Transcript
[1:01] You've been devastated by fear, and you
[1:04] will teach us in your way of community.
[1:07] Good morning.
[1:09] Today we are Sunday April the 5th, the
[1:12] year 2026, and we are
[1:16] the assembly of town of star meditation
[1:19] hall
[1:20] in the
[1:21] Lower Hamlet
[1:23] in the Dominican heart and home.
[1:26] So,
[1:29] this week as we eat of the week is uh
[1:32] uh grief and loss.
[1:36] For our friends who come to spend the
[1:41] the day today, the mindfulness day which
[1:43] is only for you to
[1:45] to know that uh the my sharing today
[1:49] will be
[1:50] uh
[1:51] about loss, and grief, and joy.
[1:54] As I thought,
[1:56] and uh that,
[1:57] I to uh
[1:59] honor that
[2:01] today is a Easter Sunday.
[2:04] So, and I wanted to honor
[2:07] all the
[2:08] millions of people in the world for
[2:12] whom it is a
[2:14] a very wonderful day.
[2:17] This is a day of the
[2:19] resurrection of the Christ.
[2:23] So, and it's a
[2:25] It goes so very well with the theme of
[2:27] our weakness.
[2:29] Because
[2:31] Easter speak about loss
[2:34] and renewal
[2:36] to come back.
[2:38] To come back to
[2:42] When we look at different eyes, then we
[2:45] can see today is the presence of Jesus
[2:48] uh
[2:49] still here
[2:51] among us.
[2:53] His love
[2:55] his compassion.
[2:57] So, it's very impressive. So, I just
[2:59] wanted to
[3:00] honor
[3:02] Easter Sunday.
[3:06] And
[3:07] uh uh
[3:08] Myself, I was raised a
[3:11] Catholic. And
[3:14] it was a religion of my parents. So,
[3:17] and so as a child and I followed this
[3:19] tradition.
[3:21] But when I became a teenager
[3:23] and especially was in the '70s,
[3:26] then
[3:28] I kind of uh
[3:29] pushed away this tradition.
[3:32] And
[3:33] particularly
[3:34] after the death of uh
[3:36] of a young friend
[3:38] and uh
[3:39] I was around 16, 17, the death of my
[3:42] grandfather and then my father.
[3:45] Then I decided to leave
[3:48] the spiritual dimension to take the dis-
[3:50] spiritual dimension of my
[3:54] But after a few years living in Paris,
[3:56] uh
[3:57] then I felt that uh
[3:59] this spiritual dimension was very
[4:01] necessary
[4:03] to uh find happiness because I found
[4:05] that even if I enjoyed my life as a
[4:08] young woman in Paris,
[4:10] something was missing. Then the
[4:12] spiritual dimension came back uh
[4:15] through uh traveling
[4:17] to different cultures which had uh a
[4:20] different look at uh at death.
[4:24] And uh
[4:25] and then
[4:27] opening my eyes to uh
[4:29] different uh ideas and uh
[4:32] and view instead of being limited. Then
[4:36] it gave me a different perspective.
[4:39] And uh
[4:41] And so this spiritual dimension then
[4:43] came back through books and through
[4:46] encountering different people with
[4:48] different ideas. So
[4:49] So this was in the '70s.
[4:52] So as as seen there there is a few of us
[4:56] who are about
[4:58] who knew this uh period where the whole
[5:01] society shift shifted.
[5:07] And so is uh
[5:08] during this traveling then I I touched a
[5:11] different uh
[5:13] uh
[5:14] different view. And uh recently we went
[5:17] to to Mexico with a group of the
[5:20] brothers and sisters
[5:22] to offer retreats.
[5:25] And uh
[5:26] there is one uh
[5:28] So here in our community, our tradition,
[5:31] we we bow, we greet each other bringing
[5:34] our palms together like body and mind
[5:38] together.
[5:39] But when we were in Mexico, particularly
[5:41] comes from the the Mayan the the the
[5:45] Maya the civiliz- civilization of the
[5:48] Maya. Then, they put their hand on their
[5:50] heart
[5:52] to greet you, meaning I see you.
[5:55] I see you. You know, I know you're
[5:57] there. And I found that so beautiful to
[6:00] uh
[6:02] you know, to greet this way. I see you.
[6:05] To recognize how important the presence
[6:08] of the other person.
[6:11] And when we were in um
[6:13] so, in this uh beautiful country in
[6:16] Mexico, we went to different region, but
[6:19] we we visited
[6:22] a place called Teo- Teotihuacan,
[6:26] which is uh in near Mexico City, which
[6:30] is an ancient uh
[6:32] a city which is in ruins, but which that
[6:36] dates from about a thousand of years
[6:38] ago.
[6:39] And this uh And it's a huge city which
[6:43] is in ruins. So,
[6:45] and the the very very
[6:47] I mean, huge. And it was discovered by
[6:50] the
[6:51] Aztec who
[6:53] uh were very uh
[6:55] surprised to discover this city, huge
[6:59] city.
[7:00] And it was not built by the Mayan
[7:02] either.
[7:04] Mhm. So, it's like uh
[7:06] the city we don't know until now
[7:09] who built it.
[7:11] So,
[7:12] we were
[7:14] So, we were with a group of
[7:16] sister and brothers,
[7:18] and we walked through this uh
[7:21] this huge city in ruins. So,
[7:24] and so, and for me, in my uh
[7:29] the practice of walking meditation is a
[7:32] practice which brought me a lot of uh
[7:35] healing and uh and discovering
[7:40] uh,
[7:41] reconnecting with my beloved one who
[7:44] passed away.
[7:45] And uh, a very powerful practice and uh,
[7:49] and now it comes when I go to some place
[7:52] and it comes
[7:53] kind of naturally to feel the presence
[7:57] of my beloved one and to feel the
[8:00] presence particularly of Thay, of Thay,
[8:03] our teacher who taught me uh,
[8:06] walking meditation.
[8:09] And uh, so we were walking in this uh,
[8:12] you know, among the different uh, alley
[8:16] and what used to be a street in this
[8:18] city. And really I felt
[8:22] so the friend felt of these uh,
[8:24] thousands, tens of thousands of people
[8:28] who lived there,
[8:30] who loved, cried, and worked,
[8:35] prayed. So they were very present in us,
[8:40] very present on this land. And at the
[8:42] same time the presence of Thay, our
[8:44] teacher, in the same time the presence
[8:47] of my family member who are not
[8:51] physically alive.
[8:53] And and it was very uh,
[8:55] and the presence of
[8:57] uh, thousands of people who were
[8:59] visiting at the same time the master.
[9:02] And so it was very uh,
[9:04] powerful to feel the past
[9:07] and the present
[9:10] and
[9:11] there, really
[9:14] uh, everyone together to feel this
[9:16] continuation
[9:17] since a long time ago.
[9:21] So it was uh,
[9:24] and in the this different civilized
[9:27] civilization, particularly the Mayan
[9:29] civilization, so
[9:31] the
[9:33] the life was seen as a great cycle.
