Sunday, February 07, 2010

Old Echo

From the basic space of birthlessness, shining,
In the abode of ceaselessness, liberating;
That Dharmakaya free from any and all diminishment
Is there, close to effortless spontaneous presence.
The Tulku Ogyenpa [Ogyen Tulku 9th], on the 10th day of the 12th month, wrote this out well.  
 
Translated by Erick Sherab Zangpo.

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Weekly Tibetan Astrology: February 7 - 13, 2010

February 7, 2010 - Chinese 25th, M-T-K 24th. Monkey, Dwa, Green 4. Today is the final zin phung day in the Ox Year. Anniversary of Tulku Urgyen Rinpoche. Extremely negative energies with tragic consequences today. Beware of accidents caused by thoughtlessness. By the way: in regards to extreme weather, there is astrology, and then there is El Nino.

February 8, 2010 - Chinese 25th, M-T-K 25th. Monkey, Dwa, Green 4. Duplicated lunar day. Today is the final Ox Year baden: no prayer flags today. Today is Dakini Day.  You may experience very pleasant surprises today. 

February 9, 2010 - Chinese 26th, M-T-K 26th. Bird, Khen, Yellow 5.  Extremely negative energies today. Use utmost caution, although a haircut today probably won't kill you. Best day yet for making important requests. Don't disturb the earth element today.

February 10, 2010 - Chinese 27th, M-T-K 27th. Dog, Kham, White 6.  Excellent for long-life practices. Generally positive day. Ordinarily, you could get a haircut today, but I would advise against it in this case (Dog day).

February 11, 2010 - Chinese 28th, M-T-K 28th. Pig, Gin, Red 7.  Beware of arguments with  or between women. Last call for the Arizona State Rabbit & Cavy Convention in Casa Grande, Arizona. Never know who you might see there.

February 12, 2010 - Chinese 29th, M-T-K 29th. Mouse, Zin, White 8.  Gutor.  A perfect day for new beginnings, primed with auspicious energies.

February 13, 2010 - Chinese 30th, M-T-K 30th. Ox, Zon, Red 9.  House cleaning day. Do not attempt to "control" anything today.

Consult our extended discussion of 2010 astrology by clicking here.

Published every Sunday at 00:01 香港時間 but written in advance and auto-posted. See our Introduction to Daily Tibetan Astrology for background information. If you know the symbolic animal of your birth year, you can get information about your positive and negative days by clicking here. If you don't know the symbolic animal of your birth year, you can obtain that information by clicking here. For specific information about the astrology of 2010, inclusive of elements, earth spirits, and so forth, please consult our extended discussion by clicking here.  Click here for Hong Kong Observatory conversion tables. Weekly Tibetan Astrology copyright (c) 2010. All rights reserved.

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Saturday, February 06, 2010

An Idea to Save the Tibetan Language


Young Tibetan intellectual Tenzin Dickey (Harvard '08) has offered a well-reasoned and rather unique argument for adopting space between written Tibetan words, and thus saving the Tibetan language.

Interesting!

This article appears on her blog, where she covers language, poetry, and angst (speaking of poetry, try this on for size), and also on her Facebook page. Since sharing, or re-posting of her article is encouraged, since she is calling on bloggers and writers for assistance, and because I think she has an idea worth further investigation, I am taking the liberty of reprinting her main thesis here:
"The Tibetan language, like an asthma patient in a dust storm, is gasping for breath. Although Tibetan children born and raised in locations as geographically disparate as Lhasa, Dharamsala or New York may grow up speaking Tibetan as a first language, they’ll almost certainly write it as a second. As long as Tibet remains a colony of China, this will not change. For Tibetan students inside Tibet, the language of professional success is now Chinese. For Tibetan students outside, it’s English. Disadvantaged by the system, Tibetan is inevitably neglected.

"For the fate of Tibetan as a spoken language, the result of this neglect is so far minimal: as the language of home and hearth, it surrounds us in infancy and we grow up speaking Tibetan as our mother tongue. For Tibetan as a writing system, however, the result of this neglect is devastating: Tibetans of our generation do almost all of our reading and writing in a foreign language and almost none in Tibetan.

