "Yeah. That does come up for me from time to time. It's come up for my boyfriend, too, actually. We broke up for a little bit in September, briefly, 'cuz we were both struggling with, like fully giving ourselves to the relationship because we both had this inclination in our mind towards monasticism."

They stopped watching TV and movies. No music. No dinner. They meditate for long periods of time every day.

"The cool thing about this path," she says, "is it just starts happening to you."

It definitely wasn't just happening to me. I mean, I'd only been at this for a few days, but I was more interested in a form of [modernized] Buddhism that let me live in my actual life.

I needed to talk to someone who wasn't about to shave her head and move into the monastery. I found Sudha Ram. Sudha wasn't staying at the monastery like the others, but she lives in the neighborhood and comes over a lot.

Within a few minutes of talking with her, it becomes clear that she has endured a lot of disappointments in life. And right now, she is working through problems in her marriage.

She tells me that Buddhism has taught her things that her Hindu faith never did. "If you don't love yourself and put yourself in front of others who are not gonna give you love, you're not gonna be successful. So I give loving kindness to myself. I give loving kindness to the other people who need to be given loving kindness. That helps a lot because the anger, the rejection, and, you know, the ill feeling, come often."

I think she's about to share more about her relationship with her husband, or her kids, or something about work. But she starts telling me about her dog, a golden retriever named Simba who died not long ago.

The dog came to her in her dreams. "He came to me, and he said, 'Mom, what did you learn from me?' I had to think, what did I learn from him? I know he was very loving. He was a golden retriever. He loves people, he loves pets, he loves everybody."

"So I said, 'Yeah, you are very loving.' And he said, 'Mom, you are very loving, too. But you still have judgment. You still judge. I'm not. I love everybody. So that's the difference.'"

I know how bizarre this sounds. I'm sitting in the basement of this Buddhist monastery, talking with this woman [investigative journalist and NPR reporter] I barely know, about her dead dog who talks to her in her dreams.

And tears are welling up in her eyes and then in mine. And I get that her grief and loneliness are bigger than this story. And we hold hands briefly across a table. And I share my own losses with her. And none of it is healed, but there is a comfort in that shared intimacy between strangers.

Letting go
Letting go may be the Buddhist precept for ending suffering. But I think, just as important as the letting go is the letting in.

Letting monastics into the frat house. Letting a journalist into your monastery. Letting a stranger into your grief. Yes, the ultimate enlightenment happens internally — when you free your mind from attachment and longing.

But awakening also happens when you are willing to step into the breach with someone else [and experience empathy]. To be present in their pain and have them witness yours.

Pali [a kind of lingua franca related to Sanskrit] is the ancient language of Buddhism, and Ayyā Somā told me that her favorite Pali word is kampa, "which literally means 'trembling together.' Sometimes we focus a lot on our trembling, or the trembling of the other person.

"But we don't realize that it's actually the same trembling, and we're all trembling together."

Buddhism may teach that the individual has the power to ease their own suffering, but true contentment requires us all to care about each other.

It's not about being alone in our mind on the mat. Buddhist monastics still have to engage with the rest of the world. And the world has to engage back. We share our stories with strangers and absorb one another's grief. We tremble, together.

Monday, June 13, 2016

How to behave at a Buddhist temple (video)

Georgia Diebelius (Daily Mail) edited by Wisdom Quarterly; Hunter Ellis (Digging for the Truth)
Khmer king riding an elephant around a Buddhist complex sees a sexy woman (DM).
(Digging for the Truth/TheSaffronSIKH) Host Hunter Ellis visits world famous Angkor, Cambodia
Code of conduct prohibits skimpy clothing, smoking, and giving money to children (DM).


No selfies with monks, no revealing clothing, and no smoking! Hilarious video shows tourists how to behave at Angkor Wat, Buddhist temple.
  • Handing money to kids and touching temple reliefs forbidden.
  • Do not climb, place feet on ancient stone art, or graffiti.
  • Code of conduct video sent to every TV channel in Cambodia.
Cracking down on inappropriate behavior, Angkor Wat in Cambodia has released a hilarious new video urging tourists to take note of their code of conduct.
 
