Wednesday, March 30, 2005

Goddess of Mercy Chant - Guan Yin Chant

The following is the Mandarine Version of Guan Yin.

According to Gotama Buddha, After he ascented to Nirvana, the 2 Buddhisvathvas would be in the trillions....of Universes salvaging suffering beings would Be :

1. Guan Yin -- The Goddess of Mercy

2. Ti Chang -- The Mines of Earth

Where Guan Yin Vow that if there is a voice of Suffering she would be there to free them from suffering..

Where Ti Chang Vow that if the Hells are not distroyed He would never become Buddha!!

I would share with you all the story on these...

The Mantra is Romanised Pali for you to Chant.

Guan Yin Prayer

观音咒

奉请观音大悲咒, 救渡众生无尽期。
左手取来功德水, 右手提着杨柳枝。
头顶顶载牟尼仪, 心里诚念陀罗尼。

古佛再来观世音, 千手千眼陀罗尼。
赐我神通智圆满, 赐我行得善方便。
赐我速得富庶种, 赐我除去一切厄。
赐我了断诸苦难, 赐我速住无为舍。
赐我了脱生死业, 赐我觅得智慧根。
赐我速登般若船, 赐我力证涅磐真。

古佛再来观世音, 千手千眼陀罗尼。
有人念得观音咒, 一切灾殃尽消散。
弟子念得观音咒。 刀山劫煞尽自撤。
火海自息化莲池 ,冤家仇敌化善友。
官非伽仗得平伸, 是非邪秽永不侵。
一切诸魔皆降服, 饥俄贫穷化富足。
家眷和谐大和气, 身心康泰勤精进。
心想事成大欢喜, 金银财宝满盈盈。

古佛再来观世音, 千手千眼陀罗尼。
弟子念得观音咒, 地狱自化为净土。
修罗自悟自调伏, 饿鬼自填自饱满。
畜牲自得大智慧。

蓬莱山,西海岸, 普陀山,洛伽洞,
梵音洞,潮音洞, 不肯去,紫竹林,

五方五土观世音, 五湖四海观世音,
虚无飘缈观世音, 虚空藏中观世音,
小千世界观世音, 中千世界观世音,
大千世界观世音, 三千大千观世音,

速来授手,救苦救难, 人佛一心,

人离难, 难离身, 苦离心,

一切灾殃尽化尘。


揭帝,揭帝,
巴拉蜜佛陀揭帝,
巴拉蜜达摩揭帝,
巴拉蜜僧伽揭帝,
菩提萨哆呀。


Chedi, Chedi, Chedi,
Parami Buddho Chedi,
Parami Dhammo Chedi,
Parami Sangkho Chedi,
Buddhisvathvaya.

Arahan Samma SamBhuddho Bagava,
Buddham Bhagavadha Abiva Demiv,

Suvagato Bhagavadha Dhammo,
Dhammong Namacami,

Supati Panno Bhagavadho,
Saravaka Sangkho,

Sangang Namami.

Satu Satu Satu!!!!!!


The English Translation would be follow on my future posting

Monday, March 28, 2005


Today is the Luna Birthday of Goddess of Mercy. I am posting this picture of her here!!  Posted by Hello

Saturday, March 26, 2005

Red Traffic Light - Be Mindful Buddha is Present!!

Driving Meditation

When we do walking meditation, the point is not to get somewhere, but rather to practice, using walking as the object of our attention. Even when we do have to get somewhere and must drive to do so, there is an opportunity for practice. Thich Nhat Hanh, Vietnamese Zen master and poet, has written a number of gathas, or brief verses, for enhancing our mindfulness during everyday activities, even driving a car.

Before starting the car, I know where I am going. The car and I are one. If the car goes fast, I go fast.

If we are mindful when we start our car, we will know how to use it properly. When we are driving, we tend to think of arriving, and we sacrifice the journey for the sake of the arrival. But life is to be found in the present moment, not in the future. In fact, we may suffer more after we arrive at our destination.

If we have to talk of a destination, what about our final destination, the graveyard? We do not want to go in the direction of death; we want to go in the direction of life. But where is life? Life can be found only in the present moment. Therefore, each mile we drive, each step we take, has to bring us into the present moment. This is the practice of mindfulness.

When we see a red light or a stop sign, we can smile at it and thank it, because it is a bodhisattva helping us return to the present moment. The red light is a bell of mindfulness. We may have thought of it as an enemy, preventing us from achieving our goal. But now we know the red light is our friend, helping us resist rushing and calling us to return to the present moment where we can meet with life, joy and peace. Even if you are not the driver, you can help everyone in the car if you breathe and smile.

A number of years ago, I went to Canada to lead a retreat, and a friend took me across the city of Montreal. I noticed that every time a car stopped in front of me, I saw the sentence, "Je me souviens" ("I remember"), on the license plate. I did not know what they wanted to remember, perhaps their French-speaking origin, but it gave me an idea.

I told my friend, "I have a present for all of you here. Every time you see a car stop in front of you with the line 'Je me souviens,' you can see it as a bell of mindfulness helping you remember to breathe and smile. And you will have plenty of opportunities to breathe and smile while driving in Montreal."

My friend was delighted! He liked it so much that he shared the practice with more than 200 people in the retreat. Later, when he came to visit me in France, he told me that Paris was not a good place to practice driving, as there were no signs "Je me souviens." I told him that he could practice with red lights and stop signs.

After he left Plum Village and went back to Montreal, he wrote me a beautiful letter: "They, practicing in Paris was very easy. Not only did I practice with red lights and stop signs, but every time a car stopped in front of me, I saw the eyes of the Buddha blinking at me. I had to smile at those blinking eyes."

The next time you are caught in traffic, don't fight. It is useless to fight. If you sit back and smile to yourself, you will enjoy the present moment and make everyone in the car happy. The Buddha is there, because the Buddha can always be found in the present moment.

Practicing meditation is to return to the present moment in order to encounter the flower, the blue sky, the child, the brilliant red light

Wednesday, March 23, 2005

Alien Planets Show Themselves for First Time

Just over 2,56X years ago.. Buddha said in his "Eternal Life Sutra" Buddha have explained in detail about the endless number of stars & universe in the existence.

Buddha in his "Explanation of The Universe" said How the Universe were formed. & there are atleast 73 planes of existence in the whole great universe. Ther are bilions...billions.....billions of Universes.

In each plane the times & spaces are difference from the human plane. He use the Animals & insects as the example.

Well there are lots of things that Buddha touch on these topic. I will share with you all here.




Alien Planets Show Themselves for First Time
By DENNIS OVERBYE Published: March 23, 2005

Astronomers said yesterday that they, or at least their telescopes, had laid eyes for the first time on planets beyond the solar system.

Using the NASA Spitzer Space Telescope and careful timing, teams studying two planets were able to distinguish the glow of the planets' infrared radiation from the overwhelming glare of their parent stars. Both planets are so-called hot Jupiters, massive bodies circling their stars in tight, blowtorching orbits and probably unfit for the kind of life found on Earth.

Until now, astronomers could infer the existence and some properties of these and other so-called exoplanets only by indirect means. They said directly measuring light from the planets was a major step in the quest to understand what alien planets are made of, because different molecules in the atmosphere absorb infrared light in characteristic ways and allow scientists to compare these alien planets to those in the solar system. Ultimately, astronomers would like to know if Earth, with its ability to evolve and support life, is unique or common in the universe.

Dr. David Charbonneau of the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, who led one of the teams, said he was ecstatic when he first saw the data. "We've been hunting for this light for almost 10 years, ever since extrasolar planets were first discovered," Dr. Charbonneau said.

The Harvard-Smithsonian team and the other team, led by Dr. L. Drake Deming of the Goddard Space Flight Center, announced their results at a news conference at the headquarters of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration in Washington. The Deming team's paper was published online yesterday by the journal Nature; the other team will publish its results in The Astrophysical Journal on June 20.

Dr. Geoffrey W. Marcy, a planet hunter at the University of California, Berkeley, called the results "the stuff of history books" and added, "With this result, we are closer to understanding our own human roots, chemically, among the stars."

Dr. Alan P. Boss, a planetary theorist at the Carnegie Institution of Washington, said in an e-mail message that the discoveries showed "that we are well along the way to combining astronomy and biology into the new science of astrobiology, with the ultimate goal being to search for life beyond Earth."

About 130 planets are known to orbit other stars, but until now they have all been detected indirectly, either by the wobble their gravity induced in the motions of their parent stars or by slight dips in the stars' light when their planets passed in front of them.

The planets whose discoveries were reported yesterday fall in the latter category, passing directly in front of their parent stars periodically and then behind them. The Goddard team's object, known as HD 209458b, was the first planet detected by the so-called transit method, back in 1999. It circles a star about 153 light-years away in the constellation Pegasus, making a complete trip every 3.5 days. In 2001, Dr. Charbonneau used the Hubble Space Telescope to make spectroscopic measurements of this star while the planet was passing in front of it and found that sodium and hydrogen were present in the planet's atmosphere.

The other planet, known as TrES-1 after the telescope network that discovered it, the Trans-Atlantic Exoplanet Survey, is about 500 light-years away in the constellation Lyra. Discovered last year by a telescope only four inches in diameter, it circles its parent every three days.

In both cases the astronomers were able to use the special geometry of these planetary systems to tease out the faint light of each planet from its parent's glare, comparing measurements made while the planet and star were both visible and while the planet was hidden behind the star. It helped that the Spitzer telescope, launched in 2003, was built to study infrared radiation, which has a longer wavelength than visible light. Because they are so close to their stars, these planets were expected to be hot and therefore show up more easily at infrared wavelengths than in the visible light. While the stars outshine such giant planets by a factor of 10,000 or so in visible light, they are only about 400 times brighter in infrared.

When the astronomers put on their "infrared goggles," as Dr. Charbonneau put it, the planets popped into view. The Spitzer telescope registered a dip in light of about a quarter of 1 percent in each case when the planet went behind its star.

That dip was enough to allow the astronomers to take the temperature of these planets and confirm that they are hot, as predicted: about 1,450 degrees Fahrenheit for TrES-1 and about 1,570 degrees for HD 209458b.

Other results were more puzzling. The TrES-1 planet seems to be emitting less light at shorter infrared wavelengths than the models of such planets predict, Dr. Charbonneau said, perhaps because greater-than-expected amounts of carbon monoxide are absorbing those wavelengths.

But as Dr. Charbonneau said, theoretical predictions about extrasolar planets have turned out to be "nothing short of disastrous." The field, he said, is driven by data, and there has not been much of that until now.

Dr. Boss said the Spitzer telescope had been designed decades ago and was never intended to study extrasolar planets. He also said that NASA had a whole menu of "wonderful" planet-finding missions.

"Just think of the results we will have from NASA's future telescopes that will be specifically designed to detect and study extrasolar planets," he said.

The New York Times > Science > Alien Planets Show Themselves for First Time

Tuesday, March 22, 2005

Feedster Claims

No Need to Click Here - I'm just claiming my feed at Feedster

Haloscan commenting and trackback have been added to this blog.

A Guided Breathing Meditations

A Guided Breathing Meditation
(Theravadin)

SIT COMFORTABLY ERECT, without leaning forward or backward, left or right. Close your eyes and think thoughts of good will. Thoughts of good will go first to yourself, because if you can't think good will for yourself—if you can't feel a sincere desire for your own happiness—there's no way you can truly wish for the happiness of others. So just tell yourself, "May I find true happiness." Remind yourself that true happiness is something that comes from within, so this is not a selfish desire. In fact, if you find and develop the resources for happiness within you, you're able to radiate it out to other people. It's a happiness that doesn't depend on taking away anything from anyone else.

So now spread good will to other people. First, people who are close to your heart—your family, your parents, your very close friends: May they find true happiness as well. Then spread those thoughts out in ever widening circles: people you know well, people you don't know so well, people you like, people you know and are neutral about, and even people you don't like. Don't let there be any limitations on your good will, for if there are, there will be limitations on your mind. Now spread thoughts of good will to people you don't even know—and not just people; all living beings of all kinds in all directions: east, west, north, south, above, and below, out to infinity. May they find true happiness, too.

