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Why the Buddha Touched the Earth

Posted: 08/14/11 10:07 AM ET

"The entire cosmos is a cooperative. The sun, the moon, and the stars live together as a cooperative. The same is true for humans and animals, trees, and the Earth. When we realize that the world is a mutual, interdependent, cooperative enterprise -- then we can build a noble environment. If our lives are not based on this truth, then we shall perish." --Buddhadasa Bhikkhu

"The term 'engaged Buddhism' was created to restore the true meaning of Buddhism. Engaged Buddhism is simply Buddhism applied in our daily lives. If it's not engaged, it can't be called Buddhism. Buddhist practice takes place not only in monasteries, meditation halls and Buddhist institutes, but in whatever situation we find ourselves. Engaged Buddhism means the activities of daily life combined with the practice of mindfulness. --Thich Nhat Hanh

In one of Buddhism's iconic images, Gautama Buddha sits in meditation with his left palm upright on his lap, while his right hand touches the earth. Demonic forces have tried to unseat him, because their king, Mara, claims that place under the bodhi tree. As they proclaim their leader's powers, Mara demands that Gautama produce a witness to confirm his spiritual awakening. The Buddha simply touches the earth with his right hand, and the Earth itself immediately responds: "I am your witness." Mara and his minions vanish. The morning star appears in the sky. This moment of supreme enlightenment is the central experience from which the whole of the Buddhist tradition unfolds.

The great 20th-century Vedantin, Ramana Maharshi said that the Earth is in a constant state of dhyana. The Buddha's earth-witness mudra (hand position) is a beautiful example of "embodied cognition." His posture and gesture embody unshakeable self-realization. He does not ask heavenly beings for assistance. Instead, without using any words, the Buddha calls on the Earth to bear witness.

The Earth has observed much more than the Buddha's awakening. For the last 3 billion years the Earth has borne witness to the evolution of its innumerable life-forms, from unicellular creatures to the extraordinary diversity and complexity of plant and animal life that flourishes today. We not only observe this multiplicity, we are part of it -- even as our species continues to damage it. Many biologists predict that half the Earth's plant and animal species could disappear by the end of this century, on the current growth trajectories of human population, economy and pollution. This sobering fact reminds us that global warming is the primary, but not the only, extraordinary ecological crisis confronting us today.

Has Mara taken a new form today -- as our own species? Just as Mara claimed the Buddha's sitting-place as his own, Homo sapiens today claims, in effect, that the only really important species is itself. All other species have meaning and value only insofar as they serve our purposes. Indeed, powerful elements of our economic system (notably Big Oil and its enablers) seem to have relocated to the state of "zero empathy," a characteristic of psychopathic or narcissistic personalities.

The Earth community has a self-emergent, interdependent, cooperative nature. We humans have no substance or reality that is separate from this community. Thich Nhat Hanh refers to this as our "inter-being": we and other species "inter-are." If we base our life and conduct on this truth, we transcend the notion that Buddhist practice takes place within a religious framework that promotes only our own individual awakening. We realize the importance of integrating the practice of mindfulness into the activities of daily life. And if we really consider Mother Earth as an integral community and a witness of enlightenment, don't we have a responsibility to protect her through mindful "sacred activism"?

This year the U.S. president will determine whether or not to approve a proposed pipeline, which will extend from the "great American carbon bomb" of the Alberta Tar Sands to the Texas oil refineries. The implications are enormous. The devastation that would result from processing and burning even half the Tar Sands oil is literally incalculable: the resulting increase in atmospheric carbon would trigger "tipping points" for runaway global warming. Our best climate scientist, NASA's James Hansen, states that if this project alone goes ahead, it will be "game over" for the Earth's climate. This is a challenge we cannot evade. It is crucial for Buddhists to join forces with other concerned people in creative and resolute opposition to this potentially fatal new folly.

As the Buddha's enlightenment reminds us, our awakening too is linked to the Earth. The Earth bore witness to the Buddha, and now the Earth needs us to bear witness -- to its dhyana, its steadfastness, the matrix of support it continually provides for living beings. New types of bodhisattvas -- "ecosattvas" -- are needed, who combine the practice of self-transformation with devotion to social and ecological transformation. Yes, we need to write letters and emails to the President, hopefully to influence his decision. But we may also need to consider other strategies if such appeals are ignored, such as nonviolent civil disobedience. That's because this decision isn't just about a financial debt ceiling. This is about the Earth's carbon ceiling. This is about humanity's survival ceiling. As the Earth is our witness.

