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There is a text called
'Mindfulness of Breathing'
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in which the Buddha proposes
16 exercises on mindful breathing.
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It's very practical.
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And everyone can do it.
Not complicated.
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You can already notice the effect
of the practice after one or two hours.
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The first exercise is so simple.
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To be aware of your in-breath
and out-breath.
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This is what we practiced this morning.
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Breathing in,
I know this is an in-breath.
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To identify the in-breath as in-breath,
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and to identify the out-breath
as an out-breath.
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Breathing in, I know
I am breathing in. So simple.
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And yet the effect can be great.
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Aware of...
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Aware of in-breath and out-breath.
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[1. aware of I + O]
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As you breathe in, you pay attention
to your in-breath only.
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Your in-breath becomes
the only object of your mind.
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And if you are truly focused,
mindful of your in-breath,
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you release everything else.
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You release the past, you release
the future, your projects, your fear,
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your anger, because the mind
has only one object at a time.
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And the object of the mind now
is the in-breath.
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Breathing in, I know I am breathing in.
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So you focus your mind on your in-breath
and you release everything else
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and you become free.
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There is regret concerning the past,
sorrow concerning the past.
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There is fear and uncertainty
concerning the future.
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All of that you release in just 1 or 2
seconds because you are focusing
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all your mind into your in-breath.
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So breathing in mindfully sets you free.
You have freedom.
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If you are to make a decision, it's better
you have enough freedom to make it.
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You are not under the influence
of anger or fear,
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and your decision is much better
than if you are not free.
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So just breathing in makes you free.
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And it is pleasant also,
it's pleasant to breathe in.
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So the exercise is so simple
but the effect can be great.
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The second exercise is to follow
your in-breath all the way through
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and to follow your out-breath
all the way through.
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And you may enjoy these two exercises
at any time and anywhere.
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Breathing in, I follow my in-breath
from the beginning to the end.
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Suppose this marker represents
my in-breath.
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It begins here
and this finger is my mind.
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Breathing in, I follow my in-breath
all the way through.
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There is no interruption at all,
not a millisecond of interruption.
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So during the time you breathe in mindfully,
you cultivate concentration.
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You are not only mindful of your in-breath
but you concentrate on your in-breath.
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The energy of mindfulness carries
within herself the energy of concentration.
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And it is also pleasant,
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because to be mindful and to concentrate
on your in-breath can be very pleasant.
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You don't have to suffer.
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In fact you can feel wonderful,
just breathing in,
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especially when the air is fresh
and if the nose is free.
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So the second exercise is...
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[2. follow I + O]
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to follow your in-breath and
your out-breath all the way through.
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We know we can do these two exercises
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anytime we like.
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The third exercise is
to be aware of your body.
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[3. aware of body]
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Breathing in, I'm aware of my body.
You bring your mind home to your body.
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And your mind becomes an embodied mind.
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That will help you to be established
in the here and the now,
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you are fully present,
you are fully alive.
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And you can live that moment
of your daily life more deeply
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if body and mind are together.
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The oneness of body and mind is
what you realize with the third exercise.
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When you spend 2 hours with your computer,
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you forget entirely that you have a body.
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You are not truly alive in that moment.
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You are truly alive only
when the mind is with the body.
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You are fully in the here and the now
and you touch the wonders of life
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in you and around you.
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Many of our brothers
and sisters in Plum Village
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program a bell of mindfulness
in their computer.
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And every fifteen minutes,
they hear the bell, they stop working,
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they go back and enjoy
their in-breath and out-breath,
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smile and enjoy their body.
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And release the tension in their body.
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That is what the Buddha recommended
2600 years ago.
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There's the fourth exercise.
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Breathing in, I calm my body,
I release the tension...
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in my body.
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[4. calm body]
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When you come back to your body,
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you may notice that
there is a lot of tension in your body.
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Then you may like to do something
to help your body to have more peace,
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to suffer less, and with your out-breath
you allow the tension to be released.
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That's the first four exercises of mindful breathing
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recommended by the Buddha
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so that we can take good care of our body.
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And with the fifth exercise
we go to the realm of the feelings.
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The fifth exercise is to generate
a feeling of joy. Generating joy.
