-
Good morning, dear sangha
-
Today is Sunday, the 30th of March 2014
-
We are in the Assembly of Stars meditation hall
-
of the Dharma Nectar Temple,
-
Lower Hamlet, Plum Village
-
This is our second week of the spring session
-
When you breathe in mindfully,
-
you bring your mind home to your body
-
Your inbreath is like a vehicle, a car
-
bringing your mind home to your body
-
It takes only 2 or 3 seconds
-
in order for you to bring your mind
-
home to your body.
-
In our daily lives,
-
very often our body is there,
-
but our mind is elsewhere.
-
Our mind is in the future, in our projects,
-
in the past,
-
caught in anger, fear, anxiety,
-
and very seldom our mind is
-
with our body.
-
That is why, when you bring attention
-
to your inbreath, and breathe in,
-
you bring your mind home to your body.
-
It takes only 2 to 3 seconds
-
for the mind to go home to the body.
-
And when mind and body are together,
-
you are there, you are truly there,
-
in the here and the now
-
and you can get in touch with the wonders of life
-
that are available in the here and in the now
-
for your transformation and healing.
-
It's very easy.
-
To breathe in and to focus your attention
-
only on your inbreath.
-
And it is also very pleasant to do.
-
How wonderful to breathe in.
-
And if you really pay attention to your inbreath,
-
your inbreath becomes the only object of your mind.
-
You are concentrated on your inbreath,
-
you are mindful of your inbreath,
-
and you release everything else.
-
You release the past, the future,
-
your projects, your worries,
-
and you become a free person.
-
And therefore freedom is possible
-
with one inbreath.
-
Mindfulness and concentration
-
directed to your inbreath
-
help you to release everything else
-
and you become a free person.
-
And if you want to keep that freedom,
-
then you can breathe out also mindfully.
-
Breathing out mindfully,
-
you focus your attention on your outbreath,
-
you are concentrated on your outbreath,
-
and your mind is only with your outbreath.
-
Everything else cannot cling to you -
-
the past, the future, your worries, your fear.
-
You are free from that.
-
So with the practice of mindful breathing,
-
you can cultivate freedom,
-
and you can preserve that freedom
-
as long as you wish.
-
2 minutes, 3 minutes, 4 minutes.
-
If you know how to practice mindful breathing,
-
mindful walking,
-
you keep your freedom.
-
You are not pulled away by the past,
-
by the future, by your worries, your projects.
-
You breathe as a free person,
-
and you walk as a free person.
-
And if you are to make a decision,
-
the decision will be good
-
because you are not influenced
-
by your fear, your anger.
-
If you make a decision
-
when you are angry or fearful
-
that is not a good one.
-
But when you are free
-
free from anger, from fear,
-
from jealousy, from hate,
-
from the past, from the future,
-
then you can make the best kind of decision.
-
Next time when you are to make a decision,
-
restore your freedom
-
by the practice of mindful breathing,
-
mindful walking,
-
and in that state of being free,
-
you can make a good decision
-
for you and for other people.
-
When you spend 2 hours with your computer,
-
you forget entirely that you have a body.
-
During that time, you are absorbed in your work,
-
and your mind is not with your body.
-
You are not alive, truly alive,
-
during that moment.
-
You are lost in your work, your projects,
-
your thinking, your planning.
-
In Plum Village, many of us
-
have a bell of mindfulness in our computer
-
and every quarter of an hour,
-
you hear the bell of mindfulness
-
and you stop working,
-
you go back to your body,
-
by the way of mindful breathing,
-
and you feel alive again,
-
you bring your mind home to your body,
-
you enjoy breathing in and out,
-
you become fully alive,
-
you smile to life,
-
and after that you continue your work.
-
And that is a good way not to be pulled away
-
for a long time
-
from the present moment.
-
Ant that helps you
-
to release the tension in your body
-
and keep your freshness,
-
keep your joy and happiness.
-
The bell of mindfulness
-
is a call
-
calling you back to the present moment
-
for you to be alive
-
for you to be free
-
in order to get in touch
-
with the wonders of life that are available
-
in the here and in the now.
-
When I do mindful movements,
-
it is not my intention to have good health,
-
but I just enjoy having a body
-
I enjoy the movements.
-
So joy, happiness is available
-
during the time I practice these mindful movements.
-
You do it for your own enjoyment,
-
not for your health or anything else.
-
So from the parking lot, walking to your office,
-
you might like to walk in such a way,
-
that every step can release the tension in your body,
-
every step can bring you home to the here and now
-
so that you can touch the wonders of life
-
available in you and around you.
-
If one inbreath can bring you home to your body,
-
to the here and now,
-
then one step you make can also bring you home
-
to the here and now.
-
You arrive in the here and now with every step.
-
Your destination is not the office, the workplace.
-
Your destination is in the here and now.
-
And every breath, every step brings you home
-
to the here and now so that you can
-
be alive.
-
Because we know that the past is already gone,
-
and the future is not yet there.
-
There is only one moment
-
when you can be truly alive.
-
That is the present moment.
-
And you have an appointment with life
-
in the present moment.
-
And if you miss the present moment
-
you miss your appointment with life.
-
Which is very serious.
-
You run to the future,
-
you take refuge in the past,
-
and you miss the present moment.
-
There are those of us who are caught in the past
-
who have no capacity to get out
-
of the prison of the past
-
in order to enjoy life in the present moment.
