Richard the Arahant has died - Discussion
Richard the Arahant has died
Daniel M Ingram, modified 4 Years ago at 7/24/20 10:11 PM
Created 4 Years ago at 7/24/20 10:11 PM
Richard the Arahant has died
Posts: 3286 Join Date: 4/20/09 Recent Posts
My friend Richard, a lay practitioner with a remarkable retreat resume over a very long period of time, has died of lung cancer, passing at home while attended by his family.
He was a deep and profound practitioner though generally quiet and very humble about his remarkable attainments and insights.
Not long ago, we did a video interview in which he talks about what is like to be dying while yet quite awake:
https://vimeo.com/441507202
All the constituents of being are impermanent. Work out your salvation with diligence.
Momento Mori,
Daniel
He was a deep and profound practitioner though generally quiet and very humble about his remarkable attainments and insights.
Not long ago, we did a video interview in which he talks about what is like to be dying while yet quite awake:
https://vimeo.com/441507202
All the constituents of being are impermanent. Work out your salvation with diligence.
Momento Mori,
Daniel
Richard Zen, modified 4 Years ago at 7/25/20 12:08 AM
Created 4 Years ago at 7/25/20 12:08 AM
RE: Richard the Arahant has died
Posts: 1665 Join Date: 5/18/10 Recent Posts
Definitely inspiring video. It matches Daniel Siegel's studies on enlightenment. You have to practice LOTS and few people will get to the point where Being is the habit. Conditioned existence is very powerful.
I could probably speculate that many people deep down don't want it, but something else: Metta, Psychology, other religious goals, and Secular goals.
The ones who do advance a lot have a large desire and prioritize the practice.
I could probably speculate that many people deep down don't want it, but something else: Metta, Psychology, other religious goals, and Secular goals.
The ones who do advance a lot have a large desire and prioritize the practice.
Ed76, modified 4 Years ago at 7/25/20 5:13 AM
Created 4 Years ago at 7/25/20 5:13 AM
RE: Richard the Arahant has died
Posts: 37 Join Date: 6/13/19 Recent Posts
I really enjoyed that and found it very inspirational.
Having watched a few interviews of this sort over the years....I thought it was great. A really light touch that allowed him to talk about his experince...
thanks for sharing...
Having watched a few interviews of this sort over the years....I thought it was great. A really light touch that allowed him to talk about his experince...
thanks for sharing...
Niels Lyngsø, modified 4 Years ago at 7/25/20 12:58 PM
Created 4 Years ago at 7/25/20 8:48 AM
RE: Richard the Arahant has died
Posts: 414 Join Date: 11/15/19 Recent PostsThis very moment, modified 4 Years ago at 7/25/20 10:38 AM
Created 4 Years ago at 7/25/20 10:38 AM
RE: Richard the Arahant has died
Posts: 71 Join Date: 7/6/17 Recent Posts
Did Richard contribute on Dharma Overground at all? If so, did he have any good threads others could share?
Smiling Stone, modified 4 Years ago at 7/25/20 12:37 PM
Created 4 Years ago at 7/25/20 12:37 PM
RE: Richard the Arahant has died
Posts: 345 Join Date: 5/10/16 Recent Posts
Thanks Daniel,
That's a great conversation (with good oriented questions to induce the interesting stuff to come out).
A nice tribute to a life of (serious, dedicated) practice. I particularly appreciate the fact that he shares a path trodden without the maps, (A breath of fresh air, really)... And I'm sure this video will be inspiring to many.
Quite a bit of wisdom sifting through all this. Stuff that moved me :
“I was able to see more clearly the purification of the minds of the monks around me, I was able to experience the fact that there's no ill will, no judgment, it inspired this incredible longing for that, and that was important”.
“ Beware of the idea that you know something when entering a retreat, only when you let go of that any real progress can happen”
“This idea that you know something is an obstacle, because all the insights I ever had, I reduce to words, but the experience of them is non verbal. If you're out there with your own architecture in mind, you're not going to see reality, reality is not a function of language, and it's not a function of concepts. Concepts are useful tools, but they're lousy masters.”
“One is the incredible power of kindness and virtue. The joy of virtue and the absolute power of patience. Patience is another way to experience equanimity. True concentration is not going to happen if there is any agitation in the mind. Virtue is the draining away of that agitation.”
Well, the beginning was about the emergency department, I could relate to that, but I would venture that, although practice is certainly useful, many people experience that letting go into the experience in the midst of pain and exhaustion, it's programmed into us and facilitated when being taken care of (and stripped of any responsibility toward our life) by the medics...
love and metta to his dear ones
RIP Richard
smiling stone
That's a great conversation (with good oriented questions to induce the interesting stuff to come out).
