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Cherry Blossom Bodhisattvas

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The talk explores the symbolism of cherry blossoms in Japanese culture as an embodiment of the Bodhisattva precepts, emphasizing the themes of beauty and impermanence in Zen philosophy. The discussion integrates the teachings of the Avatamsaka Sutra, illustrating how nature and humans together enact and receive Zen teachings, embodying core principles through daily practices and interactions.

Referenced Works:

  • Avatamsaka Sutra (Flower Adornment Scripture): This Mahayana scripture is central to the discussion, illustrating how its teachings on unity and the Buddha way manifest in simple daily practices and the nurturing of Zen traditions. It highlights nature's role in embodying precepts, and its influence on Zen enlightenment.

  • Bodhisattva Precepts Commentary: This work linked to Zen's practice includes interpretations of precepts like "not killing" and "not stealing," framed as expressions of restraint informed by Avatamsaka Sutra teachings, demonstrating the interconnectedness of Zen discipline and Mahayana ideals.

  • Dogen Zenji's works through Kyogo commentary: References are made to insights from Dogen's disciple Kyogo, discussing how all of nature and its phenomena, like cherry blossoms, align with and speak the Bodhisattva precepts.

Philosophers and Historical Figures:

  • Dongshan Liangjie: Mentioned in the context of understanding conflict through a Zen lens; an interaction highlights the instructive nature of questioning aggressive animal behavior as part of Buddhist practice.

This exploration provides deep insights into Zen practice's philosophical and practical dimensions, enriched by traditional sutras and contemporary applications in life and nature's interaction.

AI Suggested Title: Cherry Blossoms: Zen's Living Precepts

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Transcript: 

A couple of weeks ago, I went to Japan. The trip was supported by a request from my daughter and granddaughter and wife to go. I'd been wanting to go for a long time, but somehow the causes and conditions didn't seem quite there. So I went with these three generations of, may I say, women. And I felt that what was appropriate was to follow their lead, to do what they wanted to do.

[01:10]

Because I'd been to Japan quite a few times and pretty much went to the places I wanted to go to. So I was happy to not visit any of the places that I usually go except one, which was I wanted to go to Suzuki Roshi's I wanted to go there and pay my respects. And it turns out that the three generations wanted to go too. So it was great to go there. Otherwise, I just followed their lead and went places I've never gone before. And by coincidence, it seemed, the time we went, which was really kind of like, again, supported by the conditions of the granddaughter's school vacation.

[02:18]

So we went during her spring vacation. We didn't choose to go at that time, which was the Cherry Blossom Festival, the time... when the cherry blossoms are coming, reaching their ultimate beauty and fullness and blooming, and then perishing. We did not go in order to witness that yearly extravaganza. But that's when we went. And my first response was, And a lot of other people hearing when I was going said, oh, it's going to be so crowded. So many people are going to be gathering from all over the world and all over Japan to share the cherry blossom teaching.

[03:26]

And so I initially thought, oh, yeah, it's going to be so many people. And there were so many people. But when I actually got there, it was fine to have so many people and so many flowers. It was an abundant experience. first came that the cherry blossoms were just just starting and now when we went to we went to Tokyo first and then we went to Kyoto by the time we got to Kyoto they were starting to come quite strongly

[04:42]

Again, I wasn't thinking, well, let's go look at the cherry blossoms. But it was offered to me an opportunity to go on a walk on the east side of Kyoto, which was a walk that a Japanese philosopher used to walk on every day. And the walk starts at the... Silver Pavilion of the Imperial Villa called the Silver Pavilion, Gin Kakuji. That's where the walk starts. And then it goes south along the east side of Kyoto and ends at the great Zen monastery called Nanzenji, which means... Southern Zen Monastery.

[05:54]

So I thought, okay, that sounds nice to take a walk and along the walk are cherry trees all the whole way. And also at the Imperial Villa and also at Nanzenji. And we went when they were just about at their their great fullness it wasn't a sunny day but it didn't matter and so we we approached the beginning of the walk and as we approached it there was really the street was really packed with people going up to the Imperial village villa so I Requested that we not follow that extremely concentrated mass of people going to the villa.

[06:58]

So we turned south. Which was right. Which was in this southern was to the right rather than going straight up to the up to the villa. And that that part of the path was also had many people, but it wasn't packed. And it was under the cherry trees. And the people were walking in both directions. I was walking south and many other people were walking north. So these two lanes of people were passing each other under the cherry trees. And I've thought of this before, but I thought of it again. Again and again and again. We see things, and they go deeper. We see things. Oh, yeah.

[07:59]

And then we see them. Oh, yeah. And then we see them. Oh, yeah. Oh, yeah. But this is the first time for me. I've never been in Japan when the cherry blossoms were coming. I've heard about them for more than 50 years. I've heard about what they teach. But then it came to me again as I was looking at them with all these people looking at them. They teach. They teach the oneness of beauty and impermanence. They teach the oneness of beauty, truth, and impermanence. And the people come to witness this beauty and this impermanence.

[09:10]

And the people I saw, they were adoring. They were worshiping this teaching. They were receiving this teaching. from the cherry blossoms and the trees on which the blossoms were blooming. And someone whispered in my ear, and they keep coming back. Every year, they come back to us and give us their life. which is beauty and impermanence. And the humans come to receive this gift and receive this teaching together with love and appreciation and respect.

[10:17]

And during the rest of the year, the humans take care of those trees. They take good care of those trees. Those trees are old. I don't know how old they are, but they're old. They're really old. They have huge trunks, but they don't have huge branches. The branches are basically. Flower ornaments. They prune them to make the branches just they're just flower ornaments and that powerful trunk to supply. Offer this to us. So I really felt. The flower adornment scripture. Being being enacted. By this. Wonderful ritual. This wonderful practice. Of walking among the trees.

[11:20]

And having them teach us. And having us honor them. And worship them. and respect them and say thank you to them. So I thought these flowers, they're bodhisattvas. They keep being reborn, and every year they teach millions and millions of people the Dharma. They speak the Dharma in English, in Japanese, in Chinese, Korean, Russian, Swedish, French, Italian, Spanish, all these languages, these people coming from all over the world to enter this communion.

[12:29]

with these bodhisattvas. Another example of a communion, which I've seen many times, many, many, many times, but just struck me today, was I was crossing my legs here with you. And in the process of crossing my legs, it might not surprise you, I saw my feet. My bare feet. Which I've seen quite a few times before. Both walking and also when crossing my feet, my legs. But then I saw... these bare feet that I was crossing, I noticed that the Buddha sitting right near me also had bare feet and had them crossed.

[13:41]

I thought, isn't that interesting that almost always Buddha statues, the Buddhas have bare hands and bare face and bare feet. And also the bodhisattva standing there has bare hands, bare face, and bare feet. I thought, yeah, there's something there about this bare feet. Like the flowers are not wearing shoes. Not to... I don't want to have you have socks on feel bad. But anyway, there's something about bare feet and Buddhas. It might have something to do with the teaching coming out of the bare face and the teaching coming out of the bare hands and the teaching coming out of the bare feet, which in the Avatamsaka Sutra, in the Flower Adornment, there's a great deal of discussion of lights which awaken beings coming out of the feet and the hands and the forehead.

[15:02]

of the Buddhas and the Bodhisattvas. So I'm not trying to talk you into taking your socks off. Just remember that these feet and hands and face you have are going to be involved in emanating a great light at some point. A light which will awaken infinite beings. just like the cherry blossoms. The light touches them and bounces off them and illuminates innumerable beings. So thank you to the people who live in Japan who have raised these trees for I don't know how long. care of them and let and in return for the service which is offered to them they serve us they make our life more real and beautiful and impermanent not more impermanent they awaken us to the impermanence of our life and they teach it to us in this really beautiful deeply touching

[16:32]

