Sunday, December 07, 2008

Happiness


One of my previous posts, Guide to Happiness – Di Zi Gui, draws the most visits among all of my posts. This reflects a fact that people all over the world are keen to secure happiness, or are not so happy that they seek for ideas on the web.

I write post on happiness. This does not necessarily mean I am happy or I am a doctor of happiness. Instead, I am like the most of those happiness seekers, I do sometimes Google “happiness” for ideas of pursuing real happiness. With lots of reflection on this issue, I have gained some knowledge about it.

First I conclude the cause of being unhappy is that we do things in a self-centred mind.

Unfolding from the self-centred mind setting we will subsequently and naturally trap in thoughts that arise to defend for this Self. These thoughts urge the Self to go ahead fighting for the desired result even if harming others is necessary. This process ends up in an exhausted body and mind no matter the desired result is achieved or not.

Example: An office guy is overly self-centred. He is ambitious to be promoted. We can predict how is he going to behave, what is he going to do, what will he be thinking. He is likely to do anything to impress his boss. He tends to tell tale of his prospective competitors. He will deliberately show off his skills whenever he can. The end result of his ambition could be like this. He wins in the competition and gets his promotion. He is happy for some time, then he finds so many of his colleagues dislike him. He has achieved something but is unhappy about some other things.

All the day-to-day things we experience are in this pattern – we achieve something and be happy a bit but at the same time we find some other things annoying arise. If we allow this self-centred mind setting to remain or even to grow bigger, we suffer; we experience the sense of being unhappy.

Now that we agree the cause of being unhappy is from being self-centred, is it easy to get rid of that kind of mind setting? The answer is positive. The evidence is the historical Buddha, the prince of ancient India, Siddhattha Gotama, and numerous spiritual sages and teachers.

But folks, it is never an easy task to completely reverse the self-centred mind setting to become the other-centred one. To say is always easier than to be done. It took the Buddha eons of time to achieve the goal. He is on the extreme end of the happy scale, let’s say, the ultimate 100% achievement. The rest of the real happy sages and spiritual teachers fall on the scale from 70% to 99%, I estimate. Thus if we are able to achieve a 10% other-centred and a 90% self-centred mind setting, we should begin to feel a sense of genuine happiness arising.

What is the formula of the self-centred to other-centred transforming process?

As I am a Buddhist, so I believe the formula is in Buddha’s teachings recorded in all the sutras. They say the Buddha has taught 84 thousand methods of the transforming technique to suit each unique individual happiness seeker.

I would like to conclude this post by a verse taught by Master Yin Guang, thirteenth Patriarch of Pure Land Buddhism. He says if one can endeavour to comply with the life attitude set out below one is not far from Buddhahood, the ultimate blissful state.

• 敦倫盡份 閒邪存誠 諸惡莫做 眾善奉行。Play your role well and fulfil your responsibility; Disable the evil thoughts and remain the purity; Refrain from all bad deeds; Put hands on all good deeds.

Monday, October 27, 2008

Celebration of Chenny’s 21st birthday


The 8th of October 2008 is the 21st birthday of my son, Chenny. Although 21st birthday is a big celebration to all young people, but did not seem to be so to him, because he was busy in preparing the term exam. His girlfriend secretly organized a birthday party in a restaurant, called him up that night, asked him to be present, and pushed him into the hall blindfolded to make him a surprise. When Chenny told me what happened in the party, I thought after all girls were more thoughtful.

A few days prior to his birthday, we knew this one got to be a bigger one, and was thinking what to offer. My wife decided to do something our parents did for us when we were small for him on that day. After all, she is supposed to be more thoughtful than me so I just let her plan go through.

Early that morning, she boiled two eggs, dyed them into red, wrote “Happy 21st birthday“on both, and placed them on the table. When he came to the dining table and saw these lovely red things, he smiled a while but looked a bit confused as if asking “Is this for my 21st birthday?”

What my wife planned to do was to give a speech about the real meaning of celebrating a birthday when Chenny saw the red eggs. Anyway Chenny’s 21st birthday celebration from his parents is very culturally special and unforgettable to him.

The speech my wife delivered that morning was like this:

Son, it is ok to hold a joyful party in a format of food, drink, friends, and fun for your birthday today. But I want to use of this opportunity to tell you how children of our generation celebrate their birthdays, and what we all should bear in mind on our birthdays.

When we were young, the economy in Taiwan was not good. Birthday cake with candles was never heard of let along a birthday party. Yet, as parents, they wanted to do something special on their children’s birthday. Early in the morning, my mother already boiled two eggs and dyed them in red after they were cooled down a bit. As soon as I was leaving for school, she gave me a pat on my head, told me it was my birthday, prayed in murmur that I should grow into a healthy decent person, and put the still-warm eggs into my pocket. Then waved me good bye by the door step. The warmth and the red colour of the eggs in the pocket gave me a special feeling of birthday whole day long.

It is now the 21st century. People already forgot those days when material was not abundant as today. Birthday party in general becomes an occasion of eating, drinking and having fun. Very few will ever visualize the scene in the maternity ward of hospital where mother is bearing the agonizing pain till her baby is given birth.
As this is your 21st birthday, a day that means so much to you, so we decided to celebrate it uniquely for you by reversing the style that is followed by today’s society. Mum and dad’s blessing is more meaningful than a big party dinner. Also important is that a birthday should be the day to thank mother’s love. We wish you keep growing into a healthy and noble person.


After the speech, Chenny smiled sheepishly and gave us a hug and left for school with those two red eggs in his bag. This 21st birthday of Chenny’s is indeed a very unique one.

Sunday, July 27, 2008

Helping as a nanny



This picture shows I was like herding a flock of active monkeys; they were actually my nephews and niece, my 3rd sister’s and 4th sister’s children. On the camel were A Long, Menghsin and A Bin. I was holding Meiling. The time was on a Sunday morning in the year of 1972. The playing ground was of Wu Chang Primary School about 10 minutes away from our home by walk. We were at that time living near the out skirt of Taipei Songshan Airport. I was studying at the World College of Journalism during this time of helping as a nanny.

In late 60’s or early 70’s, Taiwan was beginning to build up its economic growth. I remembered there was a popular slogan of that era saying “turn the living room into a factory”. The government endeavoured to make Taiwan richer so it encouraged small businesses in any way that produce for the country. Every household in Taiwan sought something to do. Some people were good at cooking, so they set up food stool in the night market, and the living rooms of their homes naturally became small factories preparing the food material. Some were good at making clothes, and their living rooms became their factories rumbling with sewing machines. Some were skilled salesman, and their living rooms were converted into shops displaying all sorts of commodities. The whole country was dynamic in all kinds of business activities. And a few years later, Taiwan was recognized as one of the four golden dragons of Asia due to its double digits GDP for many years in a row.

In this background of the society, my father was naturally also involving in sort of economic activity, setting up a joint business of clothe factory in our living room with my 3rd sister serving as designer and manufacturing supervisor. My 4th sister and her husband were in their own business of making knitting garments. Most of the family small businesses worked so hard that they only got one day off every two weeks. Families with small children could only set their kids free in the park or ask other family member to help with child care.

As everyone of our family was working hard for money, I became the of-course candidate of the “nanny” of my two elder sisters’ children. So during week days when I was in school, these energetic children were playing, fighting, laughing or crying while the work force was doing their best to achieve the daily production quota. When I came home from school, I picked up the task of looking after them.

On weekend, my favourite place to go with this team of kids was Wu Chang Primary School. Here they could run around the spacious school field playing seek-and-hide, or play balls, sand or whatever they could have fun from. Sometimes, there were other groups of children. On the far left with Menghsin, A Long and A Bin in the picture was the leader of one of the other groups. I still remembered her name was Xie Shu Min, a then year-4 girl helping her family looking after her siblings. She approached us when I was telling stories to my group and she found it fascinating and joined us.

After a few hours of activities at the school field, I took them home hoping the intensive physical exercise we had should have consumed their excessive energy and they should become more settled at home. Indeed they normally were quieter after the outdoor activity. So I had many weekends spent in that school field with these kids till one day when I noticed that they became bored with going to the same place every time. I could not remember now about how I had dealt with that problem, but somehow it was over because they never will be small forever.

Now A Bin is father of two; A Long is father of two; Menghsin runs two book shops; and as to the then very quiet girl, Meiling, is a busy happy mother now. Looking back, I suddenly realized that all these had occurred 35 years ago. I played the role as a nanny for my family, and for the economic growth of Taiwan. I felt a bit pride in my mind that after all I contributed my part. Though I feel so, it is only a thought that rises and it will fade away into the emptiness.

I would like to conclude this story by quoting a verse from Diamond Sutra:
"All composed things are like a dream,
a phantom, a drop of dew, a flash of lightning.
That is how to meditate on them,
that is how to observe them."

