Hatred v. Concern

5 11 2008

Strangely, the day after the election is more trying than any of the previous days.

Here in the Fourth Circle of Hell, John McCain beat Barack Obama 57% to 41%. People here are truly shocked that the rest of the nation didn’t vote along with them. Asking these people what the problem is, I’ve heard that President Obama:

  • “is going to turn America into a Communist country”
  • “took money from a foreign dictator”
  • “is a terrorist”

    and my personal favorite

    • “is the Antichrist”

      This isn’t anything I haven’t heard before. I’d heard it all through the elections but that was always from anonymous commenters on blogs. The four phrases I list above came this morning out of the mouths of two women that I work with and like.

      For me, hearing this and not judging but being mindful and compassionate is…um…difficult. It’s one thing to fear the painful death that results from drinking Coke while you eat Pop Rocks. It’s another thing altogether to honestly believe that the newly elected President is he who will come to Earth to challenge Christ and bring about the end of days.

      The compassion part isn’t too hard. As I said before, these are people I like. Watching them be possessed by such an intense level of fear and ignorance is hard and I do sincerely hope that they will be free someday. Still, it’s hard to not feel frustration with someone who buys into any old piece of nonsense they receive in an email or from FOX News. It feels like the emotion that bubbles up causing you to want to slap someone who is hysterical – which is wrong, too.

      But I do feel that there is great value in remaining non-judgmental about the situation. If nothing else, we can be examples. I just don’t want to be an example who allows hatred to spread because I was busy being mindful.

      So what have I learned?

      I always used to think that I had a pretty bad attitude. That hatred was part of my general makeup. I certainly used the word enough. I “hated” disco and brussel sprouts and reality shows and “that smell” or “that fucking guy”. Looking back now, I see that I never really hated anyone or anything. I just used the word incorrectly. Not a right view issue but a right speech issue.

      Some people live to bathe in hatred. Their hatred of a person or an idea gives them a sense of purpose and “proof” that they are on the right side of things.

      In the big scheme of things though, does it really matter if it’s disco or the Antichrist? View or speech? Aren’t I, via my concern rather than hatred, giving myself a sense of purpose and “proving” that I’m on the right side of things?





      And I’m Doing This, Why?

      25 11 2007

      So I’m involved in this film project. Someone else’s, not mine.

      I should preface this by saying that, with the exception of acting, I’m not big on working on other people’s projects. They rarely provide you with enough info to really get behind the event yet they expect you to bleed, sweat and cry every drop through every agonizing moment of making their little miracle happen. If you have real anti-social tendencies, crewing someone else’s film is like being forced to listen to hordes of hand models run their fingernails down acres of chalkboards.

      The reasons I agreed to go with this one are 1) it’s a fairly large scale film (read: will be seen nationwide) and 2) I would also be acting in it and 3) the other job was Art Director which would look nice on the resume.

      Well, the acting part went up in smoke and the Art Director position has turned into the snafu to end all snafus. I’ve had my props department dwindled down to a completely overworked Set Dresser and myself and with days left before shooting, new items are being added to our to-do list by the hour. The scale of the audience is still intact, though. So should things go south due to the HeadUpTheAssness exhibited by the higher-ups, all of America will get to see just how big of a screw up I am according to said higher-ups.

      So, lessons. Right? What are my lessons?

      I see many but they seem to be the kind of lessons I always had for myself, pre-Buddhism (which doesn’t necessarily make them wrong). Things like “don’t get involved with those people again” or “stop pretending that you want to work on other people’s stuff”. But I’m having trouble seeing any lessons from a Buddhist perspective. It could be that I’m just too close to the situation right now. Perhaps once it’s over.

      There is a friend of mine who was asked to be involved much like I was who turned it down flat. His main reason was that he didn’t feel he was qualified. Everyone else felt he was but he said that it seemed that a higher level of professionalism was required for that kind of work and he didn’t possess that. That could very well be part of my problem. If so, it would have been nice to have that kind of foresight and maturity to recognize my limits.

