Who am I? Have I ever asked this question? What the hell am I doing here? Yeah, constantly every day I'm asking this question. What the hell is going on? Why are you here? Why did God create me? Why am I here? I didn't know who I was or what my purpose was on this planet or even if I had one. And I've spent, you know, I think I've spent my entire life questioning. The questions, who am I, why am I here, have definitely come up. Who are you and why are you here? Who are you? Why are you here? I think everyone, in their own way, at their own time, asks the question, Who am I? Why am I here? I'm Thomas Moore. In my books, I ask those questions. And I find that the people who read my books and talk to me about them raise those same questions, the same ones, over and over again. Over the years, I've been fascinated by the way in which a person's questions deepen. Suddenly one begins to ask things that you never asked before. You ask the questions, Who am I and why am I here? And you may never have asked the question before in your life. In this film, we're going to see a number of people who are asking themselves about their own identity, about the world around them, about the direction they're going. They ask the questions in many different ways, and they have very many different answers to these questions. Another thing we're going to do is see a few of the traditional religions and philosophies that provide us with not always the answers to the questions, but with ways of asking the questions, with images and rituals and traditions. When I was a college professor many years ago, I taught religion to a large number of students. I must have taught maybe 5,000 students over those years. And during all that time, I often showed the films of Elta Hartley to them. These were films about many of the world's religious traditions. She could teach us herself just in the films that we can find our own way deeper into the things that matter to us, sometimes in our work. It doesn't have to just be going off on our own and meditating. Our work itself, in my case, writing books is a way of doing it. In the case of Elta Hartley, she has made these films that themselves are a path toward a deeper understanding. Once you start asking yourself those questions, you're on the path, and you just keep your eyes open and make the kind of friends that help to promote that, go to the kinds of meetings that help to promote that, read the kind of books that help you. I did, in my teens, read the Bhagavad Gita and got hold of a book called 14 Lessons in Yogic Philosophy, which answered the question that I'd had ever since I was in my early teens, why are we here? What's our purpose in life? And this book, 14 Lessons in Yogic Philosophy by Ramacharaka, gave me the answers why we're here. And of course, it's so obvious we're here to grow. Life is a school. And you have to keep coming back until you learn those lessons. I think Christian mysticism is my favorite. And the reason is because I had to do a lot of research to do that film. And I learned so much about the Christian mystics and Christianity that if Christianity were taught by the Christian mystics, I'd be definitely, mainly a Christian now, you know, instead of being partly Buddhist, because their lives were so gorgeous. And that whole film was such a joy to make because I learned so much. Over the years, I've been surprised to discover how many people are very interested in Christianity as a religious tradition, but don't realize how rich its traditions really are. Many people don't even know that there are mystics and a long mystical tradition within Christianity. I have found in my own life too that being Christian can have many different dimensions and facets to it. I began life being very close to Christianity as a Catholic. And then there was a time in my life when I was quite distant from anything having to do with Christianity and Christian thought. But now with the publication of my books, I find myself in conversations with people rediscovering Christianity in my own way in a way I probably couldn't describe to anybody else because it's so personal. I do think it's awfully important to be able to appreciate and respect these variations on anyone's experience of religion from one person to another or from one period of one person's life to another. We're about to hear from two people who have found important answers to their own questions in Christianity, but they're different. One was raised a Christian and the other recently discovered it. In both cases, we find the intensity with which people approach a tradition like this that has so much to offer and yet to offer it in many different ways. I didn't believe in anything for a long time. And it's like I didn't believe in myself. So there's no way I could possibly believe in anything else. I was lost. I was thrashing around my bed screaming for help and there was no one to help me. This battle was just going on in my head. The night that I realized that I would dedicate my life to Jesus Christ, a lot of my questions have been answered in one