"When young Tibetans trained outside the monastic system – who constitute the majority – cannot write a decent letter in Tibetan or read a sentence without tripping over at least three words, we have a crisis at hand. What’s to be done?

"The root of the problem is quite simple: we cannot write Tibetan well because we almost never read Tibetan, and we almost never read Tibetan because it is so difficult to read it. And there’s one very simple way to immediately ease the difficulty of reading Tibetan: word separation. Adding a space between words so that we can see each word as an immediate discrete unit having visual meaning will simplify the daunting task of reading Tibetan script overnight.

"In fact, this is what people throughout the world have been doing with other writing systems. Ancient Greek and Latin were written in scriptura continua, which is continuous script without spaces between words. Paul Saenger, the distinguished scholar of medieval writing practices, asserts that it was only at the end of the seventh century that Irish monks began to introduce spaces between words into medieval manuscripts, and it took several centuries for this practice to be adopted as standard. (Paul Saenger argues that it was this “aerated” script that led to the development of silent reading as we know it.) This space between words, also called whitespace, is now ubiquitous across many writing systems. Even Hindi, previously written in continuous Devanagari script (the base from which Thonmi Sambhota devised the Tibetan alphabet and writing system) is now spaced. Korea’s Hangul, previously continuous, is now generally spaced. Ethiopic, which like Tibetan uses the interpunct, the dot – although they double it, like so (:)- is increasingly written with a space between words.

"Actually, writing Tibetan as we currently do, with the single dot to differentiate between syllables and no space between words, is a faithful representation of speech: after all in speech, we pause not between words but only at the end of a sentence. However, for the reader, that space – the visual equivalent of a pause – makes a world of difference: the whitespace allows words to be discrete, to have meaning that can be accessed visually as well as aurally. The eye can see quicker than the ear can hear and reading comprehension is consequently faster and simpler. Because Tibetan does not use word dividers, textual meaning is harder to access and the writing encourages the reader to read aloud rather than silently. In Space Between Words, Paul Saenger contends, “In general, graphic systems that eliminate or reduce the need for a cognitive process prior to lexical access facilitate the early adaptation of young readers to silent reading, while written languages that are more ambiguous necessitate the oral manipulation of phonetic components to construct words.” Tibetan of course falls into the latter category. He continues, “These latter writing systems require a longer training period, one that features oral reading and rote memorization and that continues, in some instances, even into adulthood.”

"When Thonmi Sambhota, the outstanding innovator of the Tibetan script, single-handedly devised the Tibetan writing system in the 7th century (and among other innovations introduced the dot between syllables), there were considerations which no longer hold true now: at that time, parchment or paper was scarce and expensive. Printing was done laboriously from woodblocks and dense continuous script fit more words onto the woodblock and more content on the page. These considerations are irrelevant today thanks to advanced printing technology.

"Let’s not forget that in the early days the script was not meant for mass consumption but rather seen as an elite privilege that one needed years of laborious training to master. After all, most writing systems in the world were developed not for mass consumption, but for the administration of empire and for governance. In fact for the greater part of the written word’s six thousand-year history, the different writing systems have required the presence of scribes who trained for long years to be proficient in reading and writing them. In Tibet, of course, the spread and diffusion of Buddhism has meant that the Tibetan writing system became the ultimate tool to preserve and transmit the teachings through the culture of the great monasteries. Within the monastic curriculum itself, years could be devoted to instill reading and writing proficiency in the young student.

"Today, with the public school system – with the medium of study often Chinese or English – taking precedence over the monastic model, we no longer have the luxury of a long training period. And the Tibetan writing system is already complicated enough without the handicap of a script that may look beautiful but might well suffocate itself. The variations in spelling are mostly unpronounced, and words are often said differently from the way they are written. If space between words can be as an inhaler to the asthmatic, and revive Tibetan literacy for future generations, what might be the costs of whitespace?

