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Good morning, Dear Sangha. Today we speak English.
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Today is March the 10th, 2013,
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and we are in the Still-water Meditation Hall,
Upper Hamlet, Plum Village.
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How many will listen to Thay directly in English?
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The majority.
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There will be about 600 people
coming for the French Retreat in a few days.
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And Sr. Hai Nghiem has proposed
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some subjects, themes, of teaching and practice.
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First is
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"Le bonheur est possible", "Happiness is Possible".
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The second is "La guèrison c'est possible",
"Healing is Possible".
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Because many people need healing.
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Most of the people who come here need healing.
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And then, "Vivre en profondeur",
"How to Live More Deeply our Life".
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Then another idea is
"Revenir à la maison", "Coming Home".
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Do not wander anymore. Go home.
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That is also an important issue.
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Practice.
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And then,
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"La rivière de la sangha", "Go as a River".
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Not as a drop of water.
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This is very important for the practice.
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We cannot practice unless we have a Sangha.
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And with a Sangha we have to go as a river.
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So not only the people
who come for the retreat need that,
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but we also, who stay permanently in Plum Village,
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we also need this practice.
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And the friends who are going to come,
who are coming,
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they will also participate in arranging the retreat.
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They will help with the cooking,
the washing, the cleaning, and everything.
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So, many people love to
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share the work of the Sangha during the retreat.
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So, we should be able to show them
how to cook, to clean, to wash, peacefully, happily,
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because that is a part of the practice, of the learning.
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And we should set an example,
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because we are
permanent residents in a practice center.
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Thay will give three Dharma talks in French.
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And maybe one of them will be Questions & Answers.
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So there will be three times
when we gather altogether in one hamlet.
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And, on the other days, we stay in our own hamlets
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with our separate Dharma talks
and discussions and so on.
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And after the French Retreat,
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Thay and a number of monastics
will have to fly to Asia.
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We have a tight schedule
in South Korea, in Hong Kong.
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And in Thailand.
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Because people over there
they want to make the most of the visit.
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We know that the practice of Plum Village
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can be seen in two points.
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The first point is how to recognize the suffering,
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and embrace it
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and transform it. And that is an art.
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Because life involves suffering, and happiness.
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We cannot avoid suffering.
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So we have to accept suffering.
We have to learn how to suffer.
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If we know how to suffer, we will suffer less, much less.
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And we will learn a lot from our suffering.
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And we know how to make use,
make good use of the suffering
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in order to create happiness.
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Like the way we grow lotus flowers.
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In order to grow lotus flowers we need mud.
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So suffering is a kind of mud that we need
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in order to generate the feeling of joy and happiness.
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So the first point, the first aspect of the practice is
how to recognize suffering
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and to embrace it,
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and to transform it.
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And we speak of the art of suffering.
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It seems that his Holiness the Dalai Lama
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has written a book with the title,
"The Art of Happiness".
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We need a book, "The Art of Suffering".
We need, we have to learn how to suffer
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because we know that
if we know how to suffer, we suffer much less.
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And we can learn from that suffering.
And make good use of our suffering.
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As true practitioners, we know that,
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and we have our own experiences as how to suffer.
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We have to learn how to suffer. That is an art.
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We have to be able to smile to our suffering
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with peace,
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like we smile to the mud
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when we know that
we have to make good use of the mud to
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grow lotus flowers.
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There are big blocks of suffering,
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"la souffrance masse".
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But there are what we call "les petites misères"
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the little sufferings.
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How to handle the little sufferings.
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And if we know how to handle the little sufferings
we don't have to suffer.
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They are daily things,
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"les petites misères de la vie quotidienne".
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And we know how to handle
these little moments of suffering.
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And we should be able
to share our practice with the people who come
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to us.
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So we are not afraid of these little miseries, little sufferings, because we know how to handle them.
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They are part of our daily life.
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And then when suffering has become a block,
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we should know how to recognize it, how to embrace it.
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And especially how to make good use
of the collective energy of the Sangha
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in order to embrace it.
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As a new practitioner,
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as a new person in the practice
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we may not be able to embrace our suffering,
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because our mindfulness is not yet
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vigorous enough, powerful enough.
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So with the Sangha we can borrow
the collective energy of mindfulness
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of the Sangha
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in order to recognize and embrace
the block of suffering in us.
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That suffering
may have been transmitted to us by our father
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our mother, our ancestors.
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And, if we know how to recognize,
embrace and transform it,
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we do it for our father, our mother, our ancestors.
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It's very kind of us to be able to do that
for our parents, for our ancestors,
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and not to transmit it to our children, and their children.
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The end of samsara.
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Many people who have read
about the practice of Plum Village
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and hear about the peace,
the energy of brotherhood, sisterhood,
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and when they come to Plum Village
and at least sit with us and walk with us
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they feel that that energy, the collective energy,
is something very real
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and not just something people talk about.
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When you allow yourself to be embraced
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by that collective energy of mindfulness and peace,
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you feel much better.
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You feel that your suffering
is beginning to transform.
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So, taking refuge in the Sangha
is a very crucial practice.
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Monks, nuns, lay practitioners, sitting together
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they come in peace,
and their energy of mindfulness can be powerful.
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If we know how to sit among them,
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how to allow the collective energy of mindfulness
to embrace our suffering
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then we are like a drop of water flowing in a river,
and we feel much better.
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We may not have to do anything,
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we just allow ourselves to be embraced.
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Allowed our suffering to be embraced
by the collective energy of the Sangha.
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And that is the greatest gift that the Sangha can make
to the people who come.
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Of course, we have to prepare many things
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for a retreat.
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We can do many things.
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We can clean, we can wash,
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we can cook, we can do many things for the retreat.
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We can serve the people.
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We can help them.
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But the best thing we can give them,
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the most precious thing we can give them,
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is not our labor,
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our hard work.
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The best thing we can provide them
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is our collective energy of mindfulness and peace.
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That is why during sitting meditation,
walking meditation,
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we should try our best to be present.
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Because that collective energy
will help calm them down,
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help embrace their suffering
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so that they can walk, they can sit,
they can breathe also.
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Because many of them just cannot breathe,
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just cannot walk, just cannot sit.
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And with that collective energy
of mindfulness and peace
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that we have as a Sangha,
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we can give them a chance
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so that they can breathe,
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they can walk and they can sit.
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This is the best thing we can offer them as a Sangha.
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So it is not hard labor
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that is the best thing we can provide,
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but that energy of peace and joy and brotherhood.
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The people who are coming they are lucky,
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because they are capable of arranging so
that they have a week
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to spend with us.
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Many other people they like it, they want it,
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but they cannot arrange,
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they do not have time, they do not have money.
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So those who can come this time,
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they are lucky enough
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to have seven days to be with the Sangha.
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We should be aware of that.
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We should try our best in order to
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give them a chance for transformation and healing.
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Thay is going to tell them
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in the first retreat (day),
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that healing is possible
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right in the retreat.
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Not after the retreat but right during the retreat.
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Because if they follow the instructions
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to breathe, to sit and to walk,
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and healing is possible with every step,
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healing is possible with every breath.
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And this is the truth.
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There is no way to healing, healing is the way.
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We should tell them
that in order to heal, they have to stop.
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Il faut relâcher pour pouvoir guérir.
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If they don't stop, there is no hope to heal.
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They have not healed because they have not stopped.
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So the five mindfulness trainings
is a very important teaching.
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The five mindfulness trainings is to stop
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the kind of action, the kind of thinking, that can create
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ill-being,
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sickness.
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The five mindfulness trainings
are also the kind of thinking and acting
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that have the power to heal.
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So without the five mindfulness trainings
healing is not possible.
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Stopping is very important.
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Stop and heal.
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That is also the theme that we offer,
the teaching, in South Korea.
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If we know how to stop,
healing can take place right away.
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With every step.
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Every breath, and so on.
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So we should be able to convince them
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to stop.
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To stop whatever they are doing
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that can lead
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to suffering,
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to anger, to despair.
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They will know what to stop
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in order to heal.
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We will tell them
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how have we been able to stop
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and to start healing.
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We have to share our experience with us.
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The moment when you decide to stop
you feel very light.
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You feel the healing taking place right away.
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That is a great moment.
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The determination to stop.
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And then, we will tell them
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that it is possible
to create moments of happiness in our daily life.
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There are
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small
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happinesses
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that we can create at any moment of our daily life.
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That is an art, also.
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The art
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of happiness.
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Whether you drink a cup of tea,
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or take a walk, or just sit down and look,
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you can create happiness during that time.
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A little bit, the ingredients that you need
in order to create a moment of happiness
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can be recognized.