[9:36] You see like we can the season here. We
[9:40] see the now is the spring. So we we see
[9:44] the renewal
[9:46] after the winter and we have the feeling
[9:49] that things
[9:50] you know
[9:52] are dead. The trees maybe are dead. If
[9:55] we look at the vine vine all around
[9:59] you know they look
[10:01] like uh
[10:02] completely uh
[10:04] don't you see you know all and without
[10:07] vitality, without life.
[10:10] And then now in the spring we see little
[10:13] buds and little leaves coming.
[10:16] And then by the fall we'll have a lot of
[10:18] wonderful fruits. So
[10:20] so it's uh the this is a cycle of of
[10:25] life.
[10:26] It's between the birth and the death.
[10:30] We listen to a song of the bear.
[11:12] So as as we walk in the in this
[11:16] big city, so we walk in silence.
[11:19] Just really air
[11:22] or or to to see this city and we know
[11:26] that the Aztec
[11:28] when they walk on this land, they have
[11:31] the same
[11:32] because they discover the city was just
[11:36] a woods with no silence. And so they
[11:39] were
[11:41] in wonder too
[11:43] who built this city.
[11:45] So it's like uh
[11:47] uh
[11:48] only I like to make this uh
[11:51] this connection.
[11:56] So we
[11:57] it's and then when I was there one
[12:00] things which uh
[12:02] touch me so I said so I felt the past
[12:05] and the present. But then I felt the
[12:07] future as well because I asked myself
[12:10] the question
[12:12] what what are we leaving? What will we
[12:16] leave behind ourself as a civilization?
[12:20] What are we going to leave behind? So I
[12:22] will
[12:23] you know in a thousand years
[12:26] people will come and they'll be walk on
[12:28] this land. What I'll going to leave
[12:30] what's behind?
[12:32] So and what do I want to leave behind?
[12:36] What is my beloved one left behind?
[12:39] And so uh
[12:41] so it was really
[12:43] yeah to feel the past, the present, the
[12:47] future to live this
[12:50] this trip that I wanted to share with
[12:53] you.
[12:55] So uh uh
[12:56] and in our life it's uh
[12:59] uh and I think it's feeling my own life
[13:02] our the spiritual dimension
[13:05] uh
[13:06] what is very important and necessary to
[13:09] face the challenge the the challenges
[13:13] that we face and do in our life.
[13:18] To be able to meet with all these
[13:20] different challenges uh
[13:25] So In in our in our practice, to
[13:29] to help us in the
[13:31] It's we have the practice of
[13:34] mindfulness, concentration, insight.
[13:38] So, is this uh
[13:40] in this energy of uh of mindfulness
[13:44] is uh concentration and insight is going
[13:47] to be a to bring us
[13:50] uh compassion, the joy, and the healing
[13:53] that we we need to to meet all these
[13:56] challenges that we face.
[14:06] And in in our practice, our teacher left
[14:09] us some uh
[14:12] little poem of practice
[14:15] that we can uh
[14:17] uh
[14:18] uh use in our daily life.
[14:21] And there is uh the little gatha, and
[14:25] what we call the little poem that I like
[14:27] to recite in the morning when I wake up.
[14:31] And so, waking up this morning, I smile.
[14:35] 24 brand new hours before me.
[14:38] I'm allowed to live to live them fully,
[14:41] to live the present moment fully.
[14:44] And to look at the world with the eyes
[14:46] of compassion.
[14:48] So, the first thing in the morning, so
[14:51] we realize
[14:53] I'm awake.
[14:55] I will smile to life. Maybe some morning
[14:58] we don't feel like smiling,
[15:00] but it's to
[15:01] bring a gentle smile to our face,
[15:04] and then it will uh
[15:07] change the way we look at life,
[15:10] even if we don't feel like smiling, but
[15:12] maybe we can offer a smile to to life.
[15:17] Life is a gift.
[15:19] And so,
[15:20] I'm up this morning, I smile. 24 brand
[15:24] new hours, so that mean it's a new day.
[15:28] Like every day is a new day.
[15:31] For me in my
[15:33] in my life
[15:35] is a
[15:37] I really bring into every day a new day,
[15:40] a new moment, and after gratitude for
[15:43] this gift of this new day.
[15:46] Cuz every day is it's a gift that is
[15:50] brought by life. We don't know what the
[15:52] day is going to bring. And so it's like
[15:54] just to open.
[16:00] And open.
[16:01] Yeah.
[16:02] A new day, a new beginning.
[16:08] And so it's to have this intention to
[16:12] live a fully the present moment.
[16:16] And to really uh
[16:20] enjoy life, and be really present for
[16:25] everything which will be uh
[16:28] which will come.
[16:30] To be open.
[16:35] And uh
[16:37] And so is this attention of being
[16:40] Okay, I will try.
[16:44] I will practice
[16:45] to open myself.
[16:48] To
[16:49] to life.
[16:51] And to look at the world with the eyes
[16:53] of compassion. And so is to look at
[16:56] ourself and then everything around us
[16:59] with the eyes of compassion.
[17:01] To have an open heart.
[17:05] And then in the evening then we have
[17:08] another little gatha. And in the evening
[17:11] we can contemplate what did I do with
[17:15] the The which just ended. There we goes.
[17:18] The day has now ended. I Our lives are
[17:21] shorter.
[17:22] Let us look carefully. What have we
[17:25] done?
[17:26] With all our heart, let us be diligent
[17:28] in the practice.
[17:30] Let us live deeply
[17:32] free from our afflictions.
[17:35] Aware of impermanence so that life does
[17:38] not drift away without meaning.
[17:43] So, it's like we look, how was the day?
[17:46] How was the day today?
[18:05] Then we can
[18:06] we could ask ourself uh
[18:09] uh
[18:10] Like for our our friend who was who are
[18:13] here who arrived Friday.
[18:16] And now our friends who are here for the
[18:18] day, maybe if you look
[18:20] how was my day yesterday? What did I do?
[18:24] What did
[18:25] how did I feel? What was my experience?
[18:30] So, we can we can look
[18:33] what
[18:36] What was my intention when I got up in
[18:39] the morning? Did I have an intention or
[18:41] I just got up and just went on
[18:44] with whatever was there.
[18:46] So, it's like it's a
[18:51] As I said, for me it's a when I I try
[18:55] and I practice to really see that
[18:59] every day is a new day. Every day
[19:02] is like the we open the curtain
[19:06] to
[19:07] whatever is going to be offered to us.
[19:17] Myself yesterday I was uh
[19:19] enough um
[19:25] uh
[19:28] asking myself, "How am I going to
[19:32] uh
[19:33] offer this sharing this morning
[19:36] about grief and loss?"
[19:38] Uh
[19:40] I went through a lot of loss in my life
[19:44] and a lot of grief.
[19:46] And
[19:47] is
[19:49] how to uh Yeah, so this was in me
[19:51] yesterday.
[19:53] And uh
[19:54] it's always a a challenge for me to come
[19:58] and sit here and uh uh share about uh
[20:02] about my practice. So, I need to share
[20:05] that to you, so I feel uh
[20:08] show you my vulnerability so to be able
[20:11] to relax a bit.