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[5. Generating Joy]
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A good practitioner knows
how to generate a feeling of joy,
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because she knows that
mindfulness allows her to recognize
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all the conditions of happiness
that are already available.
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We can remind ourselves and we can remind
our beloved ones that we are very lucky.
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We can be happy right here and right now,
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we don't have to run into the future
to look for happiness.
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There is a teaching given by the Buddha.
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That is the teaching of
"living happily in the present moment."
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Life is available only
in the present moment.
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And if you go back to the present moment
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you will notice that there are
so many conditions of happiness
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already available.
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That is why joy and happiness
can be born right away.
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The expression living happily
in the present moment
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was found in a sutra...
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five times.
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The Buddha was teaching Anathapindika,
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a businessman, in the city of Sravasti.
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That day Anathapindika, the businessman,
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came with many hundreds
of businessmen to visit the Buddha.
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And the Buddha gave them that teaching.
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"Gentlemen", he said, "you can be happy
right here and right now.
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You don't have to run into the future,
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you don't have to look for success
in the future in order to be happy."
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I think the Buddha knew very well
that businessmen,
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they think a little bit too much
about the future and their successes.
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And that is why
the expression living deeply,
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"living happily in the present moment"
was used by the Buddha five times
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in the same sutra, the same scripture.
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Drstādharmasukhavihara.
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[drstādharmasukhavihara]
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"Vihara" means to dwell or to live,
"sukha" means happily,
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and "drstā-dharma"
is the present moment.
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(Chinese: 現法樂住)
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So a good practitioner
does not look for happiness in the future.
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He knows how to go home
to the present moment
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and recognize all the conditions
for happiness that are available
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and make joy and happiness
available right away.
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And she does that for herself
and she does that for the other person.
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Creating happiness is an art.
The art of happiness.
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So the fifth exercise is to generate joy
and the sixth is to generate happiness.
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[6. Generating Happiness]
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The seventh is...
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to be aware
of a painful feeling or emotion.
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Breathing in, I know there is
a painful feeling, a painful emotion
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that is coming up in me.
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[7. Aware of Pain]
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The practitioner does not try to fight
the pain, to cover up the pain inside
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or to try to run away from the pain.
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In fact, because she is a practitioner
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she knows how to generate
the energy of mindfulness.
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With that energy she recognizes the pain
and she embraces the pain tenderly.
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'Hello my little pain. I know you are
there. I will take good care of you.'
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Whether that is anger or fear
or jealousy or despair.
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We have to be there for our pain.
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There is no fighting.
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There is no violence
done to our suffering.
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Yesterday we spoke about a mother
holding the crying baby.
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Our pain, our suffering is our baby
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and the energy of mindfulness generated
by our practice is the loving mother.
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And the mother has to recognize
that the baby suffers.
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She takes the baby up and holds
the baby tenderly into her arms.
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That is exactly
what a good practitioner will do
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when a painful feeling arises.
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You have to be there
for your painful feeling or emotion.
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You continue to breathe
and to walk in such a way,
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that the energy of mindfulness
continues to be produced.
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With that energy of mindfulness
you recognize the pain
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and you embrace the pain tenderly.
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In Buddhism we speak of consciousness
in terms of "store" and "mind."
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There are at least
two layers of consciousness.
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The lower layer
is called "store consciousness."
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Our fear, our anger, our despair are
there in the bottom of our consciousness
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in the form of seeds.
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There is a seed of anger here
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and if the seed of anger
accepts to sleep quietly down there,
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we are okay.
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We can laugh, we can have a good time.
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But if someone comes and says something
or does something
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and touches off that seed of anger,
it will come up as a source of energy.
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Down here it is called a seed.
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[seed]
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(Chinese: 種子)
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Bija.
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[bija]
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And when it comes up here
on the level of "mind consciousness,"
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it will become a kind of energy
called mental formation.
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[mental formation]
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And this is the mental formation
called anger.
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[M.F.]
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So when the practitioner notices
when anger is coming up,
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she, right away, breathes
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and invites the seed of mindfulness
to come up as energy.
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Mindfulness is another seed that is here.
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If we are a good practitioner,
the seed of mindfulness in us has grown
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to become a very important seed.
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It needs a touch lightly,
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then there will be a lot of that energy
coming up for us to use.
