Tuesday, December 25, 2007

The Four Noble Truths of Buddha

1. Life means suffering.

2. The origin of suffering is attachment.

3. The cessation of suffering is attainable.

4. The path to the cessation of suffering.

1. Life means suffering.

To live means to suffer, because the human nature is not perfect and neither is the world we live in. During our lifetime, we inevitably have to endure physical suffering such as pain, sickness, injury, tiredness, old age, and eventually death; and we have to endure psychological suffering like sadness, fear, frustration, disappointment, and depression. Although there are different degrees of suffering and there are also positive experiences in life that we perceive as the opposite of suffering, such as ease, comfort and happiness, life in its totality is imperfect and incomplete, because our world is subject to impermanence. This means we are never able to keep permanently what we strive for, and just as happy moments pass by, we ourselves and our loved ones will pass away one day, too.

2. The origin of suffering is attachment.

The origin of suffering is attachment to transient things and the ignorance thereof. Transient things do not only include the physical objects that surround us, but also ideas, and -in a greater sense- all objects of our perception. Ignorance is the lack of understanding of how our mind is attached to impermanent things. The reasons for suffering are desire, passion, ardour, pursuit of wealth and prestige, striving for fame and popularity, or in short: craving and clinging. Because the objects of our attachment are transient, their loss is inevitable, thus suffering will necessarily follow. Objects of attachment also include the idea of a "self" which is a delusion, because there is no abiding self. What we call "self" is just an imagined entity, and we are merely a part of the ceaseless becoming of the universe.

3. The cessation of suffering is attainable.

The cessation of suffering can be attained through nirodha. Nirodha means the unmaking of sensual craving and conceptual attachment. The third noble truth expresses the idea that suffering can be ended by attaining dispassion. Nirodha extinguishes all forms of clinging and attachment. This means that suffering can be overcome through human activity, simply by removing the cause of suffering. Attaining and perfecting dispassion is a process of many levels that ultimately results in the state of Nirvana. Nirvana means freedom from all worries, troubles, complexes, fabrications and ideas. Nirvana is not comprehensible for those who have not attained it.

4. The path to the cessation of suffering.

There is a path to the end of suffering - a gradual path of self-improvement, which is described more detailed in the Eightfold Path. It is the middle way between the two extremes of excessive self-indulgence (hedonism) and excessive self-mortification (asceticism); and it leads to the end of the cycle of rebirth. The latter quality discerns it from other paths which are merely "wandering on the wheel of becoming", because these do not have a final object. The path to the end of suffering can extend over many lifetimes, throughout which every individual rebirth is subject to karmic conditioning. Craving, ignorance, delusions, and its effects will disappear gradually, as progress is made on the path.

8 Fold Path

The Noble Eightfold Path

The Great Wall of China

1. Right View Wisdom
2. Right Intention
3. Right Speech Ethical Conduct
4. Right Action
5. Right Livelihood
6. Right Effort Mental Development
7. Right Mindfulness
8. Right Concentration

The Noble Eightfold Path describes the way to the end of suffering, as it was laid out by Siddhartha Gautama. It is a practical guideline to ethical and mental development with the goal of freeing the individual from attachments and delusions; and it finally leads to understanding the truth about all things. Together with the Four Noble Truths it constitutes the gist of Buddhism. Great emphasis is put on the practical aspect, because it is only through practice that one can attain a higher level of existence and finally reach Nirvana. The eight aspects of the path are not to be understood as a sequence of single steps, instead they are highly interdependent principles that have to be seen in relationship with each other.

1. Right View

Right view is the beginning and the end of the path, it simply means to see and to understand things as they really are and to realise the Four Noble Truth. As such, right view is the cognitive aspect of wisdom. It means to see things through, to grasp the impermanent and imperfect nature of worldly objects and ideas, and to understand the law of karma and karmic conditioning. Right view is not necessarily an intellectual capacity, just as wisdom is not just a matter of intelligence. Instead, right view is attained, sustained, and enhanced through all capacities of mind. It begins with the intuitive insight that all beings are subject to suffering and it ends with complete understanding of the true nature of all things. Since our view of the world forms our thoughts and our actions, right view yields right thoughts and right actions.

2. Right Intention

While right view refers to the cognitive aspect of wisdom, right intention refers to the volitional aspect, i.e. the kind of mental energy that controls our actions. Right intention can be described best as commitment to ethical and mental self-improvement. Buddha distinguishes three types of right intentions: 1. the intention of renunciation, which means resistance to the pull of desire, 2. the intention of good will, meaning resistance to feelings of anger and aversion, and 3. the intention of harmlessness, meaning not to think or act cruelly, violently, or aggressively, and to develop compassion.