[20:13] So, uh
[20:14] uh thank you for being here and thank
[20:16] you for coming to spend
[20:19] the week here with us uh
[20:22] and to come together to uh
[20:25] uh
[20:26] express our grief to be able to be seen,
[20:30] to be heard,
[20:31] to be held into uh into what is
[20:35] happening in us.
[20:37] So, the
[20:39] uh
[20:40] the loss
[20:42] a loss can speak a lot of different uh
[20:46] We There's a loss of someone that maybe
[20:49] dies, someone that we love who die. But
[20:52] there is it can be a the loss of uh of
[20:56] our our work, the loss of a country that
[21:00] we love that we had to leave, to leave
[21:02] behind as a refugee.
[21:05] Uh the loss of uh
[21:07] of uh relationship.
[21:09] So, it's loss is like very there is many
[21:13] different aspect which can cause
[21:19] a lot of uh
[21:20] a grief in us.
[21:22] And our our society in our society, the
[21:26] tendency is to
[21:29] push away the grief.
[21:31] And to just go on.
[21:34] And so to kind of uh
[21:37] mask
[21:39] our grief. And like let it not
[21:43] appear or cry by ourself.
[21:47] And which
[21:49] can create a lot of depression.
[21:52] And I know for for myself I uh
[21:57] So, I I lost my my father before and
[22:02] when I was 19, just a few days before my
[22:04] 20th birthday.
[22:06] And so
[22:08] uh Okay, he was he was dead.
[22:12] And so it was like that.
[22:15] And
[22:16] uh
[22:17] So, I didn't really took care of my
[22:20] grief.
[22:22] But the thing too after I I as I said, I
[22:25] encountered
[22:27] brought back the spiritual dimension
[22:29] into my life. And so I had um
[22:33] I practiced meditation, yoga.
[22:36] I joined
[22:38] a community, a spiritual community. And
[22:41] then so it was really part of my life.
[22:44] But until I encountered Thich Nhat
[22:46] Hanh's teaching and encountered Thich
[22:49] Nhat Hanh,
[22:50] I didn't really have the connection with
[22:53] my
[22:56] beloved one or friends who passed away.
[22:59] But when I encountered Thich Nhat Hanh
[23:01] at the beginning, Thich Nhat Hanh really
[23:03] in this practice with a walking
[23:05] meditation invited us to uh
[23:09] to walk with our our father. Our father
[23:11] was one day at the beginning when I came
[23:13] here. It's uh
[23:16] visualize your father holding your hands
[23:19] and then visualize the feet of your
[23:20] father walking with you.
[23:23] And it has been then I um
[23:27] I put into practice what Thich Nhat Hanh
[23:29] was saying.
[23:31] And I really felt it was very a very
[23:33] powerful moment because I felt the
[23:36] presence of my father which I didn't
[23:39] feel since he passed away.
[23:42] So it was like uh many many years later
[23:44] that I felt that my father was here in
[23:48] me. But I realized and touched it. It
[23:50] was an experience, a very deep feeling.
[23:53] My father was present and there walking
[23:56] with me. And then when when I was
[23:58] smaller, I used to uh
[24:00] to put my feet on the my father's feet
[24:03] to dance.
[24:04] He taught me how to dance uh tango and
[24:07] uh
[24:08] and waltz waltz, you know. So and
[24:12] and was very uh powerful and from
[24:15] this moment, this experience, and I
[24:17] continue feeling that then I I was able
[24:21] to reopen
[24:23] the connection with my father
[24:26] which because
[24:28] uh
[24:29] my it when he passed away was very sick
[24:33] and uh he was only 42. He was very young
[24:35] when he passed away. But he was
[24:37] suffering from alcoholism
[24:40] and he couldn't stop drinking. And so it
[24:44] was one one one of the condition why to
[24:47] he could he he fall very sick.
[24:50] And um
[24:51] and so and at the end of his life, I
[24:54] didn't want to tell him that I loved
[24:57] him. And was something that I was
[24:59] carrying in my heart.
[25:01] I didn't ever didn't want to tell him I
[25:03] loved him. But
[25:06] So and I could feel that it was a
[25:09] was in me. Was like a weight in me. But
[25:12] with a practice and with a connection
[25:14] that I had with my father again through
[25:17] the walking meditation.
[25:20] Then I started writing letter to him.
[25:23] And then I was able you know to tell him
[25:27] even if he was not there physically
[25:29] anymore. But I could feel his presence
[25:32] and I told him that I loved him.
[25:35] And I I was very It's very uh
[25:39] It's a practice that we're not used to
[25:41] it may seems a bit uh
[25:44] uh strange.
[25:45] But in fact it's a reality uh uh
[25:50] there is a continuation.
[25:52] It's not that uh
[25:54] we disappear.
[25:56] When we pass away there is a
[25:57] continuation.
[25:59] So
[26:01] And um the the other experience I want
[26:04] to share with you is my mother. She
[26:07] passed away in 1995.
[26:10] I was myself I was
[26:12] 42 at this time.
[26:14] So and uh
[26:16] And when she passed away was so painful.
[26:19] Was like something was tear apart from
[26:22] me. Like a part in me.
[26:24] And you probably I'm sure some of you
[26:26] you felt like that. It's like you have a
[26:29] part of you
[26:30] is is something is cut from you. And
[26:33] that what I felt something was cut from
[26:35] me.
[26:36] And in fact is only it's only a part of
[26:39] us and this part is very painful. But
[26:41] there is many other part of us.
[26:45] Which can feel the joy and can
[26:48] be present for the wonder of life.
[26:51] So
[26:53] But it was so painful that I buried my
[26:57] my pain. I didn't know what to do with
[26:59] it. So, I just buried it. I worked a lot
[27:02] and I didn't really uh
[27:05] uh
[27:05] let it uh circulate and uh took care of
[27:08] it.
[27:09] And um
[27:11] and uh
[27:12] people around me was were telling me,
[27:15] "Just go on. Just go on."
[27:17] You know, like, "No. Don't uh
[27:20] Don't show your grief. Don't show your
[27:22] grief." So, that's what I did. And I
[27:24] know it took me many years, even with
[27:27] the the practice here, it took me many
[27:30] many years to be able to open myself
[27:34] to the grief of the loss of my mother
[27:38] and to reconnect with her. And what
[27:40] helped me a lot, and I was missing
[27:43] uh her love. Her love, that's what I was
[27:46] missing the most. Not seeing her, not
[27:49] being able to hear her voice.
[27:52] And then because um
[27:55] w- with uh
[27:57] with uh the
[28:00] the way that uh our teacher invited us
[28:04] to get in touch with the nature and with
[28:07] the beauty of nature and uh
[28:10] um
[28:12] the the the beauty, the wonder, and the
[28:15] love of nature.
[28:17] Then then I could feel okay. I can feel
[28:21] I could feel the the love of the of
[28:23] Mother Earth. I could feel it.
[28:27] And then after but so
[28:29] my mother is back
[28:31] is uh
[28:33] continuing. She's back and then so I
[28:36] could I could feel her love through the
[28:39] wind, through the bird the singing of
[28:42] the birds, through the sun of my on my
[28:45] face.
[28:47] And so I could
[28:49] then little by little
[28:52] the pain
[28:54] transform.
[28:57] There's something open in me. I was able
[28:59] to let the tears come, and then let the
[29:04] the grief be a transformed in a and
[29:07] being in contact with the love
[29:09] of my mother.
[29:15] So, the the
[29:17] grief is transformation.
[29:23] And so, there is a a beautiful uh
[29:26] a sentence from Rumi. Probably a lot of
[29:29] you all know Rumi. And then he said,
[29:32] "The wound The wound is a place where
[29:35] the light enters you."
[29:38] This means when it through our suffering
[29:42] like create a wound, we feel a wound,
[29:44] but then the light
[29:46] the light of life
[29:49] which comes through this wound. The ways
[29:52] we like maybe we we have an Often is in
[29:55] life we just go like maybe on automatic
[29:58] pilot, and maybe we put an armor again
[30:02] around us, but then one point our
[30:05] suffering something
[30:07] very deep, a loss happen, and then we
[30:10] have deep grief, and then
[30:12] create a wound.
[30:14] And then
[30:15] something a softening and opening comes.
[30:23] Maybe we
[31:00] >> As I say like our grief is a
[31:02] continuation of love.
[31:06] It is because we have loved
[31:09] deeply that we feel the pain of loss.
[31:14] And if we look deeply, we may discover
[31:17] that love has not ended. It is simply
[31:19] changing its form.
[31:23] Who is um
[31:44] So healing will start with a small
[31:47] steps.
[31:48] To heal is like it's very
[31:51] we have to go with tenderness and very
[31:54] slowly.
[31:56] It cannot happen just suddenly.
[32:00] So
[32:01] is
[32:02] the connection with other people uh
[32:05] to um
[32:08] um
[32:15] And Thich Nhat Hanh, our teacher
[32:18] um
[32:20] went through a lot of suffering and
[32:23] difficulty
[32:24] through war
[32:26] and losing uh
[32:29] his own country because it he was in
[32:31] exile. And through all this suffering,
[32:34] Thich Nhat Hanh, our teacher, was able
[32:36] to uh
[32:37] uh develop a a practice uh
[32:40] to uh
[32:43] to be able to go through these
[32:45] challenges uh
[32:46] to be able to go through all the pain
[32:48] and the suffering and all these practice
[32:52] that we have today in our monastery is
[32:55] practices which will help us to meet all
[32:59] these uh challenges and difficulty.
[33:05] And so and Thich Nhat Hanh tell us is
[33:07] don't run away from your suffering.
[33:10] Embrace it and take good care of it.
[33:14] Oh, don't run away from your suffering.
[33:17] Embrace it and take good care of it.
[33:20] So and Thich Nhat Hanh is uh saying as
[33:22] well is uh life is filled with suffering
[33:27] uh and
[33:29] it is also filled with many wonders uh
[33:33] So it is filled with suffering, we
[33:36] suffer.
[33:37] There is we have the
[33:39] the pain, the grief, the loss
[33:42] and then there is many wonders. If we
[33:45] look at the window
[33:47] if we turn ourselves, if you look at the
[33:50] windows, then you can see
[33:52] all the uh beautiful flowers, the color,
[33:56] the form, the shape
[33:59] that are all around us.
[34:02] So how to connect with these
[34:04] these wonders and this to be able to
[34:08] connect with the beauty of life will
[34:10] help us
[34:11] to go through uh our suffering.
[34:14] So he said that
[34:16] life is filled with suffering and it it
[34:19] is also filled with many wonders like
[34:22] the blue sky, the sunshine and the eyes
[34:26] of a baby.
[34:28] To suffer is not enough.
[34:31] We must also be in touch with the
[34:34] wonders of life.
[34:36] They are within us and all around us,
[34:39] everywhere, anytime.
[34:46] So, there is a a lot of causes to
[34:49] suffering, the death, loss of a loved
[34:52] one, illness, maybe ourself is uh
[34:56] to uh
[34:58] uh when we have an illness or we lose
[35:01] the capacity of our body or we see that
[35:05] maybe a beloved one, for example, the
[35:08] when we have a close one who uh
[35:11] has um
[35:13] Alzheimer's disease or suffer from
[35:15] dementia, then the person that we love,
[35:18] that we were used to be with,
[35:21] is
[35:23] changing.
[35:24] And then we would like to keep the
[35:26] person as the person was and the person
[35:30] but life is change is in constant
[35:33] change.
[35:35] So, we change, the mind change.
[35:39] And so it's our to accept this reality
[35:42] of life, of the change.
[35:45] So, the illness, so maybe we have a
[35:48] diagnosis of illness for ourself or
[35:51] someone close to us.
[35:54] So, losing a job, unemployment is really
[35:58] a cause of deep grief, too. Divorce, the
[36:01] ending of a relationship.
[36:04] Our belief in something, maybe we
[36:06] believe in something and then
[36:08] something happen and then
[36:10] we we cannot believe in that anymore.
[36:15] So, hatred, division, disharmony in our
[36:18] society,
[36:19] which can create a lot of grief.
[36:22] So,
[36:24] to being starting in a new country can
[36:27] bring a lot of grief too when we don't
[36:29] know people. We have to change, go to a
[36:31] different country.
[36:34] And we are touched by wars, violence, or
[36:37] injustice happening in the world.
[36:41] We feel the loss of ecosystem species or
[36:44] the suffering of the earth.
[36:46] So, in in our uh epoch now, we can see
[36:51] there is a lot of causes to to grieve.
[36:55] And
[36:57] So, but it can when it's held in
[36:59] awareness, then it can become a gateway
[37:02] of to compassion.
[37:04] And a reminder
[37:06] of a deeper belonging.
[37:10] So, and it's a call who tell us to uh
[37:14] to be awake, to be uh
[37:17] to
[37:17] be more maybe more gentle with ourself,
[37:21] with others. Uh
[37:23] And recently I one of uh my monastic
[37:27] brother in uh he lives in Deer Park in
[37:31] California, in our monastery in Deer
[37:33] Park.
[37:34] And he gave a a talk last Sunday, but
[37:38] it's on we can see it on YouTube.
[37:41] And he was uh
[37:43] uh
[37:43] sharing about uh
[37:46] what's happening in the United States
[37:50] and this
[37:51] uh these days.
[37:53] And uh
[37:55] and about yeah, all all the war starting
[37:58] and and continuing creating a lot of uh
[38:03] violence and death, uh particularly
[38:06] young children.
[38:08] And so, and and then he started crying,
[38:11] but even more than crying, he was
[38:13] sobbing.
[38:14] Which was in the like uh very moving
[38:18] because he sobbed for quite some time.
[38:21] You see, so sometime we don't dare to
[38:24] let our tears come.
