Friday, May 08, 2020

Meanderings of a Bad Buddhist

A work of Kintsugi, a Japanese process of
repairing a broken piece with gold.
The beauty of anything is in its flaws.

This is the beginning of what I intend to be a series of posts that accurately represent events that threaten to turn us all into “Bad Buddhists” like me. Whether I will fulfill my intentions, and the schedule and frequency of my attempts, I won’t project at this point. As Dirty Harry said, “A man’s got to know his own limitations.”

Over the last few years, I have frequently been challenged for the apparent disconnect between the anger in many of my writings and the Buddhist teachings by which I strive to guide my life. The most frequent assumption by readers most critical of that disconnect is that I’m simply not a very good Buddhist, a claim with which I must in all honesty concur. I fail, on a daily (hourly?) basis to live up to the aspirations of a practicing Buddhist, and to a great extent, those failures are borne of my responding angrily to events that shall admittedly pass in time.

I do trust that even the most destructive of those events will indeed pass, regardless of my responses or behaviors. It could even be said with some authority that angry responses such as mine only serve to prolong and exacerbate the very destructive circumstances, events, and behaviors that “good” Buddhists work diligently to nullify. I cannot honestly refute such an accusation. I don’t judge myself as a “bad” Buddhist, but as I stated above, I’m not a very good one, either. That said, a study of history hints that I am apparently in reasonably good company.

Back in 14th Century China, during the Tang Dynasty, the Shaolin Temple – the birthplace of Kung Fu martial arts – housed within its walls a group of over 1,000 monks whose primary responsibilities involved the protection of the temple and the Tang government from assaults by warlords. Known at the time as the Dragon of Retribution, these monks were arguably the first “gathering of warrior monks,” or Tong. Member monks were as brutal in their defense of their charges as their host monks were pacifists in their devotion to the Eight-fold Path to enlightenment. In modern days, many of the Tong's actions would fall under the definition of terrorism. Brutal assassinations were not uncommon, and the Tong members were viewed by the public as either mystical super-beings on a righteous quest, or as incarnate demons. The reality lingered somewhere between the two extremes.

In later years, arguably beginning in the 17th Century under the Ming Dynasty, many of the Tongs were corrupted, opened themselves to lay members of questionable agendas, and ultimately formed the beginnings of organized crime syndicates that continue to function and prosper to this day.

Lest anyone assert that I view myself as a warrior monk, I can assure you that I am no such thing. I am, at best, a devoted but flawed student of the Path, and I make no claim to exceptional powers of any kind. What I am is a lifelong student who sees a burgeoning rise of a profound danger to the way of life I cherish, as well as to the principles which I try but frequently fail to demonstrate in my own life. Seeing that danger, I am driven to combat the threats in a manner for which I am most qualified: sharing a vision of the truth of those dangers, reminding others of the potential harm we all face should the threats go unchallenged, and hoping to encourage others to join in that fight without adding to the inevitable repercussions of a potentially devastating descent into violence. To remind us all – myself included – that we’re all in this together, for better or worse.

Sunday, March 22, 2020

The Shitgibbon’s Lies


Many thanks - and apologies - to the the great John Prine


I knew a man who was still just a baby
Earned billions by just bein’ born
After turning those billions to millions
Led a country that’s so horribly torn.

Well he lived in a gilded casino
Owned hotels all over the world
Never learned that his constantly bragging
Still couldn’t polish a turd.

Well, we could’ve not had Pres Shitgibbon
Destroying all we held dear
But some thought he’d get rid of them others
Muslims, Messkins, and queers.

Now he told us to beat up those traitors
Who refused to accept all his lies
Like newsmen and good politicians
Anyone who weren’t HIS guys.

Now some folks will call me a traitor
Cos I voted to see him sent home
But I’d rather be one of them traitors
Than one of the Shitgibbon’s own.

We can still get rid of Shitgibbon
And end his attempts to be king
To send him packing to Moscow
To fulfill his long desired fling

Saturday, March 21, 2020

Fear and Loathing In The Mind Of A Narcissist


We've been hearing a lot of accusations directed at the media, most notably from the Trump administration, but from the public as well. According to the narrative, the media is acting irresponsibly, fomenting fear and hysteria regarding convid-19 in the populace. While some media outlets are genetically predisposed to hyperbole, I find such accusations to be ill-advised for the most part.

IMO, the greatest source of panic is the administration itself. Trump is clearly obsessed with painting a rosy picture of all aspects of his presidency, evidenced by his constant efforts to downplay the seriousness of the threat while simultaneously making false claims about the level of response and control over the growing pandemic and deriding scientists and particularly the media for issuing statements that are in marked contrast to his own. It is only natural for the populace to be confused by such diverging reports and the associated recommendations regarding the public's behavior in response to the outbreak.

Many if not most Americans look to the country's leadership for rational information and advice, but such advice has only begun to appear - and in small instances rather than a cohesive dialog - in the last week or so, as the administration's previous conclusions advice, and admonitions could no longer be reasonably accepted in the face of reports describing the actual progression of the disease.

In keeping with Trump's preferred narrative, the spiraling increase in infections and deaths in Italy, the bad news had been downplayed by the Trump administration, while the president's finger-pointing has continued unabated. Perhaps this New York Times article can give people a better picture of what has happened in Italy and why. If we're smart, we might even find ourselves less inclined to dismiss the potential for similar tragic developments to occur here in the US due to our clinging to the notion of American exceptionalism. We can only hope...