3. Right Speech

Right speech is the first principle of ethical conduct in the eightfold path. Ethical conduct is viewed as a guideline to moral discipline, which supports the other principles of the path. This aspect is not self-sufficient, however, essential, because mental purification can only be achieved through the cultivation of ethical conduct. The importance of speech in the context of Buddhist ethics is obvious: words can break or save lives, make enemies or friends, start war or create peace. Buddha explained right speech as follows: 1. to abstain from false speech, especially not to tell deliberate lies and not to speak deceitfully, 2. to abstain from slanderous speech and not to use words maliciously against others, 3. to abstain from harsh words that offend or hurt others, and 4. to abstain from idle chatter that lacks purpose or depth. Positively phrased, this means to tell the truth, to speak friendly, warm, and gently and to talk only when necessary.

4. Right Action

The second ethical principle, right action, involves the body as natural means of expression, as it refers to deeds that involve bodily actions. Unwholesome actions lead to unsound states of mind, while wholesome actions lead to sound states of mind. Again, the principle is explained in terms of abstinence: right action means 1. to abstain from harming sentient beings, especially to abstain from taking life (including suicide) and doing harm intentionally or delinquently, 2. to abstain from taking what is not given, which includes stealing, robbery, fraud, deceitfulness, and dishonesty, and 3. to abstain from sexual misconduct. Positively formulated, right action means to act kindly and compassionately, to be honest, to respect the belongings of others, and to keep sexual relationships harmless to others. Further details regarding the concrete meaning of right action can be found in the Precepts.

5. Right Livelihood

Right livelihood means that one should earn one's living in a righteous way and that wealth should be gained legally and peacefully. The Buddha mentions four specific activities that harm other beings and that one should avoid for this reason: 1. dealing in weapons, 2. dealing in living beings (including raising animals for slaughter as well as slave trade and prostitution), 3. working in meat production and butchery, and 4. selling intoxicants and poisons, such as alcohol and drugs. Furthermore any other occupation that would violate the principles of right speech and right action should be avoided.

6. Right Effort

Right effort can be seen as a prerequisite for the other principles of the path. Without effort, which is in itself an act of will, nothing can be achieved, whereas misguided effort distracts the mind from its task, and confusion will be the consequence. Mental energy is the force behind right effort; it can occur in either wholesome or unwholesome states. The same type of energy that fuels desire, envy, aggression, and violence can on the other side fuel self-discipline, honesty, benevolence, and kindness. Right effort is detailed in four types of endeavours that rank in ascending order of perfection: 1. to prevent the arising of unarisen unwholesome states, 2. to abandon unwholesome states that have already arisen, 3. to arouse wholesome states that have not yet arisen, and 4. to maintain and perfect wholesome states already arisen.

7. Right Mindfulness

Right mindfulness is the controlled and perfected faculty of cognition. It is the mental ability to see things as they are, with clear consciousness. Usually, the cognitive process begins with an impression induced by perception, or by a thought, but then it does not stay with the mere impression. Instead, we almost always conceptualise sense impressions and thoughts immediately. We interpret them and set them in relation to other thoughts and experiences, which naturally go beyond the facticity of the original impression. The mind then posits concepts, joins concepts into constructs, and weaves those constructs into complex interpretative schemes. All this happens only half consciously, and as a result we often see things obscured. Right mindfulness is anchored in clear perception and it penetrates impressions without getting carried away. Right mindfulness enables us to be aware of the process of conceptualisation in a way that we actively observe and control the way our thoughts go. Buddha accounted for this as the four foundations of mindfulness: 1. contemplation of the body, 2. contemplation of feeling (repulsive, attractive, or neutral), 3. contemplation of the state of mind, and 4. contemplation of the phenomena.

8. Right Concentration

The eighth principle of the path, right concentration, refers to the development of a mental force that occurs in natural consciousness, although at a relatively low level of intensity, namely concentration. Concentration in this context is described as one-pointedness of mind, meaning a state where all mental faculties are unified and directed onto one particular object. Right concentration for the purpose of the eightfold path means wholesome concentration, i.e. concentration on wholesome thoughts and actions. The Buddhist method of choice to develop right concentration is through the practice of meditation. The meditating mind focuses on a selected object. It first directs itself onto it, then sustains concentration, and finally intensifies concentration step by step. Through this practice it becomes natural to apply elevated levels concentration also in everyday situations.

Tuesday, December 04, 2007

Sunday, December 02, 2007

God Bless Evel Knievel

god bless Evel Knievel

god bless Evel Knievel
motorpsycho rage
life on the edge
like Jim
a man who lived on the outskirts for us
drove his bike to the ridge for us
waved at us, and laughed with us
mocked death & tempted fate with us.

how ironic
how anticlimactic
that he succumb in such a way
still only 69, but his time came
not at the bottom of a canyon
or in the twisted flaming wreckage of a car
or slapped up against hot Vegas concrete

not with bang, not a bang at all
but like most of us
w/ a soft subdued whimper.

the Muslims can bow towards Mecca all they want
but today I will bow towards Butte.

-----------------------------

what perfect timing
what radiant synchronization
tonight as I get down
with my poet's tribute to a daredevil spirit
comparing him to Jim

I sit down in bed, sick as a damn dog, for what it's worth
watching a retrospective and interviews with Evel
and the man, a young Evel, on his way to a jump
quotes, "Light my fire baby. Come on baby light my fire."

And he says, I wasn't part of a team; a two man show
I was one man against the odds and I captured the hearts and minds of Americans.

one man.

amen.

RIP Evel. Buy a bike for Jim and you two go tour the rock and roll canyons of heaven.

Saturday, October 27, 2007

I ain't gonna work for UPS no more (to the tune of Dylan's Maggie's Farm)

I ain't gonna work for UPS no more
I ain't gonna work for UPS no more
Well, I wake up in dead of night
Fold my hands and pray for rain
I got a head full of ideas
But brown is drivin' me insane.
It's a shame the way they had me so damned bored.

I ain't gonna work in the tower no more.
No, I ain't gonna work in the tower no more
Well, Leroy hands you letter
He tells you of your crimes
He asks you with a grin
Why you can't show up on time
Then he suspends you every time you mis-sort door 4.
I ain't gonna work in the tower no more.

I ain't gonna work for the Austin Preload no more.
No, I ain't gonna work for Austin Preload no more.
Well, the boss he slams an irreg
Down on your feet just for kicks.
His office window
Is bullet proof thick
Some cheap ass security company stands around his door.
Ah, I ain't gonna work for the Austin Preload no more.

I ain't gonna work at 3 a.m. no more
I ain't gonna work at 3 a.m. no more
Well, they all talk to all the hourlies
Proper siding, blah blah blah
Everybody says
Just throw the package, fuck 'em all
Some asshole shouts "Herb where's my trailer for Door 4"
I ain't gonna work at 3 a.m. no more.

I ain't gonna work for UPS no more
I ain't gonna work for UPS no more
Well, I am old and I am white
Discrimination sure does bite
They say sing flow control, hell I'm out the door
I ain't gonna work for UPS no more.

Monday, October 22, 2007

Back to the 60's?

There is a problem with the naïve and simplistic idea that the 60’s are worth returning to. For a lot of people I think the fact that whatever Eden was glimpsed at back then, it became clear to many that paradise is beyond the grasp of the world as it was, when it became clear that too many people will continue to choose to remain asleep and in cycles of suffering and violence. Optimism gave way to cynicism; free love gave way to hedonism. Hope was replaced by wanton despair. The sense that “everything must be this way” for now cooled the fires of such bright stars as Morrison, Hendrix and others.

One of the reasons why the 60’s failed is the false hope of free love without consequences. The dangerous but seductive idea that it’s ok to do what you want. See, many folks seeking to rid themselves of the taboos and sins of the status quo, overindulged in those things deemed sinful by the Establishment.

Indeed, Blake said The Road of Excess Leads to the Palace of Wisdom, but once there wisdom is gained at what price? Jesus was quite wise and wound up nailed to a cross. Socrates smarted off and ended up dead. Jim was dead in a bathtub under suspicious circumstances at only 27. Wisdom at what price? In other words be careful what you ask for because you just might get it. Death is probably the ultimate wisdom trip as you finally get to “break on through.” Rock bottom is littered with people who found wisdom this way.

In their embrace of mysticism and Eastern religion, the hippies of the sixties probably glossed over the parts that said desire and the pleasures of the world only lead to more suffering. In Buddhism especially, they emphasize that desire is the cause of all suffering. Overindulgence, then as the satisfaction of base desires has consequences. In Taoism one of the virtues is moderation. True, there are many paths up the mountain and Rimbaud’s systematic derangement of all the senses may yield the palace of wisdom, but in what condition do you wish to arrive at your destination. On the other hand, blind repression of our human nature is another kind of excess. Moderation then might be one of the lessons to derive from the 60s.

Yes, the sixties remain a pivotal era for humanity and the players, while still too recent in their luminosity to be regaled as divine, will no doubt, as time marches on, be seen in a much better light; much like how the founding fathers of this country found post mortem accolades, despite being morally flawed. Those who survived the 60’s and those that didn’t were chosen to be on stage for us at this time, and in the least, chosen to articulate and express a vision of our next evolutionary step.

In a way this catharsis, this assertion of freedom, this revolution itself begun in the 60’s is an important step in the learning process, but it’s important to learn from our mistakes. Some people talk about wanting to go back to the 60’s, but do we really want to go back to body bags from Vietnam. No. Some would say that the situation in Iraq makes these times analogous and I somewhat agree, though the death count now is nothing what it was then. Still every life is important, but the gross carnage that was a result of our misguided domino policy in the 60’s; we have not seen that carnage yet, and I hope we never do. I hope we can get out of there, and the people in this part of the world can learn to use their heads along with their hearts, and loosen the shackles of their oppressive religion enough to live in a world where some moderation and indulgence is OK. Here we have excess of an entirely different nature; and the yet the result is the same; the emotional and physical destruction of the self.

