SEARCH

 


 
Resources
Tuesday
Mar272007

Thoughts from Patriarch Yin Guang

Thoughts from Patriarch Yin Guang
Thirteenth Patriarch of Pure Land Buddhism

  • Whether a layperson or a monastic, we need to respect those who are older than we are and to exist harmoniously with those around us.
  • We are to endure what others cannot and practice what others cannot achieve.
  • We should do all we can on behalf of others and help them to be good.
  • When sitting quietly, we would do well to reflect on our own faults.
  • When talking with friends do not discuss the rights and wrongs of others.
  • In our every action, from dawn to dusk and dusk to dawn, mindfully chant the Buddha’s name.
  • When chanting, whether aloud or silently, do not give rise to wandering thoughts.
  • If wandering thoughts arise, immediately dismiss them.
  • Constantly maintain a modest and regretful heart. Even if we have upheld true cultivation, we still need to feel that our practice is shallow and never boast.
  • We should mind our own business and not the business of others.
  • We should see only the good examples of others instead of their shortcomings.
  • We would do well to see ourselves as ordinary and everyone else as bodhisattvas.
  • If we can cultivate according to these teachings, we are sure to reach the Western Pure Land of Ultimate Bliss.

Monday
Mar262007

Small Stone

956849-691326-thumbnail.jpg
 

Imagine reaching out your hand to pick up a small stone. With your palm facing down, use your finger and thumb to carefully pick up the stone. Now, you need to hold on to it tightly or you will drop it. You may hold on to the stone for ten minutes, a half hour, two hours. But, the minute you release your grasp, you know the stone will fall. You cannot hold on to it forever, because at some point your grip will inevitably fail and the stone will be gone.

Now, again imagine reaching out your hand to pick up that same small stone. This time, after you pick it up, turn your hand over with your palm facing up. Open your hand so the stone just rests on your hand effortlessly.

With grasping we lose. Without grasping, we gain.    

 

Sunday
Mar252007

Suffering and Joy

Whatever suffering there is in this world,

it all arises from
desiring only myself to be happy.

Whatever joy there is in this world
it all arises from
desiring to share my happiness with everyone.
 

Saturday
Mar242007

Sticking With One Method

956849-786928-thumbnail.jpgQuestion: I like a certain method in Buddhism but I keep hearing about others. They all sound good and I don’t want to miss anything. What should I do?

Response: If we are fortunate enough to find our practice and teacher, we need to focus on them. Trying to follow different practices and teachers is like driving somewhere and coming to a crossroads. If we try to drive in both directions, we’ll become confused and not know which way to go.  

If we want to get a college degree, we need to choose a major. If we keep changing our major, we’ll be very well read but we’ll never graduate. And we’ll have wasted a lot of time and energy.

Our practice is the same way. We all are very busy and never have enough time to do all we want. If we do not focus on our goal of awakening, we’ll study a bit here and practice a bit there, but at then end of our lives, will not have come that much closer to our goal.

And we’ll have wasted another lifetime.  

 

Friday
Mar232007

Meat Means Misery for the World's Hungry

There is more than enough food in the world to feed the entire human population. So why are more than 840 million people still going hungry?1

Our meat-based diet is partly to blame, as land, water, and other resources that could be used to grow food for human beings are being used to grow crops for farmed animals instead. According to a recent report by Compassion in World Framing, "[c]rops that could be used to feed the hungry are instead being used to fatten animals raised for food." It takes up to 16 pounds of grain to produce just 1 pound of edible animal flesh.

The average adult human burns about 2,000 calories per day, just living his or her life. We use almost all the calories that we consume to move around, breathe, and do everyday tasks. The same is true of farmed animals. For every pound of food that they are fed, only a fraction of the calories are returned in the form of edible flesh. The rest of those calories are burned away raising the animal to slaughter weight or contributing to feathers, blood, and other parts of the animal that are not eaten by humans. This is why animals raised for food have to eat as many as 16 pounds of grain to create just 1 pound of edible flesh.2

Because the industrial world is exporting grain to developing countries and importing the meat that is produced with it, farmers who are trying to feed themselves are being driven off their land. Their efficient, plant-based agricultural model is being replaced with intensive livestock rearing, which also pollutes the air and water and renders the once-fertile land dead and barren.

If this trend continues, the developing world will never be able to produce enough food to feed itself, and global hunger will continue to plague hundreds of millions of people around the globe. The Guardian explains that there's only one solution: "It now seems plain that [a vegan diet] is the only ethical response to what is arguably the world's most urgent social justice issue."3

1 Alex Kirby, "Hungry World 'Must Eat Less Meat,'" BBC Online, 15 Aug. 2004.
2 Mark Gold and Jonathon Porritt, "The Global Benefits of Eating Less Meat," 2004, p. 22.
3 George Monbiot, "Why Vegans Were Right All Along," Guardian Unlimited, 24 Dec. 2002.
This article appeared at GoVeg.com