      But there’s something else going on here. This situation is bad and I’m sorry I got involved. I won’t quit because I committed to it but I can’t wait until it’s over and I can go back to making my own little movies again.

       


      I was just about to post this when it clicked.

      Last week, I wrote this:

      Bodhi Girl made a comment about my little medical incident last week that really got me thinking. She pointed out that my predicament made it very easy to remember the First Noble Truth, that is the truth of suffering. More precisely, that life is suffering.

      OK. Maybe I’m stretching here but could this week’s post be about the Second Noble Truth? That suffering is caused by craving? I took this job because it sounded like I could get what I wanted out of it and OH SNAP! Suffering.

      Like I said, maybe I’m stretching but work with me here.





      The Reduction of a Thousand Cuts

      18 11 2007

      Bodhi Girl made a comment about my little medical incident last week that really got me thinking. She pointed out that my predicament made it very easy to remember the First Noble Truth, that is the truth of suffering. More precisely, that life is suffering.

      On a First Noble Truth Scale, that particular bit of suffering was probably only about a five. I mean, it hurt but there are some truly horrific things experienced by people everywhere on a daily basis. Apparently though there has been some debate about what level of suffering was meant by the Buddha. There are those who say that when speaking of the First Noble Truth, the Buddha meant the sort of general dissatisfaction that come with being human.

      I’m still very new at all of this but I have to think that the Buddha meant more than that. However, if we were to find out that’s what he meant, I could go along with that. We see people that overcome horrendous difficulties to not just weedle their way out from under them but to triumph and become better than they were. It’s the “thousand cuts” that seem to really tear an individual down. The tiny pinpricks of disappointments and humiliations and disregards that hurt one so greatly and so frequently that they give in and give up.

      Some of us reach a point in our lives where we realize that this is happening to us and we make a decision to defend ourselves against the little hurts fed to us by others. Hey, that’s why I stopped using Windows™.

      But some of us go too far. In an effort to defend ourselves, we build up walls around ourselves. We strike first. We hurt others before they can hurt us. We become the handers out of the thousand cuts. And Buddhist or not, we all know about Karma. What goes around comes around. What goes up, must come down. When it comes to dealing out cuts, a thousand out is a thousand back.

      So what do we do? Well, the path I’m taking is leading me in a direction that will – should – is supposed to – BETTER – help me deal with those situations in a way that is healthy not only for me, but for others as well. But not everybody can or will choose to take this path. Certainly many will find other paths that lead them to the same place but others will not. What of them? What will they do? How will they cope? And how will those around them cope?

      I don’t know. I’m asking.





      The Beginner’s Mind – And Decorative Boxers

      15 11 2007

      The past week brought an interesting situation.

      I was in Michigan on business – training for some software we use at the office. Thursday evening, I’m sitting at the desk in my hotel room, surfing the web when suddenly I’ve got a horrible pain in my lower back. Within minutes, the pain is so bad that I’m vomiting and close to passing out.

      I’ll explain more in a minute and we’ll find out it’s not life threatening but when something like this happens – sudden horrific pain coming from inside you that is causing you to black out – you start to wonder if you are indeed dying.

      But I felt like I handled that well. No panic. No freaking out. I was actually pragmatic. I reasoned out that If I was going to die it would most likely be from hitting my head when I passed out. So I decided to lie down. Ah, but don’t forget Jimi Hendrix! I could have vomited again and if I lay on my back, I could have asphyxiated. So I needed to lay on my side.

      Then I got considerate. I decided to lay on the bathroom floor instead of the carpet because if I did vomit or in some other way void myself while dying, it would have been a lot easier to clean up if it was on a tile floor.

      The I got self-conscious. I was wearing a pair of boxers that my wife had given me that is covered in hearts and has a teddy bear on it and in big bubble letters says “My heart pants for you”. I certainly didn’t want to be found dead wearing those so I changed my underwear.

      By that time, I figured I wasn’t going to die.

