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Showing posts with label Buddhist Monks. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Buddhist Monks. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 27, 2026

Life is What Happens While You Are Making Other Plans

The week has been filled with other events besides my writing. Thanks for hanging in there with me until I get back on track.

Today is Tuesday—yes, I know, I’m blogging late, but I had things in mind to write, just not time to tell them.

I wanted to talk about the takeaways I got from this past week.

Number One, The Buddhist’s Peace Walk:

 


 

I’m so impressed with the monks who make no political statements, no religious judgements, just walk to awaken Peace. And many people are responding. It is a great attention getter and people need a leader, so they rally. And so am I, for they have touched my heart.

They made me rethink the search for happiness everyone talks about. “Search for Peace.” That sounds more doable. We can’t be happy all the time, but we could be peaceful in our bodies, in thought and deed, and let happiness come as a surprise, a gift, a blessing.

The monks just walk, and Aloka, the Peace Dog, trots along, although now he is in recovery from surgery, and I’m glad they are taking good care of him.

And their walk added perspective to the hours I needed for a Continuing Education Real Estate Course I didn’t want to take.

Thirty hours were easy compared to walking 2,300 miles in 120 days.

Takeaway from my Course:

“Let’s sell the Tiny House on April 11, 2026 ,” I tell my daughter, “in honor of the Fair Housing Act of April 11, 1968.

That act was a Humongous TURNING POINT for the country and for human rights.

In 1968, President Lyndon B. Johnson pushed through the Fair Housing Act. This was when riots were happening, and America was in the midst of unrest. President Johnson called Congress and said, “Pass that Bill!”

The bill, which had been debated to the nth degree with strong opposition, passed the following day.

Now, no person can be denied the purchase of a house based on color, race, Natural Origin, familial rights (children), disabilities, or sex. Elder rights came next. And the Disability and sex (it didn’t make sex illegal, it allowed a single woman to buy a house) came a couple of years later.

Here’s our Tiny House on day one:


 

Today, the Tiny House is not complete, but it is close.

Daughter Dear has no time to complete it, although it was dear to her heart when she began renovating it, and she’s good at bashing out walls, tiling, and adding exquisite features.

A buyer with a few hours could complete it.

She worked her fingers to the bone, and we found that a small house needs the same as a big house, just everything scrunched into a small space. The plumbing is in, the electricity was professionally installed, it’s piped for water, has a wall heater, kitchen cabinets, and an under-the-counter refrigerator. No countertop. We have the sink and bamboo flooring that need completion. DD tiled a complete wall in the kitchen and a complete bathroom with a tiled shower large enough for two people, or maybe a Great Dane dog.

The wall between the bathroom and the “living room,” which will be a bedroom at night, is still studs only. A mirrored wall there would give the illusion of a larger space, if an owner could stand to look at themselves that much.

Well, this sounds like a sales pitch. I wanted you to know what we are dealing with. And that my Real Estate course made me want to honor the FHA.

Three: Surprise,

The course mentioned the vagus nerve, and that it takes up more space in our bodies than our skin. It is there to connect to the amygdala of the brain, the seat of our feelings of unease and for telegraphing danger. It has kept us alive for millennia, though not in a fail-safe way, for we have developed so much logic that we talk ourselves out of intuitive feelings, sometimes saying it is only our imagination.

Real Estate Agents go into dangerous places sometimes, empty houses, warehouses, lofts, at night sometimes. The idea is to be focused and aware.

I was struck this week by a lecture on the Native Nations of  North America—how long they have been here, and that they had some of the same social issues we have—like fighting each other, and territorial disputes.

Sometimes you know something, but then later you really get it. That was the way I was with society and culture. I wondered how people like Socrates, Plato, Aristotle, Leonardo da Vinci, and Jesus could be so wise in times of barbarism.

Like, suddenly brilliance pops up.

It’s that we have cultures within our society. We have skin heads, KKK members living alongside Priests and Saints, and monks who do not proselytize, yet get verbally attacked for not being Christian. We have Southern, Northern, Midwest, Rural, and Urban inhabitants.

We have people who want to bomb entire areas back to the Stone Age, while others say, “Don’t do it.” “Your decision effects the rest of us.”

See how anger gets attention, and a soft voice hardly raises an eyebrow? Yet silence--it seems that the monks are on to something, walk, meditate, be in relaxed focus, make a statement, push yourself for a cause. 

We have progressive personalities and Conservative personalities of varying degrees, some are genetically predetermined, some are taught.

And then we try to have a Democracy where the majority rules.

It’s tricky.

Here is the Tiny House now, we had it pushed in under a high overhead to keep it out of the weather, and to allow DD easy access to materials in the garage a few feet away. The trouble is, our wonderful creative House mover, moved himself to Eastern Oregon, and now we must find a way to get the house back out. 
  • "Life is pretty simple:
    You do some stuff. Most fails. Some works.
    You do more of what works."

    --Leonardo da Vinci

 

 

Thursday, January 8, 2026

Our Present Political Climate is Hurting Gentle Hearts

 
And gentle hearts are responding.
 

 

My heart grew five sizes today when I watched the Instagram of the Buddhist Monks, accompanied by their faithful dog Aloka, marching for peace.

Their trek will take them from Texas to Washington, DC, 2,300 miles.

I had seen glimpses of the march but didn’t know its extent—until today.  What a commitment, 2,300 miles!

And Aloka, their dog, is marching right along with them.

Aloka was once a street dog in India until one day he joined a 100-mile march with a group of monks, now, he is the most loved and notable dog in America and is tenderly monitored on the trek by Veterinarians.

 


 

https://www.facebook.com/reel/882075867650100  Aloka

 

I am so tempted to say, “Meanwhile, back home…” but I’m not going there. The commitment of those monks shows how much we need someone to show us the way, and it shows, too, that love can be contagious, just as hate can. Look at all the people who are supporting their walk. Look at the kind hearts of the bystanders. Look at the ones who are giving gifts and make sure Aloka gets proper rest.

This march comes at a perfect time when it seems that a malaise has settled over us—maybe it’s just me—when  you feel you aren’t making a difference, you worry, and you are waiting for positive change, it pops up once, then quickly gets overshadowed by some dire act that pushes us back down.

And we are allowing it to happen.

There is a saying in India that when time grows dark and dire, I will send a comforter…I have been looking for one. Today I found one—loving hearts, peacefully walking with intention and purpose, accompanied by Aloka—the name means enlightened—their faithful dog.  

Thank you.

Your generosity❤️❤️ compassion, love❤️determination and endurance sparks a fire in our souls. ❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️


“When the power of love overcomes the love of power will we know peace.”—Jimi  Hendrix

 https://www.instagram.com/alokathepeacedog/reel/DTOK7ySlEEi/


 

P.S. Two monks were injured when a truck crashed into their support vehicle which in turn hit two monks. One lost a leg. Still, the rest of the troupe marches on.


 



 

 For more pictures please go to josnewsletter.com/