Rev. Danny Fisher

Just a Buddhist Minister Trying to Benefit Beings

A Gift of Dharma for 12.7.09

Today’s dharma quote is another from the Vidyādhara, Chögyam Trungpa Rinpoche (1939-1987), whom I previously quoted and wrote a little bio for hereThe quote is below, and it comes from Rinpoche’s profound magnum opus Shambhala:  The Sacred Path of the Warrior, pg. 147-148:

The challenge of warriorship is to live fully in the world as it is and to find within this world, with all its paradoxes, the essence of nowness. If we open our eyes, if we open our minds, if we open our hearts, we will find that this world is a magical place. It is not magical because it tricks us or changes unexpectedly into something else, but it is magical because it can BE so vividly, so brilliantly. However, the discovery of that magic can happen only when we transcend our embarrassment about being alive, when we have the bravery to proclaim the goodness and dignity of human life, without either hesitation or arrogance.

Check Out My List of the “Ten Best Films of the ’00s” at elephant journal

Over at elephant journal, I’ve named my “Ten Best Films of the ’00s”.  I hope you’ll take a look and share your picks with us there.

The Venerable Dr. Yifa’s Response to the Bhikkhuni Ordination at Perth

The author with the Venerable Dr. Yifa at University of the West in April 2007. Photo by the Venerable Kiet.

Over at The Buddhist Channel, our friend and past video-interviewee the Venerable Dr. Yifa responds to the controversy about the Wat Pa Phong Sangha’s decision to disavow Bodhinyana Monastery over Ajahn Brahmavamso’s ordination of bhikkhunis (nuns).  Take a look!

Steps To-Marrow

This from a friend of a friend:

Jada Bascom was born on April 16, 2007 at Holy Family Hospital in Spokane, WA, two hours after her birth a nurse came in and swept Jada away.  We later learned that a nurse noticed small red dots on Jada’s skin, a sign that her blood was not clotting.  This nurse was the first in a long line of people who were responsible for saving our Jada’s life.  Jada had hundreds of blood transfusions, an amazing medical team at Sacred Heart Children’s Hospital and Seattle Children’s Hospital,  Difibritide sent on a compassionate use basis from a pharmaceutical company in Italy, prayers from people of a myriad of faiths…And a bone marrow donor. 

Jada’s illness turned her families lives upside down.  Her mother had expected to spend time at home with the new baby and then return to work after 6 weeks.  Instead, Jada’s family moved in with her Grandparents.  The family pulled together everyone taking shifts at the hospital to be sure there was someone with Jada 24 hours a day 7 days a week.   Family, friends, co-worker’s, our small community of Deer Park, churches, Zen centers, cancer organizations all stepped forward to help with the fundraising necessary to keep our family going. 

On March 7, 2008, Jada came home from Seattle in remission 5 months after her bone marrow transplant…her battle with leukemia was not over.  Her body was now trying to integrate with the donor cells and vice versa.  She had several bouts with graft vs. host disease.  In February of 2009, the doctors again began slowly to decrease the drugs suppressing Jada’s immune system.  Today, Jada is almost weaned from the immune suppressant drugs.  She is on target developmentally for a two year old.  She loves the water.  She enjoys having books read to her.  Her favorite book is “Green Eggs and Ham.”  Her best friend is Alivia.  Her favorite movie is “Finding Nemo.”   Her favorite song is “The Itsy Bitsy Spider.”  She smiles and laughs a lot and is a very loving child. 

In order to express our gratitude to the innumerable people it took to save Jada’s life and to support our family through this crisis we began the Jada Bascom Foundation.  The foundation is sponsoring Steps To-Marrow, in which, Jada’s grandmother, Jeana Moore, will be walking from Seattle to Los Angeles and Los Angeles to New York City, to raise awareness around the need for bone marrow donors and to recruit potential bone marrow donors for the National Bone Marrow Registry.  We hope that through our efforts many people will find their match just like Jada did. 

Please consider getting involved at http://www.stepstomarrow.com.