      Soon enough, the vomiting was over and I was able to stand. Actually, I felt better standing. I got on the phone with my wife and talked to her for a bit and we decided that I should go to a hospital. Because my head was no longer swimming and because the hospital was only a couple of miles away, I decided to drive myself. That was an interesting idea.

      Standing and walking I found that I felt quite a bit better and by the time I reached the Jeep, I was wondering if I really needed to go to the hospital. Then I sat down in the Jeep.

      Oh yeah. I needed to go.

      So I’m driving to the hospital on one cheek, swearing every 15 or 20 seconds, hitting every red light in Livonia, Michigan – and at 8:30 on a Thursday night, they’re all red.

      To make a long story slightly less long, I get in, they check me out, freak out over my blood pressure (160/108, thank you very much), poke me, prod me, stick things in me – which isn’t as fun as it sounds – and declare me a victim of kidney stones.

      They sign me up for blood work and a CT scan and when the results come back at 1:00am, guess what? No stones! The doctor says that he’d guess it was a small stone and that by the time I got to him, the event was over. I’d hate to think what a big stone feels like.

      So apparently very little was wrong with me. It was just a scare. A little action in an otherwise dull week. If this had a design, I’d imagine that it was a test to see how I handled it all. I don’t know, I guess I got a B-.

      But perhaps the real test is figuring out what this event means to my development.

      In the beginner’s mind, it just means a glimpse of disaster. To me on the journey, it seems to have a greater significance. It’s a pin on my map, showing where I am now and days, weeks, months from now it will show where I was. Someday, it will just be a glimpse of disaster again. I look forward to that.





      My Altar v1

      5 11 2007


      As I grew so fond of saying when I hung out on forums more, “this thread is useless without pics”.

      Of course, those were usually threads about Norah Jones. This is about my altar. (See below)

      Et Voilà!

      It’s not as horribly bright as it looks. It’s just a bright flash in a somewhat dim room.





      So I Built Me An Altar

      3 11 2007

      It probably has to do with my time with the Catholics but I always felt that things like altars and statues and acts like genuflecting and prostrating and other such nonsense were best left for places of worship. Still, I was an altar boy and even though I got to be part of the show, the stage always fascinated me. I don’t know whether it was the fact that everything was oversized or the amount of gold leaf used or the way everyone magically went silent as they got close but there was something supremely reverent about it and I’m sure that’s what drew me to performing on actual stages when I grew older.

      When I was younger and found out that Buddhists had altars in their homes, it creeped me out. I mean, as both a Catholic and an avid film goer, I knew that the only people who kept altars in their homes were people who performed ritual sacrifices. Everybody knows that, right?

      But I had an Uncle who was a Buddhist. He was my first and for years my only real exposure to Buddhism. As I learned about my Uncle’s Buddhist practice, I found out that he too had an altar. Knowing that he was one of the most peaceful people in the world, I knew the sacrifice notion was just foolishness on my part and dropped it but I still never really understood the point.

      As I began studying Buddhism myself, I read about how they were focalpoints to aid one in their practice. Yadda, yadda, yadda, blah, blah, blah – see, here’s the thing: Things can be explained to you and you can understand them mentally but until you experience those things for yourself, you don’t really get them.

      A few years ago, when I first started to take an earnest interest in Buddhism, I found out that my Uncle was dying. I was told it would be soon so I made plans to get back out to San Francisco as soon as I could, which would have been about a week and a half. The night before I left, he passed away. It was a real blow because I was unable to see him and talk to him but knowing about his faith, I did feel a certain sense of peace. It was more about loss for me. I still went out to San Francisco to attend the funeral. When I arrived, I found out that the funeral was scheduled for the day after I was to leave. I had to be back at work on that day and couldn’t change my plans. So basically, I’d come to San Francisco for nothing, or so it seemed.

      The day after I arrived, I decided to spend the day in The City by myself. I’d rented a car – a Jeep actually – so I figured I’d might as well put it to good use. The first place I went was the top of Bernal Heights. That’s one of the hills that rises up out of San Francisco’s streets and it’s the hill I grew up on. Sitting up on top of it early in the morning, I had a view that was mostly obscured by fog. Many would be disappointed but I live for the fog. Sitting in a blanket of thick, cold, fog make me happy in ways many people can not fathom. It’s not unlike sitting in front of a large blank movie screen. Sure, you could just see a big white sheet or you could see things appear. You could create your own movie in your head. Watching the fog is very much like that.

