Astrology for 4/10/2016

4/10/2016 Sunday by Norma

Call or text your loved ones and everyone else while you’re at it! Conversation, ideas and the news is highlighted. A disturbing event triggers discussion and it’s important to come to a consensus before taking action. Sideline the urge to react quickly, you’ll make mistakes if you do. Better options are possible tomorrow; wait, but do gather opinions and think carefully. Peter Ustinov said, “It is our responsibilities, not ourselves, that we should take seriously.” Today, take time to visualize an outcome you want, to see everything as a dream and go for walk or a drive. Love is grand, friendship is
excellent and things are going well. Self esteem is high today, use yours to plan your future!

The astrology post affects everyone differently, depending on individual horoscopes. Look to see how this message affects you today!

Denial: The Big Picture

The following is an excerpt from a teaching by Jetsunma Ahkon Lhamo called “Bringing Virtue Into Life”

The Buddha teaches us that this precious human rebirth is very, very brief, as brief as a waterfall going down a mountain.  You know there is no way that you can appreciate that when you’re young.  There is no way.  I know because I’ve been young and now I am middle-aged.  There is no way.  No matter how smart you are.  No matter how spiritual you are.  No matter how you try to stop and think about it. It is so difficult to understand how quickly our lives pass.  When we reach middle age, the big hubbub everybody talks about, we all have mid-life crisis.  Well, that’s what it’s about.  It’s during the middle of our lives when we realize that basically we have been on a weekend pass and, honey, it is Saturday night late, and the only thing you’ve got left is Sunday.  Remember how you used to feel when you were a kid? You looked forward to the weekend so much all week long and by the time it was Saturday night you had this kind of funny feeling realizing that it was pretty much gone.  The only thing you had left was Sunday and you had to go to church!   So that’s how we think, and right around mid-life we begin to understand that life is very short. But it’s very difficult to understand it before that, particularly since in our culture we are not permitted to see death very much.  When our relatives die, they put them in a bag and cart them off.  We never get to see them.  We get to see them when they look pretty.  That’s true! They pretty them up, and then they show them to us after that; but we never really understand what has happened.  So we’re shielded even from having that kind of sensibility.

Not only is life quick but there are certain hidden rules within our lives that we cannot take in.  Why can’t we take them in?  First of all, our minds don’t want to take them in, in the same way that when we are in a traumatic situation we often shield ourselves by being in denial about that situation.  How many of you know about that little psychological trick of denial?  Ever had any denial in your life?  Any of you married?  So we have that wonderful trick of denial.  We are in denial about what is happening with our lives.  We just don’t think about it at all.

Then the other thing about it—if you think about how our minds work—what are your earliest memories?  Some people say they can remember infancy. Some people say they can remember two years old, some people say four.  Usually it’s about three or four years that you can have your earliest, earliest shreds of memory.  Usually that’s the case.  From that time until the age that you are now, that’s all the real memory that you have. So you have a problem, and that is you cannot learn cause and effect.  There is no way that you can learn cause and effect thoroughly from your life.  Do you know why that is?  It’s because many of the causes that have caused your life to be the way that it is now did not happen in this lifetime.  According to the Buddha’s teaching, you have lived many times before—not once, not ten times, but uncountable times in many different forms. And most of the causes that bring about the results of your life right now have been brought about or have been birthed previous to this incarnation, so you can’t possibly make the connection between cause and effect.

Many people resent the idea that it’s actually karma, or cause and effect, that causes us to suffer, because we don’t like the idea that we actually deserve this.  We don’t like that kind of idea.  We don’t like the idea that we may have been bad in the past.  That kind of thinking is a bit childlike, isn’t it?  Truly, it’s a bit childlike.   When you look at your life right now…, let’s say you are experiencing extreme poverty, or let’s say you are experiencing some kind of terrible illness.  If you are experiencing extreme poverty, it’s probably because in the past you have had a lack of generosity towards others.  If you are experiencing some terrible disease, it’s probably because in the past you have broken some vows or commitments that you made with your body.  These are the Buddha’s teachings.

