Tuesday, November 22, 2016


Fundamental Guideposts (5)
“Springing up out of the Earth”

The Buddha proclaims: once one awakens to his or her own buddha-nature, one becomes an eternal being like the Tathagata (the Buddha—“one who comes from the truth” and whose mission is to reveal it); one  who possesses supreme wisdom and  exercises infinite compassion.
For an enlightened person, this real world where we live is identical in essence with the Pure Land of Tranquil Light.
practice of the vow – to have a spirit of great compassion and to raise the mind of vowing to lead all people to the Lotus Sutra and to practice its spirit.
If a person realizes the wisdom of the Buddha, mental darkness will instantly disappear. We must realize fully that the wisdom of the Buddha is absolute.
To become pure to the depths of one’s mind, to become compassionate, always call on the name of the Buddha.
To truly understand and believe the sutra reveals one who is spiritually sensitive to the teaching and who is ripe to bear the fruit of the accumulated karma of one’s former lives—the unfinished business from past lives.
great bodhisattvas who spring up out of the earth – the Buddha entrusts the suffering world to the bodhisattvas who emerge from the earth (in ch. 15) – the world in which we live should be purified and made peaceful through our own efforts as dwellers in the world. Realize happiness in our lives through our own efforts. We are all responsible.
Bodhisattvas who spring out of the earth are people who have had much suffering during their lives; have accumulated virtues in such an unfavorable environment, and have attained enlightenment while leading ordinary lives—freed from illusions in their previous lives by means of the Buddha’s teachings.

Sunday, November 20, 2016

Fundamental Guideposts (4)

Four vows of the Great Bodhisattva-Mahasattvas:
♦  I vow to save all living beings without limit.
♦  I vow to end the numberless distresses.
♦  I vow to know all laws without end.
♦  I vow to accomplish the supreme Buddha-way.

The sun reaches 10° Capricorn at the end of each calendar year.  Its astrological symbol in Dane Rudhyar’s Astrological Mandala is:
an albatross feeding from the hand of a sailor – “every living entity plays a role in the word’s ritual of existence – beyond these roles the communion of love and compassion can bring together the most disparate lives.”
This symbol also is the Original Intent of an astrological moment in my own life defined as “Promises Made in Past Lives.”

from the notebook continuing:  The Sutra of the Lotus Flower of the Wonderful Law – the supremely sacred truth that dwells in the minds of ordinary people living in this corrupt world but is untainted by it, just as the lotus is untainted by the mud in which it grows and which leads them to buddhahood.
Original vow of Buddhists:  for the particular aim of benefiting others . . . entertained for the purpose of saving others from their sufferings.

To see the Buddha is to realize that “the Buddha” is never extinct and that the Buddha Shakyamuni was the perfect human being who left us his precious teachings and the “Eternal Original Buddha,” the Law preached by him.

Interpreting “Beholding the Precious Stupa” – ch. 11, the Lotus Sutra, in which a magnificent stupa “splendidly adorned” rises from the earth and abodes in the sky – very much like the mother ship which appears in “Close Encounters of a Third Kind,” only that ship came out of the sky.  The “Precious Stupa,” significantly, rises from the earth.

(Nikkyo Niwano): The absolute truth realized by the Tathagata Shakyamuni and symbolized by the Tathagata Abundant Treasures [who appears in the precious stupa to confirm Shakyamuni’s teaching of the Lotus Sutra] never changes and has existed throughout the universe forever, is revealed in the form of the various teachings of the Buddha and guides people everywhere; symbolized by buddhas who have emanated from the Buddha and who are preaching the Law in worlds in all directions.

Buddha-nature, the Precious Stupa springing from the earth, symbolizes unexpectedly discovering one’s buddha-nature in oneself (the earth) which one had been predisposed to regard as impure.

If people discover their buddha-nature for themselves, they will be able immediately to make their abode in the world of buddhas, the world of enlightened ones.

Enlightenment and salvation of the buddhas who spring from within ourselves are truly valuable and powerful.

Thursday, November 17, 2016


Fundamental Guideposts (2)
Practicing the Lotus Sutra

First, rejoicing over the Lotus Sutra / receiving and reciting it / teaching it to others / concurrently practicing the six paramitas (six determinations/virtues of persons of compassion – the bodhisattvas).  The World of the Bodhisattvas is the 9th world of compassion – the only threshold through which one may reach the 10th world – Perfect Enlightenment.
Intensely practicing the six paramitas:

donation (dhyana paramita) – to render service to others – spiritual, material, physical, without any thought of reward.
keeping the precepts (sila paramita) – to remove illusions from one’s own mind in accordance with precepts taught by the Buddha; leading a right life (the middle way between extremes) and gaining the power to save others by endeavoring to perfect oneself. (The Eightfold Path)
perseverance (shanti paramita) – always to assume a generous attitude toward others, enduring any difficulty and maintaining a tranquil mind without arrogance.
assiduity (virya paramita) – to proceed straight toward an important goal without being sidetracked by trivial things. . . to intend
meditation (dhyana paramita) – to maintain a cool and unagitated mind under all circumstances.
wisdom (Prajñaparamita) – to have the power of discerning the real aspect of all things—the ability to realize that anyone can become an enlightened one—a buddha; the ability to discern the differences among all things and to see the truth common to them.

The Buddha’s teaching stress that we cannot discern all things in the world correctly until we are completely endowed with the ability to know both distinction and equality.
What better way to instill the six paramitas in our minds than to begin each day with the Lotus Sutra, celebrating the life of the Buddha and his teachings—the celebration of life itself.
Fundamental Guideposts (3)

. . . salvation means the full manifestation and complete development of life essential to each form of life according to its true nature. . .

The actual foundation of all phenomena is a great, unchanging power that is manifested in various ways.
The teaching of “Innumerable Meanings” ( the first sutra of The Threefold Lotus Sutra) originates from one Law – from the truth.  What is this truth?  It is nonform, which transcends the discriminations of all things.
Things are equal in having the buddha-nature (the cause to live). This fact is the truth and the real aspect of all things.
. . . abandon the small self and find the self that lives as the whole. . .
Nonself is the only way that we can realize the idea that “all the universe is our domain.” If we can attain this mental state, our minds will have perfect freedom.
We will be free from everything . . . everything we do will result in enhancing others’ lives.
It is our mind that enables us to ignore time and space and to reach out everywhere.
Practice of abandoning the self:  to recite-read the sutras / to listen to the preaching / to think calmly / to serve others in the spirit of harmony.
The Buddha is completely selfless.  When one has attained the same state of mind as the Buddha, they are truly free from the idea of self because they realize that everything in the universe is united with them.
In attaining this mental state they feel that everything in the universe exists in their mind, and they perceive everything clearly. . . illusion is like a dark cloud that covers our intrinsic buddha-nature.