      From there it was off to Noe Valley for juice and a bagel but then where? Somehow I ended up at a place I hated as a child. I ended up at my grade school. The site of many bullying sessions where I was the victim. The place where Vince, Omar, Kevin and I used to smoke pot during recess. (In 7th grade, mind you. In 1977! So please stop with the “kids today” speeches.) I found a need to roam it’s halls. Perhaps see if one of the teachers I had might still be teaching and show them that I made it. But what do I find? It’s still summer vacation. The school is closed. Bastards.

      So I wander down the block to the basilica. This is the place where I did some time as an altar boy, where later I played guitar in the somewhat hipper masses and where I eventually came to believe that God did not exist.

      I entered and, as is still the case whenever entering any Catholic church, had to fight the urge to dip my hand in the font and cross myself. (They really get you when you’re young.) Moving into the church, I took a seat, near the back in case of a sudden lightning strike. I took a moment to settle in and take in the austerity of the place. Whoever designed the place, really understood the effect of architecture on the human psyche.

      Once leveled, I notice the customary old Latina in the first row, kneeling and saying her rosary. You just know she was there every day. Their dedication is stunning. We could all stand to have that level of commitment to something. To anything.

      There was the odd cleric and layman moving to and fro furiously, arranging flowers and placing items as if to say, “God will not wait for my lazy ass.” I could see the two lights on the confessional lit. Some poor schlub spilling his guts about things that probably don’t really matter in the grand scheme – and if they do matter, he should probably be speaking to someone else. It was everything that I remembered from my youth and many of the reasons I left the church.

      But then I noticed that one massive thing that had been sitting directly in front of me all along. The altar.

      Of course, to just say “the altar” isn’t quite correct. Some will tell you the altar is just the table. There’s the reredos which is the wall that sits behind the table, sometimes with pictures of saints. The cross, which in Mission Dolores Basilica is at least life size, though I’d say it’s larger than life – it’s rather horrifying, really. You have the aumbry and lectern and the huge vases filled with flowers and the little kneeling benches where the altar boys wait with their bells, even lighting and sound equipment. The whole thing really is a stage but of course, we just call it the altar.

      The power of this image just bashed me between the eyes. Even with my complete lack of belief, I couldn’t deny the ability of this structure to focus my attention on the subject at hand.

      I stayed a while but fearing retribution for having soiled this holy place with my heathenness, I got up, put my hands in my pockets as I passed the fonts and exited the building.

      I spent the rest of the day moving from place to place in a free form motion. No requirements. No goals. Just go until you have a reason to stop. I ended the day at the Buddhist Bookstore and got as much out of talking to the staff as I did out of the books that I purchased. All in all, it was a perfect day.

      Good thing too because the next day I found out that there were two services for my Uncle. The one that the family was holding that I was going to miss and one that the members of his sangha were holding that took place the day I was out seeing The City.

      So I would miss both opportunities to pay my respects to Uncle. But I think – and I could way off base here – that in doing what I did that day in The City, in reattaching momentarily to my hurtful past, acknowledging it, then letting it go, then seeking out a new way, I may have paid more respect to Uncle George and his way of life than anything I could have done at either of those services. I sure hope so anyway.

      So back to the altar.

      I had largely forgotten about my altar experience until I went to see the Dalai Lama last week. Upon entering the auditorium the first time, I was greeted with an open stage open which sat, I’m guessing, four rows of maybe eight zabuton on either side of a large throne. Some of the zabuton were occupied by monks and nuns. All would be soon. Behind the last row of zabuton on each side were a row of chairs. On one side, the row contained a number of Benedictine monks. On the other side were a number of women that I’m assuming were Catholic nuns of some sort. Behind the throne, hanging in front of the backdrop is a massive (I’m talking like 80 feet high) tapestry of the Buddha. Everything is decked out in maroon and gold.