-
There are those of us who are caught
-
in the prison of the future
-
who only think of the future.
-
we don't think that happiness is possible
-
in the present moment.
-
So the basic practice is to always go home
-
to the here and the now.
-
And the practice of mindful breathing,
-
mindful walking,
-
can bring you home to the here and the now.
-
Body and mind together so that you can touch
-
the wonders of life that have the power
-
to nourish and transform you, to heal you.
-
And that is why, when we come to Plum Village,
-
we should learn to master the art of breathing
-
and walking.
-
These two practices can help us
-
to be free from the past and the future
-
and to live deeply every moment that is given to us.
-
So from the parking lot, walking to your office,
-
you walk in such a way that each step
-
makes you a free person. You enjoy every step.
-
Every step brings you to the here and the now
-
so that you can get in touch with the blue sky,
-
the beautiful trees, the songs of the birds.
-
Every wonder of life is available
-
in the here and the now.
-
And walking like that, you release the tension
-
in your body with every step
-
You don't need extra time to practice meditation,
-
walking meditation,
-
because from the parking lot to your office,
-
you can walk like that as a free person.
-
You stop all the thinking together,
-
you just enjoy every step, and
-
you just feel
-
the presence of the wonders of life
-
in yourself and around you.
-
And every one of us can practice like that.
-
Last time, we have learned the 7th ad the 8th
-
exercise of mindful breathing.
-
And you remember the 7th exercise
-
of mindful breathing is to recognize
-
a painful feeling that is coming up.
-
Breathing in, I'm aware of the pain within myself.
-
Breathing out, I smile to the pain within myself.
-
That is the 7th exercise.
-
"aware of pain"
-
There is a painful feeling coming up.
-
You know it.
-
And as a practitioner, you know how to handle
-
a painful feeling.
-
The 7th exercise is to recognize the feeling.
-
You do not try to run away from it
-
like many people.
-
You have to be there for your pain.
-
Most of us are afraid to be overwhelmed
-
by the pain inside.
-
The painful feeling the painful emotion,
-
not many of us know how to handle
-
a painful feeling, a painful emotion.
-
And most of us try to run away
-
or to cover them up with consumptions.
-
We use music, newspapers, television, internet
-
in order to cover up the pain in us.
-
We do not have the courage
-
to face, to recognize the pain in us.
-
So the practitioner does not do like that.
-
He practices mindful breathing,
-
he practices mindful walking
-
and generating the energy of mindfulness.
-
And with that energy of mindfulness,
-
he's stronger.
-
He can go home to himself
-
and recognize the pain, and embrace it
-
like a mother embracing her ailing baby.
-
So the 7th exercise is:
-
"Breathing in, I am aware of the painful feeling in me,
-
breathing out, I embrace the painful feeling in me."
-
There is the energy of pain
-
and there is the energy of mindfulness
-
generated by the practice
-
of breathing or walking.
-
So it is the second energy
-
that is recognizing the first energy.
-
That is the 7th exercise of mindful breathing
-
proposed by the Buddha.
-
Breathing in, I know that a painful feeling is in me.
-
Breathing out, I smile, I recognize
-
the painful feeling in me.
-
And the 8th exercise
-
is to calm down
-
the painful feeling
-
the way a mother is holding her ailing baby.
-
So mindfulness is a kind mother,
-
or big brother, or big sister,
-
holding the child of suffering.
-
The first thing you do is
-
to use the energy of mindfulness
-
to recognize the pain.
-
And the second thing you do
-
is to embrace your pain tenderly,
-
like a mother holding her baby.
-
A mother has the energy of tenderness,
-
and that energy of tenderness penetrates
-
into the body of the baby.
-
The baby suffers less.
-
After a few minutes,
-
the baby may stop crying,
-
because the energy of tenderness has
-
penetrated into the energy of pain.
-
So with the practitioner who knows how to
-
generate the energies
-
of mindfulness and concentration,
-
it is possible to recognize,
-
embrace the pain,
-
and calm it down.
-
By the practice of mindful breathing,
-
mindful walking,
-
you can stay with your pain,
-
and you can calm it down.
-
And you are not overwhelmed by the pain,
-
because you do have a kind of energy,
-
that has the power to recognize
-
and to embrace.
-
And everyone can generate the energies
-
of mindfulness and concentration
-
with the practices of mindful breathing,
-
mindful walking.
-
Mindfulness of breathing,
-
mindfulness of walking -
-
that is the practice.
-
After having held the baby for a few minutes,
-
and helping the baby to suffer less,
-
the mother can find out
-
what is wrong with the baby.
-
The baby may have a fever,
-
or the baby may be hungry.
-
After having discovered that,
-
the mother can change the situation very quickly.
-
And after having used the energies
-
of mindfulness and concentration
-
to embrace your pain and calm it down,
-
you get the insight as to why
-
there is that kind of pain in yourself.
-
And you can find the roots of the pain in yourself.
-
And with the other exercise that follows,
-
you can very well transform the pain in you
-
into something more positive.
-
And we have the exercises nr. 9, 10, 11, 12
-
But you are curious to know
-
what is the exercise number 6,
-
and what is the exercise number 5.
-
Exercise nr. 5 is to generate a feeling of joy.
-
Generate joy.
-
And the 6th is to generate happiness.
