Posts from — January 2011

Looking for a part time intern

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Are you (or do you know) someone who is looking for an unpaid internship that will give an insider view of publishing, writing, and building a business to support your creative habits?

Building a business around my writing has taken a toll on my writing and I’m looking for an intern to work with me 10-15 hour/week.

We can work together in person and/or virtually, although Boston area is preferred. I will help you figure out how to get credit if you are in college studying related topics.

Tasks:

  • Manage social media contacts
  • Research best practices for self-publishing print-on-demand books, e-books, and audiobooks
  • Research best practices for developing apps that extend the brand of my publications
  • Stay abreast of current social media trends that could benefit marketing efforts
  • Post my writing to the various platforms I use (Wordpress blog, Facebook, Facebook fan page, Tumblr, Twitter, and so on)
  • Assist with administrative tasks relating to travel, mailings, database management, and so on

January 21, 2011   3 Comments

John Cleese’s advice for nurturing creativity

Well worth watching. A wonderful explanation of, among other things, what we in Shambhala Buddhism call “Container Principle,” the view that the environment you find yourself in informs your experience just as much as the other way around.

January 21, 2011   2 Comments

Talking with Eric Schneider about The Wisdom of a Broken Heart

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Lovely speaking with Dr. Eric Schneider today on his online radio show, “About Relationships.”

We talked about the following:

  1. What made you (me!) write this book?
  2. What IS the wisdom of a broken heart? It hurts so much and generates so much confusion…
  3. How can we re-envision the pain as wisdom?
  4. What does Buddhism have to say about heartbreak?
  5. What is the definition of healing?
  6. What can people do to begin working with these incredibly strong emotions?
  7. How does heartbreak make you a spiritual warrior?
  8. And more…

January 18, 2011   No Comments

Design & Meditation

Love this post from Apartment Therapy (a blog about home design and dec0r) about how a meditation retreat changes the way you look at this world.

And comments reveal the many (understandable) misconceptions and (not so understandable) judgments people have about what such a retreat is supposed to look like.

The Best Fresh Start… Vipassana & Design

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January 10, 2011   No Comments

Upcoming teachings & talks

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Hope to see you somewhere in Jan or Feb:
NYC, Colorado, Atlanta, and/or Boston!

New York

1. Evening Talk / January 13 / 7p-830p / 302 Bowery 3rd Floor (Middle Buzzer)
Interdependence Project: Love, Attachment, and Heartbreak: Is it Possible to Practice Dharma in Relationships?
Join me to talk about falling in love without grasping (hah!), letting go without self-destructing, and generally conducting yourself with elegance, decency, and gentleness while naked, body and soul.


2. Weekend Workshop / January 14 – 16 / New York Shambhala Center / 118 W 22nd St., 6th fl
The Wisdom of a Broken Heart: From Heartbroken to Open Hearted

In the Shambhala Buddhist tradition, a broken heart is not a problem to be solved, but a remarkable opportunity to discover wisdom. This weekend program will gently introduce you to the skills needed to work with a broken heart – not to drive it away or tie it up with a bow, but to find the messages contained in this most difficult situation.

You will learn meditation, the practice of maitri (loving-kindness), and several on-the-spot techniques to use throughout the day. In addition, we will:

  • Discuss the wisdom aspect of painful emotions
  • Contemplate our histories with heartbreak
  • Shift the emphasis from finding love to offering it
  • Learn to stabilize our hearts in a state of openness

Whether your heart was broken yesterday or years ago, the elements needed to tread this path are present. As we progress, you will discover that the dark power of heartbreak can introduce you to gentleness, fearlessness, and intelligence. If you stay with your broken heart, it will surely lead you down the path to wisdom.

