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a new day

Posted on Jan 1st, 2008 by jhalifax : none jhalifax
the work of meg wheatley is the heart of it all
here are some words from her

There was a geologist being interviewed. He was a beach geologist, so his field of study was beaches and sand and the like. And at the time he was being interviewed, there was a storm. One of the large hurricanes was pounding the outer bank off the Carolinas. And he was being interviewed about what hurricanes do to beaches. Now, we all know what hurricanes do to beaches and beach houses and such. We feel they're very destructive, right? They destroy homes and take down power lines and take away even sand, and whole beaches disappear in a hurricane. So this interviewer was talking to these beach geologists about this hurricane going on. And then this is what got my attention. The geologists said, "You know I can't wait to get out on those beaches again once these storms have passed. And I hope to get out there in the next 24 hours." And the interviewer said, "What do you expect to find out there?" and I was listening, and I thought he was going to talk about all the destruction he was going to find. What he said really surprised me. He said, "I expect to find a new beach."
MARGARET WHEATLEY

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joseph campbell

Posted on Jan 3rd, 2008 by jhalifax : none jhalifax
years ago, i worked for joseph campbell on his historical atlas of world mythology
buoyant, hard working, he read his new text every morning to me, then sent me to the various libraries around new york or boston or chicago to do research
these words from his reflections need to be digested by many of us

“Nietzsche was the one who did the job for me. At a certain moment in his life, the idea came to him of what he called “the love of your fate.” Whatever your fate is, whatever the hell happens, you say, “This is what I need.” It may look like a wreck, but go at it as though it were an opportunity, a challenge. If you bring love to that moment—not discouragement—you will find the strength is there. Any disaster that you can survive is an improvement in your character, your stature, and your life. What a privilege! This is when the spontaneity of your own nature will have a chance to flow.

Then, when looking back at your life, you will see that the moments which seemed to be great failures followed by wreckage were the incidents that shaped the life you have now. You’ll see that this is really true. Nothing can happen to you that is not positive. Even though it looks and feels at the moment like a negative crisis, it is not. The crisis throws you back, and when you are required to exhibit strength, it comes.”

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Roshi Joan's Public Teaching Schedule

Posted on Jan 4th, 2008 by jhalifax : none jhalifax
2008
PUBLIC TEACHING SCHEDULE
ROSHI JOAN HALIFAX


Jan 4 – Feb 3: 2008:
WINTER PRACTICE PERIOD: Exploring the Science and Art of Zen, Upaya, http://www.upaya.org/programs/event.php?id=40 or registrar@upaya.org

Jan 4-12: THE ESSENCE OF ZEN: Silent Illumination, Upaya, http://www.upaya.org/programs/event.php?id=41 or  registrar@upaya.org

Jan 16-20: ZEN BRAIN, SELFLESS INSIGHT, with others including Drs. Al Kaszniak, James Austin, Neil Theise, Jason Buhle, Upaya, http://www.upaya.org/programs/event.php?id=42 or registrar@upaya.org

Jan 25-31: WINTER SESSHIN: Dogen’s Perspective on Enlightenment, with Sensei Kazuaki Tanahashi, Upaya, http://www.upaya.org/programs/event.php?id=43 or  registrar@upaya.org

Feb 3: POETRY OF GRATEFULNESS: Brother David Steindl-Rast Fundraiser, San Francisco, 415-392-4400 http://www.gratefulness.org/a/events_poetry_benefit.htm

Feb 8-9: COMPASSIONATE CARE OF DYING: Harvard Divinity School, Boston: now closed as the program is full

Feb 21-23: LIVING AND DYING IN EVERYDAY LIFE: Ram Dass Fundraiser, Maui, Hawaii: bodhi@ipuka.org

March 3: ENGAGED BUDDHISM: PRACTICING COMPASSION AND FEARLESSNESS IN AN ENDANGERED WORLD: Religious Studies Program, University of Oklahoma

March 14-30: IN THE FOOTSTEPS OF DOGEN, in China/Japan, with Sensei Kazuaki Tanahashi, Upaya, http://www.upaya.org/programs/event.php?id=37 or registrar@upaya.org