The two-minute clip starts off with a Khmer king, riding through the grounds of the complex on the back of an elephant -- before he suddenly halts after noticing a woman's strappy heels.

Issues addressed in the footage include travelers taking selfies with monks, handing money to children and touching temple reliefs. More

Friday, September 27, 2013

The Nun and the Libertine - Better than Sex

Dhr. Seven, Amber Larson, Ashley Wells, Wisdom Quarterly, based on Ven. Thanissaro translation Subha Jivakambavanika, Psalms of the Sisters (Therigatha 14.1)
What's a beautiful, enlightened, celibate nun to do? (sodahead.com)
 
The delightful grove by day
As the Buddhist nun (theri) Subha was wandering through Jivaka's delightful mango grove, some libertine (a goldsmith's son) blocked her path. She said to him:
 
"What wrong have I done you that you stand in my way? It is not proper, friend, that a man should touch a woman who has gone forth [entered upon the spiritual life of renunciation]. I respect the Master's message, the training pointed out by the Well-gone One. I am pure and without blemish:
 
"Why do you stand in my way? You -- your mind/heart agitated, and I -- unagitated; you -- impassioned, I -- unimpassioned, unblemished, with a mind everywhere released: Why do you stand in my way?" 
 
Wait says the Libertine (Bighead4144/flickr)
[He answered:] "You are young and good looking, so what need have you of going forth? Throw off your saffron robe. Come, let's delight in the flowering forest! A sweetness they exude from all around, the blossoming trees with their pollen. The beginning of spring is a pleasant season.
 
"Come, let's delight in the flowering forest! The trees with their blossoming tips moan in the breeze: What delight will you have if you plunge into the forest alone? Frequented by herds of wild beasts, disturbed by elephants rutting and aroused, you want to go unaccompanied into the great, lonely, frightening forest?
 
The forest grows scary in the dark with its unseen creatures and wild beasts
 
"Like a doll made of gold, you will go about like a goddess (devi) in the gardens of heaven. With fine and delicate Kasi fabrics, you will shine, O beauty without equal! I would be under your power if we were to dwell in the woods. For there is no creature dearer to me than you, O nymph with languid regard. If you'll do as I ask, happy, come live in my house! Dwelling in the calm of a palace, have women wait on you, wear delicate Kasi fabrics, adorn yourself with garlands and creams. I will make you many and varied ornaments of gold, jewels, and pearls."
 
This wig looks great on you.
"Climb onto a costly bed, scented with carved sandalwood, with a beautiful, well-washed coverlet, spread with a new woolen quilt. Like a blue lotus rising from the water, where there dwell spirits, you will go to old age with your limbs unseen, if you stay as you are in the renounced life."
 
[She said:] "What do you assume of any essence, here in this cemetery grower, filled with corpses, this body destined to break up? What do you see when you look at me, you who are out of your mind?"
 
[He said:] "Your eyes are like those of a fawn, like those of a nymph in the mountains. Seeing your eyes, my sensual delight grows all the more. Like the tips of blue lotuses are they in your golden face -- spotless: Seeing your eyes, my sensual delight grows all the more. Even if you should go far away, I will think only of your sparkling, long-lashed gaze, for there is nothing dearer to me than your eyes, O nymph with languid regard."
 
