Rev. Danny Fisher

Just a Buddhist Minister Trying to Benefit Beings

The Great Buddhist Blog Swap, Part 3: Guest Blogger Maia Duerr Schools Us in Micro Peacework

Today is the third Buddhist Blog Swap, created by the great Nate DeMontigny over at Precious Metal.  I just submitted something to my buddy Justin Whitaker’s blog American Buddhist Perspective.  In addition, I’m very lucky to be able to host something from another pal, the dear Maia Duerr of The Jizo Chronicles and the Upaya Chaplaincy Training Program. (That’s us to the left, pictured in Pasadena back in January.)  Maia writes for us about “Micro Peacework”–take a look below!

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Micro Peacework
by Maia Duerr

We often think about activism and peacework in grand terms, even grandiose terms. We think it means we have to stop an entire war, save the planet from global warming, eliminate racism. Free Tibet, Save the Redwoods, End Poverty. That’s a big agenda. No wonder we’re exhausted.

Lately I’ve been thinking that two of the most common sources of violence are actually much closer to home, rooted in our own psyches. These are: 1) the tendency to hold tightly to fixed ideas, and 2) the compulsion to rush or speed in our lives.

I realize I’m not saying anything dramatically new here… teachers from the Buddha himself to Thich Nhat Hanh and His Holiness the Dalai Lama say this much better than I could. But it’s such a good teaching that it bears remembering, and we will never run out of chances to practice with these obstructions.

The first, holding tightly to fixed ideas, probably comes our way almost every waking moment. The second, the compulsion to rush or speed, causes harm in more ways than we are probably aware of. The movie “Changing Lanes” (2002, with Ben Affleck and Samuel Jackson) was a great parable on the karma generated by unwholesome actions that are so often fueled by speed. And recently, I posted a wonderful quote by Thomas Merton on that very topic on my blog.

What would it be like to consider that every moment, every interaction, is an opportunity for reversing the karma of those tendencies, and for potent peacemaking? And to consider that these apparently small actions can add up to make a significant difference in the world?

In that spirit, I offer this small, handcrafted batch of peacemaking for you to try, specially blended to work with these two obstructions:

  • Observe Shabbat, the Jewish practice of stopping on the seventh day, of being in stillness and rest. You don’t necessarily have to do it on Saturday, but try it for one day each week and see what happens.
  • Walk (or take the bus or the train) rather than drive your car. Notice how the pace of your life changes. What else happens?
  • Consider a long-held grievance you have against someone and, just for today, let it go. Grant emotional amnesty to that person.
  • Allow someone to cut in front of you in line without going into a hissy fit.
  • Watch yourself closely as you note ideas of scarcity of resources arising. Take a deep breath and practice trusting that there is enough for everyone, that all will be well.
  • Meditate. Meditation is the ultimate act of nonviolence. When you are sitting still, you are living in low impact on the world, and you are regulating your own mind and body to operate in a more sustainable way.

What would you add to this list?

A Gift of Dharma for 4.9.10

Today’s quote is from the mighty Robert Aitken Roshi, retired master of the Diamond Sangha, author, and co-founder of the Buddhist Peace Fellowship.  This is it:

Many Zen Students and even a few teachers think Zen is a kind of psychology. This is a little like thinking that persimmons are a type of banana. The Zen master is more like a flea than he or she is like a psychologist. More like a cool breeze. More like a mountain peak. I am not exaggerating or being fanciful.

Clark Strand on The Buddha and Being Buddhist in America

It’s at On Faith, and well worth reading.

The Bodhidharma Action Figure with Kung Fu Grip…Literally!

Paul Lynch at Zen Mirror has the story. (Thanks to our pal and editor Rod Meade Sperry at Shambhala SunSpace and The Worst Horse for the tip!)

“The Owls Are Not What They Seem: The Dharma of Twin Peaks’ Dale Cooper”

There’s a great piece on “the Dharma of Twin Peaks‘ Dale Cooper” over at our main man Rod Meade Sperry’s The Worst Horse today.  Check it out.

Twin Peaks, David Lynch’s avant-garde pop culture classic, celebrated its twentieth anniversary this week.

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