form or another. I felt like this was right. Like this is exactly what I needed for a long time. We all want to find our calling, you know. Whether it be career-wise, vocation-wise, with your family, with your spiritual life, there's always that dialogue, you know, why am I here? I think that there is a deeper truth to our existence. It's a little more complex, you know, and God can account for that complexity. But being a Christian in an intellectual setting, I felt was to some degree looked down upon. But Christ is one of the most profound philosophers that ever lived. We can't ignore what he said. We should bring him into that intellectual discussion. The idea that the mass for a Catholic is not only a service, it is Christ himself in the Eucharist living with us, nurturing us. So in some sense, yes, Christ lived 2,000 years ago, but he's alive and well on Sunday morning. You know, you can feed your soul with the Eucharist. You can go to confession. You can get true forgiveness. You can know that you've been forgiven by God for something you did that you feel awful about. You know, you're here to love and to serve God. And who is God? God is love. One of the strong images we just saw was of a head crammed with activity. I think this is a pretty good indication of where we are in the 20th century. We all have heads full of activity, thoughts, plans, interpretations, explanations. In fact, I think in this century we tend to think of the interior life as a mental life. But it wasn't always so. When you go back in time and not too far back, you find that people talked about the interior life as a life to be lived, not just an understanding of the external world. And people entered monastic life in the past. I know they still do, but they entered in the past in great numbers. When I was a young man, I also entered monastic life when I was very young and found that this world was one of very vivid, interesting, active, fascinating interiority going inward. And it was not mental. It was a going inward. I think one of the problems we have today is that we separate these things. And so we feel the interior life as this set of problems, mental problems, and we look for experts to tell us how to deal with them. We experiment with various ways of trying to understand them and then get them under control. Whereas maybe the thing to do is to positively develop the interior life and to meditate in our own ways and maybe even create our own monastic experiences in our simple ways in our homes and our day-to-day existence. We're now going to look at an excerpt from Elder Hartley's film Christ Your Mysticism. And I'd recommend that you look at the images in this excerpt. The sounds, the music, the costume, the dress, and the postures and attitudes that people have as they show us what it's like to nurture the contemplative life. We live in a world apart, detached from the desires of worldly men. Their one desire, to find God, to feel, to experience His presence. Daily routines are focused on this experience. A time for manual labor, a time for spiritual reading, another for prayer and meditation, and a period of communal worship. We are made in God's image, in the sense that we are created for pure love. But we have fallen from the divine likeness by centering all our love upon ourselves. Monastic life was designed to re-educate and reform man's capacity to love, liberating him from fixation upon himself, teaching him to love the divine image in his fellow man, and finally leading him to love perfectly in spirit and in truth by returning to the source of love, God Himself. That God was now present, revealing Himself in persons who were spiritual. God was not far off in the sky. He was here with us. Heaven itself and hell too were states of consciousness within each of us. The monk spent much of the day in silence, for the man who is to have a state of mind receptive to God's presence must learn to find the solitude within, wherever he may be. Sometimes when people feel a call to enter a contemplative life, they withdraw from the world. They go to a monastery, they go on a retreat, go on a pilgrimage, just get away for a while. But there's another movement that's very old and traditional, and that is to enter more fully into life, and at the same time develop your contemplative experiences. The example we're going to see now is of a man who decided to do both, to live a contemplative spiritual life and be very much involved in the world, and he found his way to do this in Zen Buddhism. Born and raised Roman Catholic, I love Jesus. I love the whole idea of a compassionate spiritual person. I love the message that he gave. It's just there was something about it that I didn't care for. You know, it's nice to put two dollars in a basket that goes around on a Sunday morning, but it's hands-on. I've got to be hands-on. For me, spirituality is hands-on. If I'm not having hands-on experience, it's worthless. I was hurting. Yeah, I was lonely. I was incredibly lonely, feeling disassociated with all of society. Well, for the past five years, five and a