Thursday, September 13, 2007

WWBD 02: What Would Buddha Do... to change the world?

From WWBD, the book, page 92:
Smoothing out the earth with leather sheets
Cannot be done for lack of so much hide.
Just put a bit of leather on you feet;
It's like you've covered the entire world!
-- Bodhicharyavatara 5.13


Upholstering the world!  I love the humor of this answer.  Shantideva sees our all too human ways with Buddha's eyes.  He knows we have this human tendency to want to change the world -- at the greatest cost and effort -- before even considering changing ourselves.  He doesn't berate us, though; he cheers us on to do the right thing.

When we want to make our lives easier, we have a choice like the one in this stanza.  We can change the world (heaven knows it needs it).  Or we can change perspective, and maybe transform ourselves (heaven knows we need it!).  Is your life hard because you need a bigger place or because you have too much junk?  Are things difficult because your job doesn't pay enough or because you spend too much?  Are things difficult because you you have no lover or because you feel you need one?  Think carefully before you decide.  The change what needs changing.


Glossary

Unless otherwise indicated entries below are borrowed from The Free Dictionary, http://www.thefreedictionary.com/:

Bodhicharyavatara:
The Bodhicharyāvatāra, sometimes translated into English as A Guide to the Bodhisattva's Way of Life, is a famous Mahāyāna Buddhist text written in Sanskrit by Shantideva (Śāntideva), a Buddhist monk at Nālandā Monastic University in India around 700 CE. It has ten chapters dedicated to the development of bodhicitta (the mind of enlightenment) through the practice of the six perfections (Skt. Pāramitās).  The Bodhicaryavatara online: http://shantideva.net/guide_ch1.htm.  Source: A Guide to the Bodhisattva's Way Of Life, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bodhicharyavatara

Shantideva:
Shantideva (sometimes Śantideva, Zh: 寂天) was an 8th-century Indian Buddhist scholar at Nalanda University and an adherent of the PrasangikaMadhyamaka philosophy.  Shantideva is particularly renowned as the author of the Bodhicaryavatara (sometimes also called the Bodhisattvacaryavatara). An English translation of the Sanskrit version of the Bodhicaryavatara is available online, as well as in print in a variety of translations, sometimes glossed as A Guide to the Bodhisattva's Way Of Life or Entering the Path of Enlightenment .  Source: Shantideva, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shantideva.

up·hol·ster   (p-hlst r, -pl-)
tr.v. up·hol·stered, up·hol·ster·ing, up·hol·sters
To supply (furniture) with stuffing, springs, cushions, and covering fabric.
[Back-formation from upholsterer.]

ten·den·cy   (tndn-s )
n. pl. ten·den·cies
1. Movement or prevailing movement in a given direction: observed the tendency of the wind; the shoreward tendency of the current.
2. A characteristic likelihood: fabric that has a tendency to wrinkle.
3. A predisposition to think, act, behave, or proceed in a particular way.
4.
a. An implicit direction or purpose: not openly liberal, but that is the tendency of the book.
b. An implicit point of view in written or spoken matter; a bias.
[Medieval Latin tendentia, from Latin tendns, tendent-, present participle of tendere, to tend; see tend1.]

con·sid·er·ing   (kn-sd r-ng)
prep.
In view of; taking into consideration: You managed the project well, considering your inexperience. See Usage Note at participle.
adv. Informal
All things considered: We had a good trip, considering.

be·rate   (b-rt)
tr.v. be·rat·ed, be·rat·ing, be·rates
To rebuke or scold angrily and at length. See Synonyms at scold.

cheer   (chîr)
n.
1. Lightness of spirits or mood; gaiety or joy: a happy tune, full of cheer.
2. A source of joy or happiness; a comfort.
3.
a. A shout of approval, encouragement, or congratulation.
b. A short, rehearsed jingle or phrase, shouted in unison by a squad of cheerleaders.
4. Festive food and drink; refreshment.
v. cheered, cheer·ing, cheers
v.tr.
1. To make happier or more cheerful: a warm fire that cheered us.
2. To encourage with or as if with cheers; urge: The fans cheered the runners on. See Synonyms at encourage.
3. To salute or acclaim with cheers; applaud. See Synonyms at applaud.

stan·za   (stnz)
n.
One of the divisions of a poem, composed of two or more lines usually characterized by a common pattern of meter, rhyme, and number of lines.
[Italian; see stance.]  stan·zaic (-zk) adj.

heaven knows (idiom)
1. I don't know
Example: Heaven knows what he's trying to do.
2. certainly
Example: Heaven knows I've tried to help.
Source: http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/heaven%20knows

junk 1   (jngk)
n.
1. Discarded material, such as glass, rags, paper, or metal, some of which may be reused in some form.
2. Informal
a. Articles that are worn-out or fit to be discarded: broken furniture and other junk in the attic.
b. Cheap or shoddy material.
c. Something meaningless, fatuous, or unbelievable: nothing but junk in the annual report.
3. Slang Heroin.
4. Hard salt beef for consumption on board a ship.
tr.v. junked, junk·ing, junks
To discard as useless or sell to be reused as parts; scrap.
adj.
1. Cheap, shoddy, or worthless: junk jewelry.
2. Having a superficial appeal or utility, but lacking substance: "the junk issues that have dominated this year's election" New Republic.
[Middle English jonk, an old cable or rope.]

4 comments:

ADMarshall said...

I just found a deliciously relevant quote for this post that ties back to earlier GNEC sessions about Buddhist-like thought, East vs West, and it's attributed to no less than the West's most well-known philosopher.

I give you Socrates on aspirations to change the world, from Brainy Quote: Let him that would move the world first move himself.

And i just must mention yet another Taoist-Buddhist-Western-thought intersection, that i'm pretty sure Lao Tsu also recommended renovating our selves while accepting our places as we come to them over wishing to fix the spaces we meet, with whomever or whatever they have, all while working in vain to cling to fixed images we made of our endlessly evolving "Selves".

ADMarshall said...

Dang, i was only able to edit that comment twice and it needs at least a third fixing.

ADMarshall said...

... which sounds silly enough now. ;)

Jatin Sethi said...

wedding wishes for uncle and aunty
marriage anniversary chacha chachi