Dharma so as many of you know I have happily committed to spend not necessarily the rest of my life but maybe the rest of my life I've committed for at least 10 years of giving the flower adornment scripture a, what do you call it, a position of honor in the practice that I'm involved with all beings. The flower adornment scripture, I'm making this commitment because I feel... my life I have not given it sufficient worship sufficient devotion I have not shared it sufficiently with people so I'm trying to bring out this teaching which I don't feel which I think is good now for it to get more attention and also to bring out how intimately the teaching of this scripture

[17:59]

is woven into our particular Zen tradition. And again, to employ this teaching to realize the majesty and depth of our simple practice together, of our simple daily life together, the sutra is telling us what's really going on. our simple daily life and also our simple daily life is a really good way to understand the sutra we don't have to be you know really what's the word intellectual or analytical or philosophical in order to study the scripture we can study it just simply with bare feet and bare hands and bare face so I'm I want us to understand that the greatness of Zen is because of the light it has received from this great Mahayana scripture not just this one but other ones too but this sutra has really made a

[19:26]

the beauty of Zen, blossom. And Zen is a good friend to this sutra and makes this sutra bloom in our practice. The sutra says, in English, now I, together, with all living beings and the great earth. Realize the Buddha way. So that's what the sutra says and that now is always now. It's not then, it's now. The Buddha realizes

[20:28]

the Buddha way now with all living beings and the great earth and that statement which is in the sutra is also found in other places in particularly is found in the Zen tradition so recently and recently and recently again I've been looking at and involved in translating a commentary on the bodhisattva precepts. And in this commentary on the bodhisattva precepts, it says that the bodhisattva precepts, particularly what we call the ten major bodhisattva precepts, those ten precepts, they are precepts of... restraint but the restraint in this case is a restraint informed by the avatamsaka sutra did you follow that by any chance so the ten

[21:56]

Major bodhisattva precepts of our tradition are called not killing, not stealing, not misusing sexuality, not lying, and not intoxicating mind or body of self or other. Particularly, it's about not intoxicating the body of others. But we added in self just to make sure people knew that that was involved. We being the Americans. Number six, not slandering. Number seven, not praising self at the expense of others. Number eight, not being possessive of anything. Number nine, not harboring ill will. Number ten, not... Disparaging the triple treasure. Those are the ten major bodhisattva precepts.

[22:58]

And in this commentary it says, these are precepts of restraint. They're also called precepts conducive to awakening. Excuse me. Precepts conducive to liberation. So those ten are called ten... precepts conducive to liberation, and they are precepts of restraint. But again, the restraint is the restraint of the sutra, according to this commentary. And what is the restraint of these sutras, of these precepts? What is the restraint? It is, now I, together with all beings and the great earth, attain the Buddha way.

[24:03]

That's the restraint. Sometimes we say, something's happening under certain restraints. Well, the practice of the Bodhisattva precepts also happening under a particular restraint and what's the restraint it's the precept of not killing is restrained or you know it's restrained by I together with all beings and the great earth attain the Buddha way that's not that's the precept of not killing the precept of not killing is attaining the Buddha way it is I together with all beings attain the Buddha way I together with cherry blossoms and cherry trees and many many people worshiping this inconceivable Buddha way

[25:18]

So again, the commentary quotes the Avatamsaka Sutra in commenting on these ten major precepts. The commentary of our little school says, this is our understanding of these precepts. Our understanding of these precepts is deeply in accord with the Avatamsaka Sutras. And then the commentary goes on. And one person is commenting on his name's Kyogo. He was a disciple of Dogen. And he then goes on to say, all of creation, all of nature, speaks. Now someone might say, speaks what? He just says speak in the context of this is a commentary on the Bodhisattva precepts.

[26:37]

All of nature speaks the Bodhisattva precepts. All of nature says, teaches not killing. It doesn't say don't kill. All of nature teaches Speaks not killing. Speaks not stealing. Speaks not taking what's not given. Look at the cherry blossoms. They speak not killing. They speak not taking what's not given. They speak not misusing sexuality. They don't speak no sexuality. They speak not misusing it. They speak not lying.

[27:43]

But not just the cherry trees, the cherry trunks and the earth in which they sit. All of creation, all of nature speaks the Bodhisattva precepts, speaks the Ava Tam Saka Sutra. The Ava Tam Saka Sutra says all of nature this sutra. This sutra is the mouthpiece of all of nature. The entirety of the Buddha's teaching is all of nature speaking. This is a teaching of our school, which comes through that wonderful island of Japan. And on that island, they gave this message. But this teaching of the Avatamsaka Sutra and Zen came from China.

[28:48]

So in China, our school started to become more and more embodying and the embodiment of this sutra. And in Japan... the additional embodiment of this sutra in the Zen school was then embodied in the bodhisattva precepts, in the interpretation of these precepts. Yeah, so there it is. The Zen school says, Cherry blossoms teach. And also we are part of the teaching process. They don't teach by themselves. They teach with humans and animals and all the other plants.

[29:51]

The title of this talk could be Cherry Blossom Bodhisattva. So now here we are together. We're here together with all sentient beings and the great earth. And all of us together speak. All of us together listen.

[31:08]

All of us together look and all of us together speaks and expresses the Buddha Dharma. So this is an offering to the great teaching of the Sutra and the great tradition of our little Zen school in relationship to the bodhisattva precepts. And what I said is like one drop in the ocean of this sutra. So we're not going to run out of material in 10 years. You may run out of me in 10 years. but you're not going to run out of dharma teachings from this sutra.

[32:12]

And therefore, if you don't run out of dharma teachings of this sutra, you don't run out of dharma teachings of Zen. Because Zen is full of the sutra, and the sutra is full of Zen, and that's what the sutra says, and that's what Zen says. Yes? How is it that it's energy things? How is it? They teach it incandescently and unceasingly. That's how they do it. And someone might say to you, do you see the light? Do you see the light in this room? The light of this room... is the way right now, is the way we all together. So you're ascension being, someone might say.

[33:18]

I'm ascension being, someone might say, right? But all of us together is not ascension being. All of us together is not ascension being. It is intimate transmission. It's not something that's... Sentient beings have a tendency to be born and die. But the thing we're doing together isn't born and does not die. It's an insentient being. The way all of nature is speaking... is not a sentient being. The way all the sentient beings together with each other and with the great Earth, that speaking is not a sentient being.

[34:20]

It's not like a, it doesn't come in like a little baby girl or a little baby boy or a little baby, what's the name of that rodent? Capybara. Capybara. So my granddaughter wanted to go to a capybara cafe. And have tea and hug capabars. So she did. Capabars are born and die. But they practice together with us. And people go thousands of miles to hug them. But the way we're practicing together is not a sentient being. It doesn't have feeling. This light doesn't have a feeling. Good feeling, bad feeling? It is an instant. It's a being. What's a being? All of nature together is a being. And it's a light.

[35:22]

And it's a voice. And it speaks to Dharma. I can't see it with my eyes, but I can see everything that it... I can see all the things it pervades. But I can't see the light. Me and you together practicing is the light. All of us together, all of us in this room, in this temple and beyond, all of us together speak the Dharma. And that all of us together is an insentient being. All of us together doesn't have feelings. All of the beings who have feelings together isn't a feeling. And it's what really does the teaching. I don't do the teaching by myself, but I'm part of the teaching in relationship to all beings because I'm in relationship with all beings.

[36:28]

But everybody else who is not teaching by themselves is also in relationship to all beings. is an insentient being. And so the insentient being is doing the teaching, and the insentient being which is doing the teaching is how all the sentient beings are working together. Nature is how all the insentient beings are working together. But that's not all of nature. All of nature also includes the working together. It's all the sentient beings who are born and die, but it's also the relationship which isn't born and does not die. So nature includes both birth and death and nirvana. It includes things that have feelings and the relationship among all feeling beings. All those practicing together realizes the Buddha way.

[37:29]

Thank you for your offering. that question. Do you have another question to offer? Yeah. The conversation of nature. The nature conversation is what speaks. The Dharma. It says all of nature speaks. It doesn't say what, but in the context it speaks the Buddha Dharma. The Buddha Dharma is nothing but All of nature speaking. How are you doing? What? Very well. Yeah, you are. Also, I saw this statement, this person on YouTube said, 10 things that Japanese do that will make you very happy. One of them is clean toilets.

