Monday, September 5, 2016

15 Great Quotes on Work and Career from Daisaku Ikeda

(Look, the Hurricane took our sand! 
They say the sand will be "re-nourished" replaced by humans - in October. 
Nature is fascinating. 
Living on the beach is a dream come true for me!)

This is end of Labor Day Weekend here in the states. Many people had Monday off from work. It signifies the end of the summer, the start of the school year...and getting back to work. Here are some quotes for you:

PRESIDENT IKEDA'S WORDS ON JOBS, CAREERS, AND PERSONAL FINANCE-
(Compiled by Bob Hasegawa)


1. Beauty, benefit and good

Mr. Makiguchi taught that there are three kinds of value: beauty, benefit and good. In the working world the value of beauty means to find a job you like; the value of benefit is to get a job that earns you a salary that can support your daily life; the value of good means to find a job that helps others and contributes to society. (Faith Into Action, page 45)

2. No more moaning

President Toda said that the most important thing is to first become indispensable wherever you are. Instead of moaning that a job differs from what you'd like to be doing, he said, become a first-class individual at the job. This will open the path leading to your next phase in life, during which you should also continue doing your best. Such continuous efforts are guaranteed to land you a job that you like, that supports your life, and that allows you to contribute to society. (Faith Into Action, page 45.)

3. The Fundamental Cause of Unhappiness

Problems as we have seen, are not in themselves the fundamental cause of unhappiness. Lack of power and wisdom to solve them is the real cause. Fortunately we all innately possess infinite power and wisdom; and Buddhism shows us how to develop these qualities.
When in the depths of despair or grappling with a difficult problem, it may be hard to believe that our lives possess unlimited potential. But this is the essence of one of the profoundest Buddhist teachings, known as three thousand realms in a single moment of life, which we will explore in this chapter. (Unlocking the Mysteries of Birth and Death, page 105.)

4. Success Means Not Giving Up

I hope each of you will realize success in your respective fields, fully recognizing that success means not giving up halfway but resolutely pursuing the path you have chosen. To this end, it is also important that you realize that the place where you work is a place for forging your character and growing as a human being. By extension, therefore, it is a place for your Buddhist practice, a place for practicing your faith. When you view things from this angle, all your complaints will disappear. No one is more pathetic than someone who is constantly complaining. (For Today and Tomorrow, Daily Encouragement, at page 283.)

5. Should you quit?

Once you have decided on a job, I hope you will not be the kind of people who quit at the drop of a hat and are always insecure and complaining. Nevertheless, if after you've given it your all you decide to move on, that's perfectly all right too. My concern is that you don't forget that you are responsible for your environment when you make your decision. (Faith Into Action, page 46.)

6. Excel at something

There is a saying that urges us, "Excel at something!" It is important to become trusted by others wherever you are and to shine with excellence. Sometimes people may dislike their job at first but grow to love it once they become serious about doing their best. "What one likes, one will do well," goes another saying. Growing to like your job will also enable you to develop your talent. (Faith Into Action, page 46.)

7. Wisdom vs. Ego

When working for a company--which is like a society or community all its own--it is important to create harmonious relations with your colleagues and superiors, using wisdom and discretion along the way. If you incur your co-workers' dislike by being selfish or egotistic, you will be a loser in work and society. Wisdom is vital to being successful at one's work. The Daishonin writes, "The wise may be called human, but the thoughtless are no more than animals." (Faith Into Action, page 46.)

8. A Buddhist must not be defeated

Buddhism is an earnest struggle to win. This is what the Daishonin teaches. A Buddhist must not be defeated. I hope you will maintain an alert and winning spirit in your work and daily life, taking courageous action and showing triumphant actual proof time and time again. (Faith Into Action, page 3.)

9. What is actual proof?

When we speak of showing actual proof, it doesn't mean we have to try to put on a show of being any more knowledgeable or accomplished than we are. It is my hope that, in the manner that best suits your situation, you will prove the validity of this Buddhism by steadily improving in your daily life, your family, place of work and community and by polishing your character. (Faith Into Action, page 4.)

10. Past failure, past small success

It's foolish to be obsessed with past failures. It's just as foolish to be self-satisfied with one's small achievements. Buddhism teaches that the present and the future are what are important, not the past. Buddhism teaches us a spirit of unceasing challenge to win over the present and advance toward the future. Those who neglect this spirit of continual striving steer their lives in a ruinous direction. (Faith Into Action, page 17.)

11. Chant to become people of strong will

Life is a struggle with ourselves. It is a tug-of-war between progress and regression, between happiness and unhappiness. Those short on willpower or self-motivation should chant Daimoku with conviction to become people of strong will who can tackle any problems with seriousness and determination. (Faith Into Action, page 109.)