Those things may have happened in this lifetime, but probably have not happened in this lifetime.  Maybe in this lifetime you are very generous.  Maybe in this lifetime you are keeping as many commitments as you can possibly manage.  Maybe you’re doing the very best that you can.  Doesn’t it seem unfair, therefore, that you would suffer from something that happened in a previous incarnation?  What’s really unfair about it is that you can’t connect the dots.  That’s the problem.  You can’t connect the dots.  There’s no way that we as ordinary samsaric beings, ordinary sentient beings with limited view, can possibly connect those dots.  It’s impossible.  What if you were seeing that your life was filled with terrible poverty and that, no matter what you did there was no way to get out of it? And yet you look at your life and you think, “Well, I have been generous.  I’ve tried, you know.  I mean, I’ve tried to give to others.  I’ve tried to be kind.  I mean I haven’t always done it perfectly, but I tried. So why do I deserve this poverty?”  It’s very difficult for us, under that kind of situation, to do anything other than feel sorry for ourselves, and that’s what most of us end up doing.  We end up perpetuating the myth that nothing is connected with nothing, that we don’t have to work at it, we don’t have to think about it.  It’s just the luck of the draw.  So we end up spending most of our lives in denial and complaining, and just not getting the big picture.  That is the worst thing about samsara.

Copyright © Jetsunma Ahkon Norbu Lhamo.  All rights reserved

 


 

Astrology for 4/9/2016

4/9/2016 Saturday by Norma

Feel like wearing your space suit today; riding around on a motorcycle, sparks flying off your helmet; building a time travel machine; constructing a co-op? Uranian energy reflects the urge to be “different,” to express yourself-strangely-in a group situation. “The more the merrier,” is your motto. A combination of eccentricity, inventiveness and group consciousness drives the agenda. John Stewart said, “You have to remember one thing about the will of the people: It wasn’t that long ago that we were swept away by the macarena.” Elsewhere, if you get up up early this is a great day for shopping, financial decisions and solid worldly accomplishments. Sleep late, and eccentricity is in charge.

The astrology post affects everyone differently, depending on individual horoscopes. Look to see how this message affects your life!

Ten Virtues and Ten Non-Virtues

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The following is from the From the Nam Cho Ngondro, The Great Perfection – Buddha in the Palm of the Hand

“From attachment, hatred and delusion, non-virtuous karma is generated.  All suffering arises from non-virtuous karma.”

Ten Non-Virtues

  • Killing
  • Stealing
  • Sexual Misconduct
  • Lying
  • Harsh words
  • Slander
  • Gossip
  • Coveting
  • Cruelty
  • Wrong View

Ten Virtues

  • Renounce killing; protect the lives of others
  • Renounce taking what is not given
  • Practice generosity
  • Give up sexual misconduct; practice discipline
  • Tell the truth
  • Abandon harsh words; speak pleasantly
  • Give up sowing discord; reconcile disputes
  • Put an end to useless chatter and recite prayers
  • Renounce covetousness; rejoice in the good fortune of others
  • Give up wishing harm to others; cultivate the desire to help them
  • Put an end to wrong views; establish in yourself the true authentic view

Ten Virtuous Activities

  • Composition
  • Offering
  • Generosity
  • Attentiveness
  • Recitation
  • Memorization
  • Teaching
  • Praying
  • Contemplation
  • Meditation

Astrology for 4/8/2016

4/8/2016 Friday by Norma

A surprise is in store and it’s in your favor. Today and tomorrow are highlighted: a leader takes an unexpected step that turns things around, and a man makes a far-reaching, innovative decision. It’s a great time for invention, discovery, space travel, technology and all forward-thinking ventures. Living in the past? Face forward! Terry Pratchett said, “The trouble of having an open mind is that people will insist on coming along and trying to put things in it.” Be open minded today and tomorrow. It’s a great time to do something new, cuddle up with a machine, go shopping and declare your love to…your love, whatever it is! Sitting around is not currently an option, it’s time to move on.

The astrology post affects everyone differently, depending on individual horoscopes. Look to see how this message affects your life today!

Facing Reality

The following is an excerpt from a teaching by Jetsunma Ahkon Lhamo called “Bringing Virtue into Life”

Why is it we’re not facing that?  Because of the very nature of samsara.  It is like drinking alcohol.  It is like taking a narcotic.  There is something about the way we perceive in samsara.  There is something about the way we register data that causes us to not see time passing, to remain fixated on a certain internal idea and not really taking into account what is actually happening.  We learn instead to accommodate ourselves.  We start dying our hair.  We put on more makeup than we did 10 years ago.  What else do we do?  If we are men, women are not the only ones who dye their hair.  This I have found out!  This is the truth!  Women are not the only ones that are doing it.  Men are doing it too, or they use that, what is that stuff that you comb in and it takes, Grecian formula.  Yeah.  Some men use the Grecian formula.

