Steve and I catch up for a chat today. He talks about the advaita book he’s writing and we talk about whether or not the “I” is real or not… or both at the same time. Is the dream real? Or a dream? Does the dream exist? Can you say that you do not exist?
Anyway…. here’s ya go.
(image is ‘introduce awareness’ by RICHARD LAZZARA,,, click on it for higher res)
This will be a place where we, TPN hosts and audience, can catch up to solve the world’s problems and extend the conversation that starts in the podcasts and blogs into another dimension.
I tell ya, grabbing some land and putting up a building in SL is very exciting. I’m buzzing!!
Of course we have Bob Seal who regularly draws advaita-ish cartoons. But one of my favouriate cartoonists is a guy called Hugh MacLeod. He is famous for drawing cartoons on the back of business cards. That’s his format. He puts them all up on his gapingvoid blog. Anyway, I saw this one today and thought it was pretty advaiat-ish.
The Xin Xin Ming (aka the Hsin Hsin Ming) has been on my mind a lot lately so I decided to record myself reading it.
Bob first gave me a copy of this 20 years ago and I still find it to be the clearest writing on “this” that I’ve ever read. As far as I’m concerned, once you’ve heard the Xin Xin Ming, there is nothing left to ask, do or say.
Xinxin Ming (Xin Xin Ming) (信心銘) (Wade-Giles: Hsin Hsin Ming; Japanese: Shinjinmei (or Shinjin no Mei)) a verse attributed to the Third Chinese Chan (Zen) Patriarch Jianzhi Sengcan 僧璨(?-606) (Wade-Giles: Chien-chih Seng-ts’an; Japanese: Kanchi Sosan), is one of the earliest Chinese Chan expressions of the Buddhist mind training practice. While it has been interpreted as “faith in mind” as opposed to the more common Buddhist faiths present at the time—faith in the Buddha, in the Dharma and in the Sangha, another interpretation suggested by Ho(see below) takes Xinxin (信心) to mean the truthful mind. Still other translations include: Inscription on Trust in the Mind, Verses on the Faith Mind, and On Believing in Mind, as well as others. John McRae (1986:316 n. 64) argues that the title should be translated as “Inscription on Relying on the Mind” or “Inscription of the Perfected Mind”.
The version I’m reading is translated from the Chinese by Richard B. Clarke.
Steve and Cam are back with more advaita hilarity and wisdom! Only kiddin. We talk a little about Mother Theresa’s doubts, your comments, Second Life, suggestions for the future of the show, and then ramble on about the usual stuff.
If you haven’t experience Second Life yet, you really should. Talk about putting a whole new face on advaita! It’s a world… that exists purely in your imagination. You have a body… but it’s imaginary. It exists only on your computer screen. Are you the character that talks with your voice? Or not?
The folks at Advaita.org have even set up a place for advaitans to hang out. Here’s the location:
More Bob smack from the Bob shack. Blessed be Eliot the Reliable. Don’t forget you can appease your advaita withdrawals by going to Bob’s website and buying his CDs and books.
So sayeth James Brown in this clip which you should watch BEFORE you listen to this episode of the show because otherwise it won’t make much sense at all….
We don’t have any “Bob smack” for you yet, so you’ll have to put up with Steve and I rabbiting on about James Brown, Leonard Cohen, the Hsin Hsin Ming, and why Cameron thinks Advaitans are the most boring people on the planet.
Here’s the James Brown BMW commercial I talk about: