Wednesday, September 30, 2015

Autumn – Petersham, Massachusetts
Enlightened nature
accessible to all
(recently published)

So what are we waiting for? One may ask how do I reach this state of mindfulness? Overcoming recent troublesome and disturbing personal circumstances, returning to the source of "what is accessible to all," can only report, in the middle of a night filled with pain, making my way through the rapids, finding calm waters, stillness, and sleep. A small  miracle.

  Seeking to “experience the realm of mind and consciousness in its natural, spontaneous state,” is to discover the implicit reality—that the “buddha (enlightened) nature” exists within each of us and is accessible to all, and that our ultimate goal always will be to attain enlightenment in this lifetime; to serve others with compassionate hearts, mindful that, in reality, the nature of all existence is not in opposing forms, but like space.
  “This guy’s really off his rocker,” you say? – out of touch with reality because our world today is fraught with “opposing forms,” contentions, ignorance, stupidity. Assuredly it  will take an eternity for the ignorant, the “stupid and those of little with” to dig their way out of the morass to discover that paths to enlightened mindfulness do indeed exist and are accessible—eternally, as long as there is life on this planet. The driving force of energy which causes everything to live is present, always, and all living beings are one substance with it.
  When Shakyamuni Buddha, who lived in this world, not apart from it, beheld men and women suffering, by his power of wisdom, “knowing the natures and inclinations of creatures,” at first tactfully proclaimed the laws which would cause all to obtain gladness.” Observing with the eyes of wisdom, “the creatures in the six states of existence, poor and without happiness and wisdom on the dangerous path of mortality, in continuous unending misery, firmly fettered by the five desires like the yak caring for its tail, smothered by greed and infatuation, blinded and seeing nothing, seeking not the Buddha’s wisdom,  and the Law to end suffering, but deeply fall into heresies, and seek by suffering to be rid of suffering,” he does not condemn, nor judge. Rather, he proclaims, “for the sake of all these creatures, my heart is stirred with great pity,” and proceeds to seek means and methods to motivate them to travel the path leading to happiness, and ultimately Perfect Enlightenment.
  The Buddha and his teachings found in the sutras, (the above from chapter 2, “Tactfulness”) are the original source of all teachings leading to celebrating life with compassion, reaching enlightenment—all evolve from the matrix of the appearing, historical Shakyamuni’s teachings during his lifetime, and resonate today with other teachings, whether scientific or metaphysical. The ultimate value of gaining mindfulness of his teachings will be seen within the ebb and flow of our lives—most surprisingly in our participating, loving, lighting up the hopes and dreams of others; realizing intuitively a sense of our miraculous inter-connection with others.
  [written in 2012] Today, negotiating crowded city streets and highways in my faithful Buick Skyhawk, vintage 1984, I no longer contest, allowing others to do their thing; a sense of inner peace, amused by those who contend, no longer engaging in the competition to “get there first.”
  I’m already there—traveling “lost,” arriving here and now.
  We don’t need to be anywhere – from the Diamond Sutra: “Subhuti, first among those who abides in peace, free from strife and passion, does not abide anywhere, that is why he is called one who abides in peace.”
  A man suddenly appears to help me  fix a flat tire. A waitress remembers my name. I maneuver the shopping cart among the crowd, evoking shared laughter when I come close to plowing down an old lady and say, “We need traffic lights, I think.” The mundane . . . the passion . . . the profound. “A jealous one raises the mind of joy.” Enlightened awareness becomes accessible.

Sunday, September 27, 2015

Full Moon Eclipse at 5° Aries
Sunday, September 27, 2015 (7:48 pm PDT)

”A Triangle with Wings”
possessing the power to transcend

Adding Another Thread
to the Mandala of Buddha-wisdom


  Full Moon eclipse as our Earth’s shadow covers its surface should remind us that all shades of our humanity are revealed as one vast, interconnected humanity, each one of us possessing the  power to transcend our differences.
One should know that the
Perfect Wisdom is a great mantra,
is the highest mantra, is the unequaled mantra.
” – from The Prajña Paramita Sutra (The Perfect Wisdom Sutra)

  We’re all being reborn at every moment. Look upon each morning as a rebirth and we may understand that only this one day exists. What will happen next time is completely dependent upon what we are doing now, therefore only “now” is important. “Now” is the cause; next life is the result. – Ayya Khema, Being Nobody, Going Nowhere in Buddhist Inspirations. “One instant is eternity; eternity is now.” – Wu-Men

Living with compassion,
love’s end is not the end,
as so it was the moment
the universe was born,
a single spark of energy
becomes everything that is.
– “Worlds I Dream” Remembering New York Years – DFS

    “We beholding this, attain that which has never been before.” – from Chapter 1, Introductory, The Lotus Sutra, as Maitreya Bodhisattva sees the eighteen thousand lands in the eastern quarter illuminated by the ray from the Buddha’s eyebrows, the various manifestations of Buddha Wisdom in the world, and the power we all possess to illuminate our worlds with wisdom, here and  now.
  “The Buddha-wisdom, is pure and minute, faultless and unhindered, penetrating through infinite kalpas.” – Chapter 7, “Parable of  the Magic City

Monday, September 14, 2015

SEAL OF THE THREE LAWS
All things are impermanent – reminds us to follow the natural direction of human life toward enlightened awareness, knowing that the one thing that is unchangeable and permanent is the cause to live.

Nothing has an ego – without exception all things, existences, all living in the world are related to one another—there is nothing that leads to an isolated existence.

Nirvana is quiescence – nirvana is a state of mind to be cherished in the moment as we extinguish all illusions, a quiet stage in which we cling to nothing in our continuing celebration of life.

Saturday, September 12, 2015


Stories from the Lotus Sutra
(second entry)


“together with its reasoning and process . . .”

  As for the sutras themselves, the Buddha’s teachings are enshrined in The Threefold Lotus Sutra, or Lotus Sutra, a gathering of all his teachings. Reading, reciting, committing to memory passages from the Lotus Sutra, returning to the sutra each day, render insights into benefits derived from instilling the teachings in one’s mind and heart, emancipation from that which holds us back from participating with others in making this a better world—the ultimate goal, to live and act as a bodhisattva, a person of compassion.
  This is not an intellectual journey, nor is it required to beseech, extol, or depend upon a deity. The very nature of the stories, events related, examples set by the Buddha and great personages offer stunning examples of how to enrich our lives and practice compassion, work our through and overcome obstacles and negativity, to see beyond illusions which prevent us from continuing along an enlightened path, enhance our experiences with grander perspectives, discover moments of joy in encounters with others. Returning to and embracing, contemplating, reading, reciting the Lotus Sutra each day, is to participate in the great drama of life itself. As a path to follow, the “Buddha-way” presented in the Lotus may seem remote and unrelated to today’s chaotic  world—but is it?
  “. . . The mysterious laws that have been attained by the buddhas (enlightened ones) each on their wisdom thrones, those who can awaken to this sutra must surely gain ere long. Those who can awaken to this sutra shall the meaning of the laws with their terms and expressions delightedly expound without end like the wind in the sky, which never has impediment. After the Tathagata (“one who comes  from the truth”—the Buddha) is extinct. such a one, knowing this sutra that the Buddha has taught, together with its reasoning and process, shall expound it according to its true meaning.
  “Just as the light of the sun and moon can dispel the darkness, so shall they, working in the world, disperse the gloom of the living and cause numberless bodhisattvas finally to abide in the one vehicle. Therefore, those who have wisdom, hearing the benefits of this sutra after I am extinct, should receive and keep this sutra. These sons and daughters shall in the Way of the Buddha be fixed and have no doubts.”