Skip to main content

Orientation 2

Naikan In Four Movements

This four-part Naikan series grew out of a course I offered at Baltimore Dharma Group in Spring 2025. While Naikan is often framed as a tool for self-reflection, I came to see it as something more relational: not a system of correction, but a practice of returning—again and again—to what holds us, what flows through us, what we leave behind, and what we remain with.

Orientation 3

Threadwork

Here, in language, is the closest I have come to tracing the patterns I live inside — and the patterns I see others living inside, too. ...That, to me, is the heart of this offering: not to win empathy through performance, but to make coherence inhabitable — even when the pattern isn't matched. These pieces are not arguments. They do not aim to persuade. They exist to demonstrate — without explanation. To resonate — without claiming universality. To name the cost of asymmetry — without blaming the other. To hold clarity — without self-erasure.

Orientation 4

Holding Vow Sutra: An Introduction

Introduction and Intention:  This is a sutra, but not a sutra in the traditional sense. It is not part of the Buddhist canon, nor is it offered from a seat of transmission or formal authority. It is, rather, a thread — woven from lived practice, shaped by fidelity, and rooted in a vow that did not begin with me and does not end with me.

Featured

The Autistic Mode: A Way Of Thinking

We all have moments of deep concentration—those times when we are so absorbed in something that the world recedes. A musician practicing alone, refining a passage with exquisite focus. A philosopher turning an argument over in their mind, testing its weight from every angle. A scientist working through the layers of an equation, adjusting variables, refining the logic until it holds. In these moments, the noise of the world fades, and what remains is a kind of clarity, a steady presence of thought moving toward resolution.

Featured

Threshold to Threadwork

Introduction: There are two doors into this work. The one below meets the moment. It is written in accessible language—for those seeking clarity about autistic experience, and especially about how it differs in rhythm, in structure, and in the invisible labor it asks of those who must translate themselves to be understood. But this isn’t the only way in. There is another door—quieter, less translated, more interior. If you're looking not just for insight, but for shape—if you’ve ever sensed that what goes unspoken is sometimes the most coherent thing there is—you may find yourself at home there.

Featured

Musings from the Meta-Verse: Tip of the Iceberg Cosmologies

Before you begin: please take a moment, settle in, enjoy the image above—of me holding my baby daughter as a first-time dad, tune into the frequency of restful wonder. Now allow your mind to wander outward from the edges of that image: to the room, to the street outside, to the vast sky beyond the vast sky. Further—past the solar system, past the galaxy’s edge, past everything known—to the edge of the cosmos. And then…

Featured

Woven

I never stopped making art. I just didn’t always call it that. What I made with you, my loves — in those days we shared — was the most embodied form of relational creation. Art was us — there was no interruption. Something Luu Li and and I talked about yesterday landed deeply. She said, “Wow Papa, 54 years! I'm so glad you’re starting to do art again.” And I told her — honestly — it’s never left me. But after that, I found myself thinking: when I was homeschooling Luu Li and CT, I wasn’t just not doing art — I was expressing my creativity through my life with them.

Cát Tiên Crawls

View in Vimeo
It's been so fun watching Cát Tiên discover the secret to mobility.

Let the chase begin!

Comments

  1. I love the video. You need to teach me how to do that (make cool videos...not how to crawl...)!

    My favorite is Cat going backwards. :-)

    ReplyDelete
  2. Hey Amy,

    Pretty easy: iMovie on a Mac. It's movie-making for the masses! Basically, an easy tool for mixing together all that miscellaneous footage (with your favorite music as a soundtrack) into a consumable goodie.

    Luu

    ReplyDelete
  3. Something tells me that crawling will be a momentary thing! This is sooo cute - thanks for sharing,
    Fiona

    ReplyDelete
  4. Didn't mean to post as 'anonymous' - just couldn't work out which profile I was meant to select....oops. Cat Tien would probably do better than me!

    ReplyDelete
  5. Watching her always brings joy to me, everything about her is so cute. The part at 1:46 reminds me of a wind-up toy.

    Chi Le

    ReplyDelete
  6. Too cute! We hope to see her crawl in person soon! --Chauna

    ReplyDelete
  7. I was supposed to do some homework but I ended up watching this video 3 times. She's so cute, miss that baby smile. Ba Noi is going to miss her dreadfully when she leaves.

    Chi Mai-Ly

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment