Browse > Home / Archive: June 2002

| Subcribe via RSS

Magic and Dharma

June 29th, 2002 | Comments | Posted in Buddhism, Spirituality
826 people have read this post.

I’m just about done with Healing With Form, Energy and Light: The Five Elements in Tibetan Shamanism, Tantra, and Dzogchen, which has been quite a good book. The amazing thing reading through this book is how much entire sections of it read almost completely like a manual for Western magical practices and elemental work. Whole sections of it when the author discusses how the elements interrelate, how the various energies form the body, and how to work with the elements and energies could be taken from a good book on Hermetic magic. It’s also amazingly refreshing to read a trained and recognized Tibetan teacher who is comfortable enough with English to use idiom and Western cultural references when appropriate. He describes the energy channels at one point and he’s trying to give a guide to visualizing their size and references the two side channels as being about the diameter of a pencil and the central one being larger with the diameter of a fountain pen, roughly. He even picks up some analogies to passwords and hard drives when dealing with the chakras at one point but does so in an insightful, not silly, way. It’s nice. I’ve been reading this book off and on for the last month when I had the energy to focus on it.

I just picked up his book on Lucid Dreaming and have his book on Dzogchen and the Nature of the Mind. I think I’ll be reading those next. It’s too bad that Tenzin Wangyal Rinpoche is on the East Coast but I’m actually considering traveling to his center if he offers a series of teachings there when I can go. He has a three week retreat starting this Monday but there was no way I could do that. I am in contact with a practice group of his in the Bay Area and he seems to come out twice a year normally to give teachings and empowerments.

Refuge is the day after tomorrow. I’ve never attended the ceremony before so we’ll see how it goes.

Houses and Painting

June 28th, 2002 | Comments | Posted in Daily Life
544 people have read this post.

I’ve got the luxury of two days off from work this week for free. Microsoft has a rather large campus (is there a company with larger?) and I’m on a secondary campus. They’re moving my entire group (60+ people) back onto main campus this week so we get Thursday and Friday off to keep us out of their hair while they move all of our machines and boxed up stuff. I can’t complain about a three day work week. Next week is one as well because of the fourth of july and then I’m going to California for a week the following week on Thursday for the recreation of the Rites of Eleusis that I’m attending.

What bad things can you say about three three-day work weeks in a row other than me possibly getting stressed about schedule since I’m a manager type?

Since we’re moving, I decided to take advantage of it and paint my new office. This might seem weird but how many years can anyone work in an institutional off-white office and not go insane? A number of us do this on occasion and our facilities people only go ape-shit about it infrequently. I found a half-full can of a decent blue left over from some painting project in a lounge, bought a roller and such and did my best job on three out of four walls in my new window office. The edges aren’t the best and they’ll have to do some replacement on plastic trim when I leave but… heh. It looks a hell of a lot better and the fumes will get me high for months.

R and I are looking to find a house in Seattle or just north of there though the Eastside is a possibility since I’m finally getting sick of the commute after doing it since 1995. We’re resigned to moving off of the Hill since we don’t want to pay more than $1,500 a month and need a minimum of a three bedroom house (1 room for me, 1 room for her, 1 shared bedroom) in order to stay sane. I did a big net trawl of classifieds tonight and found a lot of three bedroom places and some four bedroom places in Bothell, Kirkland, Redmond, Beacon Hill and a few scattered places. Now we have to start making calls. Having two cats and a ferret will make it interesting too…

Red Tara Empowerment and Medicine Buddha

June 27th, 2002 | Comments | Posted in Buddhism, Spirituality
1074 people have read this post.

I got a reminder newsletter in my snail mail today that mentioned that Chagdud Gonpa Amrita is offering the Red Tara Empowerment on August 8.

This local group also gets together on Monday nights to do the Red Tara Practice together so it would be an opportunity to take the empowerment and possibly have a group to practice it with… I’m planning on attending this.

I also received the newsletter for the Virupa Ecumenical Institute today. They list the following in August:

Medicine Buddha: Meditation and Healing Through Sacred Dance Movement
Prema Dasara and Anahata Iradah

Tuesday, August 13, 7:30 PM
$10 Public, $8 Sakya Monastery members
$5 Students and Senios

Beginning and Intermediate Levels

This sacred dance invokes the power of the Medicine Buddha for developing our wisdom and for healing afflictions of body and mind. At the request of Lama Lhundrup, Prema Dasara and Anahata Iradah developed this movement meditation for the nuns of Kopan Monastery in Nepal. As the basis for the dance, the nuns offered a four-line prayer they use when making Medicine Buddha Sand Mandalas. The traditional melody for the mantra resonates deeply and is set in the context of a simple sadhana practice. Medicine Buddha’s mantra purifies illness and removes obstacles from our spiritual journey. This class is a powerful inner and outer experience and the actitivities of the Dharma. For more information on this event and the activities of Prema and Anahata, please view the website of Tara Dhatu at http://www.taradhatu.org/