"A legitimate concern is that the unparalleled canon of Tibetan literature will be inaccessible to future readers accustomed to reading separated words. However, a few hours’ practice should allow scholars who will be fluent readers to access old manuscripts. Word separation will be crucial not only to beginning readers parsing lines, it will be an aid for scholars engaged in reference reading by facilitating swift silent reading and an expanded field of vision. As an interesting aside, it will also simplify the creation of a computer spell-check program and translation program for Tibetan.

"I know this proposition will upset and outrage many Tibetans, because we have always been resistant to change – and we have been writing this way for centuries. But remember that traditionally scripture was written in stanzas so that readers always knew where to pause even without space. Most writers writing in Tibetan today do so in prose. The young reader slogs through, stumbling ever so often. Even the learned scholar trips every once in a while.

"All things being equal, where words are spaced and comprehension is easier, more people will pick up a book. My brother Tendor and I have been informally testing the merits of word separation on a number of Tibetans, making them read two copies of the exact same text, one containing continuous script and the other containing separated script. Without exception, every one of the surveyed Tibetans found it easier to read and comprehend the separated script. We hope to continue the survey online and make it available to all interested participants.

"Tendor, an activist and a musician, who first started advocating word separation in written Tibetan a year ago, has been writing with word separation at his bilingual blog http://www.yarlungraging.com. Although “aerated” Tibetan script may look startling at first, this minor change has the capacity to turn the chore of reading into a pleasure.

"I believe that a study by the Tibetan Department of Education or a similar institution should formally assess the merits of word separation. A top-down implementation of an aerated writing system in the Tibetan schools, starting with the elementary classes and moving up to the higher grades, can bring about the immediate revival and long-term survival of the Tibetan language. Imagine if ten years from now, Tibetan students can read Tibetan with the same ease with which they can speak it, and children crave and nag for Tibetan language comic books! Such a future is certainly possible if we adopt word separation today, making the same leap that almost all other literate cultures have already made.

"If this top-down implementation sounds too radical at this time, it might be more realistic to urge a bottom-up initiative that can gradually spread among the Tibetan public. To this end, I ask bloggers and writers in and outside Tibet to experiment with aerated script, to add space between words.

"Written Tibetan can remain hallowed and privileged, or it can be accessible and popular. Since the time of Emperor Songtsen Gampo, it has been written Tibetan, bod-yig, that has bound the three provinces together, bod-yig that has preserved the intrinsic unity of the Tibetan people through imperial fragmentation and governmental dissolution. Bod-yig, Sambhota’s legacy to all Tibetans, has saved us time and again. Now it’s time for us to save this legacy. Future generations will thank us for allowing our words to breathe and to live."

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Daily Tibetan Astrology: February 6, 2010


Chinese 24th, M-T-K  23rd. Sheep, Khon, Blue 3. Negative energies today. Beware of catching colds, flu, or eating contaminated food. Please note that we will change format beginning tomorrow, placing our Daily Tibetan Astrology feature on hold for New Year, and replacing it with a Weekly Tibetan Astrology feature.

Consult our extended discussion of 2010 astrology by clicking here.

Published every day at 00:01 港時間 but written in advance and auto-posted. See our Introduction to Daily Tibetan Astrology for background information. If you know the symbolic animal of your birth year, you can get information about your positive and negative days by clicking hereIf you don't know the symbolic animal of your birth year, you can obtain that information by clicking here. For specific information about the astrology of 2009, inclusive of elements, earth spirits, and so forth, please consult our extended discussion by clicking here. For that same discussion as it applies to 2010, the Iron Tiger Year, please click here. The remaining Ox Year baden senpo (bad day to raise prayer flags) is February 8. Click here for Hong Kong Observatory conversion tables. Daily Tibetan Astrology copyright (c) 2009, 2010. All rights reserved.

