Blue Dragonfly Zen Center

Blue Dragonfly Zen Center This is a Zen Center for those wishing to have a steady meditation practice but are not able to reach the Temple at FM. Thank you,
Horenge Bosal Sunim.

The center is located on 3 acres of old Kentucky farm land. It is Eco friendly and very wooded. The center is behind the house and is based in an 1800 old two carriage house. Upstairs there is a community kitchen and zendo that holds up to 40 mediators.

Many roads lead to the Way or Path but basically there's only two, reason and practice, to enter by reason means to real...
10/15/2014

Many roads lead to the Way or Path but basically there's only two, reason and practice, to enter by reason means to realize the essence through instruction and to believe that all living things share the same true nature, which is not a parent because it's shrouded by sensation and delusion. Those who turn from delusion back to reality meditate or walls the absence of self and other the oneness of Mortal and Sage and who remain unmoved even by Scriptures are in complete unspoken agreement with reason without moving, without effort, they enter we say bye reason.

10/08/2014

Affirming the Truths of the Heart
The Buddhist Teachings on Samvega & Pasada.
A life-affirming Buddhism that teaches us to find happiness by opening to the richness of our everyday lives.

That's what we want or so we're told by the people who try to sell us a mainstreamlined Buddhism. But is it what we need? And is it Buddhism?

Think back for a moment on the story of the young Prince Siddhartha and his first encounters with aging, illness, death, and a wandering contemplative. It's one of the most accessible chapters in the Buddhist tradition, largely because of the direct, true to the heart quality of the young prince's emotions. He saw aging, illness, and death as an absolute terror, and pinned all his hopes on the contemplative forest life as his only escape. As Asvaghosa, the great Buddhist poet, depicts the story, the young prince had no lack of friends and family members who tried to talk him out of those perceptions, and Asvaghosa was wise enough to show their life affirming advice in a very appealing light. Still, the prince realized that if he were to give in to their advice, he would be betraying his heart. Only by remaining true to his honest emotions was he able to embark on the path that led away from the ordinary values of his society and toward an unsurpassed Awakening into the Deathless.

This is hardly a life affirming story in the ordinary sense of the term, but it does affirm something more important than life, the truth of the heart when it aspires to a happiness absolutely pure. The power of this aspiration depends on two emotions, called in Pali samvega and pasada. Very few of us have heard of them, but they're the emotions most basic to the Buddhist tradition. Not only did they inspire the young prince in his quest for Awakening, but even after he became the Buddha he advised his followers to cultivate them on a daily basis. In fact, the way he handled these emotions is so distinctive that it may be one of the most important contributions his teachings have to offer to American culture today.

Samvega was what the young Prince Siddhartha felt on his first exposure to aging, illness, and death. It's a hard word to translate because it covers such a complex range at least three clusters of feelings at once: the oppressive sense of shock, dismay, and alienation that come with realizing the futility and meaninglessness of life as it's normally lived,
a chastening sense of our own complacency and foolishness in having let ourselves live so blindly; and an anxious sense of urgency in trying to find a way out of the meaningless cycle. This is a cluster of feelings we've all experienced at one time or another in the process of growing up, but I don't know of a single English term that adequately covers all three. It would be useful to have such a term, and maybe that's reason enough for simply adopting the word samvega into our language.

But more than providing a useful term, Buddhism also offers an effective strategy for dealing with the feelings behind it feelings that our own culture finds threatening and handles very poorly. Ours, of course, is not the only culture threatened by feelings of samvega. In the Siddhartha story, the father's reaction to the young prince's discovery stands for the way most cultures try to deal with these feelings. He tried to convince the prince that his standards for happiness were impossibly high, at the same time trying to distract him with relationships and every sensual pleasure imaginable. To put it simply, the strategy was to get the prince to lower his aims and to find satisfaction in a happiness that was less than absolute and not especially pure.