half years, I've been practicing Zen Buddhist. I'm actually a postulate Rinzai Zen Buddhist, American monk. A lot of what I do is meditate on Ponder Cohen's, those silly little questions that can't really be answered with logical thought. Practicing Zen Buddhism, it's incredibly engaged. Realizing the no separation between my life as a monk in a temple as compared to my life as, you know, Joe American on the street. I can attain liberation from my pain. I can attain enlightenment realizing that I don't have to be afraid that I'm lacking anything, that I'm not going to die because, oh, I don't have the right job, I'm not making enough money, or she don't like me, oh my God, I'm going to be alone the rest of my life. I'm a full, complete human being. Graced by God, there's a spirit in me that is universal. Donald is not your usual image of the monk. Centuries ago, another young man left home, knew he had to find something else in his life, and went out on his own search and asked his questions, the same ones we're exploring. Twenty-five hundred years ago, in the foothills of the Himalayas, a baby boy was born to the Gotama family. They called him Siddhartha Gotama, who came to be known as the Buddha, the enlightened one. What kind of man was this? What brought about his search for enlightenment? He was born into a life of luxury, protected from the ugliness, the tragedy, the desperation of the world. Legend has it he journeyed into the village. There he saw for the first time the spectacle of human suffering. He saw that pain and suffering, disease and death were not incidental to the life of man. They were identical with the life process itself. He felt the sorrow so intensely that he determined to find a remedy. He left his wife and young son, abandoned all material possessions, and went into the forest to join the many wandering holy men. He became aware of the need for a new kind of effort, mental concentration rather than physical austerity, and stressed over and over again the possibility of discovering reality without divine aid. Your fate is not in the hands of God. It is in your own, he said. You yourself must make the effort. Buddhas only point the way. Buddhists believe that the purpose of life is to attain complete enlightenment, and Buddha said that this was possible for everyone, no matter what caste or what sex, that all that was necessary was to follow the eightfold path. This eightfold path is the basic formula that will eliminate suffering by correcting false values and giving true knowledge of life's meaning. We must learn to think and speak with care and truthfulness, abide by basic moral laws, earn our living in ways that are not hurtful to others, and maintain a consistent pursuit of the goal by thinking about it incessantly and by learning to contemplate with a deep mind. Buddhists believe that enlightenment comes from a sudden flash of intuition, which occurs after time spent in disciplined meditation. There is no centralized authority, no pope, no elaborate ceremonies of conversion. One can become a Buddhist by simply practicing the principles of the eightfold path, not a set of rules, but a technique of action by which the individual can overcome his self-centeredness. Sometimes, the answers to our deepest questions are not at all rational. You can't put them in words. And religions for centuries have understood this, and they have taught people how to meditate. Meditation doesn't always or doesn't usually end in any kind of understanding that can be expressed in language, but it leads to another place of understanding, a deep place. There are many forms of meditation. Many schools have thought about how to meditate. We're going to see one, as presented by Alan Watts. Alan Watts was a figure who was important in the 1960s. He was very important in my life. He introduced me to Eastern religions, and especially to the beauty of religion itself. Meditation, it's best to sit on the floor or the ground on a cushion, either cross-legged or in the lotus posture, if you can manage it, or as I'm sitting, which is kneeling and sitting back on my heels, which I find the most convenient. This position is slightly uncomfortable. There is a certain amount of strain on the legs, but the advantage of this is that it keeps you awake. You should have your spine comfortably erect, not tight, not slumping, but just evenly erect, and your hands resting on your lap, palms upwards one upon the other. And then you settle into this position, so that you, in the same way as we learned to let the breath settle itself out when you breathe out, so you learn to relax into this position and settle down comfortably on the ground, and you will discover that if you take it easy, time will disappear, and that you will be able, as judged by the clock, to sit in this way comfortably for, say, forty minutes to an hour. The religions offer a very interesting paradoxical answer to our question by saying that we can find out who we are, we can find out why we're here, when we discover divinity, God, an absolute sense of God. Of course, no religion