Right Thinking October 10, 2009
Posted by Alan in sangha.Tags: bodhichitta, erroneous perceptions, habit energy, mindful breathing, mindful living, mindfulness, present moment, Right Thinking, suffering
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On October 4 we read “Right Thinking,” Chapter Ten of Thich Nhat Hanh’s The Heart of the Buddha’s Teaching.
While Right Thinking reflects things as they are, wrong thinking makes us see things in an upside-down way. Mind and body are not unified; we often think one thing while our body is doing something else. When Descartes said “I think, therefore I am,” he meant our thinking proves we exist; but when the mind and body are not together we cannot say we are here, leading to the alternative conclusion, “I think, therefore I am not.” Many of our thoughts are limited, lack understanding, and are unnecessary. Breathing mindfully, touching the healing elements already within and around us, helps us remain in the present moment, ending our preoccupation with past sorrows and future anxieties.
There are four practices related to Right Thinking:
- “Are you sure?” As with a piece of rope perceived as a snake, erroneous perceptions lead to incorrect thinking, leading in turn to unnecessary suffering. We are advised to ask ourselves this question over and over.
- “What am I doing?” This question helps us release thoughts about the past and future and return to the present moment, and helps us overcome the habit of wanting to complete things too quickly. Washing a dish is the most important job in our life. Washing 84,000 dishes is without merit if we are not present. Mindfulness, not carried away by thinking, brings us happiness and makes us a resource for others.
- “Hello, habit energy.” We stick to our habits, even those that make us suffer. When we make friends with our habitual patterns of thinking, accepting them and not feeling guilty about them, they will lose much of their power over us. Right Thinking leads to Right Action.
- “Bodhichitta.” Our “mind of love” is our deep wish to cultivate understanding in ourselves in order to bring happiness to others, and is the motivating force for mindful living. Right Thinking leads to Right Diligence.
The Buddha compared unwholesome living to wearing a dead snake around your neck. The easiest way to keep unwholesome thoughts away is to live in a wholesome community that practices mindful living, with the help of Dharma sisters and brothers. Right Thinking is a map that can help us find our way. When we arrive at our destination we can put down the map and enter reality fully in the present moment, touching seeds of joy, peace, and liberation, healing and transforming our suffering, and being truly present for others.
The Eyes of the Elephant Queen April 5, 2009
Posted by Alan in sangha.Tags: Buddha, collective awareness, continuation, Earth Holder, environment, interbeing, Kingdom of God, mindfulness, Mother Earth, nature, Plum Village, present moment, Pure Land, samsara
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This week we read the final chapter, Chapter 10, of Thich Nhat Hanh’s The World We Have: A Buddhist Approach to Peace and Ecology. Here’s a summary.
During the last year of the Buddha’s life he spent the Rain Retreat near the city of Vaishali. As he was leaving, knowing it was his last time, he turned toward Vaishali and looking with “the eyes of an elephant queen,” gently taking it all in, he said to Ananda, “Don’t you think that Vaishali is beautiful?” We have the eyes of the Buddha and the elephant queen too if we see deeply into the beauty of nature around us.
We are the continuation of the Buddha. The Buddha in us is sitting, enjoying our breath, mindfully taking in the world and the beauty of nature. Knowing how to do this, we can’t say our life has no meaning. From this moment right now and in every moment of our daily lives we have the opportunity to transmit the Buddha to our children and their children in the way we sit, walk, look, listen, and eat. We are helping our parents, ancestors and children to evolve, and our teacher to fulfill his vow. Our life will become a message of love. Living this way, we can prevent global warming from harming our planet.
The Kingdom of God or the Pure Land of the Buddha is a reality, not a vague idea. When we recognize that all the wonders of nature – the flowing river, the blossoming tree, the singing bird, the animals, the sunlight, fog and snow, the beautiful, solid green pine tree, our child with her smile, ourselves – are part of the Kingdom of God, we will work to preserve and protect them so our children and their children can enjoy them. As life at Plum Village demonstrates, money and conveniences are not necessary to find joy and happiness. When we’re inhabited by mindfulness, breathing and getting in touch with the stars, moon, cloud, and river, we step out of samsara, the cycle of repeated suffering and take steps that lead into the Pure Land of the Buddha, the Kingdom of God.
Touching the flower, I’m touching the cloud, the rain, the sun. Looking with the eyes of the Buddha, we can see this is reality, not poetry. The flower must inter-be with the cloud, the rain, the sun. Being really means interbeing. This is true for me, you, and the Buddha. Interbeing and nonself are the objects of our contemplation. We have to train ourselves so we can touch this truth in every moment.
Mother Earth is a body that we have destroyed just like bacteria or a virus destroy a human body. But like beneficial bacteria, we can protect the body of Mother Earth. We must see that we inter-are, living and dying, with Mother Earth. We are a family, and as a family should take care of each other and our environment. Positive change in individual awareness brings positive change in collective awareness. This should be first priority. We should sit with our family and the Bodhisattva Earth Holder to decide how to act. “With your first mindful breath, healing will begin.”
Sangha Building July 28, 2008
Posted by Alan in sangha.Tags: ancestors, community, compassion, family, family traditions, hungry ghost, interbeing, meditation, mindfulness, pain, parenting, present moment, roots, sangha, sangha family, seeds of mindfulness, single parent, suffering, Thich Nhat Hanh
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The dharma reading for this week and last week was Chapter Nine, “Sangha Building,” from Thich Nhat Hanh’s Touching Peace: Practicing the Art of Mindful Living, pp. 99-115. Here’s a summary.
Thay says he sees people without roots as hungry ghosts. A “hungry ghost” is “a wandering soul who is extremely hungry and thirsty but whose throat is too narrow for food or drink to pass through.” (p. 99) A hungry ghost longs for love and beauty, but is unable to receive or touch them, turning instead, in their search for meaning, to alcohol, drugs, or sex.
The main sickness of our time is the production by society of millions of persons with no roots, no happiness at home, nothing to believe in or belong to. How can a person survive with nothing to believe in, with no energy to smile or touch beauty? Drugs are not the cause of these problems, so attempts to control drugs will have only limited success. Rather, we need to rebuild the foundations of our communities to offer people something to believe in. Science, Marxism, even the God President Bush invoked against Iraq, are all too small. Many people are turned off by others who claim to represent traditions the deepest values of which they have not experienced for themselves.
Mindfulness, on the other hand, the awareness of what is going on in the present moment, is something we can believe in. Mindfulness is not an abstraction. When we drink a glass of water, when we sit, walk, stand or breathe, we know we are drinking a glass of water, sitting, walking, standing or breathing. Mindfulness is the living buddha inside us, “giving birth to insight, awakening, compassion, and love.” All people, not just Buddhists, have these seeds of mindfulness in them, and watering these seeds can restore families.
The “five powers” taught by the Buddha are faith, energy, mindfulness, and understanding. Faith brings about energy, and a good friend can inspire faith. (p. 102) We must put our trust in what is stable; “I take refuge in the sangha” means I trust a stable community. Friends in sangha are the most essential element of the practice.
Looking deeply, we discover that what we call our “self” is made entirely of non-self bits from society, nature, ancestors, and those we love. We may resist acknowledging roots that have made us suffer, but when we connect with them, our pain begins to melt away. We see our place in the continuation from our ancestors to future generations. Rather than throw away our traditions, we must find the best elements among them, living in a way that allows joy, peace, and liberation for our ancestors, ourselves, our children, and their children.
For those abused, beaten, rejected, or severely criticized by their parents, the meditation on the five-year-old child may be helpful. “Breathing in, I see myself as a five-year-old child. Breathing out, I smile at the five-year-old child in me.” You can acknowledge your vulnerability and the pain you received as a child. Next you can visualize your parent as a five-year-old child, acknowledging his or her vulnerability, even though he or she may have been very different later as a parent, possibly victims of their own ancestors. A parent who suffered much at the hands of his own parents may not have learned how to treat his own child well. In this way, the suffering, the circle of samsara, continues. With compassionate and mindful practice, your anger may dissolve, allowing you to smile and hug your parent, saying, “I understand you, Dad [or Mom]. You suffered very much during your childhood.” (p. 105)
Meditation helps us discover the value of our families’ traditions. Divisions between people based on religious traditions have added much to suffering over the centuries. This should not occur; any insight gained into interbeing, regardless of the religious tradition, is true meditation. We cannot ask hungry ghosts to go back to their own roots; they cannot absorb any nourishment there. We must offer them a new environment where they can take root. The sangha can be modeled after the family, with dharma brothers, dharma sisters, dharma aunts, uncles, mothers and fathers. In Plum Village, Thay is “Grandpa Teacher.” The sangha family offers a new opportunity to get rooted.