If the young prince were living in America today, the father would have other tools for dealing with the prince's dissatisfaction, but the basic strategy would be essentially the same. We can easily imagine him taking the prince to a religious counselor who would teach him to believe that God's creation is basically good and not to focus on any aspects of life that would cast doubt on that belief. Or he might take him to a psychotherapist who would treat feelings of samvega as an inability to accept reality. If talking therapies didn't get results, the therapist would probably prescribe mood altering drugs to dull the feeling out of the young man's system so that he could become a productive, well adjusted member of society.

If the father were really up on current trends, he might find a Dharma teacher who would counsel the prince to find happiness in life's little miraculous pleasures a cup of tea, a walk in the woods, social activism, easing another person's pain. Never mind that these forms of happiness would still be cut short by aging, illness, and death, he would be told. The present moment is all we have, so we should try to appreciate the bittersweet opportunity of relishing but not holding on to brief joys as they pass.

It's unlikely that the lion hearted prince we know from the story would take to any of this well meant advice. He'd see it as propaganda for a life of quiet desperation, asking him to be a traitor to his heart. But if he found no solace from these sources, where in our society would he go? Unlike the India of his time, we don't have any well established, socially accepted alternatives to being economically productive members of society. Even our contemplative religious orders are prized for their ability to provide bread, honey, and wine for the marketplace. So the prince would probably find no alternative but to join the drifters and dropouts, the radicals and revolutionaries, the subsistence hunters and survivalists consigned to the social fringe.

He'd discover many fine minds and sensitive spirits in these groups, but no accumulated body of proven and profound alternative wisdom to draw on. Someone might give him a book by Thoreau or Muir, but their writings would offer him no satisfactory analysis of aging, illness, and death, and no recommendations for how to go beyond them. And because there's hardly any safety net for people on the fringe, he'd find himself putting an inordinate amount of his energy into issues of basic survival, with little time or energy left over to find his own solution to the problem of samvega. He would end up disappearing, his Buddhahood aborted perhaps in the Utah canyon country, perhaps in a Yukon forest without a trace.

Fortunately for us, however, the prince was born in a society that did provide support and respect for its dropouts. This was what gave him the opportunity to find a solution to the problem of samvega that did justice to the truths of his heart.

The first step in that solution is symbolized in the Siddhartha story by the prince's reaction to the fourth person he saw on his travels outside of the palace, the wandering forest contemplative. The emotion he felt at this point is termed pasada, another complex set of feelings usually translated as "clarity and serene confidence." It's what keeps samvega from turning into despair. In the prince's case, he gained a clear sense of his predicament and of the way out of it, leading to something beyond aging, illness, and death, at the same time feeling confident that the way would work.

As the early Buddhist teachings freely admit, the predicament is that the cycle of birth, aging, and death is meaningless. They don't try to deny this fact and so don't ask us to be dishonest with ourselves or to close our eyes to reality. As one teacher has put it, the Buddhist recognition of the reality of suffering is so important that suffering is honored as the first noble truth is a gift, in that it confirms our most sensitive and direct experience of things, an experience that many other traditions try to deny.

From there, the early teachings ask us to become even more sensitive, to the point where we see that the true cause of suffering is not out there in society or some outside being but in here, in the craving present in each individual mind. They then confirm that there is an end to suffering, a release from the cycle. And they show the way to that release, through developing noble qualities already latent in the mind to the point where they cast craving aside and open onto Deathlessness. Thus the predicament has a practical solution, a solution within the powers of every human being.

It's also a solution open to critical scrutiny and testing an indication of how confident the Buddha was in the solution he found to the problem of samvega. This is one of the aspects of authentic Buddhism that most attracts people who are tired of being told that they should try to deny the insights that inspired their sense of samvega in the first place.

In fact, early Buddhism is not only confident that it can handle feelings of samvega but it's also one of the few religions that actively cultivates them to a radical extent. Its solution to the problems of life demand so much dedicated effort that only strong samvega will keep the practicing Buddhist from slipping back into his or her old ways. Hence the recommendation that all Buddhists, both men and women, lay or ordained, should reflect daily on the facts of aging, illness, separation, and death to develop feelings of samvega and on the power of one's own actions, to take samvega one step further, to pasada.

