My daily practice involves reciting portions of the Lotus Sutra in shindoku in the morning and then in the evening reciting the same section from Senchu Murano’s English Translation.
The shindoku is a Japanese pronunciation of the Chinese translation using Romanized text. As Rev. Ryuoh Michael Faulconer explains in the introduction to his Myo Ho Renge Kyo Romanized, “It is a form of faith reading done as practice which our inner Buddha nature understands. When we chant in our native language, we do so to further our understanding.”
Practice and study.
Daily I recite the admonition from Nichiren Shonin’s Instruction in Shoho Jisso Sho: “Earnestly endeavor to strength your faith, so that you may be blessed with the protective powers of Skyamuni Buddha, the Buddha of Many Treasures, and Buddhas in manifestation throughout the Universe. Strive to carry out the two ways of practice and learning. Without practice and learning, Buddhism will cease to exist.”
And I suppose this blogging and my daily posting of the Lotus Sutra section read each days qualifies as part of my effort to “[e]ndeavor yourself and cause others to practice these two ways of practice and learning, which stem from faith.”
But what to do when I’m traveling and away from my home altar?
For a week I’m in the suburbs of Rochester, New York. Specifically, I’m in Jitters Cafe, “Rochester’s Hometown Coffee Roaster,” in North Chili, which is the closest coffee shop to my father-in-law’s home in Churchville, New York.
On past trips I’ve stayed in hotels and kept to my daily practice schedule before and after visits to my father-in-law. But this time my wife and I are saving the hotel cost and bunking on my father-in-law’s couch. And rather than trying to practice in my father-in-law’s house, I’ve decided to do my reading of the shindoku and English versions of the Lotus Sutra each morning over coffee and then take advantage of the free WiFi to post here.