A nice tribute to a life of (serious, dedicated) practice. I particularly appreciate the fact that he shares a path trodden without the maps, (A breath of fresh air, really)... And I'm sure this video will be inspiring to many.
Quite a bit of wisdom sifting through all this. Stuff that moved me :
“I was able to see more clearly the purification of the minds of the monks around me, I was able to experience the fact that there's no ill will, no judgment, it inspired this incredible longing for that, and that was important”.
“ Beware of the idea that you know something when entering a retreat, only when you let go of that any real progress can happen”
“This idea that you know something is an obstacle, because all the insights I ever had, I reduce to words, but the experience of them is non verbal. If you're out there with your own architecture in mind, you're not going to see reality, reality is not a function of language, and it's not a function of concepts. Concepts are useful tools, but they're lousy masters.”
“One is the incredible power of kindness and virtue. The joy of virtue and the absolute power of patience. Patience is another way to experience equanimity. True concentration is not going to happen if there is any agitation in the mind. Virtue is the draining away of that agitation.”
Well, the beginning was about the emergency department, I could relate to that, but I would venture that, although practice is certainly useful, many people experience that letting go into the experience in the midst of pain and exhaustion, it's programmed into us and facilitated when being taken care of (and stripped of any responsibility toward our life) by the medics...
love and metta to his dear ones
RIP Richard
smiling stone
Brandon Dayton, modified 4 Years ago at 7/25/20 12:45 PM
Created 4 Years ago at 7/25/20 12:45 PM
RE: Richard the Arahant has died
Posts: 511 Join Date: 9/24/19 Recent PostsJazz Muzak, modified 4 Years ago at 7/25/20 6:16 PM
Created 4 Years ago at 7/25/20 6:16 PM
RE: Richard the Arahant has died
Posts: 36 Join Date: 9/27/19 Recent Posts
What a beautiful interview. Thank you for this Daniel. I've been enjoying the tremendous number of podcasts and interviews you've been doing over quarantine (they've certainly added something to my practice as well as keeping me sane!), but this one is really something special.
Pawel K, modified 4 Years ago at 7/25/20 6:28 PM
Created 4 Years ago at 7/25/20 6:28 PM
RE: Richard the Arahant has died
Posts: 1172 Join Date: 2/22/20 Recent Posts
I liked realization about current moment being the one that has the potential for absolute and total fulfillment the most.
Very nice life review.
Thank you for posting.
Very nice life review.
Thank you for posting.
Ben V, modified 4 Years ago at 7/25/20 9:28 PM
Created 4 Years ago at 7/25/20 8:17 PM
RE: Richard the Arahant has died
Posts: 418 Join Date: 3/3/15 Recent PostsNoah D, modified 4 Years ago at 7/26/20 11:28 AM
Created 4 Years ago at 7/26/20 11:28 AM
RE: Richard the Arahant has died
Posts: 1217 Join Date: 9/1/16 Recent Posts
Thank you this was tremendously inspiring. May Richard's friends & family feel love, healing, peace with his transition & may he continue his awakening activities ongoing.
If you have any other arahant or anagami friends that would be willing to be recorded in similar interviews, I would request that these videos be made & published, for the benefit of all beings! I think it is particularly helpful if they trained in 'traditional' contexts & were acknowledged by 'established' teachers, because it can help to actually change the culture by introducing more & more, this idea that awakening is real.
If you have any other arahant or anagami friends that would be willing to be recorded in similar interviews, I would request that these videos be made & published, for the benefit of all beings! I think it is particularly helpful if they trained in 'traditional' contexts & were acknowledged by 'established' teachers, because it can help to actually change the culture by introducing more & more, this idea that awakening is real.
Tim Farrington, modified 4 Years ago at 7/27/20 1:52 AM
Created 4 Years ago at 7/27/20 1:52 AM
RE: Richard the Arahant has died
Posts: 2464 Join Date: 6/13/11 Recent PostsDaniel M. Ingram:
My friend Richard, a lay practitioner with a remarkable retreat resume over a very long period of time, has died of lung cancer, passing at home while attended by his family.
He was a deep and profound practitioner though generally quiet and very humble about his remarkable attainments and insights.
Not long ago, we did a video interview in which he talks about what is like to be dying while yet quite awake:
https://vimeo.com/441507202
All the constituents of being are impermanent. Work out your salvation with diligence.
Momento Mori,
Daniel
He was a deep and profound practitioner though generally quiet and very humble about his remarkable attainments and insights.
Not long ago, we did a video interview in which he talks about what is like to be dying while yet quite awake:
https://vimeo.com/441507202
All the constituents of being are impermanent. Work out your salvation with diligence.
Momento Mori,
Daniel
Eternal peace grant unto Richard, O Lord; and let perpetual light shine upon him.
with all due application of the three characteristics to every apparently substantive term, lol.
