• Offering Hope

    I recently started taking classes in a teacher leaders’ program. One of my instructors in the program found out that in a few weeks, she must have surgery for cancer, and possibly follow up this surgery with chemotherapy. She announced this to the class last week to inform us that she may be out for one or more classes, and perhaps even for the rest of the semester. We’ve only had 3 class meetings, but I already can feel that she is a genuinely caring individual. She also spent many years as a respectable principal of a NYC bilingual/dual language school. It was apparent in her voice and her words…

  • sandwich of choice

    Leaving the grocery store one day, with my groceries and a fat sandwich from their deli, I encountered a very thin, bedraggled woman rumaging through the trash can for discarded soda cans. There was a collection center on the other side of the parking lot where she turned in her finds for a bit of cash. I walked past her to my nice clean car, loaded my purchases and set my sandwich on the seat next to me. Suddenly, I’d lost my appetite and begin to wonder when she last had been able to make a choice about what she got to eat–not just dining on whatever the shelter was…

  • Helping out in a Charity Fair

    Recently, a Buddhist temple needed some performances for their Charity Fair. I helped to present some Buddhist songs and got in touch with 2 other Buddhist singing groups to join in, too. We had a great time performing and the audience, besides being entertained, got to hear some Dharma too.

  • sharing

    today i didn’t give money to the homeless guy i pass most days although i usually do give something.today i bought some sandwiches and sat down beside him on the street and had a chat for just 10 minutes. it seemed to mean much more to him that someone was listening to what he said. and what he said taught me something too. we’ll have many more chats.

  • Strike!

    I was waiting for the bus this morning when a stranger pulled up and told me that bus drivers across the city had gone on strike. Later, as I was driving to work I saw another commuter unknowingly waiting for the bus in the rain. Inspired by the random act of kindness shown to me earlier, I stopped and passed on the news of the strike to this person. Just as anyone else would have done given the same situation!

  • New dimensions

    Meeitng with and listening to Rev. Heng Sure’s musical way of teaching the Dharma as well as other topics at the “Council for a parliament of world religions” in Melbourne recently gave new dimensions to ways of teaching. Religious teaching tends often to be bone dry and as a result many people – especially young ones – loose interest. This musical way I believe can open their hearts and minds to a better world.

  • Pure Land and Police Fine

    My co-worker often asks what I do while I volunteer at a buddhist temple and how do I feel when I meditate. She is interested in learning buddhism but she thinks it’s too difficult for her. I gave her a book on Pure Land. Last week she went into the office and told me she had a police fine for talking on the phone while driving to work. “Oh that was hard!” she said, “I kept telling myself, Pureland! The police is doing their job. Great Job! Amitabha! They are doing well. Pureland! I am not going to be angry! PureLand!!” Later on she added, “I am not sure how…

  • Staying Open

    Maybe we perform many priceless acts of kindness in a day and every day. That is how it feels for me being an acupuncturist and working in a community clinic setting. Some of those acts of kindness are really my job. I should be listening and paying attention to my interactions with people. I am constantly learning to get better at that too. I also experience great joy in those acts of kindness. It does not feel like a one-person exchange but a series of events of communication between people that open other possibilities to happen.As an example, yesterday I was volunteering after my shift to help the evening shift,…

  • doing time, doing zazen

    A couple of weeks ago, I helped out at my local Sotozen tempel, stuffing many zafus (meditation cushions) for people doing time in prison. With the guidance of the Sotopriest, they will do zazen to help them get rid of their marihuana-addiction. I am a strong believer of rehabilitation instead of harsh punishment in the prisons. The people who’s serving time are human beings like everybody else, and they need our support and our compassion.

  • Giving

    In the sutra of the past vows of Earth Store Boddhisattva, the Buddha explained very very clearly to us that there are three kinds of giving. They are giving of wealth, giving of Dharma and giving of fearlessness. When I read the sutra, I was extremely excited to learn how these types of giving enable one to plant blessings, and the more I read the sutra, the more it gave me encouragement to do more giving. For example, when I saw some beggars on the street or those who are sick, I would immediately take out my wallet and give my money to them and sometimes I would buy them…