April 4-10: INTRODUCTION TO CHAPLAINCY, with others, Upaya, http://www.upaya.org/programs/event.php?id=54 or registrar@upaya.org

April 15-16: MIND AND LIFE INSTITUTE: MAYO CLINIC, Compassionate Care of the Dying: Training Clinicians in Attentional Balance and Prosocial Mental Qualities; private meeting with His Holiness the Dalai Lama

April 25-May 2: BEING WITH DYING PROFESSIONAL TRAINING PROGRAM IN COMPASSIONATE END-OF-LIFE CARE, with others, Upaya, http://www.upaya.org/programs/event.php?id=38 or  registrar@upaya.org

May 5-11: MOUNTAIN AND MONASTERY SESSHIN: with Roshi Enkyo O’Hara, Upaya/Prajna Mountain Refuge, http://www.upaya.org/programs/event.php?id=56 or registrar@upaya.org

May 16-18: GRATEFULNESS RETREAT, with Brother David Steindl-Rast, Upaya, program open to funders

May 22-25: LIBERATION THROUGH YOGA AND BUDDHISM, with Richard Freeman, Upaya, http://www.upaya.org/programs/event.php?id=57 or  registrar@upaya.org

May 30-31: BEING WITH DYING: CULTIVATING COMPASSION AND FEARLESSNESS IN THE PRESENCE OF DEATH, University of Virginia, with Dr. Dan Becker and Tussi Kluge

June 6-12: MIND AND LIFE SUMMER RESEARCH INSTITUTE,
http://www.garrisoninstitute.org/retreats.php?type=currentM&date=2008-06-1, Garrison New York   
   
June 13: ENGAGED BUDDHISM: PRACTICING COMPASSION AND FEARLESSNESS IN AN ENDANGERED WORLD, www.gitchemqua.org  info@gitchemqua.org 416-651-1846, Toronto

June 14-15: COMPASSION AND WISDOM RETREAT ON THE BODHISATTVAS OF GREAT LIBERATION, www.gitchemqua.org  info@gitchemqua.org 416-651-1846, Toronto

June 26-July 6: WILDERNESS FAST AND COMPASSIONATE ACTION, with Marty Peale, at Prajna Mountain Refuge Site/ Upaya,  http://www.upaya.org/programs/event.php?id=58  or registrar@upaya.org

July 10-13: COMPASSION AND WISDOM AT THE END OF LIFE, with Frank Ostaseski, Upaya, http://www.upaya.org/programs/event.php?id=59 or registrar@upaya.org

July 16-20: IN THE SHELTER OF EACH OTHER, with Mayumi Oda, Zuleikha and others, Upaya, http://www.upaya.org/programs/event.php?id=60 or registrar@upaya.org

August 6-Sept 7: SUMMER PRACTICE PERIOD: ESSENCE OF ENGAGED BUDDHISM, Upaya,  http://www.upaya.org/programs/event.php?id=61 or registrar@upaya.org

Aug 6-10: ENGAGED BUDDHISM RETREAT: History and Foundational Practices of the Five Buddha Families, with Fleet Maull, Upaya, http://www.upaya.org/programs/event.php?id=62 or registrar@upaya.org

Aug12-15: THE HEART OF THE PRECEPTS, with others, Upaya, http://www.upaya.org/programs/event.php?id=63 or registrar@upaya.org

Aug 20-26: THE NATURE OF ALL THINGS, with Natalie Goldberg, Prajna Mountain Refuge/Upaya, http://www.upaya.org/programs/event.php?id=65  registrar@upaya.org

August 29-Sept 4: DOGEN’S KOANS FOR SOCIAL ACTION, with Sensei Kazuaki Tanahashi, Upaya, http://www.upaya.org/programs/event.php?id=66 or registrar@upaya.org

September 12-16: IN THE SHELTER OF EACH OTHER, with others, Felsentor, Switzerland http://www.felsentor.ch/english/course_details.php?id2=179

Oct 10-11: BEING WITH DYING, University of Virginia, tba

Oct 24-Nov 9: FALL PRACTICE PERIOD: Exploring Resilience and the Compassionate Life with Sensei Zoketsu Norman Fisher, Sharon Salzberg, Jim Gollin, Beate Seishin Stolte, Jean Wilkins  http://www.upaya.org/programs/event.php?id=69 or registrar@upaya.org