John Stanley & David Loy are part of the Ecobuddhism Project.

 
"The entire cosmos is a cooperative. The sun, the moon, and the stars live together as a cooperative. The same is true for humans and animals, trees, and the Earth. When we realize that the world is a...
"The entire cosmos is a cooperative. The sun, the moon, and the stars live together as a cooperative. The same is true for humans and animals, trees, and the Earth. When we realize that the world is a...
 
 
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01:43 PM on 08/24/2011
I just posted a clip from another HP article to my blog, about an ECOSATTVA in real life: http://blog.rainforesteco.com/2011/08/24/weforest-founder-bill-liao-a-long-journey-to-ted/ For those who have incorporated - really embodied - spiritual principle into their lives, the choice we have now becomes clear. Put Love and Compassion into action. Or not.
07:09 AM on 08/20/2011
The purpose of Buddhism is enlightenment. Enlightenment shows us that we are made from elements of the earth and water. We are also made from elements of the sun and yes the stars. This is the truth. How then can we then view ourselves as one. We are tiny pieces of everything. To ignore this is ignorance. To understand the motivation of oil executives is to understand selfishness, which is not exclusive to them.
10:25 PM on 08/16/2011
I think we can keep our politics and our Buddhism separate.
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Tulka2
Solidarity. Courage. Humor.
05:28 PM on 08/17/2011
I can see that, but only as long as there are no contradictions.  How could you be an executive at Goldman Sachs and say you were a Buddhist?  It would be a pretty sterile Buddhism.  Oh, meditate.  Do meditate all you financial lords of the universe because your heart will be changed.
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Tree S-B
Well, you know...
10:49 AM on 09/19/2011
The environment is not politics. If you think it is then you're not a very observant Buddhist.
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10:18 PM on 08/16/2011
Yes, carbon is one part of the equation, but killing wilderness and detroying biodiversity in a misguided attempt to reduce carbon (a la Big Solar and Big Wind) is medicine as bad as the disease. The focus must be on SUSTAINABLE GHG reductions, which means efficiency, rooftop/in-city PV, passive heating/cooling, etc. not bulldozing and dynamiting our deserts and canyons so Chevron Solar and BP Wind can make another billion dollars monopolizing energy supplies.

People interested in the heavy spiritual aspects of ecosystem connectivity and biodiversity raised here might be interested in the Foundation for Deep Ecology:

http://www.deepecology.org/
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Linus521
In wildness is the salvation of mankind
01:29 PM on 08/16/2011
Interesting, this article reflecting upon the human spirit and soul and its connections to Holy Creation, also joins in partnership with science. Perhaps, some of us are aware, the Earth and all of Creation are what is sacred in our lives, being a part of a great and vast miracle.

Some of my richest experiences have been shared with animals that have been deemed unworthy and not intelligent enough to love and cherish. As far as the miracles of the Earth and all that is sacred, man is still in the Dark Ages.
PATOISJAM
reason: strategize: succeed
12:32 PM on 08/16/2011
Buddha touched the earth because the wind blew him over and there was no one to pick him up and put him back in his spot. Poor buddha.
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jdjay
08:45 AM on 08/16/2011
I agree, the entire cosmos is cooperative. Unfortunately we are no where near establishing that everything on the earth is cooperative. Having the right attitude simply means that all life is sacred. That means that for anything to have life there has to be the presence of the soul. The actual teachings of Jesus have become lost to the world. Modern Christianity gives a false license for false dominion of the earth's resources by negating the existence of the soul in everything except human beings. If there is life there is a soul generating that life, plant or animal. This is the main obstacle to the progressive evolution of mankind as a whole. Until we get this major spiritual accounting mistake corrected we will collectively be falling way short of the mark.