Intimate, deep relationships, first with one person, then with another, and gradually with others, bring peace and harmony to everyone in the sangha. A deep desire of Thay’s is that communities organized like large families, with all the brothers and sisters, aunts and uncles, cousins and grandparents, not like isolated, non-communicative islands, will help people succeed in their practice. The small nuclear family is not such a good model: there is not enough air to breathe, nowhere to escape to. Seeds of suffering are too easily transmitted when the family is too constrictive. The large traditional family provides many avenues for help.
The single parent need not think he or she must remarry; he or she may be more stable without a partner. You can transform yourself into a hermitage with air, light, and order inside, a peaceful and joyful refuge for your child and friends, your dharma brothers and sisters in the practice community. Return to your hermitage and arrange things within, opening the windows to let healthy elements in, closing the windows to keep unhealthy elements out. The single parent can learn to be both father and mother, both disciplinarian and nurturer, and can succeed with the help of friends and the community. Other adults in the sangha can serve as aunts and uncles for the child. And the practice center will benefit from the presence of children. “Children are jewels who can help the practice. If the children are happy, all the parents and non-parents will enjoy the practice.” (p. 111)
Practicing together can bring real transformation, in a good sangha where people are happy and communication is open. Time, energy, and concentration are required to build a sangha; “we have to take care of each person, staying aware of his pain, her difficulties, his aspirations, her fears and hopes.” Each of us needs this. Without a sangha, burn-out will come quickly. (p.112)
To build a sangha, find one person to join in your practice. Eventually others will join, and the sangha will include “the trees, the birds, the meditation cushion, the bell, and even the air you breathe.” The sangha where all practice deeply together is a gem. Organize in a way that is enjoyable for everyone. It will never be perfect, but imperfect is good enough. When you practice together mindfully, resisting the speed, violence, and unwholesome ways of society, you are a sangha. Substance is most important; forms, such as those of churches or other religious traditions, can be adapted. Just do everything in mindfulness. The value will be evident, not in what you say, “but through your being.”
We Have Arrived May 19, 2008
Posted by Alan in sangha.Tags: ancestors, bodhisattva, Buddha, happiness, interbeing, Mara, present moment, Thich Nhat Hanh, walking meditation
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Today’s dharma reading was chapter four from Thich Nhat Hanh’s Touching Peace. Here’s a summary. Please share any thoughts.
Thich Nhat Hanh relates a story about a friend who helped him organize a visit to India. He describes the friend’s discomfort and inability to relax due to the discrimination he has endured throughout his life as a member of India’s lowest social caste. We all struggle in a similar manner, forgetting that “we have arrived;” conditions for our happiness are already here in the present moment, not waiting for us sometime in the future.
The practice of stopping now and looking deeply halts the habit energy of the negative seeds we have inherited from our ancestors and our society, liberating both ancestors and future generations. This is the teaching of interbeing. If we do not liberate our ancestors, we remain in bondage and we will transmit that to our children and grandchildren. Touching the earth, stepping mindfully, we all arrive and find peace at the same moment.
Thay includes several other images to illustrate interbeing: a meeting between Sudhana and Mahamaya, the mother of the Buddha, sitting on lotus flowers of hundreds of millions of petals; millions of Diamond Matrix bodhisattvas giving exactly the same discourse at the same time all over the universe; all of us taking care of the baby inside us, thus taking care of everything. “The moon is in me. My beloved is in me. Those who make me suffer are also in me…there is no hatred or blaming…No one is afraid to die, because dying means being born as something else at the same time.”
Thay goes on to describe the appearances of Mara – anger, darkness, jealousy, craving, despair; skepticism; worldly ambition – to the Buddha. Siddhartha greets Mara with quiet gentleness, touching the Earth, calling on the Earth to testify for him. The Earth trembles and appears as a goddess, offering flowers, fruits, perfumes. Mara just disappears. Similarly, when we recognize Mara, and respond by touching the Earth and walking upon the Earth mindfully and joyfully, Mara goes away. Earth is our nourishment, our refuge, our healer.
Thay continues with a full description of walking meditation. He then concludes by telling us we need not struggle, nor hurry. When we smile, countless bodhisattvas smile with us, and our peace affects our ancestors and all future generations. “Peace is every step. We have already arrived.” (Touching Peace, 35-45)