Hello!

Would anyone be interested in helping me out mangaing this tumblr? Reply to this post and let me know! For now, I’m just gauging interest.

7/3/2012 | 1 note | Reblog
19/11/2011 | 5,636 notes | Reblog
14/10/2011 | 5,507 notes | Reblog

I try my best not to post anything that is not explicitly Buddhist related, but I couldn’t help it with this video. There are so many underlying Buddhist themes in here, it was practically begging to be shared! It’s a lengthy watch, but so worth the twenty minutes.

Neuroanatomist Jill Bolte Taylor had an opportunity few brain scientists would wish for: One morning, she realized she was having a massive stroke. As it happened — as she felt her brain functions slip away one by one, speech, movement, understanding — she studied and remembered every moment. This is a powerful story of recovery and awareness — of how our brains define us and connect us to the world and to one another.

12/10/2011 | 19 notes | Reblog
"However many holy words you read, however many you speak, what good will they do you if you do not act on upon them?"

—Siddhartha Gautama
10/10/2011 | 63 notes | Reblog
The Ten Spiritual Realms

By Takashi Tsuji

Traditionally, Buddhism teaches the existence of the ten realms of being. At the top is Buddha and the scale descends as follows: Bodhisattva (an enlightened being destined to be a Buddha, but purposely remaining on earth to teach others), Pratyeka Buddha (a Buddha for himself), Sravka (direct disciple of Buddha), heavenly beings (superhuman [angels?]), human beings, Asura (fighting spirits), beasts, Preta (hungry ghosts), and depraved men (hellish beings).

Now, these ten realms may be viewed as unfixed, nonobjective worlds, as mental and spiritual states of mind. These states of mind are created by men’s thoughts, actions, and words. In other words, psychological states. These ten realms are “mutually immanent and mutually inclusive, each one having in it the remaining nine realms.” For example, the realm of human beings has all the other nine states (from hell to Buddhahood). Man is at the same time capable of real selfishness, creating his own hell, or is truly compassionate, reflecting the compassion of Amida Buddha. Buddhas too have the other nine realms in their minds, for how can a Buddha possibly save those in hell if he himself does not identify with their suffering and guide them to enlightenment.

We can learn a valuable lesson from the teaching of reincarnation.

In what realm do you now live? If you are hungry for power, love, and self-recognition, you live in the Preta world, or hungry ghosts. If you are motivated only by thirsts of the human organism, you are existing in the world of the beast.

Consider well then your motives and intentions. Remember that man is characteristically placed at the midpoint of the ten stages; he can either lower himself abruptly or gradually into hell or through discipline, cultivation and the awakening of faith rise to the Enlightened state of the Buddha.

23/9/2011 | 51 notes | Reblog

Thailand’s Loy Krathong Festival

4/9/2011 | 17 notes | Reblog

The Floating Lantern Ceremony is part of Northern Thailand’s Loy Krathong Festival, also known as Yee Peng, and is held at the Buddhist Meditation Center, Tudong Ka Sathaan Lanna, behind the Mae Jo Agricultural University in San Sai District, Chiang Mai.

“The Buddhist tradition states that when you release a lantern, Kome Loy, into the sky, you are releasing your misgivings and are to make a wish.  This cleansing ritual makes it difficult to think of anything but how beautiful our lives are as we watched everyone’s wish float toward the heavens.” -Jamie Sinz

4/9/2011 | 69 notes | Reblog
Buddhist children in Nepal

Buddhist children in Nepal

2/9/2011 | 2,331 notes | Reblog
"Though one should conquer a thousand times a thousand men in battle, he who conquers his own self, is the greatest of all conquerors."

—The Dhammapada (8,x)
2/9/2011 | 16 notes | Reblog