Golden white Buddha (sukhothai-tourism)
[She said:] "You want to stray from the road! You want the Moon as a plaything! You want to jump over Mount Sineru -- you who have designs on one born of the Buddha [Enlightened One]. For there is nothing anywhere at all in the world with its devas that would be an object of passion for me. I do not even know what that passion would be, for it has been undone, root and all, by the Path. Like embers from a fire pit -- scattered, like a bowl of poison -- evaporated, I do not so much as see what that passion would be, for it has been undone, root and all, by the Path. Try to seduce one who has not reflected on this, or whom the Master has not instructed. But try it with this one who knows, and you do yourself harm! For whether insulted or worshiped, in pleasure or pain, my mindfulness stands firm. Knowing the unattractiveness of compounded things, my heart adheres nowhere at all. I am a follower of the Well-gone One, riding the vehicle of the Noble Eightfold Way: My arrow removed, canker-free, I delight, having gone to an empty dwelling. For I have seen well-painted puppets, hitched up with sticks and strings, made to dance in various ways. When the sticks and strings are removed, thrown away, scattered, shredded, smashed to pieces, not to be found, in what will the mind there make its home? This body of mine, which is just like that, when devoid of phenomena, does not function. When, devoid of phenomena, it does not function, in what will the mind there make its home?
 
"Like a mural seen painted on a wall, smeared with yellow pigment, there your vision has been distorted, meaningless your human perception! Like an evaporated mirage, like a tree of gold in a dream, like a magic show in the midst of a crowd -- you run blind after what is unreal. Resembling a ball of sealing wax, set in a hollow, with a bubble in the middle and bathed with tears, eye secretions are born there too: The parts of the eye are rolled all together in various ways." 
 
Oh, no, Lisa! What have you done? That's gross. I'm sorry I was hitting on you!
 
Plucking out her lovely eye, with mind unattached she felt no regret. "Here, take this eye. It is yours." Straightaway [dispassionately] she gave it to him. His passion shriveled right then and there, and he begged for her forgiveness. "Be safe, follower of the renounced life. This sort of thing will not happen again! Harming a person like you is like embracing a blazing fire. It is as if I have seized a poisonous snake. So may you be safe! Forgive me."
 
And freed from there, the nun went to the unexcelled Buddha's presence. And when she saw the mark of his excellent merit, her eye became as it was before.

Wednesday, April 7, 2010

Buddhist monks vow anti-government protests


Burma's Saffron Revolution was led by Buddhist monks, brothers of the Sri Lankan Sangha

(Sify News) Sri Lanka's influential Buddhist clergy vowed on Monday to launch a wave of anti-government protests after police arrested a dozen monks who demanded the release of the jailed former army chief. The National Bhikkhu Front (NBF) accused President Mahinda Rajapakse's government of committing an "unforgivable [error]" when police beat and arrested 12 monks staging a fast outside the main railway station in the capital Colombo. "The fast was to press for the release of General Sarath Fonseka," NBF head Dambara Amila told reporters in Colombo. "The government will have to pay for this." More>>

Buddhist monks fast to death for Fonseka’s release
(Daily Mirror) Four Buddhist monks who are members of the newly formed "People’s Forum for Redemption of the General" began a fasting campaign calling for the immediate release of detained General (Retired) Sarath Fonseka yesterday. The death fast was being carried out in front of the Fort Railway Station where a hut had been erected for the monks. Banners calling for the release of Fonseka were seen near the spot together with continuous chanting of protective chants (pirith).

Tuesday, March 3, 2009

World's Worst Cultural Mistakes

"When in Rome" (or "When around Romans")
Dharmachari

Americans are so lax, it's hard to imagine anyone has an enforceable etiquette code. But they do. In Buddhist circles, due to the Vinaya (monastic code) rules, both monks and nuns should not be touched or hemmed in. This is especially true of members of the opposite sex. This means avoid extending a friendly or formal handshake. Or at the very least, don't be offended if your hand is left hanging in midair. It's a cultural mistake. You will cause embarrassment and tension. This is because your hand can neither be shaken nor is a monk or nun likely to be able to explain why right at that moment. Other cultures know. And anyone who doesn't will seem a barbarian.
  • What to do instead: Place your palms together (anjali mudra) and bow ever so slightly.
But it doesn't stop there. Etiquette dictates one never point one's feet at anyone or pat anyone on the head (even cute kids). Moreover, the soles of one's feet should never be pointed in the direction of an altar, a Buddha figure or depiction, or monastics. Doing so is a major faux pas. And even if you're not told anything, you will be hurting feelings.