-
A good practitioner can always
-
bring about a feeling of joy
-
whenever she wants.
-
A good practitioner can always
-
generate a feeling of happiness
-
whenever he wants.
-
And how?
-
It's not too difficult.
-
Because when you practice mindful breathing,
-
and you breathe in, and you bring
-
your mind home to your body,
-
you become fully present in the here and the now.
-
You realize what we call
-
the oneness of body and mind.
-
Mind and body are together.
-
And when your mind is with your body,
-
you are established in the here and the now.
-
That's the first step.
-
And when you are established
-
in the here and the now,
-
you are in a position to recognize
-
the many wonders of life,
-
the many conditions of happiness
-
that you already have.
-
And most of us do not believe that happiness
-
is possible in the here and the now.
-
We need to run to the future in order to get some more.
-
And that is why we sacrifice the present moment
-
for the sake of the future.
-
But going home to the here and now,
-
you will be able to recognize the many
-
conditions of happiness that are already available to you.
-
More than enough for you to be happy
-
in the here and the now.
-
More... than enough.
-
The French have a song about that.
-
"Qu'est-ce qu'on attend pour être heureux?"
-
Why do we have to wait in order to be happy?
-
Because in the here and the now,
-
there are so many conditions of happiness
-
that are already available!
-
Take a piece of paper and write down
-
the conditions of happiness that you have
-
and you will see that one page is not enough,
-
two pages are not enough,
-
three pages are not enough.
-
You are luckier than many people in the world.
-
And if you are not happy in the here and now,
-
that's your fault.
-
Because you are not there in order to recognize them.
-
So to generate a feeling of joy is always possible
-
when you touch the conditions of happiness
-
that are already available to you.
-
Your eyes, still in good condition, is already
-
a condition of happiness.
-
You just open your eyes
-
and you see the face of your beloved one,
-
you see the blue sky,
-
you see the trees,
-
you see the hills, you see the river
-
and the stars.
-
So your eyes is one condition of happiness.
-
And there are plenty of them in your body,
-
(conditions of happiness),
-
there are plenty around you,
-
and if you are in the here and now,
-
you can touch many of them, and to generate
-
a feeling of joy or happiness is something
-
very easy to do at any time.
-
Good condition that you have some
-
mindfulness and concentration in you.
-
And you know very well that to have that
-
energy of mindfulness and concentration,
-
you can practice mindful breathing, mindful walking.
-
So that is the 5th exercise of mindful breathing.
-
to generate a feeling of joy whenever you want.
-
The 6th exercise is to generate
-
a feeling of happiness whenever you want.
-
And this is the art of happiness.
-
Creating moments of joy,
-
Creating moments of happiness for you
-
and for the other person.
-
If you are not joyful, if you are not happy,
-
you do not have much to offer to him or to her.
-
So to practice generating joy and happiness for you,
-
you have something to offer to him or to her.
-
And the next two exercises:
-
to become aware of the painful feeling
-
and to calm it down,
-
is the art of suffering, the art of
-
handling suffering.
-
And we have learned last time that
-
if we know how to suffer,
-
we suffer much less.
-
We are not overwhelmed by the suffering,
-
because we know how to use the energies
-
of mindfulness and concentration
-
to recognize the pain and to embrace it
-
and to calm it down.
-
It's clear that if you know how to suffer,
-
you suffer much less. And you can go further.
-
You can make good use of the suffering
-
in order to create happiness - the way
-
we use mud in order to grow lotus flowers.
-
And it is an art,
-
the art to generate happiness,
-
the art of handling suffering.
-
The 4th exercise, and the 3rd, is about the body.
-
These 4 exercises are about the feelings.
-
Pleasant feeling, pleasant feeling
-
painful feeling, painful feeling.
-
How to generate pleasant feelings,
-
how to handle unpleasant feelings.
-
The 3rd exercise is to recognize,
-
to be aware of your body.
-
Breathing in, I am aware of my body.
-
Breathing in, I know I have a body.
-
Awareness of body.
-
You bring your mind home,
-
and you recognize the existence of your body.
-
It's like you go home
-
and you recognize the feeling of pain.
-
But here, to recognize the presence of your body.
-
And when you are home to your body,
-
you might notice that there is tension,
-
stress, and pain in your body.
-
Because you may have allowed
-
the tension to be accumulated in your body.
-
You have been working your body very hard,
-
and tension, pain accumulated in your body
-
make you suffer.
-
That is why the 3rd exercise of mindful breathing
-
is to go home to your body
-
and be aware of your body.
-
And when you are with your body, you might notice
-
that there is tension and pain in it -
-
that is why you have to use the 4th exercise -
-
to release the tension in your body.
-
Calming the body.
-
So the method is exactly the same.
-
Here, you are aware of the painful feeling,
-
and you calm down the painful feeling.
-
On this side, you are aware of your body,
-
and then you practice mindful breathing,
-
to calm your body, to release the tension in your body.
-
That is the praxis of relaxation -
-
releasing the tension in the body.
-
These 4 exercises are to take care of our body
-
while the other exercises
-
are to take care of our feelings.
-
The first one is recognizing,
-
to be aware of your inbreath and outbreath.
-
Breathing in, I am aware of my inbreath.
-
Breathing out, I am aware of my outbreath.
-
Recognizing your inbreath and your outbreath.
-
That is the first exercise.
