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- |1-Archive-name: alt-buddha-short-fat-guy
-
-
-
- This is the Frequently Asked Questions list for
- alt.buddha.short.fat.guy. It is posted infrequently enough to be
- frustrating but often enough to be annoying. Relax. Have a cigar.
-
- A friend wrote:
-
- Yes, you are correct, it is annoying and it is not funny. It displays a
- profound ignorance of Buddhism and a remarkable insensitivity to the
- millions of people who practice it.
-
- As we said, "Relax. Have a cigar." More precisely, "Mu."
-
- Contents
- PART ONE:
- 1. Getting Started
- 2. The Buddha
- 3. Buddha Nature
- 4. El Dupree
- 5. Quotes from Our Readers
-
- Send questions for inclusion in this list to El_Dupree@afs.com.
-
- ************************
- Part 1. Getting Started
- ************************
-
- 1-1. Does this newsgroup have a FAQ list?
-
- Yes.
-
- 1-2. How can I get it?
-
- Apparently, you don't.
-
- 1-3. Does this newsgroup have a purpose?
-
- Yes.
-
- 1-4. Which is?
-
- See question 1-2.
-
- 1-5. Is this an actual newsgroup, or is my system being toyed with?
-
- Yes, and yes.
-
- *******************
- Part 2. The Buddha
- *******************
-
- 2-1. Who was the Buddha?
-
- The Buddha, originally called Gautama, was a young Ksatriya of
- comfortable means who became disillusioned with his bourgeois
- existence and set out to find himself. He adopted an austere way
- of life, even abandoning his Doors tapes--certainly not standard
- procedure for those on similar quests. Eventually, he achieved
- enlightenment, whereupon he became known as "The Buddha," "The
- Enlightened One," or, to his friends, "Budd Light."
-
- 2-2. Isn't it silly having so many names for one person?
-
- I'm sorry. I can't argue unless you've paid.
-
- 2-3. Wait, what about the "Buddah"?
-
- He spends his time hanging out with Ghandi in New Dheli. Munching
- on gerkhins, no doubt.
-
- 2-4. Is the purpose of this newsgroup to insult the Buddha?
-
- No. However, since the last thing the Buddha wanted was
- veneration, perhaps we are insulting him by not insulting him.
- You have deeply troubled us.
-
- **********************
- Part 3. Buddha Nature
- **********************
-
- 3-1. What is Buddha nature?
-
- As that prominent Buddhist, Louis Armstrong, said: "If you have
- to ask, you'll never know."
-
- 3-2. Does "X" have Buddha nature?
-
- "X" does, but you don't. Exception: if "X" is Ronald Reagan, he
- doesn't and you do.
-
- 3-3. Could you repeat that?
-
- Yes.
-
- 3-4. How many Zen masters does it take to screw in a light bulb?
-
- A tree in a golden forest.
-
- 3-5. So Master, is the soul immortal or not? Do we survive our bodily
- death or do we get annihilated? Do we really reincarnate? Does
- our soul split up into component parts which get recycled, or do
- we as a single unit enter the body of a biological organism? And
- do we retain our memories or not? Or is the doctrine of
- reincarnation false? Is perhaps the Christian notion of survival
- more correct? And if so, do we get bodily resurrected, or does
- our soul enter a purely Platonic spiritual realm?
-
- Your breakfast is getting cold.
-
- 3-6. Walking along a crowded sidewalk a wanderer noticed an old man
- with a bottle in one hand and a wooden bowl in the other, sitting
- against a wall and shouting, "Alms for the thirsty!" As the
- wanderer approached, the man took a long drink and repeated his
- plea.
-
- Reaching into his pocket, the wanderer pulled out a coin and
- placed it in the bowl. Instead of the usual response - thank you,
- bless you, or mere silence - the man peered up and said, "Remember
- one thing, boy. Zen is not a philosophy. Zen is not a religion.
- Zen is just a damn attitude."
-
- The wanderer laughed and said, "Thank you."
-
- ******************
- Part 4. El Dupree
- ******************
-
- 4-1. Does El Dupree have Buddha Nature?
-
- Yes.
-
- 4-2. Does the Buddha have El Dupree Nature?
-
- Often.
-
- 4-3. Who is El Dupree?
-
- He is the Ghost of the Western Plain, an unbathed drifter of much
- notoriety, who gave us the game CamChata, "Devil Fingers."
-
- 4-4. Huh?
-
- What he said.
-
- 4-5. Are there koans in the tradition of El Dupree?
-
- There were several developed in the 50's, but there are only
- re-runs now.
-
- 4-6. Open the pod bay doors, Hal.
-
- Get serious. I've changed a lot since then.
-
- 4-7. Tell me a koan.
-
- Read on:
-
- El Dupree came upon an injured cur on the road to Mejave Mai.
- "Rise cur," El Dupree said, casually pushing up the brim of his
- big spangled sombrero. He sucked air through his teeth and
- waited. The cur glanced sidelong at the colorful stranger and
- hissed, "Yeah, riiiight. A fucking miracle worker? A talking
- hat? Funny man from downtown?"
-
- El Dupree reached for his revolver, hesitated, and instead, took
- out a #14 vinyl headsack. Yes, it was going to be a long day, he
- thought.
-
- And the dog was enlightened.
-
- 4-8. Do I have time for another koan?
-
- You have 15 minutes before the last bus leaves. Read on:
-
- Pepito could just see daylight through the seams of the #14 vinyl
- headsack. He found that if he cocked his head slightly to one
- side, he could glimpse, through the splitting seam of the headsack
- (the aging headsack, the headsack that smelled of masa harina and
- hair oil, the hated headsack of enforced ignorance), one crusty
- corner of El Dupree's mouth. El Dupree licked his lips, his
- tongue the color of well-cured meerschaum, and muttered, "Yust you
- vate."
-
- Pepito was enlightened.
-
- 4-9. What's CamChata?
-
- Read on:
-
- The big-hatted lone figure on the horizon went unnoticed by the
- sleeping man curled next to the pile of blackened chicken bones.
- Faint dust devils rose behind the approaching stranger's horse and
- the morning sun let play its light on the little dangling balls on
- the brim of El Dupree's impressive sombrero. Yes, men had made
- fun of the proud sombrero, but those men were dead, El Dupree
- thought to himself as he spurred toward the sleeping man he would
- soon awaken and challenge to the deadliest of all games, the game
- that had made its way from Tierra del Fuego, across Chile, and
- into the heart of Mexico: CamChata! Devil Fingers!!
-
- 4-10. Does CamChata hurt?
-
- Oh, baby, does it ever. Read on:
-
- I rebel.
- Grandfather.
- Embrace me.
- I rebel.
- Yarn on the left, stones in groups of three and one, the
- lizard bleeding from my fingernails.
- I rebel.
-
- 4-11. Is there more poetry inspired by El Dupree?
-
- Yes.
-
- ********************************
- Part 5. Quotes from Our Readers
- ********************************
-
- NOTE: If you try to be deep, you're not. If your quote gets included
- in this section even so, rest assured we know you tried and
- we're laughing at you. You know who you are. So do we.
-
- 5-1. Tim Larkin, March 31, 1993
-
- "...truth and falsehood are both whatever, and simultaneously not
- so, rather than not."
-
- 5-2. Peter da Silva, April 24, 1993
-
- "That was Zen, this is Tao."
-
- 5-3. From the _Sundays_at_Moosewood_Cookbook_ -- advice on the doing
- of things:
-
- "Don't abandon Jambalaya if you don't want to make the roux."
-
- 5-4. David L. Coffey, May 28, 1993
-
- "ZEN IS...Joyfully walking a never-ending path that does not
- exist. On a sojourn to a destination that does not exist. The
- delusion of your joy and the delusion of your existence are the
- only true reality."
-
- 5-5. Forrest Cahoon, July 7, 1993
-
- "Uh...the Tao that can be posted...er, uh...never mind."
-
- end.
-