has presented this more clearly than Judaism, the sense of an absolute God, the sense of a God who is involved in every aspect of life, in the family, in the home, in politics, in community, and in isolation and solitude. You can't find a religion that has more of an emphasis on the absolute God. I think of God, firstly, as a creator of the universe, and as the one who set things in motion. And I think of God as not only having created the world and then stepping back, but still having an active role in the world, that God is constantly here and there and aware of the actions of the earth and what's going on. And I look at God as a source of comfort in terms of prayer and everything, and as a sort of, I guess, motivation to do good things, in other words, to serve God, to want to do things for that reason. I'm seventeen years old. I'm here now working as a counselor in Camp Ramah. I was studying in Orthodox Day School, but I wasn't really practicing everything that I was learning. I was learning the Orthodox studies, and then on the weekends I'd be partying and doing my thing. But as I got older, I left the Yeshiva and started going to public school, and I guess at that point I realized something was missing in terms of religion, so I got involved with a youth group. I'm the International Vice President of United Synagogue Youth, and my position is mainly to fifteen thousand member organization in America, Canada, Hungary, and Israel. And my main position is to coordinate the Israel programming for the organization in terms of awareness and political action and those sorts of things. And I don't think that things are as bad as they seem. I think there's definitely hope for the future. There are views that are more stringent and views that are more lenient, and I would say mine is pretty moderate. It's a good balance of tradition and modernity, you know. It's a little bit of everything. It's important also just in general if you're going to identify yourself as a Jew and, you know, walk around and say that you are, to really, to make it something that you're proud of and that people will look at you and say, that's a Jew. You know, it's a good thing to be. As far as my parents and my family goes, we would say we were culturally Jewish, but religiously, no. I mean, I guess around Christmas and Hanukkah time, we would light candles and I would get presents. And then once a year I was dragged for the Passover Seder, which I hated, just because it was boring. And they made me, you know, even as a little kid, they'd want to go through the rituals of reading the books and asking the questions why on this night do we eat sitting instead of reclining instead of standing. And I was always uncomfortable doing that because it didn't mean anything to me. I didn't necessarily believe in God even as a little kid. And I didn't like saying these words because it just felt phony. It didn't feel like a part of me. I label myself an agnostic. And then I always say, well, at least I think so. Which is basically what an agnostic is, is someone who's not sure. And maybe other people say, oh, okay, you know, make up your mind one way or another. Well, how am I supposed to make up my mind? I don't know if I believe in God. I want to believe in God because I don't want there to be, because I'm happy with this life and I don't want it to end. I don't want there to be nothing after. I don't think it matters. I mean, I could spend my life believing in God and from day one to the day I die, I will believe in God. But really, if there is a God or if there isn't a God, it doesn't really matter. I think I'm apathetic and cynical, but doesn't mean you can't be happy and intelligent and keep working to change things. Americans these days seem to be rather uneasy about the notion of being dependent. I often think that we have a declaration of independence in this country and that idea of independence has seeped deep into our bones and our psychology is full of it. People try very hard to become independent. You don't hear much about people trying to be dependent. And yet, dependence has a very important place in life. And I think that part of the answer to our question, who am I, is to discover that I can only define myself or understand myself in relationship to somebody else. And that relationship implies mutuality, relying on someone else, being in community, depending on someone for my very survival and even for my self-understanding. So I think this notion of dependence can be deepened. If dependence is a problem, a psychological problem, I would say, this is a therapist in me talking, I would say that the solution to that would be to discover a very deep, solid sense of dependence. And of course, this can be then expressed in religion in the sense that we can be dependent on God, we can be dependent on divinity, on the world itself, the world in which we live, on an absolute sense of the divine. And it is this kind of absolute divinity that we find in the religion of Islam. I'm grateful every day when I wake up that I'm Muslim and they have Allah with me