Tag: suffering and transformation
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The Body That Burns Without Burning

They said the old saint lit himself on fire, Twelve hundred years of light, arms ablaze, And I thought: how can I match that pyre With my small hands and ordinary days? The Sutra promises we all can wake Right here, right now, in skin and bone, But if the price is everything I break—…
William Altig
body as temple, Buddhist modernism, Buddhist Poetry, contemplative verse, contemporary religious poetry, daily devotion, doctrinal poetry, East Asian Buddhism, embodied practice, endurance, Enlightenment, faith under persecution, Gratitude, human resilience, Karmic Transformation, Lotus Sutra, Mappō, meaning in suffering, metaphysical poetry, mundane as sacred, Nichiren Buddhism, Perfect Offering, perseverance, philosophical poetry, religious philosophy, sacred ordinary, sacrifice reinterpreted, Shikidoku, Soteriology, Spiritual Practice, Spiritual Resilience, spiritual struggle, suffering and transformation, theodicy -
The One That Stays

“The One That Stays” wrestles with an ancient question: How do ordinary people offer something sacred when the old stories demand the impossible? Inspired by Buddhist teachings about sacrifice and perseverance, this song explores the tension between spectacular acts of devotion and the quiet heroism of simply continuing—of getting up, showing up, and staying present…
William Altig
Americana, bluesy folk, Buddhist Philosophy, contemplative music, contemporary folk, daily struggle, devotion, endurance, faith and doubt, folk pop, gospel influenced, human spirit, inner strength, meaningful life, ordinary heroism, perseverance, philosophical lyrics, protest song, Religious Poetry, resilience, roots music, sacred ordinary, social justice, soul folk, spiritual songs, standing firm, staying power, suffering and transformation, survival