Saturday, July 25, 2009

The Way

The Way

The mind reveals the way of the world,
Separating the real from the non-real,
Without the mind, we would not know what to do
To be grateful for the wisdom that it sees.

The heart reveals the way of balance,
Separating indulgence from need,
Without the heart, we would be lost in our lives,
To be grateful for the care that it offers.

The spirit reveals the way of truth,
Separating craving from our nature,
Without the spirit, we would remain enslaved to our mind and heart,
To be grateful for the peace that it creates.

Change continuously separates our selves,
From mind, heart, and spirit,
Yet in our practice—our way forward,
Each remains as One,

To guide within ourselves and throughout, Universe.

Friday, July 24, 2009

the beautiful struggle

I finished an inspiring memoir this week from which this entry is its namesake. It is the story of Ta-Nehisi Coates, a young man who was nearly swallowed by black Baltimore-city slums, during the 80s crack epidemic, and under the hands of his Black Panther father.

I wanted to share a long excerpt from my favorite chapter (chapter 4, pp. 107-111), "to teach those who can't say my name." This chapter is when Ta-Nehisi begins to discover himself, amidst the hard street-game, family turmoil, and his own father's ideological shadow. He was the type of young brother who was groping in the dark for meaning in his personal and social identities. At this point in his life, Ta-Nehisi found hip-hop, a door for him to unearth forgotten words and melodies of his spirit.

He lays it down:

"I took Consciousness because there was nothing else, no other sorcery to counter death for suede, leather, and gold. My father bet his life on change. For the glory of ex-cons, abandoned mothers, and black boys lost, he had made peace with his end. I was a coward, mostly concerned with etting from one day to the next. How could I square my young life with this lineage? What would I say to the theology of my father, which held that the Conscious Act was wroth more than sex, bread, or even drawn breath?

There were no answers in the broader body, where the best of us went out like Sammy Davis and spoke like there had never been war. I will avoid the cartoons--the hard rocks loved Billy Ocean, Luther was classic, and indeed, I did sit in my seventh period music class eyeing Arletta Holly and humming "Lost in Emotion." But you must remember the era. Niggers were on MTV in lipstick and curls, extolling their exotic quadroons, big-upping Freed Astaire, and speaking like the rest of us didn't exist. I'm talking S-culrs and sequins, Lionel Richie dancing on the ceiling. I'm talking the corporate pop of Whitney, and Richard Pryor turning into the toy. Was the Parliament had never happened, like James Brown had never hit. All our champions were disconnected and dishonored, handing out Image Awards, while we bled in the streets.

But now the word turned Conscous, De La refused to scowl and Stetsaonic shouted across the Atlantic gap. First, Chuck, then KRS, and then everywhere you looked MCs were reaching for Garvey's tricolor, shouting across the land, self-destruction was at an end, that the logic of white people's ice had failed us, that the day of awareness was now.

Across the land, the masses fel away to the gospel. Old Panthers came out in camoflage to salute Chuck D. Cold killers would get a taste of 'Raise the Flag,' drop their guns, and turn vegan. Brothers quoted Farrakhan with wine on their breath. Harlots performed salaat, covered their blond french rolls in mud cloth and royal kente. Dark girls slashed their Apollonia poters, burned their green contacts, cut their hair, threw in braids. Gold was stashted in teh top dresser drawer. The fashion became your father's dashik, breads, and Africa medallions...

At first I felt the words of otehrs pulsing through me--my reforming brother, the esotric allusions of the God, the philosophy of KRS-One--and in truth, in many years of trying, I never completely touched my own. My hand was awkward; and when I rhymed, the couplets would not adhere, punch lines crashed into bar, metaphors were extended until they derailed off beat. I was unfit, but still I had at it for days, months, and ultimately years. And the more ink I dribbled onto the page, the more I felt the blessing of the Jedi order of MCs. I wrote every day that summer, rhymed over B-side instrumentals, until my pen was a Staff of the Dreaded Streets (plus five chance to banish fools on sight) and my flow, though flicted and disjointed, a Horn of Ghetto Blasting. The words were all braggadocios, but when done with the recital, even though I was alone, I felt bigger.

