First, mapping the human genome, now creating synthetic life. These are some of the accomplishments of Craig Venter, founder and president of the J. Craig Venter Institute a nonprofit genomics research institute. He was interviewed on the NPR program, On Point. His team was able to create sequences of DNA from four bottles of chemicals according to instructions provided by a computer. This chromosome was then injected into a microplasma micoides cell and was integrated into its replicating process such that after millions of generations it fully integreated the new genetic instructions. Venters calls it a “self-replicating cell that’s parent is a computer.” This is not artificial life or life from scratch, but life modified by changes in DNA. Venter says strikingly in a statement that might have been uttered by the Buddha if he had a Ph.D. in biology, “We change second to second in our cells and we are software driven machines, and the software is DNA.”
This is a good definition of impermanence — we are always changing at the cellular level and as Venter’s research demonstrates, quite changeable. We know that most of the cells of our body die and are replaced every seven years and we also know that the atoms in our bodies change over about once a year — EVERY atom! Now, too we know, moment-by-moment our cells are changing. We are not snapshots, still life’s capturing something fixed in place. We are motion and change, fluid and malleable. We are more video than snap shot, more action painting than still life.
What are the implications of this? In any given moment, I can ask myself the question, “What am I trying to protect here, and why?” Instead of protection, can we move with the changing nature of things. After all, our cells are changing moment-by-moment and so is everything else. We can celebrate this change, or at least take a keen interest in its undulations and vicissitudes. Or we can try to keep these changing tides fixed. I’m in a good mood right now, my energy bright, my body relaxed. The part of my mind that doesn’t want to understand impermanence thinks this is the way it should be, what I’m entitled too. But, of course, reality doesn’t really care about what I think things should be like or what I think I should be entitled to, it just does its thing of change. So a few moments later I feel a twinge of tension in my neck shooting down to my hip. The frame of this moment looks and feels different from the last. I can complain about this. I can bemoan my fate and put energy into trying to recapture that previous moment. This winds up getting rather tedious after a while. So, rather than putting energy into trying to keep things the same, I’ll reflect on the dynamic, changing nature of my cells, imagine them dancing their dance of life.
-
Advertisement
-


click here to see all of our uplifting newsletters» Search This Blog
Subscribe
Upcoming Events
Come join me for a heartfelt weekend retreat at the Barre Center for Buddhist Studies, 17-19 February 2012 I will be teaching the Buddha's dharma through metaphors. BCBS is a wonderful, peaceful place to learn mindfulness and Buddhist psychology Click on this link to register . I hope to see you there this Winter.
Featured Books
- "108 sparkling insights into mindfulness" -- Larry Rosenberg, author of Breath by Breath
- "Playful, wise, and memorable" -- Tara Brach, author of Radical Acceptance
- "Fresh and straightforward voice"-- Shambhala Sun Magazine
- Wild Chickens and Petty Tyrants on Amazon
- Wild Chickens and Petty Tyrants now available for Kindle
- Wild Chickens and Petty Tyrants from Wisdom Publications
- Wild Chickens and Petty Tyrants from Your Local Independent Bookseller
- Read more praise for Wild Chickens and Petty Tyrants: 108 Metaphors for Mindfulness
- The Everything Buddhism Book in the Beliefnet Store
- The Everything Buddhism Book now available for Kindle
Social Networking
About the Authors
Dr. Arnie Kozak
Arnie Kozak, Ph.D., Mindfulness-Based Psychotherapist, Author, and Speaker; Clinical Instructor Departments of Psychiatry and Medicine, University of Vermont College of Medicine.
» Posts by Dr. Arnie KozakTag Cloud
acceptance attachment attention Barre Center for Buddhist Studies Being Healthy is a Revolutionary Act: A Manifesto for Thriving in a Mixed-Up World Beliefnet brain Buddha Buddhism chanting David Whyte dharma education epistemology Exquisite Mind Psychotherapy and Meditation Studio five hindrances golf grief His Holiness the Dalai Lama impermanence Independence Day Jon Kabat-Zinn liberation meditation MedMob metaphor metaphors for mindfulness Mindful Eating mindfulness Mindfulness Day mindfulness meditation neuroscience New York Times obstacles to practice Pema Chodron present moment living quotes for strength self Shambhala Publications smiling TED Vermont Wild Chickens and Petty Tyrants: 108 Metaphors for Mindfulness Wisdom Publications words of comfort-
Recent Posts
- Participate in Your Own Rescue
- Free the Mind: A New Documentary on Mindfulness
- Polly Young-Eisendrath: Getting Free Of Self-Importance Is The Key To Happiness
- Military Mindfulness
- The Transparent Brain: A New Sense of “Clarity”
- The New Boston Massacre: Marathon Bombing
- Adam Scott: Masters Champion, Hero, Pride of Australia
- Mud Season: Lessons on Impermanence
- Manhunt
- Quiet: The Power of Introverts in a World That Can’t Stop Talking
Blogroll
Exquisite Mind Psychotherapy and Meditation Studio88 King Street, Burlington, VermontWeekly Meditation ScheduleTuesday through Friday 12:00 to 12:45 :: Silent Sitting PracticeThursdays 6:00 PM :: Introductory ProgramSecond Saturdays Mini-Retreat, 1-5 PMAll programs are offered free of charge.Visit exquisitemind.com for more information.- Barre Center for Buddhist Studies
- Basic Mindfulness
- Bow Down Yoga
- Cambridge Insight Meditation Society
- eMindful
- Exquisite Mind Psychotherapy and Meditation Studio
- Go Beyond Words: Wisdom Publications Buddhist Blog
- Imagine Zero
- Insight Meditation Society
- Kripalu
- Lawyers With Depression
- Living Mindfully
- Maya Center for Integrated Medicine and Research
- Mindful Awareness Research Center
- Mindful Hiker
- Mindfulness & Psychotherapy
- One City
- Opening the Heart Workshop
- Polly Young-Eisendrath
- Rev. Sam Trumbore
- Saltwater Buddha
- Shao Shan Temple Spiritual Practice Center
- Shambhala SunSpace
- Stephen Batchelor
- The Frontal Corex
- The Mindful Path
- Tiny Buddha
- Todd Sargood
- Tricycle
- Vajra Dakini Nunnery
- Vermont Digger
- Wisdom Publications
- Yoga Sanga
-
Advertisement

Link to me on LinkedIn