Monday, January 6, 2025

Orlando Bloom Talks New Show 'To the Edge' and His Buddhist Faith

Orlando Bloom Talks New Show 'To the Edge' and His Buddhist Faith

How Orlando Bloom's Buddhist practice helped lead him 'To the Edge' in new adventure show

"As a philosophy and as a practice, it's something that's definitely been the anchor in my life," he tells TODAY.com.

Orlando Bloom
Nathan Congleton / TODAY

Orlando Bloom may be most well known for his roles in "Pirates of the Caribbean" and "The Lord of the Rings," but viewers will see a new side of the actor as he takes on three extreme sports in a matter of weeks in his new show, "Orlando Bloom: To the Edge."

While Bloom goes rock climbing, wingsuiting and free diving — meaning without an oxygen tank — to about 102 feet below sea level, he's also often reciting Buddhist chants before embarking on each adventure.

Viewers might be surprised to find out Bloom has been practicing Buddhism for more than 30 years. The 47-year-old tells TODAY.com how his faith played a role in "To the Edge," now streaming on Peacock. (Peacock is a part of TODAY.com's parent company, NBCUniversal.)

"As a philosophy and as a practice, it's something that's definitely been the anchor in my life," Bloom says.

He starts by sharing the meaning of "Nam-myoho-renge-kyo," the chant he recites throughout the three episodes: "It means, 'I bring myself in tune with the rhythm of the universe through the vibration of sound.'"

Bloom, a practitioner of Nichiren Buddhism and a follower of the Soka Gakkai organization, says he likes the philosophy that the Buddha believed would lead all living beings to enlightenment in their current lifetime.

"At its core, it's about respecting all living beings," he says. "And I liked that as a roadmap. I always wanted a roadmap, and in a way, this practice has been that for me."

Orlando Bloom
Orlando Bloom has been practicing Buddhism since he was 16.Nathan Congleton / TODAY

Bloom's 'art to living'

Bloom says he discovered Buddhism when he was working with an artist on painting and drawing when he was 16. Ahead of his school exams, he heard his mentor chanting "Nam-myoho-renge-kyo."

"I just said to him one day, 'What are you doing?'" Bloom recalls. "And he said, 'I'm chanting that you're going to do really well in your exams, and then you're going to have a really successful life.'"

Bloom asked if it would actually help, and his mentor said it would, so Bloom decided to start his own practice.

"I just never stopped because I found it to be very, very helpful to me," he says. "If there is an art to living, I found that the philosophy and this practice is, for me, the art."

But that doesn't mean his faith has remained constant over the course of 30 years — he says he questions his faith "every day."

"Ten times a day. Ten times a second. All day, every day. There's no moment I'm not — constantly," he says.

"It's not like I chant 'Nam-myoho-renge-kyo' to be, like, levitating," he adds with a laugh. "No, I chant 'Nam-myoho-renge-kyo' to survive my life and everything that happens in life. Chanting helps me to navigate the nastiness."

Bloom says he wanted to incorporate his faith into "To the Edge" because it makes him focus on each experience in life.

Orlando Bloom: To The Edge - Season 1
Orlando Bloom free dives in his adventure series "To the Edge."Peacock

"What my chanting of 'Nam-myoho-renge-kyo' does is, it just focuses me," he says. "It has me open my mind to the experience, to be present to the moment, to go with the flow."

And while some may think the idea of Buddhism is the opposite of trying extreme sports, Bloom says his faith grounded him ahead of the intense moments seen on the show.

"I've had this practice since I was 16, and it's an amazing tool to keep me present, focused and grateful for what's right in front of me because I think, sometimes, we can forget that all of the obstacles in our life are really opportunities for our growth," he says.

"When you're right in it, it's like, 'Why is this happening? What am I doing? Why was this a good idea?' And I just mean in everyday life, by the way," he continues.

But while filming moments of "abject fear, or a heightened sense of pressure," on "To the Edge," Bloom says his chant became something he relied on.

"I find it was a perfect tool for me, and it just so happened that I was doing it, so it became part of what you saw me do on the show," he says.