All the universe is our domain

Monday, November 14, 2016

Canadian Geese
Barnaby Lake, British Columbia

Fundamental Guideposts (1)

  Followers of Ancestral Well, however frequently or infrequently, will have taken note that the basic intention of the blog is to acquaint readers with the teachings of the Buddha in The Threefold Lotus Sutra (the Lotus Sutra), a Buddhist scripture of pivotal importance and one of the world’s great religious classics, representing the culmination of the Buddha’s ageless teaching of wisdom, compassion, and liberation.
  Recently, in the midst of “cry havoc” in the world, I ran across a notebook – “a book of meditation” written in this century. All ruminations therein accruing from a long period of study and “connection” with The Threefold Lotus Sutra through daily morning meditation. One might say, the notes taken from various writings resonating with the Lotus Sutra, add to a “tapestry of faith” in a fundamental belief in the sanctity of life and the possibility that one may reach a mental state of being no longer influenced by change or circumstances or things, consider all things equally, unmoved by whatever happens; abandonment of self-righteousness which causes us to lose the feeling of kinship with people; extinction of false discriminations between oneself and others—to feel the unity of oneself and all creatures in the universe, reaching out spontaneously to embrace them; attainment of Perfect Knowledge, the wisdom that unites the ability both to see the equality of things (emptiness/void in nature and form) and to discern the differences among things.

  These are some of the “promises” from “awakening to, reciting, copying, and keeping the Lotus Sutra—the Sutra of the Lotus Flower of the Wonderful Law.
  Please note, “fundamental guideposts” such as these are part of a larger whole – not intended as “memes” or “quotes” one can pull out of the drawer to make one feel better for a moment, a day . . . after which . . .?
  In Nikkyo Niwano’s Buddhism for Today: a modern interpretation of The Threefold Lotus Sutra, concludes with the following story:
  From the Sutra of a Hundred Parables:  “. . . Once there was a very stupid man. As he was parched with thirst, he roamed here and there looking for water. While walking about he luckily arrived at the Sindh River. For some reason, however, he just stood on the riverbank instead of drinking. A friend nearby wondered at his behavior and asked him, “Why don’t you drink the water in the river?” The man answered, “I am dying for a drink! But the river has so much water that I cannot possibly drink it all. So I am hesitating whether I should drink or not.”
  “I sincerely hope that no one will harbor such a foolish idea toward the teaching of The Threefold Lotus Sutra.”

from the notebook:
A goal to reach for (Lotus Sutra):

“Great! The Great Enlightened, the Great Holy Lord,
in him there is no defilement, no contamination, no attachment.
The trainer of gods and living beings, elephants and horses,
his moral breeze and virtuous fragrance deeply permeate all.
Serene is his wisdom, calm his emotion, and stable his prudence.
His thought is settled, his consciousness is extinct,
and thus his mind is quiet.
Long since, he removed false thoughts
and conquered all the laws of existence.

  (Lotus Sutra): Why is it called a bodhisattva-mahasattva’s sphere of action? – “if he abides in a state of patience, is gentle and agreeable, is neither hasty nor overbearing, and his mind is unperturbed . . . has no laws by which to act [not conceited or boastful about his/her good works] . . . sees all things in their reality [acts toward all people with the same compassion, never making a show of it], nor proceeds along the uninvited way.

Absolute truth, the true form of things – reality – that which makes all beings live . . . can take any form because the eternal original life-force/energy of the universe is the only real thing existing in the world.

to be continued . . .

Sunday, October 23, 2016

“A group of immigrants enters a new world”

  Etiwanda, California at the Myohoji Temple, October 24, 1976 at precisely 11:13:14 am, Pacific Daylight Savings Time, the priest taps me on the head with a scroll rolled up in a white envelope tied with a blue ribbon, the Gohonzon (object of worship); one of a group of fourteen other celebrants. At the moment my head is tapped, friend Robert LuPone (who lured me into this strange celebration) clocks the time on one of his precision watches:  11:13:14 am Pacific daylight time.
  Strange, perhaps, but the moment we had entered the temple that day, hearing soft, mysterious sounds of chanting, Nam Myoho Renge-kyo, I turn to Bob and Kathy to say, ”I’ve been here before.” If this is true, I’ve never left this world in forty years.
  Found in the symbolism marking that formal entry into the Buddha’s teachings we find the Zodiac degree for the Sun’s position relative to the eastern horizon as 23° Sagi­ttarius, the “Rising Sign” or the true nature of the moment, the start of the first house where one discovers through life experiences How to envision and deal with destiny:

a group of immigrants as they fulfill the require­ments for entrance into the new country.  Keynote:  Consciously accepting the ways of a new stage of experience, in readiness for the opportunities it will present. . . “We find our­selves in a period of TRANSITION [Rudhyar’s key word].  We have to imitate, yet retain our inner integrity.”
  Well, forty years later, still at it, and the original Gohonzon received that day still graces my meditation center. (Robert LuPone, by the way, has been active in theatre all these years, currently as Director/Founder of Manhattan Class Company in New York.) Practice is much different than earlier days, and I no longer formally belong to any Buddhist sect. As to “results” and “merits” derived? Perhaps some of them may be seen in the postings here at “Ancestral Well.”

Sunday, October 16, 2016


Everything and everyone are connected,
Nothing has an ego

from: “The Buddha” PBS Documentary
Richard Gere, Principal Narrator


  What the Buddha realizes is that if we can get rid of this fundamental misunderstanding of the nature of the self, based on egotism, we won’t cling to things, we won’t screw up everything we do because we’re thinking about it in the wrong way.
  “After washing my feet,” the disciple said, “I watch the water going down the drain. I am calm. I control my mind, like a noble, thoroughbred horse. Taking a lamp, I enter my cell. Thinking of sleep, I sit on my bed. I touch the wick. The lamp goes out – Nirvana. My mind is freed.”
  Richard Gere: The mind is as restless as a monkey, the Buddha taught. Who you are, what you think of as your “self,” is constantly changing, like a river endlessly flowing. One thing today, another tomorrow.
  Jane Hirshfield, Poet: There’s water in the river, then there’s water in the glass, and then water is back in the air, and then it’s back in the river. The water’s there, but what is it? That’s the way to think about the self in Buddhism. One moment you’re angry, the next moment, you’re laughing. Who are you?
  Blair Brown: A seed becomes a plant. Wisps of grass are spun into a rope. A trickling stream turns into a river.
  Jane Hirshfield: The self comes and the self goes. Simply notice how from one moment to another your self is not as much the same as we think it is.
  D. Max Moerman, Barnard College: What the Buddha realizes is that if we can get rid of this fundamental misunderstanding of the nature of the self, based on egotism, we won’t cling to things, we won’t screw up everything we do because we’re thinking about it in the wrong way.
  Jane Hirshfield: Once you stop centering your feelings about your feelings on your self, what naturally arises is simple compassion, compassion for your own suffering, compassion for the suffering of others.
  Gere: Even the most abstract of the Buddha’s teachings had a practical dimension. Compassion, the Buddha taught, comes from understanding impermanence, transience, flow, how one thing passes into another, how everything and everyone is connected.

Tuesday, October 11, 2016


Banishing fear, 
the subtle truth of the Buddha’s Teachings


  Unfortunately in today’s world, at least until the election, fear and hate seem to dominate the landscape; more than enough religions harbor fear, condemning their followers to live closely guarded lives, to set themselves apart from others. Ignorance and fear are at the root cause of this “holier-than-thou” phenomenon.
  An awareness of the “true Laws of Existence” can lead us in the opposite direction to arrive at a place where we “integrate all the many diverse experiences of life” and through this “mindfulness” learn to celebrate life in each moment dispelling compassionately all discriminations and judgments which separate us from others, fear and insecurity banished forever.
  One needs a “longing heart” to seek and find this mindfulness for themselves. One should learn to think holistically. The Buddha in The Threefold Lotus Sutra: I behold all living creatures sunk in the sea of suffering hence I do not reveal myself but set them all aspiring, till, when their hearts are longing, I appear to preach the law.
  In our world today, “The Buddha appearing to preach the law,” simply means our acceptance of the great pervading  and eternal life-force existing in all our lives causing everything and everyone to live—realizing that an intuitive method of spiritual training aims first of all, at discovering a reality in the innermost recesses of the human mind—a reality that is the fundamental unity pervading all the differences and particulars of the world; that we are equal in terms of the value of our existence. When we realize this, “the Buddha is appearing to preach the law.”
  When I first connected with teachings of the Buddha in 1976, I had not the slightest knowledge of these things. The connection was with an intensive “spiritual practice” with an even more intense community (many of them close friends) which lit a fire under us each day if we wanted to belong and continue the practice.
  In my ignorance however, I experienced in life an instinctive realization that I was part of a community – not just the group’s community, but in touch somehow with all those who came into my world.
  Most notably, only a day or two after beginning to practice, driving the deadening Interstate 5 to San Francisco, with the sudden realization that everyone on the road with me were “going somewhere,” that we were all part of a community, the strain of competing, trying to be “first” vanished. Impatience? vanished. Strain? vanished.

Saturday, September 24, 2016

Adventures with the Lotus Sutra (1)
A night away from Larry’s Bar
occasioned by a shooting star


  Countless intriguing and inspiring moments have accumulated over the past forty years practicing the teachings of the Buddha with The Threefold Lotus Sutra, right up to the present day. In a way, I suppose they explain why the practice has become more focused and rewarding over the years, and why today the thought of beginning each day without celebrating the Buddha’s life and teachings in the Lotus Sutra is unthinkable. Here’s one adventure that might amuse you. . . March 23, 1978.

  Opting to return home alone from the Encore movie theatre on Melrose Avenue, choosing not to follow the usual routine slinging down a few (or several) beers at Larry’s Bar across the street to score a hook-up.
  Home is an apartment in a ghoul­ish 1920s building where Valentino once resided (the owner succeeded in getting the street renamed, “Valen­tino Place”). It’s close to Paramount Studio’s main gate through which Norma Desmond/Gloria Swanson makes her grand entrance in “Sunset Boulevard.”
  After kneeling in front of the Mandala (Gohonzon), briefly chanting a few “devotions to the Lotus Sutra,” Nam Myoho Renge kyo, I head up the winding staircase with its iron-wrought railing leading to a second floor dormer. Time now for some “Moon  viewing.” Knowing the Moon is bright and close to full (a “gibbous Moon”), I gaze at it through a high dormer window.
  The Moon is bright in a clear night sky. Suddenly a shooting star crosses to the right of the Moon! It’s 10:35:04, calling my attention, in the astrological scheme of things, to the symbol in Rudhyar’s Mandala for the Moon’s position, 29° Virgo:
  Individuals seeking occult knowledge are reading an ancient scroll which illumines their minds. Realigning one’s self. Rudhyar:  In occultism the “Pattern of Humankind” is an arche­typical Power that may be contacted. It must be sought out with undeviat­ing determination to “reach the other shore.”

So much for beer slinging this night—back to chanting in front of the “ancient scroll”!

  This doesn’t mean I never returned to Larry’s—it was right across the street after all, but the message was clear for this night at least, that I should spend time celebrating with the Buddha and the “ancient scroll,” and to think if I had gone to Larry’s, I would not have seen the shooting star! (Should mention that at the time I had been commissioned to novelize a screenplay, close to  completion.)

Saturday, September 10, 2016

Mind – Fundamental Principle of Nature
Excerpt from article, from NY Times Science:
  Dr. Nagel "proposes [this] might require another revolution: showing that mind, along with matter and energy, is a fundamental principle of nature – and that we live in a universe primed to generate beings capable of comprehending it." Rather than being a blind series of random mutations and adaptations, evolution would have a direction, maybe even a purpose."
Stories from the Threefold Lotus Sutra – Preface, "Celebrating Life" (by DFS):
  In the moment of his enlightenment, the Buddha is awakened to the profound interconnection of all living things. He perceives that an imperishable energy, a uni­versal life-force, is the cause of all existence, imbedded in all laws. From emptiness, the profound Law of the Void, itself the Great Perfection, he realizes and all living things, are equal in the fundamental value of their existence and are caused to live by the will to live, brought into being by virtue of karmic necessity, evolving creatively with planet earth
* * * * *  Five Star pages from notes – 2005  * * * * * (unedited)
(Ken Wilber) all boundaries and dualisms have been transcended and all individuality dissolves into universal, undifferentiated oneness. Identities associated with all levels of consciousness are illusory – except for the ultimate level of mind where one finds one’s supreme identity.
  (Niwano, Lotus Sutra) – now in this chapter (16) the truth is clearly revealed . . . beyond doubt that the ultimate substance of the Buddha is the everlasting life-force of the universe, none other than the eternal Buddha.
  Shakyamuni taught that all visible or apparent forms in the world are but temporary appearances brought into being by combinations of causes and conditions. If these causes and conditions did not exist, neither would their visible forms; different causes and conditions would produce other visible forms.
  The ultimate substance of the Buddha is the eternal imperishable life-force; the Buddha abounds within and about us all.
We ourselves are one substance with the Buddha.
  (Wilber) one’s own mind is intrinsically one with primordial spirit, primordial force-energy. Enlightenment is the remembering of buddha-mind, or the direct recognition or re-cognition of pure Emptiness, our place in the universe just as is—something that is totally, completely present right now, but we have perhaps forgotten it.
  We will recover from our fragmentation when we remember who and what we really are.
  Nothing is outside Emptiness. Emptiness does not choose sides.
  Enlightenment is thus not catching a really big wave, but noticing the already present wetness of whatever wave I’m on. Moreover, I am then radically liberated from the narrow identification with this little wave called me because I am fundamentally one with all other waves – no wetness is outside me. I am literally one taste with the entire ocean and its waves, and that taste is suchness, Emptiness – the utter transparency of the great perfection.