I'd walk outside, and my head was just a little higher, because if you do this right, if you claim to be that nigger enough, though you battle only your bedroom mirror, there is a part of you that believes. That was how I came to understand, how I came to know why all these brothers wrote and talked so big. Even the Knowledged feared the streets. But the rhyme pad was a spell book--it summoned asphalt elementals, elder gods, and weeping ancestors, all of whom had your back. That summer, I knew what Fruitie was trying to say, that when under the aegis of hip-hop, you never lived alone, you never walked alone."

The hip-hop generation thanks you.

Sunday, July 5, 2009

"You Will Get the Dharma You Need" - Act One

I have to credit this wonderful catch-phrase to a Buddhist podcast I recently discovered called "Buddhist Geeks." The name is especially endearing because, well...I am pretty close to Geek. Please--don't take this news too hard.

I've sat next to the saying last week. I've held it and examined it. Poked and prodded; pushed and pulled. Spun it around, even. And upon inspecting it, I realized: I like it a lot. The saying reminds me of another one with which I was raised: God will not give you more than you can handle. With our open hands, we are given our share.

Then, a few days later, I read this passage from Extremely Loud & Incredibly Close, between the main character, 9-year old Oskar and his father before bedtime:


"So I said, 'Obviously, but why is there gravity?'

He said, 'What do you mean why is there gravity?'

'What's the reason?'

'Who said there had to be a reason?'

'No one did, exactly.'

'My question was rhetorical.'

'What's that mean?'

'It means I wasn't asking it for an answer, but to make a point.'

'What point?'


'That there doesn't have to be a reason.'


'But if there isn't a reason, then why does the universe exist at all?'


'Because of sympathetic conditions.'" (emphasis added)


We exist because of sympathetic conditions--what a beautiful expression. I am beginning to appreciate what both expressions mean.

I have a job for every year that I have contemplated my long-term work-life this summer. Two and a half jobs for two and a half thinking years. It is a different question than a "career-choice," "jobs I should find," or "a way to make money." I want to know how this: given my power to choose, how will work be incorporated into my day-to-day life? I had no significant insight for two and a half years.

I asked myself about meaningful work--how can I best employ my talents and skills into the work that I do? My strengths lie in conceptual analysis suited for brainy sort of work but also, I am physical strong and efficient, a combination suited for moving and organizing things. It has taken me as long to discover what I do well, only to discover that any one of us has the capacity to learn any skill with persistent discipline and a wise approach.

Next, I asked myself about fulfilling work--which kinds of work aligns my spirit, heart, and mind? This answer is complicated by the skills and talents that I identified, until I understood that my fulfillment entirely depended on the last question.

What kinds of work were skillful in a spiritual sense--whether my chosen work were ethical. At the very least, I had not engaged in unethical work (to my knowledge). I confronted the dilemma about choosing the most skillful work--whether my chosen work inflicted the least harm and advanced the most virtue. Community-organizing, for example, "serves"; on the other hand, I learned that it may not be the kind the work that lends itself to "professionalization." I organized to find and strenghten community for which I discovered that earning a living changed the nature of it. I still cannot carve the words, yet I knew that I was unfulfilled.

Multiple jobs may drive some people out of their minds. As fragile as our minds are, it is exactly what I need. It does not follow that we should have single jobs that define who we are. We are and offer many different things so our work should reflect our complex selves. It is interesting that we assume that our work should be reduced into a single paid-job that often defines who we are or our life station. What a story.

Sympathetic conditions are the result of the Universe arranging itself for our best understanding. Conditions have arisen to tell me that I need work-lives--materially compensated or not--that further the Dharma. What will this look like? Probably legal-work, physical labor, spiritual offerings, to sustain "freelance" writing. The possibilities are as wide as this Universe of ours, as I try to re-tell my own work story.

More lessons from the Invisible Truth-Telling Hand in Act Two on bondage, domination/submission, sado-masochism (BDSM) and Buddhism.