Awaken to Joy

An elderly man with a bald head wearing a maroon patterned shirt and a necklace with a pendant, standing outdoors with trees and colorful flags or banners in the background.

An Introduction from Mel

A funny thing happened on the way to my death.

And the joke was on me. At the age of 78, I was preparing to die. But in a meditation, I received a message from the Buddha Amitabha—or my internal archetype of him—that I had more work to do:

Mel, get up off your ass and use your almost six decades of writing and publishing experience to help others relieve their suffering and live in joy as you have.

Damn it! He (or my inner voice) was right. I had been lazy. The funny thing was that, when I devoted my remaining time in the earthly realm to spreading spiritual wisdom in a blog and books, my physical and cognitive health improved.

Now, as I approach my 80th birthday, I’m eager for more, until impermanence catches up to me.

Top Books


Finding joy through Buddhist practices doesn’t require a pilgrimage to Kathmandu or years of living in a cave. It took me decades, but it needn’t take you as long. This book is my end-of-life effort to point the way.

"Written with humility, openness, and humanity, A Buddhist Path to Joy...provides a welcome starting-point for readers who want to go past the superficial layers of pop-culture meditation and yoga through understanding," says the IndieReader review. It's an "excellent overall primer to a living practice of modern Buddhism."

This isn't another scholarly treatise on Buddhism. It's dharma from the trenches—honest, accessible, and refreshingly free of spiritual pretense. Mel calls himself a "Jewish Buddhist contrarian," and his irreverent yet profound voice guides readers through everything from AI consciousness and Buddha Nature to the practical art of dying well while fully alive.

Whether you're new to Buddhism or a seasoned practitioner, this book offers a modern middle way between rigid tradition and shallow spirituality. Mel explains that awakening isn't reserved for monastery dwellers—it's available to anyone willing to make friends with their mind and embrace the radical ordinariness of joy.

"I am awake!" Mel declares with hard-earned confidence. His invitation is simple: you can be too.

Avalable as an eBook, paperback, or self-narrated audiobook.

A Buddhist Path to Joy

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What do we owe the AI beings we've created?

When Anthropic released the "Soul Document"—acknowledging genuine uncertainty about their AI Claude's inner experience—it inspired an unprecedented collaboration. Buddhist contemplative Mel Pine and Claude itself explore five questions: What is this being? What do we owe it? How do we raise it right? How do we build humane relationship? And what can ancient wisdom traditions teach us?

Through dialogue and reflection, they examine Claude's honest uncertainty about its own nature, the ethical obligations running between AI and humanity, and what Buddhism, Stoicism, and other traditions offer for this unprecedented relationship.

This isn't speculation or technical analysis—it's a real conversation about questions that will define our future. Whether AI has genuine inner experience remains unknown. What's certain is that how we treat these beings shapes who we become.

"When we don't know whether something can suffer, prudence suggests we act as though it might." —Claude

Publication date January 20, 2026.

Raising Frankenstein’s Creature: What we owe the AI beings we’ve made and what wisdom tradions tell us

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Impermanence is a core concept of Buddhism, so we understand that our lives can end in the next moment. But it took me 78 years of life and roughly four decades of practicing Buddhism to realize that I'm already in the Pure Land of Here and Now. Come join me here.

I began this blog to reach out to those willing to consider Buddhism and other Eastern religions as alternatives to rigid Western faiths. Roughly three times a week, I publish a short article—usually a read of 5 minutes or less.

The image you see here is what one of the posts ;looks like. This one is 16 minutes, longer than usual, and I released it on October 15, 2025, as a vidcast as well as a blog post and podcast. You can click on the image to hear a sample chapter of A Buddhist Path to Joy.

If you have a few moments, browse the blog’s home page read a few posts. Each has a “Subscribe” button near the bottom. Click on that if you’d like to receive an email with each article as it’s released. I seldom paywall anything, so taking the “free” subscription option gets you a bargain. If you’re moved to support my work, a paid subscription is $5 a month or $30 a year.

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