For people whose sense of samvega is so strong that they want to abandon any social ties that prevent them from following the path to the end of suffering, Buddhism offers both a long proven body of wisdom for them to draw from, as well as a safety net, the monastic sangha, an institution that enables them to leave lay society without having to waste time worrying about basic survival. For those who can't leave their social ties, Buddhist teaching offers a way to live in the world without being overcome by the world, following a life of generosity, virtue, and meditation to strengthen the noble qualities of the mind that will lead to the end of suffering.

The symbiotic relationship designed for these two branches of the Buddhist parisa, or community, guarantees that each will benefit from contact with the other. The support of the laity guarantees that the Monastics will not need to be overly concerned about food, clothing, or shelter, the gratitude that the Monastics inevitably feel for the freely offered generosity of the laity helps to keep them from turning into misfits and misanthropes. At the same time, contact with the Monastics helps the laity foster the proper perspective on life that nurtures the energy of samvega and pasada they need to keep from becoming dulled and numbed by the materialistic propaganda of the mainstream economy.

So the Buddhist attitude toward life cultivates samvega a clear acceptance of the meaninglessness of the cycle of birth, aging, and death thatvdevelops it into pasada, a confident path to the Deathless. That path includes not only time proven guidance, but also a social institution that nurtures it and keeps it alive. These are all things that our society desperately needs. It's a shame that, in our current efforts at mainstreaming Buddhism, they are aspects of the Buddhist tradition usually ignored. We keep forgetting that one source of Buddhism's strength is its ability to keep one foot out of the mainstream, and that the traditional metaphor for the practice is that it crosses over the stream to the further shore. My hope is that we will begin calling these things to mind and taking them to heart, so that in our drive to find a Buddhism that sells, we don't end up selling our harts short.

12 Essential practices to Live More Like a Zen Monk.Great inspiration, great faith & great doubt & great devotion. All i...
10/03/2014