Spiritual dominion means that we collectively respect that all life is sacred. As the poem above by Larry Cifuentes says, "Divine love is measured by each man's sting." God is judging us not only on how we treat our fellow human beings but on how we treat all life and all resources. He wants us to cause the least amount of pain possible to every living entity. In fact, He wants us to improve the quality of life for every living entity, plant and animal. That is the true expression of our love for Him and the blessings He has given us.
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Linus521
In wildness is the salvation of mankind
01:36 PM on 08/16/2011
Oh, JD, I am crying real tears after reading your glorious post. How utterly beautiful; how very true and how divine. You possess a blessed soul and gorgeous spirit.

I like a religion that is as old as the stars, "Cause no pain; do no harm, not to yourself, not to others and not to the Earth".
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Adam of CA
Independent Information Hunter
05:31 PM on 08/17/2011
What God wants is for humans to cause the least amount of pain. Meanwhile, the animals cause endless pain to humans via shark attacks, spider bites, etc. WoW! What an unbalanced creation this world is.
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PhunkeyPhish
08:50 AM on 08/18/2011
? It's not like animals against humans. Spiders bite many animals and sharks only attack humans because they are a predator and humans stumble into an ecosystem which they don't belong. Humans have the intelligence to understand causing harm to innocent bystanders is wrong. In everything else we do we never compare ourselves to animals, so why should we compare ourselves to animals when it comes to how moral we should behave?
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sabelmouse
i love to tumble , ask me why .
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larry cifuentes
10:07 PM on 08/15/2011
All religions, including Buddhism,
all are hinged on a single truism.
Must explain as to why,
one is born and then must die.

Every river is Dhyana,
only the Ocean Mahayana.
All believes preliminary,
Soul insight the exemplary.

Plenty a map detail one place,
in every mirror, I notch my face.
To man, the measure of everything,
divine love is measuring each man’s sting.
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Tulka2
Solidarity. Courage. Humor.
07:52 PM on 08/15/2011
I like your interpretation, but think it's enough to say the Earth is reality.  Buddha points to reality as opposed to Mara's fancy-pants illusions.
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iLdoRight
Encouraging The Rightest Rightness
07:31 PM on 08/15/2011
Because that is what you are suppose to do when you say, "You'er It" !
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DAE
05:51 PM on 08/15/2011
The earth is not cognizant although like all systems it seeks equilibrium. The homeostatic equilibrium that the earth system seeks to maintain can be disrupted by both internal and external factors. Internal disequilibria are a result of stochastic oscillations or permutations in the natural order of things. That is what we humans are.
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taijiredlion
sic itur ad astra
12:47 AM on 08/16/2011
We are also the earth becoming aware of itself. Anyone who chooses a Pandoran figure as his avatar should know that.
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DAE
01:35 AM on 08/16/2011
You got it backwards, we must return to a monistic awareness of the earth and cosmos. We have become alienated from the natural world as a result of our self awareness which has intervened between ourselves and the world we are apart of. We have created a dualism between man and nature when in fact no such dualism exists. This mistaken dualism is the stochastic permutation that is creating disequilibrium in the Earth system. Once we abandon our fixation on self-awareness and self-fulfillment as the sin qua non of existence we will be able to become fulfilled in the Pandoran sense.
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10:31 PM on 08/16/2011
That's a way to look at Earth, which I've heard as the Gaia Hypothesis. Another one, by Peter Ward, is the Medea Hypothesis. What we take to be true changes what we see and what we view to be important. Anyway, I like his videos -- there are a selection of them on the web.
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Indigo1941
Time traveler.
05:39 PM on 08/15/2011
Ecological responsibility is sensible and valid. Attitudes that value ecological sensibility can be traced into the Vedas and the Buddhadharma, there's no doubt about that. They can also be traced into Mosaic Judaism and Islam and the many forms of the Christianism. A case can be made, if someone wants to, on the importance of the Vision of Hathor Arising in the closing folio of the Papyrus of Ani (aka The Egyptian Book of the Dead) that illustrates the importance of ecological sensibility and certainly the petroglyphs of the ancient Sahara and of the Anasazi in Four Corners all point to spiritual connectors to ecology. And so it comes down to this, responsible behavior is a constant in spiritual teachings and practices. There's nothing special about it that makes it all that uniquely Buddhist.
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khanti
Cultivator
08:54 AM on 08/15/2011
Do continue to contribute on HuffPo.
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khanti
Cultivator
08:53 AM on 08/15/2011
Good article.