Transcript
[1:38] Dear respected Thai, dear beloved
[1:40] community,
[1:43] welcome everyone.
[1:46] My name is uh brother Dawhan and
[1:50] I will uh share some stuff with you
[1:53] today.
[1:57] Today is uh Sunday uh April the 5th in
[2:01] the year 2026
[2:03] and we are seated in the Still Water
[2:05] meditation hall in the upper hamlet.
[2:10] It's a very beautiful day today. I think
[2:13] we are very lucky this week. Springtime
[2:16] is a very beautiful time of the year
[2:19] and we can hear
[2:22] Yeah, we can see the flowers blooming on
[2:24] the trees and on the grass. We can hear
[2:28] the birds singing when we walk
[2:31] or well I don't know what they're saying
[2:34] like brother uh brother Bang mentioned
[2:37] yesterday I have to say I'm listening to
[2:40] the birds and the frogs in a different
[2:42] way now trying to in interpret it what
[2:45] they are saying
[2:47] like what when I was listening to the
[2:49] frogs yesterday knowing that it's spring
[2:52] and mating season it it has a very
[2:55] different vibe suddenly
[3:00] But um yeah outside is very beauty
[3:04] beautiful
[3:05] but whether we uh can touch this beauty
[3:09] it doesn't only depend on the outside
[3:11] but it also really depends on us
[3:14] to be able to be in touch with spring.
[3:18] We first have to be in touch with
[3:20] ourself
[3:22] and we have to be available for for
[3:25] life.
[3:27] And
[3:29] yeah, it depends a lot on our own mind
[3:32] if we are in touch with beauty or not.
[3:35] It depends on where we put our
[3:37] attention.
[3:40] So
[3:42] luckily the same holds true for uh
[3:44] whatever is coming out of my mouth
[3:46] today. I don't take sole responsibility.
[3:50] It also depends on you whether this is
[3:53] uh is this a nice talk? Yes or no? Good
[3:56] enough, not good enough.
[3:59] I just uh I just share.
[4:04] So we are here uh for our wake up
[4:08] retreat
[4:09] with the title am I good enough?
[4:13] and
[4:16] wake up uh the wakeup retreats here are
[4:18] amongst my favorite retreats that we
[4:21] offer here in Plum Village. It is very
[4:24] beautiful to see so many uh young people
[4:26] come together
[4:28] and and also the young at heart amongst
[4:32] the amongst our monastics.
[4:35] But for everyone to come uh to come
[4:37] together and to yeah to have a beautiful
[4:41] aspiration in life and to be in touch
[4:44] with like-minded people
[4:47] um
[4:49] with a lot of uh energy and searching
[4:52] for a beautiful way to live. It is very
[4:55] inspiring to see and it give me a lot of
[4:57] um hope for the future.
[5:02] So um who wants to wake up?
[5:08] Okay, it's quite a number. That's good.
[5:11] The rest already awake then I suppose.
[5:17] So uh this morning
[5:21] I also wake up. Surprise surprise I
[5:25] wouldn't be uh be sitting here.
[5:28] And uh these days during springtime I'm
[5:32] uh still sleeping in my hammock
[5:35] and it's uh it's just planted next to
[5:38] the residence and it's so pleasant to
[5:41] sleep out in nature to hear the sound of
[5:45] the rain on the tarp to hear the winds
[5:48] go to the trees and to wake up uh with
[5:51] either the sunlight or the sound of the
[5:54] birds
[5:56] And
[5:58] when I wake up, it is uh already really
[6:01] important what I'm doing with my
[6:03] attention,
[6:04] what I am mindful of and how I start my
[6:07] day.
[6:10] So upon waking up I'm lying in my
[6:13] hammock and we are encouraged to uh
[6:17] in our tradition we have something
[6:19] called gatas and these are short
[6:22] practice poems and they help us to be
[6:26] mindful of the activity that we are
[6:28] doing and to also offer a certain spirit
[6:31] to the activity to set an atmosphere.
[6:35] So the gata for waking up it goes as
[6:38] follows.
[6:41] Waking up this morning I smile.
[6:45] 24 brand new hours are before me.
[6:49] I vow to live fully in each moment
[6:53] and to look at all beings with eyes of
[6:56] compassion.
[7:00] And I wake up and I recite that poem
[7:05] straight away becoming aware of my
[7:07] breathing with a line with the inb
[7:09] breath and a line with the outreath.