Nov 4-6: POLITICS OF COMPASSION ELECTION RETREAT, with Jim Gollin, Upaya,  http://www.upaya.org/programs/event.php?id=72 or registrar@upaya.org

Nov 7-9: COMPASSION AND RESILIENCE: TRANSFORMING SECONDARY TRAUMA AND COMPASSION FATIGUE: with Sharon Salzberg, Upaya,  http://www.upaya.org/programs/event.php?id=73 or registrar@upaya.org

Dec 1-8: ROHATSU SESSHIN: EXPLORING WISDOM AND STUPIDITY, with Roshi Enkyo O’Hara, Sensei Kazuaki Tanahashi, Upaya,  http://www.upaya.org/programs/event.php?id=75 or registrar@upaya.org
 

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shikantaza snow

Posted on Jan 7th, 2008 by jhalifax : none jhalifax
a great blanket of snow is silently falling from the sky
covering all the differences
hiding the particularities
in the midst of the shikantaza retreat

no traffic on the outer road
but some on the mind road as i settle into the pattern of zazen hour after hour

now a break, a gap
and i write in the joy of the quiet
with nothing marking or remarking
black grass holding up the black stars, mark strand



Black Maps

Not the attendance of stones,
nor the applauding wind,
shall let you know
you have arrived,

nor the sea that celebrates
only departures,
nor the mountains,
nor the dying cities.

Nothing will tell you
where you are.
Each moment is a place
you’ve never been.

You can walk
believing you cast
a light around you.
But how will you know?

The present is always dark.
Its maps are black,
rising from nothing,
describing,

in their slow ascent
into themselves,
their own voyage,
its emptiness,
the bleak temperate
necessity of its completion.
As they rise into being
they are like breath.

And if they are studied at all
it is only to find,
too late, what you thought
were concerns of yours

do not exist.
Your house is not marked
on any of them,
nor are your friends,

waiting for you to appear,
nor are your enemies,
listing your faults.
Only you are there,

saying hello
to what you will be,
and the black grass
is holding up the black stars.

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kobun chino

Posted on Jan 9th, 2008 by jhalifax : none jhalifax
in the early seventies, i met kobun chino roshi.
he was incomparable
still is, though passed on
like kaz, a true man of no rank

hunted around for kobun stories
here is what i found
let me know if you have others

this is the real zen:


"The more you sense the rareness and value of your own life, the more you realize that how you use it, how you manifest it, is all your responsibility. We face such a big task, so naturally we sit down for a while."
--Kobun Chino Otogawa Roshi (1938-2002)



Kobun Chino lived for some years in Arroyo Seco, New Mexico, near his zendo and overlooking Taos. One day he was alone in a house, kindly offered to him by an old Zennie named Jonathon Altman, when a knock came on the door. Kobun answered it and there was a young man who said that he came for help because his life was a mess. Kobun said that his life was a mess too and that he didn't think he could be of help. The young man pleaded for Kobun to talk to him so Kobun let him in. Once inside he told the fellow to take a seat and excused himself for a moment to go to the bathroom. The man waited and waited but Kobun did not return, so finally he went across the room and knocked on the door that Kobun had entered. There was no answer so, still calling Kobun's name, he opened the door slowly. The door wide open, the young man looked inside to see an empty bathroom with an open window. Kobun was nowhere to be found.


Once my previous Zen teacher, Tim McCarthy, was with his teacher Kobun Chino while Kobun was giving a talk about Zen. Someone asked Kobun about flying saucers. Kobun told him, "You should ask Tim about that. He reads comic books!"



Kobun Chino asked: When all the teachers are gone, who will be your teacher?
The student replied: Everything
Kobun, paused, then said: No, you…….



During a shosan (a formal public question-and-answer session) Angie Boissevain came before Kobun Chino Roshi with a question that had been burning within her all morning. But after she made the customary three bows and knelt before him she found her mind utterly blank, the question gone.
She sat before him in silence for a long time before finally saying:
"Where have all the words gone?"
"Back where they came from," replied her teacher.



Shortly after September 11, 2001, Kobun was the honored guest at the weekly meeting of the sangha which would become Everyday Dharma Zen Center. After meditation, Kobun asked for questions. A visibly distraught young woman asked, "How can I deal with the enormous fear and anger that I feel about what happened?" Kobun replied, "Do one kind thing for someone every day."



As a master of Zen archery, Kobun was asked to teach a course at the Esalen Institute in Big Sur, California. The target was set up on a beautiful grassy area on the edge of a cliff overlooking the Pacific Ocean. Kobun took his bow, notched the arrow, took careful aim, and shot. The arrow sailed high over the target, went past the railing, beyond the cliff, only to plunge into the ocean far below. Kobun looked happily at the shocked students and shouted, "Bull's eye!!"

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a cathoic woman's voice

Posted on Jan 9th, 2008 by jhalifax : none jhalifax
women.......
why do we kill them......


Published on National Catholic Reporter Conversation Cafe (http://ncrcafe.org)

The imperfect storm
By Joan Chittister
Created Jan 9 2008 - 08:59
 From Where I Stand by Joan Chittister, OSB   
January 9, 2008 
     
Vol. 5, No. 18 

There are two winds blowing around the globe. The first, fundamentalism, brings with it the guarantee of absolutism and security. The second, inclusiveness, brings with it the promise of a new kind of future, ambiguous certainly but expansive, at least. Those two winds clashed last week and the whole world is waiting to see which of them is stronger.

When Benizar Bhutto lay assassinated in Pakistan on December 28, 2007, news agencies around the world told the political story. Most of them missed completely the cultural story that underlies it.

The media concentrated almost entirely on the death itself. Bhutto was a political figure who had become a political icon and symbol of new life for the country. With her dead, there was plenty of death to go around.

There was, for instance, the death of peace that came with the sudden death of a popular political candidate in the already tension-filled country of Pakistan. Not only was Bhutto dead but so were over 40 other Pakistanis thanks to the riots that followed.

There was, too, the death of confidence in government as a whole. Over 400 government buildings, they told us, were torched in the chaos that followed the loss of Bhutto to the political life of the country, Polling places were destroyed, a symbol of the death of free elections, a clear statement of the gap between the powerful and the powerless there.

We all saw, as well, the death of integrity on world-wide television. Two doctors -- one who had treated Mrs. Bhutto when she was admitted to the hospital, and one speaking as spokesperson for the government the following day -- gave separate and different accounts of her death. The first described the condition of the body and the bullet wounds that killed her. The second told the world that Bhutto was brought into the hospital "her eyes rolled back in her head and with no sign of pulse -- both signs of cardio-pulmonary arrest" brought on, we were supposed to believe, by striking her head on the rim of the sun roof of her car as it lurched forward after an explosion. Obviously one of those doctors was surely not telling the truth. Clearly honesty had died on a grand scale right before our eyes.

But another kind of death, largely unnoted in the public press, gave sign of the seriousness of the other four. With the death of Benizar Bhutto the hope of women for justice, for full human development, for recognition and participation in the public arena, died a bit everywhere, too.

Once prime minister of a secular government, Bhutto was now a candidate for re-election in a country tilting dangerously toward theocracy. When warned that her life might well be in danger, Bhutto's response, according to a BBC radio interview (Jan. 3, 2008) was that "no Muslim would kill a woman." Maybe not. Probably no good Catholic or Jew or Hindu or Buddhist would either. But being Catholic, or Muslim -- or member of any other orthodox religious ilk for that matter -- has little or nothing to do with it. Instead, fundamentalism, the first wind circling the globe, is the real problem.

The thought of a woman leader, meaning a leader who is a woman, simply cannot be stomached by religious fundamentalists. According to The Washington Post, (Dec. 28, 2007, "Bhutto Targeted by Many Militant Groups) "some members of Pakistan's intelligence establishment resented the idea of a woman leading a Muslim nation." After all, fundamentalists teach, God does not want women acting like real human beings -- making decisions, having ideas, developing leadership skills. The God who gave women the same brains that God gave to men apparently gave brains to women only to taunt them, to mock them, to make certain that they understand the depths of their human deprivation. To these people, women are meant to be the servants of men, not the leaders of men. Equal, they say, but "different." These people will do anything to still a woman's voice, to kill a woman's public influence.