11. Faith and deadlocks at work and in life

Over the long course of your life, you may at times find yourself in a deadlock at work, at school or in your daily affairs. However, these are phenomena of daily life and society which lie on a different plane than faith and are not themselves the essence of faith. Therefore, you must never allow yourself to be swayed by such superficial matters and risk losing your faith entirely. (Daily Guidance, Volume Three, page 183.)

12. Worldly fame and wealth

Worldly fame and wealth which is not based on Myoho may appear to be sources of happiness for the moment. However, such happiness is merely superficial and cannot last. Through your faith, however, you can change transient, superficial happiness into actual happiness, and temporary enjoyment into everlasting prosperity. Everything boils down to the strength of your faith and the power of your conviction. (Daily Guidance, Volume Three, page 39.)

13. What is faith?

Everything is contained in a single word faith. It encompasses truth, courage, wisdom and good fortune. It includes compassion and humanity as well as peace, culture, and happiness.
Faith is eternal hope; it is the secret to limitless self-development. Faith is the most basic principle of growth. (Discussions On Youth, Volume 2, pages 163-164.)

14. Faith and Work

Faith and daily life, faith and work these are not separate things. They are one and the same. To think of them as separate ~ faith is faith, and ~ work is work is theoretical faith. Based on the recognition that work and faith are the same, we should put one hundred percent of our energy into our jobs and one hundred percent into faith, too. When we resolve to do this, we enter the path of victory in life. Faith means to show irrefutable proof of victory amid the realities of society and in our own daily lives. (For Today and Tomorrow, Daily Encouragement, page175.)

15. Strength is Happiness.

Strength is itself victory. In weakness and cowardice there is not happiness. When you wage a struggle, you might win or you might lose. But regardless of the short-term outcome, the very fact of your continuing to struggle is proof of your victory as a human being. A strong spirit, strong faith and strong prayer developing these is victory and the world of Buddhahood. (For Today and Tomorrow, Daily Encouragement, page 50.)

Thursday, September 1, 2016

Storm Hitting Florida Right Now!

It's my first storm coming in to St. Pete Beach
The main place it will hit is north of here, but it's a pretty big storm so we are getting a lot of the water and wind. It's still building steam...not officially hitting land until a few hours from now. 

This is the scene right out my window. I'm okay up here on the 5th floor, but I am concerned about my car, and all the people who are NOT on the 5th floor. 

At any rate I'm up here with plenty of food in a good, solid building...with a Gohonzon! 
Nam-myoho-renge-kyo to you!

Sunday, August 28, 2016

What Does "Attaining Enlightenment" Mean?


“What does Attaining Buddhahood mean for us?
It does not mean that one day
we suddenly turn into a Buddha
or become magically enlightened.
In a sense, attaining Buddhahood means
that we have securely entered the path,
or orbit, of Buddhahood inherent in the cosmos. Rather than a final static destination
at which we arrive and remain,
achieving enlightenment means
firmly establishing the faith needed
to keep advancing along the path
of absolute happiness, without end."
Daisaku Ikeda, 
From “For Today and Tomorrow,” page 205.

Exactly! That’s how I feel.

I’m sitting here at the pool in St. Pete Beach. In front of me is the magnificent sky and waters of the Gulf of Mexico. St. Pete is on the west side of Florida and my apartment looks over the water. There’s a gentle breeze blowing, soft sunlight and a few light clouds.
It’s warm, sunny, beachy here, and almost every day we have the most magnificent thunderstorms with lightning, dark mysterious clouds and some of the loudest thunder I have ever heard!  Every morning the poofy clouds above the water turn pink with the sunrise, and every night we are treated to a light show of a sunset, one more beautiful than the next. My camera is filled spectacular sunset shots. 

I am living in paradise!
And I am making my way in this world…creating and discovering my new life. My son Aaron is in Phoenix in his first year of internship, impressing everyone in the hospital with his genuine compassionate and wise heart, and my nephew Josh is a brilliant chiropractor here in St. Pete. Ben and I are creating a program I will present through an 501C organization. I’ll tell you more about that as it happens. So right now I am in this highly creative space of writing while I put my roots down here in Florida. Through my own hand, Ben is helping me create the program to teach others how to write to their loved ones, and have their loved ones write back to them. And I have all kinds of support. I have a virtual assistant who is working on my website – at last! I will be able to offer private coaching/EFT sessions and other programs. 

And I have various forms of coaching and support. I am being completely protected as I carve out my new life!
Every day I chant to experience the fullest expression of my life...and for every moment to be an expression of kosen-rufu in action. I chant for every reader of this blog to continue being encouraged to reach for the stars in their lives…as I have in mine…no matter what! And I chant in appreciation for my life and protection.

