practical insights, transformative knowledge

One-sided Coin

May 7, 2010 by max · Leave a Comment 

So our new album of young Buddhists’ music – Dhamma Gita – is out and totally rocking. Sharon Salzberg just tweeted about us, and we were linked on the blog of PBS series The Buddha where Hanuman wrote a nice piece…. anyway….

There’s one track on Dhamma Gita – Faith by Michaela Lucas (featuring Sogyal Rinpoche teaching) – where Rinpoche is talking about all the delusional perceptions of Samsara (the cycle of death and rebirth) – which, if you think about it means like everything we see and experience here while alive. Everything? Delusion? Holy crap.

So driving into work this morning listening to this part of Faith I recalled a version of this, from what I think was the Zen teachings of Bodhidharma, somewhere in the vast stacks of the internet: “You can’t find the Buddha with the mind, there’s no use looking – the mind only finds more mind.” You simply can’t find what is real with what is delusion. How could you? It’s impossible!

All at once it occurred to me, finally, what that Borges story El Disco (The Disk, not The Disco) meant. Read it 10 years ago perhaps. All of a sudden – Sogyal, Bodhidharma, El Disco! Delusion!

PS – found that page and while my direct quote may have been more or less apocryphal, there was this attributed to Bodhidharma: ‘A Buddha doesn’t observe precepts. A Buddha doesn’t do good or evil. A Buddha isn’t energetic or lazy. A Buddha is someone who does nothing, someone who can’t even focus his mind on a Buddha. A Buddha isn’t a Buddha. Don’t think about Buddhas. If you don’t see what I’m talking about, you’ll never know your own mind.’

Let’s all hang in there. Happy Friday!

what is this guy doing?

January 29, 2010 by max · 1 Comment 

Mr. Squiggles!

December 8, 2009 by max · Leave a Comment 

squiggles is on the right

The recent dust-up around GoodGuide’s report on Mr. Squiggles, their subsequent retraction, and all the chirping and squeaking from both ends of our consumer and anti-consumer culture misses the point. Read all about the methods, issues.

The debate misses the point that included in GoodGuide’s study were these results:

Bakugan 7-in-1 Maxus Dragonoid                     466-807 ppm    Chromium

———————————————–    ———–    ——–

Bakugan 7-in-1 Maxus Helios                        143-756 ppm    Chromium

———————————————–    ———–    ——–

Fisher-Price Laugh & Learn Laughing Farm             193 ppm      Chromium

———————————————–    ———–    ——–

Zhu Zhu Pet Hamster Mr Squiggles                    93-106 ppm    Antimony

———————————————–    ———–    ——–

International Playthings My First Purse (Purple)      76 ppm      Antimony

The highest ‘safe’ (provided you trust the US government to regulate these things) levels of both chromium and antimony for adults are 60 ppm. We didn’t hear a foul called by the folks over at Fisher-Price Laugh & Learn Laughing Farm. They’re too busy having an amazingly good time. The Bakugan people didn’t even respond, and their Dragonoid (yeah it’s like a dragon and android, super-sweet) thingies seem to pretty much be made of chromium.

The coolest thing to come out of this, besides hearing grown men say ‘Mr. Squiggles’, was that the makers of Mr. Squiggles – St. Louis-based Cepia LLC – released their environmental hazard tests for little Squiggles: http://www.zhuzhupets.com/Zhu%20Zhu%20Pets-EN71.pdf – to prove that he’s clean.

Great. This is the sort of thing for which GoodGuide exists. For a company to release this info is very rare, and for a company to even have this info on hand is rare. GoodGuide exists to create transparency, and they did with Mr. Squiggles. Guaranteed the folks at Bakugan don’t have it, or don’t want it out there for people to read. So Cepia wins. Mr. Squiggles wins. Companies who are out in front of this wave of consumer knowledge will win, and they’ll win through transparency.

So kudos, GoodGuide – it’s probably not a happy scene there today, no Laugh & Learn Laughing Farm, no. But through adversity we learn our impacts. So it is.

-

Thoughts on Ecology

September 22, 2009 by max · 1 Comment 

MTSP

MTSP

We’ve been thinking a lot here at MTSP about Ecological Awareness – specifically about Life Cycle Assessment and transparency as a manifestation of the system – our system or production – becoming aware of itself: developing its industrial consciousness. There’s a neat article we linked to some days back more or less about this idea from a Buddhist perspective.

I have a few questions. First – what do we think we are? In environmental discussion there’s an assumed, sublingual distinction made between the environment and humans – both as beings and in terms of the things we make and use.

There’s this great line from Michael Lerner at the end of ‘Environmental Health, Human Healing’, where he’s talking about how environmentalists mention we need to save the world – he says “The Earth doesn’t need saving – we do.” I think this gets at the issue quite well – we tend to anthropomorphize things far outside of their real existence. To know the true reality of anything it is necessary to be that thing – all we know is ourselves. We are conscious of this knowing to varying degrees at various times, but the knowing never changes.

Max Plank wrote all about the issues with this anthro-centric tendency a century ago. This tendency seems to emerge because life as experience is radically subjective – and so we see the polar bear is sad, and the Earth is sick. Maybe. Maybe not. Disney had a lot to do with this too, in my opinion.

Ok. My friend was just up in Juneau doing beaver-control at Glacier National Park and the salmon were running. He was watching grizzly bears fishing, and said they would pick up the female salmon, bite into them and eat the eggs, then eat the brain, and then throw the fish away. This is while other bears are staving in BC.

Save the wasteful bears! Nature is us, and we are it.

If we’re part of nature – (everything that lives and all of the things those things live on – though we usually picture fields of grass, as though grass were the big, fresh deal) – our actions are part of nature. It’s not like Chevron and Target Superstores are organic life forms, but they are ‘naturally occurring’. Or are they divine? Supernatural? They’re at least as natural as wasteful bears. To think there is an earth without everything we’ve ever done is a little out there.

Titch Nat Hann, quoting Wittgenstein wrote: “There’s no president without the country”. There’s likewise no environment without an us. If a Walmart appears in the forest, and there’s no one there to shop it, does it make a profit? No! The answer is no, it doesn’t.

What am I getting at? If we’re part of nature – if experience is subjective – if Disney was started by human beings – as we come to be more aware of what we do, and more careful that what we do not kill or hurt anyone else, and not make the polar bears sad, we help only ourselves. But that’s great, because we are us, after all.

Here’s to mindfulness!

I’ve heard this example: When we’re young, we’re told and shown that it’s bad to cross the street without looking. So we don’t do it. Our mom gets mad. So we don’t. As we grow up we realize it’s not bad but we still look, to avoid getting squished. Because who wants to get squished? No one!

See the same thing with the environmental movement, perhaps. All this doom and gloom about losing our planet – mom’s mad! She’s not going to take your Target Superstores anymore! Wise up, or she’ll kick you ass! As we get older we perhaps realize that this may not be true. Maybe we just don’t want to get squished. One can have compassion for this viewpoint. Still, the old caveat remains: beware a lack of humor – it always masks some attempt at controlling others.

This is why the truly inspiring rationality and equanimity of Greg Norris is so needed right now: (Audio Clip!). You can’t retroactively punish ‘corporations’ or ‘consumers’ for doing what they’ve ‘done’ to the planet. The workable viewpoint is let’s try to not get squished. Supporting solutions, instead of attacking problems. Does the heart good.

- Max

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