How to stay up to date on the war and also make a difference

So the world is at war again. I guess it’s just a thing humans love to do when they have power — throw lives at other lives and see if it helps them get more power.

As it should be, the news is all over this. Countless stories and horrors are coming out of Eastern Europe every day, and I appreciate that I cannot get away from the coverage. I hop in the car, turn on the radio, and there it is, a story about how the Ukrainians are putting up an incredible fight with just their impromptu volunteer army; I sit down at the local phở spot and it’s there on the TV, Anderson Cooper wearing a thick winter jacket, talking to some expert about the implications of a fire at a huge nuclear power plant; I open my phone, and there’s a headline about how Russian Americans living in New York are thinking about it, which side they’re on and why.

Right now, Ukrainian families are fleeing war zones in the millions, both internally within Ukraine and to other neighboring countries. Meanwhile, NATO country leaders are working hard to not trip off a world war.

We have to know what’s going on. That’s the truth.

At a certain point however, it starts to take its toll. We’re losing sleep. Friends tell me they can’t turn their phones off; they’re getting nightmares every night; they can’t disconnect from the horrors. It’s so bad that it’s good, addictive in a way, and we forget that it has such a profound impact on us.

We hope that by knowing more, by reading more, by absorbing more that we’ll be able to help in some way.

Here’s the thing, you can always know more. But knowing alone isn’t enough. To really help we need to call upon more within ourselves.

I grew up the child of immigrants. My mother and her whole family came from Vietnam, fleeing at the very last moments of the fall of Saigon. My father came here with an entrepreneur’s dream and a life savings of pocket change. Many of you (wish I could say all) know me as a kind, generous, and hardworking person. Today, I work at a company that’s working overtime to create housing stability through establishing financial identities for low and medium income Americans.

How did this happen? How did my family come here with so little and yet I and many others like me are able to work comfortably on such meaningful initiatives?

The answer is: through the support of millions of unseen factors and the kindness of total strangers. My Vietnamese family was “adopted” (the only way out of the refugee military barracks spread throughout the nation in the late 1970s) by a church community in Louisiana. Had this parish not done this, my family would have been splintered and dispersed, forced to assimilate without being able to hold onto the things that make my family so strong and beautiful. At the same time the American people voted to elect representatives and pass policies in Congress that made this country welcoming and supportive for my family. While my father didn’t come here under such extreme circumstances, many of the same things, like support from countless individuals and institutions, hold true.

I bring this up because I think the first thing we can do when confronted with horror is to reflect on beauty. What does it mean to think about what a truly good outcome would look like? When we shift into that frame, the horror doesn’t lessen of course, but we experience paths clearing before us: the way out, or the way forward. (Side note, this kind of thinking is also what I do for work.) It creates a sense of gratitude. Gratitude works miracles in us, as we all know. It humbles us, clarifies for us what really matters in the end, creates enormous energy, and it opens us up to be able to give love to others because we acknowledge we’ve received it, knowingly or unknowingly.

When it comes to dealing with horrors and finding ways to help, the second thing we need is the skill of checking in with ourselves and giving ourselves care when we need it. It’s actually really hard to stop while you’re reading or watching something totally engrossing and say, how am I doing right now? How is this content affecting me? The reason this is important is because when we go down these rabbit holes, we forget we have limits. We forget we have needs. We forget we have a body. This key part of mindfulness practice can and should be used to help us maintain our energy and focus on what the reality is and what part we can play in it.

We can pour ourselves a cup of tea. We can take a quiet walk with a friend. We can stop to feel what someone else might be feeling right now, fleeing from a war zone with a child on their back. As my teacher would always say, a single breath taken in mindfulness can be a revolutionary act. To really make change, we need to play the long game. And that means taking care of ourself as well as others. It means carving out the moments needed to connect with ourselves, the people around us, and those farther away.

The last thing I want to say is, to keep us in the game, we need to lean on each other. None of us is an island, much less so during times like these. Phone a friend when you’re feeling down, phone a friend when you’re feeling up! Bring a gift to that person who just moved into your neighborhood. We can take care of each other because we know we’re playing the long game.

Collective action is part of this too — and essential! Join a petition to welcome refugees into your state or county or neighborhood. Make public art. Make it easy for politicians to do what you feel is the right thing. Everything we do that makes our impact greater, more long-lasting, and sustainable requires us to work with others. So take care of and nurture these relationships. You don’t have to like everyone you work with, but you can love them. Pausing to check in with ourselves is a great way to learn how to get better at pausing to check in with others.

So the world is at war again, and we need to be prepared to take care of it — and ourselves. Dear friends, I hope all of this is stuff you knew already, and I hope the reminder helps you stay sane and grounded out there. Sending you all my best.

Snow covered pine trees

Halloween 2021

Had my camera along for the ride as I wandered around Miami. Generally, a roll is worth it if just one photo stands out. For this Ilford HP5, this was the one for me.

