Community Blog2020-05-29T14:27:56-04:00

Community Blog

3March 2014

Strive on with heedfulness

March 3rd, 2014|Blog, On the Cushion|

Every Law student studies the case in which Oliver Wendell Holmes advised that when we come to a railroad crossing, we should “stop, look and listen” in order to be safe. Great advice, not only for railroad crossings, but for all the crossings, large and small, in life. It is akin to the last words of the Buddha on his deathbed to his disciples: “Strive on with heedfulness.”

24February 2014

Refuge in the Rich Tapestry of Sangha

February 24th, 2014|Blog, On the Cushion|

Sangha is the third jewel, the third refuge in the Buddha’s teachings. The traditional meaning of “Sangha,” is the community of practitioners who preserve and uphold the teachings of the Buddha: the enlightened Buddhas and Bodhisattvas, monks and nuns and householders who are practicing to realize the wisdom, ethics and meditation Path of Dhamma, moving toward truth.

17February 2014

Safety in Dhamma

February 17th, 2014|Blog, On the Cushion|

Dhamma is the second jewel, the second of the three refuges in Buddhist practice. Taking refuge begins with asking the question, “where do I find safety?” When we take refuge in Dhamma, it means we seek and find safety in the truth of the way things actually are, warts and all.

10February 2014

We Are Awake

February 10th, 2014|Blog, On the Cushion|

In what do we take refuge when we take refuge in the Buddha? Like us, the Buddha was a human being, and our refuge in these qualities of Awakened Mind/Heart respects deeply our own potential—luminous, spotless, wise.

3February 2014

Finding Safety

February 3rd, 2014|Blog, On the Cushion|

All Buddhist traditions invite taking refuge in the Buddha, the Dhamma, and the Sangha. These Three Jewels provide a focus for commitment and reflection. In daily life, we are constantly looking for safety, refuge, in something—whether it is our ambition, career, house, money, neuroses or relationship.

27January 2014

Worldly Winds

January 27th, 2014|Blog, On the Cushion|

We each have our measure of joy and of suffering, which the Buddha referred to as the Eight Worldly Winds: gain and loss, pleasure and pain, praise and blame, fame and disrepute. I suspect he named them meteorologically because, like these worldly winds, we are subject to the weather but cannot control it. Gentle breezes to gale force winds all unpredictably blow through our lives.

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