If Lucy is being used as a pawn and it could be so, why doesn't she speak up? Why doesn't she write the opposite or ask them to remove her name from their blogsite and any reference to her so she can't be used as pawn?
If the guru/disciple relationship had broken down for whatever reason, I am glad that Lucy James has not appeared to retaliate against NKT (though perhaps that is because there is nothing to retaliate against). I googled to see if there were any statements by her regarding the controversial issues - and I didn't find anything which gives me the impression that Geshe Kelsang Gyatso taught her well and she is a good Dharma practitioner.
I think that when the news came out and it became wide-spread over the internet, Lucy James had three options:
1. To give a public statement (or to write an official reply via the Internet) denying everything, and in hopes, try to clarify any doubts which had affected her reputation.
2. Throw a little tantrum, denounce GKG as her guru, stop being part of NKT and 'lama-hop'/'center-hop' to somewhere which accepted her, and she could start of on a clean-slate again.
[ Sounds like something T.Canada would do...*smacks mouth closed*
]
3. Keep quiet and take it as part of her Dharma practice.
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I think that for many of us, if someone was to say, "I heard that you did this and that at your center" or "I heard that you did this to your Lama *looks shamelessly at you*" - we would take it quite harshly and do everything and say anything to justify and defend ourselves.
We might feel picked upon and like how TM says, we might feel like we're 'being used as a pawn".
No one likes feeling victimized.
There are many times when someone has said something untrue, or blamed me for something that I had never done. My response has always been to continuously justify myself by denying everything and say, 'I didn't do it' or 'It wasn't me'. Even without saying anything, a little bit of anger arises in me, and I'm sure in all of us, it's really hard to control such a natural reaction.
How Lucy responded: by keeping quiet, continuously support her Lama and stay on as an NKT member and practitioner speaks
SO much for herself. To feel like your reputation has been completely tarnished and to be publicly asked to resign as a teacher in your "spiritual home", mustn't feel too good. Imagine feeling ashamed and embarrassed that everyone gossips and talks about you over something that (perhaps) you hadn't done.
She didn't try to justify herself, she didn't try to defend herself, she didn't put up a fight and "ask them to remove her name from their blogsite and any reference to her so she can't be used as pawn".
To me,
she is exemplary of how a student should be in her reaction to her Gurus words and actions: don't put up a fight, accept it and take it as your Dharma practice. After all, who knows better: me (who has spent most of my life just doing things for me, myself and I) or your Guru (who has devoted his life and vowed to bring sentient beings out of suffering and onto the path to Enlightenment)?