-
In, out, deep, slow,
-
calming, smiling
-
Present moment.
-
Wonderful moment
-
So it's a beautiful winter day here, in Deer Park.
-
And the question is whether we are present enough to enjoy it.
-
So walking meditation is to cultivate that kind of presence so we can see clearly what's going on in our body
-
and also what's going on with our walking
-
and with the nature around us and especially with the community around us.
-
So
-
when we practice walking, we cultivate presence by coming back to our breathing, into our step.
-
So when we breathe in.
-
We might take two or three steps.
-
And then breathe out.
-
We take three or four steps and we try to be 100% there with our breathing in our steps
-
to not caught in the future or the past.
-
So that phrase you see, "arrived at home", in the meditation hall.
-
It is to help us to come back to see that our home is right here and right now.
-
So you might like
-
to coordinate your breathing with your step so that you're not lost in your thinking.
-
Thinking about where you want to go or your projects, your worries, your fears.
-
You can just put it all down, let it go into the earth,
-
and you might like to, for example, count your steps, just one, two,
-
maybe one, two on the inbreath.
-
And then.
-
One, two, three.
-
On the outbreath.
-
You naturally find the rhythm.
-
It might be two steps or three steps, whatever it might be.
-
You don't force your breathing to change.
-
You just allow it to come naturally.
-
And however many steps go with the inbreath and however many go with the outbreath, you just let that be where you focus on coordinating them.
-
So that keeps us present.
-
And when you really are able to do that, you can continue on and practice the the teaching on "arrived at home".
-
So you might like to say arrived, arrived.
-
Arrived.
-
And then on the outbreath, at home.
-
At home.
-
At home.
-
It means that your step is home right here, right now, and not somewhere else.
-
So Thay, our teacher, love to remind us that the direction of life is here and now.
-
The address of life is here and now.
-
So wherever we are, we can be at home, wherever we are, we can be at peace.
-
Wherever we are, we can enjoy.
-
Life within us and around us.
-
Sometimes look at human beings and we think, "Why are we always running around everywhere?"
-
Why can we not just come back and enjoy this moment on the earth?
-
So let's try to realize that today.
-
The mind can go in a thousand directions.
-
But on this lovely path, I walk in peace
-
With each step, a gentle wind blow with each step of flower bloom.
-
The mind can go.
-
In a thousand directions.
-
But on this lovely path I walk in peace. With each step, a gentle wind blow.
-
With each step, a flower blooms.
-
You might like to also walk with your ancestors, your mother, your father.
-
Maybe they haven't ever had the chance to walk mindfully in their life.
-
But they are in every cell of our body.
-
So if we walk mindfully, we are also walking with them.
-
So we are walking for them.
-
So our peaceful steps of arriving at home also are transmitted to them, through every cell in our body.
-
And not only our mother, father, our grandparents, but also, you know, our ancient ancestors.
-
Something like a chimpanzee, something like a lizard.
-
You know, those are also in every cell of our body.
-
The very shape of our foot has grown up in contact with the earth.
-
That's why we are able to walk as two legged creature on the Earth.
-
This arch in our foot and the Achilles tendon is designed for us to walk like that, upright on the Earth.
-
So we are walking with our ancestors, our evolutionary ancestors as well.
-
And in this way, we we connect with the trees, with the plants.
-
And when we do that, our steps become legendary.
-
So wherever we walk becomes the legendary path. Where the Buddha walked in his time became a legendary path.
-
And that's not just because he is an important historical person, but it's because of his way of walking.
-
Walking and mindfulness.
-
Walking for all of his ancestors.
-
I
-
I am home.
-
In the here and in the now.
-
I have arrived.
-
I am home in the here and in the now.
-
I am solid.
-
I am free.
-
I am solid.
-
I am free.
-
In the ultimate, I dwell
-
In the ultimate, I dwell