1. River

    Comment

    This river knows nothing but her name
    She is the hard blue muscle
    That pumps blood into the mouth of morning,
    The woman who sits at the edge of sorrow
    Grafting time into the shape of a clay pot or reed basket,
    Insatiable with longing and filled with the ovaries of stars,
    The mind of all things drawn to silt and sludge,
    To pools and ferns.

    Currents streak her back with a name that means dreaming fish
    Where ripples of reed ducks and water rats pattern hieroglyphs
    Against her wide green thighs.
    She is the water that we shed as tears, scooped up by the hands of night
    And poured into the throat of day, turquoise and lapis, emerald and jade.
    The moon hums against her skin.

    She knows nothing but her name rising as fog over fields,
    Or sleeping in limbs of apple trees as the Eyeless One
    Who spirals through a thousand lifetimes and dances Kali or Quan Yin.
    Look, the animals are searching for their reflection in her face.
    Even the God who sleeps curled in the belly of small creatures
    Wakes up, slips on her mask of moonlight
    And swims from this opening into Mother Ocean.

    She splashes their bodies with moss and now they are snarled
    In her net of fish scales and seal bone.
    These are the knees of devotion,
    The tangled roots of our lives coming to fruition.
    The river is a mirror for our bodies.
    She carries the planets inside her belly and hums the earth into being
    So that our bodies, blooming with their fisted flowers of blood
    Are filled with that song.

    The River, who speaks in tongues, is born and dies
    In the fissured cracks of our cells so that
    We become the sleeping center of the shell,
    The speck of sand turning into pearl.

    ~Devreaux Baker

  2. Let us rise up and be thankful

    Comment

    Let us rise up and be thankful, for if we didn’t learn a lot today, at least we learned a little, and if we didn’t learn a little, at least we didn’t get sick, and if we got sick, at least we didn’t die; so, let us all be thankful. ~Buddha

     

  3. Our basic equipment

    Comment

    We don’t need more money, we don’t need greater success or fame, we don’t need the perfect body or even the perfect mate. Right now, at this very moment, we have a mind, which is all the basic equipment we need to achieve complete happiness. ~Dalai Lama

     

  4. Learning Meditation

    Comment

    Ven. Dejapanno Phorn Pheap and Ven. Munindathero Maha Nhor Tepmony show a 3-year-old Ananda how to meditate during a Meditation session at Buddhist Peace Meditation Center at Wat Kirivongsa Bopharam. ~Templenews TV

     

     

  5. Suffering of one person or one nation

    Comment

    We must recognize that the suffering of one person or one nation is the suffering of humanity.
    That the happiness of one person or nation is the happiness of humanity. ~Dalai Lama

     

  6. Money, power or fame…

    Comment

    No matter how much money, power or fame you have, it all means nothing if you aren’t making a positive impact on the world. People remember the kindness and smiles you share with them, not the money you made.

     

     

     

  7. Jendhamuni at the temple

    Comment

    Jendhamuni and a beautiful young girl at The international Community of Khmer Buddhist Monks Center in Pelham, Massachusetts during Khmer New Year 2011.

     

  8. Generate a good attitude and heart

    Comment

    It is very important to generate a good attitude, a good heart, as much as possible. From this, happiness in both the short term and the long term for both yourself and others will come. ~His Holiness The Dalai Lama

    Vipassana Learning Class at the Buddhism Peace Meditation Center in Leverett, Massachusetts taught by Venerable Dejapanno Phorn Pheap.

  9. The Thief

    Comment

    Tibetan teaching story

    ‘The 12th century master Geshe Ben was renowned for his goodness and integrity.

    Once, while begging for alms, a family of devout Buddhists invited him to their home to be fed. He was so hungry that he found it difficult to wait while his hosts were elsewhere preparing the meal. To his complete shock he found himself stealing food from a jar when no-one was looking. Geshe Ben suddenly burst into loud cries of “Thief! Thief! I’ve caught you red-handed.”

    His hosts rushed into the room to find him berating himself and threatening his hand with being cut off it ever behaved like that again.’

     

    Source: viewonbuddhism.org


Live & Die for Buddhism

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Khmer Tipitaka 1 – 110

 ព្រះត្រៃបិដក

ព្រះត្រៃបិដក ប្រែថា កញ្រ្ចែង ឬ ល្អី​ ៣ សម្រាប់ដាក់ផ្ទុកពាក្យពេចន៍នៃព្រះសម្មាសម្ពុទ្ធ

The Tipitaka or Pali canon, is the collection of primary Pali language texts which form the doctrinal foundation of Theravada Buddhism. The three divisions of the Tipitaka are: Vinaya Pitaka, Sutta Pitaka, Abhidhamma Pitaka.

Maha Ghosananda

Maha Ghosananda

Supreme Patriarch of Cambodian Buddhism (5/23/1913 - 3/12/07). Forever in my heart...

Samdech Chuon Nath

My reflection

វចនានុក្រមសម្តេចសង្ឃ ជួន ណាត
Desktop version

Listen to Khmer literature and Dhamma talk by His Holiness Jotannano Chuon Nath, Supreme Patriarch of Cambodia Buddhism.

Shantidevas’ Bodhisattva vows

My reflection

Should anyone wish to ridicule me and make me an object of jest and scorn why should I possibly care if I have dedicated myself to others?

Let them do as they wish with me so long as it does not harm them. May no one who encounters me ever have an insignificant contact.

Regardless whether those whom I meet respond towards me with anger or faith, may the mere fact of our meeting contribute to the fulfilment of their wishes.

May the slander, harm and all forms of abuse that anyone should direct towards me act as a cause of their enlightenment.

As a solid rock is not shaken by the wind, so the wise are not shaken by blame and praise. As a deep lake is clear and calm, so the wise become tranquil after they listened to the truth…

Good people walk on regardless of what happens to them. Good people do not babble on about their desires. Whether touched by happiness or by sorrow, the wise never appear elated or depressed. ~The Dhammapada

Hermit of Tbeng Mountain

Sachjang Phnom Tbeng សច្ចំ​​ ភ្នំត្បែង is a very long and interesting story written by Mr. Chhea Sokoan, read by Jendhamuni Sos. You can click on the links below to listen. Part 1 | Part 2

Beauty in nature

A beautiful object has no intrinsic quality that is good for the mind, nor an ugly object any intrinsic power to harm it. Beautiful and ugly are just projections of the mind. The ability to cause happiness or suffering is not a property of the outer object itself. For example, the sight of a particular individual can cause happiness to one person and suffering to another. It is the mind that attributes such qualities to the perceived object. — Dilgo Khyentse Rinpoche

Nature is loved by what is best in us. The sky, the mountain, the tree, the animal, give us a delight in and for themselves. — Ralph Waldo Emerson

 

Our journey for peace
begins today and every day.
Each step is a prayer,
Each step is a meditation,
Each step will build a bridge.

—​​​ Maha Ghosananda