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  • MONDAY OCTOBER 1 2007 12:00 PM

Brad Warner's Hardcore Zen: Myanmar? Didn't Even KNOW Her!

I’m writing you this missive from a wooden bench in Tokyo’s Yoyogi Park. Today they’re running both a big Indian festival and a big vegetarian festival here. All the curry you can possibly stand all in one place. My idea of Heaven.

I’m in Tokyo because we just finished our annual Dogen Sangha Zazen retreat in Shizuoka. Which is down where Mount Fuji is, about two hours by bullet train from Tokyo. I’m also having many meetings with the company I work for who just got bought out by another company. The good news is they’re still speaking to me. The bad news is that it seems no matter how this thing works out I’ll probably end up unemployed.

So I’m walking around here today thinking how incredibly weird it is to be in this place. When I was a teenager I fantasized about Tokyo. But I knew I’d never get there. It was too far away, too expensive to travel to, I knew no one there, couldn’t speak the language, there was obviously no way I could ever reach such a place. Yet Tokyo has gone from being unimaginably far away to being a place so familiar I’ve even shown Japanese people from other cities around the town. Shee-oot, my boss (now former boss apparently) was born and raised here and still didn’t know how to get from Shinjuku to Akihabara in a sensible way till I told him.

The world continues to shrink. The events in places once unimaginably far away sometimes seem frighteningly close to home now that we can travel there in mere hours or better yet watch with rapt fascination as they unfold before us in high def right in our bedrooms. But I’ll tell you something that will probably cause every card carrying Buddhist out there to gasp. I know almost nothing about the events unfolding right now with those Buddhist monks in Myanmar or Burma or whatever it’s hip to call it. I don’t even know that much. I mean, I thought Myanmar was the name of a convenience store.

All’s I know is that some Buddhist monks are protesting against the government, who are apparently really bad people, and that their non-violent forms of protest are drawing a very violent reaction. More power to the monks, I say. I hope this does some good. But beyond that I have to say that the whole thing doesn’t hold a great deal of interest to me (insert giant gasp of Buddhist disbelief here).

It's not that I don't care. It's just not the most important thing going on right now.

I’ve been inundated with e-mails over the past week or so from Buddhists all over the place who want me to know their position on the matter and want me to join them in supporting the monks. Well, it’s not me in particular they want to join them. These are all bulk e-mails being sent out to hundreds of people. In the absence of any real concrete information, a lot of these folks turn to rumors and speculation. One guy’s been sending me a series of increasingly lurid horror film-like accounts of the supposed atrocities. These may or may not turn out to be factual. But in the absence of confirmed facts, the only real result of reading such things is precisely the same kind of deviant kick you can get watching one of those torture porn flicks they make these days. It’s very thrilling. But not very useful. Like all bulk e-mails I find them annoying as Hell and hit the delete button as soon as I see what they are.

Maybe that seems incredibly callous and lacking in compassion. But I don’t really think it is. Here’s why.

In terms of Buddhist compassionate action the most urgent problems we need to attend to are the ones right in front of us. But we get confused these days because so much stuff is put right in front of us through our ever-increasing array of amazing high-tech communications paraphernalia. Yet when things are too far away from us, there’s really not a whole lot we can do about them. Yes, you may be able to do a little to help the monks in Myanmar. Maybe you can send a donation -- though I hear they’re refusing them. Maybe you can voice your support -- as I just have (see above). You can send a petition to the Myanmar government asking them to stop busting monk heads. If you’re really gung-ho you can get on a plane and go join the fun. But apart from that, there really aren’t a whole lot of ways to get involved.

Yet our concern for these kinds of problems often seems to far outweigh both our capacity to do anything about them and our interest in dealing with stuff right under our noses. Look. There’s trouble everywhere. One of these days we’ll establish communications with creatures on other planets. Once we get over the initial Big Wow of that it won’t be too long before there are folks here on Earth who are wringing their hands over the unfair treatment of the Glophnar miners on Nebulous VII in the Zeta Reticuli system. In the same way as the events in Myanmar, once utterly unknowable to anyone living in North America, seem urgent and pressing, problems on worlds we now don’t even imagine exist will someday seem just as vital.

Were I to speak to one of the guys who keep sending me these bulk e-mails, I might say, "Turn off your TV. Close your newpaper. Disconnect your internet for a few hours." What you read in newspapers and blogs and what you see on TV is not reality. It's third hand reports of confused misunderstandings of situations you can never truly grasp because they are forever beyond your capacity to know them. A photo or video only shows you what went on in front of the camera -- if it truly shows even that -- and ignores the universe that contributes to and influences the events you're seeing. It's a lie. Those things are not real. But your reaction to them is. Be very careful.

Which is not to trivialize what’s going on right now in Myanmar or to say we shouldn’t do what we can. We should do everything we can to make this world better for everyone. We need to let the assholes beating up those monks know we're watching and we do not approve. It’s just that all but a very small amount of the concern now being lavished on the monks in Myanmar by these well-meaning Buddhists who put me on their bulk mail lists seems misplaced. Sure it’s important and sure it’s your duty as a human being to help however you can. But once you’ve done the little bit you’re able to, you’re finished.

All too often, though, I see people using their supposed humanitarian concern for people undergoing great suffering in tragic situations in far away places as a means to avoid working on much more urgent problems very, very close to home. It’s as if very big, very colorful problems in exotic and remote places are much more important than the far smaller and more mundane stuff right here. Yet dealing with the small mundane stuff right here is your real duty.

All of the problems in the world, from Myanmar to Iraq to Iran and wherever else start from exactly the same place. You. I’m not trying to be poetic here either. It’s really, literally all your fault. One of the hardest ideas in Buddhism for most folks to wrap their craniums around is the idea that even problems that seem to be absolutely positively beyond any shadow of a doubt out there -- like the nasty shit going down in Myanmar -- are, in fact, very much internal problems. The connection between you and all of humanity and the rest of the universe is incredibly intimate. It’s so close you can’t see it anymore than you can look directly into your own eyeballs. Yet it’s even more real than your own eyeballs.

When I talk about this stuff sometimes people think I’m advocating complacency. Like I’m saying, “Myanmar is way far away dude. Don’t sweat it.” But that’s not it at all. The real Myanmar is right here. You just think it’s out there. And by imagining it to be far, far away you’ve placed it in the realm of things you can’t possibly really deal with and you avoid taking the action that's truly necessary.

That may sound like a contradiction of what I said right at the outset of this piece. But it’s not. See, cuz the ways we supposedly deal with stuff far, far away is mostly kind of bullshit. It’s stuff we can hold up to our friends and say, “Look at me! I’m being like totally compassionate! I care about the problems of the world!!! Don’t you see this button I’m wearing on my shirt that says so?” But it doesn’t really help all that much. Maybe a little tiny weensy bit … maybe. But not much.

The most truly compassionate thing you can do for the world is to work on yourself. That is your interface with everything. That’s where it all begins. This is how you start to fix what’s wrong with the world. The ripples you send out never dissipate completely. They’ll be felt all the way to Nebulous VII in the Zeta Reticuli system and a zillion miles beyond.

If you’re in the Cleveland area be sure and catch my movie Cleveland’s Screaming! at the Cleveland Institute of Art Cinematheque on Saturday October 6th at 9:15 PM.

I’ll be speaking at the Akron Public Library on November 7th (Wednesday) at 7 PM

And if you miss Cleveland’s Screaming! in October or you just want to see it again, you can catch it on November 9th at the Beachland Tavern in Cleveland along with a live performance by the band I’m in 0DFx as well as CD Truth, Cheap Tragedies and special guests TBA!

Brad Warner is the author of Hardcore Zen and Sit Down and Shut Up!. He maintains a blog about Buddhist stuff. If you're in Southern California and you want to try some Zazen for yourself, he has a group that meets every Saturday in Santa Monica.

 

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Comments
Nokturn

Nokturn

United Kingdom
April 2006

OCT 02, 2007 03:20 PM

Squire said:
Ok. What's the bottom line here: Burma or Myanmar?


I believe Burma was the name the country had when it gained independence, wheras Myanmar is the name the military regime has given it since.
So in countries which don't particularly like the regime (such as the UK) its generally referred to as 'Burma'.

Nokturn

Nokturn

United Kingdom
April 2006

OCT 02, 2007 03:22 PM

Yeek, evil double post.

strangebeastie

strangebeastie

Oceanside, CA
September 2004

OCT 02, 2007 05:51 PM

Tallboy66 said:
Become the change you wish to see in the world.



Aw, beat me to it. I prefer "Be the change", but I'll wait for the rest of the world to calm down before I start a war over it.

Kanner

Kanner

New Zealand
September 2007

OCT 02, 2007 07:02 PM

Actually, best to start a war now, while everyone's occupied and looking the other way. wink

Perdita

Perdita

SUICIDEGIRL

I'm lost

OCT 02, 2007 07:39 PM

this is a great article.

anyone who thinks it was selfish or narcissistic or apathetic clearly might need some assistance in reading comprehension and critical thinking.

Squire

Squire

I'm lost
November 2003

OCT 03, 2007 04:01 AM

Nokturn said:

Squire said:
Ok. What's the bottom line here: Burma or Myanmar?


I believe Burma was the name the country had when it gained independence, wheras Myanmar is the name the military regime has given it since.
So in countries which don't particularly like the regime (such as the UK) its generally referred to as 'Burma'.



Gotcha. I first heard about the protests on the BBC and they kept referring to Burma, and I thought, "Burma? When the hell did they change it back?"

chemzen

chemzen

State College, PA
July 2007

OCT 03, 2007 04:55 AM

Perdita said:
this is a great article.

anyone who thinks it was selfish or narcissistic or apathetic clearly might need some assistance in reading comprehension and critical thinking.



Exactly.

Just by simply reading people's responses you can tell who read it with some sort of critical thinking skills, as opposed to those that just looked at it but didn't let anything sink in.

sam444

sam444

I'm lost
December 2005

OCT 18, 2007 07:07 AM

Some posts on here ponder whether or not this particular situation is a 'Buddhist issue'. IMHO if it appears to someones' mind to be a 'Buddhist issue' then it is a Buddhist issue to the beholder, if it doesn't then it is not. If I wanted to sound all mystical & 'Japanese Zen' about it, I gues I 'd say that nothing is an inheranty Buddhist issue & that everything is an inherantly Buddhist issue. Either way, it doesn't help the Burmese very much.

The article reminds me of something that happened in my own life recently. A girl I know sent me an obviously fake viral email with a picture of a baby in some sort of hospital scanny machine thing. The email said that this baby has had heart problems from birth & that AOL are tracking how many people get this email (impossible) & will donte $x towards its medical costs for each person it gets sent to.

I did a quick Google search, found an webpage confirming this email was a fake & sent it to the girl who sent me the baby pic. Her reaction was to shout at me for 'spoiling it'. She had enjoyed thinking she had helped a poor helpless baby & told me that it 'didn't matter' that it wasn't real.

I'm sure the residents of the Kadampa place near me will have a good time praying & chanting for the Burmese. But in my view, this will only serve to make themselves feel better & a little less helpless about tragic events thousands of miles away which they are almost powerless to prevent or solve. It won't help the Burmese one jot.

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