[38:35]

Another one is put the chair back under the table after you get up. But the one that came to my mind just now is the Japanese expression. If somebody asks you how you are, in Japanese they often say, are you feeling well? Genki desu ka, which means genki is like energetic or well. Genki desu ka, and you often might say, yeah, genki desu. But another thing they might ask you is not so much, are you healthy, but how are you? Ikaga desu ka? And the answer that makes people happy. The answer that makes people happy. One more time. The answer that makes people happy is okagesama de. Okagesama. Okagesama de. What does that mean? It means, how are you? The answer is, I'm here. Because of all of you. I'm here because of you and [...] you.

[39:46]

I'm here because of all of you. That expression makes people happy. Even if I'm sick. How are you? How are you? Now, if you ask me if I'm Genki, I'll just say Genkides. But if you ask me how I am, I'm going to say, I'm here because of all of you. That's the Abhatamsaka Sutra, which has pervaded Japanese culture. And I'm not saying Japanese culture is perfect, but it has some good points, and that's one of them, is that people say that. Also, before they eat, they say, which basically means I receive it but the sense of it is I receive it I receive this food by the kindness and efforts of all beings so in the Zen temple we say 72 labors or innumerable labors brought us this food that's in the Zen monastic version of

[41:02]

Itadakimasu. It's a monastic version of I receive this food by the effort and kindness of many beings. So I respect this food. I'm grateful for all the beings who bring it to me. But a more general thing is I'm here because of reality, which is We together with all beings and the great earth attain the Buddha way. resonating very much with all of nature speaking the precept of not killing, not taking, and what's not given.

[42:10]

And then into my mind came the thought of the animal world where there is often combat and sometimes killing of other animals, and also stealing of eggs, of birds, and how Yeah, so that's not exactly speaking. And also, that part of us that needs to become part of our living precept, that energy that comes from that part of us and the animal world. So I'm wondering what you thought about that would be. One thought that came when you were speaking was, one day, one of our great ancestors, his name is Chinese ancestor, who is called Dungshan, or Tozan, he was with one of his students, and the students saw some birds being cruel to each other.

[43:27]

And the students said to Dungshan, what's that about? That's kind of your question. What's that about? And Dengshan said, that's for you. They're doing that for you, for you to ask that question. So the things you're bringing up, they're for you to ask the question. And now you have asked the question. Because of those things, you could ask this question. Because of those nasty birds, those birds in conflicts, the monk could ask the question. That's what all this conflict's about. It's to help us ask the question, well, what is not killing? What is not killing? These beings seem to be on the verge of or killing each other. What's that about? Well, that's for you to ask, where is not killing?

[44:29]

Where is... all sentient beings together with the great earth, how are those birds part of practicing together? If you could see that the birds fighting that way were practicing together with all beings, if you could see it, that would be not killing. As now, when I don't see it, but... if I don't see it in such a way that I don't just see killing, I see where is and what is not killing. So I don't just see killing, I see the question, where are the precepts now? What you said, how are those birds or those animals who are killing each other, how are they the Buddha way? How are they practicing together with all beings?

[45:36]

The way they are is what we're looking for. We're not denying this tragic situation. But we're not just getting stuck in the tragedy. We're asking, how is this the Buddha Dharma? How is this speaking to us? And it's not just speaking to us by itself. It's not just this conflict by itself. That's not going to be... Even if you see people being friendly to each other, it's not them being friendly by themselves that speak in the Dharma. It's okage samadhi. It's how these people who are being kind to each other are there being supported by all beings. That's where the Dharma is. So if people are being kind to each other, it's not the kindness all by itself itself It's the kindness of them working together with everybody. If people are being cruel to each other, of course, that's not the Buddha way by itself.