      BANG! Between the eyes again.

      Suddenly I’m having every experience in front of every altar ever, all over again and that’s when it hits me.

      “focalpoints to aid one in their practice”

      Of course! Having an altar doesn’t make me a ritual sacrificer anymore than it makes me a Buddhist or a Catholic. I can only be those things if I practice those things.

      Here’s an example. I own a baseball bat. Does that make me a baseball player? No. Only playing baseball can make me a baseball player.

      So once I’m back home, I start pondering the altar idea. Do I need one? Do I want one? Well, my little practice spot is kind of shabby. It doesn’t particularly inspire me to meditate. To focus on the subject at hand. It does kind of sound like having an altar might be appropriate. But what does that entail? Do I need to buy stuff? Is there some particular layout that I have to get right? Is this whole endeavor going to start to irritate me at some point?

      Then I found this thread over at e-sangha. Great stuff. I discovered that while the altar should definitely focus you on the subject of the Buddha’s teachings, part of how it does that is to speak directly to you. The best way to do that is for the altar to be very much a part of you. It should take on part of your personality. I realized I already had everything I needed. Here’s what I used.

      • 1 old steamer trunk
      • 1 concrete Buddha statue from WalMart that was going to go into the garden next year
      • 1 maroon fleece throw blanket
      • 1 “Teaching of Buddha” book
      • 1 “Atisha’s Lamp For The Path To Enlightenment” book
      • 1 dorje

      The Buddha statue is perched on top of my homemade zafu. I found one that supported my back better so I thought I’d give mine to the Buddha. In front of the altar, my zafu sits on my homemade zabuton. As time goes on I’m sure I’ll add more as I find things that suit me but I’ve found that when I bow, then sit on my zafu and look up at the Buddha, BANG! Right between the eyes.

      Works like a charm.





      Finding Center

      30 10 2007

      Well, today has been weird. I’ve found myself flying back and forth between extremes of anger and elation, cruelty and compassion – basically, who I’ve been and who I’d like to be. I assume that what I’m doing is finding a middle ground where I can be comfortable in my practice, A place where I can bend without breaking. That would be handy.

      I ended the day on what I can only assume was some sort of test. I feel like I’ve been getting a lot of those lately.

      The office of mayor in our little town is up for for election this year. Our local public access channel has been running a tape of the debates between the two candidates every night and tonight I got a chance to watch it. Now, I’d had my opinions about one of the gentlemen running and why he was, shall we say, ill-equipped to serve as mayor but watching him on television tonight really hit the point home. The man is not bright and I’m being nice. Really, really, REALLY nice.

      Now, I’m trying to be more compassionate towards others. I’m trying to feel love for everyone and I really feel that not calling someone an idiot is a big step in that direction. (If you knew me, you’d think it was a giant leap.) But here’s the thing: what if the person in question really is an idiot? What if they’re as dumb as a small paper bag half full of used matches? And what if the braniac in question wants to run your town and has a fair chance of winning?

      You meditate, right? That’s where I’m headed right now.





      Familiarity Breeds Familiarity

      28 10 2007

      Being back at home, I’m finding that my practice is headed back to it’s old patterns. That is, it’s hit and miss. It’s not that I don’t want to practice. It’s that I want to do that and a number of other things too plus there’s a bunch of things that I’m required to do. So mediation, study, yoga, these things tend to get pushed aside. I need to force myself into a regimen to make sure that I stay the course but it needs to be a regimen that isn’t so stiff that I push back.

      So, I started the day with a small meal, a short meditation session, thirty minutes worth of yoga, then sat down and listened to a dharma talk at Audio Dharma by Gil Fronsdal. Things were going well until the dharma talk. Shortly after I started listening to that, my mind began to wander. I had to keep rewinding to catch pieces I just listened to. I definitely did not get the most out of it. I’ll try listening to it again tomorrow during lunch. I imagine I’ll need it by then.

