Tuesday, July 29, 2008

The Cause of All Suffering

As to the cause of all suffering, it has its root in greed and desire. If greed and desire are wiped out, it will have no place to dwell. To wipe out all suffering--this is called the third rule. For the sake of this rule, the rule of extinction, one practices the way. And when one escapes from the bonds of suffering, this is called attaining emancipation. By what means can a person attain emancipation? Separating oneself from falsehood and delusion--this alone may be called emancipation.

--from The Lotus Sutra, trans. by Burton Watson

Friday, July 25, 2008

How do you make God laugh?

Tell Him about your plans.

Wednesday, July 23, 2008

Recent Reading

Persian Girls By Nahid Rachlin

Rachlin's autobiography -- which she wrote in memory of her sister Pari, who died falling down a flight of stairs, or rather, of a series of unhappy marriages and unhappy events in her life. Pari had married, somewhat against her will, to a man that she thought promised her freedom, an unlikely luxury for a woman living in Iran, even under the Shah who presented himself as a Westernized progressive. That freedom never came, the divorce eventually came through, but at the expense of almost never seeing her son again. That pain tormented Pari for the rest of her life, even after she re-married. It is harrowing reading Rachlin's description of the beautiful and lively Pari, full of hope and dreams as a teenager, gradually descended into a woman of depression and despair. A strong spirit who probably would have thrived had she been born at another time, at another place; Pari perished, like many others in that part of the world, due to an utter lack of options to live life as they wanted to.

Rachlin only avoided the same fate because she ended up in America. Her father was initially strongly against the idea, but he was afraid her progressive taste of reading and other habits would get the family in trouble in those very dangerous and turbulent times in Iran, and finally relented. After graduating from college, she disobeyed her father by not returning home and moving to NYC to build of life of her own, which she did, and is now an accomplished writer.

Memorable Quote:

"Dearest Pari, it is to bring you back to life that I write this book."