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Showing posts with label sleep. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sleep. Show all posts

The Mantra: nam myoho renge kyo

I have written about the Lotus Sutra (also known as the Saddharma Puṇḍarīka Sūtra) before. It is one of the most influential and revered sutras in Mahayana Buddhism. It is considered a central scripture in various Mahayana traditions, including Tiantai, Nichiren, and Pure Land Buddhism.

The Lotus Sutra contains a variety of teachings attributed to Gautama Buddha, presented in the form of dialogues and parables. 

One of the key mantras associated with the Lotus Sutra is the phrase "Nam-myoho-renge-kyo." I learned it as a naive college freshman when I attended an "Introduction to Buddhism" meeting at Rutgers University's Douglass College. Admittedly, I attended more because I had been invited by an attractive woman who I wanted to get to know better.

We learned to chant the mantra "Nam-myoho-renge-kyo" as a form of meditation and devotion. One guy there said chanting it could bring to anything you wanted. That sounded incredibly far-fetched. It is believed to invoke the power and blessings of the Lotus Sutra and is a way of tapping into the inherent Buddhahood within oneself and manifesting one's highest potential for wisdom, compassion, and enlightenment.

That phase of my Buddhist study lasted about a semester. Chanting did not get me that woman or anything else that I wanted. I would study Buddhism more seriously and with better teachers several times over the course of my life, but I can't say that I ever became a Buddhist. (Desire gets in the way.)

You can chant"Nam-myoho-renge-kyo" silently or aloud, with the focus on the rhythm and vibration of the mantra. Since the repetition of the mantra is believed to quiet the mind, I have been using it as a way to cultivate some  inner peace before I go to sleep. Yes, I use it as a sleep aid. 

Though I know the meaning of the words which translates to "I devote myself to the Lotus Sutra of the Wonderful Law," I find it works better to forget the translation. Thinking about it in English leads my mind to wander to meanings. I use the words with my breathing. I start with a breath in on Nam and a breath out on myoho, in on renge and out on kyo. After several repetitions, I increase the intake to Nam-myoho and breathe out to renge-kyo. All of this is silent. Eventually, I am taking deep breaths to the full Nam-myoho-renge-kyo and long exhales to it.

Sleep has often eluded me in my life and I have tried many thing from meditation, to exercises, reading and just about every herbal remedy and prescription sleep aid on the market. All of them work to a degree but none work long-term or without side effects. Even reading has side effects, as it causes my brain to connect to all kinds of related things.

I know that I am not using the chant in the "proper" Buddhist way. Or am I?

The mantra is believed to embody the universe's all-pervading nature, and since the closest I come to prayer these days is addressing the universe, the mantra seems like a good path.


mantra tattoo via Ryven



A Long Sleep

Gustave Courbet, Le Sommeil (Sleep), Oil on canvas, 1866

In my insomniac nights, I usually end up watching TV and simultaneously surfing the Net.

Here are some folks who really knew how to sleep.

The Greek poet Epimenides is said to have fallen asleep in a cave as a child and not to have awoken for 57 years, after which he found himself possessed of all wisdom. I have been awake for almost as many years and still don't feel wise.

I guess I am more like Rip in Washington Irving’s 1819 story, "Rip Van Winkle," who slept for 20 years in the Catskill Mountains, waking an old man, “unknowing and unknown.”

I am a big fan of the Arthurian legends. So, I believe is not dead but asleep in the form of an old tree yet to wake. And Arthur is not dead in Avalon, but is sleeping in the form of a raven.

It is said that Saint Euthymus slept standing against a wall, and Arsenus hardly slept at all.

I'm not sure it gives me comfort that leaders like Margaret Thatcher thrived on three or four hours’ sleep a night - same with Napoleon and Zhou Enlai.

Ben Franklin: “Up, sluggard, and waste not life; in the grave will be sleeping enough.”

Harold Wilson: “I believe the greatest asset a head of state can have is the ability to get a good night’s sleep.”

The 7 Sleepers of Ephesus were persecuted Christians who sought refuge in a cave at the time of the Emperor Decius (AD 250) and slept for 200 years. They awoke in AD 447 during the reign of Theodosius II.

Sleeping Beauty (popularized by Charles Perrault) was a beautiful princess cursed by a wicked fairy to prick her finger and die. Fortunately, a good fairy commutes this death sentence to sleep lasting 100 years, from which the princess is released by the kiss of a handsome prince.

OK, I'm getting a bit drowsy - gonna click "Publish Post" and try the sleep thing. See you in the morning on Weekends in Paradelle.