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Wednesday, August 29, 2007

My Perspective: A Path Of Redemption For Michael Vick

By Scott Nance

I'm not a sports fan. I didn't have any opinions of football star Michael Vick regarding him or his career. I hadn't even heard of him until stories of his dogfighting came to light in the press.

I'm a dog owner. More than that, I have cared for dogs for years and volunteered to help many lovable dogs find new homes, sometimes coming from abusive situations. So you can imagine my opinion of him once I learned of his crime. To describe it in words would be only cliche and trite.

My opnion of Vick began to change somewhat when I read an account of his guilty plea in court. After expected the repudiations of dogfighting, he said, "I will redeem myself. I have to."

I found it to be a somewhat surprising thing for him to say and if he is sincere, a really brave thing to say, as well.

If Vick is sincere, it is possible for him to redeem himself and I began to think about a path he could travel to accomplish that.

Vick, of course, will have to travel that path following whatever mode of spirituality he finds in his heart, be it Christianity or any other.

However, I can only describe that path within the context of my own spirtual path, that of Buddhism.

In that light, what Vick has done -- abuse and kill other beings simply for sport and pleasure -- carries very heavy negative karma. That karma is already bringing him suffering and will continue to carry suffering in the future.

But it is said that the only good thing about negative karma is that it can be purified. Michael Vick can purify his negative karma.

The history of Buddhism is filled with stories of horrible murderers even who once they sincerely dedicate themselves to the spiritual path completely purify their karma and attain enlightenment, which is the goal of all Buddhists.

Clearly, as Vick himself said, he will have whatever prison time he is given to reflect and think about his actions. That is the start.

There are reports of the Vick's employers looking to reclaim millions they paid him on his contract. I hope that after prison though he is left with some wealth.

That wealth won't be for his own benefit. Rather, it could become a valuable resource to a great number of good works to benefit as many others as possible.

In fact, to be serious about redemption, Vick has to forget about any future back in pro football. He has to begin sincerely and consistently putting others before himself.

Considering his crime is dogfighting, Vick may consider appropriate after prison his first good works will be to help homeless and abused animals, donating time and money to animal shelters, humane societies and the like. If he does have a love of football, he could also give of himself to youth sports and other youth programs, for instance.

Vick, however, should not in any way advertise or promote his connection to these good works. If he does, he may get some good PR in the short term but not actual redemption. No, Vick needs to do these good works not to shine attention to himself but rather merely for trying to help others and be of benefit. If Vick goes about these good acts but the world never hears of them or even hears much of Michael Vick ever again, he will be on the right path.

If Vick does all of this, along with prayer, meditation or whatever other spiritual support Vick finds to be authentic to him, he will find a genuine transformation within himself.

It will likely take a lifetime, but Michael Vick will be redeemed. He is right, he has to be.

More than that, if he is successful, Michael Vick will actually become a role model of all of the rest of us who need our own redemption.

A journalist for 20 years, Scott Nance is publisher of Life, The Universe Media, including the Life, The Universe ... and On The Hill news sites.

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Thursday, June 28, 2007

Emotional Resonance and Rocket Launchers: A Meditation on 'Lost'


By Scott Nance

It's long been said that religion and science don't mix. Religion and science fiction -- that's another story.

Scifi has been lifting religious themes and symbolism at least as far back as Leonard Nimoy's borrowing of a Jewish blessing to create the Vulcan salute for the original Star Trek series.

Often, science fiction has adapted concepts from Eastern religions, such as Buddhism. Imbuing an alien culture with Eastern, Buddhist-like trappings and whatnot has proven to be a quick and easy way to convey a sense of the exotic upon the fictitious culture.

These Buddhist attributes tend to be things like using meditation practice, incense or some similar embellishment as a story or plot device.

The "ascension" by the Ancients of Stargate SG-1, for instance, sounds a lot like an interpretation of Buddhist Enlightenment. (However, while the recent Stargate Atlantis episode "Tao of Rodney" postulated a technological path to Ascension, Buddhist Enlightment only comes from lifetimes of meditation and dedicated practice.)

But no recent series, anyway, has made such a concerted, albeit murky, connection to Buddhism than the ABC drama, Lost. The very name of the organization that runs the research stations on the mysterious island on which Lost is set -- the Dharma Initiative -- is an unmistakable Buddhist referrence. Among other inrepretations, the word "Dharma" most frequently refers to the teachings of the Buddha, or what is Buddhism itself.

If that wasn't enough, the survivors of Lost spent much of the second season of the series living down a hatch where they had to key a series of numbers into an old computer every 108 minutes to prevent catastrophe. The mumber 108 is a very significant one for Buddhists, as Buddhist rosaries, or malas, are made up of 108 beads which we use to count out our recitations of mantras.

All of these familiarities have gotten more than one Buddhist wondering what the real connection is -- beneath the many mysteries of Lost -- between our Dharma and the Dharma Initiative.

The Buddhist magazine, Tricycle, last year ran a story on the show and its continuing flirtation with Buddhism.

"Certainly at least one of Lost's writers seems to have some real knowledge of Buddhist practice," writer Dean Sluyter says.

I don't think we Buddhists are offended by the producers' use of at least the trappings of our religion on Lost. All of the fans of Lost are left to try to figure out the many questions and mysteries the series puts out there -- these odd references to our faith only present we Buddhists with just one more such puzzle to wonder about.


A former entertainment journalist, Scott Nance has been author of the online Emotional Resonance & Rocket Launchers column for more than three years. He's also been a longtime member of the USS Chesapeake, an active Star Trek and science fiction club in the Washington, DC, region, and is the publisher of Life, The Universe Media. Email him with any comments.












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Sunday, January 21, 2007

5 Things You Don't Know About Me




Editor's Note: Readers know this is not a personal-oriented blog. However, I was "tagged" for an Internet blog game called "5 Things You Don't Know About Me" by fellow blogger Paula Mooney.

Who am I to not go along, so here it is ...

1. I have a wonderful family here in Baltimore ... my beautiful wife Lisa, my age six-going-on-16 daughter Anna and stepson Steven. (Oh, and our Boston terrier Charlie and our bird, Sir Chirps.) We live in the Hampden neighborhood in a house that's 126 years old (and decades ago it was a funeral home).

2. I am a Buddhist. Several years ago I came to the Dharma and took Refuge within the Karma Kagyu school of Tibetan Buddhism. Practicing the Dharma today is very important to me and is part of nearly every aspect of my life. I am a student of Shamar Rinpoche. Living in Baltimore, I meditate and practice the Dharma at the Baltimore Shambhala center. Through meditation and the Dharma, I slowly come closer to the nature of mind and basic goodness.

3. I went to college at Hampshire College in Amherst, Mass., where there were no grades, tests or fraternities. Hampshire operates as an alternative, experimenting institution. It's very self-directed. No babysitting of students. You either succeed or you're gone. It was a great experience.

4. I used to write entertainment books. I wrote books on vampire movies, the rock group ZZ Top, the TV series Deep Space Nine and ... I cringe to admit it, but yes, the pop group New Kids on the Block.

5. I've loved being a newspaper reporter. You get to meet a lot of interesting people and see things most people, well, only ever get to read about. For instance, about 10 years ago I got called to a Hindu temple in surburban Maryland about a sacred statue that was drinking milk. Apparently, other Ganesh statues worldwide were also drinking milk. You don't see that everyday.


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