If You Could Ask Seagal One Question What Would It Be?

ORANGATUANG

Wildfire
Thanks TD,I guess that he would miss them, mainly when it was mother's day yesterday and she passed away last year.Do you know if they reached an nice elderly
age?..As i hope that Steven does...Heather.
 

tora

Funmaker
lewis said:
who was your sensei?
or
how long did it take you to train?
or
how old was you when you started?

Hey Lewis,check above-I've already answered your question...just in case it would take you ages to wait for his personal reply.And don't worry,it's a reliable source.Well,more or less.At least the most popular one.
And feel like home.It's not a job,it's an adventure!:D
 

TDWoj

Administrator
Staff member
I believe he's said he meditates four hours a day, two hours in the morning and two at night. Unfortunately, I can't recall the specific article where he says that, and I don't have time to go looking for it....
 

Lotussan

I Belong To Steven
TDWoj, is right!

Here you go Mortimer....




Steven Seagal Speaks

An interview with screenwriter Stanley Weiser
In an interview with screenwriter Stanley Weiser, the martial arts expert and action film star Steven Seagal breaks his silence on his many years of Buddhist practice and addresses criticism of his recent recognition as an incarnate Tibetan lama.

Stanley Weiser: First off, can you tell our readers a little bit about your background in the art of aikido—how long you trained, who your teachers were, when you attained the status of a master?
Steven Seagal: Well, the title of master—on paper—is something that I probably received in the early eighties. I still don’t believe that I have attained the level of being a master. Maybe some other people think I am a master, but in my mind I am certainly not.
Stanley Weiser: When did you start aikido training?
Steven Seagal: In the mid-sixties I started training with Ishisaka Kiyoshi.
Stanley Weiser: What tradition of aikido was that?
Steven Seagal: There is only one tradition. I say that because people who were connected with Ueshiba Morihei, the founder, feel that if someone is doing another style, they shouldn’t call it aikido. For me, his is aikido because he invented it.
Stanley Weiser: Did you have a spiritual-friend relationship with him as your teacher?
Steven Seagal: I did not get to study with him by taking his hand or anything like that. The most I ever got to do was hear him teach.
Stanley Weiser: Were you introduced to Buddhism as an off-shoot of your martial arts discipline?
Steven Seagal: Well, to be honest with you I am not sure. I was born with a serious spiritual consciousness and for many years studied different paths. I went to Japan in the late sixties and began Zen sitting. I visited monasteries, studying Buddhism and receiving spiritual instruction. This was the beginning for me, the way I believed it should be—the development of a physical man through martial arts and polishing the spiritual side simultaneously.
Stanley Weiser: You also studied acupuncture?
Steven Seagal: Right. That was the way I was originally introduced to Tibetan Buddhism. There was a handful of lamas who had come over from Tibet. They were sick and had been tortured. Because I was studying acupuncture, I was asked to try to look after a couple of them, even though I didn’t speak Tibetan. We were able to eventually communicate. I learned a little Tibetan and I became very close with them.
Later on, I became involved in certain things that are not really the kind of things that I look back on with fondness. This was at a time when the Khampas were still fighting the Chinese and the CIA was helping them, and because of the severe repression of the Tibetan people, I wanted to get involved. My involvement, though, was minimal.
These were the years when my interest in Tibetan Buddhism flourished, but my involvement in any of the spiritual endeavors and training remained my personal business—not secret as some of the other things were, but just private. This was at a time when I very much wanted to be invisible in the dharma community, for a lot of reasons. Only in the last few months have I come out of the closet.
Stanley Weiser: Can you say anything about your involvement with the Tibetan freedom fighters?
Steven Seagal: I think it is probably best if we don’t get into that. We are trying to live in a world where we can choose the middle path and seek harmony, and I don’t want to appear to be a dangerous revolutionary person, because I am really not. I am here on this Earth for one thing and that is to see if I can somehow serve humankind and ease the suffering of others.
Stanley Weiser: Who was your root guru?
Steven Seagal: Basically, for me His Holiness Dilgo Khyentse Rinpoche was the greatest, and now I have a very strong devotion to Minling Trichen and His Holiness Penor Rinpoche.
Stanley Weiser: There are the recent reports that Penor Rinpoche has recognized you as a tulku. Is that correct?
Steven Seagal: Gosh, I don’t think that is the way that I would put it. There’s a very despicable magazine that made accusations that I had bribed Penor Rinpoche and all the other higher lamas into giving me recognition. Well, first of all, this a recognition that people have been telling me about for more than twenty years, people who have known me in the dharma for a long time, long, long before Penor Rinpoche ever formalized this. It was something that I had always kept secret, and in fact denied. So if I denied it then, why would I bribe people for it now? You see why it is so pitiful. I don’t mind them insulting me but it is a shame that people are scandalizing the dharma and saying bad things about Penor Rinpoche and other high Nyingma lamas.
Stanley Weiser: You are saying that for more than twenty years people have talked to you about possibly being a tulku?
Steven Seagal: There are people who had said to me that I am an incarnate lama, or tulku. Penor Rinpoche basically recognized me as Kyung-drak Dorje, who was the reincarnation of the translator Yudra Nyingpo. According to Jamgon Kongtrul’s Lives of the Tertons, Yudra Nyingpo was a disciple of the great translator Berotsana and became both an outstanding scholar and an accomplished meditation master. Many of his reincarnations, such as the Minling translator Lochen Dharma-shri, were able to contribute to Buddhism and it seems that he has taken rebirth as a number of tertons (treasure-revealers).
Stanley Weiser: Do you have memories of past lifetimes?
Steven Seagal: From the time that I started going to India and meditating I did start getting memories that were fairly unclear. Just a few days ago, I was sitting with a lama and one of the things he said to me was that you have a very good imprint of many strong past lives, and therefore your realization will come more swiftly than some people’s.
Stanley Weiser: What did he mean by that?
Steven Seagal: I can’t really explain it. But with something like ngondro, if you practice and practice and dissolve into the emptiness with the practice and you are concentrating on bodhicitta more than anything else, you will probably start to slowly dissolve the veil of who you think you are into your true nature, which is a combination of all your lives. We just have to remember them. This is where retreat is beneficial.
Of course, as you practice longer, you will develop some different siddhis. But none of them really matters. What matters is what you do with your life. In contrast to what that magazine had to say, whenever someone has asked me, are you a tulku, what I have consistently said is that I don’t believe it is very important who I was in my last lives, I think it is important who I am in this life. And what I do in this life is only important if I can ease the suffering of others, if I can somehow make the world a better place, if I somehow serve Buddha and mankind, if I can somehow plant the seed of bodhicitta in people’s hearts.
Stanley Weiser: So contrary to the fact a lot of people think this recognition was some kind of sudden discovery, it has been developing over a long period of time.
Steven Seagal: Oh, I have been doing serious meditation in my own pitiful way for probably twenty-seven years.
Stanley Weiser: That’s a long time. Are students supposed to call you any special title.
Steven Seagal: People call me all kinds of things, including four letter words. I respond to all of them. When I walk into a room some people see a dog, some people see a cow; I am all of what they see, it is their perception. But I do believe that buddhanature is in all of us, even in a mangy dog lying in the gutter with fleas. That dog is Buddha to me. People can call me anything they want, I respond to anything.
Stanley Weiser: You gave a public talk in Santa Barbara recently.
Steven Seagal: I have given teachings recently. Always on Buddha’s teachings. The Dalai Lama has said to me to concentrate on bodhicitta. This is what I feel that I would like to do.
Stanley Weiser: The Dalai Lama gave you personal instructions about teaching?
Steven Seagal: I wouldn’t say he has given me personal instructions about teaching. But he has given me personal instruction and has invited me to come to other teachings of his. I would also hopefully study with Trichen Rinpoche and Penor Rinpoche—these are a few of the lamas that I think are quite sublime teachers and great masters, and I am lucky enough to receive some time with them. Hopefully by sitting with them I will absorb some knowledge or wisdom on how to transfer the little bit I have.
Stanley Weiser: When you became a movie star, how did that affect your ego? Did it go out of control? The teachings must have been hard to come by, considering that you were being fawned over and/or reviled?
Steven Seagal: Even when I was in Japan, people tried to deify me, and the reason I left there was that deification is truly a death trap. That is a reason why I kept my spiritual practice to myself in America. I don’t think deification has been one of my biggest problems in life because I am lucky enough to have understood a long time ago what adoration and power really are about. I think the great obstacle was just a lack of understanding of the way.
Stanley Weiser: There is a Buddhist slogan which says, "Work with the greatest defilements first." What would you say is the greatest defilement you have had to face in this life?
Steven Seagal: Not really understanding the difference between desire for spiritual perfection for the benefit of all sentient beings, and feeding myself. This is where I was confused in my youth: I thought that if I could spiritually feed myself to levels of great spiritual attainment then I could do greater things in the world and it would be good for me and therefore good for everyone else. I was just too ignorant and foolish to realize that the basis we have to come from is first and foremost the benefit of all sentient beings. This was a great obstacle for me and it caused me great suffering.
Stanley Weiser: Do you think this recognition is a means to accelerating that process?
Steven Seagal: I hope so.
Stanley Weiser: What meditation practices do you do?
Steven Seagal: I do ngondro, I do guru yoga, this is a great form of meditation for me. I do secret practices that I am empowered to do.
Stanley Weiser: Do you do prostrations?
Steven Seagal: Prostrations are my favorite thing in the universe. Right now I am just trying to simplify all of the exalted practices that are probably over my head, all of the tantras I have tried to learn, and I am just trying to concentrate on bodhicitta. Whenever I get too esoteric into the realms of tantric stuff, I get a little bit lost. Then I find the wisdom of my teachers when they say go back to the beginning and concentrate on bodhicitta.
I am not a highly realized being, I am not a great lama, I don’t have any great practice. I am a very low person just trying to get to first base and the most basic practice of a bodhisattva. I am starting humble memorizations, meditations, and prayers.
Stanley Weiser: How long do you practice for?
Steven Seagal: I don’t have a particular clock. I don’t keep track of exactly how long I’ve practiced, but I’d say it’s usually two hours in the morning and two hours at night.

