relationship with the rest of life
In Mahayana Buddhism in particular great emphasis is laid on realizing the union of wisdom and compassionate action. Human fulfillment is seen to lie in the integration of the inner and outer dimensions of life, not in transcendent wisdom or world-saving compassion alone. As long as we remain delusively convinced of our egoic separation, then we remain cut off from the capacity to empathize fully with others. Such empathy is nothing other than the affective response to insight into the absence of egoic separation. For when the fiction of isolated selfhood is exposed, instead of a gaping mystical void we discover that our individual existence is rooted in relationship with the rest of life. For Thich Nhat Hanh, this is the realization of "interbeing"; for the Dalai Lama that of "universal responsibility": two ideas at the heart of contemporary Engaged Buddhism.
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Hello from California! I live about a mile from Berkeley Zen Center, if you've ever been there, and aspire to follow their good guidance. I've just found you, and really appreciate your posts. Thanks!
Hi Mark - I visited Los Angeles and San Francisco in 1977 - fell in love with the latter, of course.
I'm a Pureland Buddhist Minister with the Amida Order. (www.amidatrust.com) My teacher, Dharmavidya (David Brazier) was a monk in the Serene Reflection (Zen) Order at Throssel Hole Buddhist Abbey - a sister to Mount Shasta, prior to moving to Pureland. Rev Master Houn Jiyu was one of his teachers, as was Chogyam Trungpa - many years ago in Cambridge. BTW he's giving a Dharma Talk at San Francisco Zen Centre this coming Sunday. He's on his way from Amida France to our new centre in Hawaii.