Tuesday, June 03, 2008

In memory of my mother



June 28 is the memorial day of my mother. On this date in 2002, she left this world. Every year when June arrives, bits and pieces of memory about mother and me arise. This year I like to commemorate her by writing some of her stories prior to her memorial day.

Mother was the second daughter of my maternal grandparents who rented my paternal grandfather’s land to plant crops to feed their family. At the age of 10, she obeyed her parents’ command, walked into Chen family as a fostered child daughter-in-law. That was a smart idea my paternal grandfather proposed. He knew my mother’s natural father was a modest and honest farmer, he believed descendants of good people would be nice for his son, my father. So he said to my grandma that he wanted to get that girl, my mother, into Chen family to be trained well before she was officially married to his son.

Buying fostered child daughter-in-law was a common practice found among rich families of my grandparent’s era. So my mother, at the age of 10, carried a simple pack of belongings, holding the sad emotion of leaving her own family, though poor, with her mother’s company, walked from her village for 3 miles to Chen family in the town. She told me late in her life that from time to time she resented her mother being so cruel selling her for the survival of the family.

Before she was officially put together with my father at age 18, she was trained to be a good wife. As a 10 year old child, her first mission was to look after my great grandmother. She shared a bed with my great grandmother. She walked alongside of her grandmother wherever she went. Before long, her responsibility extended to include cooking for this big family of about 20 people including grandfather’s team of carpenters. She was meant to get up before four o’clock in the morning to start cooking breakfast and boiling hot water while everyone was still sleeping. She recalled the hardship of that cooking task, in the winter time to a child using the very conventional olden day kitchen facilities. She had to be standing on a short stool so as to be high enough to work on the stove. It was even harder for her to get up in the morning when there was a cold blitz. She cherished her grandmother’s kindness. She said that often her grandmother woke up seeing her struggling to get up, pulled her back to the warm bed, asked her to sleep for a little longer and she would remain awake in order to wake her up for her cooking tasks.

Part of my grandfather’s training plan for his fostered daughter-in-law was sending her to school which was my mother’s dream. So she was taken into grade four skipping the first three years for a normal child because of her height and maturity. Though she was excited about being given the opportunity to go to school, this unusual class placement was a great challenge to her. She got to work harder to catch up. My grandfather spared some of his working time everyday to teach her learn new words. Soon my mother caught up with the other students despite her big load of household tasks, and became the top few students of the class. Composition was her strength. One of her writings was put on the bulletin board to be shown to the whole school.

Mother graduated from school with excellent marks. She begged for further schooling. Her teacher came to visit my grandparents hoping to make them agree with her request to go to high school. My grandfather agreed, however, grandmother thought a daughter-in-law with high school certificate would be arrogant and uneasy to be disciplined, so she rejected her request. My mother was very obedient, she just accepted the reality.

As originally planned, she was married to my father at the age of 18. Their first child was a boy. Unfortunately this boy, my eldest brother, died at very young age in a catastrophic earthquake occurred in middle part of Taiwan. This tragedy hurt her deeply. But fate didn’t just stop fighting against her. Before me, there were two of her children, a boy and a girl, died during their babyhood. They were said to be very cute and healthy. The whole family pampered them very much. But a sudden attack of fever lasting a few days and they were gone. My mother later recalled this heart breaking experiences, still felt the hurt vividly in her mind.

Before I was born, there was no son to carry on Chen’s name. My mother was very worried about the gender of the baby in her pregnancy in 1950. Her anxiety about whether the coming baby would be a son or a daughter was especially high because my grandma was very frail then and kept telling my mother that her soul would never be consoled if this time was not a boy. Mother relieved upon giving birth to me, a boy, and the midwife held me to show to my grandmother in her bed. Three days after my birth grandma died with her wish for a grandson fulfilled.

With 6 children to feed, mum and dad got to work very hard. Dad worked as a technician for a timber mill in a neighbouring town, and mum got to pick up the load of running a grocery shop and getting the household chores done at the same time. I often saw mother panting and sweating all day rushing around with the things to do. Once I remembered in a summer evening when I was about 6 of age, there were the three daughters of our neighbour gathered at our kitchen, and I heard they were saying, “we come to watch Obasang (auntie, in Japanese) having her dinner.” In my mind, I wondered what was my mum’s eating her meal of any special? Then I saw my mother rushed back home from our shop, sweating. She greeted these three girls knowing they came to watch her performing of eating a meal. Silently she picked up a bowl, filled it with rice porridge, picked up chopsticks, shovelled a big mouthful of the thickened porridge then picked up bit of side dish and put it into her mouth to chew, and then gulped them down. With 3 repeats of the same movements, the bowl was emptied. Within about 3 minutes, mum had done her meal with her back soaked by sweat. The process was watched amazingly by these audiences. One of the girls commented, “It is an enjoyment watching Obasang eating her meal. The meal seems to be delicious from the way Obasang eats.” And of course, mum smiled at them silently after the meal and rushed out to look after our shop.

Since mother started learning how to cook from 10 years old, she was good at cooking. She could make a good meal in less than one hour including preparation, cooking and tidy-up. The dishes she made were of the class of a restaurant. But of course, we could only get the chance to enjoy mum’s delicious dishes on special occasions such as New Year’s Eve and traditional festivals. Although mum was capable of making delicious food, she actually dreaded any big day on which she was supposed to do fancy cooking apart from looking after her shop. On any of that kind of big days, she got to get up even earlier to organise everything for the shop first. Then, she left the shop to my 3rd sister to look after while she rushed to the market to shop all the cooking material. Then, she needed to wash, peel, cut, chop, marinate, pre-process all by her alone to get all the material ready for making various kind of yummy dishes. At the end of the cooking and worshiping ritual, she always exhausted and could only lay on the bed for a short while before going to our shop to close it for the day.

Her life was a bit relieved after my father decided to get our shop sold, and shifted to live in Taipei from Ching Shui. My father was employed as office assistant in my big brother-in-law’s company. This job did not earn him enough income to support us, so my mother offered to serve as the company’s cook taking care of the 3 meals a day for the office employees. This supplemented the family’s income.

Mother’s life was noticeably improved after I had graduated and fulfilled my 2 year term of military service and got a job. This period began in 1975 when Taiwan economy grew rapidly. Mum had opportunities joining in tours to quite a few touring destinations in Taiwan. But she did not want to just let me carry the burden alone; she sought for casual job available in our community. There was an umbrella manufacturing factory in our community. They needed more hands to sew the fabric onto the umbrella skeleton. That was not a laborious job, but was rather tedious and required great patience to do it. She persuaded my father to take part in this simple but tedious job. So they started sewing umbrellas.

They started early in the morning no matter it was summer or winter. Sometimes it was so cold in winter morning, and yet she already started sewing the umbrella before dawn. A few times I asked her why not sleep-in a bit. She said to me, “You will know an elderly cannot sleep long when you are at my age.” Sometimes, I stood at her back and gave her a massage over the neck and shoulders, and I could feel this small offering brought her great happiness.

In January 1989, father died at age 74. To my mother, father’s death must have triggered her box of memories as he was the one she had known of since age 10. They had woven their memories over 63 years of time together despite the fact that there was more bitterness than joy.

In April 1990, I accompanied mum to visit 4th sister in Canberra who immigrated to Australia in 1989. That was mum’s first time ever travelled overseas. Upon seeing each other at sister’s front yard, this pair of mother and daughter hugged each other tightly bawling loudly. The emotion erupted like a collapsing dam. To mum, she was just recovering from the loss of her closest man, and to my sister, she was adjusting to a totally new life in a new country. Both of them had tried so hard to compress their emotion to prevent it from eruption, and now it had got its breaking point.

Mother had great impression on the living quality of western country on this trip to Australia. And this could be related to our decision of immigrating to New Zealand in 1992.

Socialable as mother was, she soon had very good interaction with many of the new Taiwanese immigrant families. She attended the local primary school activity, too. Once my son’s school invited all the grannies of their school students to take part in their teaching activity. Each of the invited grannies was to tell the students in their group about what kind of games they played at school when they were young. My mother had no English, however, she bravely entered the classroom together with many English speaking grannies. Sitting on the low stools in a circle with the students of their group, they began their activity. I saw mum from outside the classroom smiling all the time; sometimes looked at the children, sometimes looked out the window seeking me. She told me later that she felt a bit nervous but could feel the friendliness from other grannies and the children.

To an elderly like mum, living in a culturally new country is a torture, and I could only appreciate it myself a few years after our arrival. There were a lot of mental sufferings such as loneliness, frustration, isolation, nervousness and etc. But all are too late. There was no go-back; my children had been accustomed to local life style. I felt sorry for mum. And it could be due to these sufferings, mum devoted her time in practice Buddhist cultivation when we were out at work and her grand children were in school.

She had a counter brought from Taiwan. When she chanted Amitofo (Buddha name) for a whole round of her chanting beads she recorded 1 into the counter. Thus she went on chanting, chanting, chanting till the time we all came back from work and school. Then she called us into her room one by one. She then stood beside us, holding her chanting bead ring and lightly stoking over our back, murmuring her pray and transferring her merit gained from the chanting to us. I later realised that the so called Buddhist retreat in a monastery is similar to what mum had been doing during that period of time. They practice isolation, silence, mindfulness, all as what mum did.
In July 2001 when mother was 86, her weakening kidney made her frail and her doctor sent her to stay in North Shore Hospital for one week for a thorough test. Coincidentally my work was very busy with a lot of incoming stock, so I could not take a whole week leave for mum’s companionship during her hospital check-up. I had to be in and out of her ward and my work when nessary. She could manage to be in hospital by herself in the day time, but was scared of being there without having me beside her in the night time. So the night shift nurse was kind enough to get me a lying chair to sleep by her bed. Mum’s high social skill astonished me when one day I dropped in from work seeing her talking to the resident of her neighbouring bed, a local Kiwi, by means of body language.

The result of the check-up indicated that mum’s kidneys were beyond the effect of medication available, and doctor thought that her condition was not suitable to apply urine analysis treatment as well. Then she was discharged from the hospital with new prescription of antibiotic for keeping her chronic kidney inflammation under control.


Mother’s fragility was getting worse by month after her last hospital stay. Walking from her room to our dining room could take ages to complete, so I requested a wheel chair from the hospital to move her around in the house. This was about the last 3 months of her life time when she became bed bound. The last month saw her losing her appetite. I asked her if there was any pain or discomfort, and she said no pain except being weak. To a devoted Buddhist, having no pain and discomfort and being conscious at the last stage of life is a great blessing.

On the 28th June 2002, I was preparing to go to work. Though knowing mum was very weak and had had no appetite for food for 3 days, I thought this was another day of saying good bye to her and would be seeing her in bed when I got home from work. I waved her good bye before going to work and she pulled her left hand out of the duvet, smiled and said in her mouth “good bye.”

When I was at work that day, I had an impulse of writing a fax to Dr, Alex Chan, her doctor. In the message I told him that mother had been very frail in the past 2 weeks and it seemed that her life was to come to the end any time. And I begged if he could make a home visit of her on that day? But I did not receive his reply before I was off the day.

When I got home and entered mum’s room, we exchanged greetings and then I proceeded with the routine of catheterisation to empty her bladder. Half way in the process, I suddenly heard mum breathed heavily and then all became silent. I raised my head and realised that mum had just passed away. In panic I rang her doctor at the clinic. There was no answer. So I rang his home. A lady answered my call in English, seemingly the doctor’s house keeper. I requested to speak to Dr. Chan; she declined. So before she hung up, I hurriedly said to her that because my mother was dying I needed to talk to her doctor. Still, she wouldn’t pass the phone on, instead she said to me that if mother was dying then I should call 111 for ambulance but not doctor.

I went back to mum’s room making sure the Amitofo music was still on. Beside this, my brain seemed to be blank; didn’t know what to do next. About 10 minutes after the phone, I heard a car driving up the driveway and parked by the door. It was Dr. Chan. He must have figured out, from the phone and the fax message sent to his clinic, that my mother was dying. He had no obligation with my request for home visit whatsoever, but he came. I was very grateful to what he did to my mother. After some checks, he proved her death. Upon hearing this announcement, tears came out of my eyes, and I knelt down before mum. Doctor held me up and asked me to get mum’s death certificate from his clinic next day, then I saw him off.

We followed the tradition of Pure Land sect of Buddhism to keep mum’s body undisturbed for at least 8 hours. During this period we played the Amitofo music non-stop to remind her soul of focusing on the goal of shifting to the Blissful World of Amitofo.

The funeral agent was called in the next morning to sort out the detailed arrangement of the funeral.

Our friend David Huang helped to invite whoever knew my mother to attend the funeral. My boss, Thomas Chiu, was invited by me to deliver a speech about my mother. Two of my colleagues, Mark and Dennis came to pay their condolences, too. Many of mum’s friends turned up. Mrs. Jean Huang presented a pair of flower bunches to pay her respect and condolences. My 4th sister and her daughter Meiling flew from Sydney to attend the funeral. I asked the funeral hall host to play the Amitofo music as the background sound throughout the event. The funeral was simple but very solemn.

As mum had mentioned to 4th sister once in their meeting that she wished to be cremated and her remain be kept in Fo Guang Shan Temple in Sydney. She had this wish because my 4th sister's huband, died two years earlier from liver cancer, was buried in Sydney and his soul plaque was kept in that temple, too. So sister arranged a Buddhist ceremony in the temple on August 3, and I flew from Auckland on the same day with the box of mum’s remain. We went to the temple directly from airport.

The solemn Buddhist ceremony began as soon as mum’s remain was placed on the altar by Buddha’s statues. The chanting of sutra, smell of incense, and the atmosphere in the hall triggered my sadness that my tears streamed down even after the rituals were finished. And then mum’s remain is stored in the pagoda where solemn Buddhist music and worships are presented twice daily to remind the souls of continuing practice in order to achieve complete liberation.

Almost 6 years after mother left this world, I write about her life briefly hoping my descendants whoever reads her stories will be touched by my mother’s decent spirit and endeavour to learn her virtues.

Thursday, April 24, 2008

Reflexology


Reflexology is a technique of healing by means of massaging the reflection spots on the foot sole of the ailing part of the body. The reflection spot of an ailing part is usually tender when right pressure is applied on it, and is normally not feeling that tenderness if its corresponding part of the body is just fine.

I learned this technique from an elderly, Lee Ching Zheng, in Taiwan. Mr. Lee was an enthusiast of reflexology. He learned it from self-taught by carefully studying books published by a catholic priest, Fr. Joseph Wu, in 1980’s. He claimed that his mother-in-law had had spinal stenosis for a long time and required injection from the pharmacy almost daily. But since he started applying reflexology on her, she stopped going to the pharmacy for injection.

In 1985, Mr. Lee was keen to teach me this technique when he knew that my wife had been infertile since our marriage 8 years ago. Besides the free one-on-one lesson, he presented free tool, the massager made of wood for applying strength on the reflection spots on the foot sole.

Through consistent practice of this technique for sometime, I became quite experienced, and I extended my service to cover all of my family members. Sore tooth, headache from cold, stomach ache, sore knee and etc were treated and the feedback were encouraging. Two years later, my wife was pregnant. Although we had tried other alternative remedies such as herb, acupuncture and Fensui at the same period of time, we believed reflexology had played a big part in my wife’s pregnancy.

Then in 1992, we emmigrated to New Zealand. One day in April 1992, I came across a piece of advertisement about tuition for reflexology on the newspaper. I thought reflexology is a thing only believed in the Oriental, but why it appeared in the newspaper of a western country. I was also surprised to know from the advertisement that the tutor was called Suzanne, a German nurse. Being curious to see if it is the same technique I had learned from Mr. Lee, I enrolled on this 3 day course to be held in Mt Eden Intermediate School.

On the day the course started, I entered the classroom and found that I was one of the only two Asians in the class, the rest of the class of 15 were Europeans. Then I realized natural healing technique is also believed by westners.

In the three day class, we were asked to practice hands-on to each other. When Suzanne asked us to find our own partner, I found that I seemed to be the most popular in the class because many of them came to ask me to be their partner. Once I was working with Shirley who was president of a speech club in Ponsonby. Her enthusiasm in learning this technique impressed me very much. The stuff we learned from the course was the same as I had learned from Mr. Lee in Taiwan.

Life of an immigrant is busy and stressful. And it is especially so if you are from non-English speaking country. During this time, I had made acquaint with a Korean whom I called Ajoxi. He lived in the same suburb where I lived, so from time to time he walked to my place after dinner, and we usually had chat in the garden. From our talk, I could tell he was worrying something. Finally he told me he worried about his health because he constantly felt soreness somewhere in his abdomen. He did even grab my hand to touch that spot. I encouraged him to consult with his family doctor but he seemed to be reluctant to do so. Then I told him that I had learned a technique called reflexology. I also told him how it worked and if it did not work on him it at least harmed him nothing. So we did a few sessions. And one day I received his call, “hi, Dr. Chen, the problem in my abdomen is gone. From now on I should call you doctor Chen.”

Dr. Chen!? I felt being flattered yet there was a feeling of joy inside me upon hearing Ajoxi’s remark in the phone. A feeling of being helpful that was all because of my reflexology teachers – Mr. Lee and Suzanne.

Sunday, March 09, 2008

Visit to Chicago


This picture brings up my memory about my involvement in the press installation during the years from 1986 to 1991 when working for Young Wei Industrial Co. in Taiwan. The surrounding of this press in the picture is pretty oily and messy, however, it is very typical to most of the pressrooms I had been to in the 5 or so years. The smell of ink, lubricant oil, and all sorts of chemical required in the production of newspapers are so unforgettable to me. From picture I can tell it is the Urbanite press of Goss International.

During that period of time, we had installed about 10 new presses and relocated 10 old ones. Each of these presses was composed of at least 10 printing units, folder, reel stands and press control panel. With so much technical stuff in one thing, each of the jobs requires teams of mechanics, electricians, plumbers, riggers, and experienced press erecter. The press erecter supervises the overall installation to make sure every detail of the jobs done by various teams is up to the required standard. And my job was like a coordinator, translator, and casual helper. Most of the time on the site, I was everywhere with the foreign technician and erecter from the manufacturer.

Sometimes there were technicians and engineers from two or more different press component manufacturers, and I was required by them at the same time to do translation up or under the press. Sometimes there were dispute on a job between the supervisor and the mechanic or the riggers, and a lot of swear words were in the exchanges of conversation, so I had to be careful and skilful with my translation. The technique I used from time to time in making all the parties happy again was softening the offensive part of the conversation, and bought them a beer after work.

Once we won a sales contract for two Metroliner presses from China Times, one of the largest newspapers in Taiwan. This machine is double the size of Urbanite press, and its production is completely controlled by central computer system. According to the contract, the supplier was supposed to run a two week training course for the customer’s press crews in the class at their headquarter in Chicago. My boss wanted me to attend the training to gain knowledge about this huge machine so as to be able to help in the installation more efficiently.

So in early November 1989, I flew with the customer’s press crews to Chicago for the training class. That was my first time ever to a western country. I was very excited in seeing the super nation of the world. What impressed me was the size of beef steak we were treated in the dinner on the first night of our arrival. It was as big as three pieces of normal steak sold in Taiwan. And the salad bowl was as big as the cooking pot. Gee, I thought our host was playing jokes with us by ordering this super size of dinner. Turning around to look other tables, they all had the same size of steak. I used to be a big eater, and don’t like to waste food, but that was the first time I left half of the steak and salad unfinished.

It was also giving me a chance to meet with people whom I had had frequent fax exchanges with. Rick Kordas was the one I sent fax to almost everyday when I was not at the installation site. He was a graduate of Chicago University. At the time of my visit, he had just bought a house for his family of six. Both he and his wife were working, a busy family. He offered to take us out for dinner every night, but I courteously declined considering his family life after work.

It was an intensive course covering everything of operation and maintenance. Though we could not digest everything fed to us, we were familiar with every component of the machine to an extent after the training. We only needed to review the manuals and more hands-on to be able to run the machine. On the last day of the course, the tutor, whose name has been forgotten, presented each of us a certificate of complete of training. On the next day, I flew back to Taiwan while the customer’s group carried on their extra week long visit to LA.

The shipment of machine arrived early next year, and we had a period of six months of time being very busy in setting up the machine. Although my school study was not in the areas of mechanic and electronic, I had learned quite a lot through this five year period of time working with the technicians and press crews. This extra learned knowledge has enabled me to repair our family appliances such as clothes dryer, lawn mower, stove, audio, and etc.

This has been something I haven’t had a chance to share with my children who have become too busy with their own study or career when I have time to tell them some stories as a retired fellow. So I post this past experience of mine on the web hoping one day my children will read their dad’s story of learning from involving.

Sunday, February 03, 2008

What has gone wrong?


The last weekend of January was not so peaceful in Auckland. Two lives were killed. One young man was stabbed to death by a robber when he was working in his father’s dairy shop. Another young man was caught tagging on the fence by the property’s owner. The owner chased the young man with a knife and killed him.


This two homicide cases shocked the nation. Although statistics indicates January is usually the peak of homicide crime because of the scorching heat and the bills to be paid after the Christmas holiday, both are factors trigging the anger, but two lives killed in one day in the same district of the city is something shocking the society. What has gone wrong?


In the following couple of days, topics about this two cases were hot in the talk-back radio shows. All sorts of ideas were raised up by the audiences calling in. Politicians gave opinions and preventative remedies. Ideas such as keeping students at school until 18 of age; provision of skill training or apprenticeship and so on were heard here and there. The ideas discussed were like trying to revive a dying tree by working on its branches and leaves while the real problem in its root was totally overlooked. Instant cure of a problem seems to be a most welcomed approach.


