#32 ELEGY FOR WINNING TIME

The last episode of Winning Time’s second season on HBO charts the 1984 NBA finals between Magic Johnson’s LA Lakers and Larry Bird’s Boston Celtics, an animosity great enough for the Boston fans to pummel the Laker’s bus in a flurry of garbage as it pulled out of Boston Garden.  In a signature brutal moment […]

#31 IN THE PRAIRIE DOG’S EYE

If you live in the western US, on the grassland plains, you probably know prairie dogs, whom you can find tunneling vacant lots, quite possibly in your neighborhood. At least, they’re certainly in my neighborhood. When I walk out through King’s Ridge and take the bike path out to Cottonwood Trail, I pass them foraging […]

#30 DEATH OF A TEDDY BEAR

                                                                                      “The pure products of America go crazy—”                –William Carlos Williams, “To Elsie”             While his name may live on in militant rightwing bunkers on the internet as a martyr to government tyranny, most likely most of us won’t remember his story a day later.  Americans have extraordinarily […]

#29 OPPENHEIMER MEETS THE BUDDHA IN REDFACE

In 1981, my first year at Naropa, Ram Dass came and did some talks.  One thing he said has always stuck with me: “People ask me what I think about the theory of reincarnation, and they get mad when I tell them it’s not a theory, it’s a fact.” It’s not a theory, it’s a […]

#28 TOWARD A POETICS OF TRANSLATING THE DOHA: Part Three—Jackals & Vultures Weep!

Now, to put this thinking to the test, I’ll assay a fairly difficult doha by Shabarapada (aka, “Shabara,” “Shavara,” “Shavaripa”) from the Charyagiti, a collection of condensed, gnomically esoteric ejaculations by Indian siddhas, that has a detailed commentary by one Munidatta, without which I doubt we’d have the slightest idea what most of them have […]

#26 TOWARD A POETICS OF TRANSLATING THE DOHA: Part Two—I Have the Key to Enter the Vision

The dakinis (Sanskrit: “sky-goers”; goddesses who appear in many forms) confront the Indian tantric master Tilopa (988-1069), challenging Tilopa with their own tantric doha: The born-blind looks at, but he cannot see the forms; A deaf man listens to, but he cannot hear the sounds; An idiot speaks, but he cannot understand the meaning. At […]

#25 IN PRAISE OF THE JOKER

The first time I watched Nikola Jokic play a few years ago, he came off the bench, replacing Jusuf Nurkic as center for the Denver Nuggets.  The Nuggets got the ball and went on offense, where Jokic situated himself at the foul line.  With one flip of the ball over his head, it flew over […]

#24 TOWARD A POETICS OF TRANSLATING THE DOHA–Part One: The Rut of Suchness Flows

  In the Indian tradition of Buddhist poetry, as inherited and practiced by the Tibetans, we get a predominant didacticism–it’s poetry that’s meant to explain the dharma to you. But that’s not everyone. The Indian siddhas (Sanskrit: “realized ones,” “accomplished ones”) aren’t so academic sounding, though they may be teaching dharma; when they speak , […]

#23 A LATE SPRING RETREAT

I hadn’t been on any extensive retreat in four years, when I went it into a solitary one here at my house ten days ago.  In fact, I can’t really remember the last solitary retreat I did of more than two or three days or how many years ago that was.  I’d been in a […]