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We know that mindfulness
is a source of joy, a source of happiness.
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People complain that
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they do not have happiness.
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We should be able to tell them
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that they have conditions to be happy.
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And help them to recognize
this conditions of happiness that they do have.
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The cherry blossoms are there,
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but they are not capable of
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contemplating, enjoying the cherry blossoms.
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The sunshine is there,
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spring is coming, all this things
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are wonders of life.
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And yet, they are caught in something.
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They are not capable of
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recognizing this
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conditions of happiness.
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They have a body.
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And yet they do not have access to their body.
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It's funny. You have a body,
but you don't have access to your body.
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You cannot go home to your body.
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You cannot touch your body and say:
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this is my body.
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Because they don't have mindfulness.
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When they spend three hours with their computer,
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they completely forget that they have a body.
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They stay in a
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world of
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unreal world.
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And that is why in Plum Village
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our brothers and sisters
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like to program a bell of mindfulness in the computer,
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so that from time to time we are reminded
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to stop and go back to our body
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and breathe in
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using the mindfulness of breathing in order to
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recognize our body and get in touch with it.
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Maybe our body is calling us
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but we don't hear.
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Our body need us, but we don't hear.
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If we can get in touch with our body
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we can get in touch with our feelings also.
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There are many feelings calling us.
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Suffering is like a child calling us,
a suffering child is calling us.
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But we ignore the voice of the child within.
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Because every feeling is a child.
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So mindfulness help us to get in touch
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not only only with the suffering,
in order for us to embrace and transform,
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mindfulness also help us to
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to touch the wonders of life, including our body.
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Breathing in can be
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can be a delight.
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Breathing out can be a delight.
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You enjoy your breathing.
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Just visualize a monk sitting on the grass.
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He does not do anything.
He just breath in and enjoy his in-breath. He is free.
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He is free from worries,
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from anger,
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from craving.
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He is capable of getting in touch with his body
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and the blue sky,
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the green color, with the spring coming.
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So we should be able to do that
in order to remind the people who are coming
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that they can also create moments of happiness.
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Les petits bonheurs de chaque jour.
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Learn how to enjoy.
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Learn how to savor the little happinesses
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in our daily life.
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And that is possible.
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There are many talented people.
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They can get a diploma.
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They can get invent a new machine.
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They can do many things.
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We will ask them:
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Can you create a moment of happiness?
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Can you make use of your body,
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can you make use of your in-breath,
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can you make use of your mindfulness
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in order to create a moment of happiness?
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A feeling of happiness?
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The way we
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make a soup.
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In order to make a soup we need some water,
some vegetables, some tofu and so on.
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Most of us are able to make a good soup.
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Un petit bonheur, a little happiness
is like that, is like a soup.
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And with some ingredients
we are capable of making
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a moment of happiness for us and for the other person.
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You can offer some of your soup to the other person.
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If you know how to invent,
to create a moment of happiness
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you can enjoy that happiness
and you can offer that to the other person.
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So that is an art.
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The art of happiness.
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You have to learn to enjoy.
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And to fabricate
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this feelings of joy and happiness in our daily life.
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Il faut apprendre à savourer les petits bonheurs.
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To learn how to savor
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the little happinesses in our daily life.
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And to create them.
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And we know
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how to stop
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the Non Stop Thinking radio, NST,
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in order to do so.
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If you allow the radio inside to continue,
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then you cannot do anything.
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Because there is always that mental discourse
going on day and night in your head.
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You think of the past, you invoke the past,
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you are afraid of the future,
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and the thinking goes on.
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And it takes away all space in you.
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You have no time to live your life.
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It is very important
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to stop the radio inside,
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the non stop NST, Non Stop Thinking.
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Because that is the practice of
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rumination.
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We eat and we chew again and again
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our suffering,
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our worries, and that is not good for your health.
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So we should be able to help them
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not to continue to eat their own consciousness.
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That is about
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the fourth nutriment.
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Consciousness as food.
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In our consciousness there are suffering,
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regret, sorrow.
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We have the habit of bringing them up again
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from the depth of our consciousness
and chew and eat them again and again and again.
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That is not healthy,
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a healthy kind of food.
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So stopping
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the mental discourse is very important in the practice.
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It's funny that
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in Plum Village not only we don't drink alcohol,
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eat meat, but we advice not to talk and not to think.
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Because while walking if we talk or think,
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we allow that radio to continue
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and you are victim,
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you are victim of the past, of the future, of worries.
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We are not living our life.
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In order to be able to live our life
we have to stop the radio inside.
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Le discours intérieur.
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And then, how can you enjoy your steps
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if you allow the radio to continue?
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That is why it is very important to stop the radio inside.
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To feel,
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rather than to think.
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When we touch the ground with our foot
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we should be able to feel.
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And the feeling can bring insight.
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We are concentrated on that feeling.
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I am touching mother Earth
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with my left foot.
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And in no time at all
you touch all the wonders of life
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that are available
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during the time you touch the ground with your left foot.
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And you have the feeling,
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a wonderful feeling of joy,
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of well-being.
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And by doing so, you can stop the thinking.
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Stop the thinking in order to do that,
to do that in order to stop the thinking.
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So to feel rather than to think is our practice.
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To feel your body.
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To be aware of each feeling.
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To embrace them.
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That is our practice.
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And the healing is possible.
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And we provide ourselves with a kind of healthy food.
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We do not chew again and again
our sorrow, our fear, our anger,
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which is not good for our health.
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But we begin to get
the kind of healthy, sane food that we deserve.
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And the Sangha around us
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is there to remind us of our practice.
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So we learn
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how to walk joyfully and happily.
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Walking meditation is not a hard labor.
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Is not a duty that we have to perform.
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That is an opportunity
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to create moments of happiness.
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That is a good opportunity
to create moments of happiness
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and to heal.
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Walking meditation.
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Whether you walk with a Sangha or you walk alone.
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Walking with a Sangha you inherit,
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you profit from the collective energy of the Sangha.
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And walking alone
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you radiate the energy of peace and mindfulness
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and you remind people
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to walk like you.
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Any moment of practice
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can heal and help heal other people.
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Not only you yourself, but to help heal other people.
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It's very pleasant to see a brother or a sister
walking mindfully and happily
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on a campus.
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That is very nourishing and healing.
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So whether you walk with a Sangha or you walk alone
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your steps are very important for us.
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And the people who come to us,
when they see us walking like that
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they have faith in the practice, in the Dharma.
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When we have lunch, when we eat,
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there must be a way of eating
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in order for every moment of the meal
can be healing, can be nourishing.
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We do not only get the nutriment from the food,
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but from the Sangha.
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Because together, sitting together and eating
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we generate energy of mindfulness,
collective energy of mindfulness and brotherhood.
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And that is very healthy, that is very healing.
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So eating like that you stop the thinking.
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And you became aware of
the members of the Sangha around you.
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Everyone is generating
the energy of peace, brotherhood.
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That is healing, that is good food.
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So eating together is a practice.
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Is not hard labor, is not a duty to perform.
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Also,
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sitting meditation.
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Sitting meditation is
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an opportunity to heal,
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to create moments of joy also.
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And not a moment when you have to be there
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waiting for the bell to sound
announcing the end of the sitting.
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No. That would be a waste.
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C'est du gaspillage.
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It is very
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very rare, very precious moments.
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People in the world, they don't have
the time to sit and do nothing like that.
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They consider it to be uneconomic.
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A luxury.
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Time is money.
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But we know that sitting
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can be very healing.
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So we have to learn how to enjoy
every moment of our sitting.
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How to breath, how to sit,
so that every moment of sitting
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can be nourishing and healing.
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And if we know that
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that schedule is made by ourselves
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and not imposed on us by a political party,
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or by the King.
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It is the Sangha who has created the schedule
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so that we can make good use of the schedule
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for our transformation and healing.
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The schedule is not imposed on us
by anyone, including Thay.
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The schedule has been designed by the whole Sangha
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so that everyone has equal chance
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to transform and to heal.
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So we should not complain
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that the schedule is too tight.
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Only beginners need a tight schedule.
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That is the raison-d'être
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of a practitioner, to have a schedule.
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And we know that doing with a Sangha,
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doing together with a Sangha,
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is better, is easier, is more pleasant.
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So the bell and the Sangha coming to the sitting
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is helping us.
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Is a great help that everyone is going to the sitting
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so we are going to the sitting.
That is something very natural.
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We don't have to make any effort.
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It is said in many sutras
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that the Dharma
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is lovely, is pleasant,
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in the beginning, in the middle, at the end.
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So every minute of the practice
should be pleasant, should be healing
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and transforming.