[46:40]

So nothing is put away by itself. Cruelty and kindness are not by themselves. Kindness is always together with all beings in the great earth. And when kindness is together with all beings in the great earth, then everybody realizes the Buddha way. But cruelty, it's the same. If cruelty is by itself, it's just cruelty. Of course, cruelty is not attaining the Buddha way. Impatience, unkindness are not the Buddha way. But the way unkindness is working together with all beings in the great earth, that is the Buddha way. demonstrated and stick with the first thing the first thing he mentioned was clean the toilet first clean the toilet then put the chairs back and then let's talk about all beings together so first birds fighting let's let's let's get in there and not try to kill the birds who are fighting not not try to stop the birds from being what they are

[47:55]

Let's just get in there and be intimate with this terrible situation. Let's get intimate with the messy, dirty aspects of life. And our own aggression. And our own aggression, yeah. Let's get intimate with our own aggression, be generous and compassionate to our own aggression. Then we're ready to open up and see that the aggression... is working together with all beings. And that working together with all beings is all of nature. And that speaks to precept of not killing. That precepts the Dharma. Thank you. Let's see. Who is it? Oh, maybe Homa? I don't know. Or Oscar? Yes. I think this question was the question that I was contemplating. the pure mind she's she's devoted to contemplate the pure mind so the pure we often we say the pure mind of Buddha and where does the pure mind of Buddha live it lives in the mud

[49:23]

We live in the mud. We live in the toilet. We live in the ocean of cruelty. And we embrace it all with compassion and realize the pure mind of Buddha. The pure mind of Buddha is where all the darkness is interacting completely with all the darkness and all the light. That's how we take care of the pure mind of Buddha. Yes, Oscar. What a coincidence. Okay. And partly to stimulate the study of the Great Sutra,

[50:30]

to stimulate the realization of our simple little Zen practice in relationship to it. I wanted to bring up a couple things about the sutra, which then you probably will help me remember to talk to you about. One is, there's a chapter, a book in the sutra called Names of Buddha. And yeah, it's pretty much full of names of Buddha. names of many Buddhas so one of the main points of the sutra of the chapter of the book is that we have names for all these Buddhas and the purpose of the names for all the Buddhas is so that beings who hear all these names can also have knowledge and vision in various ways.

[51:31]

So in order for beings to have many different versions of knowledge and vision, we have names for Buddhas. That's sort of what the chapter's about. It's chapter number seven, by the way. And so the way it relates to our practice is that in receiving bodhisattva precepts, we receive a name. And those names that we receive when we receive the precepts, those names are so that sentient beings can have knowledge and vision. So I just want to tell you, I would like to talk to you about that in more detail at some point, about how that sutra chapter relates to our practice of giving names and meditating on the sutra, but also meditating on your name. So it's just kind of like a little prompt For those of you who have a name, you can start contemplating your name.

[52:36]

And by contemplating your name, you will be contemplating Buddha names. And you will be engendering the possibility of vision and knowledge by contemplating your Buddha name. So that's how you study the sutra and by studying your own name. And if some of you don't have a Buddha name, that can be arranged. But you have to ask for it. But a lot of people who do have Buddha names, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12. Do you have any Buddha name, Norfolk? Norfolk. Okay. 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21. Yeah, so there's 21 people here who have received Buddha names, and some of the other ones who haven't have asked to receive it, and they will eventually receive it if they continue to practice together with all beings in the great earth.

[53:55]

Another thing I want to tell you about is the chapter after chapter 7 is, you might guess, is chapter 8. And the name of that chapter is The Four Noble Truths, or The Four Holy Truths. And you've heard about them, but it's the Mahayana, what's the word, rhapsody on the Four Noble Truths. It's taking them basically and making them infinite. So I'd like to talk to you about that too. I'm telling you about that so you'll remind me to talk to you about chapter number eight. And then there's a ninth chapter too. And I think that chapter might be called Awakening by Light. What light? Well, it's the light of all of nature. which you heard about earlier.

[55:02]

The light of all nature, the light of all nature, the light speaks. And then there's a tenth and so on. But I'll stop there just to tell you that these are some parts of the sutra that I'd like to discuss with you and try to relate them to our regular, ordinary, daily practice. How is it for you to practice together with all sentient beings and the great earth? How's it going? Okay. Yeah. Difficult. Yeah. Difficult. It's all of nature. All of it. You name it, it's included. All of it. All of it. No exceptions. It's all included. That all-inclusive practicing together is the Buddha way.