[38:27] But to do that and then
[38:29] just being held, you know, he he was
[38:33] sitting like I'm sitting today, but with
[38:35] a community in front of him. And just to
[38:38] feel because
[38:40] we're practicing and we we accepting
[38:43] each other in our vulnerability,
[38:46] then it's a very healing, but not
[38:48] healing only for him because he was a
[38:52] a a refugee from Vietnam. He was a his
[38:56] parents had to leave Vietnam
[38:59] when he was and he was 8 years old
[39:01] himself. So, everything which is
[39:03] happening today was like
[39:06] touch him
[39:08] very deeply as
[39:11] when he was a kid to leave his own
[39:13] country. So, he was just to his tears
[39:17] just came up. He didn't tell himself I'm
[39:19] going to cry. But he's
[39:21] So, he's maybe he's this week maybe you
[39:24] will you will
[39:25] feel that you will need just to let the
[39:28] tears come.
[39:29] And with being surrounded with a friends
[39:34] because often when we have grief, maybe
[39:36] the tendency and and the society is uh
[39:41] encouraging us to do this which is not
[39:44] really uh
[39:45] uh helpful and very compassionate is
[39:48] often we we we feel that we have to move
[39:52] ourself out and to
[39:54] to cry in our corner.
[39:57] So, we we kind of hide ourself.
[40:01] So, is but is our to be able to let
[40:05] ourself be held by the group, a group of
[40:09] people
[40:10] around us and us
[40:12] too when we see someone
[40:14] crying and suffering is to just not to
[40:18] try to fix it,
[40:20] but just to be there to offer a true
[40:22] presence, to be able to embrace a person
[40:25] in their suffering.
[40:27] And then but sometime too sometime when
[40:30] we go through grief, we we feel that we
[40:33] we need to be alone. So it's like a
[40:36] balance. Sometime we feel to to be alone
[40:40] and ourselves to just
[40:43] in our compassion to take care of this
[40:46] pain, this grief.
[40:51] So it's like a
[40:53] because the grief that we have is shared
[40:55] with many people. So it's not only our
[40:58] own grief.
[41:00] Like uh
[41:01] uh
[41:02] for example, our brother who was crying
[41:07] about everything which is happening with
[41:09] the war
[41:10] is something we can feel to the same
[41:13] grief.
[41:14] And when we see someone
[41:17] uh
[41:18] crying like that, maybe it help us to to
[41:21] open ourselves
[41:24] and
[41:25] to
[41:26] accept our own grief.
[41:43] So and I know for for myself is like uh
[41:48] um
[41:49] I know with the the
[41:50] the death and the pain of having lost
[41:54] many of my
[41:56] beloved one, family members and friends.
[42:01] And then what it does, it's like with a
[42:04] practice of welcoming welcoming my grief
[42:07] and my tears, what it helped me to open
[42:10] my heart to compassion. To have
[42:13] compassion for others, for the suffering
[42:16] of others.
[43:40] When practice which which
[43:56] Help me to open my heart
[43:59] and
[44:00] and recognize the great the gift of
[44:04] of life of every day which is
[44:07] offered to uh to us
[44:10] is a practice of of gratitude
[44:13] to have gratitude even for the the
[44:18] challenges, the pain, the loss uh
[44:23] because uh
[44:27] of this uh
[44:29] the pain and the loss uh
[44:33] I I learn I was able to learn many
[44:36] things and to open my heart uh to to
[44:39] compassion.
[44:41] Mhm.
[44:43] Um
[44:45] last week or 2 weeks ago in our
[44:47] monastery, we had some
[44:50] what we called transmission lamp
[44:53] transmission. That's mean the
[44:55] practitioner, people who've been
[44:56] practicing for many years uh
[44:59] then at one point then they they are
[45:02] they receive a lamp to be able to share
[45:05] the the teaching.
[45:07] And myself uh
[45:09] I received uh a lamp transmission in
[45:12] 2000
[45:14] the lamp transmission in 2011.
[45:17] And when you receive the lamp
[45:18] transmission, you write
[45:20] what we call a poem um
[45:24] insight gatha. It's something in your
[45:27] practice. What is your insight uh
[45:30] and so I wanted to share the my insight
[45:33] gatha. So I wrote it in French
[45:36] and but
[45:37] I
[45:38] I translated it in uh
[45:40] in
[45:41] English
[45:43] so it's uh
[45:45] it's not completely my trans my
[45:48] translation. I used to the
[45:51] uh
[45:52] mhm
[45:53] help of uh what we call chat GPT
[45:58] to turn it into a more poetic English so
[46:02] anyway, but I will
[46:04] in French is I will say in French first.
[46:33] Okay, so in English, huh?
[46:36] Before my ancestors crossed the
[46:38] threshold of death,
[46:41] I wept tears of despair.
[46:45] Held in mindfulness,
[46:47] those tears have become a hidden spring
[46:50] of happiness
[46:52] where I return to drink in stillness.
[46:57] In the deep quiet, I hear the tender
[47:00] murmur of their song,
[47:03] a melody drifting through time.
[47:07] And in the gentle art of letting go, I
[47:10] awaken to life
[47:12] bathed in a vast, silent joy.
[47:21] So, is uh
[47:24] Before I
[47:26] Before I or then I was married and I
[47:28] have a daughter.
[47:30] And now I I um
[47:34] Few months before I received the lamp, I
[47:37] was reflecting on the poem on the poem
[47:40] that you will offer I will offer for the
[47:44] ancestors.
[47:46] And then I was writing as I love walking
[47:48] meditation and walking meditation is a
[47:50] practice that really helped me through,
[47:53] as I said before, helped me a lot to
[47:57] touch to reconnect with my father,
[48:00] but to touch joy as well.
[48:03] And so, I really wrote many poem, and I
[48:07] showed them to my daughter. And my
[48:10] daughter, she shared with me. She said,
[48:12] "Mom, you need to share about your
[48:15] suffering and how the practice that I
[48:18] uh
[48:19] offered you and uh what you went through
[48:22] to
[48:24] what it did with the practice help you
[48:26] with your suffering?"
[48:28] Because in the um the Buddha's teaching,
[48:32] the first Dharma talk that uh the first
[48:34] sharing that uh the Buddha taught after
[48:38] his what we call his enlightenment
[48:41] was about uh four noble truths and the
[48:44] truth of suffering. That's mean in our
[48:47] life, we all all have suffering. All
[48:51] have
[48:52] So, the the truth of suffering and the
[48:55] truth of uh the noble truths that there
[49:00] is causes of suffering.
[49:03] There is many causes why we suffer.
[49:07] And but there is a a third noble truth,
[49:09] too, is there is a a happiness. There is
[49:15] a
[49:16] um
[49:18] a what we call well-being. I mean, there
[49:21] is a deep happiness, which is there for
[49:24] us to touch.
[49:26] And then the four noble truth is there
[49:29] the path
[49:31] to go through this deep happiness.
[49:35] What we call in in Buddhism, we say
[49:37] Nirvana. There is a path who can lead us
[49:40] to that. So, and these four truths, in
[49:44] fact, they are not separated. They inter
[49:47] are They are together. So, we can see,
[49:50] we can recognize and see in the in the
[49:54] suffering the the happiness which is
[49:57] there.
[49:58] Because in the like in the
[50:02] suffering the grief of losing someone
[50:06] in fact
[50:08] we can see and touch the person
[50:12] even more
[50:14] deeper than when the person was
[50:16] physically alive.
[50:18] Then we can connect and feel them within
[50:21] us.
[50:25] So I
[50:26] um
[50:29] So my
[50:31] in the gatha that I I offered is a
[50:35] is like
[50:37] I wiped tear of despair of losing my
[50:41] beloved one.
[50:42] But then with the practice of
[50:44] mindfulness, you know, really
[50:48] embracing embracing my tears.
[50:53] Taking care of my tears of my despair.
[50:56] Then
[50:58] with mindfulness, with awareness, aware
[51:01] of the suffering, aware of my suffering
[51:05] taking care of it
[51:07] then they became
[51:09] a source of happiness.
[51:12] And then what I do what we do is to be
[51:15] able
[51:16] to embrace this despair, we need the
[51:20] practice is to stop to be able to stop
[51:23] ourselves from running
[51:25] from running away
[51:27] from our despair, from our tears.
[51:30] So here uh
[51:32] when you came you already experienced
[51:34] that
[51:35] we we are
[51:38] enjoying to train to stop at the sound
[51:41] of the bell.
[51:43] So
[51:45] is during our life we are carried by
[51:49] something will push us to move to move
[51:52] fast and to move forward and faster and
[51:54] faster.
[51:56] And then to be able to slow down and to
[51:59] stop ourself just to take a a few
[52:03] moments to come back to our body,
[52:06] to come back to our feelings. What is
[52:09] happening in me?
[52:11] What is there around me, in me?
[52:15] And then it uh
[52:18] it open
[52:20] ourself to a different dimension of
[52:23] life.
[52:24] Mhm. Maybe we stop a moment and we
[52:27] breathe. We can connect with our body.
[52:32] How do I feel in my body? What
[52:36] the different sensations and feeling.
[55:09] >> I have a questions for you.
[55:11] Did you hear the birds?
[55:15] Yeah. Okay.
[55:17] Maybe? Yeah. Okay, good.
[55:20] Is uh
[55:21] This is one
[55:23] uh
[55:23] to be able to listen and to hear
[55:29] the
[55:30] uh
[55:31] the sound of nature
[55:34] is
[55:35] is to
[55:36] So, that's mean we are
[55:38] there is a connection there. Nature is
[55:41] speaking to us
[55:43] and then we are able just by stopping.
[55:47] But just marking a pause.
[55:50] Then we can
[55:51] hear we can hear the voice of of nature.
[55:56] We can hear something telling us.
[55:59] Come back my child. Where are you gone
[56:02] in your head? Oh.
[56:05] We forget.
[56:07] We forget. We forget that life is here.
[56:13] Our beloved one are here. We can hear
[56:16] them speaking to us.
[56:18] Saying so is a the birds but it can be.
[56:22] The wind
[56:24] or or.
[56:25] The sun the warm of the sun or even our
[56:28] tears is to feel.
[56:31] And uh.
[56:32] But.
[56:34] So we may when we have a lot of grief is
[56:37] we we may
[56:40] um.
[56:42] Kind of
[56:43] lose this
[56:45] the capacity to feel.
[56:48] To really
[56:50] feel the emotion feel.
[56:53] Through all the experience in our body.
[56:57] And is this to.
[56:59] Uh open ourselves to have this capacity.
[57:03] To feel the pain of the person in front
[57:05] of us
[57:07] and to feel our own pain.
[57:10] And to feel the joy to feel this is one.
[57:15] Uh
[57:16] the beauty when I came to Thich Nhat
[57:18] Hanh's teaching too and
[57:20] is our to embrace and take care of our
[57:23] suffering.
[57:25] And at the same time to nourish the joy.
[57:28] To nourish the joy which is very
[57:31] difficult because often we feel oh
[57:34] I have too much grief. I suffer too
[57:37] much. I cannot be joyful. It's not
[57:39] possible to have joy. It's not possible
[57:43] to find. And I know in
[57:46] after my my mother's passed away as I
[57:50] said was a lot of grief in me that I
[57:53] buried.
[57:54] And
[57:55] after uh
[57:58] after some time then I realized I didn't
[58:01] have joy anymore.
[58:03] I could see my daughter laughing with
[58:05] our our friends. I loved the practice
[58:08] that I was doing, the life that I had.
[58:11] But I couldn't was kind of a
[58:14] I couldn't be joyful anymore. The joy
[58:18] was not present.
[58:20] And what really helped me because I went
[58:23] I felt that I
[58:25] I looked in myself. What did I needed
[58:27] the most? And I felt that I needed the
[58:29] most was silence.
[58:32] To to be in silence and
[58:35] to practice more sitting meditation. So
[58:38] I went to
[58:39] more silent retreat. It was a lot of
[58:41] silence.
[58:43] And sitting meditation but a lot in the
[58:47] nature too. So I was going spending a
[58:50] lot of time in the nature just lying
[58:53] down
[58:55] on a bench and just
[58:57] being there in the nature. And then and
[59:00] there
[59:02] I really we connected with the joy of
[59:06] life. And then I had some uh some uh
[59:11] meeting someone and it was making me
[59:14] laugh a lot.
[59:16] Just for things like that. And it really
[59:20] I was able to reconnect with love with
[59:23] like very simple things, ordinary
[59:26] things. And uh What seems ordinary, but
[59:30] which is not in ordinary, is the wonder
[59:33] of life. So, it's how to bring back joy.
[59:37] So, during your your your time here, I
[59:40] really encourage you to to spend time
[59:43] outside,
[59:45] especially with the spring, uh to maybe
[59:49] adopt a tree, to adopt a tree and sit
[59:53] at the foot of the tree, or and hug the
[59:56] tree, put your ear on the tree,
[59:59] and then listen to what the tree wants
[1:00:01] to tell you.
[1:00:03] The tree will speak with you. And so, I
[1:00:05] encourage you to to do that. Choose a
[1:00:08] tree in the property, and if you like,
[1:00:11] it's just an invitation.
[1:00:13] But I know for me, I have a few friends
[1:00:15] on the property, and
[1:00:18] and I I I go, and I I just listen.
[1:00:21] Sometimes it's maybe something happen,
[1:00:24] and I go, and I hug the tree, and I
[1:00:26] listen.
[1:00:28] Or just ask the tree to give me a more
[1:00:31] to help me to root, to ground myself
[1:00:34] more.
[1:00:36] So, I encourage you to uh
[1:00:38] to do that
[1:00:40] when you hear. One practice which helped
[1:00:43] me a lot, too, is to do a journaling, to
[1:00:46] journal, to just put on the on paper
[1:00:50] whatever,
[1:00:51] you know, the
[1:00:53] maybe it's what things turning in my
[1:00:56] head, then just to let them on paper.
[1:01:00] And then to express my gratitude, to be
[1:01:04] able to say thank you to life, uh to
[1:01:06] really express my gratitude to life, or
[1:01:10] to try to the community,
[1:01:12] or to have my body still working okay,
[1:01:16] to thank my body,
[1:01:18] to thank the my sister who cook, you
[1:01:22] know, they cook for us. So,
[1:01:24] two of the sisters and the friends who
[1:01:26] live here.
