Doug "Ten" Rose's Blog
March 16, 2013
Give it a minute, please.
HEY THAT VIDEO IS AUDIO FOR 3:50, BUT THEN THE VIDEO KICKS IN JUST FINE, NO PROBLEM. HANG IN THERE! THANKS!
Published on March 16, 2013 20:24
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Tags:
adventure, buddhism, hitchhiking, lsd-travel, psychology-philosophy, road-trip, self-hep
for a good time call:
Go to Youtube and search Fearless Puppy on American Road for Ten's first ever (and pretty amusing) Internet TV interview. A good time will be had by all.
Published on March 16, 2013 20:11
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Tags:
adventure, buddhism, lsd, philosophy, psychology, self-help, talk-tv, travel
February 28, 2013
Frontispiece of Reincarnation Through Common Sense
“All my life I have tried to pluck a thistle and plant a flower wherever the flower would grow in thought and mind.” Abraham Lincoln
“The Constitution only guarantees people the right to the pursuit of happiness. You have to catch it yourself.”
Ben Franklin
“The most revolutionary act a person can perform in this country is to be happy.”Dr. Patch Adams
“The Constitution only guarantees people the right to the pursuit of happiness. You have to catch it yourself.”
Ben Franklin
“The most revolutionary act a person can perform in this country is to be happy.”Dr. Patch Adams
Published on February 28, 2013 20:19
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Tags:
adventure, asia, buddhism, new-age, new-book, quotations, spirit, spirituality, temples, wat
February 23, 2013
New FB Group!
Hi! I hope you are well. The sequel to Fearless Puppy on American Road will be printed within a month or two. Here’s a bit from the press release. *Please join the new FB group “Reincarnation Through Common Sense.” *Also, you can sign up for advance purchase to get a signed-by-author copy when they come out. Don’t send $ now! Just contact me with your name, mailing address, and request for advance purchase. When the book is ready, I’ll notify you. You can send the $ then. Thanks!
*ALL AUTHOR PROFITS SPONSOR WISDOM PROFESSIONALS, AND THEIR EFFORTS* “Once you accept the universe as being something expanding into an infinite nothing which is something, wearing stripes with plaid is easy.” Albert Einstein
Reincarnation Through Common Sense is a book of stripes and plaid in the most entertaining sense of Einstein’s words. Westerners have written many books about living in Asian temples. None are like this true story.
The rural Buddhist Monks and Nuns of a forest temple in Asia adopt a very troubled soul from Brooklyn, New York. He can’t speak the language. No one there speaks English. He is penniless, has no intention of studying spiritual discipline, and is amusingly psychotic. He writes to future readers in order to tame his comic, cosmic insanity. This is not a book by a theology student! The author is nonetheless given access to the ancient roots and spiritual wings that define the Wisdom Professionals who have rescued him. He redefines life and reports the details in a manner so intimate and natural that you’ll think you are sitting on a barstool, and in the temple, next to him. You may laugh your butt off on the way to Nirvana!
Magic is redefined as objective reality and common sense. Spirit is presented as a functional friend, without the fairy dust. Moods run from adventurous psychosis through enlightened bliss as writing styles run through ancient prose to the most erudite modern internal rhyme (hip hop/rap). The main character’s life runs through death and into reincarnation without ever leaving his body—and he describes this process to us in living color. This down to earth treatment gives a clear view in simple terms of truths that we more often find fossilized within concretized symbols beneath rusting metaphor. For an experience unique in comedic drama, spirituality, adventure, and sheer creativity, start reading Reincarnation Through Common Sense from the beginning.
www.fearlesspuppy.org
*ALL AUTHOR PROFITS SPONSOR WISDOM PROFESSIONALS, AND THEIR EFFORTS* “Once you accept the universe as being something expanding into an infinite nothing which is something, wearing stripes with plaid is easy.” Albert Einstein
Reincarnation Through Common Sense is a book of stripes and plaid in the most entertaining sense of Einstein’s words. Westerners have written many books about living in Asian temples. None are like this true story.