      Afterwards, I decided to start on work around the house. In the past, I’ve always had a strong distaste for this kind of work. I do it but I hate it. What a lovely way to spend my time off. Of course, I’ve read the many things written about treating your work as part of your meditation practice. I always got a good chuckle out of that. I mean, it’s pretty hard to view work as meditation when you’re swearing under your breath the whole time. My work today – laundry and yard work – was different, though. It felt very much like meditation.

      To my amusement, I found myself singing a song while I was working. The song was taught to us prior to one of His Holiness’ sessions last week. The song was in both Tibetan and Sanskrit and I’m sure I was mangling the words badly but it’s the thought that counts, right?

      Once my work was done, I realized that a number of the people I know realized I was home and the phone calls and emails started coming in. People wanted things. They always do. That was part of what was wearing on me so heavily before I left but I certainly can’t expect that to go away. It’s part of what I need to learn to accept and deal with.

      I think I did OK with that though. No swearing or grunting. No pacing. I didn’t do that thing with my hand and my face. So, yeah. That went well.





      So it begins.

      28 10 2007

      I’m sure there are other blogs like this.

      OK. Hang on.

      I just looked. There’s this one. Not dissimilar.

      So here’s the scoop. I’ve frittered around on the edges of Buddhism for a number of years now. I’ve never really committed to it for a variety of reasons all of which amount to excuses. Lately, a number of aspects of my life have conspired to push me towards that commitment but there is one excuse that is actually valid: I live in hell. Well, not actually hell. It’s rural Indiana, which, if you’ve ever been here…

      Here in the middle of nowhere, difference is viewed as something about which one should be suspicious, if not harbor deep seated fears. Here’s a perfect example. There are a number of restaurants in town but not one of them is Italian. Why? Too exotic. I’m not making that up.

      So, yeah, Buddhism is way beyond the definition of possible, let alone normal around here. My nearest hope for a little of that ol’ time sangha? 64 miles. Not exactly conducive to Sunday services.

      But I’m ignoring all my excuses, valid or otherwise, and jumping in feet first. And I’m going to use this blog as my own little personal journal. I’m doing that for a couple of reasons. First, writing with a pen makes my hand cramp up. What can I say? I’m a wuss. Second, I know there are others out there in my boat and certainly there will be more. Perhaps my successes and failures can help someone else.

      What prompted this? Well, I know it all sounds so very Al Gore-hybrid vehicle-oxygen bar- spirulina-Earth Shoes-stop me before I date myself even further, but I just spent a week listening to His Holiness the Dalai Lama speak on Atisha’s “Lamp for the Path to Enlightenment“. It’s not like his teachings came out of the blue and conked me over the head. They simply reinforced a lot of things that I’ve been working on mentally for a long while now. Rather than having a stranger present some new hip way of thinking, it was more like having a friend ask if you’re ever going to grow up.

      So, I guess I am and you get to come along for the ride. But who am I?

      I’m an I.T. Manager in my forties. I’m happily married, a father of two and a grandfather of one. My wife is the most wonderful woman in the world. Although she is not a Buddhist and has no leanings in that direction, she fully supports my choices. As a matter of fact, she is the one who got me the tickets to see His Holiness.

      My personality runs in contrast to what most people think of when they think of Buddhists. I’m a confirmed pessimist. I don’t care much for other people. I can be openly hostile and rather foul-mouthed. Like I care.

      But I do believe that these things have caused my life to be more difficult than it has needed to be and at times has caused unnecessary suffering for those around me. Although it may void my membership in the Curmudgeon’s Hall of Fame, I’ve never wished for other people to be made unhappy by my actions and I’ve always believed that the world would be a better place if people stopped making each other miserable. It’s just time that I start to accept that I’m one of those people.

      Anywho…

      It’s time to get rolling. Actually, I got rolling a few days before going to see His Holiness. I’ve been meditating twice a day and over the past couple of days I’ve made a specific effort to focus as much as possible on spreading compassion. The next 24 hours should be fairly easy but come Monday, I head back to work and that’s when the real effort begins.

      Stay tuned.