Lion's Roar

Peace Inside

THERE WAS ONE PARTICULAR experience that really helped me get through my beginning times of being ordained—going to jail. This is how it happened.

I occasionally used the temple car to pick up Shrfu, my teacher, go to the printers, or run miscellaneous errands. In the process I managed to accrue a lot of parking tickets. I didn’t pay them much attention because I figured what we were doing was tremendously important for the world, and we didn’t have time to be bothered with minutia—we’d simply transcend these minor annoyances because the Buddha was on our side. Apparently the city of San Francisco didn’t see things quite the same way, because they kept sending us notices, notices, and more notices about the overdue tickets. When they finally sent an order to appear in court, I figured it was time to deal with the problem. I’d just go

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Lion's Roar

Lion's Roar2 min read
Determination
I’m deeply moved by the image the great poet Shantideva gives of the courageous bodhisattva who glides down into the sufferings of samsara “as swans sweep down upon a lotus lake.” As he described it, there’s such joy and ease in the bodhisattva’s det
Lion's Roar2 min read
Renunciation
Renunciation, the third parami, is often spoken of or looked upon as harsh and restrictive. Whenever we are in some difficulty where we need support, harshness and restrictiveness don’t resonate. But what we should know is that renunciation actually
Lion's Roar4 min read
Good Food
What drew you to Buddhist practice? Daily sitting practice helped me feel more connected to something greater than myself. In 2005, I spent a week at Deer Park, Thich Nhat Hanh’s monastery in Escondido, California. The woman who is now my wife and I

Related