every day. Allah is outside and inside. Whenever you think of Allah, Allah is with you. And He stated this, that whenever you think of Me, I'm there. It's like 24-hour service, in a matter of speaking. It's a beautiful religion. I know most people have stereotypes that Muslims are terrorists, and that we're a bunch of fanatics, and that we don't know what we're doing. But it's not like that at all. Islam is probably the, it is the most beautiful thing I have ever known. What is the meaning, or the true meaning of being here? Is it to make money? Is it to be powerful? No. It's to be happy. It's to help your fellow brother, your sister. I did feel different because there are certain practices which I must do because I'm a Muslim, which my Christian and Jewish and other non-Muslim friends did not have to do. For example, during Ramadan, there's a month during the year which Muslims are required to fast from sunrise to sunset daily. No eating, no drinking, no smoking. If you're married, no relations. Total abstinence. And that's to teach you patience, to teach you to be generous when you give charity. So during the lunch time, I'd go to the cafeteria and not eat, and my friends would offer me something. I said, no, I'm fasting. And they'd be, what, you're fasting? What's that? So I'd get a chance to explain what it is. And some of them would look at you funny, and some would say, oh, that's really interesting. Through the daily prayer that a Muslim must practice, there is an interaction between one's self and God. You're always asking for mercy, for forgiveness, for guidance. So in that way, yeah, I have talked to God. Why am I here? I'm here to worship. Worship who? Worship the Creator. I'm here to worship, to please, and to serve Him. Now we're going to see a short excerpt from a film by Ilta Hartley on Islam. This too is a film that I used to show students many years ago. And the images in this particular film have stayed with me all my life. The image of the whirling dervishes, the washing of hands, the prayers, and all the rituals that we see, the architecture, the colors, the designs. It shows us that in the purest religion, you find that the spirit that is felt in an interior way just shows itself, pours out into creating a beautiful world around, all around the people who are practicing the religion. Youngest of the great religions, it reverenced Christ and the prophets of Israel. But to Israel's monotheism and Christ's love thy neighbor, it added how to love Him. Trust in God and His messenger, Muhammad. Pray five times each day. Give to the poor. Fast during the month of Ramadan, and if possible, once in one's lifetime, make a pilgrimage to Mecca. This was and is Islam for the majority. But for others, there was more. We call these other Sufis. They wanted to purify and spiritualize Islam from within. Give it a deeper mystical tone. Infuse into it a spirit of liberty and love. For most Muslims, God is on the periphery. The Sufis wanted Him to stay center. They wanted to shift Him from background to foreground, to meet Him face to face. Religiously, they were an elite, aspiring higher and willing to assume the heavier disciplines their extravagant goal required. The Sufi tries to pray without ceasing, to make of his entire life a prayer. Every faithful Muslim will enjoy God's presence eventually. The Sufi wants Him now, here, in this very life. Islam is a circle. God is its center. Its circumference is His law. Each Muslim observing that law stands as a point on the circumference. Sufism is the radius, the path that leads from the circumference to the center. For every outside, there is an inside. For every body, a soul. The soul of Islam is Sufism. One of the feelings I get as we explore religions, various religious traditions, in answer to our question of who am I, why am I here, is a sense of deep pleasure and vitality. There is a deep, deep source of happiness, of joy, of pleasure that is connected to our quest for meaning, so that meaning and pleasure go together, or meaning and the most concrete pleasures of life. They can also go together. We see this especially in Hinduism, where the celebrations and festivals, the food, the music, the images, the shrines, all profess that God is everywhere, that everything is divine. That gives the entirety of life, then, a sense of vitality and pleasure. Religion then becomes an art of memory, a way of remembering that all things are not just flat, reasonable, practical, but they have a soul, they have a heart. Religion shows us that. What's being done here are various rituals to the gods. Each particular ritual does have a significance. The significance is very involved and very complex, and the priests are very well-versed in the rituals and prayers that need to be said for each particular god. Usually this is the site where homams are done, where basically things are offered to the gods, such as ghee, which is basically melted butter. Those things are offered to the gods at this site. And it can't be any place. It has to be a certain... and there's a certain method, a certain