[56:08]

And that all-inclusive practicing together speaks. Yes? Yes? I didn't really understand how you were using that. Yeah, it's more like a constraint than a restraint. More like a constraint than a restraint. So you might have some pillars in order to constrain a great temple to be a place that would actually hold a roof. But it doesn't exactly restrain the temple. It's more like But you could call it a constraint of the temples, that temple roofs need pillars to hold them up. But it's not holding anything back. It's giving pillars, giving support.

[57:12]

But giving support, you could say, is like a restraint of looking for something other than what's going on. We're restraining looking for something. For example, we're restraining thinking of practice as something that you do by yourself. So we're restraining people thinking that I can practice not killing by myself. I cannot practice not killing by myself. The birds cannot practice not fighting by themselves. But they do practice not killing in their practice with all beings. So we can all teach... And we can all sing, but our singing, our Buddha singing, is together with everybody. Does that respond well to you?

[58:13]

Good. Yes. I'm pivoting off of your question. And it feels like practicing restraint is an invitation for me to practice whatever the offering is, as opposed to something being put on me. Like a constraint, it feels like something from the outside. Constraint, but a restraint, like a restraint, for me to restrain from killings, particularly when it's not given as an invitation for me to be engaged or involved. Good, great. And... Yeah, so I am because of all of you. I'm nothing in addition to all of you. So you're not your other.

[59:16]

You're an other, which is me. You are the other, which is actually what I am. Did you about to raise your hand? You didn't move your handle. Well, I detected it and you gave it to me and you didn't do it by yourself. Are you leaving? Pardon? You can. By the way, anybody can use restroom, including you. Anybody who needs to go to the restroom, please. If you need to go, you may go. You go with the blessing of us all. Anybody else go to the bathroom? Please know that you're always welcome to go to the bathroom. And then afterwards, clean it.

[60:20]

Was there another question? Yes, Gloria? It looks like that, doesn't it? Yeah. Unintentionally. And so there's the demons and the overlapping of Shinto and Buddhism. Yeah, there's that, yeah. It was very, very interesting that a program for children came upon called Oni. Oni? Oni. Which means demon, right? Demon. Yeah. And as it turned out, I'm looking at all of these things and recognizing pengu and kapha and all of these things. They're in this community where they clearly love one another.

[61:25]

They love nature all around them. And they're preparing because it seems... there's this Oni, and I'm like, what? That was threatening them, and they were terrified. As it all turned out, the Oni, of course, were cutting down forests and behaving in ways that were threatening them. And it just put that program raised with, is there really Oni? Who is the real Oni? I'm also seeing both the Shinto and the U.S. practicing with all the needs. It's not one or the other. You're going to see both. Yeah, yeah.

[62:30]

Yeah. We also went to Nara where they have this very large statue of Vairochana Buddha. And that statue was built in the 700s because the emperor wanted people to study this flower adornment scripture. And this is the Buddha of the flower adornment scripture. But right nearby is the Shinto shrine. So we went both to the Buddhist shrine and the Shinto shrine. And the Shinto shrine also had cherry blossoms. And this sutra is including all different traditions. Yes? with this comment that any time we shift or move this energy to one part of the world, saying this teaching is understanding.

[63:50]

To me, this is more understanding. These are realizations. And when we shift this to one part of the planet, it makes me uncomfortable because this is a moving. Yeah. Moving to one part is uncomfortable. But this teaching of the sutra is not to move it to one part. It's to move it to all parts. So then it could be my perception when you speak of Japan and Japanese culture, which I have it's global this teaching is global the teaching of cherry blossoms is global and some and some people from other parts of the world made that point during the blossom that we have cherry blossoms in Iran also

[64:55]

These bodhisattvas pervade everywhere. No exceptions. Well, that's okay with me. If you're happy, I accept your happiness.

[65:19]

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