Wednesday, August 10, 2016

Boston Common

  When first reading The Turning Point at least a decade ago – struck by how much Fritjof Capra mirrors the teachings of the Buddha. Following, excerpts from this book shared with friend Dr. Cody Masek two years ago. Capra offers basic, scientific principles about the fundamental nature of life and the most effective means of changing our perceptions, truly transcendent and directly applicable to developing mindfulness along the Buddha’s path (and ours) toward enlightenment.

Excerpts from
The Turning Point
by Fritjof Capr


The Turning Point, Science, Society, and the Rising Culture, Fritjof Capra; Bantam Books, published by arrangement with Simon and Schuster; Simon & Schuster edition published March 1982; Copyright 1982 by Fritjof Capra.

The Systems View of Life – Page 268 and ff.  (emphasis added)

Machines and Organisms
  The first obvious difference between machines and organisms is the fact that machines are constructed, whereas organisms grow. This fundamental difference means that the understanding of organisms must be process-oriented. For example, it is impossible to convey an accurate picture of a cell by means of static drawings or by describing the cell in terms of static forms. Cells, like all living systems, have to be understood in terms of processes reflecting the system’s dynamic organization.
  . . . Although the organism as a whole exhibits well-defined regularities and behavior patterns, the relationships between its parts are not rigidly determined. . . This order is achieved by coordinating activities that do not rigidly constrain the parts but leave room for variation and flexibility, and it is this flexibility that enables living organisms to adapt to new circumstances.
Page 269 – Recalling Lipton’s view “Change your perceptions, change your biology.  Note this is “Pre-Lipton” by maybe twenty years.
  The nonlinear interconnectedness of living organisms indicate that the conven­tional attempts of biomedical science to associate diseases with single causes are highly problematic. Moreover, it shows the fallacy of “genetic determinism,” the belief that various physical or mental features of an individual organism are “controlled” or “dictated” by its genetic makeup. The systems view makes it clear that genes do not uniquely determine the functioning of an organism as cogs and wheels determine the working of a clock. Rather, genes are integral parts of an ordered whole and thus conform to its systemic organization.
Systems View: Self-organization / Self Renewal / Self Transcendence
  The internal plasticity and flexibility of living systems, whose functioning is con­trolled by dynamic relations rather than rigid mechanical structures, gives rise to a number of characteristic properties that can be seen as different aspects of the same dynamic principle—the principle of self-organization. A living system is a self-organizing system, which means that its order in structure and function is not imposed by the environment but is established by the system itself. Self-organizing systems exhibit a certain degree of autonomy, for example, they tend to establish their size according to internal principles of organization, independent of environ­mental influences. This does not mean that living systems are isolated from their environment; on the contrary, they interact with it continually, but this interaction does not determine their organization. The two principle dynamic phenomena of self-organization are self-renewal—the ability of living systems continuously to renew and recycle their components while maintaining the integrity of their overall structure—and self-transcendence [love this one!! – dfs] the ability to reach out creatively beyond physical and mental boundaries in the processes of learning, development, and evolution.
some really good stuff on next few pages. . .
Systems View - continuing at bottom of page 269
  The relative autonomy of self-organizing systems sheds new light on the age-old philosophical question of free will. From the systems point of view, both determinism and freedom are relative concepts. To the extent that a system is autonomous from its environment, it is free; to the extent that it depends on it through continuous interaction, its activity will be shaped by environmental influences. The relative autonomy of organ­isms usually increases with their complexity, and it reaches its culmination in human beings.
  The relative concept of free will seems to be consistent with the views of mystical traditions that exhort their followers to transcend the notion of an isolated self and become aware that we are inseparable parts of the cosmos in which we are embedded. The goal of these traditions is to shed all ego sensations completely and, in mystical experience, merge with the totality of the cosmos. Once such a state is reached, the question of free will seems to lose its meaning. If I am the universe, there can be no “outside” influences and all my actions will be spontaneous and free. From the point of view of mystics, therefore, the notion of free will is relative, limited and—as they would say—illusory, like all other concepts we use in our rational descriptions of reality.
Systems View of Life . . . top of p. 271 – mid-paragraph
  The stability of self-organizing systems is utterly dynamic and must not be confused with equilibrium. It consists in maintaining the same overall structure in spite of ongoing changes and replacements of its components. A cell, for example, according to Weiss, “retains its identity far more conservatively and remains far more similar to itself from moment to moment, as well as to any other cell of the same strain, than one could ever predict from knowing only about its inventory of molecules, macromolecules, and organelles which is subject to incessant change, reshuffling and milling of its popula­tion.”  The same is true for human organisms. We replace all our cells, except for those in the brain, within a few years, yet we have no trouble recognizing our friends even after long periods of separation. Such is the dynamic stability of self-organizing systems.
  Phenomena of self-organization is not limited to living matter but occurs also in certain chemical systems . . . [discussion of this follows] . . . Dissipative chemical struc­tures display the dynamics of self-organization in its simplest form, exhibiting most of the phenomena characteristic of life—self-renewal, adaptation, evolution, and even primitive forms of “mental” processes. The only reason why they are not considered alive is that they do not reproduce or form cells. These intriguing systems thus represent a link between animate and inanimate matter. Whether they are called living organisms or not is, ultimately, a matter of convention.
Self Renewal - the Systems View of Life – bottom p. 271
  Self-renewal is an essential aspect of self-organizing systems. Whereas a machine is constructed to produce a specific product or to carry out a specific task intended by its designer, an organism is primarily engaged in renewing itself; cells are breaking down and building up structures, tissues and organs are replacing their cells in continuing cycles. . . the overall pattern of the organism is preserved, and this remarkable ability of self-maintenance persists under a variety of circumstances, including changing environ­mental conditions and many kinds of interference.
  . . . The other side (of species adaptation to environmental changes through genetic mutations) is the creative development of new structures and functions without any environmental pressure, which is a manifestation of the potential for self-transcen­dence that is inherent in all living organisms.
Note: Capra discusses self-transcendence at length. There’s a really clear synthesizing of “The Systems View” in the film, Mind Walk, produced by another Capra – Bernt.
  Here’s another shot at Capra’s “Systems View of Life” from Bernt Capra’s film, Mind Walk” – the woman physicist, Sonia to the poet and politician:  Self-renewing ~ Self Transcending – living forms possess an inherent tendency to reach out and create new forms; will go on exploring whether they need to or not – will surprise themselves – creating beauty. . . Each to the other, they co-evolve.” This encourages the poet some­what.  And the politician says, “I’ve got it. We evolve with the planet, not on the planet.”  Now “going back to the beginning of all this:
p. 90
Mass is nothing but a form of energy
  The concepts of space and time are so basic for our description of natural phe­nomena that their radical modification in relativity theory entailed a modification of the whole framework we use in physics to describe nature. The most important con­sequence of the new relativistic framework has been the realization that mass is nothing but a form of energy. Even an object at rest has energy storied in its mass, and that relation between the two is given by Einstein’s famous equation E = mc², c being the speed of light.
  Once it is seen to be a form of energy, mass is no longer required to be indestruc­tible, but can be transformed into other forms of energy. This happens continually in the collision processes of high-energy physics, in which material particles are created and destroyed, their masses being transformed into energy and motion and vice versa. The collisions of subatomic particles are our main tool for studying their prop­erties, and the relation between mass and energy is essential for their description. The equivalence of mass and energy has been verified innumerable times and physi­cists have become completely familiar with it—so familiar, in fact, that they measure the masses of particles in the corresponding energy units.
Mass seen as bundles of energy
  The discovery that mass is a form of energy has had a profound influence on our picture of matter and has forced us to modify our concept of a particle in an essential way. In modern physics, mass is no longer associated with a material substance, and hence particles are not seen as consisting of any basic “stuff,” but as bundles of energy. Energy, however, is associated with activity, with processes, and this implies that the nature of subatomic particles is intrinsically dynamic. To understand this better we must remember that these particles can be conceived only in relativistic terms, that is, in terms of a framework where space and time are fused into a four-dimensional contin­uum. In such a framework the particles can no longer be pictured as small billiard balls, or small grains of sand.
The being of matter and its activity cannot be separated . . .
  These images are inappropriate not only because they represent particles as separate objects, but also because they are static, three-dimensional images. Subatomic particles must be conceived as four-dimensional entities in space-time. Their forms have to be understood dynamically, as forms in space and time. Particles are dynamic patterns, patterns of activity which have a space aspect and a time aspect. Their space aspect makes them appear as objects with a certain mass, their time aspect as processes involving the equivalent energy. Thus the being of matter and its activity cannot be separated, they are but different aspects of the same space-time reality.
Force (energy) and matter seen to have common origin
in dynamic patterns of particles
  The relativistic view of matter has drastically affected not only our conception of particles, but also our picture of the forces between these particles. In a relativistic description of particle interactions, the forces between the particles—their mutual attraction or repulsion—are pictured as the exchange of other particles. This concept is very difficult to visualize, but it is needed for an understanding of subatomic pheno­­­­­­­­­­­mena. It links the forces between constituents of matter to the properties of other constituents of matter, and thus unifies the two concepts, force and matter, which had seemed to be fundamentally different in Newtonian physics. Both force and matter are now seen to have their common origin in the dynamic patterns that we call particles. These energy patterns of the subatomic world form the stable nuclear, atomic, and molecular structures which build up matter and give it its macroscopic solid aspect, thus making us believe that it is made of some material substance. At the macroscopic level this notion of substance is a useful approximation, but at the atomic level it no longer makes sense. Atoms consist of particles, and these particles are not made of any material stuff. When we observe them we never see any substance; what we observe are dynamic patterns continually changing into one another – the continuous dance of energy.
There is only the dance
  The two basic theories of modern physics have thus transcended the principal aspects of the Cartesian world view and of Newtonian physics. Quantum theory has shown that subatomic particles are not isolated grains of matter but are probability patterns, inter­connections in an inseparable cosmic web that includes human observers and their consciousness. Relativity theory has made the cosmic web come alive, so to speak, by revealing its intrinsically dynamic character; by showing that its activity is the very essence of its being. In modern physics, the image of the universe as a machine has been transcended by a view of it as one indivisible, dynamic whole whose parts are essentially interrelated and can be understood only as patterns of a cosmic process. At the sub­atomic level the interrelations and interactions between the parts of the whole are more fundamental than the parts themselves. There is motion but there are, ultimately, no moving objects; there is activity but there are no actors. There are no dancers, there is only the dance.
(from dfs) – Forgive this intrusion, but couldn’t resist:
[There is only the dance, another expression of the profound law] . . .
As within pure lapis lazuli a golden image in made apparent,
so the World-honored One in the great assembly
expounds the meaning of the profound law. –
Chapter One, The Lotus Sutra, “Introductory”
S-matrix theory – p. 92
  . . . At present there are two different kinds of “quantum-relativistic” theories in particle physics that have been successful in different areas. . . S-matrix theory is more relevant to the theme of this book, since it has deep implications for science as a whole.
A philosophy of nature
  The philosophical foundation of S-matrix theory is known as the bootstrap approach. Geoffrey Chew proposed it in the early 1960s, and he and other physicists have used it to develop a comprehensive theory of strongly interacting particles, together with a more general philosophy of nature. According to the bootstrap philosophy, nature cannot be reduced to fundamental entities, like fundamental building blocks of matter, but has to be understood entirely through self-consistency. All of physics has to follow uniquely from the requirement that its components be consistent with one another and with themselves.This idea constitutes a radical departure from the traditional spirit of basic research in physics which had always been bent on finding the fundamental constituents of matter. At the same time it is the culmination of the conception of the material world as an interconnected web of relations that emerged from quantum theory. The boot­strap philosophy not only abandons the idea of fundamental building blocks of matter, but accepts no fundamental entities whatsoever—no fundamental constants, laws, or equations. The universe is seen as a dynamic web of interrelated events. None of the properties of any part of this web is fundamental, they all follow from the properties of the other parts, and the overall consistency of their interrelations determines the structure of the entire web.

