My favorite blogger on Buddhism, Tenpa from Digital Tibetan Buddhist Altar posted a story and a prayer about the devastation that is happening in the Gulf of Mexico. The post is entitled Wounded Waters: Prayer for the Gulf of Mexico.
Tenpa talks about how, in 1964, he and a friend would camp at Longboat Key. They performed acts of Buddhist vandalism:
The fishermen at Longboat Key used to plant their reels in the sand, and leave their lines cast out into the surf. The waterbirds would come skimming across the water at dusk, and get entangled in the lines. Do and me used to sneak along the beach and cut the lines, so the fish would not be tempted, and the birds would not drown
Tenpa reflects on the passage of time, the formerly pristine Longboat Key having long fell prey to developers, both he and his friend have changed as well:
I heard that Do (ed note: Tenpa’s friend from Thailand) became a general, and I of course became a deliberate failure. Nevertheless, it would be fair to say that Do and me have probably always carried a little bit of the Gulf along with us, like grains of sand in the bottom of a pocket.
I am posting the prayer in its entirety, and I hope my karma is good enough to get away with it, as I think it is worth sharing.
Because we have divided all that we seem to experience
into polar opposites founded on mistaken notions of “them” and “us”
We trade ever-present satisfaction
For temporary dreams
believing in the illusion of happiness and gain.When, from the lust for independence
in this world of interdependence,
we selfishly cut open the earth’s veins
I pray we remember the planet’s wounded waters
and how, from ignorance, we injured all beings in and around themThe shores that map our aspiration for water and earth
do not delimit primordial perfection
which is spacious and profound:
by resting in one place
radiant blessings reach beyond the idea of boundariesIt is not for the inhabited waters alone we pray
but for the wild places we do not always remember to see
this great ocean of misery that seems to come and go
when we close our eyes, when we open our eyes
Instantly evaporated when we open our heartsMay mistaken notions be tamed,
May always possible perfection be realized
May peace born within us heal the damage we have done
May life be comfortably sustained for all sentient beings who suffer
By the merit of our clear awakeningBy the power of truth,
May there spontaneously come an end to the disharmony of the elements
in the Gulf of Mexico.
Thank you, Tenpa, for this prayer. May it come to pass.
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