
Novel by Christina Carson
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Quote from Suffer the Little Children:
"Perhaps what we call misfortune is actually a place where the universe interrupts our habits that keep life so limited and small, forcing us to respond differently. The opportunity it offers depends on how hard we work to close the gap or hold it open, allowing ourselves to glimpse realities we've never glimpsed before."

Novel by Christina Carson
Quote from Dying to Know:
"I knew in that moment, we were never meant to surrender our childlike innocence, to trade a world in which we fit like a glove for one that hung on us like ill-fitting hand-me-downs. However, all about us insisted on our membership. And instead of a handshake or a mystical password as entrance into this spurious society, we agreed instead to share a lie, the one that says we’re safe, secure, and fulfilled living this way."
When the Buddhist Monks Came to Town
In March of 1959, which for many of you was long before you were born, a group of 38 people stole out of Lasha, Tibet around midnight and walked through the Himalayas to asylum in India. The Dalai Lama, who was only 18 years-old, was in the group as well as two other monks he’d chosen to accompany him. Behind him, he left hundreds
Lasha, Tibet
more he knew would soon die in a battle with the Chinese, as they gave their lives to insure his escape. Forty-two years later, Bert and I came to meet one of those monks traveling that night, when we agreed to take on a project for a friend. The event was to bring a small band of Buddhist monks to Huntsville to perform their art. In our first meeting, they created a sand Mandala against the beautiful showcase of Tibetan Art the Huntsville Museum of Art put together. Than one month later, they returned, their dance troupe performing at the Von Braun Center. The following day they held a ceremony for anyone to attend. There, they swept up the mandala, an extraordinary creation out of colored sand taking two weeks of 8-hour days to make, and released it to the waters of Big Spring Park. This marked its journey of return to the sea. How
could we have known, even beyond the wonder of these young monks, we would also meet their Geshe(teacher), one of the two monks chosen by the Dalai Lama to accompany him out of Lasha that portentous night in history.
Since only one young man spoke any amount of English, we met on an intuitive basis, recognizing one another in novel ways. The Geshe recognized Bert at a depth most men never see in him, and they became as brothers in that short time. From then on, each meeting took on a mystical quality. The monks modeled what life looks like when people choose to live in the moment. And never mistake America as an easy experience for these young men – they said very noisy and speedy. However, they committed to a year on the road and gave themselves to the cause full out. They had hardly a penny in their pockets, living off the largesse of American amazement of them and their art. They were here to raise money to keep the ever increasing number of refugee monks arriving in India fed and clothed at their monastery. So many marvels took place in that short time, like when we stood atop Monte Sano in misty rain of an early spring morning, the monks chanting in response to the peace pole we planted there. Later, after the ceremony, the Geshe took Bert back to the pole, pointed to the Tibetan phrase for 'Let Peace Prevail,' and showed with his hands, it was upside down. We laughed for a long time.
Grace followed then as when they pulled back into Huntsville late on the night before their performance, and there in the driveway only minutes after their arrival, the front axle of their 15-seater van, pulling a trailer, twisted and broke. Again it was lightly raining, and we sat on the nearby stone wall waiting for the wrecker. But they, like sweet children, laughed, chewed their bubble gum – something new to them – and sat, quiet. I teased the oldest of the men as they off-loaded the trailer. “I thought you monks were to travel with only a towel and a begging bowl.”
In reply, he smiled like a Cheshire cat and pointed to a trunk presently being pulled from the trailer. “Begging bowls in there.” We laughed, again.
My point is that theirs was not an easy life. They had to choose, every morning they woke, to be here, now. This was no cloistered existence but a working order of monks who were tested minute to minute: Could they remain present; could they choose to attend to beauty, wonder and joy, not succumb to their fatigue, their loneliness, their longing for home. Life confronts us daily with a series of choices. Our lives are not fundamentally different from theirs, except they committed to paying attention to their choices. Thus they gifted us not only with their talent but also with what life looks like when we’re committed to right-minded choices. Whether as writers or human beings our lives hang in the balance of our choices.
One time while watching the Dalai Lama in a TV interview, the interviewer asked him what it was like to be the only Dalai Lama living in exile. One can only imagine the panoply of thoughts that could have invaded his mind in that moment—the memory of hundreds of monks who died for him, all those he was now responsible for, all the politics he had to entertain and excel in, all from a place that is not his home of heart. But what he did instead was chose to remain present. In response to the interviewer, while looking out a bougainvillea-framed window, he replied, “How beautiful these flowers are they not?” Then he was ready to answer.
May we not underestimate ourselves. We all can choose that which nurtures our lives and our art. No one said it was easy, but the reason we get goose bumps around people like the monks and the Dalai Lama is due to their choices well made.
Comments
So beautifully said, sister Christina! I can add nothing but how beautiful a flower you are as well. Brava!!
We all make choices. Most of us then spend the rest of our lives wondering if we made the right choice or what would have happened if we had made another choice. Those "what if" moments are what keeps us moving from one book to the next. There are simply more "what if" questions than we can answer. I think, with your poetic gift of writing, you need to give these Monks, especially with one remembering the night of the great escape with the Dalai Lama, should be characters in your next book. They have a story to tell, and no one can tell it as well as you.
What a great experience for you and Bert. This all reminded me of one of my favorite photos -- cut out of the newspaper, laminated and sitting on my desk, I've been carrying it around from office to office for 14 years -- of the Dalai Lama fooling around with Bishop Tutu's hat at a Nobel Peace Laureates Conference. I look at this picture and it just sets me straight, every time. Here's a link to it on the photographer's site: http://clarkshadows.photoshelter.com/image?&_bqG=1&_bqH=eJxtj8tOwzAQRb.m2bBJI1JEJC_8mIZpGgf8iOSVZZqiIpWHUtTvx44qiCizGJ97x9fW4KdjH2zo2eo2f3rfD5umOSzvn8f67lQVVVFWyzxWhV5oToZwDK83x_AWMvRaUAOLkrXtohRkZgiRDCFmlouVzHRGG_5G4ToK_0c5Gjd9ZuI4Ae.sNMp51F2SnUKQcYadTBK1V7AFqkFc5ONc604ZoqhssmlBT6UgX5GtBuVREJuW37CXh_xcwHncxVGPyli69bQGyV26lHnOPMaHY_SC9gfV.hfbhJQbctqHcXfI.ildT52n_g31GHGv&GI_ID=
Always so glad you stop by, Jo. I feel heard then.
Most kind words, Caleb. Thank you. Thinking about your blog on irony, the monks' story is an irony for the world.Out of such hardship and sacrifice of lives, came a man who continues to show the world what love and peace truly look like - the Dalai Lama.
Oh, Laura, what a treat. Thank you for that priceless photo. There is more communicated in that photo than in most books about the two of them. Many thanks!
And then there was the day we were driving to church-the morning the Geshe and the rest of the monks were scheduled to leave. We had said our goodbyes the night before and had no intention of visiting them again when I turned hard left and said, "We have to see them one more time."
We knocked on door of the house the monks were using and one of the youngest of the group opened the door, smiled, bowed, and said the, "The Geshe is expecting you."
He was.
Thank you for adding that one, my dear, for it was surely the sweetest.
