The Buddha machine
A remarkably clever gadget that has been causing a tiny
sensation worldwide, The Buddha Machine, a small soundbox
made in China,
is magic in your pocket. It comes with a tiny integrated speaker, a volume
control, a mini 1/8-inch jack output (for headphone or big-shot musician
options), and a switch to choose among the nine rough-sounding, low-bit-rate,
and droney loops stored on a chip and played by the
mini sound system. It’s an anti-Pod, if you will.
Buddha Machine co-creator Christiaan Virant explains, “The original box was used at
Buddhist temples to chant or play prayers, and there are a number of different
explanations of why they invented this box in China.
Some people say it’s because modern people are too lazy to go to the temples to
say the chants to the Buddha like they used to, so they invented this small
machine to do it for them.”
Virant continues, “Other people
say it’s because there are fewer and fewer Buddhist monks out there. In the old
days, the number of Buddhist monks was much higher, because that was considered
a very high-class profession, and now more and more people are going into
business or whatnot, so there are less monks to do the
chanting for the Buddha. So they made a small box to do it in the place of a
human.”
I can see this beautiful little piece of genius helping to
smooth out hip and cranky little babes in need of sleep. Even better, maybe it
will cause family members with soap opera haircuts to immediately start yanking
out hair.
— Dave Cross
This week for families
Cinderella Fri-Sun, Dec 9-11.
School of the Arts, 45 Prince St.
Fri 7 p.m., Sat 2 and 7 p.m.; Sun 5
p.m. $9. 324-3535
Old Jake’s Skirts Sat-Sun, Dec
10-11. Big Theatre for Little People, Geva
Theatre Center, 75 Woodbury Blvd. Sat 11 a.m., 2 p.m.; Sun 1 p.m., 4 p.m.
$9-$12. 232-GEVA, www.gevatheatre.org
A Year with Frog and Toad Sat-Sun, Dec 10-11, 17-18. Rochester Children’s Theatre, NazarethCollegeArtsCenter, 4245
East Ave. 2 p.m. $12. 389-2170, www.rochesterchildrenstheatre.org
Fear monster
Peace I leave with
you; my peace I give to you. I do not give to you as the world gives. Do not
let your hearts be troubled, and do not let them be afraid. — John 14:27
When I was a child, I marveled at the prospect of someday
being big — courageous, strong, and
free of all fear, like Mom and Dad. The dark depths under the bed, the eerie
silence behind the closet door, even the twisted shadows reaching through the
window held no power over them. Life without fear held such promise!
At age 42, I’m still hoping to someday be bigger than my
fears. Like most of us, I merely traded my childhood fears for mortgage
monsters and wellbeing ghouls that sometimes overwhelm, robbing me of sleep far
more aggressively than did any imagined threat of my youth. I haven’t learned
my lesson: It is not a monster I fear; my
fear IS the monster.
Fear is the opponent of peace. It constricts the flow of
blood to our brains and narrows our thinking. It is the basis of all anger,
crime, and conflict.
Peace as the world gives — usually defined as the mere
absence of war — is fearfully inadequate. Instead, let us with our children
embrace a higher personal standard: peace as the absence of fear. Do not let your hearts be
troubled. Do not let them be afraid. Examine and understand. Cast enlightenment
on your darkest fears. May our world sleep well tonight.
— Rev. Corey Keyes
This article appears in Dec 7-13, 2005.