The rural Buddhist Monks and Nuns of a forest temple in Asia adopt a very troubled soul from Brooklyn, New York. He can’t speak the language. No one there speaks English. He is penniless, has no intention of studying spiritual discipline, and is amusingly psychotic. He writes to future readers in order to tame his comic, cosmic insanity. This is not a book by a theology student! The author is nonetheless given access to the ancient roots and spiritual wings that define the Wisdom Professionals who have rescued him. He redefines life and reports the details in a manner so intimate and natural that you’ll think you are sitting on a barstool, and in the temple, next to him. You may laugh your butt off on the way to Nirvana!
Magic is redefined as objective reality and common sense. Spirit is presented as a functional friend, without the fairy dust. Moods run from adventurous psychosis through enlightened bliss as writing styles run through ancient prose to the most erudite modern internal rhyme (hip hop/rap). The main character’s life runs through death and into reincarnation without ever leaving his body—and he describes this process to us in living color. This down to earth treatment gives a clear view in simple terms of truths that we more often find fossilized within concretized symbols beneath rusting metaphor. For an experience unique in comedic drama, spirituality, adventure, and sheer creativity, start reading Reincarnation Through Common Sense from the beginning.
www.fearlesspuppy.org
Published on February 23, 2013 13:05
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Tags:
adventure, asia, asian-culture, buddhism, comedy, dharma, drama, fun, new-age, self-help, self-help-again, spirituality, travel
February 21, 2013
Your World
"This is your world; it is your feast... Look at the greatness of the whole thing. Look! Don't hesitate--look! Open your eyes. Don't blink, and look, look, look further." Chogyam Trungpa Rinpoche
I thought you all might like that one. The revised Fearless puppy and the new Reincarnation Through Common Sense are nearly print-ready. ALL author profits go to fund Wisdom Professionals--beginning with, but not exclusive to, Tibetan Monks, Nuns, and causes. Generous marketing advice and assistance is arriving daily. If anyone has marketing or any type of literary business knowledge or connections, it would be much appreciated. Look for the new books before summer! Stay well & happy, Ten www.fearlesspuppy.org
I thought you all might like that one. The revised Fearless puppy and the new Reincarnation Through Common Sense are nearly print-ready. ALL author profits go to fund Wisdom Professionals--beginning with, but not exclusive to, Tibetan Monks, Nuns, and causes. Generous marketing advice and assistance is arriving daily. If anyone has marketing or any type of literary business knowledge or connections, it would be much appreciated. Look for the new books before summer! Stay well & happy, Ten www.fearlesspuppy.org
Published on February 21, 2013 20:04
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Tags:
adventure, bizarre, buddhism, meditation, philosophy, psychology, road-stories, self-help, sex-drugs-rock-n-roll, spirituality, travel
February 1, 2013
a page or two from new book/available @ 7/13/13
The Society for Creative Maladjustment
Based on a speech by the Reverend Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.
Dedicated to him, the Giraffe Society, Giraffes everywhere,
and to the Giraffe that lives in each of us.
Most institutions share a defensive stance that profits when the public craves stability, fears change, and clings religiously to status quo. These institutions promote that craving for stability and fear of change.
In a vain, ridiculous, and doomed quest for permanence, status quo attempts to avoid the growing pains and power shifts required by progressive change. One method used to accomplish profitable stagnation is to downplay the new and better. Status quo has tagged brilliant folks throughout history with some pretty dubious titles in an attempt to trivialize the importance of what these people had to say. We’ve heard “crazy,” “heretic,” “traitor,” “fruitcake,” “on the fringe,” “dangerous,” “revolutionary,” “weirdo,” “loose cannon,” and “commie” every now and then, but the label most often used in polite society to describe those who would rock the boat is “maladjusted.”
Status quo itself is something that lives in a glass house and really shouldn’t throw stones. Fear, bigotry, war, poverty, disease, and poisoning the biosphere are all stones with which our established systems could justifiably be hit. Many societal trends are accepted, but not well adjusted. The same could be said of the people who blindly follow these trends. Not long ago our society considered owning other people to be well adjusted.
It is unfortunate that so many of the better, kinder, more humane humans suppress or even amputate their feelings in order to fit in and gain acceptance. They are frozen in non-action. They accept the unacceptable in fear of the penalties for being thought maladjusted. This impotent intelligence may be even sadder than the brutal ignorance it complies with.
