Rev. Danny Fisher

Just a Buddhist Minister Trying to Benefit Beings

Month: January, 2009

Get Well, Frank!

One of my old professors at Naropa University, the great Frank Berliner, has been hospitalized with an intracerebral hemorrhage. He’s apparently doing fine and will make a full recovery, but please keep him in your thoughts, prayers, and practice.

I learned one of the most important lessons in my life as a Buddhist practitioner from Frank. For a long time, I felt a real aversion to suffering in my experience. I thought that looking at it–even acknowledging it–would just encourage it. I was afraid of it. Strangely, I was a nominal Buddhist who refused to bring mindful attention to the parts of himself that were asking for some. One day I was asking Frank a question–one that came very much out of this off-kilter perspective. I honestly don’t remember what the question was, but Frank stopped me in the middle of it and said gently, with a glint of humor, “Danny, it’s called the noble truth of suffering, not the shitty truth of suffering.” That vintage nugget of wisdom from Frank has rung in my consciousness since I heard it, and it has really helped me be gentler with myself and thereby deepen my practice. I will always appreciate it and him. Get well, sir.

Dharmacore Reports on the First Ever Online Jukai Ceremony

Dharmacore reports on that first ever online jukai ceremony that I posted about several days back. Check it out.

Bill Moyers Journal: The Forgotten Americans

Burma News (1.23.09)

Here are the latest headlines on Burma:

  • The Irrawaddy interviews Aung Din, executive director of the U.S. Campaign for Burma, about the “implications of an Obama presidency for future U.S. policy on Burma.”
  • The Associated Press reports that United Nations Special Envoy Ibrahim Gambari will return to Burma on January 31st. It will be his first visit in five months.
  • The Agence France-Presse reports that U Gambira, an organizer of the “Saffron Revolution” who is now imprisoned at Burma’s remote Hkamti prison, has begun a hunger strike.

  • AFP: Chinese Government Says It is Ready to Mend Ties with France

    Last year saw the Chinese government enraged at His Holiness the Dalai Lama’s warm welcome in France by President Nicolas Sarkozy. The Agence France-Presse reports that Wu Hongbo, China’s Assistant Foreign Minister, has said:

      We are ready to work with France to improve our bilateral relations. This is in the interest of the two countries and their people. France is a great country, French people are great people. We very much hope that there will be an improvement in bilateral relations, however, as the Chinese saying goes, the one who tied the knot should be the one who unties it. As the one who tied the knot, France, I believe, is clear about what needs to be done.

    Sigh…