And if you are a good practitioner you have enough mindfulness in order to handle whatever needs to be handled. Suppose anger is coming up in you, as an energy. As a practitioner, you don't allow anger to be alone in you, because if you let anger be alone in you, anger will cause a lot of damage in your body, in your mind and maybe around you. And that is why you practise mindfulness of anger. Breathing in, I know anger is in me. Breathing out, I smile at my anger. I embrace my anger. You have a seed of anger deep within yourself, but you also have a seed of mindfulness deep within yourself. You have a seed of compassion within yourself. When anger is touched, when the seed of anger is touched it manifests into a kind of energy called "anger". Suppose this is your consciousness. It has two layers. The lower layer is called Store Consciousness and the upper layer is called Mind Consciousness. You have a seed of anger here. You also have a seed of joy of mindfulness, of compassion, of non-discrimination. You have a seed of anger, of despair of jealousy, of discrimination in the depths of your consciousness. But when the seed of anger is left alone there in the Store Consciousness, you don't water it, no one comes and touches it, you are OK. You can laugh, and you may have a good time. But that does not mean you do not have the seed of anger in you. As soon as you hear someone saying something or doing something, the seed of anger in you is touched and it becomes a zone of energy in the realm of Mind Consciousness. in Buddhism we call it a Mental Formation. Anger is a Mental Formation. In my tradition, we speak of 51 categories of Mental Formations. We have the seed of discrimination in us. We have a seed of non-discrimination in us. That is true. If the seed of discrimination is watered every day it becomes very important and it doesn't allow the seed of non-discrimination to manifest. If the seed of anger becomes stronger and stronger every day the seed of compassion has less chance... And that is why every time a negative seed is touched and manifests we have to take care of it. That is why I spoke about mindfulness of anger. When... Mindfulness is the capacity of knowing what is happening. What is happening is anger has manifested. So as a practitioner, you ask the seed of mindfulness to manifest at the same time. And if you are a diligent practitioner the seed of mindfulness in you is strong enough and it's very easy for you to touch and invite it to come up; and it will come up and become a zone of energy. Suppose anger is energy 1, mindfulness is energy 2. Mindfulness is mindfulness of something and here mindfulness of anger. Mindfulness here has The following function: recognizing. Recognizing anger as anger. Mindfulness of breathing... Breathing in, I know this is my in-breath. Breathing out, I know this is my out-breath. Recognizing in-breath as in-breath. Recognizing out-breath as out-breath. Recognizing drinking as drinking, recognizing walking as walking. That's the nature, the function of mindfulness. So the energy of mindfulness generated by your breathing, your walking, has the capacity of recognizing anger as anger. Breathing in I know the anger is in me. Breathing out I take good care of my anger. Recognizing anger and embracing anger, this is an art, this is a practice. This is no fighting. Mindfulness is generated not to fight anger but to recognize anger and to hold anger very tenderly. That is Buddhist practice. You do not transform yourself into a battlefield... The good fighting the evil, that's not Buddhism; because you have mindfulness, but you have also anger. And mindfulness plays the role of an older sister, holding the angry, suffering younger sister and help her to transform. A mother is working in the kitchen and she hears her baby crying and she's very much careful of her baby; so she stops her work in the kitchen, she puts down whatever she is holding and she goes to the room of the baby and the first thing she does is to pick up the baby and hold the baby tenderly in her arms. That's the mother. She does not know what is wrong with the baby yet, but the first thing she does is to pick up the baby and hold him mindfully. We do the same thing, as practitioners. Every time anger, or despair comes up we generate the energy of mindfulness in order to recognize and to embrace tenderly, tenderly. And if we know how to practise mindful walking, or mindful breathing, we continue to generate mindfulness and we have that energy, in order to recognize and to embrace and we can bring relief; because mindfulness as an energy is embracing anger as another source of energy tenderly. Big brother, younger brother. Although the mother has not realized what is wrong with the baby, the fact that she is holding the baby tenderly can already bring a relief to the baby, and the baby may stop crying; and if the mother continues to hold the baby tenderly with mindfulness she will find out what is wrong. The baby might be hungry, The baby may have a fever or the diaper may be too tight. As a mother she can find it out very quickly. As a practitioner you can find out very easily why this anger [is there]; and you can see the roots of that anger. You will find the nature of that anger, the root of the anger. If the mother finds out what is wrong with the baby, she can fix the situation very quickly. If the baby is hungry she can give her son some milk. If the diaper is too tight, she can just undo it and do it again. So after having embraced tenderly your anger you might like to continue the practice of mindful breathing, the practice of mindful walking and look deeply into the nature of your anger, and find out what is the root of your anger. Recognizing, embracing and looking deeply. Because mindfulness is the kind of energy that carries with her the energy of concentration. Wherever mindfulness is concentration is [there] also. When you are mindful of your in-breath you are concentrated on your in-breath. When you are mindful of your tea you concentrate on your tea. And that is why the more powerful mindfulness is the more concentration you get; and with that mindfulness and concentration you practise looking deeply and you will get an insight. And that insight is going to liberate you, transform your anger. There is a story of a young boy who used to come to Plum Village every summer with his younger sister, and they practise mindfulness as children. The boy had difficulties with his father, he blamed his father. Every time he fell down and got hurt his father always shouted at him instead of coming and help him. So his relationship with his father was difficult, and he vowed when he grows up he would not be like his father; if he had children and then if his child fell down and got hurt he would not shout at him; instead he would come and try to help. That was his determination. One day he was playing in the lower hamlet, at Plum Village, and his sister while playing with another little girl on a hammock fell down and got hurt, and blood was coming out. Suddenly he found himself very angry; he wanted to shout "Stupid! How could you do something like that?" And because he had been practising mindfulness, he was able to refrain from shouting and he recognized that he was exactly like his father. Instead of trying to come and help his sister, he had the tendency to shout at her. He hated what he had within himself. So when he practised mindful breathing he knew that this is the continuation of his father inside of him; he is not different from his father and with that insight he turned around and practised slow walking, when he had seen someone coming to help his sister; and during slow walking he recognized that he is the continuation of his father. The energy of anger has been transmitted by his father and if he does not practise he is going to become exactly like his father and he will treat his children, in the future, in the same way. That is called Samsara, continuation. And suddenly he had a desire, that he had to go home and tell his father that he has exactly the same kind of energy and he would invite his father to practise with him. And when that intention was born in him his anger and resentment towards his father began to dissolve. What kind of insight did he get? He got the insight that he is exactly like his father, he has the same kind of habit energy. And that is why he wanted to practise. And he saw himself as a victim of that energy, a victim of the transmission of that habit energy; and he saw that his father also was a victim of that transmission too. His father might have got it from his own father. And when he had that insight, his anger vis-à-vis his father just stopped. He got a transformation. I think for a young man of 12 that is a remarkable achievement. It is insight that transforms our afflictions; and mindfulness has the power of recognizing, embracing, looking deeply, getting the insight that transforms you, that makes you free. Transformation, healing, freedom. And when the young man was liberated, the father in him was liberated; and the ancestors in him were liberated and [so was] the circle, the realm of the samsara.