Then bring your thoughts back to the present. If you want true happiness, you have to find it in the present, for the past is gone and the future is an uncertainty. So you have to dig down into the present. What do you have right here? You've got the body, sitting here and breathing. And you've got the mind, thinking and aware. So, bring all these things together. Think about the breath and then be aware of the breath as it comes in and goes out. Keeping your thoughts directed to the breath: that's mindfulness. Being aware of the breath as it comes in and out: that's alertness. Keep those two aspects of the mind together. If you want, you can use a meditation word to strengthen your mindfulness. Try "buddho," which means "awake." Think "bud-" with the in-breath, "dho" with the out.

Try to breathe as comfortably as possible. A very concrete way of learning how to provide for your own happiness in the immediate present—and at the same time, strengthening your alertness—is to let yourself breathe in a way that's comfortable. Experiment to see what kind of breathing feels best for the body right now. It might be long breathing, short breathing; in long, out short; or in short, out long. Heavy or light, fast or slow, shallow or deep. Once you find a rhythm that feels comfortable, stay with it for a while. Learn to savor the sensation of the breathing. Generally speaking, the smoother the texture of the breath, the better. Think of the breath not simply as the air coming in and out of the lungs, but the energy flow that courses through the body with each in-and-out-breath. Be sensitive to the texture of that energy flow. You may find that the body changes after a while. One rhythm or texture may feel right for a while, and then something else will feel more comfortable. Learn how to listen and respond to what the body is telling you right now. What kind of breath energy does it need? How can you best provide for that need? If you feel tired, try to breathe in a way that energizes the body. If you feel tense, try to breathe in a way that's relaxing.

If your mind wanders off, gently bring it right back. If it wanders off ten times, a hundred times, bring it back ten times, a hundred times. Don't give in. This quality is called ardency. In other words, as soon as you realize that the mind has slipped away, you bring it right back. You don't spend time aimlessly sniffing at the flowers, looking at the sky, or listening to the birds. You've got work to do: work in learning how to breathe comfortably, how to let the mind settle down in a good space here in the present moment.

When the breath starts feeling comfortable, you can start exploring it in other areas of the body. If you simply stay with the comfortable breath in a narrow range, you'll tend to doze off. So consciously expand your awareness. A good place to focus first is right around the navel. Locate that part of the body in your awareness: where is it right now? Then notice: how does it feel there as you breathe in? How does it feel when you breathe out? Watch it for a couple of breaths, and notice if there's any sense of tension or tightness in that part of the body, either with the in-breath or with the out-breath. Is it tensing you up as you breathe in? Are you holding on to the tension as you breathe out? Are you putting too much force on the out-breath? If you catch yourself doing any of these things, just relax. Think of that tension dissolving away in the sensation of the in-breath, the sensation of the out-breath. If you want, you can think of the breath energy coming into the body right there at the navel, working through any tension or tightness that you might feel there...

Then move your awareness to the right—to the lower right-hand corner of your abdomen—and follow the same three steps there: 1) locate that general part of the body in your awareness; 2) notice how it feels as you breathe in, how it feels as you breathe out; and 3) if you sense any tension or tightness in the breath, just let it relax . . . . Now move your awareness to the left, to the lower left-hand corner of your abdomen, and follow the same three steps there.

Now move your awareness up to the solar plexus . . . . and then to the right, to the right flank . . . . to the left flank . . . . to the middle of the chest . . . . After a while move up to the base of the throat . . . . and then to the middle of the head. Be careful with the breath energy in the head. Think of it very gently coming in, not only through the nose, but also through the eyes, the ears, down from the top of the head, in the back of the neck, very gently working through and loosening up any tension you may feel, say, around your jaws, the back of your neck, around your eyes, or around your face...

From there you can move your attention gradually down the back, out the legs, to the tips of the toes, the spaces between the toes. As before, focus on a particular part of the body, notice how it feels with the in-breath and out-breath, relax any sensation of tension or tightness you might feel there, so that the breath energy can flow more freely, and then move on until you've reached the tips of the toes. Then repeat the process, beginning at the back of the neck and going down the shoulders, through the arms, past your wrists, and out through your fingers.