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Friday, February 05, 2010

Like A Train

Along with 8,298 other people (and still counting) I get Trungpa Rinpoche quotes from the Dharma Ocean mailing list. Usually, I read them and save them. Sometimes, I print one out and give it to a friend. Today, I want to share this one with all of you:
When you are trying to help someone, you have to have humor, self-existing humor, and you have to hold the moth in your hand, but not let it go into the flame. That's what helping others means. Ladies and gentlemen, we have so much responsibility. A long time ago, people helped one another in this way. Now people just talk, talk talk. They read books, they listen to music, but they never actually help anyone. They never use their bare hands to save a person from going crazy. We have that responsibility. Somebody has to do it. It turns out to be us. We've got to do it, and we can do it with a smile, not with a long face.
Oh, that hit like a train. The years rolled away, and I was standing on the tracks, and he was standing there beside me, saying something a whole lot like what he said above, and probably that is what he was always saying.

Some others, who never knew him -- who know only the pictures, or the books, or the wild stories, and know nothing of his great and gentle, endless and nurturing ocean of loving kindness -- might say that this is not necessarily an "easy" way to live. 

But, it is a good way to live, and who cares about easy?

Oh, Rinpoche... you used your bare hands to keep people from going crazy, and you did it with a smile -- the flame from the candle that is never extinguished, dancing in your eyes.

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No Picture Available

So, then ---

Khyentse Rinpoche did it best with his note from "someone pretending to do retreat." I am left with this note from someone threatening to do retreat.

Very shortly -- it is down to a couple of days -- I will be traveling some interminable distance to an always-waiting retreat place, and promptly on the 14th, will disappear for three months. My retreat advisor is very easy, and liberal. Only three months? He even said I could break it up, a month here, a month there. 

He apparently resisted the impulse to counsel forty-nine days, but did offer this cheerful, parting comment, "Remember Padmasambhava!" 

Nothing quite so wonderfully concentrates the mind as imminent hanging.

Carried away by the smoke of many rituals and the sound of many drums, we dream the interrupting dream of yesterday, today, and tomorrow. Of course, none of this is guaranteed. Life is very, very fragile. Dreams are fragile. This collective agreement we seem to have in here and now is more fragile still. If you have ever spent any time at all in wars, you know you can catch it in the blink of an eye.
One of these days you'll be all alone
Way out yonder in the combat zone
Bullets flyin' around your head
Drop down quick or you'll be dead
Maybe this notion of retreat is like a wisp-o-the-hills, just out of reach. Maybe it is the end of the rainbow. This coming and going, punctuated by bells and lit by butterlamps: offerings and dances, morning and night. Maybe the real retreat is the one from which we are never separate; as real as the prayer we don't have to utter -- a continuity in which we are always at liberty to participate, but which does not demand participation -- because there is nothing to leave or join.

Going away to the mountain, or the desert, or the forest is a persistent theme in the mind of man. We look at it as a freedom. We sit in town, thinking of the cave, yet know there are those who sit in the cave thinking of the town.

The best retreat I ever did was one morning, when I sat at the breakfast table, and looked out the window. 

Ah. 

Everything is perfect. 

That retreat lasted about two years. Where I was or what I was doing didn't matter. Everywhere I looked, the scenery was flexible. You could stick your finger into it, just like a soap bubble. I kept seeing glimpses of Tenpa, and I even called out to him once or twice, until after a time, he faded away.

You would think that two years is long enough to stabilize your view, but it isn't. 

View and conduct are two fractious horses yanking a cart in different directions. It takes a whole lot of handling to get them working in tandem. You have to let them inform each other. Refractory or not, it takes sensitive hands, and we all know how hands get sensitive. Hands get sensitive through experience.

That experience cannot be forced. It has to be natural.

So, maybe retreat is deliberately having the same experience over and over, for some arbitrary length of time? Well, lets see how that might work. We've been dying, over and over, and that usually takes about the same length of time, i.e. the time it takes for our breath to escape four hand widths away. Can we remember what that feels like? Can we get our living and dying synchronized long enough to avoid attachment either way? Can we hokey up some kung fu solution: repeatedly smacking the air with our mortal distance?

