Rev. Danny Fisher

Just a Buddhist Minister Trying to Benefit Beings

A Gift of Dharma for 4.5.10

Photo posted on Naropa University's Facebook page today.

Seeing as it’s the anniversary of his death, today’s quote is from Allen Ginsberg (1926-1997), whom I previously quoted and wrote a little biography for here.  This is it:

There is a bodhisattva aspect of poetry, particularly when you combine it with the notion of poetry as proclamation. So:

proclamation of original mind
proclamation of primordial mind
proclamation of your candid mind
proclamation of your own chaos
proclamation of your own uncertainty
proclamation of your own fragility
proclamation of your own sensitivity
proclamation of your own cheerful neurosis, so to speak, a cheerful attitude toward your nature, which fits in well with the meditation-practice suggestion to take a friendly attitude toward your thoughts rather than try to push them away—“invite them to tea,” merely observe them with a friendly attitude, and that can be applied to poetics, taking a friendly attitude toward your thoughts, and when you catch yourself thinking, if you have an interesting and vivid thought, notating it, particularly the sequence of thoughts that might lead other people to notice their own mind.

In other words, if you can show your mind it reminds people that they have got a mind. If you can catch yourself thinking, it reminds people they can catch themselves thinking. If you have a vivid moment that’s more open and compassionate, it reminds people that they have those vivid moments.

By showing your mind as a mirror, you can make a mirror for other people to recognize their own minds and see familiarity and not feel that their minds are unworthy of affection or appreciation. Basically, poetics is appreciation of consciousness, appreciation of our own consciousness.

Donate a Cushion to Homeless Meditation Practitioners (Please Forward, Repost, Tweet, Etc.)

This from Kiley Jon Clark at HMP Street Dharma:

Dear HMP friends,

I need your help this time.

Please contact as many Buddhists/People/Meditation/Groups/Temples/Centers as you can…and ask them to please send us some meditation cushions!

We have a beautiful Chapel at Haven for Hope, that we are going to be allowed to use for Homeless Meditation Practitioners

When it is our night to use this Chapel, I want it to look, smell, and feel like a real Buddhist Sanctuary…because…it will be…at least for that night…and we want it complete with Alter items, incense, candles, colorful tapestries, etc…and most importantly: Meditation Cushions!

Can you send some emails to people you know, and help me get this done, Please?

Or

if you know a better way to get cushions, let me know…like setting up an account with a company that makes them or something like that….

but I don’t want to ask for money…it would be cool if many, many People and Centers all just sent one Cushion a piece…and then everyone  would have a hand in providing meditation instruction in the Homeless Community.

counting on you,

Hmpstreetdharma@gmail.com
hmpstreetdharma.org

thanks,

Kiley Jon Clark
PO Box 71
Floresville, Texas 78114

For more about this project for the homeless, follow this link.

The Buddhist Literary Heritage Project’s Official Website Goes Live!

This from the Buddhist Literary Heritage Project:

It has been a year since the Translating the Words of the Buddha Conference–a five day translation conference attended by more than fifty Dharma translators, teachers, scholars and students, held at Deer Park Institute in Bir, India. After many months of hard work and preparation, I am delighted to inform you that the Buddhist Literary Heritage Project (BLHP) interim website is now available at http://www.buddhistliteraryheritage.org. Please visit our website, and share the link with friends whom you think may be interested.

Check it out here.

Shechen Rabjam Rinpoche’s Vision for the 2010 Centennial