BODHESAKO Getting Off, Portrait of an American Buddhist Monk

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nyanasuci
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BODHESAKO Getting Off, Portrait of an American Buddhist Monk

Post by nyanasuci »

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No doubt, you will enjoy reading this autobiographical novel, masterful narrative of Bodhesako's early years as a Buddhist novice and monk in India and Sri Lanka.

Getting Off
A Portrait of an American Buddhist Monk


From the Preface:
To a youthful and restless American adult in the 1960s, “getting off” expressed the euphoric initial feeling experienced when an hallucinogenic drug such as LSD took effect. … More quotidian meanings of this expression not confined to the 1960s counterculture are found in the realm of public transportation. A passenger on a bus informs an inattentive driver that he or she will be “getting off” at the next stop, thus avoiding having to ride too far. Or, when riding in a crowded subway or tram, one might desperately cry out “getting off” to urge other passengers blocking the exit door to make way. This verbal message gives one a license to push and squeeze past the human obstructions preventing one from reaching freedom outside that confined, airless space. Finally, a situation where one, having become disenchanted with daily life typical of Western societies—life driven by an unending quest for sensual fulfillment and pleasure from material goods and entertainment—chooses to “get off”. Here, one may compare lay life to a merrygoround at an amusement park whose melody, at first pleasant, gets gradually more and more grating as one goes around and around.
In this book, Samanera Bodhesako’s masterful narrative of his early years as a Buddhist novice and monk, all of these seemingly unrelated connotations of “getting off” are present—but will not be discerned by one who merely skims through the adventures depicted. These connotations are to be pondered and reflected upon by a reader who travels along with the author not only on the physical terrain of India, Ceylon, and Nepal, but, more importantly, through the mental terrain so honestly and compellingly revealed.
>>> http://pathpresspublications.com/en/pag ... etting_Off" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false; :reading:
Bhikkhu Hiriko - Ñāṇasuci

The experts do not say that one is a sage in this world because of view, or learning, or knowledge, Nanda.
I call them sages who wander without association, without affliction, without desire.

The Buddha, Sn.V.8.2 (1078)


http://pathpress.org | http://nanavira.org | http://ajahnchah.org
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pilgrim
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Re: BODHESAKO Getting Off, Portrait of an American Buddhist Monk

Post by pilgrim »

Is it the same as this online book?
http://www.buddhanet.net/cmdsg/go1-1.htm" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
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Unrul3r
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Re: BODHESAKO Getting Off, Portrait of an American Buddhist Monk

Post by Unrul3r »

It seems so.

Just finished reading the day before yesterday and I must say that I liked it a lot.

Edit: Reading Stringhoppers and Rabbitholes. Is there anyway to get the PDFs that were being linked in the right-side of blog?
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