Following next – One of the most profound systems of Western thought, raising it to the level of Buddhist or Taoist philosophy.
p. 93
  The fact that the bootstrap approach does not accept any fundamental entities makes it, in my opinion, one of the most profound systems of Western thought, raising it to the level of Buddhist or Taoist philosophy. At the same time it is a very difficult approach to physics, one that has been pursued by only a small minority of physicists. The bootstrap philosophy is too foreign to traditional ways of thinking to be seriously appreciated yet, and this lack of appreciation extends also to S-matrix theory. It is curious that although the basic concepts of the theory are used by all particle physicist whenever they analyze the results of particle collisions and compare them to their theoretical predictions, not a single Nobel prize has so far been awarded to any of the outstanding physicists who con­tributed to the development of S-matrix theory over the past two decades.
Properties of particles determined by methods of observation
  In the framework of S-matrix theory, the bootstrap approach attempts to derive all properties of particles and their interactions uniquely from the requirement of self-consistency. The only “fundamental” laws accepted are a few very general principles that are required by the methods of observation and are essential parts of the scientific framework. All other aspects of particle physics are expected to emerge as a necessary consequence of self-consistency. If this approach can be carried out successfully, the philosophical implications will be very profound. The fact that all the properties of particles are determined by principles closely related to the methods of observation would mean that the basic structures of the material world are determined, ultimately, by the way we look at this world, that the observed patterns of matter are reflections of patterns of mind.

From Hui-neng’s Enlightenment, Here and Now:

The core of the mind now comprehends that the outer world is but a manifestation of one's own mind, and this understanding becomes a massive liberation. In enlighten­ment the eye of wisdom is opened to an intuition of the heart of being, a perfected vision tran­scending all dualities, the self-realization of our real selves.

More on Particles and the Bootstrap Theory
p. 94
  The picture of subatomic particles that emerges from the bootstrap theory can be summed up in the provocative phrase:  Every particle consists of all other particles.
  It must not be imagined, however, that each of them contains all the others in a classical, static sense.  Subatomic particles are not separate entities but interrelated energy patterns in an ongoing dynamic process.  These patterns do not “contain” one another but rather “involve” one another in a way that can be given a precise mathematical meaning but cannot easily be expressed in words.

Monday, August 08, 2016

Earth, Venus Jupiter seen from Mars

An Unsealed Letter

  Sunday, October 13, 2013 – What an extraordinary morning this has been, finding myself as if sitting on a treasure chest of information, desiring to share it with everyone I know, and hesitating because I’m not sure how to do this so that it will seem relevant to the lives of others, when lo and behold, Mars is crossing “An Unsealed Letter” at 30° Leo!
  The “back story” to this is rather complex.  Perhaps the bottom line is that we all should be encouraged to realize that when we become a participant with others, compassionately serving the needs of others as a primary intent, hidden forces are there to encourage and affirm those actions. Whether or not you can “see” them, they do exist. Some call this “a higher power” or in Humanistic Astrology, “unseen forces” or, as with those who practice the teachings of the Buddha – the universal life energy/force which causes everything to live. Whatever one calls them, they can be defined, they exist within our own mindfulness, and they exist here and now and are readily available.
  Utilizing these “unseen forces” can quite naturally be realized in the simplest ways. As it happens, I began to see this some time ago (1974-5), finding myself in a rather chaotic, pointless existence, reaching out for “grander solutions,” stumbling upon the writings of Dane Rudhyar’s Humanistic/Transpersonal Astrology, and soon after the teachings of the Buddha.
  Perhaps one of the best ways to explain this, is to present the position of Mars in the Zodiac in the next couple of days [October, 2013], and the symbol from Rudhyar’s Astrological Mandala. Mars position in the Zodiac and in the twelve houses of experience at this time—the Fifth House of personal expression, and (personally) the Eleventh House of “Promises Made in Past Lives”—house of Aquarius, points to sharing and participating with others in serving social needs, and in the broader spectrum of human experience at this time, society’s need to share knowledge to better humankind.
  In my own life the symbol touches upon the very nature of recent “searches,” remarkably finding  those of more or less “like minds.” Mars “activity” in and of itself indicates “reaching out, seeking,” and just plain acting upon desire – somehow future oriented. The primary focus of this desire has been “found” in newly formed “friends” at Face Book [2013]– those who share in-depth knowledge, memories, emotional content in broad artistic spectrums, mostly in films, overcoming a frustration I’ve had for years in having literally no one in my life of like mind.
  Let’s be clear – none of the above or below came to mind until I looked at the position of Mars this morning in the Zodiac because I knew in my life, Mars was crossing into the realm of social integration and linking with more “humanity serving” societies. Thus does Rudhyar’s Humanistic, Person-Centered Astrology serve.

Mars 30° Leo – AN UNSEALED LETTER

  The realization by the individual that all thoughts and all messages are inevitably to be shared with all humankind. – “The fact that a letter is sealed doesn’t imply a trust that other people will not read its contents, but rather the idea that the contents are for all to read. The letter contains a public message in the sense that when one has reached the stage of true mental repolarization and development, one has actually become a participant in the One Mind of humanity. Nothing can really be hidden, except superficially and for a brief time. What any person thinks and deeply realizes becomes the property of all. Nothing is more senseless than possessiveness in the realm of transcendent ideas. Nothing can remain permanently “sealed.”
  “Communication and sharing must always prevail over the will to glorify oneself by claiming sole possession of ideas and information.”
  Today, Monday August 8, 2016 – of course, one need not wait for Sun, Moon, and planets to cross significant symbols to affirm the presence of “unseen forces.” Just as a “higher power” does not exist outside ourselves, these “unseen forces” are ever-present within our own mindfulness. And how inspiring it is when our intent toward living with compassion reveals them.

Saturday, August 06, 2016

Angelsea, Wales

How to tune a harp, or
how the Buddha came to teach The Four Noble Truths
 and the Eightfold Path, and ultimately the Lotus Sutra


  Young Prince Siddhartha “abandoned all things hard to abandon, his treasures, wife and child, his country and his palace, to give all, his head, eyes, and brain to people as alms.” This didn’t happen overnight. In the beginning, his overall purpose to end human suffering, he totally abandoned a normal life, wandering in forests seeking the way to enlightenment with five ascetics, Ajñata Kaundinya, Ashvajit, Vashpa, Mahanaman, and Bhadrika. (No need to remember their names, I never have—let’s just call them, Siddhartha’s five buddies seeking enlightenment through various means of self-torture.)
  How did Siddhartha escape? Significantly, because one day he overheard a man instructing his pupil on how to tune his harp, significantly because Siddhartha’s mind was open to embracing its lesson.
  If the strings are stretched too tight, it will not play, and if  the  strings are stretched too loose, it will not play.
  Hearing this, Siddhartha accepted a bowl of rice from a village girl, forsaking his ascetic vows, and his buddies were shocked. He called out to them, “The path to enlightenment is in the middle way, beyond extremes.”
  Siddhartha becomes in that moment, “Bodhisattva Siddhartha” in search of Perfect Enlightenment. (Here I’m accepting the time-sequence presented in Bertolucci’s film, “Little Buddha.”)
  As the story is told in the Lotus Sutra: reaching the “training place of Perfect Enlightenment” not far from the city of Gaya, beneath the Bodhi tree he attained Perfect Enlightenment, and seeing “creatures in the six states of existence, poor and without happiness and wisdom, in 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 Law to end sufferings, but deeply falling into heresies, and seeking by suffering to be rid of suffering—for the sake of all these creatures, my heart is stirred with great pity.
  “When I first sat on the wisdom throne, looking at that tree and walking about it during thrice seven days, I pondered such matters as these—the wisdom which I have obtained is wonderful and supreme, but all creatures are dull in their capacities, pleasure-attached and blind with ignorance. Such classes of beings as these I saw, how can they be saved?”
  “Having finished pondering this matter, I instantly went to Varañasi [Benares].” Here in Deer Park, the Buddha finds his old buddies, the five ascetics, and by his “tactful ability” teaches the Four Noble Truths and the Eightfold Path.

The Four Noble Truths
1 – All existence entails suffering.
2 – Suffering is caused by ignorance which gives rise to craving and illusion.
3 – There is an end to suffering, and this state of no suffering is called nirvana.
4 – Nirvana is attained through the practice of the Eightfold Path.
  None of these “four truths” should be considered separately – they are fluid in their practice, and are fulfilled with practice of the Eightfold Path. Unless Eightfold Path is followed, suffering’s end cannot be achieved.

  NOTE: a “right” path does not mean there is a “wrong” path. [These are not commandments.] A “wrong” path is simply not following the other basic teaching, “The Middle Way.” The “right” path is to follow the middle path between extremes.

The Eightfold Path – right view, right thinking, right speech, right action, right living, right endeavor, right memory, right meditation.

  It was forty years before the Buddha would reveal the “One Buddha Vehicle,” the path to Perfect Enlightenment, the teachings in the Lotus Sutra (The Sutra of the Lotus Flower of the Wonderful Law), as he relates in Chapter 2 of the Lotus Sutra:

When I saw the Buddha-sons-and-daughters
bent on seeking the buddha-way,
in countless thousands and countless myriads,
all with reverent hearts,
draw near to the Buddha;
they had already heard from the enlightened ones
the Law which they tactfully explained.
Then I conceived this thought:
The reason why the Tathagata appears
is for preaching the Buddha-wisdom;
now is the very time.

  Indeed, in today’s world, now is the very time.

Thursday, August 04, 2016

At the beginning of time,
a single spark of energy becomes everything that is . . .

 The miracle of existence is confirmed by science as may be seen in quantum physics, and by cosmologists who study the ineffable history of the universe.
  All existence is the result of inter-connection, cause and effect. Without these interconnections, we would not—could not, exist.
  Our choice is either to participate in life and celebrate it fully, compassionately, or resist letting go of self-righteousness which causes us to lose the feeling of kinship with people; refusing to allow ourselves to feel and to know a unity does exist between oneself and all living beings, and that it’s our responsibility to reach out spontaneously to embrace them.
  We do exist, that’s a given, and the choice is ours alone. We are ALL human beings living and dying within the great flow of universal time.
  The Buddha did not originate these “truths” – at the moment of his enlightenment under the Bo tree, he discovered them as having existed since the beginning of time. He spent his life imparting these “truths” to others, living his life and teaching others in accord with them.
  As with life itself, the Buddha’s teachings exist, here and now—they are not simply quotations or maxims or epigrams to be viewed as delicacies through the window of a candy store. They must be relished and put to use in our lives, tasted and felt at the core of one’s being. Following the Buddha-way, “the path Buddha” is to celebrate life as we live it each moment, never for a moment separating our “meditative practices” from our lives.

“Of those who hear the Law, not one fails to become an enlightened one. This is the original vow of the enlightened ones, By the Buddha-way which I walk, I desire universally to cause all creatures to attain the same Way along with me.” From “The Eternal Life of the Buddha” ch. 16, The Sutra of the Lotus Flower of the Wonderful Law.
  To acquaint oneself, to “receive, copy, memorize, cause others to copy,” the Lotus Sutra is a noble pursuit, weaves the fabric of morning meditation, building substance and structure into all meditative practices.

Saturday, July 09, 2016

Our Intent—the Buddha’s Intent
Practicing the one and only Law
of emancipation and nirvana

To give peace to all creatures I appear in the world,
and for the hosts of the living preach the Law pure as sweet dew,
the one and only Law of emancipation and nirvana.
With one transcendent voice I proclaim this meaning,
constantly taking the Great-vehicle as my subject. . . .

I look upon all everywhere with equal eyes,
without distinction of persons, or mind of love or hate.
I have no predilections nor limitations or partiality;
ever to all I preach the Law equally;
as to one person, so to all.

Constantly I proclaim the Law, never occupied with aught else;
going or coming, sitting or standing,
I never weary of pouring it abundantly upon the world,
like the rain enriching universally.

Honored and humble, high and low,
law-keepers and law-breakers,
those of perfect character and those of imperfect,
orthodox and heterodox,
quick-witted and dull-witted,
with equal mind I rain the rain of the Law unwearyingly.

Friday, December 11, 2015

Berkshires

Test of Faith
Proving its Validity

Sunday, June 28, 2009. As in several mornings of late, as I water the wild bush (name unknown) in my front yard so that the sun will send its photons and dot the branches with tiny, sparkling jewels—like the “seven precious jewels” gracing the Stupa rising into the sky in Chapter 11 of the Lotus Sutra, gold, silver, lapis lazuli, moonstone, agate, pearl and carnelian—I’m imagining conversations with my neighbors , , ,
  fantasizing that someone will walk by and ask, “Why do you spray the top of the bush like that?” to which I reply, “My dad always watered his magnolia tree this way and like him, I’m doing this to express gratitude for all growing things—for life. And wait till you see the many colored jewels in the water drops.”
  This reminds me, as I water the bush, and the peach tree and roses, that I do share moments of celebration with many individuals, thankful for those who enrich life by just being there at times of need without any thought of reward. This is a bit frustrating because I want to give back, repay their generosity, even though I know they don’t expect it.
  It seems so simple – the celebration of life with others. Often I’m reminded of a couple of lines from Walt Whitman’s “Song of Myself” – This moment that comes to me out of the past decillions / there’s no greater than it and now.
  Ultimately, one practices teachings of the Buddha only in the moment when in touch with others. The test of faith, proving its validity, is realized as we respond compassionately and spontaneously in the moment, letting go of personal egos, without manipulating or insisting on the acceptance of our points-of-view. . .
  listening, truly listening, being there for others with total acceptance and with “a gentle and forbearing heart,” aware only of the “great compassionate heart” within all living beings; that we are all caused to live by the great, imperishable life-force of the universe. . . Here and now following the Eightfold Path, the “middle way” of right view, speech, action, thought, and endeavor, unaware that we are “practic­ing” anything at all.

Friday, December 04, 2015

  With each new advance in theoretical science, physicists and cosmologists inform us that since the beginning of time, nothing in the universe today, including you and me, could have come into existence had not certain condi­tions caused it:  matter created from primordial energy forming patterns of rela­tion­­ship, matter pre­dom­i­nating over anti-matter, elemental particles reaching out to inter­­connect to form webs of rela­tionship—the list goes on.  Reaching back to the first second in which the universe began to form out of the “big bang”—and note, creating time in the process—funda­mental elements which make up all life in the universe, resulted from these and other related conditions.
  Buddha-thought presents a remarkably similar view.  The central doctrine of the Buddha’s teachings, the Law of Causation, states that all phenomena in the universe are produced by causation.  Thus, all things are interrelated.  From Niwano’s Buddhism for Today:
  Shakyamuni Buddha did not regard this universe as God’s creation or his conquest, but as resulting from the relation of cause and effect by which all phenomena are produced. . . . all things exist in relationship with one another and are interdependent.
  All things and forms in the universe, how we view ourselves as human beings, are produced from one void that can neither be seen with the eyes nor felt with the hands.  There is a great invisible life-force of the universe, the working of which produces all things from the void, and all things are produced by virtue of the necessity of their existence.  Humanity is no exception.  We ourselves are brought into being in the forms we take by virtue of the necessity to live in this world.  Think­ing this way, we are bound to feel the worth of being alive as human beings, the wonder of having been brought into this world.
  Buddhism asks, “Is there something which is unchanging and eternal?”  The Lotus Sutra defines this “some­thing” as life itself, the desire to live, originating from primordial energy at the beginning of time—the great life-force of the universe caus­ing every­thing to live.  Primordial energy did not create the universe.  It simply is; it caused the universe to come into existence.  Buddha is not god or creator, but the appearing Buddha, Shakyamuni’s enlightenment that we are all one substance with “Original Buddha”—one substance with nothing other than the great life-force which caused everything to live from the moment of the “big bang” leading to the emergence of humankind.
  Timothy Ferris in his New York Times article, “Beyond Newton and Einstein,” points out that “new theories of physics imply that all the known forces in nature are manifestations of one basic interaction and that once, long ago, all were part of a single universal force or process.”  Physicist Fritjof Capra, as he introduces discoveries in quantum physics in his book The Turning Point,” reminds us that as quantum physics came into play, “the universe is no longer seen as a machine  made up of a multitude of objects but has to be pictured as one indivisi­ble, dynamic whole whose parts essentially are interrelated and can be under­stood only as patterns of a cosmic process.”

  No matter how the universal force or pattern of cosmic process may be defined by physicists, the universe does exist and humanity did emerge from this process after billions of years.  “Mahayana (great vehicle) Buddhism sees all exis­tence as supremely sacred.  It needs no other-worldly validation of this sanctity—no God on High; and, most important of all, it sees the plain and mundane things of daily existence—when viewed from the right perspective—as sanctified as the loftiest ideals.  In short, in this enlightened awareness we can all see the marvelous wonder of our universe, blemishes and all, and find our home and comfort in a cosmos that is magically a part of us, and us a part of it.  This interpenetration of the individual in the universe is what Buddhism is really all about.  This is Buddhism’s scope and majesty.”
The Way Through
Shakyamuni Buddha
in the Lotus Sutra


I, by my power of wisdom,
knowing the natures and inclinations of creatures,
tactfully proclaim the laws
which cause all to obtain gladness.

Know, Shariputra!
I, observing with the Buddha’s eyes,
see the creatures in the six states of existence,
poor and without happiness and wisdom,
in 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;
they seek not the Buddha, the mighty,
and the Law to end sufferings,
but deeply fall into heresies,
and seek by suffering to be rid of suffering.
For the sake of all these creatures,
my heart is stirred with great pity.

When I first sat on the wisdom throne,
looking at that tree and walking about it
during thrice seven days,
I pondered such matters as these;
The wisdom which I have obtained
is wonderful and supreme.
But all creatures are dull in their capacities,
pleasure-attached and blind with ignorance.
Such classes of beings as these, I saw
how can they be saved?

  How indeed? The power to be “saved” –  and with universal compassion, to help liberate others, rests within each of us. This power is not given by some god on high. It rests within. It is to begin now, this  moment. It is to follow the same path as the Buddha. It is the reason we were born as human beings in the first place.

Wednesday, December 02, 2015

A shooting star
on a night not spent at Larry’s Bar

Individuals seeking occult knowledge
 read an ancient scroll which illumines their minds


  Integration of one’s individual, personal destiny (Sun position) with activities beyond the personal (Pluto position) is found in the transit of the north node of the Moon (where the Moon’s orbit around the earth intersects the ecliptic plane of the Earth in its orbit around the Sun). In other words, symbols for the Moon’s north node offer a key to this integration, reaching beyond the strictly personal to participate with others as we fulfill our destiny.
  Currently (December, 2015) the north node of the Moon is transiting 28°02 Virgo, 29° Virgo in the Astrological Mandala – Individuals seeking occult knowledge read an ancient scroll which illumines their minds.
  March 23, 1978—opting to return home alone from the Encore movie theatre on Melrose Avenue, choosing not to follow the usual routine slinging down a few (or several) beers at Larry’s Bar across the street to score a hook-up.
  Home is an apartment in a ghoul­ish 1920s building where Valentino once resided (the owner succeeded in getting the street renamed, “Valen­tino Place”). It’s close to Paramount Studio’s main gate through which Norma Desmond/Gloria Swanson makes her grand entrance in “Sunset Boulevard.”
  After kneeling in front of the Mandala (Gohonzon), briefly chanting a few “devotions to the Lotus Sutra,” I head up the winding staircase with its iron-wrought railing leading to a second floor dormer. Time now for some “Moon  viewing.” Knowing the Moon is bright and close to full (a “gibbous Moon”), I gaze at it through a high dormer window.
  The Moon is bright in a clear night sky. Suddenly a shooting star crosses to the right of the Moon!. It’s 10:35:04, calling my attention, in the astrological scheme of things, to the symbol in Rudhyar’s Mandala for the Moon’s position, 29° Virgo:
  Individuals seeking occult knowledge are reading an ancient scroll which illumines their minds. Realigning one’s self. Rudhyar:  In occultism the “Pattern of Humankind” is an arche­typical Power that may be contacted. It must be sought out with undeviat­ing determination to “reach the other shore.”
  So much for beer slinging this night—back to chanting in front of the “ancient scroll”!