Short reflections on my gig as a clown

  1. If you have one trick, milk the introduction for as long as you can. Make fun of the kids, take volunteers, pretend you have a plan.

  2. 6 year olds are brutal. They will embarrass you like it’s their job. And it is embarrassing.

  3. You exist as a kind of Queen’s Guard. They want to test whether you really are a clown. Of course, you are.

  4. You need this nose. It helps you breathe. The surface area makes it much easier than with a regular nose.

  5. Your energy will never be enough, but try to exceed theirs at least.

  6. The outfit looks like pajamas but is actually very hot.

  7. Change tact fast when they start to lose focus.

  8. Respond to everything. If they poke your clown shoes, pretend it hurts a lot. Your makeup will really help exaggerate all of your expressions and make anything you do pretty much funny.

Julian Clown.jpeg

Why is it so sexual?

Spent my christmas eve-eve recording a cover of a song that my dear friend, David Preddy, wrote back in college. Preddy, wherever you are these days, this one goes out to you, homie.

Dog Friendship

I remember standing on the beach last year with my Leica CL 35mm in hand, waiting for the moment décisif of a man playing with his dog. Daniela and I both stood enjoying the sight, herself in total understanding, myself in a bit of a confusion. Why was this grown man laughing so hard while playing with his dog? Surely, he'd seen his dog grab a stick and run before. Surely this wasn't the first time they'd played tag.

Being left to take care of Maggie's needs (save meal prep, shoutout to Ms. Thanh) these past couple weeks has changed something in me about the way I relate to joy and frustration. It would be unfair to call her simple, though I think it's fair to say that simplicity is an important part of the bigger picture here. If she doesn't eat enough for breakfast, she vomits right next to my workstation as I'm taking calls. If she doesn't run enough in the middle of the day, she'll chew on my shoes and jump up and down or lay low in pretend ambush with her butt in the air, tail wagging, until I react. Sometimes this means she really needs to poop. Sometimes not. I feel terrible when I can't take her outside for hours due to back-to-back meetings.

But when we go outside, everything changes. If the weather's wet or dark, she tiptoes out of the house behind me, waiting for my signal to know it's safe to descend the wooden staircase into the darkness. If it's bright and clear, she storms out the back door and into the yard with the great oak and makes a racing lap through the newly fallen leaves and branches, full speed, her ears back and her eyes mad.

I can feel the bodily stiffness shaking out of her. She's never mad at me or bitter for taking so long. I look for a Maggie-sized stick and she races toward me, throwing her body in the air like a dolphin to try to grab it. I throw it and she chases it down, usually missing on the grab in her explosive enthusiasm, sometimes doubling back for it like an overzealous student running suicides in gym class, sometimes grabbing a different stick and acting like it's all the same anyway, sometimes just giving up entirely and racing another lap around the yard with a champagne pop of exuberance.

She likes to shred sticks and I encourage her. She's good at it. Sometimes I try to sneak up on her and steal it. If I can grab it in time, we'll play tug of war, and if the stick is the right size, she'll hang on so tight I can lift her whole body into the air. If she lets go, I'll throw the stick for her to chase and we'll start all over again. Sometimes the stick is rough in the hand or she gives it a good tug and pulls it out from my grip. In the end, I always let her win. And boy does she like to show off. Stick held high, she'll flaunt and prance like a flamboyance of flamingos around the yard. And I'll laugh and laugh and laugh. She'll do this even without beating me if she finds a whole branch of branches. Lifting an awkward stick is a celebration in its own right. We celebrate together.

As the days have gotten colder, I've adjusted to my winter clothes. Not the fashionable kind that you wear when going from home to the office. But the ski kind. The kind that lets you stay outside for hours in the snow without ever feeling like you need to go take a hot bath, at least when it's not windy.

I even overheat. When we play keep-away, there's actually no way for me to win without cheating. She's too fast. So I'll just flail my arms around babbling and pretend like I'm gonna steal her stick, but she knows I can't catch her. The only way for me to get that stick is to wait for her to lay down in the grass and start shredding, or to call her name and tell her to drop it, which is against the rules. You've got to have rules in games, rules that make sense to all the players.

Here's what I mean by simple. Maggie has a few core physical and emotional needs. She needs to be loved, she needs to be fed, she needs to run and be free, she needs to poop and to pee, she needs me to know that she's protecting me. I think the thing that surprises me most in having a dog friendship is how much she's the same as me.

Discriminating Nature

I've struggled with something for a few years now. It starts with a story.

Way back in the day, long before I developed any interest in birding, one of the monks and I were sitting together by a window in the brothers’ dining hall at Blue Cliff Monastery in upstate New York. A field guide to the birds of North America was sitting out on the table by a pair of binoculars and I picked them up and began searching the bird feeder and the grass beneath it for something to learn. I was going back and forth between the book and the window. After a few minutes of silently watching me, Phap Khoi turned and said, why do you need to know what they are? Isn't it enough to be mindful of them, here with us now?