CNN's special investigative report, "Lifting the Veil," is clear about what happens to women where the Taliban, Islam's fundamentalist sect, seeks to be -- pretends to be -- the real, the only, expression of Islam. In these places, women are imprisoned in their homes, allowed in public only with a man or at least heavily shrouded, forbidden to drive or travel alone, left uneducated, married off as children and abandoned on the streets when widowed. It's a bleak, desperate situation. "God's will," they say -- as have so many before them.

In theocratic governments, religions other than the state religions exist only by virtue of the fiat of the state and the state is devoted to maintaining the laws of the religion that underlies it. Too bad for everyone else. Like women.

Absolutism is the old wind.

Inclusiveness is the new wind.

And this new wind is blowing, as well. Benizar Bhutto, although a most religious woman, was also the proponent of a secular democratic government. In the secular state, all religions enjoy equal protection under the law. All people are safe from the excesses of religion. This is the wind of justice and equality. And it is equally religious as well as comfortably secular.

This is the wind that comes with those who believe that God created all people with human rights, that God calls women, as well as men, to go on doing God's will, to continue co-creating the universe, to be moral agents. To vote, to minister, to teach, to think, to lead.

As a result, women everywhere, propelled by religion, are calling on both their religions and their governments to realize that as long as women can be suppressed, ignored, discriminated against, used, abused and made invisible -- all in the name of God -- humanity is only half human, government is suspect and religion itself is in danger of betraying itself.

Until the women's agenda is addressed, until things change for women, until the Benizar Bhuttos, the Hillary Clintons, and the Bishop Kathryn Jeffers-Shorri's of the world, leaders all, are the norm, not the exception, until domination and female invisibility stops being blamed on God, oppression will be the norm. Then nothing may change for women, true, but nothing will change for the rest of the world either. The fact is that whether they realize it or not, in the end, oppressors limit themselves as much as they limit those they oppress.

From where I stand, it seems clear that religions that only pretend to be religions ride on the past wind. Just look around you at all the women's groups rising up all over the world. In the face of religious fundamentalism, all of them -- like Benizar Bhutto -- pay the price, of course. But, has anyone noticed, these groups of women leaders are not going away.

Be not mistaken: There is clearly another wind blowing that no number, no kind, of assassinations can quell.


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history lesson by billy joel

Posted on Jan 10th, 2008 by jhalifax : none jhalifax
CLICK:  HYPERLINK http://home.uchicago.edu/~yli5/Flash/Fire.html
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zen brain

Posted on Jan 10th, 2008 by jhalifax : none jhalifax
UPAYA ZEN CENTER........
ZEN BRAIN, SELFLESS INSIGHT

Santa Fe, New Mexico—There has been a dramatic increase in research and scholarship concerning Buddhism and neuroscience with the recent publication of several recent books including James Austin’s Zen Brain Reflections (2006, MIT Press), B. Alan Wallace’s Contemplative Science (2007, Columbia University Press), Daniel Siegel’s The Mindful Brain (2007, W.W. Norton), Sharon Begley’s Train Your Mind, Change Your Brain (2007, Ballantine), and Richard Davidson’s and Anne Harrington’s Visions of Compassion (2002, Oxford University Press).

The Upaya Institute and Zen Center will explore this growing field of research, Wednesday, January 16 through Sunday, January 20, 2008, at the “Zen Brain, Selfless Insight” retreat.  Scientists and scholars at the retreat hope to facilitate greater understanding of relevant neuroscientific research on the brain.

The format of “Zen Brain, Selfless Insight” will include meditation practice each day, interspersed with intensive discussions led by five scientists and scholars, each of whom have a long-term Zen practice, with Upaya Zen Center residents and 70 Zen practitioners. This retreat is a Upaya Institute/Zen Center and Mind and Life Institute collaboration.

The results of this important program will be made available in spring 2008.  In June 2008, the scientists from “Zen Brain, Selfless Insight” will do a major presentation of the findings at Mind and Life’s Summer Research Institute at the Garrison Institute in Garrison, New York.  