What fueled the vibrancy of that era (the 1960s) and what has seared it into our collective social memory was a confluence of factors including psychedelic drugs and the war in Vietnam as well as a clash between new and old ideas. The dialectic was at work: thesis and antithesis. The next step we need to embrace, than is synthesis.
To treat free love as just an excuse to do whatever you want, is to abuse it and that’s one reason why the sixties failed. There must be responsibility within love. Science is forcing us to throw off the mythologies of old, and in the vacuum between this old paradigm and a new mythology, is I think the dangerous place we find ourselves now. God is dead, so why not do what I want? Because God isn’t dead, he’s just not who you think he is.

Saturday, September 08, 2007

A Last Fling With Decadence & Democracy -- Original CD featuring Sex w/ an Angel

Get a signed limited edition copy of the CD Last Fling w/Decadence and Democracy, a compilation work by me, Joe Rossi AKA Deadhead Dylan & The Desolation Doors, backed by a host of excellent musicians, with songs recorded over the last two decades of the last millenium: live tracks, studio, original American music!

Send $10 cash, check or money order and a cool fun letter with your desired mailing address to

PO Box 685313
Austin TX 78768-5313

or you can use Paypal:



A Third Option:

you can visit amazon.com by clicking on the link below and purchase it there:

Joe Rossi: Last Fling w/ Decadence & Democracy

At amazon you can also listen to sound clips of all the songs, read reviews, post reviews etc. The music on the CD is some of the music featured in our YouTube videos, such as Love Her Like The Rain, Rock & Roll Socks, Brainflower, and Freeways & Mirrors. You can also hear some of the tracks at http://myspace.com/mjoerossi or http://myspace.com/electricsol



The first two options are preferred as I have not heard from Orchard, the label selling my CD, in years, even though I know for a fact that they have been selling my CDs. Sooner or later, I will have to hook up with them and see what is going down, but in the meantime the first two options helps us in a much better and more direct way, plus the ones amazon sells won't be signed for obvious reasons.

There's even some used cheap ones out there. I guess! Check it out!

Remember, it's all about L O V E!

Cheers!

Monday, September 03, 2007

Profound Quote re: Eternal Life

One of the better quotes I came across in MySpace said "the trick is not to live forever, but to be able live with yourself forever." I'm paraphrasing.

I always like to use the analogy of the mirror. When you die, you are handed a mirror. You're fate then is to look into that mirror for all eternity. If you were mean, ugly, hateful, angry, dark and loathsome, well that is what you get to watch forever. If on the other hand you were beautiful, loving, happy, light and lovable, well that then is what you get for all eternity.

I think in a nutshell that is what Jesus was trying to teach us, as well as other great masters.

Tuesday, August 07, 2007

The Metaphorical Versus The Literal

It is important to remember that in mythology, and religion; the stories we believe are not literally true, but rather are metaphorically true. At least that is what I believe. So while a literal hell does not exist then, there is a metaphorical hell. Which might be like the difference between going to a hellish place or just watching a movie about hell.

There can also be reconciliation between the Western ideas of sin, hell and damnation, and the Eastern religious concepts of a life cycle or samsara, and reincarnation, and the effect Karma has on future incarnations.

If we postulate that life is indeed eternal, and indeed it is, than we can assume that consciousness has an endless supply of life cycles in which to reincarnate. And if one's karma is continuously bad, than he or she will continue to reincarnate in forms of life that suffer, inflict suffering and continue to suffer ad infinitum. That sounds hellish to me. On the other hand if one's karma is good, and one's sinful transgressions not so severe, and there is a geunine and self propelled effort to repent, grow, love and forgive, that they progress into a state of heavenly bliss and escape the wheel of life and its constant suffering i.e. heaven.

Some question how life can be eternal. That is not the eternal life of the afterlife that we might imagine, but more rather to the impermanence of life as we know it. The life forces and processes at work here on Earth. What happens when the Sun dies, or supernovas or gets hit by an asteroid. Sure, true enough life here on Earth might or will end. But elsewhere in the known universe in all the known galaxies there are billions upon billions of stars and planets, and somewhere at sometime, perhaps in billions of years from now or maybe only millions, or quite possibly millions of years ago, microscopic life is beginning or began the long series of events that lead a people such as ours to a place where it is now in History.

And I bet this story we're living has been told over and over and ago, eons before this universe came into existence perhaps. And there will always be life in some form somewhere for consciousness to become aware of, and for it to become aware of itself.