Austin News Magazine

The universe is a garden hose

October 7th, 2009 by Wendy Leiva

by Bob Long

I went on a picnic in Parping, Nepal once with a group of local nuns and a few other Westerners. We were sitting on our blanket noshing when a demented conversation got under way. At one point I blithely chirped, “Things exist because they don’t. If they truly did exist, they couldn’t.” A fellow beside me, yawning, replied, “Well, that’s obvious.” I marveled then at the placid assurance with which we accepted being such oddballs, talking above our own heads.

Lisa Randall is an out-there cosmologist who is tenured at Princeton, MIT and Harvard. She looks like a model, and goes to lecture dressed in Miuccia Prada. When she attends conferences, she is famous for heading out to buy couture in her time off. She also does rock climbing, bicycles around Italy, wanders India, writes opera libretti, and likes to quote Eminen and Bjork. Who said academics are a bunch of old fuddy duddies? Or that they have to look like Bea Arthur?

In “Warped Passages: unraveling the mysteries of the universe’s hidden dimensions”, she leads you on an E-Z tour of modern physics, first re-treading the familiar ground of relativity and quantum mechanics, then brushing you up on your supersymmetry and string theory, and finally heading off into her own further abyss of higher dimensional time-space matrices, a domain once thought fruity but now gaining respectability. She makes it all seem eminently reasonable.

To relieve 500 p. of arduous physical theory, there are copious illustrations. One shows a rabbit doing a dance in front of a light projector to make a shadow of a human hand on a screen. There are Feynman diagrams, and pix showing particle arrays as water drops dispersed in a garden hose. I missed a lot, even with all this help, but I did do some good brain aerobics. Chakrasamvara practice didn’t add up either, but it took me out beyond my usual smallness.

There are a lot of interesting factoids within: that the original size of the universe was 10-32 centimeters (that’s dinky, and it’s also the size of the Planck constant), that only 30 percent of the energy in the universe is carried by matter, the other 70% existing as a latency in the vacuum, and so on. Hey, are she and her pals making all this up? Well, one could just as well ask such a question about the three kayas or the five buddha famlies. Does conceptual mind call forth a world?

You might worry, “But can you take it to the beach?” Heck yeah, you can. Lisa R. is an egalitarian cut-up who wants everyone to get it through humorous metaphors and similes, helping you to grasp the accumulating force patterns of virtual gluons by comparing their actions to the events in the Trojan War, making funny about how it all could have stopped at a mano a mano between Paris and Menelaus (but then she couldn’t have taken her particles on to their end result).

Rolling Stone calls Lisa Randall “one of the 25 most interesting people in the U.S.” It’s undoubtedly true. Stephen Hawking, asked a few years ago to give the Loeb lectures at Harvard, talked mainly about her theories. She’s one of those exasperating three-dimensional beings who have it all, yet somehow remain humble. It is admittedly hard not to hate people who so effortlessly outclass us. Trungpa Rinpoche said the solution to our jealousy is to admire them openly.

Shambhala Day 2009 Offerings

February 28th, 2009 by Wendy Leiva


On Wednesday, February 25, the Austin Shambhala Center joined the rest of the mandala in celebrating Shambhala Day. Several of our sangha members made offerings to celebrate the new year:

  • Patrick Larson offered a series of contemplative photographs posted outside on the center patio. You can view Patrick’s photos of our Shambhala Day celebrations at Shambhala Day 2009.
  • Miriam Klotz provided an inspiring and encouraging I ching reading for the coming year.
  • JoAnne Trubitt read a poem written by Cindy Huyser:
    Year of the Earth Ox
    by Cindy Huyser 
    
    She strides in
    with steady, slow hooves.
    Earth element, the ground of Dharma –
    ready to bring
    great harvests from rich soil. 
    
    Patience yoked,
    pulling forward,
    sunlight playing on hide
    over sinew, clavicle
    and scapula. 
    
    Bull-headed, stubborn.
    Not to be stopped
    by stones in the way
    of the plow’s blade.
    Can we match her diligence? 
    
    Abundant land,
    watered with springs
    of tradition –
    green shoots rise
    again and again. 
    
    Flowers of emptiness
    growing
    for the harvest of Earth Ox –
    fragrant petals shining
    in the Great Eastern Sun. 
    
    © Cindy Huyser 2009
  • Melinda Rothouse and Rita Ricardo sang two songs acapella in honor of departed San Antonio sangha member Kevin Finnegan: “In This Heart” by Sinead O’Connor and “MLK” by U2/Bono.
  • Wendy Leiva presented a poem inspired by the Female Earth Ox:
    2136 Warriors
    by Wendy Leiva
    
    Hitting a snag
    as she toils at the till,
    Ox pauses
    ...
    gathers closer to the ground and
    	p u l l s  through
    		with focused effort and intention.
    
    So shall we too,
    when we hit clods
    and rocks
    and roots of old trees
    all long dead but still looming,
    hard and tricky and rough,
    beneath the soft, loose, easy topstuff.
    
    When we stumble
    and catch
    and the plow refuses to move,
    so shall we pause
    ...
    straighten our shoulders to the warrior's work and
    	p u l l  through
    		with focused effort and intention.
    
    © Wendy Leiva 2009
  • Maya Bernal (age 10) presented a poem inspired by a crane:
    The Crane
    by Maya Bernal
    
    Oh Crane, with your long and graceful wings,
    will you teach me how to soar
    above the people
    next to the Great Eastern Sun?
    
    Oh Crane,
    will you be my good friend
    forever and for always?
    
    © Maya Bernal 2009
  • Lou Faiel-Datillo provided an educational and highly hilarious presentation on the Aspidistra plant (also known as the Cast-Iron Plant). There is no way to faithfully reproduce or describe the elation and joy this performance brought all in attendance. You really just had to be there!

Cheerful Shambhala Day and Happy Year of the Female Earth Ox to all!

Kyudo Demonstration on Monday

February 27th, 2009 by Wendy Leiva

Sangha member Craig Thompson will be giving a Kyudo demonstration on Monday, March 2 at 7:00pm, at Casa De Luz (1701 Toomey Rd) in the Japonica Salon, upstairs.

For more details and information about Craig, see the JASGA announcement.

For more information about Kyudo, see http://www.zenko.org


Home | Meditation | Programs | Buddhism | Shambhala | Arts
Calendar | Community | Gallery | Search | About Us

Austin Shambhala Meditation Center
1702 South Fifth Street, Austin,  TX 78704
Tel. (512) 443 3263    Email:

Shambhala, Shambhala Meditation Center, Shambhala Training and Shambhala Center are registered service marks of Shambhala International (Vajradhatu). Way of Shambhala is a service mark of Shambhala International (Vajradhatu).   Website by Blue Mandala