What's the problem? (It's comparable to using a flag to blow your nose. It's just cotton! It may indeed just be cotton. But the significance of that design goes far beyond the fabric. Not only human beings, even the unseen beings might take offense).

  • What to do instead: Be mindful of your feet; point with your hands; face your outstretched legs in a different direction.
Finally, with regard to monastics, you should not be alone with the opposite sex at anytime. Even the appearance of impropriety is a breach of their avowed monastic code. There are certainly monastics who are lax in their observance, or more relaxed in mixed company, or more observant of situational ethics. Alone they may be very relaxed and stiffen up suddenly in the company of other monks who would criticize them.

What to do instead: Make sure a member of the monastic's sex is also present; it is also vital to make sure that third person is able to understand the language you and the monastic are speaking in to avoid the possibility that something untoward is being discussed in that third person's presence.
Don’t let blowing your nose or taking off your shoes land you in hot water when you travel
Sallie Brady

Touching Someone
Where It’s Offensive: Korea, Thailand, China, Europe, the Middle East.
What’s Offensive: Personal space varies as you travel the globe. In Mediterranean countries, if you refrain from touching someone’s arm when talking to them or if you don’t greet them with kisses or a warm embrace, you’ll be considered cold. But backslap someone who isn’t a family member or a good friend in Korea, and you’ll make them uncomfortable. In Thailand, the head is considered sacred — never even pat a child on the head.
  • What You Should Do Instead: Observe what locals are doing and follow suit. In Eastern countries remember that touching and public displays of affection are unacceptable. In places like Qatar and Saudi Arabia, men and women are forbidden from interacting, let along touching.
Knowing Your Right from Your Left
Where It’s Offensive: India, Morocco, Africa, the Middle East.
What’s Offensive: Many cultures still prefer to eat using traditional methods — their hands. In these cases, food is often offered communally, which is why it’s important to wash your hands before eating and observe the right-hand-is-for-eating and the left-hand-is-for-other-duties rule. If you eat with your left hand, expect your fellow diners to be mortified. And when partaking from a communal bowl, stick to a portion that’s closest to you. Do not get greedy and plunge your hand into the center.
  • What You Should Do Instead: Left-handed? Attempt to be ambidextrous — even children who are left-handed in these cultures are taught to eat with their right hand — or at least explain yourself to your fellow diners before plunging in.
Keeping Your Clothes On
Where It’s Offensive: Scandinavian countries, Turkey.
What’s Offensive: Wearing bathing suits, shorts and T-shirts, underwear, or any other piece of clothing into a sauna, hammam, or other place of physical purification. In some cultures, a steam room or a sauna is considered a place of purity and reflection, where the outside world (i.e., your clothes) should be left outside. In some Scandinavian countries it’s common for entire families to sauna together in the nude.
  • What You Should Do Instead: Sitting on a folded towel is considered acceptable. If you’re too modest to appear naked, strip down, but wrap yourself in a towel.
Getting Lei'd Off
Where It’s Offensive: Hawaii.
What’s Offensive: Refusing or immediately removing a lei.
  • What You Should Do Instead: Leis in the Hawaiian Islands aren’t just pretty floral necklaces that you get when you check into your hotel or show up at a luau. They’re a centuries-old cultural symbol of welcome, friendship, and appreciation. Never refuse a lei — it’s considered highly disrespectful — or whip it off in the giver’s presence. If you’re allergic to the flowers, explain so, but offer to put it in some place of honor, say in the center of the table, or on a statue. Note that closed leis should be worn not hanging from the neck, but over the shoulder, with half draped down your chest and the other half down your back.
Looking Them in the Eye … or Not
Where It’s Offensive: Korea, Japan, Germany.
What’s Offensive: For Americans, not making direct eye contact can be considered rude, indifferent, or weak, but be careful how long you hold someone’s gaze in other countries. In some Asian nations, prolonged eye contact will make a local uncomfortable, so don’t be offended if you’re negotiating a deal with someone who won’t look you straight in the eye. If toasting with friends in a German beer hall, your eyes had better meet theirs — if they don’t, a German superstition says you’re both in for seven years of bad luck in the bedroom.
  • What You Should Do Instead: Avoid constant staring and follow the behavior of your host — and by all means, look those Germans straight on.
Drinking Alcohol the Wrong Way
Where It’s Offensive: Latin America, France, Korea, Russia.
What’s Offensive: Every culture has different traditions when it comes to drinking etiquette. Fail to consume a vodka shot in one gulp in Russia, and your host will not be impressed. Refill your own wine glass in France without offering more to the rest of the table, and you’ve made a faux pas. In Korea, women can pour only men’s drinks — not other women’s — and if you want a refill, you need to drain your glass. And if you’re in Latin America, never pour with your left hand — that’s bad luck.
  • What You Should Do Instead: Until you’re culturally fluent, leave it to your pals to pour.
Blowing Your Nose
Where It’s Offensive: Japan, China, Saudi Arabia, France.
What’s Offensive: Some cultures find it disgusting to blow your nose in public — especially at the table. The Japanese and Chinese are also repelled by the idea of a handkerchief. As Mark McCrum points out in his book Going Dutch in Beijing, the Japanese word hanakuso unpleasantly means nose waste.
  • What You Should Do Instead: If traveling through Eastern and Asian countries, leave the hankies at home and opt for disposable tissues instead. In France as well as in Eastern countries, if you’re dining and need to clear your nasal passages, excuse yourself and head to the restroom. Worst-case scenario: make an exaggerated effort to steer away from the table. Let’s hope you don’t have a cold.
Removing Your Shoes…or Not
Where It’s Offensive: Hawaii, the South Pacific, Korea, China, Thailand.
What’s Offensive: Take off your shoes when arriving at the door of a London dinner party and the hostess will find you uncivilized, but fail to remove your shoes before entering a home in Asia, Hawaii, or the Pacific Islands and you’ll be considered disrespectful. Not only does shoe removal very practically keeps sand and dirt out of the house, it’s a sign of leaving the outside world behind.
  • What You Should Do Instead: If you see a row of shoes at the door, start undoing your laces. If not, keep the shoes on.
Talking Over Dinner
Where It’s Offensive: Africa, Japan, Thailand, China, Finland.
What’s Offensive: In some countries, like China, Japan, and some African nations, the food’s the thing, so don’t start chatting about your day’s adventures while everyone else is digging into dinner. You’ll likely be met with silence—not because your group is unfriendly, but because mealtimes are for eating, not talking. Also avoid conversations in places a country might consider sacred or reflective—churches in Europe, temples in Thailand, and saunas in Finland.
  • What You Should Do Instead: Keep quiet!
Road Rage
Where It’s Offensive: Hawaii, Russia, France, Italy, around the globe.
What’s Offensive: Honk on Molokai or fail to pay a police officer a fine, a.k.a. bribe, on the spot when you’re stopped for speeding in Russia, and you’ll risk everything from scorn to prison time. Remember, too, that hand gestures have different meanings in other countries — a simple “thumbs-up” is interpreted as an “up yours“ in parts of the Middle East.
  • What You Should Do Instead: When driving abroad, make sure you have an international driver’s license; never, ever practice road rage; and keep your hands on the wheel.

Source

The Worst (and Most Common) Etiquette Mistakes

Party Poopers
When you receive an invitation to a dinner or party--whether by Evite, voicemail, or casual email--RESPOND. Yeah, that’s what that little “RSVP” thing means. Everyone knows it, yet it’s amazing how many don’t respond. Even for weddings! Planning a party or event requires a lot of work, so do the host a simple favor and let them know if you're coming or not.