Some folks believe that even the most intense human suffering can be tolerated, as long as they are not the particular humans suffering. But most of us are better than that. Most of us cannot comfortably adjust to brutality. Some are courageous enough to speak out in a maladjusted manner against such injustices.
Look at the folks who were considered maladjusted by most of the people who shared their era. Jesus, Gandhi, Martin Luther King Jr., Mother Teresa, Copernicus—there’s no end to the list. Isn’t it amazing that more people aren’t excitedly running toward becoming creatively maladjusted rather than being frightened away from it?
When Mother Teresa first began her mission “everyone thought she was cracked.” (This quote is from Father Gabrich, a fellow Albanian expatriate and fifty year friend of Mother’s. He said the first Mass given in the first rooms where Mother began her care of the sick and poor.) There are now very few people of any religion who do not recognize her as a Saint. She bucked the traditionalists with an inner strength that a “well adjusted” person cannot access. She didn’t just sidestep, but actually defied conventions of the very church that her life was based upon. She did so with a ferocious courage and revolutionary attitude that dismantled even the most liberally minded ignorance. She made the world a better place by sticking her neck out.
It’s not just famous people who do the creatively maladjusted thing.
The Giraffe Society recognizes and awards people worldwide who stick their neck out for the greater good. They have a long list of regular folks just like us who are charter members of this particular branch of the Society for Creative Maladjustment.
An older couple walks to the bank. They have spent most of their lives in the frosty winters of northern America. They are on their way to transfer accounts to a sunny retirement spot and to arrange sale of the home they are ready to leave.
Before they can get to the bank, they meet a cold, hungry, homeless man with a heart-wrenching true story. They listen. The couple never makes it to the bank that day. Instead, they take the man back to their home.
The couple’s next trip to the bank is to refinance the mortgage on their house, not sell it. They open a homeless shelter in that house and never move south. Their sunny retirement spot is now internal and they have never been happier.
They are publicly acknowledged and awarded membership in the Giraffe Society by virtue of their spiritual membership in Dr. King’s Society for Creative Maladjustment. At one time, the suffering man who they met on the way to the bank was a member too. He got a little too self-involved, had some bad breaks, slipped downhill, and his membership lapsed. That man has pulled himself back together now, helps to manage the shelter, and is again a member in good standing of The Society—and society at large.
He got by with a little help from his friends.
It can be said that the Monks and Nuns at this Temple are full time members of The Society for Creative Maladjustment. They live without sex, without alcohol, and do not eat after noon. They deprive themselves of many things that most of us would consider essential.
There are folks who see these choices as signs of maladjustment, but the results of these labors increase the ability of my Temple mates to help others. The Monks and Nuns are focusing on things they believe to be more important than luxury or even physical comfort.
Are you someone who feels it? Are you someone who admires what that old couple did? Do you understand the good intentions and efforts of the Temple dwellers described in this book? If so, then you are probably someone who, at least occasionally, does a decent thing for a person in need whether or not others think you are well adjusted or maladjusted for doing so.
Thank you.
On behalf of all of your fellow creatures, and myself, thank you very much. Any helpful action can be a good one. Often what appears to be a small thing can end up having a much bigger impact in the long run than was expected at first. Goodness multiplies quickly.
If you don’t feel the point yet, it doesn’t mean you are a bad person. There are logical, if not always obvious, reasons for any behavior. Some of us have been screwed over so severely that we have a right to not recover from it, to stay isolated from, bitter toward, and even afraid of our fellow humans. The major problem with this approach is that it doesn’t work. We hurt ourselves more than we hurt anyone else by using it. Being right doesn’t help as much as forgiving does. Forgiving others is better than suffering.
Everyone has goodness in them. Even those who initially appear evil can turn saintly once they get past the fear and mental clutter that inspire cynicism and neurotic self-concern. When good intentions are put into action, when one person does something nice for another, those fears and that mental clutter begin to dissolve. Everyone benefits. The roots of evil start to rot and begin to pass away.
Every action contains its own automatic, congruent reward or punishment that is inseparable from it. Both instant and long term karma are facts of life.
Reading and talking will only take us so far. Only the doing gets a thing done.
Thinking, talking, or reading about doing is like trying to scratch an itchy head through a leather hat. It is a good start but doesn’t get the job done. People have been talking about a peaceful, happy planet since the beginning of history. It hasn’t happened yet.