12 Essential practices to Live More Like a Zen Monk.
Great inspiration, great faith & great doubt & great devotion. All in the way they try to live their lives: the simplicity of their lives, the concentration and mindfulness of every activity, the calm and peace they find in their days.
You probably don’t want to become a Zen monk but you can live your life more like a Zen monk by following a few simple rules.
Why live more like a Zen monk? Because who among us can’t use a little more Piece of mind, concentration, tranquility, & mindfulness in our lives? Because Zen monks for hundreds of years have devoted their lives to being actually present in everything they do, to being dedicated and to serving others. Because it serves as an example for our lives and others whether we ever really reach that ideal being is not the point.
One of my favorite Zen monks, simplified the rules in just a few words: “Smile, breathe and go slowly. It doesn’t get any better than this".
However, for those who would like a little more detail, I thought I’d share some of the things I’ve discovered to work very well in my experiments with Zen living. I’ve found that there are certain principles that can be applied to any life, no matter what your religious beliefs or what your standard of living.
“Zen is not some kind of excitement, but actual concentration on our usual everyday routine.”
- Shunryu Suzuki.
Do one thing at a time. This rule and some of the others that follow will be familiar to long time Zen habits readers. It’s part of my life, and it’s also a part of the life of a many Zen monks. Single task, don’t multi task. When you’re pouring water, just pour water. When you’re eating, just eat. When you’re bathing, just bathe. Don’t try to knock off a few extra tasks while eating or bathing.
Zen proverb: “When walking, walk. When eating, eat.”
Do it slowly and deliberately. You can do one task at a time, but don't rush that task. Instead, take your time, live in the actual moment at hand and never mind what's befor or after.
Make your actions deliberate, not rushed or random. It takes practice, but it helps you focus on the task.
Do it orderly and completely in the actual present moment. Put your mind, body & spirit completely on the task.
Don’t move on to the next task until you’re finished. If, for some reason, you have no choice but to move on to something else, at least put away the unfinished task and clean up after yourself. If you prepare a sandwich, don’t start eating it until you’ve put away the stuff you used to prepare it, wiped down the counter, and washed the dishes used for preparation. Then you’re done with that task and can focus more completely on the next task. Which is actually eating the sandwich.
Do less. A Zen monk doesn’t lead a lazy life, he has a day filled with work. However, he doesn’t have an unending task list either, there are certain things he’s going to do today, and no more. If you do less, you can do those things more slowly, more completely, mindfully and with more concentration. If you fill your day with tasks, you will be rushing from one thing to the next without stopping to think about what you are actually doing.
Put space between things. Related to the “Do less” rule, but it’s a way of managing your schedule so that you always have time to complete each task. Don’t schedule things close together, instead, leave room between things on your schedule. That gives you a more relaxed mindful schedule, and leaves space in case one task takes longer than you planned. Or something u forgot.
Develop Rituals.
Zen monks have Rituals for many things they do, from eating to cleaning to meditation. Ritual gives something a sense of Importance, if it’s Important enough to have a Ritual, it’s Important enough to be given your entire attention & mindfulness, and to be done slowly and correctly. You don’t have to learn the Zen Monk Rituals, you can create your own, love & appreciate your natural surroundings if u have any left. The preparation of food, for eating, for cleaning, for what you do before you start your work, for what you do when you wake up and before you go to bed, for what you do just before exercise. Anything you want, really.
Designate time for certain things. There are certain times in the day of a Zen Monk designated for certain activities. A time for for bathing, a time for work, a time for cleaning, a time for eating. This ensures that those things get done regularly. You can designate time for your own activities, whether that be work or cleaning or exercise or quiet contemplation & meditation. If it’s important enough to do regularly, consider designating a time for it.
Devote time to sitting. In the life of a Zen Monk, sitting Meditation or (Zazen) is one of the most important parts of his day. Each day, there is time designated just for sitting. This meditation is really practice for learning to be present in the actual moment your in.
You can devote time for sitting meditation. You could use any activity in the same way, as long as you do it regularly and practice being in the actual present moment.
Smile and serve others. Zen Monks spend part of their day in service to others, whether that be other monks, in the monastery or people on the outside world. It teaches them humility, and ensures that their lives are not just selfish, but devoted to others & humanity. If you’re a parent, it’s likely you already spend at least some time in service to others in your household, and non parents may already do this too. Similarly, smiling and being kind to others can be a great way to improve the lives of those around you. Also consider volunteering for charity work. Make cleaning and cooking become meditation.
Aside from the Zazen mentioned above, cooking and cleaning are two of the most exalted parts of a Zen Monk’s day. They are both great ways to practice mindfulness, and can be great rituals if performed each day. If cooking and cleaning seem like boring chores to you? try doing them as a form of meditation or ritual. Put your entire mind into those tasks, concentrate, and do them mythology and completely. It could change your entire day as well as leave you with a cleaner house & seance of well being.
Think about what is necessary. There is little in a Zen Monk’s life that isn’t necessary. He doesn’t have a closet full of shoes, or the latest in trendy clothes. He doesn’t have a refrigerator and cabinets full of "junk food". He doesn’t have Cars, Motorcycles, Televisions or bank accounts. He has basic clothing, basic shelter, basic utensils, basic tools, and the most basic food, they eat simple mostly vegetarian meals consisting usually of rice, miso soup, vegetables, and pickled vegetables. Now, I’m not saying you should live exactly like a Zen Monk. But it does serve as a reminder that there is much in our lives that we do not recognize as unnecessary, and it can be useful to give some thought about what we really need, and whether it is important to have any of the stuff we have that’s not necessary.
Live simply. The corollary of Rule 11 is that if something isn’t necessary, you can probably live without it. And so to live simply is to rid your life of as many of the unnecessary and unessential things as you can, to make room for the essential. Now, what is essential will be different to each person. For my practice, family, Shaolin Kung Fu internal & external, Yoga, Qi Gong, Buddhist Study, Kanji, and not too much reading is what currently works for me. To others, yoga, cycling, working out and spending time with close friends might be essential. For others it will be nursing and volunteering and going to church and collecting comic books. There is no law saying what should be essential for you but you should consider what is most important to your life, and make room for that by eliminating the other less essential things in your life.

09/18/2014

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The Bodhisattva vow is the vow taken by Mahayana Buddhists to attain complete enlightenment for the sake of all sentient...
09/04/2014

The Bodhisattva vow is the vow taken by Mahayana Buddhists to attain complete enlightenment for the sake of all sentient beings. One who has taken the vow is normally known as a Bodhisattva. Whereas the Prātimokṣa vows cease at death, the Bodhisattva vow extends into future lives. There are two traditions of the Bodhisattva vow, one originating from Asanga and the other from Nagarjuna.

Taking the Bodhisattva Vows. A Bodhisattva vow is found at the end of the Avatamsaka Sutra by Samantabhadra. In Guide to the Bodhisattva's Way of Life, Shantideva explains that the Bodhisattva vow is taken with the following famous two verses from Sutra:

"Just as all the previous Sugatas, the Buddhas
Generated the mind of enlightenment
And accomplished all the stages
Of the Bodhisattva training,
So will I too, for the sake of all beings,
Generate the mind of enlightenment
And accomplish all the stages
Of the Bodhisattva"

Alexander Berzin (1997) asserts that the Bodhisattva vow transcends Life & Death.

The promise to keep Bodhisattva vows applies not only to this life, but to each subsequent lifetime until enlightenment. Thus these vows continue on our mind-stream into future lives.

Mahayana Overview
In Mahayana Buddhism, the Bodhisattva vows to work for the relief and liberation (nirvana) of all sentient beings as long as samsara persists.

This can be done by venerating all Buddhas and by cultivating supreme moral and spiritual perfection, to be placed in the service of others. In particular, Bodhisattvas promise to practice the "six perfections" of giving, moral discipline, patience, effort, concentration and wisdom in order to fulfill their bodhicitta aim of Attaining & Enlightenment for the sake of all sentient beings.

08/26/2014
08/11/2014

What meditation does. Slowly a good shout of the master, unexpectedly, in the situation where the disciple was asking a question, and the master jumps up and shouts, or hits him, or throws him out of the door, or jumps over him!
These methods were never known. It was purely the very creative genius of Ma Tzu, and he made many people enlightened. Sometimes it looks so hilarious, he threw a man from the window, from a two-storey house, and the man had come to ask on what to meditate. And Ma Tzu not only threw him, he jumped after him, fell on him, sat on his chest, and he said, "Got it?!"
And the poor fellow said, "Yes" because if you say "No," he may beat you or do something else! It is enough, his body is fractured, and Ma Tzu, sitting on his chest, says, "Got it?!" And in fact he got it, because it was so sudden, out of the blue, he could never have conceived it other wise.
~ABBOT.

05/21/2014

Welcome the Abbot of the Blue Dragon Fly Zen Center a long time friend that will be running the page. My deepest respect and may the wisdom of our Master continue to flow. ._/\_

04/17/2014

Has time seems to be forever I now have learned that the the only Thing that is forever is the sounds of life unfolding in each and every moment. The rooster, the dog, voices that amount to really nothing. The morning light, the light brisk wind that touches every point of Munich at the same time. Life has been ruff and at times brutal, bit that is just the way IT is. Now as the Autumn wind I hear your voice Master mote and more, ..JUST LISTEN AND MOV ONLY FORWARD WITH NO REGREATS. My head to the floor I share my tea and with the passing wind, I hope you hear my silence, ._/\_x3

11/14/2013

Many moons have past and i stop while sitting here for you Master. I realize why you did what you did, why i am here with the same tear tat fell between us many moons ago. Now with a heart crushed with sorrow and pain i am on my knees here at the gates of hell. All i see is the flower on the door k**b and another session looking into hell. My own true nature as it is show to me through you. If you only knew, but then again you do..deep bows of resoect and all my love..metta.

10/18/2013

2/2 Help earthquake victims in Cebu and Bohol. To donate, txt RED to 4143. Ex. RED 50 to 4143. Ref:005207730584

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