Inside 'To the Edge'

Orlando Bloom: To The Edge - Season 1
Orlando Bloom rock climbs in the third episode of "To the Edge."Peacock

Of the three sports — wingsuiting, free diving and rock climbing — he says wingsuiting was "one of the most heightened moments" of his physical experience on the show.

Bloom says there wasn't anyone in his life who was completely against him attempting the extreme stunts seen in the show, but his partner, Katy Perry, did have some hesitations.

"I think my partner was, like, not entirely sure what I was doing until I came home, freaking out, and then she was like, 'OK, that's crazy,'" he says. "But she's happy now. And she saw it all."

The pop superstar FaceTimed her beau several times throughout the show, and came in person to watch him go wingsuiting for the first time.

Perry hugged Bloom after his wobbly flight, before playfully saying he looked like "a flying wombat."

As for the other episodes, Bloom says he found free diving "mentally and emotionally challenging, but also rather beautiful in its own way," while rock climbing was "just a brutal grind."

Bloom mentions the moment at the end of his climb, which had been selected specially for him, when he was standing on top of ancient art.

"I never felt so connected as I did in that moment," Bloom says. "It was probably a combination of all three (stunts) coming together."

He added: "From doing these things, you learn to become capable, and that's something that I wanted."

Anna Kaplan

Anna Kaplan is a news and trending reporter for TODAY.com.


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Saturday, January 4, 2025

題目是生命的充電 Daimoku is a means of recharging our lives


学习池田SGI会长的指导

【題目是生命的充電】
。。。。。。。。。。。。。。。。。。。。。。

山本伸一 教導:題目是生命的充電。
每天的唱題,是心靈的清潔打掃,也是為新一日的出發開動引擎。

大宇宙有自身的法則,也同時存在於每個生命的小宇宙裡。

佛法就是探究這存在於萬事萬物、卻眼看不見的根本生命法則,稱之為 [ 妙法 ] 。日蓮大聖人為了將這妙法的力量引發出來,為世人圖顯了御本尊。

向著御本尊唱題,大宇宙和小宇宙的韻律就能美妙地調和起來。

所以,勤行是打開自身寶庫的作業,
在生命大地上挖掘生命力的湧泉,
挖掘取之不盡、用之不竭的智慧、慈悲、勇氣的源流,能使人跨越任何考驗。
。。。。。。。。。。。。。。。。。。。。。
09年新世紀4月刊第12頁

Friday, January 3, 2025

Life's true exhilaration lies in how we live each moment

人生是在于怎样以最后胜利为目标度过"如今"?妙趣是在于"如今"的奋斗之中。因为在风浪之中奋斗,所以才有乐趣。广宣流布是"伟大的剧场"。
Life's true exhilaration lies in how we live each moment, how hard we strive and challenge ourselves in the present, in our journey for ultimate victory. Life is interesting precisely because we have to battle our way through all kinds of ups and downs. We are enacting the drama of kosen-rufu on an infinitely grand stage.

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如实如见的精神

【如實知見的精神】

如實知見就是如實地觀察現實,作為信仰佛法者要秉持如實知見的精神。
。。。。。。。。。。。。。。。。。。。

當時,中國處於文化大革命時期,有關中國的消息幾乎都封鎖了 ...

首次訪華正式決定後組建訪華團,我(原田稔)也是其中一員。4月、5月,聽取相關人士對中國的解說、收集書籍和信息等,把預備好的知識塞進腦袋裡。我記得當時準備的份量很多。

有天,池田先生來到我們的「對策室」。正當我在想「先生看到我們做了這麼大量的準備工作,肯定會放心」的時候,傳來先生嚴厲的語氣。

「我猜想著你們在幹甚麼,果然不出所料。再怎樣收集資料也不可能了解真實的中國。反而被成見左右,不能掌握真相。重要的是,作為信仰佛法者要秉持如實知見的精神。把現在收集的資料給我統統從桌上撤掉。」
這麼說著,便把桌上的書全部挪到地板上。

如實知見就是如實地觀察現實,先生的指導讓我恍然大悟。要通過佛法的眼光瞭解對方的「人性」,即使在訪華期間,先生的根本態度也沒有任何改變,始終如一。這如實知見的態度,應該也是平常對話或友好活動的基礎。
。。。。。。。。。。。。。。。。。。

2014年新世紀12月刊(一分鐘精品)