“Zen Brain, Selfless Insight” will take place at Upaya’s beautiful Santa Fe campus nestled in the Sangre de Cristo Mountains.


www.upaya.org
Zen Brain, Selfless Insight Faculty

Joan Halifax Roshi, Ph.D.
Joan Halifax Roshi is a Buddhist teacher, Zen priest, anthropologist, and author. She is Founder, Abbot, and Head Teacher of Upaya Zen Center, a Buddhist monastery in Santa Fe, New Mexico. She received her Ph.D in medical anthropology in 1973. She has lectured on the subject of death and dying at many academic institutions, including Harvard Divinity School and Harvard Medical School, Georgetown Medical School, University of Virginia Medical School, Duke University Medical School, University of Connecticut Medical School, among many others. She received a National Science Foundation Fellowship in Visual Anthropology, and was an Honorary Research Fellow in Medical Ethnobotany at Harvard University. A Founding Teacher of the Zen Peacemaker Order, her work and practice for more than three decades has focused on applied Buddhism. Her books include: The Human Encounter with Death (with Stanislav Grof); Shamanic Voices; Shaman: The Wounded Healer; The Fruitful Darkness; Simplicity in the Complex: ABuddhist Life in America; Being with Dying; and Wisdom Beyond Wisdom (with Kazuaki Tanashashi).

Alfred W. Kaszniak, Ph.D.
Al Kaszniak, received his Ph.D. in clinical and developmental psychology from the University of Illinois at Chicago in 1976, and completed an internship in clinical neuropsychology at Rush-Presbyterian-St. Luke's Medical Center in Chicago. He is currently Head of the Department of Psychology, Director of Clinical Neuropsychology, Director of the Arizona Alzheimer's Consortium Education Core, and a professor in the departments of psychology, neurology, and psychiatry at The University of Arizona. His work has focused on the neuropsychology of Alzheimer's disease and other age-related neurological disorders, memory self-monitoring, the biological bases of emotion, and emotion response and regulation in long-term Zen and Vipassana meditators. His 2006 paper (co-authored with Lis Nielsen) in the journal Emotion is entitled, Awareness of subtle emotional feelings: A comparison of long-term meditators and non-meditators.

James H. Austin, M.D.
James Austin has spent most of his years as an academic neurologist, first at the
University of Oregon Medical School and later at the University of Colorado Health Sciences Center. He is currently Clinical Professor of Neurology at University of Missouri Health Sciences Center. Dr. Austin's cultural background includes the first sabbatical spent in New Delhi, India; and the second spent in Kyoto, Japan, where he began Zen meditation training with an English-speaking Zen master, Kobori-Roshi, in 1974. He has a keen interest in the experimental designs and findings of investigators who are studying meditation and related states of consciousness. His early research background includes publications in the areas of clinical neurology, neuropathology, neurochemistry and neuropharmacology. Dr. Austin is the author of more than 140 professional publications, including three books: Zen and the Brain: Toward and
Understanding of Meditation an Consciousness - Chase, Chance, and Creativity: The Lucky Art of Novelty; and most recently Zen-Brain Reflections  His forthcoming book is entitled, Zen Brain, Selfless Insight.

Neil D. Theise, M.D.
Neil Theise is a diagnostic liver pathologist and adult stem cell researcher in New York
City, where he is Professor of Pathology and of Medicine at the Beth Israel Medical
Center of Albert Einstein College of Medicine. His research revised understandings of
human liver microanatomy, which, in turn, led directly to identification of possible liver
stem cell niches and the marrow-to-liver regeneration pathway. He is considered a
pioneer of multi-organ adult stem cell plasticity and has published on that topic in
Science, Nature, and Cell. Current laboratory investigations focus on nerve-stem cell interactions
in human livers, melatonin-related physiology of human liver stem cell and regenerative
processes, and aspects of human liver stem cell activation in acute, fulminant hepatic
failure. His 2004 article in Tricycle magazine is entitled, From the Bottom Up: Is science
rewriting emptiness with the emerging field of complexity theory? What Buddhists can
learn from ants, atoms, and physics.