Nickel & Dimin’
How annoying is it when you go to dinner with four or more people, the check finally arrives, and one of your meal companions begins to divvy up the check down to the last penny? Sure, we get that Sally had a shrimp salad, and Janet had two iced teas, while Beth only had water, and you ordered a slice of peach pie (a la mode, which is extra). The point is, if you go out to dinner with a group, be prepared to split the bill more or less evenly. If there's an outstanding cost differential, fine, estimate it and be done with it. The person who spends twenty minutes dividing the bill to the dime comes off as a cheapskate –- and kills the festive mood.

The Line-Up
Lines are a fact of life. At the post office, the supermarket, just about everywhere these days. For starters, moaners who huff and gripe about standing in a line of three people for all of five minutes are tops on our list. Get over yourself -- if you don’t have a few minutes to wait to buy that loaf of bread, then pick it up another time. Another thing: Don’t show your impatience by creeping up so close to the person in front of you that they can feel your breath. Crowding those around you will not get you to the front any faster, so give them some space. Finally, cutting in line or trying to ignore the fact that there IS a line –- stop it! Everyone’s time is valuable.

The ME Show
It’s great to hear all the crazy, wacky, wonderful things happening in the lives of others. Jobs, engagements, breakups, boyfriends, puppies, pregnancies, vacations — very good stuff, all of it. But once you’ve listened to a friend, family member, or colleague spout about their own fabulous life for an hour (or two), it’s normal to expect them to ask, “So, what’s going on with you?” Those who blab on about themselves while you listen intently, then don’t ask a thing about you in return are just plain rude.

Baby Biz
Changing a poopy baby diaper around others is nasty -- and we're moms. Changing the other kind of baby diaper in public is one thing, but still should only be done when absolutely necessary!

Mobile Madness
As much as we love the modern age, there are days when we long to go to a coffee shop, movie theatre, bookstore, or post office and not hear some teen queen dishing to her friend about last night's hot date with Todd or eavesdrop (unwillingly) on a screaming family feud. Mobile phones are essential, but please, people, pleeeeeeease, use a little restraint on the when's, what's, and where's. We're happy that Todd is "totally built" but we're going to have to start walking around town and slapping people with "TMI" tickets (yes, too much information).

Smokes
Everyone has a right to smoke in public, but be conscious of whose face your smoke is blowing into. Are there kids nearby? And we just might kick the butt of the next person we see throwing their burning butt on the ground without putting it out. Really, find an ashtray or trashcan where you can extinguish and dispose of it properly -- that thing is garbage, not decoration for our streets and sidewalks.

The Pee & Flee
Public bathrooms get used by everyone -- yup, they're public! So, making a mess of the toilet seat, and then prancing out without bothering to wipe it up -- not cool. Leaving a mess for the next visitor is completely unacceptable (and disgustingly unsanitary, of course). Take 10 seconds to rip off a piece of toilet paper, toilet seat cover, or a paper towel, and do your due diligence!
Stealing...a parking spot, that is. Yeah, you know who you are. If someone has their blinker on and is patiently waiting for a spot, it's theirs. And if you've already passed a spot up, it's gone. Treat others as you expect to be treated, and the parking goddesses will smile down upon you... eventually.

Belly Baring
Men, women -- anyone who's passed puberty, everyone who isn't lounging poolside or oceanside -- resist the urge to bare those bellies. They may be beautiful, Buddha-like, jolly, but sometimes they can be flabby, hairy, and not ripe for public consumption. If you're jogging, fellas, t-shirts or tanks won't hurt your workout, so throw one on. Gals, midriff fashions are never really on our "Do" list, and that goes double if your age doesn't contain the word "teen." There are plenty of ways for all of us to flaunt what we got without sharing our tum-tums with the world.

Spitting
This gets especially yucky when it's one of those enormous globs that looks like it could be alive. Some people (males, in particular) think it's kind of a cool-guy thing to do. We're here to tell ya that no one wants to see you hock a big gooey one out of your car, onto the sidewalk, or anywhere else for that matter. Try a tissue.

Honking
Problem People who honk too often, too unnecessarily, or just to express their emotions are on our list of Most Etiquette Challenged. If you're trying to warn someone about a collision or problem, fine, otherwise it's not that serious. Give it a rest!