On the insistence of the other members of the planning committee, I was one of three people in the Discussion Panel at the
Buddhist Festival in the Park, themed
Sharing the Dharma. Given that I talked in part about sharing the Dharma with children, it's kind of appropriate that the only photo that I personally took that day was of the altar some girls arranged in the Children's Pavilion. I'd given them an impromptu short lesson on how they could bring anything important to them to their own personal altar.
I didn't ad lib from my written speech, except when I apologized for my phone ringing. This was of course embarrassing, as well as funny because I almost never set the phone to ring...only to vibrate...but this day I set it to ring, as it might be important if someone tried to reach me while we were setting up for the festival. I am hardly ever in this position...at the front of an audience. There were a few women in the audience who really made me glad to be there. They were listening, and showing their appreciation with nods and smiles. One woman in particular had such an encouraging smile that I had to go say hi afterward and thank her. It made me realize that there is such a thing as a good audience member. When someone gives a talk, it goes both ways.
Here's my talk:
I want to talk about three aspects of Sharing the Dharma. We have many different Buddhist traditions here today, and each emphasizes a different aspect of the Dharma, perhaps even contradictory aspects, so I will talk a little about what we all share in common. Also, I want to talk about how we Buddhists tend to share the Dharma, without evangelizing, and I want to talk about sharing the Dharma with children.
People often ask me, “What makes you a Buddhist?” Even if we try to answer this, we will find different traditions have different promises you make. Most often called the precepts, these promises can range from 5 to 16, and many more for ordained monastics. How these precepts are treated can vary as well, ranging from personal guidelines, to somewhat rigid rules, to rules one commits to for a limited time. I have heard of some traditions where you commit to the precepts you’re sure you can keep.
However, there is one thing we share across traditions, across methods, whether lay or monastic, whatever country, and that is that we take refuge in the 3 jewels, Buddha, Dharma, and Sangha. I have managed to sound wise to my non-religious friends by saying that it seems to me these are 3 aspects you will find in any spiritual framework, if you think of the Buddha as the teacher, the Dharma as the teachings, and the Sangha as the community with which we share this refuge.
I take that back…even these will have differences. In some traditions, Sangha can only mean a community of 5 monks, whereas in others it can mean anyone or even anything you share a spiritual refuge with. Some people find their refuge in the community of mountains, trees, rocks, and streams, and in my Zen tradition we would say those mountains, trees, rocks, and streams are sangha to those folks.
Still, in the traditional sense, we find refuge in the historical Buddha, in the Dharma teachings that have flowed forth from that Buddha, and the Sangha community that has supported this flow down through the ages. We find this triple jewel to be our spiritual home.
Many of us who have converted to Buddhism come to it in part because it is a religion that for the most part doesn’t try to convert you. In some cases, we like it because it seems not to be a religion, as we don’t worship a god. For the most part, we want it to be a choice, freely made. In my experience in Zen, we might even say, “Don’t do this for this or that reason.” We might say, “Don’t start unless you are prepared to take this on for life.” In many cases, we do this because we must. An eternal question has made itself felt in our lives, and Buddhism seems to have the tools to respond to it. Then, we Buddhists won’t say, “Have faith. Believe.” Instead, we will say, “OK, give it a try. Your experience will show you this is the right path.” This is our faith. We are ok with somewhat different paths pointing to a universal experience.
This eternal question is the manifestation of the 4 Noble Truths, another piece of the Dharma we all share. We seek out this path because something about our life is unsatisfactory. Truth number 1: Life is marked by dukkha, or suffering, or unsatisfactoriness. Truth number 2: We’re not talking about the simple pain of broken bones or a sore throat, we’re talking about that extra grasping we do. We don’t just feel the pain, we really want that pain to GO AWAY. We’re talking about the clinging, the grasping we do to have life be a certain way. This is how life is…seems like a bad thing…but without this grasping, would we seek out an answer to that eternal question? Would we seek a way out?