The singular chance for the survival and happiness of our loved ones, ourselves, and future generations is being defined by what we do to increase cooperation, health, sanity, happiness, and respect for each other right now.
The Society for Creative Maladjustment has been cleaning the red carpet in anticipation of your arrival. This society’s door is always open. When anyone joins, everyone gets stronger. All approaches to a better world—whether these approaches are scientific, spiritual, economic, or political—must lead through this door eventually. There is no sensible option to the compassionate cooperation inspired by constructive, creative maladjustment.
“Every society has its protectors of the status quo and its fraternities of the indifferent who are notorious for sleeping through revolutions. But today our very survival depends on our ability to stay awake, to adjust to new ideas, to remain vigilant and to face the challenge of change.”
Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.
“Among the most remarkable features characterizing Zen we find these: spirituality, directness of expression, disregard of form or conventionalism, and frequently an almost wanton delight in going astray from respectability.”
D.T. Suzuki
“Once social change begins, it cannot be reversed. You cannot uneducate the person who has learned to read. You cannot humiliate the person who feels pride. You cannot oppress the people who are not afraid anymore. We have seen the future, and the future is ours.”
Ceasar Chavez
Based on a speech by the Reverend Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.
Dedicated to him, the Giraffe Society, Giraffes everywhere,
and to the Giraffe that lives in each of us.
Most institutions share a defensive stance that profits when the public craves stability, fears change, and clings religiously to status quo. These institutions promote that craving for stability and fear of change.
In a vain, ridiculous, and doomed quest for permanence, status quo attempts to avoid the growing pains and power shifts required by progressive change. One method used to accomplish profitable stagnation is to downplay the new and better. Status quo has tagged brilliant folks throughout history with some pretty dubious titles in an attempt to trivialize the importance of what these people had to say. We’ve heard “crazy,” “heretic,” “traitor,” “fruitcake,” “on the fringe,” “dangerous,” “revolutionary,” “weirdo,” “loose cannon,” and “commie” every now and then, but the label most often used in polite society to describe those who would rock the boat is “maladjusted.”
Status quo itself is something that lives in a glass house and really shouldn’t throw stones. Fear, bigotry, war, poverty, disease, and poisoning the biosphere are all stones with which our established systems could justifiably be hit. Many societal trends are accepted, but not well adjusted. The same could be said of the people who blindly follow these trends. Not long ago our society considered owning other people to be well adjusted.
It is unfortunate that so many of the better, kinder, more humane humans suppress or even amputate their feelings in order to fit in and gain acceptance. They are frozen in non-action. They accept the unacceptable in fear of the penalties for being thought maladjusted. This impotent intelligence may be even sadder than the brutal ignorance it complies with.
Some folks believe that even the most intense human suffering can be tolerated, as long as they are not the particular humans suffering. But most of us are better than that. Most of us cannot comfortably adjust to brutality. Some are courageous enough to speak out in a maladjusted manner against such injustices.
Look at the folks who were considered maladjusted by most of the people who shared their era. Jesus, Gandhi, Martin Luther King Jr., Mother Teresa, Copernicus—there’s no end to the list. Isn’t it amazing that more people aren’t excitedly running toward becoming creatively maladjusted rather than being frightened away from it?
When Mother Teresa first began her mission “everyone thought she was cracked.” (This quote is from Father Gabrich, a fellow Albanian expatriate and fifty year friend of Mother’s. He said the first Mass given in the first rooms where Mother began her care of the sick and poor.) There are now very few people of any religion who do not recognize her as a Saint. She bucked the traditionalists with an inner strength that a “well adjusted” person cannot access. She didn’t just sidestep, but actually defied conventions of the very church that her life was based upon. She did so with a ferocious courage and revolutionary attitude that dismantled even the most liberally minded ignorance. She made the world a better place by sticking her neck out.
It’s not just famous people who do the creatively maladjusted thing.
The Giraffe Society recognizes and awards people worldwide who stick their neck out for the greater good. They have a long list of regular folks just like us who are charter members of this particular branch of the Society for Creative Maladjustment.
An older couple walks to the bank. They have spent most of their lives in the frosty winters of northern America. They are on their way to transfer accounts to a sunny retirement spot and to arrange sale of the home they are ready to leave.