So, anyway --

All this pixel-killing conjecture isn't doing anybody any good, when we stand in ever-present danger of believing this bullshit is real.

You can do what you like. I am just going to ride on a little ways, whether it is west out of Chengdu or somewhere north of Santa Fe, and however long it takes is how long it takes.

For the next three months, if I catch a glimpse of Tenpa, I will not call out to him. There is not a whole lot left that I want to say. I figure it is enough to take off the worn-out gloves and learn from those horses, in that place just over the next rise, and the one after that, where the blue river is clear, and those horses are always dancing.

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Daily Tibetan Astrology: February 5, 2010


Chinese 23rd, M-T-K  22nd. Horse, Li, Black 2. A pivotal day, astrologically speaking. Hold on to your money and your energy. Only nine days left to Losar, so save your resources for the week to come, when much will be required of you. All is not as it seems. Old year negativities are still floating around, laying traps for the unwary.

Consult our extended discussion of 2010 astrology by clicking here.

Published every day at 00:01 港時間 but written in advance and auto-posted. See our Introduction to Daily Tibetan Astrology for background information. If you know the symbolic animal of your birth year, you can get information about your positive and negative days by clicking hereIf you don't know the symbolic animal of your birth year, you can obtain that information by clicking here. For specific information about the astrology of 2009, inclusive of elements, earth spirits, and so forth, please consult our extended discussion by clicking here. For that same discussion as it applies to 2010, the Iron Tiger Year, please click here. The remaining Ox Year baden senpo (bad day to raise prayer flags) is February 8. Click here for Hong Kong Observatory conversion tables. Daily Tibetan Astrology copyright (c) 2009, 2010. All rights reserved.

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Thursday, February 04, 2010

Brevity and the Soul of Twit: Updated

In a sensitively titled piece "Bite Me, Boulder Buddhists!" now appearing at elephant journal, popular iconoclast Bill Schwartz (@ryderjaphy) offers his must-read take on Tibetan Buddhism, Twitter, and the "sangha" that loves to hate (big hint: they are not in Colorado).

Schwartz obviously has an old Chicago joke in mind....

"Say there," says the drunk to the cop, "Is it against the law to call a policeman a jackass?"

"It certainly could be," replies the cop.

"Well, then, " says the drunk, "Is it against the law to call a jackass a policeman?"

"No, I'd have to say it isn't," the cop answers.

"Thank you then, Mr. Policeman."

UPDATED:  The intrepid Bill Schwartz thanks the policeman in his latest "Welcome to Twitter Hell," and excites dialogue about on-line bullying that is definitely a must-read.

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Ogyen Tulku IX in Northern California

Teaching in three languages (Tibetan, English, and excellent Mandarin) the Ninth Ogyen Tulku took the throne at Alameda, California's Orgyen Dorje Den this past Sunday to commemorate Longchenpa's anniversary, and to conduct prayers for the swift rebirth of the late Penor Rinpoche. The event was well attended, and the temple beautifully decorated with lights and flowers.

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Meeting Thinley Norbu Rinpoche

Zach Larson has published an anecdotal account of meeting Thinley Norbu Rinpoche recently, in Nepal, and reports that Rinpoche is traveling with a five-man close security detail to help manage crowds.

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Zangdokpalri Temple Consecration Coverage

From the Zangdokpalri Foundation comes complete coverage of the long-awaited consecration. Dungse Rigdzin Dorje Rinpoche is smiling from ear to ear in every photo, and as well he might: this was a remarkable achievement.

Some people say, "Oh, well... they built a temple... that's nice," but the building of the temple is only half the story. The other half of the story is the community they created in the process. If you check out the link, above, you will see what we mean.

The next thing I would like to see is a complete collection of Kunzang Dechen Lingpa's works, in English. That really does need to be done, to make this particular mandala complete.