Jason Buhle, B.A.
Jason Buhle is a graduate student in the Department of Psychology at Columbia
University in New York, conducting functional brain imaging research within the
Social/Cognitive/Affective Neuroscience Unit of Columbia University. He is the
recipient of a 2005 Francisco J. Varela Memorial Grant from the Mind and Life Institute,
to study attention and emotion regulation in advanced Zen meditators. His 2006 paper
(co-authored with Dr. A. Raz) in the journal Nature Reviews Neuroscience is entitled,
Typologies of attentional networks, and his presentation at the 2007 annual meeting of the
Cognitive Neuroscience Society was entitled Expert meditators show enhanced vigilance,
alerting and conflict resolution.


The Upaya Institute and Zen Center is a residential Buddhist practice and social community serving many people through retreats and social action projects. Upaya’s vision focuses on the integration of practice and social action, bringing together wisdom and compassion.

www.upaya.org
upaya@upaya.org

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upaya, complexity, brain

Posted on Jan 22nd, 2008 by jhalifax : none jhalifax
The Brain --- is wider than the Sky ---
For --- put them side by side ---
The one the other will contain
With ease --- and You --- beside ---
The Brain is deeper than the sea ---
For --- hold them --- Blue to Blue ---
The one the other will absorb ---
As Sponges --- Buckets -- do ---
The Brain is just the weight of God ---
For --- Heft them --- Pound for Pound ---
And they will differ --- if they do ---
As Syllable from Sound ---
- Emily Dickinson

Of all the things I've lost, it's my mind I miss the most.
- Ozzy Osbourne, quoted in "Foolish Words: The Most Stupid Words Ever Spoken"


The fun thing about studying the human brain is that, like any honest inquiry process, it ineluctably deposits us into an infinite loop of not-knowing.  That is, the more we learn about the gray matter between our ears, the more questions arise: not only about the different parts of the brain and their intricately inter-related functions, but also concerning the evolving technology and analytical methodology employed to construct what we now think we know about the brain.   Which is why it was such a pleasure this past week to have four eminently qualified neuro-scientists (James Austin, Jason Buhle, Alfred Kaszniak, and Neil Theise) share the fruits of their work in (relative) layman's terms, with humor and humility rather than intellectual hubris or any pretense of certainty. 

Kudos also to Roshi Joan for insisting that these heady, hyper-cognitive "data blitzes" be balanced out with Noble Silence and many periods of meditation throughout the day in order to maintain the grounded energy of our Winter Practice Period, as we head into the home stretch with the Winter Sesshin that begins this Friday (see details below). 

Wednesday, January 23,  DHARMA TALK at 5:30pm in the zendo will be given by Margaret Wheatley, on "Partnering with Confusion and Uncertainty."  She is a writer and management consultant who studies organizational behavior. Her approach includes systems thinking, theories of change, chaos theory, leadership and the learning organization, particularly its capacity to self-organize. For more info: www.margaretwheatley.com/
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ends and means

Posted on Jan 23rd, 2008 by jhalifax : none jhalifax
Ends and means
great question
what are we doing to our world
this from wendell berry

“Once we have reached the desired end, we think, we will turn back to purify and consecrate the means. Once the war that we are fighting for peace is won, then the generals will become saints, the burned children will proclaim in the heaven that their suffering is well repaid, the poisoned forests will turn green again. Once we have peace, we say, or abundance or justice or truth, or comfort, everything will be right. Its an old dream.
It’s a vicious illusion. For the discipline of ends is no discipline at all. The end is preserved in the means; a desirable end may forever perish in the wrong means. Hope lives in the means, not in the end. Art does not survive in its revelations, or agriculture in its products, or craftsmanship in its artifacts, or civilization in its monuments, or faith in its relics.”
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strawberries

Posted on Jan 29th, 2008 by jhalifax : none jhalifax
Strawberries are too delicate to be picked by machine. The perfectly ripe ones even bruise at too heavy a human touch. It hit her then that every strawberry she had ever eaten --- every piece of fruit --- had been picked by calloused human hands. Every piece of toast with jelly represented someone’s knees, someone’s aching back and hips, someone with a bandanna on her wrist to wipe away the sweat. Why had no one told her about this before?
--- Alison Luterman, “What They Came For” (from The Sun magazine)
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