way that it has to be offered. What I get out of practicing Hinduism is the fact that it gives you an inner strength. I find that it gives me a strength that also tends to guide you. The goal is, one, the path's to be varied. That's the whole basis of that. That's why I think Hinduism is probably the most allowing religions of the other ones that I've gone through to look at. It allows for you to take any path. At the same time as being a polytheistic religion, it's monotheistic. You can take God from any angle and you'll reach him. Whether you want to call him Christ, whether you want to call him Allah, whether you want to call him Ganesh, it's your choice. God is always there. You don't have to go to temple every day, but God, no matter where you are, God is always there. You can wake up in the morning and everybody, they pray in the morning and they pray before they go to bed, but you don't have to pray every single day as long as you know that God is there and God will always be with you. We have usually meditation and yoga. I don't practice it, but I think when I was younger, I used to go to a Hindu camp. We had, every morning, we used to have... morning, as you say, stretching exercises and breathing exercises, relaxation. That's what's involved in our religion. I'll meditate, but it's more like prayer. Meditation is more like it's a discipline and you'll do it every morning. People wake up at four or five a.m., practice yoga or meditation. I used to it one time. I can't say I do it as much now. I'll do it on and off. It depends on the time. Sometimes I'm going to be tired or something, I just won't be able to do it. I just give myself time to myself. You're going to go through every day deciding whether you have a mission or not, and that stresses out people. People go every day in the morning, God, why am I in this job? Why am I doing this? Am I enjoying this? Am I not enjoying this? I don't think it's even worth it to think about those things. You find out what you like to do, you do it, and you just try to hope that everything else around you is working with it, and you pray to God to help you with it. Whether you're happy, sad, that's what the place is. Wherever you are right now is good. The next day will be better. The message that I would give to the people is that I think religion is important, but I think if it's difficult for a person to suddenly join a religion when they haven't been exposed to it or brought up in it from a young age, but I wouldn't say it's impossible. I think religion is important because it definitely guides you. I found that it tends to prevent you from being lost, which is very easy to have. Hindus believe that existence is a process of finding God within, and that man's life on earth has only one purpose, to identify himself with his eternal self, and so come to intuitive knowledge of Brahman, the Divine. Meditation is a primary discipline by which one reaches perfection. First, one prepares himself morally. Then comes control of the breath or pranayama, and correct posture or asana for control of the body. Meditation helps control the senses and still the mind. Every ritual, symbols painted on the ground, or worship of the spirit in the tree, is directed toward this intuitive experience of the God within. Religious practices performed at home are the only ones that are relatively obligatory. Every home has a small shrine where individual members worship daily. At the highest levels of religious thought, God is abstract, but most need to picture their gods in human form. In addition to worship at home, worship called puja is frequently held at the temple, and offering, simple, flowers usually, is customary. When yoga is mentioned, most Westerners think of the Hatha yoga, the physical discipline that teaches control of the body. But there are many yogas, for yoga means yok, or union, union with God. A yogi is someone who practices yoga. Most forms of yoga involve meditation. Control of the body is taught so that one can sit in meditation for a considerable period of time without having body sensations intrude. Songs in praise of God, called bhajans, are a way of celebrating God's love. So, when assiduously practiced, and when a person centers his heart in the true self, and is exempt from attachment to all desires, he is said to have attained to yoga. Every week I try to read something from one of the great books of Daoism. Daoism, at least as I understand it, has been a very strong influence in my life and work. One of the things I like about Daoism, is the way it unfolds on itself. The image of the strong and the weak folding in on itself all the time, the happy and the sad, and so on. I also notice that Daoism, at least for me, makes me realize that our deepest questions ultimately have a certain lightness about them. There is a heaviness and lightness of the yin and yang of our very questions. So we say, who am I? Why am I here? Those questions can be heard in very heavy tones. They seem so serious. And the answers are not so serious in a certain sense. The answers are, your questions