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Daily Tibetan Astrology: February 4, 2010


Chinese 22nd, M-T-K  21st. Snake, Zon, White 1. Note the omitted day in Chinese practice. This can be a singularly successful day in every respect. Employ caution while traveling. Vigorous action brings quick, positive results. Only ten days left before Losar.

Consult our extended discussion of 2010 astrology by clicking here.

Published every day at 00:01 港時間 but written in advance and auto-posted. See our Introduction to Daily Tibetan Astrology for background information. If you know the symbolic animal of your birth year, you can get information about your positive and negative days by clicking hereIf you don't know the symbolic animal of your birth year, you can obtain that information by clicking here. For specific information about the astrology of 2009, inclusive of elements, earth spirits, and so forth, please consult our extended discussion by clicking here. For that same discussion as it applies to 2010, the Iron Tiger Year, please click here. The remaining Ox Year baden senpo (bad day to raise prayer flags) is February 8. Click here for Hong Kong Observatory conversion tables. Daily Tibetan Astrology copyright (c) 2009, 2010. All rights reserved.

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Wednesday, February 03, 2010

Singa Tulku and the Hundred Syllable Mantra

For those of you who, for whatever reason, find that today's other offering of the Dalai Lama chanting the Heart Sutra isn't your cup of tea, we also have Singa Tulku's peculiar video of the Hundred Syllable Mantra.

Never let it be said that we don't give equal time.

Now, I think I will go do the Hundred Syllable Mantra to recover from this post.


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Dalai Lama Chants the Heart Sutra

Here is a nice one: the Dalai Lama, chanting the Heart Sutra, in MP3 format, and downloadable by clicking here.

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Daily Tibetan Astrology: February 3, 2010


Chinese 20th, M-T-K  20th. Rabbit, Gin, White 8. This is one of those so-so days: a little of this, a little of that, and it takes skill to navigate between them. On the one hand, today is good for signing contracts, making money, and receiving gifts. On the other hand, there is a tendency toward divisiveness. It takes two hands to clap.

Consult our extended discussion of 2010 astrology by clicking here.

Published every day at 00:01 港時間 but written in advance and auto-posted. See our Introduction to Daily Tibetan Astrology for background information. If you know the symbolic animal of your birth year, you can get information about your positive and negative days by clicking hereIf you don't know the symbolic animal of your birth year, you can obtain that information by clicking here. For specific information about the astrology of 2009, inclusive of elements, earth spirits, and so forth, please consult our extended discussion by clicking here. For that same discussion as it applies to 2010, the Iron Tiger Year, please click here. The remaining Ox Year baden senpo (bad day to raise prayer flags) is February 8. Click here for Hong Kong Observatory conversion tables. Daily Tibetan Astrology copyright (c) 2009, 2010. All rights reserved.

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Tuesday, February 02, 2010

Buddhist Priest Takes Over Airline

Kazuo Inamori, retired founder of Kyocera, one of the wealthiest men in Japan, and an ordained Zen Buddhist priest of the Rinzai Sect, has taken over control of bankrupt Japan Airlines, at the request of the Japanese government.

Makes sense to me that a man who deals in koans could also do well at turn-arounds.


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Daily Tibetan Astrology: February 2, 2010


Chinese 19th, M-T-K  19th. Tiger, Kham, Red 7. Today is Groundhog Day in the U.S., which reminds one of the Buddhist motion picture of the same name. Today is also zin phung, so if there's to be any shaking, it will be during the 36 hour window centered on today. Today is a day of increase. Look for favorable developments. Avoids anger and arguments.


UPDATED: Pennsylvania's prognosticating groundhog, Punxsutawney Phil, saw his shadow today, signaling six more weeks of winter. In related news, shares of Rolling Rock rose sharply on the exchange today, amid heavy drinking.

Consult our extended discussion of 2010 astrology by clicking here.

