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Dr. Billings someday?

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No, I don’t have a doctorate (yet). I met with Dr. Payne for lunch again today. As I’ve mentioned before, he’s the dean at the Institute of Buddhist Studies (IBS) at the Graduate Theological Union in Berkeley. I took the class on esoteric Buddhism with him during this last Spring semester in an effort to both improve my knowledge of such things but also to get some exposure to him (to see what he was like and vice versa) as I have been considering working on a doctorate at GTU. As people may recall, I received my Master’s degree, focusing on Western Esotericism, this last December.

Dr. Payne is one of the few people in the United States who has been doing academic work on Japanese esoteric Buddhism. In his case, it has been Shingon, but my interests are in Tendai, which is similar in many ways and has had a lot of cross-pollination with Shingon over the last 1,000 years in Japan. He and I have met over lunch a few times in the last six months to talk about Buddhist academia, GTU, and the possibility of doing a doctorate. He’s been pretty supportive and friendly, I must say, and I’ve appreciated him taking the time to meet with me.

Today, I spoke to him about my plans to apply this Fall for the doctoral program at GTU, which would start in Fall, 2009 for me (the soonest I could get into it, actually). We discussed ideas around the work that I could do and I think I’ll be focusing on Tendai esoteric practices, taimitsu, if I get in. I asked him if he’d write a letter of recommendation for me, based on my work in his class and our chats, and he agreed after some brief discussion. This is a big deal since he is the dean of one of the member schools of GTU and, more importantly, he is the only one of the faculty there that could really supervise the doctoral work that I want to do. (Also, the fact is that I only have two potential letters of recommendation right now and I needed three to apply!) I don’t know how difficult it is to get into GTU, though I expect it isn’t as hard as some, like Stanford, but having the guy that you want to advise your doctoral work agree to write a letter of recommendation to the same program definitely improves my chances of getting in and I think supports the two of us working together. I genuinely like Dr. Payne as well. He’s got some character and at least one friend who knows both of us thinks that we’d work well together (though he might put me through the wringer academically in the process).

Dr. Payne suggested, in no uncertain terms, that I should spend the next year working on Japanese, specifically reading, for the work that we discussed. IBS has classes that focus on Japanese language through liturgy that would be the right sort of thing (since I really don’t need to know how to introduce myself verbally for a business meeting for my academic work). The main emphasis is that I need to be able to read specific kinds of Buddhist texts, especially ritual manuals. Fortunately, the classes were, the last time I looked, only a couple of days a week in the mornings so I should be able to work them into my work schedule.

All of this means that I will be applying to the doctoral program and, assuming I am accepted, going to GTU to begin work on my PhD in a bit over a year. I’ll probably be there at least five or six years (maybe longer) with the first two years being the intense coursework and the rest being much more focused on research for my dissertation.

At this point, unless I can figure out how to work part time on my work at Mozilla, I would probably have to quit working there while doing my PhD work. I’ve been advised that if there is any way I can keep my current job (regardless of what it is), that I would do well to do so because any aid I get for academic work will be tiny and any graduate student jobs pay very little in comparison to “real” jobs. We’ll see how that works out.

Paper Finished and Summer Plans

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I finished the first full and largely complete draft of my term paper for my esoteric Buddhism class today. It came in at 28 pages but one must remember, since we’re using footnotes for citations, that anywhere from a half to full inch at the bottom of many pages is taken up by footnotes.

The paper is off with my editor now (which means that my wife consented to look at it and catch the typos that I haven’t caught after ten minor redrafts for some reason and to see if it reads like a real paper). Once it gets past her and any mistakes she finds, I’ll send it in. With that, I’m done with this class and just in time for Summer!

This summer is shaping up to be fairly busy. I’m still quietly doing an online course with the Buddhist group that I work with for our education program. Those will continue one after the other.

R and I took a little time off today and drove down to Half Moon Bay to go horseback riding. I hadn’t been on a horse since I was a kid (which is shameful since my dad’s family owned a horse ranch of sorts in Wyoming). R had done horse camp as a kid but that was a long while ago. We did an hour and a half trail ride with a guide along the ocean, which was rather nice. I spent much of my ride trying to convince my horse, Chico, to quit eating flowers and shoots and to keep moving along. I had the “no riding experience” horse so he pretty much did what he wanted much of the time. I’m glad we went but my ass is pretty sore right now. I would like to do some more riding in the future though this wasn’t particularly cheap to do.

Beyond my continuing education work, R and I found out that Emeryville (which is a block West of us) has a Taiko dojo with regular open classes. Since we’re both interested in drumming (especially Taiko) and like joint activities, we’ll probably try out the classes there when the new series begins in two weeks. Learn to drum the Japanese way! They have their own Youtube channel as well if you want to see the local group in action.

We’re going to Seattle next week, where I’ll be seeing the Karmapa in his rockstar tour of the United States, as well as my daughter, grandparents and a few friends.

At the end of July, I’m going to Canada for a week for the Mozilla Summit with my co-workers. I’ll come back from that for four or so days and then head off to Las Vegas Black Hat and Defcon, again for work (since I’m the QA lead for security releases).

At the end of August, R and I will be going to Burning Man again. I went last in 2006 (she in 2001) and we’re looking forward to it.

Oh, and we are planning our Fall vacation trip (when we normally try to travel) to Egypt for late September or October for a couple of weeks.

21 Pages of Term Paper Written

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I have 21 pages of my term paper written for my class at the Institute of Buddhist Studies on Esoteric Buddhism. It is a 20 to 25 page paper but that’s fairly rough.

I decided to remove my discussion of the Susiddhikara Sutra because after writing my introduction, the history section on it and the Mahavairocana Sutra, a short introduction on esoteric Buddhist terminology (mandala, mantra, mudra, etc.), and then summarizing the ritual content of the seven fascicles of the Mahavairocana Sutra, I had 18 pages written. If I had added a summary of the ritual contents of the Susiddhikara Sutra, it would have been another eight to ten pages and then I would had to have written my comparison and conclusions. A 35 page term paper is half or a third of a Master’s thesis and I’ve already done one of those…

So my paper is now a discussion of the history of the Mahavairocana Sutra and its ritual contents with some discussion of modern uses (like in the Juhachi-do) mentioned at the end. I ran this by the professor and he had no issues with it. I removed the Susiddhikara Sutra material and then worked on stuff a bit more, taking it up to 21 pages. I have to rework/finish my summary of the last fascicle of the Mahavairocana Sutra, which is really a ritual manual, and then write my conclusions. This is due in a week and I have a three day weekend coming up so I’m in fairly good shape, all things considered.

Going over things today, the paper actually reads fairly well right now, which makes me happy. I tend to start an evening’s or afternoon’s writing on papers by going over what I’ve already written. This helps me rewrite or redraft constantly and also helps make sure I’m consistent in tone and not repeating myself. It also warms me up for the new writing at the end of it. Unfortunately, I can sit down to do this, as I did this evening, and spend two and a half hours reworking existing material and not writing that much which is new.

This is what the floor next to my desk (also heaping full of things) looks like right now. I’ve never been a tidy person but this needs to end soon:

Books in Hell