[7:12] And these uh these lines have been put
[7:15] to music as well. So when I'm in a good
[7:18] enough mood, I also sing it to myself.
[7:21] So let me uh let me sing it for you.
[7:27] Waking up this morning, I smile.
[7:34] 24 brand new hours are before me. I vow
[7:42] to live fully in each moment
[7:47] and to look at all beings with
[7:51] compassion.
[7:56] Thank you.
[7:59] And
[8:00] waking up like this, it sets a very good
[8:04] tone for the day. It is very different
[8:07] than how I used to wake up
[8:10] before becoming uh yeah before living in
[8:13] the monastery with probably a very short
[8:17] night of sleep and straight away kind of
[8:19] in a rush to uh get out and about to get
[8:23] ready to go to work. I would get up, I
[8:26] would smoke cigarette and drink a coffee
[8:29] and off I went.
[8:32] So
[8:34] now it's very different.
[8:39] So So to be in touch straight away with
[8:41] things that give me well-being, that
[8:43] make me feel good like I wake up and I
[8:47] smile. And sometimes that's an outer
[8:50] smile that I actually smile to myself
[8:52] and to life. but mostly a smile within
[8:57] and I can recognize that there are 24
[9:00] brand new hours that I have to live.
[9:03] Today is the first day of the rest of my
[9:06] life and we have a choice what we are
[9:09] going to do with it
[9:12] and life is so very precious.
[9:15] So to recognize that each morning and to
[9:18] live my life with uh with intention
[9:21] uh that's very important.
[9:24] So the intention there is that I vow to
[9:26] live fully in each moment
[9:30] to be truly there for life so that life
[9:34] can be available for me as well
[9:38] and that I look at all beings with eyes
[9:40] of compassion
[9:42] recognizing that life is not always
[9:44] easy. We all have our challenges in
[9:47] life. We all have our suffering in life.
[9:51] This is part of life.
[9:53] So to also treat people kindly, to look
[9:56] at people and all beings with eyes of
[9:58] compassion, knowing that I only see a
[10:02] part of their story.
[10:06] And next uh
[10:09] I go I wake up then get out of my
[10:13] hammock and I walk to my room. We sleep
[10:17] with uh
[10:20] two three brothers in in the room in the
[10:23] residence and I have have two roommates
[10:27] and often when I get up they are still
[10:30] sleeping.
[10:32] I tend to uh wake up early. So I uh go
[10:37] into my room as quiet as I can, as
[10:39] mindful as I can. And the first thing
[10:42] that I do then is uh I light this
[10:46] candle.
[10:48] So I come and sit in my space. I have a
[10:53] little desk and I can sit on the floor
[10:57] and I sit in a space to start my day
[11:00] that inspires me. So I have a little
[11:03] altar with things that uh bring up good
[11:06] memories that water the good seeds. So
[11:09] there are there's mostly objects from
[11:12] nature like a shell I found in Vietnam
[11:16] or a stone from the US or um things I
[11:20] received from my family in the
[11:22] Netherlands. And I also have a
[11:26] collection of uh Buddhas.
[11:29] They're they're very small. They're like
[11:31] this, but there are about
[11:35] a couple hundred of them.
[11:39] So every morning I sit down and I sit in
[11:42] front of my Buddhas. It's actually quite
[11:45] like the scenery that I'm seeing here
[11:48] all beautifully seated
[11:51] and uh yeah
[11:55] and look at beauty. And while lighting
[11:57] the candle, there's also a gata to go
[12:00] with this.
[12:06] Lighting
[12:07] this candle,
[12:10] offering light to countless Buddhas. The
[12:15] peace and joy I feel
[12:19] brightens the face of the earth.
[12:26] Lighting
[12:28] this candle,
[12:31] offering light to countless Buddhas. The
[12:35] peace and joy I feel
[12:40] brightens the face of the earth.
[13:26] So I light this candle and also with
[13:31] that in intention that I light up my
[13:34] awareness, my mindfulness for all the
[13:38] Buddhas, for countless Buddhas. as that
[13:41] there may be more light in the world
[13:44] and knowing that when I have peace in
[13:47] myself there is more peace in the world.
[13:52] If all of us are at peace are joyful are
[13:55] happy then there is more peace in the
[13:58] world. So my how I'm feeling and my
[14:02] inner world and uh what I'm nourishing
[14:06] it directly affects the world.
