Addressing the Gender Bias in Buddhism
Addressing the Gender Bias in Buddhism
One of my students has been upset for months about things the Dalai Lama said back in August:
Dalai Lama says there is no gender bias in Buddhism
August, 2010
Tibetan spiritual leader Dalai Lama said in Himachal Pradesh's Lahaul district on Friday, there is no gender bias in Buddhism and nothing prevents a woman from becoming his successor.
"So the purpose of the incarnation is to serve people about dharma (faith). If the circumstances are such, female form is more useful, then why not," said Dalai Lama.
He also added that that the female Dalai Lama should be attractive.
"And I also mentioned in case Dalai Lama's incarnation one female comes then must be very attractive female. So the very reason, you see more influence to others, an ugly female then may not much effective," added Dalai Lama.
I have no use for organized religion or hierarchies of any kind. I don't teach Buddhism. I teach what the Buddha taught, that is, waking up. Both men and women are equal in their ability to wake up.
There is no gender bias in Buddhism. Buddhism is composed of Buddhists, some (many?) of whom are gender biased. But the teachings of waking up are genderless and classless. We must remember that although Buddhists, like Christians, are supposed to be living up to the ideals exemplified by their founding masters, they are flesh and blood humans, many of whom are still bound by the cultural and ethnic strictures of the society into which they were born and in which they were raised. And Asian societies as a whole are quite patriarchal and misogynistic, and have been for millennia.
That is why I believe that true Buddhism will come from teachers raised in a modern western culture, one to which Buddhism is a transplanted religion and that has to at least some extent transcended the gender and ethnic bias that has unfortunately been the inseparable companion of both Buddhism and Christianity since the demise of their founders. Perhaps only by this removal of the essence of Buddhism from the cultures in which it has been entangled for centuries may we finally make spirituality an "equal opportunity employer".
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2011





I want to share with you my story of The Gift of the Katana as a way to demonstrate what I am teaching you about the Power of Intention.
I have been very busy this last month making videos for "


I recently reminisced about the unusual tale of how I was awarded one of the most coveted symbols of advanced athletic prowess at Spellman-the varsity pin. My homeroom during freshman year was 1F, in room 108, and Brother Brian (Kelly) was our homeroom teacher (and also our Biology and Religion teacher as well). Those of you who remember me will recall that I was about as far from the athletic type as one could get. My elementary school, St. Benedict's, had no athletic program at all, and so for the first 8 years of my education, physical education of any kind was nonexistent. My parents were not "sports-minded" and did not encourage me to join local sports teams of any kind. So I had no experience with competitive sports. One activity I did enjoy through my youth, though, was swimming. When I got to Spellman in the Fall of 1967, I figured that it would be a good thing to "round out" my program by including some athletic activity, and since swimming was something that I had at least some familiarity with, I decided to join the Swimming Team.
I have worked with very young children since 1982, as a psychological consultant to preschool programs. My job was to evaluate preschool-age children (between the ages of two and a half to 5 years) who were suspected by their parents, or pediatricians, or other early childhood intervention organizations, of having significant developmental delays.
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In 2002, when I was working with a previous incarnation of the soap company in which I am now a partner, my business partner, Kaylin, mentioned to me that one of the customers of our nontoxic soap was the laboratory of the Language Research Center at Georgia State University in Atlanta. They were using our soap to clean the lab and living quarters of the Bonobo Chimpanzees with whom they were doing anthropological research in the development of language and speech in primates. One of the researchers, Holly, had heard of our soap and because it was so effective and yet still totally nontoxic, she wanted the safest product possible to use with the chimps in their living and working quarters. Kaylin told me that Holly had called to say that they were about to run out of soap and needed to order more. It happened that I was going to be driving to New York via Atlanta in a couple of days, and Kaylin suggested that I could drop off the soap directly to Holly instead of having it shipped up to her. I readily agreed.
I have a very dear friend who is a Kiwi. No, I don’t mean he’s a small, odd-looking flightless bird or a fuzzy, juicy green-fleshed fruit. Richard was born and raised in New Zealand. I met Richard during an extended trip to Maui in 1996, where he was studying to become a Feldenkrais (a form of bodywork) practitioner, and we have been friends since. At the time he was a professional musician, a tympanist (kettledrum player) in the Auckland Philharmonia. In 1998, the Philharmonia hired a new concertmaster, a French-Canadian violinist (and what a marvelous musician she is) from Montreal named Marcelle. Richard’s and Marcelle’s professional relationship in the orchestra grew into a friendship and very quickly from there they realized they were meant for each other.
The Lord’s Prayer is the perfect, complete statement of existence, of how the universe and all creation “is” and “works”. It may be understood in the following manner:
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I was asked to comment on the prayer of that great Buddhist teacher St. Francis, and this prayer which I say every morning. I would add this line in this prayer : "and it is in gratefulness that we are gifted in every moment."
As a Shodan (First Degree Black Belt), I came to personally understand the anecdote that states that when you become a black belt you are ready to truly begin to learn Aikido . My training has been enhanced greatly with the addition of principles from the Daito Ryu Aikijujitsu system. Sensei Todd González introduced me to the principles of small circle leading and recently Sensei Jim Giorgi who legitimized these principles as having a valid home in Nihon Goshin Aikido. 


I recently sent a copy of Between Yesterday and Tomorrow to a dear friend who is a wonderful spiritual teacher in the Siddha Yoga lineage. He agreed to review the book and sent me the following comment referring to a sentence I had written in one of the chapters of the book (dealing with the Continuum Concept). The sentence he commented on reads as follows:
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My student, Kate, had something to share with me recently. She wanted to discuss a passage she read in a novel that resonanted with her and she wanted to get my perspective on it. We also talked briefly about her personal experiences and I agreed with her that it was not only a powerful passage in the novel but that her vantage point after personal experience was sound.
“The Messiah will come only when he is no longer necessary; he will come only on the day after his arrival; he will come, not on the last day, but on the very last.” ~ Franz Kafka, Parables and Paradoxes
My student Kate has been working with me not only on the mat in Integral Aikido but with EFT. She's been working on building her own Integral Transformative Path before we met through some intellectual and spiritual pursuits. One of the things that she's finding on her personal path is happiness through writing and she often shares pieces with me that involve our work together.
John Begue, one of the students at the Port Allen NGA dojo who studies under Sensei Troy Maranto, saw this question on the System of Strategy Facebook page of James Williams, Sensei. From reading my books, John knew that I had some knowledge in this area of interest and referred the question to me for my opinion. Below I have reproduced the exchange as it took place on the System of Strategy page on Facebook over the past few days.
One of my students posed some questions to me recently regarding moving on from toxic relationships. Moving out of the relationship to a place of healing is challenging, often dishearteningly so in the beginning stages. Working through the emotional pain is an individual path but there are some powerful tools to be found in mindfulness, meditation and EFT. Moving on from any negative, emotionally charged situation takes time and work to heal. The important point to remember is to be mindful of triggers that bring unnecessarily negative emotions so that you can continue your path to break the attachment and the hold over your daily life. What follows here is our email conversation addressing the challenges presented after the dissolution of a relationship: