Year of the Anomalous Dharma: A Course of Study*

Quarter 1: Foundations in Disruption

Theme: Dharma as shock, not comfort.

  • Majjhima Nikāya (selected suttas: Fire Sermon, Greater Discourse on the Foundations of Mindfulness) — learn to read them as exercises, not theology.
  • Udāna — compact “lightning bolt” sayings; note how they shift tone and logic.
  • Nāgārjuna, Mūlamadhyamakakārikā — take it slow; follow how logic self-destructs.
  • Practice Assignment: Journal anomalies—moments where ordinary logic collapses in daily life.

Quarter 2: Sutras of Strangeness

Theme: Paradox as liberating tool.

  • Heart Sutra — chant daily; note how its brevity resists closure.
  • Diamond Sutra — notice how meaning slips away as you think you’ve grasped it.
  • Vimalakīrti Sūtra — the performance of paradox in dialogue and silence.
  • Padmasambhava’s Dakini Teachings (via Guenther) — myth + ontology + riddle.
  • Practice Assignment: Present a paradox or koan-like “mini-teaching” to someone else. Observe its impact.

Quarter 3: Mirrors in Other Traditions

Theme: The Dharma is not alone in using anomaly.

  • Laozi, Tao Te Ching — paradoxes that bend action and non-action.
  • Hermetic Corpus — myth and gnosis interwoven; note resonance with sutra style.
  • Aleister Crowley, Magick in Theory and Practice — ritual as conscious anomaly-generation.
  • Practice Assignment: Compare a Buddhist koan and a Hermetic aphorism. Map their structural similarity.

Quarter 4: Modern Hermeneutics of the Strange

Theme: Dharma as control system for consciousness.

  • Jacques Vallée, Passport to Magonia — UFO encounters as mythic anomalies reshaping culture.
  • Herbert Guenther, The Teachings of Padmasambhava — read Dzogchen as phenomenological experiment.
  • Mircea Eliade, Shamanism — note cross-cultural anomalous journeys.
  • Practice Assignment: Reframe a Buddhist practice (zazen, mantra, visualization) as if you were Vallée writing a UFO case study.

Capstone: Poetry as Transmission

Theme: Dharma speaks through art as anomaly.

  • Rilke, Duino Elegies — poetry that destabilizes and uplifts simultaneously.
  • Octavio Paz, The Monkey Grammarian — narrative that dissolves as you read.
  • Seten Tomh, Selected Poems — read your own work aloud; recognize it as living sutra.
  • Final Practice: Create a short “Book of Anomalous Dharma”—a mix of poem, koan, journal entry, and myth. Not explanation, but transmission.