[14:09] If everyone would know how to do that,
[14:13] there would be complete peace in the
[14:15] world. So I do my part
[14:20] and the next thing I do is uh I drink
[14:23] tea. So I also brought uh my teapot.
[14:33] I see a fan of tea here. Pontis
[14:46] And I do this uh again as quietly and
[14:49] mindfully as I can. I think it is uh
[14:53] easier when I sit in my room and I don't
[14:55] have uh so many people looking at me.
[14:59] I do have Buddhas in front of me as
[15:01] well, but I don't feel so watched by
[15:04] them.
[15:58] So we have a next poem, a next gata that
[16:03] to go with with this activity
[16:06] and it is uh the gata the poem for
[16:09] drinking tea
[16:11] and it goes like this.
[16:15] This cup of tea in my two hands.
[16:21] Mindfulness held perfectly.
[16:26] My mind and body dwell
[16:31] in the very
[16:35] and now.
[16:39] This cup of tea in my two hands.
[16:46] My emptiness held perfectly.
[16:51] My mind and body well
[16:56] in the very
[17:00] now.
[17:07] So this kind of uh morning routine how
[17:10] we wake up every morning.
[17:13] I do this uh every morning. I've been uh
[17:17] living here in Plum Village since 2014.
[17:22] And the tea culture and Zen practice, it
[17:25] goes uh very hand in hand. I think
[17:29] there's a lot of beauty in the tea
[17:31] culture and there's also a lot of
[17:34] awakening in the tea in the caffeine. So
[17:38] for waking up in the morning and coming
[17:41] to sitting meditation to have a clear
[17:44] mind it is uh helpful.
[17:47] But when I wake up like this, when I
[17:51] wake up um and straight away start
[17:55] nourishing my seeds of peace, of ease,
[17:58] of relaxation and I don't have to do
[18:01] anything else. This is an hour every
[18:04] day. This is before sitting meditation
[18:07] where I start the day feeling well.
[18:11] I don't I practice just being present
[18:14] for what I'm doing. when I'm waking up,
[18:16] when I'm walking from my hammock to my
[18:19] room, when I'm lighting the candle, when
[18:22] I drink my tea, and I just do that. I
[18:27] try not to get uh into my planning mind
[18:30] like, oh, the things I still have to do
[18:33] or um yeah, start planning for the day,
[18:36] but I just sit and drink tea.
[18:40] And touching well-being like that in the
[18:43] beginning of the day, it gives a very
[18:45] stable and solid foundation for the rest
[18:48] of the day. How I continue my day and
[18:52] this kind of energy that I'm in touch
[18:54] with it carries out throughout the day.
[18:59] So you might uh you might want to look
[19:01] at that as well. How we are starting our
[19:04] day. uh we straight away nourishing the
[19:07] energy of rushing that is very prevalent
[19:10] in society or can we uh start our day uh
[19:14] with more peace.
[19:17] So
[19:19] let me drink a sip of this tea as well.
[19:21] I'm just holding it.
[19:44] So the theme of this retreat, brother
[19:46] Bang mentioned it yesterday briefly the
[19:50] question am I good enough?
[19:56] Am I good enough?
[19:58] Am I good enough sitting here?
[20:03] Take your silence as silent approval.
[20:05] Thank you.
[20:08] This is a question that is also very
[20:10] much alive in me
[20:13] at times.
[20:15] So when brother Bang asked me to if I
[20:18] want to offer something if I have
[20:20] something to share
[20:23] my initial reaction was like oh no I I
[20:26] don't think so.
[20:29] It's also revolving around this question
[20:32] like am I good enough? Am I good enough
[20:34] to to sit here
[20:36] because I have certain ideas that I want
[20:39] to perform that I want to offer my best
[20:43] there are ideas about if I feel adequate
[20:46] yes or not.
[20:48] But uh after after one day of
[20:51] contemplation I say okay let's let's
[20:53] just do it. I didn't know yet what I
[20:56] wanted to share but I said yes I I will
[20:58] come and sit here and move my lips a bit
[21:01] for you.