However, the problem will be just getting worse if its root, the lack of moral education, is not taken care of. Without moral education, the value of matters will be confused, and people feel it is ok to do whatever they like. The moral education taught by sages in olden days has been discontinued since long time ago. Nowadays, moral education is rarely seen. What is everywhere on TV and all kinds of media are topics relating to craving, hatred,violence, sexual stimulus. How can a safe society be maintained if there are so many negative things around.


It is said that in order to prove that people can be taught with good values, Master Chin Kung, has started his experiment on transforming a small town in China, called Tangchi, into a model town by delivering the teachings of ancient sages. The outcome of this experiment is profound. The following web page has detailed report on this educational project. http://www.radio86.co.uk/china-insight/from-chinese-media/5030/peace-at-home-peace-in-the-world

Amitofo

Wednesday, January 02, 2008

The eighty four thousand ways


It is said that the first sermon Buddha gave after his enlightenment is about the four truths he rediscovered in his 9 years of quest of ending the suffering of all sentient beings. The first truth states that life is full of suffering. The second is that the cause of suffering is craving. The third states that the suffering can be eliminated. The fourth says the answer to the elimination of suffering is the Eight Fold Paths. I learned this teaching from Rev. Kusula’s pod casts in his website: http://www.urbandharma.org/udharma9/dharmatalks.html

Many of my friends don’t agree with this concept that life is full suffering. They think their life, though is not perfect, is not bad either. They have money in their account. They travel overseas now and then. Their children have above average school performance. Their marriage relationship is quite ok. They seem to be satisfied with everything in their life. So they say “don’t just look at the dark side of life, mate!”. What they say are not wrong, but we all forget that one day we will face death. This is the most difficult thing to deal with, not to say all the troubles along the route.

It is right that we should not only look at the dark side of life. But it is true that besides the happy things there are sad things waiting for the right time and place to visit us. When this happens, suffering arises. And if we are not trained to deal with it, we suffer .

I know a friend whose son was a top student in high school. Not only that, he was a filial son to his parents. A brilliant future seemed to be guaranteed to him. One night when he was studying at home, he suddenly felt headache in agony. So his father called up ambulance to rush him to hospital, and they followed it in their car. As soon as they had parked the car and walked into the ward, their son was announced dead.

A friend of mine had an enviable family. His marriage was the model to every one of us. No one ever had seen them saying any harsh word to each other. Their children are all grown up and are very nice to them. Who knows one day when he was standing in the back yard he fell down to ground and died on the same day. Aged 55.

Another story was about someone I had met once long time ago. Wealthy and healthy he was, his family never thought that one day in his regular swimming session he would die from heart attack upon jumping into the water. Aged 45.

Not just that someone we love dies will cause us suffering, the less serious incidents can bring us all sorts of negative feelings, too. Have a visit to the hospital and you will be reminded of the world of suffering. Any part of our body goes wrong will make us suffer from annoying discomfort to as serious as experiencing the process of death depending on how bad our physical problems is. Mental health problems can drive people mad too. Even everyday living is full of unpleasant incidents. Divorce, domestic violence, extra-marital affairs, drug addiction, alcoholism, and etc you name it, Google search proves it.

Man! No one can be guaranteed to be free from one or the other of these problems. And according to Buddha’s teaching, the suffering caused by any of these problems originates from our craving, hatred and ignorance, the so called “three poisons” in Buddhism.

About 2500 years ago, Prince Siddhartha Gautama, like every one of us in this world, experienced the suffering as well. He determined to find the cause and solution to being free from suffering. He found The Four Noble Truth mentioned above.

The fourth truth is about The Eightfold Paths: 1) Right understanding 2) Right thought 3) Right speech 4) Right actions 5) Right livelihood 6) Right effort 7) Right mindfulness 8) Right concentration.

Although by following the eight paths the elimination of suffering is guaranteed. But because every one of us is unique, so each of us needs to find a most suitable way to get rid of the three poisons and fulfil the paths, thus Buddha taught eighty four thousand ways for us to choose from.

By chance, I viewed a video tape of Dharma talk by Master Chin Kung in year 2000. That tape is titled “Get to know Buddhism”. From this video I was introduced the method of chanting Amitofo as the most suitable way to me to reach the ultimate goal of Nivana.

I have got the method, but it is up to me to practice the way consistently in order to attain a true happiness. Suffering might not disappear immediately; I know at least no more new bad karma is to be entered to my merit account.