Rev. Danny Fisher

Just a Buddhist Minister Trying to Benefit Beings

Month: April, 2011

Phoebe Snow (1952-2011)

Sad news via Shambhala Sun Space:

Singer and folk guitarist Phoebe Snow has died, the cause of death being identified as complications from a brain hemorrhage she suffered in January 2010. The voice behind such hits as 1975’s “Poetry Man” and “Gone at Last” (with Paul Simon), Snow was also a practitioner of Nichiren Shoshu Buddhism, whose main practice is the chanting of the devotional mantra “Nam Myoho Renge Kyo.”

Snow’s career quieted down for a time as she focused on the health of her special-needs daughter, Valerie. After Valerie’s death in 2007, she would re-engage her life in music, and also her practice. As Snow told the San Francisco Chronicle:

“…I thought I would rail against my religious practice. I questioned it at first for obvious reasons. But then my faith deepened. I became much more devoted. I found, almost… I’m trying to find the right word to describe it… sanctuary.”

A Gift of Dharma for 4.25.11

Today’s quote is another from the Most Venerable Thich Nhat Hanh, whom I previously quoted and wrote a little bio for here. This is it:

Maybe intellectually people know that they should live in the present moment, but the habit energy that has been there for a long time is always pushing them to rush around, so they have lost their capacity to be in the present moment in order to lead their life deeply. That is why the practice is important, and talking is not enough. You have to practice enough to really stop your running around so that you can establish yourself in the present moment. That is the very beginning of the practice: stopping. Stopping, looking deeply, and finding happiness and liberation—that is the Buddhist path.

BBC: “Brains of Buddhist Monks Scanned in Meditation Study”

Zoran Josipovic prepares a Buddhist monk for a brain scan in an fMRI machine

"Zoran Josipovic prepares a Buddhist monk for a brain scan in an fMRI machine." Image via the BBC.

Watch and read the story here.

The Tzu Chi Foundation Pushes for More Asian American Organ Donors

Whittier Daily News has the story.

In addition, two years ago, I posted about the Taiwan-based order taking the lead on encouraging people to donate their dead bodies to science. You can read that post here.

A Gift of Dharma for 4.24.11

Photo by Rinchen Lhamo.

Today’s quote is from Peter Lieberson (1946-2011), the American composer whose works were often inspired by Tibetan Buddhism, and who also served as international director of Shambhala Training for many years. He died yesterday at age 64. This is it — from a beautiful piece he wrote for Shambhala Sun in 1997:

The Buddha let go of his struggle [to gain enlightenment] because he saw through all the techniques he had been faithfully practicing for years. He understood that the intrinsic wakefulness of his basic being was beyond any concept of enlightenment.

At the same time, he discovered that freedom paradoxically came about through those very disciplines that were artificial, gradual in application, and, ultimately, constricting. So for those inspired to follow the Buddha’s example, a path developed based on the skillful methods of the Buddha himself and of realized teachers in the lineages that followed.

From the very beginning of the Buddhist path simple techniques are presented to the student that encourage a state of wakefulness; in a sense one is deliberately playing a trick on oneself. Still, because one is trying to let go, there are nine yanas, or vehicles, in the Buddhist path that present ever more subtle and powerful techniques, each wearing out the previous ones. From this perspective, it might be said that enlightenment is a kind of transcendental exhaustion.

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