That brings us to Truth number 3: There is indeed a way out of this grasping and craving. Here is where you find our Buddhist faith. We trust those who have gone before, the Buddha, those teachers who have said, yes, I’ve been through this, and I’ve experienced this way out. Still, we say, “Find out for yourself.”
Finally, those buddhas who have gone before tell us this is the way out: truth number 4: The Eightfold Path.
Different traditions may focus on different aspects of the Eightfold Path, but we all agree this is a template for a path out of suffering. Some paths may emphasize a sudden realization, some a long slow integration, but however we understand it, we find the Eightfold Path integrated into various aspects of our teachings. [[Wisdom: 1. Right View 2. Right Intention Ethical Conduct: 3. Right Speech 4. Right Action 5. Right Livelihood. Mental Development: 6. Right Effort 7. Right Mindfulness 8. Right Concentration]]
Woven through all those “Rights” in the eightfold path is an understanding of the Middle Way. What does “Right” mean for you? The Buddha found his Middle Way between the comforts of a prince and the deprivations of an asthetic. What is the “Right” way for us to live in this modern world? Again, our different traditions will have a different response to this. Even within our respective communities, we will have different teachers who have different styles of response. Without a casual response, with thoughtfulness, we each will have a Middle Way, and we each will have a choice. With each moment, we have the opportunity to find the Right response, this is the path we keep choosing, this choosing is the way out of the dissatisfactoriness.
I have noticed over the years that converts are particularly enthusiastic about sharing their religion. During the early years, I learned that in my enthusiasm I could tell a person much more than she really wanted to hear. A polite question about my religion of choice did not mean a person wanted to know about the basic teachings, or go to a workshop on how to meditate. I learned to respond to the specific question, and offer no more. If someone really wanted to know, a conversation would begin.
I loved that I could make this choice, and I remembered my childhood in which I did not have a choice. Ironically, I was allowed to stop going to my United Methodist church only after my “confirmation.” After I was confirmed, I kept going to church after all, and I now realize that I stayed because I found refuge in the community, and because the community accepted me, I accepted the teachings. Later, as I uncovered my own notions of what I believed, I realized I had not been given a choice as a child. I had been coerced. I had been taught religious opinions as though they were facts and laws of nature as tangible as stones and erosion. As I now was able to make this choice, so I now felt it was so very important that each person be allowed to make their own choices. I cringed at the documentary “Devil’s Playground.” What choice do these Amish teens have, when set loose at 16 to experience the world, when they have been taught from babies that if they do not choose their church, they will go to hell?
Now you find me here, helping people to find this refuge. You find me teaching children about the Dharma, for over a dozen years now. I tread lightly. There is much in the teachings that can be shaped for children, but I treat myths and legends as myths and legends. I say “Some people say” or “some find it useful to understand it this way.” Even with 5 year olds, this works. They, more than all of us, understand story. They live story. They accept story as real, whether we say it’s a story or not. When they get older, with the skepticism of a growing brain, they won’t look back and think, “it’s all untrue” because from the very beginning we gave them the choice.
For example, for children’s Jukai, or taking of the precepts, we use the 3 refuges and 2 promises from Thich Nhat Hanh’s tradition, and we tell the kids, “This is a promise that is only for this year. Next year you can take the promises again. If you don’t feel like making these promises is something for you, you don’t have to, you can keep silent. You can wait til next year.” Some kids do just that. Still, we can’t avoid all coercion. When it is a child’s first year at Jukai, they get to choose a mala, and it’s no surprise, most want that mala made for kids. Enticements may be a form of coercion, but it’s a pretty mild form.
So on the one hand choice is important, on the other hand, it is the nature of kids, and all humans, to have a deep need for shared stories and connection through ritual, and well, tangible stuff. Through the shelter of Buddha, Dharma, and Sangha, we find these needs met. Most important of these needs, I think, is kind attention and acceptance. Through this path, through the original need that came from dissatisfaction, if we can embrace a self-acceptance so complete, so profound that this self doesn’t matter, then all selves matter. Then the Right paths can happen not because we make an effort, but because the rightness falls into place because it is not for this self, but for all selves, that we tread this path.