Then others of us, we have different ways of not dealing with reality.  You know, you get to be maybe 45, 50 years old and you realize that you can’t do what you did before.  You just cannot.  You don’t do it.  You don’t want to do what you did before, but you simply cannot.  Physically you cannot do what you did before and so the way you deal with that, instead of really dealing with that and really looking at that, is you sort of change your life style and you think, “What I’d really like now is a change of life style where coincidentally I am slower.  I don’t have to walk or run as fast.  I coincidentally would like to have a house with less stairs.  I coincidentally would like to have clothes that are a little looser on me than they used to be.”

Some of us, the men for instance, when they are younger what they really want most in this world is motorcycles.  You want a motorcycle so bad you can taste it!  You’d do anything for a motorcycle or maybe a new guitar or fast car or whatever it is that young men really want.  Then when we get older we don’t face the fact that we’re older, but suddenly we want a town and country car, the kind that has a special kind of seat for lower back pain.  Then we get one of those beaded things you put on the seat for hemoroids.  It’s all right, because nothing has really changed.  I’m still a good looking man.  You know, that’s the way we think.  We’re just missing something here.  We are not facing reality.

Copyright © Jetsunma Ahkon Lhamo.  All rights reserved

Astrology for 4/7/2016

4/7/2016 Thursday by Norma

You’ve passed a certain mode and it’s best to keep going. Avoid looking back and refrain from analyzing a problem that would like to re-assert itself, but can’t unless you give it attention. Thomas Raddall said, “Don’t brood on what’s past, but never forget it either.” It’s a great day to enjoy life, to begin something new, and to engage in solid financial thinking. Men and women are on the same page, singing the same song, and happy to be together. Conduct your business, spend time with loved ones, enjoy groups and friends and stay in well-lit places.

The astrology post affects everyone differently, depending on individual horoscopes. Look to see how this message affects your life today!

Examining the Waterfall

The following is an excerpt from a teaching by Jetsunma Ahkon Lhamo called “Bringing Virtue Into Life”

My experience has been that here in the west, when students come to Dharma, when they embrace Dharma and even when they’ve been practicing Dharma for a long time, they have the attitude that we, as people, are going to that church or that temple which is out there somewhere. It’s an incorrect attitude that bears examining.   We go there and we act in a certain way according to the beliefs of that church or that temple, and then we go home and we continue on with our lives as though our lives have not been changed, as though nothing has been heard at this church or temple that is relevant to our lives.  We don’t even realize that we’ve done that, but it’s such a deep prejudice that each of us has—this idea that one’s spiritual life or one’s religious life is somehow separate from the rest of one’s life.  For westerners it is a deep prejudice to the point where it is almost invisible.  It is so much a part of us that it has become, in a sense, part of our background, part of the landscape within our minds.  It’s hard for us, at least, to pick this out and say “Look at that.  I act this way when I’m around the temple and I’m thinking about Dharma and I’m thinking about the Buddha’s teachings. Specifically when I’m doing particular Dharma practice, I act this way.  Then I go home and I proceed as though I had never heard of it.”

We don’t even realize to what extent we do that.  Oh, it’s not to say that we don’t hear anything and we don’t try to do anything with our practice.  For instance, if a teacher were to say to us “All right, now I’ve given you this empowerment.”  And often when a teacher gives empowerment,  the teacher will say “Now I’ve given you this empowerment, I need something from you in exchange. And what I need from you in exchange is the commitment to good moral conduct,” let’s say.  Or “What I need from you in exchange is the commitment to never kill or harm another living being.”  So when we have a directive like that we can fixate on that.  We can put that in our pocket.  That’s a direct order.  We can hear that.  That’s something we can carry around and it’s easy.

Maybe we go home and maybe we don’t kill anything anymore.  Maybe we do things like, instead of getting out the old fly swatter, we capture the flies and we take them outside. So that’s our big effort as a Buddhist.  The flies are thrilled.  But the rest of what the teacher taught—those thoughts that should gentle the mind and turn the mind toward Dharma, that should make us see more clearly, that should make us live better and in a higher way, a more responsible way—these things we often miss.  These things we don’t carry home with us.

A good “for instance” is the idea that samsara, or the cycle of death and rebirth, is tricky, seductive, that it is a narcotic, that samsaric living deludes us into a feeling of safety.  In fact, our lives are samsaric lives. Since we have been born, they are involved in the cycle of birth and death. Our lives, in fact, according to the Dharma teaching, pass as quickly as a waterfall rushing down a mountain.  This is an excellent example.  This is something that every teacher will teach you the first time they see you; and they will teach you every time they see you until the last time they see you.  In one form or another, you will hear this same teaching and these are some of the thoughts that we are taught that turn our mind toward Dharma.  That’s an interesting thought, and actually that’s a very interesting image.  It’s a perfect image, in fact, by which this teaching can be taught. The reason why is that when you look at a waterfall rushing down a mountain, you might see a waterfall that has been rushing down a mountain for hundreds of years, thousands of years.  You could go to someplace where there is a very high mountain.  Perhaps there’s been a waterfall there for a thousand years and you might think to yourself “My life is going to be as fast as a waterfall rushing down a mountain.  Good deal.” Except that’s not how it’s meant, you see, because what the Buddha is talking about is that, if you took one cup of water and dropped it from the top of the waterfall, it would be down at the bottom of the waterfall in a flash.  You couldn’t even follow it with your eyes, it would happen so fast, and that is how fast our lives pass.