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If we are not a practitioner, the seed
of mindfulness is there but very tiny.
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If you practice mindful breathing,
mindful walking everyday,
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the seed continues to grow.
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Whenever you need that energy,
you just touch it,
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and you have a powerful source of energy
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to help you to deal with
whatever is happening up there.
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So the practitioner begins
to breathe or to walk mindfully.
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The second mental formation
is manifested on this level.
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Another mental formation...
And this one is mindfulness.
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So it is the energy of mindfulness that
will take care of the energy of anger.
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There is no fighting.
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Mindfulness does at least two things.
First of all to recognize,
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a simple recognition of the pain.
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And that is the seventh exercise.
Breathing in, I know anger is in me.
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Or despair is in me or jealousy is in me.
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Recognize simply, not fighting.
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The second thing mindfulness will do
is to embrace.
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And that is seen in the eighth exercise
is to calm down the pain
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[Calm Pain]
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like a mother holding the baby.
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The mother does not know
what is wrong with the baby.
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But the fact that
she's holding the baby gently
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can help the baby suffer less right away.
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The same thing is true
with the practitioner.
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She does not know what is the cause
of that kind of anger or fear.
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But the fact that she is recognizing
and holding that energy of fear and anger
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can help her suffer less right away,
after one or two minutes.
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So this is...
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the art of suffering.
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This is the art of happiness.
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How to generate a feeling
of joy and happiness.
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How to take care
of a painful feeling and emotion.
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How to calm it down, how to get a relief.
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And with the exercises that follow
you can go further
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and you can transform pain, sorrow, fear
into something more positive,
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like making good use of the mud
in order to grow lotus flowers.
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So a good practitioner
is not afraid of pain.
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She does not try
to run away from the pain.
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In fact, she tries to be with the pain.
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She knows how to handle
a feeling of pain,
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a strong emotion.
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And she knows how to make
good use of that mud
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in order to create
understanding and compassion
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which are factors of true happiness.
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So with global ethics,
with the practice of mindfulness,
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with a spiritual dimension
in our daily lives,
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we know how to overcome difficulties
that present themselves in our daily life.
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And that is why each one of us
should bring a spiritual dimension
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to our daily life.
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Without that kind of practice, we
don't know how to handle the difficulties
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that come everyday.
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The image of a mother holding a baby
is very helpful.
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If your mindfulness is powerful enough,
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you embrace your pain, your sorrow,
you continue to breathe
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or to practice walking meditation.
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It's like giving your fear,
your anger a mindfulness bath.
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Maybe 3 minutes, maybe 5, 10 minutes.
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After that, she will lose
some of her strength
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and go back to the original place,
down there in the store consciousness.
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After having taken a mindfulness bath,
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she goes down into the store and
goes back to where she had been before.
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Losing some of her strength.
That is the power of mindfulness.
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In the Buddhist tradition,
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we speak about 51 categories
of mental formations.
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As a novice monk, I had to know by heart
all these mental formations,
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so that every time one of them came up,
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I should be able
to call it by its true name,
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'Hello my fear, I know your name,
I am going to take good care of you.'
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Recognizing and embracing.
That's the first step of the practice.
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There are wholesome, positive seeds
down here, we mentioned mindfulness.
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We mentioned concentration,
we mentioned insight,
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we mentioned non-violence,
we mentioned joy, we mentioned compassion.
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There are many good things down there.
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And as a good practitioner,
we know how to recognize them
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and help them to come up
as frequently as possible,
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because they will make the landscape
of the mind consciousness beautiful.
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We are happy if we know
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how to invite them to manifest
as mental formations up here.
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As for the negative, unwholesome mental
formations like fear, anger, despair,
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we better keep them down there,
do not give them a chance to come up.
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And they will grow weaker
and weaker and weaker.
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We do that for ourselves and we do that
to help our beloved ones to do the same.
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(Bell)
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(Bell)
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If we speak about
the life of a school teacher,
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we know that there is suffering
inside of the teacher,
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and there is also suffering
inside of the students.
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That is why if school teachers know
how to handle their own suffering,
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if teachers know how to generate
joy and happiness
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they will become happy teachers,
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they will suffer less,
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and when they go to their class, they can
help their students to do the same.
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During the last two decades
of the last century,
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there was a professor of mathematics here,
in Toronto.
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He taught at the French Toronto School.
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He came to a retreat
organized in Montreal.
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He came back
and tried to put into practice
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the practice of mindful breathing
and walking.
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His name is Henry Keekoo
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and he is director
of the program of mathematics
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in the Toronto French School.
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Two journalist from The Globe and The Mail
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came to his class to interview him
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about why he wanted to introduce
Buddhism into his class.
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This is forbidden here in Canada.
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And then he invited the two journalist
to come to his class
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and see how he taught his students.
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The day he came home from the retreat
and resumed his class
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he walked in mindfully,
slowly and mindfully.
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And he came up to the blackboard
and he erased things mindfully,
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and the students asked him,
'Papa, are you sick?'
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(French) 'Papa, es tu malade?'
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'No, I am not sick,
I am practicing mindfulness.'
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(Laughter)
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So he told the students about
what he has learned in the retreat.
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Breathing, walking, easing,
calming and so on.
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And he proposed that
every half an hour, 15 minutes
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a boy would clap his hands three times,
replacing the bell of mindfulness
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and everyone practice mindful breathing
in and out to calm themselves.
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And the class made a lot of progress.
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there's a lot of joy
and progress in his class.
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And he taught in many classes
of mathematics in that way.
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So when the two journalist came,
they witnessed that,
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teacher and students sit down
and enjoy breathing together,
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breath out laughing together.
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And every time they hear that (clapping),
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everyone stopped teaching, learning,
and enjoyed breathing in and out.
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That had a good impact on the learning
and the teaching of the school.
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So when the time for retirement came, they
asked him to stay for another three years.
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And other classes have adopted
his way of teaching.
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So for a teacher,
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or school teachers,
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the first thing to do
is to come home to himself or herself.
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The way out is in.
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Go back to oneself
and take care of oneself.
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Learning how to generate a feeling of joy,
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learning how to generate
a feeling of happiness,
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learning how to handle
a painful feeling, a painful emotion.
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Listening to the suffering
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allow understanding and compassion
to be born and suffer less.
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This is the first step and he or she
has to do that. That is the first step.
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A sangha, a community of practice
in the neighborhood can help him,
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can help her to deepen their practice.
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You have to begin with yourself.
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And the school teacher also
has members of his family;
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a partner, children. So like that.
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So after he has done it for himself,
he can help the other to do the same.
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It's much easier. When you
have not changed yourself,
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it's very difficult to help
change the other person.
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To help him or her suffer less.
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So with loving speech and deep listening,
with more peace and gentleness in yourself
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you become more pleasant.
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That is why you can help
the other person much more easily,
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and she or he will be able
to do the same thing.
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And we become co-practitioners.
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We share the same values,
we share the same spiritual practice.
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Because we know that each day
the situation improves;
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there's more peace, less suffering,
more joy, more happiness
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and the children will profit from that.
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Because the children
can practice very well also.
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And when you have
a united harmonious family,
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then you can bring that
into your workplace.
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Then maybe first you have your class
and you transform your class.
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Your class becomes a happier place.
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Your class can become a family
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because there are many children
who are unfortunate.
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Their parents are not in good terms
with each other. They fight,
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they make each other suffer
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and the child has had no chance
to learn what love is.
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The class may be the second chance
for the child.
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And the school teacher can play
the role of the father or of the mother
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and can teach the young person
how to love, what is love.
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It's something real.
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I remember this summer opening
in Plum Village
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there was a child that
came up for questions and answers
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and she made the whole sangha cry.
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She said that her parents are divorced.
They fight each other,
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they make each other suffer
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and when they come, they still fight
each other in front of the child.
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And the child asked, 'What is love?
I don't know, what is love?
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Why do they fight so much,
even in front of us?'
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Many people cried. Very disturbing.
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So it is possible to give children
like that one a second chance
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by transforming the classroom
into a family,
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and Henry Keekoo was able to do so.
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There are other classes in the school
and there is the administration,
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and of course they will do everything
in order to improve the quality of life,
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the quality of teaching and learning
in the whole school.
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We continue tomorrow.
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(Bell)
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(Bell)
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(Bell)
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(Bell)