Published every day at 00:01 港時間 but written in advance and auto-posted. See our Introduction to Daily Tibetan Astrology for background information. If you know the symbolic animal of your birth year, you can get information about your positive and negative days by clicking hereIf you don't know the symbolic animal of your birth year, you can obtain that information by clicking here. For specific information about the astrology of 2009, inclusive of elements, earth spirits, and so forth, please consult our extended discussion by clicking here. For that same discussion as it applies to 2010, the Iron Tiger Year, please click here. The remaining Ox Year baden senpo (bad day to raise prayer flags) is February 8. Click here for Hong Kong Observatory conversion tables. Daily Tibetan Astrology copyright (c) 2009, 2010. All rights reserved.

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Monday, February 01, 2010

Bodhi Tree Bookstore to Close

The venerable Bodhi Tree Bookstore in Los Angeles, California will close later this year, according to its owners, Phil Thompson and Stan Madson. You can catch the whole sad story by clicking here.

There were four bookstores in the United States where you could walk in and find almost any book on Buddhism ever published in the English language. The first was Shambhala, on Telegraph Avenue in Berkeley, now long gone. The second is Bodhi Tree, in the process of going. The third was Samuel Weiser's, in New York, also gone, and the fourth was Pasadena's Oriental Bookstore -- gone but not forgotten.

Amazon has done for bookstores what WalMart did for Main Street.

Where can I put a flower --- a flower that I found on a careless afternoon, with a pleasant companion, who kept it in her hair for just a while --- when there are no more pages to the books; when there are only screens? Where can I stand --- on a rainy afternoon, between appointments, enjoying the competition of the printers and designers and binders and pages --- when there are no more bookstores with their special scents, worn wood, and endless possibilities?


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Daily Tibetan Astrology: February 1, 2010


Chinese 18th, M-T-K  18th. Ox, Khen, White 6. Longchenpa's Anniversary. Note that the Phukluk calendar omits the 17th day this month, whereas Tsurluk omits the 18th. Rigpa omits the 17th. So, on the common Tsurluk calendar, tomorrow is Longchenpa's anniversary, but we're sticking with today. Anyway... the countdown begins. We have two weeks to Losar, and all sorts of arrangements to make. Today is a good day to begin making those arrangements. In addition to Losar, the month of February also gives us Chotrul Duchen on the 28th. Quite possibly the best day to get anything done this month is February 20th, so if you are one of those people who stay home from Losar waiting for an auspicious day to go out, stay home from Sunday the 14th until Saturday the 20th.

Consult our extended discussion of 2010 astrology by clicking here.

Published every day at 00:01 港時間 but written in advance and auto-posted. See our Introduction to Daily Tibetan Astrology for background information. If you know the symbolic animal of your birth year, you can get information about your positive and negative days by clicking hereIf you don't know the symbolic animal of your birth year, you can obtain that information by clicking here. For specific information about the astrology of 2009, inclusive of elements, earth spirits, and so forth, please consult our extended discussion by clicking here. For that same discussion as it applies to 2010, the Iron Tiger Year, please click here. The remaining Ox Year baden senpo (bad day to raise prayer flags) is February 8. Click here for Hong Kong Observatory conversion tables. Daily Tibetan Astrology copyright (c) 2009, 2010. All rights reserved.

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Sunday, January 31, 2010

For Shame: Lillian Too

Lillian Too is one of those only-in-Asia, low-level occultist, self-proclaimed feng shui "masters" who make a fortune from selling solutions to problems that don't exist -- deftly picking the pockets of a legion of credulous Malaysian housewives. Above, you see one of her shops, and you probably get the idea.

Grasping Turtle mudra

It seems that now Lillian has taken to selling the Dharma. She has recently begun offering a translation of the Mahashri Sutra, for USD $96.00, calling it a "wealth plaque." The thing of it is, the translation she's selling is the work of young translator Erick Zangpo, who lives a hand-to-mouth existence in D'sala, depending on the kindness of strangers.

Let me see if I have this straight -- Lillian Too is ripping off a decent young guy who is starving, and flogging sutras so she has more cash to buy live fish in fancy restaurants, and plunge them into boiling water?

Take back your silver, lady... I cannot tell your fortune.

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