-
Every beginner of meditation practices that.
-
It's very easy, but it's very deep.
-
Because if you really focus your attention
-
on your inbreath and your outbreath,
-
you release everything else,
-
and you become a free person.
-
Just paying attention to your inbreath and outbreath
-
can bring great results.
-
And the 2nd exercise of mindful breating
-
is to follow your inbreath
-
and your outbreath.
-
Suppose this marker represents
-
the length of your inbreath.
-
It begins here and it ends here.
-
Maybe 3, 4 seconds.
-
And suppose this finger is your mind.
-
I begin to breathe in.
-
Breathing in, I follow
-
my inbreath all the way through.
-
Breathing out, I follow my outbreath all the way through.
-
My finger sticks to the marker, my mind
-
follows very closely my inbreath and outbreath.
-
There is no interruption.
-
And breathing like that makes your mindfulness
-
and concentration more solid, deeper.
-
And if you are more mindful,
-
if you are more concentrated,
-
then the pleasure of breathing
-
will be greater.
-
Because breathing in and out can be very pleasant.
-
If you suffer when you breathe in,
-
that's not good practice.
-
And when you breathe in and you feel
-
pleasant, wonderful,
-
you enjoy your inbreath,
-
you know that is good practice.
-
To breathe and to be aware that you are alive
-
that can already bring you a lot of happiness
-
because a person who is already dead
-
does not breathe in anymore.
-
As I breathe in, I know I am alive.
-
And to be alive is a miracle -
-
it is the greatest of all miracles.
-
And that insight alone can bring happiness.
-
Just to sit there and breathe
-
can make you happy already.
-
So the very first exercise of mindful breathing
-
can already generate mindfulness, concentration
-
and bring you a lot of happiness
-
whether you are sitting on the grass
-
or you are sitting at the foot of a tree
-
and breathe in with mindfulness and concentration
-
you can be a happy person just breathing in and out.
-
Sitting on the bus, sitting on the train also,
-
instead of thinking of this and that,
-
you enjoy breathing in and out
-
and you enjoy the landscape.
-
One week in Plum Village is enough
-
for you to learn, to train yourself in the art
-
of mindful breathing and walking.
-
And you can experience joy, happiness,
-
and you know how to handle
-
the painful feeling, the painful emotion
-
that is coming up in you.
-
Last time, we also spoke about listening.
-
We listen to our own suffering.
-
While you hold your suffering tenderly,
-
you can listen to it
-
because you have mindfulness in you
-
you have the energies of mindfulness
-
and concentration in you.
-
You are not afraid of the pain in you.
-
With that energy of mindfulness and concentration,
-
you can look deeply into the nature
-
of your suffering.
-
You can listen to your own suffering.
-
Because your suffering may carry
-
within itself the suffering of your father,
-
of your mother, of your ancestors.
-
And understanding your suffering,
-
you understand the suffering of your mother,
-
your father, and your ancestors.
-
Maybe father and mother did not know
-
how to transform the suffering.
-
And that is why they have transmitted
-
that block of suffering to us.
-
And we don't know why we suffer that much.
-
The fact is that the suffering in us
-
carries within itself the suffering of our father,
-
our mother, our ancestors and our nation.
-
That's sure.
-
And that is why we need to have the time
-
to listen to our own suffering,
-
and to understand.
-
And in order to listen, you need
-
mindfulness and concentration.
-
So that you are not afraid
-
of being overwhelmed
-
by the suffering inside.
-
Looking deeply, and listening deeply
-
is the act of meditation. To meditate
-
is to have the time to look and to listen.
-
And the object of meditation
-
is our own suffering, our own pain.
-
And if you continue to look, to listen,
-
to your pain, your suffering,
-
you come to understand.
-
And understanding
-
will always bring compassion.
-
This is easy enough to understand.
-
When you look at the other person,
-
deeply... and with mindfulness,
-
you have a chance to see the suffering in him, or in her.
-
That person does not know how to handle
-
the suffering in him.
-
He continues to be the victim of his own suffering.
-
He makes himself suffer, and he makes
-
the people around suffer, including you.
-
So far, no one has told him
-
so far, no one has helped him to understand
-
and transform his suffering. That is why
-
he continues to suffer and to make
-
the people around him suffer.
-
When you suffer, you make people suffer
-
even the people you love.
-
Therefore, you should try to understand
-
your own suffering in order to suffer less.
-
Because understanding always
-
brings about compassion.
-
When you look at the other person deeply,
-
and if you recognize the suffering in him or her,
-
then you see that this person is the victim
-
of his own suffering.
-
And suddenly, understanding arises in you
-
and you are not angry at him anymore.
-
You don't want to punish anymore.
-
Your anger vanishes. Instead you want
-
to do something, to say something
-
to help him or her suffer less.
-
It means that understanding suffering
-
has already brought compassion into the heart.
-
Now you can begin to look at him
-
with compassion.
-
And you don't suffer anymore.
-
Compassion makes it possible for you to stop suffering.
-
It is very clear that when you understand
-
the suffering of someone, you don't want
-
to punish him anymore. You want to help.
-
So the formula is very clear.
-
Understanding brings compassion.
-
And when compassion is there, you
-
don't suffer anymore. No anger -
-
only the intention to help.