aren't very good. Find better questions. Or you need to deepen your questions. Or you are something outside of yourself. Or you are bigger than yourself. Or you are God. Or you are gods. Or there is one God. There are many gods. There is a certain humor in all of this. I don't think it is a cynical kind of humor at all, but a kind of humor of self-recognition, of saying, yes, my questions are limited. I am limited. And Daoism lets me know that. I would like to read to you a passage from the Dada Jain. There was something formless and perfect before the universe was born. It is serene, empty, solitary, unchanging, infinite, eternally present. It is the mother of the universe. For lack of a better name, I call it the Dao. It flows through all things, inside and outside, and returns to the origin of all things. The Dao is great. The universe is great. Earth is great. Man is great. These are the four great powers. Man follows the earth. Earth follows the universe. The universe follows the Dao. The Dao follows only itself. Now we are going to see Susan Rabinowitz, who brings Daoism to life in her basement school, a teacher of Tai Chi and Chi Kung, who practices the principles of the Dada Jain, but practices them with her body and with her presence within her community. When you encounter Daoists, they don't very often really talk a lot about the philosophy of Daoism. They are more likely to just do something that is balancing and is unifying to their mind and their body. Balance is important to the Daoists, and it is important in as many different ways as you can think about it. What we see these people here doing is balanced in their physical body, it is balanced in their mind, and it is balanced in their energy. The first beginning practice is one where the people stand still and don't move outwardly, but allow their mind to experience their bodies. By experiencing their bodies, really the feelings of their bodies, not just the thoughts in their mind about their bodies, they start to bring their mind and their body into balance. After a little while of this, the natural energy of the human being starts to join this balance of mind and body and becomes balanced as well. I think what is important to me is having a mind and a body and a spirit that really are one thing, that in some way are connected to each other and that in some way are connected to a larger picture. As a Daoist, I contemplate nature's ways and learn to move as the fish that swims with the current or the knife that slips with the grain. The brooks and birds, the mountains and forests fill me with constant delight, but my joy has not ended when grief rushes in, because there is no dark without light, no up without down, no bad without good. It's yin and yang, opposites coming together, creating a whole. Like water, a Daoist deals with obstacles by circumventing them when possible, but just as water erodes the hardest rock if no way round exists, so does he silently persist in following the course set for him by nature. The religions have so much wisdom to offer, and in the next segment we're going to see Tom, Laura, and David, who are doctoral students of religion, talk about the impact of their studies on their own personal lives and the way they think, and how their academic study of religion have led them to take up the practice of Tibetan Buddhism. Part of my interest in Buddhism came about because I was actually very interested in physics, and I read the Dao of physics when I was in high school, and I felt as if somehow well, if science is somehow proving Buddhism, well that's, you know, I was very impressed by that. But in a sense, I finally came around to realizing that it was, like science doesn't really have a heart in some ways. It didn't seem to me to be a path with a heart, and here was, in a sense, a science that didn't just have a heart, it was a heart, you know, it was the science of the heart. Another way to put it is it's the perfection, the culmination of wisdom and compassion in an integrated form, so completely wise compassion and completely compassionate wisdom. This is held up as an ideal, and it's stated to be something that is attainable. Whether or not any of us attain it, the perfection of these two qualities in this life may not be as important as if we are at least moving in that direction towards that idea. If you want to understand your past actions, look at your present condition. And if you want to understand your future condition, look at your present actions. Some of the things that concern me is this notion that when you're adopting a so-called non-Western tradition, that it represents some kind of breakage away from your own self, your own truth, your own culture. And I would suggest that for me, Buddhist practice and values is simply a path in some ways to re-appropriate what it is that I feel is mine and where I came from. We're now going to see excerpts from Elder Hartley's film Requiem for a Faith about Tibetan Buddhism. It was narrated by Houston Smith. I remember again seeing this film many years ago and being so impressed by the gesture that showed the interrelationship between method and wisdom. And the very description of this interrelationship was a form of technology, the moving of the hands in a certain formal traditional way. The Tibetans are particularly good at this technology of spirituality. They use music, costume, especially gesture, color, printing, tools. I have here a dagger that can be used for dealing with dark and evil spirits. Very handy thing to have and I keep it on my desk or nearby all the time. I think that we often, in our effort to answer our questions of who am I, why am I here, become too vague. We need a technology. We need some firmness, some focus in our questioning. And religion can offer this to us and it's one of the really greatest gifts of religion. The Tibetans assume that truth has many levels. The Tibetan wise knew and to the advance they taught that it's all within ourselves. These gods that seem so solid, so objectively real, actually represent our own psychic forces, the calm and fear, the kindness and malevolence that is in each one of us. Those whose minds are simple will see good and evil as residing outside themselves and possessing concrete forms. This ignorance is at root single. It consists in the delusion that we are individuals. With insights so radically penetrating as to be at first scary, we see that separate selfhood is a fiction. Our real identity is with being as a whole. Once we see this, we begin to act with the whole. Easier said than done we say, and the Tibetans agreed. So wisdom requires methods to reach it. For those who like shortcuts, who can take life's medicine straight, method prescribes the royal road of meditation. Go in beeline, straight for the prize, the saving insight into life's oneness that brings eternal release. Truth hits us with greater force if we can see it, not just think it. So the Tibetans painted the truth. In addition to seeing the truth, we can feel it physically with our bodies. So the Tibetans enacted the truth through gestures. Finally, truth can be heard. So the Tibetans chanted. They discovered ways we still don't know how of shaping their vocal cavities to resonate overtones to the point where these became audible as distinct tones in their own right. So each lama thus trained could sing chords by himself. Sensed without being explicitly heard, they stand in exactly the same relation to our hearing as the sacred stands to our ordinary mundane lives. For the object of the spiritual quest is precisely this, to experience life as replete with overtones that tell of a more that can be sensed but not seen, sensed but not said, heard but not explicitly. I can ask myself the same questions. Who am I? Why am I here? The questions are familiar to me because I've asked them of myself many times in the past. The second one I think is the easier one. Why am I here right now? I'm here because I love what I'm doing. The first question is a tough one. Who am I? I ask the question often and I've never been able to answer it but that doesn't stop me from asking it again and again. And I can recommend that you ask that question and ask it very concretely instead of in the abstract. Ask the question, who am I as I watch this? Or even better, who is watching this? Why am I here? Or even better, where am I coming from as I watch this? What is happening to me? Who am I becoming as I sit here and watch all these images? But eventually you know I came to realize that you know all identities and labels being relative as they are you know there are certain ones that might be you know positive for me and Buddhism, the label of a Buddhist I felt was overall a good one. Hopefully I will be you know an obedient servant of Christ, a loving one you know and hopefully I can live my life in that way. It's like the age old question, if we ever knew why we're here, what we're supposed to be doing here, there would be no reason for existence. And I've spent you know I think I've spent my entire life questioning. Being a seeker never ends. It's you know you're always learning, it's a you know it's a never ending process. I think everybody goes through that phase of you know who am I and why am I here and I feel that I am a Muslim and a Muslim is somebody who surrenders himself and submits himself to Allah's will. I can hardly remember a time in my life when I wasn't concerned with why I was on this earth or who I was as a person. Why am I here? I'm here to worship. Worship who? Worship the Creator. I'm here to worship, to please and to serve him. So while in high school I kind of had my you know rebellious like well what am I doing here? I think as an adult the experience of my father dying was a much more pivotal and significant one for me. Each day, each moment, each breath is a different answer to those questions. I'm not a permanent thing. You know right now I'm the guy being interviewed and an hour from now I'll be a guy eating dinner and tonight I'll be the guy who's sleeping but who am I when I'm asleep if I'm not there to know who I am. You know so it's who the hell am I? I don't know.