Colorado

Weekend Workshop / January 28 – 30 / Shambhala Mountain Ctr, Red Feather Lakes, CO
The Wisdom of a Broken Heart: From Heartbroken to Open Hearted
see description above

Atlanta

Weekend Workshop / February 4 – 6 / Atlanta Shambhala Center / 1447 Church St., Decatur
The Wisdom of a Broken Heart: From Heartbroken to Open Hearted
see description above

Boston

Evening Talk / February 15 / 7p / Boston Shambhala Center / 646 Brookline Ave., Brookline
Weekly Dharma Gathering, Under 30 Meditation Night

January 10, 2011   No Comments

Fuel your New Year’s resolutions with love

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OK, it’s officially next year. One can’t help but become reflective, which is wonderful. It is so useful to step back from the speed and commitments that occupy most of the year and use this grace period between Christmas and New Year’s as a time-out-of-time to fly up and hover at 50K feet, looking down on your life and asking questions such as: What did I achieve? What did I fail* to achieve? What would I like to happen in the coming 12 months? What are my deepest wishes? How can I live them?

These are all completely awesome and very important questions. I’m asking them of myself pretty much day and night this week. However, although it’s wonderful to contemplate, analyze, and rouse dedication, often the whole new year’s resolution thing contains significant elements of shame, agitation, aggression, and even self-loathing. When I think of the things I want to accomplish, I also connect with the fear that I will fail to do so. I think this is pretty natural.

This year, I discovered something that changed the process from one of grasping to something more relaxed.

I included others. I made what I call the Sympathetic Joy list. Sympathetic Joy is one of Buddhism’s Four Immeasurables, those qualities which we naturally possess in endless quantity. They are the qualities that have the power to bring us absolute happiness. They are:

1. Loving Kindness: Feeling tenderly toward others
2. Compassion: Feeling their sorrow as your own
3. Sympathetic Joy: Feeling their joy as your own
4. Equanimity: That quality of balance that gives the first three an earthy and human (rather than an ethereal and angelic) vibe.

As this year ends, in addition to listing the things I want to achieve, I thought of those I love and what they hope to accomplish. I put myself in their shoes and tried to feel into their hopes and dreams and the reaction they would have if their dreams came true. For example, I thought about my friend “Darcy” (names changed to protect the innocent) and how unhappy she has been in her job. Her work doesn’t fulfill her and she feels trapped by economics. So I added to my list simply this: I wish for Darcy’s professional and financial happiness, no matter what that might look like, and I pray for this to happen in 2011. Then I thought about my friend Charles who is lonely because he doesn’t have the partner he longs for. I included: In 2011, I will share in Charles’ dream for love and hope for it alongside him, so that it might come true.

And so on. When I tuned into the lives of those I love, not to correct or judge them, as in “I hope Charles will get some therapy for the family-of-origin issues that are at the root of his loveless life” or “Darcy should take more professional risks in 2011,” but to feel alongside of them what they dream of until, quite naturally, the aspiration for their happiness arose, the whole goal-setting process suddenly seemed like a big love fest. I felt how dearly I love the people in my life. I felt their love for me, and how joyful my success would make them. Wanting to succeed suddenly seemed like something I could do for us, not just myself. Expanding in this way made the whole process one of relaxation, gratitude, and honest longing rather than desperation.

So, if you feel like it, make your own Sympathetic Joy list to start the year. And as you go through 2011 and check in on the progress of your own aspirations, reconnect in your heart with the aspirations of those you love. If they remain stuck or unfulfilled, take this in and send out to them some love, support, camaraderie. You don’t have to make suggestions, offer advice, or make judgments. Just know that you stand shoulder to shoulder with them and have taken on their joy as your own. What could be more supportive than this?

Wishing you a new year immeasurably full of the Four Immeasurables, that they may be felt by you, for you, and all around you. And, if you want to multiply your success in 2011 beyond your wildest dreams, take on the joy of others’ accomplishments as your own.

*My friends. Don’t shun words such as failure, problems, fear, disappointment—these are all part of life. We give words too much power by refusing to use them because we should be more “positive.” This borders on superstitious and magical thinking. Your mind is so much bigger and smarter than this.

January 1, 2011   12 Comments