-
So when you look deeply into your own suffering,
-
you see the suffering of your father, your mother,
-
your ancestors and your nation,
-
and that kind of understanding brings about
-
compassion in your heart. And compassion
-
begins to heal you. One thing we have to remember
-
Compassion can heal us.
-
And that is why all of us should learn
-
how to generate the energy of compassion.
-
Stanford University has a committee of scientists
-
who study the effects of compassion.
-
The fact of healing by compassion.
-
And we spent one evening working with them
-
about how to generate the energy of compassion
-
in order to help heal ourselves and help
-
heal the other people around us.
-
Understanding here means understanding suffering -
-
your own suffering first. Because when you have
-
understood your own suffering, you suffer less.
-
And when you have understood your suffering,
-
it's much easier to understand the suffering
-
of the other person.
-
And this is possible with the practice of
-
listening deeply, with compassion
-
and using loving speech.
-
You listen to yourself with compassion
-
and you heal yourself,
-
and then you begin to listen
-
to him or to her with compassion,
-
and you help heal him or her.
-
The practice of deep listening,
-
compassionate listening,
-
and loving speech
-
can always restore communication
-
and bring about reconciliation.
-
You have to understand yourself,
-
you have to listen to yourself,
-
you have to reconcile with yourself,
-
because there may be a deep conflict within.
-
And once you have been able to reconcile with yourself,
-
you can reconcile very easily
-
with the other person
-
and end the difficulties in your relationship.
-
The other person may have a lot of
-
suffering in him.
-
And he may have not been able to listen
-
to his own suffering.
-
And maybe no one has listened to him.
-
And you who are a practitioner,
-
you know how to listen
-
to your own suffering.
-
and now you want to listen
-
to the suffering of the other person.
-
You come to him and say:
-
"Darling, I know you have suffered quite a lot
-
in the past many years."
-
And this is the practice of loving speech.
-
Tender, gentle speech, which is
-
the practice of the 4th mindfulness training.
-
You go to him or to her,
-
and because you have some compassion
-
in your heart,
-
you have seen the suffering in him or in her,
-
that is why you can use easily
-
what we call loving speech.
-
You say like this:
-
"Darling, my dear friend, I know you have
-
suffered quite a lot during the past many years,
-
and I was not able to help you.
-
In fact I have reacted in such a way
-
that made the situation worse.
-
I have made you suffer more.
-
I'm sorry.
-
Darling, I have reacted in such a way
-
because I did not see your suffering.
-
I did not understand the suffering in you.
-
Darling, it's not my intention to make you suffer.
-
Just because I did not understand
-
the suffering in you
-
and I believe that if I understood the suffering in you,
-
I would not react like that,
-
the way I have in the past.
-
So you've got to help me.
-
Please tell me what is in your heart.
-
Please tell me of your difficulties, your suffering,
-
your frustration. I want to hear.
-
Because I know that if I understand the suffering,
-
I will not react the way I have in the past.
-
You've got to help me. If you don't help me,
-
who will help me?"
-
That is the kind of speech that we must use
-
in order to open the heart of someone.
-
If you have seen some of his suffering,
-
and if you have some amount of compassion
-
in yourself, you are capable of using that
-
kind of speech that we call loving speech.
-
"Darling, I know you have suffered quite a lot
-
and I have reacted in such a way that made
-
you suffer more. I am sorry.
-
It's not my intention to make you suffer like that.
-
It's because I did not understand your suffering.
-
So darling, please help me. Tell me what is
-
in your heart. Tell me of your suffering,
-
your difficulties, so that I can understand.
-
And if we know how to use that kind of speech,
-
we can open the heart of someone.
-
He or she will tell you.
-
And now we have a chance to practice
-
deep listening, compassionate listening.
-
Because the practice of compassionate listening
-
can heal... can heal a person.
-
One hour of practice, of listening,
-
can already heal the other person.
-
When you listen,
-
you have to practice what we call
-
mindfulness of compassion.
-
in order to keep compassion alive in your heart.
-
Because if you don't train yourself,
-
you cannot listen to him or to her.
-
Because what the other person says,
-
might trigger anger in you,
-
irritation in you,
-
and when anger
-
comes, you can no longer listen,
-
you have lost your capacity
-
to listen to him or her.
-
Because what the other person says
-
might make you angry,
-
there may be some kind of
-
bitterness, blame, accusations
-
and that makes you angry,
-
and you want to correct him or her,
-
right away, and you transform the session
-
into a debate, and you ruin everything.
-
That is why you have to train yourself first.
-
You train yourself in the art of listening
-
to yourself.
-
You train yourself in order to see the suffering
-
in you. And then you train yourself to see
-
the suffering in him or in her.
-
And you tell yourself:
-
I am listening to him with only one purpose:
-
to make him suffer less.
-
The purpose is not to...
-
to find the truth,
-
to find out who is right or wrong.
-
The purpose is to help a person to suffer less.
-
I am going to listen in such a way
-
that can make him suffer less.
-
And therefore even if he says wrong things,
-
if what he says is full of wrong perceptions,
-
even if there is a lot of bitterness,
-
accusation, blame, I continue to listen.
-
I am not going to interrupt and correct him,
-
because I know that if I did that,
-
I will transform the session into a debate.
-
So I make the vow to listen.
-
Later on, in 3, 4, or 5 days,
-
I may have a chance to give him some information
-
so that he may correct his perception
-
but not now. Now is only to listen.
