Read The Lotus Still Blooms Online

Authors: Joan Gattuso

The Lotus Still Blooms

Table of Contents
 
 
 
JEREMY P. TARCHER/PENGUIN
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Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Gattuso, Joan M.
The lotus still blooms / Joan Gattuso.
p. cm.
eISBN : 978-1-585-42637-9
1. Religious life—Buddhism. 2. Buddhism—Doctrines. I. Title.
BQ4302.G
294.3—dc22
 
Printed in the United States of America
1 3 5 7 9 10 8 6 4 2
 
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To His Holiness the Dalai Lama
Acknowledgments
With a sincere heart, I acknowledge and thank:
• My always loving and supportive husband, David Alexander.
• My brilliant and skillful agent, Anne Sibbald.
• Joel Fotinos and Sarah Litt of Jeremy P. Tarcher/Penguin for endless support and patience with all of my questions.
• My closest Buddhist teachers with whom I have studied—His Holiness the Dalai Lama, Sogal Rinpoche, Thich Nhat Hanh, Lama Chonam, Sangye Kandro and Robert Thurman, and the various Buddhist nuns and monks who have paused briefly on my path.
• My spiritual sojourner, Reverend Linda Spencer.
• The fellow Unity ministers with whom I walk—Reverends Sandra Hymel, Stan and Barbara Smith, Ric Schmacher, Joann Landreth, Suzanne Stover and Ron Stover.
• My precious lifelong friends Susan Miller Schwabe, Nancy Miller, Courtney Lang, Dr. Minner Bowers, Dr. Ileana Pina, Adrienne Gerspacher, Barbara Hill, Bob Javorski, Dr. Keith Jordan, John Broad, Ronn Liller, Karen Karsh, Peter Clancy, Dr. Jacqueline Rogers and Sandy Deck.
• My departed friend Georgia Drakes, who first introduced me to His Holiness the Dalai Lama.
• My family—my mom, who I am so grateful is still with us; my brother Jim and his wife, Vicki; Grady and his family; Sabrina and her family; and my precious and loving stepdaughters, Robyn, Lisa, and Julie and their families.
• My staff members, who are more like family than staff: Felicia Martinez, her three daughters, and Rudi Barnes.
• Last, but far from least, our three precious four-legged “daughters”—transplanted Hawaii kitty Petite Noir and Yorkies Honey and Tara, each of whom brings joy to every day we share.
All great religions have methods for overcoming suffering.
Buddhism is just one example.
 
—HIS HOLINESS THE DALAI LAMA
Introduction
WHILE I WAS ON A BOOK TOUR in Los Angeles, a totally unexpected and life-expanding event began to unfold. I had a free afternoon in which my childhood friend Ginna, then the chef at Deepak Chopra’s healing center, was coming to fetch me for the day. She was temporarily on leave from the healing center, living in the Los Angeles area and working as the personal chef for an action-movie hero while he was getting in shape for his upcoming movie.
Ginna offered me a choice: Would I prefer to go to his movie set, or would I like to see his home in Bel Air? I instantly chose his home, a spontaneous decision for which I remain grateful to this day.
The Bel Air area is most luxurious, lined with manicured estates. We pulled through the gates of a grand home. Upon entering we were greeted in the kitchen by the young live-in girlfriend, who appeared to be a little upset. Ginna, multitalented artist, chef, earth-mother goddess personified, said she needed to talk with the young woman. Did I mind being alone for a while? Of course I told Ginna I did not. It was fascinating sitting in the kitchen observing the famous movie star’s domestic life filled with two nannies, a cook, a helper and a chauffeur—all in the kitchen at the same time. I took in a very animated conversation in the midst of the unpacked groceries that were everywhere. Then the unexpected occurred.
Through the kitchen doorway two Tibetan monks in robes and wearing mala beads entered the kitchen. I immediately stood and bowed to them. They bowed to me, while my brain raced to comprehend this increasingly bizarre kitchen scene. The monks took seats opposite me at the kitchen table. We introduced ourselves. They were guests in the actor’s home while they were studying English at UCLA. The older of the two barely understood English, while the younger was fairly fluent.
After only a few minutes the younger one asked innocently, “Do you want to come to my room?”
I was for a fraction of a second taken aback, not having received such an offer in many a year, let alone from a young Tibetan monk in saffron robes. “Okay, I guess so,” I responded haltingly. This is how I met Lama Chonam, my most precious Buddhist friend.
We walked through the great rooms of the mansion and up the stairs to the second floor. When we reached his room, the young monk opened the door and we entered. It was more like a sanctuary than a bedroom. It consisted of a beautiful altar with many butter candles burning, artistic figures of the Buddha, and various Taras and bodhisattvas.
He placed two chairs near the altar, and we sat at a right angle to each other. In the depths of my being I knew this was a significant occurrence. He opened his heart to me that afternoon, telling me of his arduous escape from Tibet over the Himalayas and into Nepal. His tales were spell-binding. He was amazed that I had been studying with the Dalai Lama for several years and had married my Western spiritual education to my Tibetan practices. We sat together for two hours deeply engaged in conversation, like two lost friends who had finally found each other again after many years or lifetimes of being separated.
When it was time to go, he walked me to the car and said, “We must have very good karma together.” Then he did an extraordinary thing for a monk. He reached out and hugged me, and I hugged him in return. “I have met many Americans,” he said, “but I never have met anyone that I felt so connected to. It is like we are meeting again. And you came to this house so we could meet. We shall meet again.”
And so we have, many times. He has taught Buddhism at my church, and as the years have gone by he has become a respected teacher in his own right within Buddhism.
Lama Chonam has the purest heart of anyone I personally know. And to think that on the day I thought I was to see a movie star’s home, a Tibetan monk saw my heart and I saw his.
I share this tender story because it so solidified for me that it is possible to remain a minister of Christian metaphysics and also to incorporate the Buddhist teachings on my path. Meeting Lama Chonam was for me a Divine message saying, Yes, it can and does all weave together into a most meaningful whole.
 
 
MY JOURNEY IN BUDDHISM began many years earlier, in the autumn of 1991, when two life-altering events occurred for me. The first was surgery for uterine cancer, and the second was my first encounter with the teachings of Tibetan Buddhism and being with His Holiness the Dalai Lama.
This second event happened at Madison Square Garden in New York City, where I arrived in a wheelchair, just days out of surgery. Going to New York was one of those absolute knowings in life, where from my toes to my soul I just knew I had to go.
A friend in my congregation who was deeply attached to the people of India and Nepal, having adopted a child from each country, encouraged me to accompany her. I “knew” I was meant to go. The journey was undertaken much to my husband David’s consternation, since it was so few days after major surgery. I went having no idea what to expect or how my life would be forever changed.
At that first encounter of the teachings my knowledge of Buddhism was minuscule. I had, however, been practicing a Buddhist contemplation technique known as Mindfulness Meditation for more than a dozen years. I simply listened to my inner urging to attend and went. In short order a long-slumbering Eastern soul—more aligned with Eastern thought and culture than Western—within me began to stir and awaken. From that day to this I have inquired, studied, practiced, traveled, retreated and now teach what I have learned and am learning.

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