MuMuWu MuMuMuMu, modified 4 Years ago at 7/27/20 12:26 PM
Created 4 Years ago at 7/27/20 12:26 PM
RE: Richard the Arahant has died
Posts: 19 Join Date: 6/12/10 Recent Postsshargrol, modified 4 Years ago at 7/27/20 1:12 PM
Created 4 Years ago at 7/27/20 1:12 PM
RE: Richard the Arahant has died
Posts: 2694 Join Date: 2/8/16 Recent Posts
Although it's odd to say given all the talk of death, that was a fun interview! Thank you Daniel and Richard.
Jinxed P, modified 4 Years ago at 7/27/20 4:06 PM
Created 4 Years ago at 7/27/20 4:06 PM
RE: Richard the Arahant has died
Posts: 347 Join Date: 8/29/11 Recent PostsTony K, modified 4 Years ago at 7/28/20 1:16 AM
Created 4 Years ago at 7/28/20 1:16 AM
RE: Richard the Arahant has died
Posts: 18 Join Date: 2/9/11 Recent Posts
I had the pleasure of practicing with Richard at few of the TMC retreats. For two of the TMC retreats, I actually sat next to him. I also had the pleasure of meeting his wife.
The first time I met him in 2012 TMC retreat, I knew he was a advanced practitioner. The way he conducted himself, even in absolute silence, I knew Richard was very advanced in the practice.
It is indeed a very inspiring video. It can take a while for your practice to bear fruit. But with patience and perseverence, it is definitely attainable.
The first time I met him in 2012 TMC retreat, I knew he was a advanced practitioner. The way he conducted himself, even in absolute silence, I knew Richard was very advanced in the practice.
It is indeed a very inspiring video. It can take a while for your practice to bear fruit. But with patience and perseverence, it is definitely attainable.
Chris M, modified 4 Years ago at 7/28/20 9:15 AM
Created 4 Years ago at 7/28/20 9:15 AM
RE: Richard the Arahant has died
Posts: 5423 Join Date: 1/26/13 Recent PostsTim Farrington, modified 4 Years ago at 7/28/20 4:19 PM
Created 4 Years ago at 7/28/20 4:19 PM
RE: Richard the Arahant has died
Posts: 2464 Join Date: 6/13/11 Recent Posts
https://vimeo.com/441507202?ref=fb-share&1&fbclid=IwAR06lvqxNFUbX4kEICqhO3jjB-gYvOTWzxgDISfbmcpCD8xwaG0FWhPtbOs
This conversation between two men who have known and loved each other for years, one of them facing his own imminent death with humor and his eyes wide open and still curious and engaged, is just so beautiful, at the human level, and any other level you want to look for. Richard's sense of comedy about his pulmonary episodes and mortality in general is awe-inspiring to me. He basically tells near-death episodes as funny stories. I think the one in the bathroom at the hospital is particularly cool, as it brings home the absurdity of some of the hospital covid-measures, resulting in a man with a terminal heart condition having to walk across the room alone to get a bag of underwear his wife was not allowed to deliver personally. Some flunky just dropped it inside the room! Then he went to pee, and collapsed from the oxygen demand, and somehow he makes it all hilarious, a shared joke, while they revive his dying ass body. It's easy to see why he was so beloved by so many.
This conversation between two men who have known and loved each other for years, one of them facing his own imminent death with humor and his eyes wide open and still curious and engaged, is just so beautiful, at the human level, and any other level you want to look for. Richard's sense of comedy about his pulmonary episodes and mortality in general is awe-inspiring to me. He basically tells near-death episodes as funny stories. I think the one in the bathroom at the hospital is particularly cool, as it brings home the absurdity of some of the hospital covid-measures, resulting in a man with a terminal heart condition having to walk across the room alone to get a bag of underwear his wife was not allowed to deliver personally. Some flunky just dropped it inside the room! Then he went to pee, and collapsed from the oxygen demand, and somehow he makes it all hilarious, a shared joke, while they revive his dying ass body. It's easy to see why he was so beloved by so many.
Cino, modified 3 Years ago at 8/22/21 12:16 PM
Created 3 Years ago at 8/22/21 12:16 PM
RE: Richard the Arahant has died
Posts: 34 Join Date: 2/9/17 Recent Posts
Very inspiring, thank you so much for preserving this, Daniel.
"The teaching is good in the beginning, good in the middle, good in the end. It's also the same in the beginning, same in the middle, same in the end" - that cracked me up! It's right there in the same league as Bill Hamilton's one-liners (that I know of, having learned them off this site).
"The teaching is good in the beginning, good in the middle, good in the end. It's also the same in the beginning, same in the middle, same in the end" - that cracked me up! It's right there in the same league as Bill Hamilton's one-liners (that I know of, having learned them off this site).