-
Even if he said wrong things,
-
if he had a lot of wrong information,
-
I will not stop him. Because I know
-
that will spoil the session. So I continue to listen
-
I will tell myself: "Poor fellow, he is victim
-
of so many wrong perceptions.
-
But I am not going to interrupt him now,
-
because if I did, I spoil the session.
-
So you continue to listen with compassion.
-
You know that you have time, later on,
-
to help him correct his perception
-
by offering him some information.
-
But not now.
-
And you can sit there and listen
-
for one hour or more.
-
And if you can remember that
-
the only purpose of your listening is
-
to help him empty his heart and suffer less,
-
and if you can remember that,
-
you nourish compassion in your heart,
-
and compassion is going to protect you
-
and not allow the anger in you to be triggered.
-
That is called mindfulness of compassion.
-
And during the time you listen to him or to her
-
practice mindfulness of compassion
-
so that compassion stays with you for the whole session
-
and you are able to listen to him
-
one hour, one hour and a half or so.
-
The retreats that we offer a little bit everywhere
-
usually last 6 days, or at least 5 days.
-
And during the first few days, we learn how to
-
recognize our feelings, our emotions
-
we learn how to get in touch with the wonders of life.
-
On the 3rd day, we begin to learn how to listen
-
to our suffering, and to learn about
-
listening to the suffering of the other person.
-
On the 5th day we try to apply the practice
-
of compassionate listening and loving speech
-
in order to reconcile with the other person.
-
If the other person is in the retreat,
-
that is much easier,
-
because that person has been exposed
-
to the teaching and the practice.
-
But if the other person is not in the retreat,
-
you have the right to use your telephone
-
in order to practice deep listening and loving speech.
-
So on the 5th day, you are told
-
that you have a chance to
-
use the practice of compassionate listening
-
and loving speech in order to reconcile
-
with the other person.
-
And the miracle of reconciliation always happens
-
in our retreats everywhere.
-
And on the last day of the retreat,
-
many people came and reported about
-
the fruit of their practice.
-
Many had been able to reconcile with
-
their husbands, their wives, their son and so on.
-
I remember that retreat in Oldenburg, north Germany.
-
That morning, 4 German gentlemen came to me
-
and reported that
-
the night before, they had been able
-
to reconcile with their father at home.
-
They had used the telephone in order to practice.
-
One of them said: "Dear Thay,
-
the moment I was making the phone call,
-
calling my father at home, I did not believe
-
I can succeed. Because I was very angry at him.
-
I have made the vow never to go and see him anymore.
-
So I did not believe that I can talk to him
-
the way you told us, using loving speech.
-
But when I heard his voice at the end of the line,
-
suddenly I found myself capable
-
of talking to him like that.
-
Daddy, I know you have suffered a lot
-
in the past many years.
-
I was not able to help you to suffer less
-
and I have reacted in such a way
-
that made you suffer more.
-
Daddy, I'm sorry.
-
It's not my intention to make you suffer like that.
-
Just because I did not see
-
and understand your suffering.
-
I believe that if I understood your suffering,
-
I would not have reacted the way I have
-
and made you suffer like that.
-
I'm sorry.
-
Please tell me, father, of your suffering,
-
of your difficulties. I want to know.
-
Because I'm sure that if I understood
-
your suffering, I would not behave,
-
I would not react the way I have in the past.
-
Please help me.
-
And on the other end of the line,
-
the father began to cry, because his son
-
has never talked to him that way.
-
That is the result, the fruit of the practice
-
called loving speech, compassionate speech.
-
It always works.
-
If you have some amount of understanding
-
in your heart,
-
if you can see the suffering in the other person,
-
you can speak like that.
-
You need only some time to look deeply
-
to see the suffering in him or in her,
-
to see that he has been the victim
-
of his own suffering for a long time,
-
and he does not need punishment.
-
He needs help. If you have that kind of insight
-
and compassion, you are surely capable
-
to use loving speech.
-
And dear Thay, I have talked with my father
-
for 1.5 hours, and we were able to reconcile.
-
And you know something, dear Thay,
-
the first thing I will do after the retreat
-
is to go straight to see him -
-
go to his house and visit him.
-
And many people in the retreat succeeded
-
in the practice of reconciling with the other person.
-
If you can listen to him or her,
-
they will be able to listen to you also,
-
and understand your suffering.
-
In Plum Village, we have in the past
-
sponsored groups of Israelis and Palestinians
-
to come practice with us
-
here.
-
It's very difficult to obtain visas for Palestinians.
-
We had to work closely with the foreign ministry
-
in order to get a number of visas.
-
And when the two groups came to Plum Village,
-
it was very difficult in the beginning.
-
They did not look at each other...
-
I guess that when they look at each other,
-
they suffer.
-
So we allowed them to stay in different places
-
and on the first days, we helped them to practice
-
in order to get in touch with the
-
refreshing and healing elements in nature.
-
Walking meditation, sitting meditation, tea meditation,
-
mindful eating, singing songs of the Dharma
-
and then we initiated them to the practice
-
of listening to their own suffering.
-
Listen to their own suffering.
-
And it's only in the second week that we brought
-
the two groups together for the practice
-
of listening deeply to each other.
-
One group is invited to speak out.
-
And they have been instructed that
-
they can tell everything about their suffering.
-
You can tell the other group
-
every kind of suffering that you have undergone.