[1:01:28] So, it's two of these uh
[1:01:30] to water what we say, to water these
[1:01:33] different seeds which are in in us.
[1:01:37] Uh in all of us.
[1:01:39] To
[1:01:40] So, we have the grief, the part of us
[1:01:42] who suffer and we sad.
[1:01:45] So, the tendency maybe to listen to sad
[1:01:50] music and to
[1:01:52] uh
[1:01:53] stay with our sadness. So, it's to be
[1:01:56] able to welcome and take care. And then,
[1:01:59] at the same time, to nourish other seeds
[1:02:02] in ourself.
[1:02:03] To nourish joy, to nourish uh
[1:02:07] the the gratitude, to nourish
[1:02:09] compassion, to nourish the
[1:02:12] to look
[1:02:13] and see the beauty.
[1:02:15] You know, like there is always
[1:02:19] This is there is a always a a tiny
[1:02:21] flowers even on the
[1:02:24] uh
[1:02:24] asphalt. You know, often you see a tiny
[1:02:28] flowers which grows or little leaf or
[1:02:31] little drop of water or a spider web
[1:02:35] that you can see the sun reflecting in
[1:02:38] the spider web. Always something that we
[1:02:41] can if we are mindful, aware,
[1:02:45] you know, we see the beauty and
[1:02:47] recognize the beauty
[1:02:49] in the most ordinary things. So,
[1:02:55] This is uh to really uh
[1:02:57] uh
[1:02:58] teach ourself to appreciate appreciate
[1:03:01] everything, the presence of the people
[1:03:03] around us.
[1:03:07] And the the Buddha offered us uh
[1:03:10] uh
[1:03:11] uh
[1:03:12] a teaching, the teaching on
[1:03:14] impermanence.
[1:03:16] So,
[1:03:17] maybe you already heard about uh
[1:03:20] uh but we had the first uh
[1:03:23] guiding meditation we had, we
[1:03:26] Sister Tomoe was uh
[1:03:28] guiding us to to recognize the
[1:03:30] impermanence and our our bodies change.
[1:03:33] So, if you look at a picture of yourself
[1:03:36] when you were a few years old,
[1:03:38] maybe a a young child or teenager, and
[1:03:41] you see yourself today,
[1:03:43] so, you see the change.
[1:03:45] Don't
[1:03:46] Yeah?
[1:03:48] Can you see the change in yourself?
[1:03:50] So, in fact, we changing constantly our
[1:03:53] body, our cells.
[1:03:55] Uh you know, millions of cells die every
[1:03:59] day in our body. So, to be able to
[1:04:02] recognize that, to accept this fact,
[1:04:06] I will get old. There is no escape of uh
[1:04:09] getting older.
[1:04:11] It's like
[1:04:12] myself I I
[1:04:15] And and it's very interesting how the
[1:04:17] brain I don't know if it's like that for
[1:04:19] you, because often the brain, when we
[1:04:21] look at the mirror, we we see ourself
[1:04:25] we keep the same face that maybe when
[1:04:27] you we were 30 or 40. It's very
[1:04:30] interesting.
[1:04:31] But then sometime you see a picture we
[1:04:33] say, "Oh, no, I
[1:04:35] don't look like that anymore. I have
[1:04:37] more wrinkles and things like that."
[1:04:42] But somehow our brain let us see the
[1:04:44] same same face that uh
[1:04:47] myself I see the face
[1:04:49] that I had when I was 35, 40.
[1:04:53] But then sometime I see picture or video
[1:04:55] of myself and oh, I don't see that
[1:04:57] anymore.
[1:04:59] But the mirror reflect my brain is uh
[1:05:03] making me see a different perception of
[1:05:05] myself.
[1:05:07] But it's to accept, okay, I don't know
[1:05:09] escape, I will go get older. And then I
[1:05:12] will get sick, too. We all get sick,
[1:05:14] huh? I I we all get sick, huh? So, it's
[1:05:18] like we cannot escape a sickness, huh?
[1:05:21] And we can also we will all die. All of
[1:05:23] us our body will die at one point. We
[1:05:26] cannot escape death, huh? You see in our
[1:05:29] community, we thought that our teacher
[1:05:31] will live forever.
[1:05:34] Thay We had this idea that Thay will
[1:05:37] never die.
[1:05:38] Thay I Thay never died,
[1:05:41] but his physical body died.
[1:05:43] So, he's very present. If we are here
[1:05:45] today, it's because Thay's and we are
[1:05:48] the older continuation of our teacher.
[1:05:51] But physically, I don't we don't see him
[1:05:54] anymore. We don't hear him anymore.
[1:05:56] So, it's like we can hear him on YouTube
[1:05:59] and on video, but
[1:06:01] it's it's different. It's not there
[1:06:03] physically.
[1:06:05] But so, we cannot escape death, it's a
[1:06:09] fact, huh? Mhm.
[1:06:11] And so, it's a
[1:06:13] And all that is dear to us, huh?
[1:06:17] All that everything that we cherish, we
[1:06:20] will have to let it go.
[1:06:22] Maybe
[1:06:23] we love our cat or we love our
[1:06:27] house or we love
[1:06:29] the people around us. We will have to
[1:06:31] let them go. We will not be we will not
[1:06:34] live with them. We just go when we leave
[1:06:37] and they will go, too.
[1:06:40] There is nowhere to escape being
[1:06:42] separated from them.
[1:06:44] Which is very difficult to accept
[1:06:46] because we want to keep
[1:06:48] things.
[1:06:50] But things change. It's a
[1:06:53] As you we see, we are speaking about
[1:06:55] spring. You see? And spring is really
[1:07:00] We're very lucky in this region of
[1:07:03] in this place in France because we have
[1:07:05] these four seasons, which are really we
[1:07:08] can really see the change of season
[1:07:11] season. So it help us to see and accept
[1:07:14] the change in life.
[1:07:19] And so it's only
[1:07:21] what we are the ground is our action. We
[1:07:24] will our action will
[1:07:27] of action of body, speech and mind that
[1:07:30] what will continue.
[1:07:32] That that what we will be that we will
[1:07:35] leave behind.
[1:07:37] You see so is uh
[1:07:40] when we see the
[1:07:42] some ancient civilization like when I
[1:07:45] was when I was speaking about Mexico and
[1:07:48] the Maya the
[1:07:51] the Maya civilization
[1:07:53] in fact they had a very deep love of
[1:07:55] nature and the way were when we we met
[1:07:59] some of our
[1:08:01] some of the descendant of the Maya the
[1:08:04] way
[1:08:05] they
[1:08:06] honor Mother Earth of taking care of
[1:08:09] Mother Earth.
[1:08:10] And then this like
[1:08:13] a transmission
[1:08:15] you see a transmission. So it's like
[1:08:18] ourself what do I want to leave behind
[1:08:21] which action
[1:08:24] what
[1:08:25] what
[1:08:27] You know we we print
[1:08:30] we print something.
[1:08:33] by our body by our thinking process our
[1:08:38] speech
[1:08:39] what do we want to leave behind? So the
[1:08:42] practice of uh
[1:08:44] of
[1:08:45] mindfulness and concentration
[1:08:49] insight so we have the insight or
[1:08:52] I don't want to leave behind me hatred
[1:08:56] or violence resentment. I prefer to
[1:08:59] offer peace.