He was trying to teach me something, and I didn't have an answer. But I didn't like the conclusion I felt like he was getting at. That we need not learn the nuances of nature, that the details are irrelevant to the mindfulness practitioner, that a bird is a bird.

Maybe I misinterpreted him. Maybe he just wanted me to appreciate nature with the non-discriminating mind, without the purpose of getting something or somewhere. Big nowhere-to-go energy. But it left me feeling uneasy; and for years I've come back to this question, especially as my birding life has emerged, admittedly with no small amount of somewhere-to-go, something-to-do energy, with the desire to count, to accomplish, to be amazed.

Yesterday, my mother was listening to Ekhart Tolle at her sewing desk. I love Ekhart Tolle. He was describing the beauty of a relationship with a dog to an audience of technologists. Then suddenly he turned and ended up on the same rhetorical corner as Brother Phap Khoi. You don't need to know the details of nature to be alive with it. If you note your energy, you'll see it's most alive when you're present with nature, not identifying species.

Now, I wasn't taking notes, so I'm not quoting him on saying that exactly, but that was the gist I heard. And here's why it made me upset.

For decades the American mindfulness movement has done a poor job at appreciating the gravity of climate change, focusing on personal, individual growth and liberation, certainly at the start. It's been part and parcel of the Protestant ethic and the self-help, pick-yourself-up-by-your-bootstraps, meritocratic, capitalist mythology. A bird is a bird and if it makes you feel good then that bird has done its “job.” Don't bother learning what you can about it because your job isn't to help it. Your job is to look out for you and your own spiritual attainment.

What happened to the bodhisattva vow, that Mahayana commitment to save all sentient beings?

Maybe this bird blindspot was the answer. If you don't even know what they are, how they live, what they need, how can you help?

(That not attempting to learn first is the same blindness and overconfidence that fuels the colonialist foreign aid mania of roaring into the so-called Third World with solutions and not questions and curiosity. But I'll save that rant for another day.)

I recently participated in an 8-week online Engaged Buddhism retreat, titled “This Is It”, hosted by Earth Holders. I learned a lot, and was impressed with how the virtual environment could be designed to create a holding space for the kind of powerful organic growth that characterizes the Plum Village tradition.

On the last day of the retreat, a participant asked a question to the teachers about equanimity and comfort. It was a great question. As my friend, Kae Foo, recalled it, “can't the principle of equanimity be a guise for privileged people to hide behind their privilege?”

Sister The (pr. Tey), one of the retreat teachers, took the question. She began with an expansive definition of equanimity, saying that to neglect the reality of interbeing and enter a state of mental quietude is not equanimity. To practice equanimity is to develop our understanding of interbeing and the truth that while others suffer, we suffer.

I was deeply touched by this answer. Wisdom is one of those things that seems so obvious and “of course!” when you hear it, but can be so hard to find on one’s own. Part of what surprised me was how it integrated the practice of mindfulness with the practice of mental discrimination between subjects and objects. Others are not just dreams, but part of us. I wondered if this insight could be applied to my dilemma with birds.

Personally, I don’t meditate to achieve a state of peace. I meditate so I can be a calm, clear, and compassionate member of society and of the planet. I’ve also noticed that my birding life could use a little more mindfulness energy. I think all self-aware birders will learn this at some point. There’s a lot of desire in birding. But there’s also a lot of learning.

We learn about ecosystems and evolution, unbelievable seasonal brain plasticity for the memorization of food hiding places, migratory air currents and thermals, adaptations for salt-water-only diets, sexual dimorphism, and of course feathers and beaks adapted to wonderfully specific and general uses. It’s pure magic out there, people.

Engaged Buddhism is about bringing the practice of mindfulness into every area of our lives, because suffering can be found anywhere, sometimes gross, sometimes subtle. As one of my mentors, Charles Goodman, likes to say, “birth, old age, illness, and death” don’t discriminate.

Where am I going with this? I want to say that while my birding life could use some more mindfulness, I also believe the mindfulness community could use more birding.

If what we want is to help all sentient beings, we need to understand them. As Thich Nhat Hanh says, “love is understanding and understanding is love”. And if we do not understand, we cannot help. Our equanimity includes our interbeing with all animals and plants (and dare I say minerals?), so we need to learn to practice mindfulness with our birding and to practice birding with our mindfulness.

Of course, the same could be said about frogs or whales or beetles. And I’m all for it.

A Buru Style Classic

This song was a watershed for my college life. Anyone who saw Buru Style in those days knows what I’m talking about. Made this cover for all my friends who rotated through that beautiful band.

How I like to compose music

Thought it might be interesting to share how I compose music. Here's a reggae tune I've named "I and I", made up on the fly. It's also my first multi-camera video, shot and edited entirely on iPhone.

I had no idea I make so much stank face.