-
Children and adults. You can tell them everything,
-
but please use a kind of speech
-
that can help them to understand.
-
Don't blame, don't accuse, just tell them
-
how you suffer - your children, your adults.
-
Because if you use that kind of speech
-
you help them to understand.
-
The purpose is to help them to understand
-
your own suffering.
-
Do not blame, do not accuse, just tell them
-
of your suffering The suffering you have undergone.
-
And with the other group,
-
who will be practicing deep listening,
-
we tell them to sit, breathe, and listen
-
with the practice of mindfulness of compassion.
-
We listen to them with only one purpose,
-
to help them to suffer less.
-
Because we know that they also have
-
a lot of suffering in them.
-
So the purpose of this session
-
is just to listen,
-
so that they can speak out, empty their hearts,
-
and suffer less.
-
So we are not going to interrupt them,
-
even if they have wrong information and so on.
-
So both groups were practicing
-
loving speech
-
and compassionate listening.
-
And the miracle --- CUT ---
-
When you listen like that,
-
you recognize that the other side
-
they have suffered exactly the same thing
-
like on your side - children and adults.
-
Before that, you believed that only
-
you suffer, the other side does not suffer,
-
they are only the cause of your suffering.
-
You believe that the other side
-
is the cause of your suffering.
-
But when you suffer, you listen like that,
-
you suddenly realize that they are human beings
-
who have suffered exactly like on your side.
-
And for the first time,
-
you see them as living beings
-
full of suffering.
-
And that kind of insight
-
helps anger to go down in you.
-
And you begin to look at them with compassion.
-
The first time, you see them as living beings
-
who have suffered exactly
-
the same kind of suffering
-
that on your side, you have suffered.
-
And when you look with the eyes of compassion,
-
you don't suffer anymore.
-
In the beginning, there was a lot of anger,
-
a lot of suspicion, a lot of fear,
-
but now, since you have been able
-
to see them as human beings
-
who have suffered a lot like you,
-
suddenly you feel compassion is born
-
in your heart, and for the first time,
-
you can look at them with compassion,
-
and when you look like that,
-
you don't suffer any more.
-
You don't want to retaliate,
-
you don't want to punish them any more,
-
and you want to say something, to do something,
-
to help them suffer less.
-
Transformation begins to take place in you.
-
And we have many sessions like that,
-
succeeding each other,
-
and each time, for this side to have their right
-
to speak about their suffering,
-
the other group will be listening.
-
And a few sessions like that
-
can heal the wounds of both of them.
-
And many of us who are not Palestinians
-
or Israelis, we sit with them,
-
we walk with them,
-
we eat with them,
-
we bring our mindfulness and concentration
-
as a collective energy to support their practice.
-
And now they began to eat together,
-
they began to walk together,
-
even holding hands to walk together.
-
It's very beautiful.
-
And on the last day of the retreat,
-
they always... both groups come together
-
as one group,
-
and reported to the whole community
-
about the fruit of their practice.
-
It's very moving to see the transformation
-
and healing taking place.
-
They always told us that when they go back
-
to the Middle East, they will organize
-
practice like that, so that other Israelis
-
and Palestinians can come to practice
-
to suffer less.
-
And in Plum Village, every year,
-
we send a delegation of monks and nuns
-
and lay people to the Middle East
-
and have organized retreats of mindfulness
-
so that people can come and practice with us.
-
We have sister Thay Nghiem... is she back already?
-
Thay Nghiem is in Israel
-
with other monks and nuns
-
offering a retreat for people in the Middle East.
-
So to restore communication,
-
and to reconcile is something possible
-
with the practice of mindfulness and concentration.
-
If you know how to practice
-
compassionate listening and loving speech,
-
you can restore communication,
-
you can reconcile.
-
I like to tell you this story
-
of a lady in America,
-
She's a catholic.
-
She wanted to commit suicide
-
because she did not see a way out.
-
The husband was a university professor,
-
they have children who are in college,
-
who are students in universities also,
-
but they did not have happiness,
-
because
-
there is a lot of anger in him,
-
despair in her,
-
and there is no communication.
-
She described him as a kind of bomb
-
ready to explode at any time.
-
That lady has a friend who is
-
a practitioner, a buddhist practitioner
-
of mindfulness
-
And the buddhist lady always tried to...
-
to get her to listen
-
to a Dharma talk given by Thay.
-
And the talk is about defusing a bomb.
-
Because the catholic lady always said:
-
"My husband was like a bomb -
-
so much anger ready to explode at any time."
-
So the buddhist lady said:
-
"I have a Dharma talk, given by my teacher
-
about how to defuse a bomb!
-
So why don't you listen and learn
-
to help your husband to transform his anger?"
-
But that catholic lady said:
-
"But I am a catholic, why do I have to listen to...
-
... to a Dharma talk?!" So she refused.
-
But one day, she was in despair,
-
and she telephoned her friend
-
who is a buddhist practiioner:
-
"My dear friend,
-
I am going to kill myself tonight."
-
And the buddhist lady said:
-
"Well, please come, and visit me before you do so.
-
Take a taxi, come!
-
And tell me what is wrong."
-
And then, when the catholic lady came,
-
the buddhist lady said:
-
"Dear friend, you have told me
-
you have told me several times,
-
that I am your best friend,
-
and yet, I don't believe it so much,
-
because the only request that I made
-
is for you to listen to the talk of my teacher,
-
but you refused. How can I believe
-
that you are my best friend,
-
I am your best friend at all?"
-
That's a kind of challenge.
-
And the catholic lady said (to herself):
-
"Well, to satisfy her need, her request,
-
is not so difficult,
-
so I am going to listen to that talk,
-
and I will go home and kill myself later on."
-
So the buddhist lady was so happy,
-
so she gave the cassette tape,
-
because at that time
-
there was no CD... no Compact Disc,
-
and she withdrew and allowed the catholic lady
-
to be alone and to listen to the talk.
-
And you know that in the talk,
-
I spoke about compassionate listening,
-
loving speech, in order to restore communication
-
and to reconcile.
-
And the catholic lady sat down
-
and listened to the whole talk.
-
And something happened in her.
-
And when she finished listening to the talk,
-
she told her friend:
-
"I'm going home and I'll help my husband!"
-
"To defuse the bomb in him, I am going
-
to listen to him, with compassion,
-
so that he will suffer less.
-
I see that he has a lot of suffering in him,
-
and I have not helped him at all -
-
I have reacted in such a way
-
that made him suffer more.
-
I'm going to practice deep listening,
-
compassionate listening,
-
to help him suffer less.
-
The buddhist lady said: "Well,
-
you have to wait, my dear friend.
-
You need some training before you can do it!
-
It's not just by listening to a tape
-
that you can go and practice right away!
-
My teacher is coming from France
-
to give several retreats of mindfulness,
-
and one is right here, in California!
-
So why don't you wait for a few days
-
and we will go to the retreat together.
-
And I am sure that after the retreat,
-
you will apply the teaching and you will
-
be successful in helping your husband.
-
And the catholic lady agreed to wait
-
for a few days until they came to a retreat.
-
And after the retreat, she came home
-
very peacefully, and she was determined
-
to practice. That night she came home
-
and walked mindfully, breathing in and out,
-
calming herself:
-
"My husband, I know you have suffered so much,
-
in the last many years.
-
I could not help you to suffer less.
-
And I have reacted angrily
-
and made you suffer much more.
-
Dear one, it's not my intention
-
to make you suffer like that.
-
Just because I was ignorant
-
I did not understand the suffering in you.
-
So please help me, tell me of your suffering,
-
tell me of your difficulties. Please help me.
-
I need help.
-
And her husband began to cry.
-
Because the lady has not spoken to him
-
like that for a long time.
-
And that night became a very healing night.
-
They listened to each other, they reconciled,
-
and she was able to convince him
-
to go to the next retreat.
-
Both husband and wife went to the 2nd
-
retreat of mindfulness.
-
And on the last day of retreat,
-
during a tea meditation,
-
the husband told the group
-
introducing his wife:
-
"This is a bodhisattva that has saved my life."
-
She has helped me
-
to heal and to transform.
-
And then, a week after that, there was
-
a day of mindfulness organized in
-
the practice center called Spirit Rock.
-
There were many thousand people coming
-
for the mindfulness day.
-
And a couple came with their 3 children
-
and attended the day of mindfulness.
-
And we had a chance to meet that group,
-
and they told us the story.
-
The buddhist lady brought them over,
-
introduced them, and told us the story
-
of the transformation and healing
-
of the family.
-
And when I talked to...
-
I remember when one day I talked
-
to a group of Vietnamese buddhists,
-
I said: "That lady, she's a catholic,
-
she's not a buddhist,
-
but only after 5 days of retreat,
-
she was able to restore communication
-
and to reconcile with her husband.
-
And you are buddhists! And if you cannot do
-
like her, your practice is not good enough!
-
It's a kind of challenge... challenging.
-
The fact is that buddhists are not buddhists
-
if you know how to practice
-
compassionate listening and loving speech
-
you'll be able to restore communication
-
and to reconcile.
-
You have to stop that situation
-
of difficult relationships.
-
And if you know how to do it,
-
you can succeed after 5 days of practice.
-
And I think in the case of the Israelis
-
and Palestinians, that is a difficult
-
case.
-
And that is why, if we have difficulties
-
in our relationships, don't despair.
-
There is a way out.
-
You have to go back to yourself first.
-
You are here.
-
And you are the person here.
-
You have difficulties in your relationship,
-
you have tried so many times without success,
-
and you are about to give up.
-
You are thinking of divorce,
-
you are thinking of separation,
-
you are thinking of suicide, and so on.
-
Because you have tried everything,
-
and you did not succeed.
-
But when you touch the Dharma,
-
you see the way.
-
The way is
-
to begin with yourself.
-
Listen to your own suffering,
-
go home to yourself.
-
Don't try to help the other person,
-
try to help yourself first.
-
Practice mindful breating, mindful walking
-
go home to yourself,
-
and listen to your suffering inside.
-
Because understanding suffering
-
will bring compassion. And compassion
-
is going to heal you, and make you suffer less,
-
and then you can help the other person.
-
So the first thing is for you
-
to go home to yourself.
-
The way out is in.
-
And after you have suffered less,
-
after you have generated
-
and amount of understanding and compassion,
-
then you are ready to go help him or her.
-
And that is the process.
-
And you don't need to be a buddhist
-
in order to do that.
-
Everyone can do that,
-
and restore communication
-
and reconcile.
-
I think that's good enough for today.