[1:09:01] So it's like when we practice walking
[1:09:03] meditation
[1:09:04] then to uh
[1:09:06] um
[1:09:08] you know, print peace.
[1:09:10] You know, like really
[1:09:14] leave uh
[1:09:16] peace behind us uh
[1:09:18] as we walk. So, we try to uh
[1:09:21] to be that. That's what we want to leave
[1:09:23] behind uh
[1:09:25] So, everything will uh
[1:09:27] uh
[1:09:28] we will go, but we going to leave
[1:09:31] something behind us uh
[1:09:33] is uh
[1:09:35] our action of body, speech, and mind uh
[1:09:49] So, and I didn't uh
[1:09:52] speak of one uh very important aspect of
[1:09:56] our practice is our breath
[1:09:59] our breath, breathing
[1:10:01] to recognize the beauty of our
[1:10:04] breathing, of being able to breathe uh
[1:10:07] And so,
[1:10:08] uh
[1:10:09] when we go through grief and suffering,
[1:10:12] it's like the
[1:10:14] importance of having an anchor, a place
[1:10:17] where we can come back, a place which
[1:10:20] you're going to help us not to be
[1:10:22] carried away by
[1:10:24] the the suffering.
[1:10:27] And so, it's like when we we stop, we
[1:10:30] pause
[1:10:32] we can come back to our breath, come
[1:10:34] back to our body.
[1:10:36] So, our breathing is always there, 24
[1:10:39] hours a day. Our breath is there.
[1:10:43] So, we can connect with it and then just
[1:10:45] recognize the
[1:10:47] the the dance. You know, our our
[1:10:50] breathing is never the same.
[1:10:53] Breathing in
[1:10:55] out. Often myself, when I observe my
[1:10:58] breath, there is a pause
[1:11:01] in between, you know, the breathing in
[1:11:07] and out. And then we can see the breath
[1:11:09] manifest from conditions.
[1:11:12] Some conditions give me the possibility
[1:11:15] give us the possibility to breathe.
[1:11:18] Our lung our lungs,
[1:11:20] the oxygen that we breathe
[1:11:23] in.
[1:11:24] So, there is this interconnection
[1:11:26] interbeing nature. You see the trees,
[1:11:30] they offer us oxygen
[1:11:32] to be able to breathe and
[1:11:36] And then we breathe out.
[1:11:39] And the breathe the breathing cease.
[1:11:42] So, there is condition of the breathing
[1:11:45] cease. And then we let go of carbon
[1:11:48] dioxide, which give the possibility of
[1:11:51] the trees to breathe.
[1:11:53] And to be alive. So, there is a next
[1:11:55] chance. There is this inter connection
[1:11:59] which like we take example into the with
[1:12:02] the the breathing etc.
[1:12:05] But there is this So, we can touch.
[1:12:08] And then here we are all breathing.
[1:12:12] Are we?
[1:12:15] Yeah? Are you sure?
[1:12:17] Are you sure you can you connect that
[1:12:19] you're breathing now?
[1:12:21] That your heart is pumping blood through
[1:12:24] your out your body?
[1:12:26] It's something It's very simple, but
[1:12:28] often we don't think about it. We don't
[1:12:30] have gratitude for our breath.
[1:12:33] But if we don't breathe, that's mean our
[1:12:35] body will die.
[1:12:37] And our breathing happen automatically.
[1:12:40] So, it's like really having this
[1:12:43] just this fact of recognizing, "Oh, I'm
[1:12:46] breathing.
[1:12:48] I'm alive. What a joy.
[1:12:51] I can breathe." When we cannot breathe,
[1:12:53] it's very painful. I don't know if you
[1:12:56] some of you sometime you have maybe a
[1:12:58] cold or you have problem with your lungs
[1:13:01] and you cannot breathe.
[1:13:03] Or maybe, you know,
[1:13:05] don't know if you've been myself it
[1:13:06] happened to me you're in the you're
[1:13:09] swimming and you taken in the water and
[1:13:11] then you cannot breathe.
[1:13:13] And so it's a
[1:13:16] to discover oh, I'm breathing. What what
[1:13:19] a wonder. What a joy. I'm alive.
[1:13:23] It's a wonder to be able so the the
[1:13:26] breath is there and so we are all
[1:13:29] breathing
[1:13:30] here and so
[1:13:32] what do you think happen? Where does the
[1:13:35] air goes?
[1:13:38] So I'm breathing, you know, we have
[1:13:40] there is oxygen and then carbon dioxide,
[1:13:43] but we are all breathing
[1:13:46] in this room. So what do you think where
[1:13:48] the air goes?
[1:13:55] Don't know.
[1:13:58] But if we are breathing, that's mean we
[1:14:01] exchanging the air that we breathe.
[1:14:04] Between we are connecting through our
[1:14:06] breathing.
[1:14:08] It seems to me like that. I mean, I know
[1:14:11] that
[1:14:12] as we live in a community when someone
[1:14:14] has a cold often several of us will have
[1:14:17] a cold afterwards.
[1:14:19] So there is
[1:14:21] an exchange like that, but is it just is
[1:14:24] a
[1:14:25] is either is even if you look at the
[1:14:27] cycle of water.
[1:14:30] Just the cycle of water how the water
[1:14:33] what happened to the water and from the
[1:14:35] river from the ocean and it goes the
[1:14:38] cycle and we drink the water and then we
[1:14:41] pee and then it goes back to the earth.
[1:14:44] There is all this cycle of
[1:14:46] and the cycle of life, which is quite
[1:14:49] extraordinary if you explore.
[1:14:52] So, is
[1:14:53] and this gives a lot of
[1:14:55] lot of joy just to uh
[1:14:58] to see how this interconnection
[1:15:02] So, and there is this beautiful
[1:15:04] beautiful calligraphy from our teacher
[1:15:06] saying the tears
[1:15:08] I shed yesterday have become rain.
[1:15:12] So, when we have grief, we should we
[1:15:14] have tears.
[1:15:15] We shed tears, but then they become
[1:15:18] rain, and then the rain will uh
[1:15:21] will nourish the the soil, the earth, uh
[1:15:25] and allow for
[1:15:27] flowers, trees, vegetables,
[1:15:31] a lot of things to to grow. And it's the
[1:15:34] same for us, we let we shed tears,
[1:15:38] and then they they will soften our heart
[1:15:42] and open our heart to
[1:15:44] to compassion
[1:15:46] and to uh to life, to touch life in a
[1:15:50] deeper dimension.
[1:15:55] So, and uh
[1:15:59] So, when we live
[1:16:01] deeply the present moment, uh
[1:16:04] So, thank you for your
[1:16:06] your listening and your presence,
[1:16:09] and I
[1:16:13] Yeah.
[1:16:16] I wish you a a lot of uh
[1:16:19] of healing and joy as this week
[1:16:23] together.
[1:16:25] Thank you.
[1:16:28] And we listen to three sounds of the
[1:16:30] bell.
[1:17:32] >> Mhm.