Now when we are looking at our lives, we look at them the way we look at a waterfall going down a mountain.  We don’t see the cup of water.  We don’t think like that.  We don’t want to think like that!  Who wants to think like that?!  We see the waterfall as being something stable, so this analogy becomes perfect.  When we look at our lives, the evidence is clear. I don’t know about you, but I don’t look the same way as I did ten years ago.  Do you?  Even if you are 20, ten years ago you were ten.  You still don’t look the same way as you did ten years ago.  When you are 45, you know you don’t look the same way as you did when you were 35.  So the evidence is clear and you see it every morning.  You see it every morning when you brush your teeth or you do your hair or shave, or whatever it is that you do.  You know about it.  In fact, you’re playing this little game with yourself.  I know because we all play this little game.  Trust me on this.  Especially the women can really identify this.  We play this little game with ourselves.  We’re not graying because we can go to the hairdresser and he will fix it.  Every now and then we get really brave when the guy is up there fooling with our hair and putting the glop on.  We say, “O.K., how bad is it?  How gray am I?”  And I don’t know about your hairdresser, but my hairdresser takes my hand and lovingly speaks to me and says “You will never be gray.  I will help.”  So the delusion goes on.  See?  It simply goes on, and we’re not facing it.  We’re not facing the fact that this thing that we are most afraid of is actually happening.

Copyright © Jetsunma Ahkon Lhamo.  All rights reserved

Astrology for 4/6/2016

4/6/2016 Wednesday by Norma

Ta da! Confidence and happiness move everything forward. People are singing, “I feel good!” along with James Brown today. Women are cheerful and energetic: they’re running laps around men, who are stable and pleased. A surprise – something that seems destabilizing but isn’t- is headed your way.
Just call superwoman and she’ll take care of it for you! William Makepeace Thackeray said, “Bravery never goes out of fashion.” What’s good today? Solid financial deals, stable thinking and the ability to plan carefully, which you need to avoid distraction. If you’re running around in circles,
distraction is here, so think!

The astrology post affects everyone differently, depending on individual horoscopes. Look to see how this message affects your life today.

Uncover the Treasure

The following is from a series of tweets by Jetsunma Ahkon Lhamo:

While every being is sacred and precious, and has within the seed of Buddha-nature it is also difficult to see sometimes. Neonatal nurses in the “old days” could plainly see that babies are born different. To say that now is not politically correct, just not done. However it is true!

Some come out kicking and punching, wailing their healthy lungs out. Some babies come out peaceful, contemplative, eyes open like little old folks. Some seem dull and dazed. Other babies seem joyful, alive, innocent, devilish, comical, sleepy. Many nurses feel a “bad” energy under some conditions. A creepy feeling this child will come to no good. Why is that? Not every odd “feeling” child will grow up to murder their parents. But many babies that don’t feel right do act out. Why? In Buddhism we say this is a reflection of past karma and habitual tendencies. Of course to every mom her baby is a personal event, either yearned for or unwanted. Still, they carry the essence of Buddha. Yet some do grow up haters, mentally unstable, thieves, murderers and meanies. While others become saints, clerics, monks, nuns, caregivers.

Why? We are taught the negative patterns of past lifetimes still reflect in one’s mind stream now. If we apply self honesty and examine our activities in this life we will see. Look in the mirror. Have you caused suffering or benefit? Do you find the habit of helping others or the habit of criminals? You can see and you can change to reflect the precious triple gem within, waiting like a lotus to bloom from the mud, as all lotus must do. Rise up. Bloom, bring beauty. As it is our nature to do so, we must!

At birth we are beings with potential. Mixed karma, good and bad, mixed potential. Yes, the ultimate treasure is within. But we must uncover and polish it until every single facet shows its ultimate potential. And do it with joyful spirit. We are, after all, Buddhas. We have method, intention, and power to benefit all beings. We are free to love and deepen. Free to choose the ground, path and result. EMAHO!

Copyright © Jetsunma Ahkon Lhamo.  All rights reserved

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