I chant for the most possible good/value/fulfillment to flow through me and to me and around me. I chant to truly do my mission on this earth. I chant to establish myself financially, socially, all ways here in St. Pete.
For the first time in my life I am truly in a place I know I want to stay for a long, long, time. It’s a different way of living life. For most of my life I had one foot out the door…but not anymore.

I’m even enjoying myself physically in a whole new way. Last week I began drinking a form of perfect Ph balanced water, and suddenly out of the blue I felt like swimming in the pool. I have never done a lap in my life, but I created a backstroke where I feel like an angel. Wow, THIS is what I’d call a miracle. (So would anyone who ever knew me as a child.) I was never a swimmer, always afraid of the water. It reminds me of what I hear James Herrmann say in Chicago once. “We don’t practice Buddhism to say ‘Oh, that’s just the way I AM.’ No, we practice to change the way we are into anything we want.” So, all of a sudden, I’m a swimmer. Who knew?

I’m reading the Human Revolution and watching Josei Toda make one sound business decision after another. He was truly a man of action. I am chanting to get over my perfectionist tendencies!

What did it say in the quote above? Oh yes!
“firmly establishing the faith needed
to keep advancing along the path
of absolute happiness, without end.”
Thank you Sensei!



What Does "Attaining Enlightenment" Mean?


“What does Attaining Buddhahood mean for us?
It does not mean that one day
we suddenly turn into a Buddha
or become magically enlightened.
In a sense, attaining Buddhahood means
that we have securely entered the path,
or orbit, of Buddhahood inherent in the cosmos. Rather than a final static destination
at which we arrive and remain,
achieving enlightenment means
firmly establishing the faith needed
to keep advancing along the path
of absolute happiness, without end."
Daisaku Ikeda, 
From “For Today and Tomorrow,” page 205.

Exactly! That’s how I feel.

I’m sitting here at the pool in St. Pete Beach. In front of me is the magnificent sky and waters of the Gulf of Mexico. St. Pete is on the west side of Florida and my apartment looks over the water. There’s a gentle breeze blowing, soft sunlight and a few light clouds.
It’s warm, sunny, beachy here, and almost every day we have the most magnificent thunderstorms with lightning, dark mysterious clouds and some of the loudest thunder I have ever heard!  Every morning the poofy clouds above the water turn pink with the sunrise, and every night we are treated to a light show of a sunset, one more beautiful than the next. My camera is filled spectacular sunset shots. 

I am living in paradise!
And I am making my way in this world…creating and discovering my new life. My son Aaron is in Phoenix in his first year of internship, impressing everyone in the hospital with his genuine compassionate and wise heart, and my nephew Josh is a brilliant chiropractor here in St. Pete. Ben and I are creating a program I will present through an 501C organization. I’ll tell you more about that as it happens. So right now I am in this highly creative space of writing while I put my roots down here in Florida. Through my own hand, Ben is helping me create the program to teach others how to write to their loved ones, and have their loved ones write back to them. And I have all kinds of support. I have a virtual assistant who is working on my website – at last! I will be able to offer private coaching/EFT sessions and other programs. 

And I have various forms of coaching and support. I am being completely protected as I carve out my new life!
Every day I chant to experience the fullest expression of my life...and for every moment to be an expression of kosen-rufu in action. I chant for every reader of this blog to continue being encouraged to reach for the stars in their lives…as I have in mine…no matter what! And I chant in appreciation for my life and protection.

I chant for the most possible good/value/fulfillment to flow through me and to me and around me. I chant to truly do my mission on this earth. I chant to establish myself financially, socially, all ways here in St. Pete.
For the first time in my life I am truly in a place I know I want to stay for a long, long, time. It’s a different way of living life. For most of my life I had one foot out the door…but not anymore.

I’m even enjoying myself physically in a whole new way. Last week I began drinking a form of perfect Ph balanced water, and suddenly out of the blue I felt like swimming in the pool. I have never done a lap in my life, but I created a backstroke where I feel like an angel. Wow, THIS is what I’d call a miracle. (So would anyone who ever knew me as a child.) I was never a swimmer, always afraid of the water. It reminds me of what I hear James Herrmann say in Chicago once. “We don’t practice Buddhism to say ‘Oh, that’s just the way I AM.’ No, we practice to change the way we are into anything we want.” So, all of a sudden, I’m a swimmer. Who knew?

I’m reading the Human Revolution and watching Josei Toda make one sound business decision after another. He was truly a man of action. I am chanting to get over my perfectionist tendencies!

What did it say in the quote above? Oh yes!
“firmly establishing the faith needed
to keep advancing along the path
of absolute happiness, without end.”
Thank you Sensei!