A Gift of Dharma for 12.6.09

Today’s quote is from the great Ven. Matthieu Ricard.

After completing a Ph.D. in molecular genetics at the Institut Pasteur, Ricard moved to the Himalayas to devote himself entirely to the study and practice of Tibetan Buddhism.  Though he has studied with many great masters, he was a very close student and attendant for Dilgo Khyentse Rinpoche.

A board member of the Mind and Life Institute, he has participated in research projects on the effects of meditation on the brain, at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, Princeton University, University of California-Berkeley, and others.  Since 1989, Ricard has also been the French interpreter for His Holiness the Dalai Lama.

He is the author/translator/photographer of Journey to Enlightenment: The Life and World of Khyentse Rinpoche, Spiritual Teacher From Tibet; Motionless Journey: From a Hermitage in the Himalayas; Bhutan: The Land of Serenity; The Life of Shabkar: The Autobiography of a Tibetan Yogin; Rainbows Appear: Tibetan Poems of Shakbar; Tibet: An Inner Journey; and Monk Dancers of Tibet.  In addition, he is the co-author of The Monk and the Philosopher, The Quantum and the Lotus: A Journey to the Frontiers Where Science and Buddhism Meet, Buddhist Himalayas, and Happiness: A Guide to Developing Life’s Most Important Skill.

He currently lives at Shechen Tennyi Dargyeling Monastery in Nepal, and coordinates the Karuna-Shechen humanitarian projects in the Himalayan region.

Here’s the quote, from his recent interview with Krista Tippett for American Public Media’s Speaking of Faith:

Ms. Tippett: …A quality of you and of His Holiness, the Dalai Lama, and other very wise people I’ve come across, spiritual people, serious people, is also of very robust sense of humor. He’s always laughing. He’s funny. And even before I met you, when I’ve seen pictures of you, you know, you always have a smile on your face. And I want to know, where does humor come into this, to wisdom?

Mr. Ricard: Well, humor comes with, you know, when you’re not, first of all, if the ego is not such a target, that is always there, exposed to all the arrows of praise and blame and criticism and all that and you are not too much, you know, susceptible to that, basically you don’t care to start with. Nothing to lose, nothing to gain from all this noise of, “Oh, you are such a great guy” or “You are just a bastard.” What does it mean? It’s like egos, it doesn’t care. So it gives a sense of less vulnerability as a real strength. People think that a strong ego is a strength. Strong ego is ultimate vulnerability. You are so preoccupied with a strong ego, you can’t sleep anymore.

Ms. Tippett: Right.

Mr. Ricard: But if this ego is transparent, it’s fine. So it’s sort of lifeless. And then also because you have this real confidence, not come from strong ego, you are much more available to others, so open to the world. You know, I see that in Tibet very often. Sometimes you find a very difficult situation — no car when we do those projects in schools and clinics, we get stuck in the middle of a river with our car. You know, big stream, it’s raining, you know, everybody will just — you can imagine some people screaming, you know, upset. Usually, it ends up everyone is on top of the car cracking into laughter. Such a — the thing is such a funny thing. So there’s a kind of, you know, we do our best. And these things happen. And why should you take it too seriously because we will survive that hopefully. And after all, what’s the problem? Just one part of the journey and it’s so much more fun if you take it like that than, you know, making all these tantrums about this.

It’s just precisely what we were mentioning before, the way you interpret the world. I gave this example, which struck me: I was sitting outside our monastery once and it was monsoon time in Nepal, a lot of mud and water. And we had put some bricks about 20 to 30 meters to go from one brick to the other to cross that mess. And one person came, a foreigner, and that person was just screaming, “How disgusting this place.” And I was sitting there and she’s going to scold me for it just there… so OK. Then five minutes later, another person came, two ladies, and she was just hopping from one to the other, “Oh, it’s so nice. It’s such fun. And when there is rain, there’s no dust.” And she was in exactly the same situation, and she has a sense of lightness and humor. The other one was just like grumbling like crazy about it. So, same situation, different perspective.