You can repeat this survey of the body many times until the mind settles down.

Then let your attention return to any spot in the body where it feels most naturally settled and centered. Simply let your attention rest there, at one with the breath. At the same time let the range of your awareness spread out so that it fills the entire body, like the light of a candle in the middle of a room. Or like a spider on a web: the spider's in one spot, but it knows the whole web. Be keen on maintaining that broadened sense of awareness. You'll find that it tends to shrink, like a balloon with small hole in it, so keep broadening its range, thinking "whole body, whole body, breath in the whole body, from the top of the head down to the tips of the toes." Think of the breath energy coming in and out of the body through every pore. Make a point of staying with this centered, broadened awareness as long as you can. There's nothing else you have to think about right now, nothing else to do. Just stay with this centered, broadened awareness of the present...

When the time comes to leave meditation, remind yourself that there's a skill to leaving. In other words, you don't just jump right out. My teacher, Ajaan Fuang, once said that when most people meditate, it's as if they're climbing a ladder up to the second story of a building: step-by-step-by-step, rung-by-rung, slowly up the ladder. But as soon as they get to the second story, they jump out the window. Don't let yourself be that way. Think of how much effort went into getting yourself centered. Don't throw it away.

The first step in leaving is to spread thoughts of good will once more to all the people around you. Then, before you open your eyes, remind yourself that even though you're going to have your eyes open, you want your attention to stay centered in the body, at the breath. Try to maintain that center as long as you can, as you get up, walk around, talk, listen, whatever. In other words, the skill of leaving meditation lies in learning how not to leave it, regardless of whatever else you may be doing. Act from that sense of being centered. If you can keep the mind centered in this way, you'll have a standard against which you can measure its movements, its reactions to the events around it and within it. Only when you have a solid center like this can you gain insights into the movements of the mind.

Friday, March 18, 2005

Kalama Sutra

Kalama Sutra

Buddha said:

Do not believe in Logic

Do not believe in anything simply because you have Hearsay.

Do not believe in Traditions because they have been Handed down for Many Generations.

Do not believe anything because it is Spoken and Rumored by Many.

Do not believe in anything because it is Written in your Religious Books.

Do not believe in anything Merely on the Authority of your Teachers and elders.

But after Mindful Observation and Analysis, when you find that anything Agrees with Reason’s and is Conducive to the Good and the Benefit of One and All, then Accept it and Live up to It.

Wednesday, March 16, 2005


Chinanat In Gold Posted by Hello

Saturday, March 12, 2005

Talk About Kalama Sutra

This article about Kalama Sutra is a summarized form.

I shall gives the full version in my next post.




The Kalama Sutra
Anthony Flanagan,Your Guide to Buddhism.

Once, the Buddha was traveling through the region of Kosala inhabited by a group of people known as the Kalamas. When he came to the town of Kesaputta he was approached by a number of Kesaputtians who asked him a question which is as relevant today as it was then. The essential question was this: 'When we are presented with an array of different views on the nature of truth, with teachers claiming that theirs is the one and only way, which are we to believe?

The Buddha's response is captured in this key passage:

'do not be satisfied with with hearsay or with tradition or with legendary lore or with what has come down in your scriptures or with conjecture or with logical inference or with weighing evidence or with liking for a view to pondering over it or with someone else's ability or with the thought "The monk is our teacher"'.

But this passage has to be seen in the context of the whole sutra.

The Buddha advises the Kesaputtians not to accept any teaching when they know that it is 'unwholesome, liable to censure, condemned by the wise, being adopted and put into effect they lead to harm and suffering'. The kalama sutra, therefore, is an important one in that it directs us not to follow any teaching blindly but to test it out against clearly defined criteria.

For example, are its ideas wholesome, do they accord with the teachings of the wisest teachers, do they lead to one's own suffering or the suffering of others?