Before they can get to the bank, they meet a cold, hungry, homeless man with a heart-wrenching true story. They listen. The couple never makes it to the bank that day. Instead, they take the man back to their home.
The couple’s next trip to the bank is to refinance the mortgage on their house, not sell it. They open a homeless shelter in that house and never move south. Their sunny retirement spot is now internal and they have never been happier.
They are publicly acknowledged and awarded membership in the Giraffe Society by virtue of their spiritual membership in Dr. King’s Society for Creative Maladjustment. At one time, the suffering man who they met on the way to the bank was a member too. He got a little too self-involved, had some bad breaks, slipped downhill, and his membership lapsed. That man has pulled himself back together now, helps to manage the shelter, and is again a member in good standing of The Society—and society at large.
He got by with a little help from his friends.
It can be said that the Monks and Nuns at this Temple are full time members of The Society for Creative Maladjustment. They live without sex, without alcohol, and do not eat after noon. They deprive themselves of many things that most of us would consider essential.
There are folks who see these choices as signs of maladjustment, but the results of these labors increase the ability of my Temple mates to help others. The Monks and Nuns are focusing on things they believe to be more important than luxury or even physical comfort.
Are you someone who feels it? Are you someone who admires what that old couple did? Do you understand the good intentions and efforts of the Temple dwellers described in this book? If so, then you are probably someone who, at least occasionally, does a decent thing for a person in need whether or not others think you are well adjusted or maladjusted for doing so.
Thank you.
On behalf of all of your fellow creatures, and myself, thank you very much. Any helpful action can be a good one. Often what appears to be a small thing can end up having a much bigger impact in the long run than was expected at first. Goodness multiplies quickly.
If you don’t feel the point yet, it doesn’t mean you are a bad person. There are logical, if not always obvious, reasons for any behavior. Some of us have been screwed over so severely that we have a right to not recover from it, to stay isolated from, bitter toward, and even afraid of our fellow humans. The major problem with this approach is that it doesn’t work. We hurt ourselves more than we hurt anyone else by using it. Being right doesn’t help as much as forgiving does. Forgiving others is better than suffering.
Everyone has goodness in them. Even those who initially appear evil can turn saintly once they get past the fear and mental clutter that inspire cynicism and neurotic self-concern. When good intentions are put into action, when one person does something nice for another, those fears and that mental clutter begin to dissolve. Everyone benefits. The roots of evil start to rot and begin to pass away.
Every action contains its own automatic, congruent reward or punishment that is inseparable from it. Both instant and long term karma are facts of life.
Reading and talking will only take us so far. Only the doing gets a thing done.
Thinking, talking, or reading about doing is like trying to scratch an itchy head through a leather hat. It is a good start but doesn’t get the job done. People have been talking about a peaceful, happy planet since the beginning of history. It hasn’t happened yet.
The singular chance for the survival and happiness of our loved ones, ourselves, and future generations is being defined by what we do to increase cooperation, health, sanity, happiness, and respect for each other right now.
The Society for Creative Maladjustment has been cleaning the red carpet in anticipation of your arrival. This society’s door is always open. When anyone joins, everyone gets stronger. All approaches to a better world—whether these approaches are scientific, spiritual, economic, or political—must lead through this door eventually. There is no sensible option to the compassionate cooperation inspired by constructive, creative maladjustment.
“Every society has its protectors of the status quo and its fraternities of the indifferent who are notorious for sleeping through revolutions. But today our very survival depends on our ability to stay awake, to adjust to new ideas, to remain vigilant and to face the challenge of change.”
Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.
“Among the most remarkable features characterizing Zen we find these: spirituality, directness of expression, disregard of form or conventionalism, and frequently an almost wanton delight in going astray from respectability.”
D.T. Suzuki
“Once social change begins, it cannot be reversed. You cannot uneducate the person who has learned to read. You cannot humiliate the person who feels pride. You cannot oppress the people who are not afraid anymore. We have seen the future, and the future is ours.”
Ceasar Chavez
Published on February 01, 2013 15:00
•
Tags:
buddhism, giraffe-society, martin-luther-king, memoir, mlk, self-help, spirituality