Stanley Weiser: In the busy movie life of chaos and uncertain ego, where is your sense of equilibrium? How are you able to hold your seat in that world?
Steven Seagal: I don’t really care what other people think of me or say about me. When you ask what gives me solace and eases samsara, it is Guru Rinpoche, the Lord Buddha and all the protectors, dakas and dakinis. I walk forward into this town and give the little bit that I am able to.
Stanley Weiser: What other projects are you spending time on?
Steven Seagal: I want to be able to feed the children who are starving and sick in Tibet. I want to work on projects primarily for children who are hungry and sick. We are also trying recently to do something for people with eye problems in Tibet. Many of the monasteries are in need of help. When that magazine said these inaccurate things about my teachers, what they did not want to say is that I have traditionally donated large sums of money to many different religious organizations. I have done it in secret but it seems that what we call the press believes there is no profit in reporting good deeds. They prefer bad news even if they have to manufacture it.
Stanley Weiser: Part of this, I think, is their inability to reconcile the image of you on screen with that of you as a spiritual man.
Steven Seagal: Acting is an art. It is supposed to be an art. One of my teachers said that art is the mother of religion; by becoming one with ourselves and nature, one becomes one with god. I am not saying that I am a great artist; I am probably a poor artist. But the point is I was able through this vehicle to spread the dharma and help other religious institutions around the world, from Jewish to Catholic to Hindu.
Stanley Weiser: What do you do with all the unchecked anger that comes with working in this back-stabbing business. As a Buddhist, how do you deal with it?
Steven Seagal: I’m human: when cut I bleed like everybody else. When this happens it is best to bring your problems into your practice. By overcoming anger, hurt and attachment we become stronger; you bring these before the Buddhas, before the protectors, and purify yourself.
Stanley Weiser: Your screen persona is that of the noble tough guy protecting the innocent and downtrodden from gangsters, drug dealers and terrorists. In the characters you are playing, you are forced to meet violence with violence. When you watch yourself on screen, how do you reconcile the carnage with the lifestyle of a man practicing the teachings of compassion and non-violence?
Steven Seagal: Well, I don’t think one has anything to do with the other. I think that art imitates life and its function should be a perfect and accurate interpretation of the way life really is, in all of its emanations. I am an artist trying to perfect his craft, but at the same time I do have feelings about violence. I was under a contract with Warner Brothers I could not get out of, and what they wanted me for was the male action films. I was offered extraordinary sums of money by other studios to do different types of movies and Warner Brothers would not let me. Now that I’m out of that situation, this will enable me to do the kinds of films I would really like to do, which certainly are spiritual in nature and which will lead people into contemplation and offer them joy.
Stanley Weiser: Okay, last question. Acknowledging the inseparability of samsara and nirvana, what would you say the best thing about being Steven Seagal is and what is the worst thing about being Steven Seagal?
Steven Seagal: You know, I was sort of raised in Zen and I don’t really look at my life in terms of best or worst.
Stanley Weiser: I was asking from a relative point of view.
Steven Seagal: The thing I am most grateful for is teachers who have allowed me to have the little bit of knowledge and wisdom that is now keeping me breathing. I am grateful for the ability that I have on the screen to bring people happiness and joy and the ability that I will have in the future to hopefully bring people into the path of contemplation. In terms of worst things, I consider my worst enemies and my worst sufferings to be my greatest teachers, so there is always another side to these negative forces.
Stanley Weiser: Thank you very much.
Steven Seagal: Thank you.


Article is here....
http://www.shambhalasun.com/Archives/Features/1997/Nov97/Seagal.htm
 

ORANGATUANG

Wildfire
Well this is sort of a question..If you ever came to Adelaide?... For whatever if you were stuck for some where to stay i would be honoured if you stayed at my place its not an mansion but its my home....Heather..
 

katw_03

New Member
I don't usually reply to these kind of threads(nothing wrong
with it, I might add) :D but I would ask him "What is it about
you that makes my heart race every time I see you on film?"
(katrina blushes)
 

ORANGATUANG

Wildfire
Hi Kat, i know what you mean..I reckon that he has just got that "magnetic attraction"
and he is just one great guy....Heather...
 

Lotussan

I Belong To Steven
I'd ask him: "Baby, can I be with you as long as I want?"

And oh, I do want to be with you sooo sooo sooo much...
 

tora

Funmaker
And I'd like to ask him "What is it about you that makes me look so goofy when I see you?"...though the other times I'd stay away :D...Oops...maybe I should better stay away now as well?:rolleyes:
 

tora

Funmaker
voetballcanine said:
Aww, poor little Tora is star struck. Thats rather amusing, actually. Don't worry, I've been there too...I feel you, as it were.

Come shake my hand now,fellow and let's row the boat together :D
 

Lotussan

I Belong To Steven
"is it true you are a certified herbalist, and if so, do you know of any good herbal remedies for hair loss?"

P.S.

I love you...:)
 
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