The Kalama Sutra - Printer Friendly

Thursday, March 10, 2005

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Wednesday, March 09, 2005


Joint Pasadena Buddism MeetUp Group Posted by Hello

Tuesday, March 08, 2005

Bodhidharma 470 -- 543

His Holiness The 28th Patriarch of Indian Buddhism
His Holiness The First Patriarch of Chinese Zen Lineage


He is the founder of Zen Buddhism. When he arrived in China, it is known that he went to the cave in Shao Lin Temple & Meditate for 10 years, without speaking a single words.

Bodhidharma is credited with bringing Zen Buddhism to China and he is the First Patriarch of Chinese Zen Lineage. He was born on Oct. 5th. (Chinese Lunar Calendar) in Southern India, and was the third son of an Indian King; the royal family belonged to the Bhramin caste.

Bodhidharma's Buddhist Master, Prajnatara, was the 27th Patriarch of Indian Buddhism, taught Bodhidharma for many years, gave him Mind Transmission, made him the 28th Patriarch, and gave him the name Bodhidharma.

Following the instruction of his Master to transmit Dharma to China, Bodhidharma traveled east to Southern China in 526 A.D. When he arrived in Kwang Chou, he was ceremoniously welcomed and greatly honored by the local military official named Shao Yang.

The same year, he was invited to the Capitol, Nanjing, to meet Emperor Wu Di of the Liang dynasty. Because the communication between the Emperor and Bodhidharma was mutually unsatisfactory, Bodhidharma left the palace, crossed the Yangtzu River, and continued north until he arrived at the Shao Lin Temple in Ho Nan Province. It was here that Bodhidharma became famous for meditating 9 years facing a wall.

After he gave his disciple, Hui K'o, the Robe, Begging Bowl, Lankavatara Sutra, and Mind Transmission, Bodhidharma went to Chen Sung (One Thousand Saints) Temple to propagate the Dharma. He passed into Nirvana in 536 A.D., was buried in Shon Er Shan (Bear Ear Mountain) in Ho Nan, and a stupa was built for him in Pao Lin Temple.

Later, the Tang dynasty Emperor, Dai Dzong, bestowed on Bodhidharma the name Yuen Che Grand Zen Master, and renamed his stupa as Kong Kwan (Empty Visualization).
Bodhidharma's Teachings:

Bodhidharma instructed his disciples that the Lankavatara Sutra be used to seal the mind. The method of cultivating practice transmitted by Bodhidharma pointed out that we should pay attention closely to this important sutra.

His major teaching is there are two paths to enter Dharma Gate: Study and Practice.

Study:
Through the study of Buddhist sutras and scriptures, you will understand Buddha Nature. Your Buddha Nature doesn't manifest because it is clouded by defilements, such as: greed, attachment, passion, aggression and ignorance.

Practice:
When you follow Buddhist principles in your daily life, you discover that your Buddha Nature is equal to the Buddha's.

1. Bao Yen Hsin: The willingness to accept, without complaining, suffering and unhappiness because you understand it is your own karma.

2. Sui Yen Hsin: Understanding that all situations are the consequences of karmic causes, and therefore, you maintain equanimity in all circumstances, both negative and positive.

3. Tsung Fa Hsin: Realizing through practice the essence of your Buddha Nature, which is equanimity.

Wednesday, March 02, 2005

Where Are We From?? Planet of Lights & Sound!!

Do you know where are we from originally?? Have you ever ask this questions??

According to Buddha in his Fa Hua Sutra &
Goddess of Mercy - Kuan Yin Sutra

We all living beings are originated from the Plane of Kwang Yin the Heavens of Lights & Sounds;

It is about atleast few thousands billions MK light years away from this universe & our present earth.

We have no Physical body, we don't have the blood & fresh... therefore there is not physical illness or needs to eat or drinks.

What we are today is because we dell in our present on earth & enjoying the taste of the Garbages & Drinks on earth that is what we are,
subject to:

Birth

Growth

Decay

Death


The wheel of Birth & Death!!

The Buddha teaching of become a Enlighten One, the Buddha is based on his own path that he learn & he have walk through!!

Now you can find out Buddhism knowledge by do a search on:

Google

Yahoo

MSN

You would discover more....




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