[21:03] So there have been times in my life uh
[21:06] when this question came up and I feel I
[21:10] can answer it with a yes like yes I feel
[21:13] good enough
[21:15] and these are times in my life where uh
[21:18] things are going well you know it is
[21:21] often related to certain events maybe I
[21:25] finished uh uh finished something like
[21:28] high school I never finished my college
[21:32] but uh finishing high school I feel like
[21:34] ah good job this is done good enough
[21:39] or when finishing exams
[21:42] or I also feel good enough when things
[21:45] are going well in my job in my
[21:48] responsibility
[21:49] when things they uh smooth they got they
[21:52] go smoothly
[21:55] and these are times um I feel good
[21:58] enough
[22:00] and actually
[22:02] when I feel good enough when there is
[22:05] well-being in me. often I'm not even
[22:08] asking this question
[22:10] like this question am I good enough it
[22:13] does not uh it does not really come up
[22:16] it comes up more
[22:19] um this feeling of not being good enough
[22:21] is when things are not going so well
[22:25] so there also have been times in my life
[22:28] that uh things don't go so So,
[22:40] and we all have these times as well.
[22:44] I think the first time uh that I
[22:46] encountered that when I was around 16,
[22:51] 15, 16 and there were certain dynamics
[22:54] in my family. Um yeah, which were very
[22:59] difficult for me
[23:01] and that brought a lot of sadness in my
[23:05] being and this carried on for uh for
[23:09] quite a while and so every day I kind of
[23:13] woke up sad. I woke up um
[23:17] yeah
[23:20] not in a happy space and if this carries
[23:24] on uh long enough
[23:27] um it kind of made me not wait I want to
[23:30] wake up anymore even there was a time in
[23:32] my life that I thought like if I just
[23:36] just don't have to wake up tomorrow I'll
[23:38] be actually quite fine with that
[23:41] and this is not because I didn't like
[23:43] life I've also I've never been suicidal,
[23:46] but these thoughts were there
[23:48] nonetheless.
[23:51] It's not that I didn't like life, but I
[23:53] just didn't know how to deal with the
[23:55] sadness and with the the difficult
[23:57] emotions that were uh coming up in me.
[24:02] And there are also um other times in my
[24:06] life.
[24:10] I think I um
[24:13] this is something that many young people
[24:15] can uh recognize. I think
[24:18] um the kind of a lack of direction in my
[24:21] life. This was uh one of my biggest
[24:24] sufferings
[24:26] that yeah actually between the age of 18
[24:30] and 28 I didn't know what to do uh with
[24:33] my life. I didn't know what I wanted to
[24:36] become. I didn't know what I wanted to
[24:39] study younger. I didn't know what I
[24:41] wanted what kind of job I wanted to do.
[24:44] And there was so much expected there's
[24:47] so much expectations from our society
[24:50] from our uh family from our friends and
[24:54] that they that we for some reason need
[24:57] to know what we want to be doing with
[24:58] our life and not knowing how to answer
[25:02] that question uh was a big source of my
[25:05] suffering.
[25:07] I think one of the biggest sources of my
[25:10] suffering
[25:12] and going uh
[25:16] yeah I kind of I had a working life uh
[25:18] after dropping out of uh college because
[25:22] that was not it. So uh I worked and but
[25:26] I kind of worked from uh yeah from day
[25:29] to day. I worked from weekend to
[25:32] weekend, from holiday to holiday,
[25:34] but I did not really feel like uh like
[25:38] truly living like was this it? Is this
[25:41] what I'm doing with my life? So that
[25:44] also was a time where this question
[25:46] arose often like this doesn't feel like
[25:50] enough. This is this is not good enough.
[25:52] And with that I am not good enough.
[25:57] one other time in romantic
[25:59] relationships.
[26:01] I had very few, but I think I only had
[26:06] one before my monastic life where I
[26:08] lived together for a couple of years.
[26:12] And when she broke up with me, that was
[26:16] also really strong. This uh this idea
[26:19] like I am not good enough because the
[26:21] person that I uh trust so much, the
[26:24] person that um I loved um with
[26:28] everything I had suddenly that was not
[26:31] mutual anymore. And uh yeah, she didn't
[26:35] seem to want me in her life anymore. And
[26:38] that did something to my
[26:39] self-confidence, to my self-esteem as
[26:41] well. I trust this person and but I'm
[26:44] not good enough. So these were times
[26:47] that uh um
[26:51] yeah this question was very there
[26:58] I know I'm talking more about the times
[27:00] that uh I didn't feel good enough but
[27:02] luckily most of my life I have felt good
[27:05] enough and this is also very good news
[27:11] this uh this enoughness
[27:13] this feeling and the feelings that come
[27:16] with it. They are not a fixed thing. Uh
[27:19] they change all the time depending where
[27:22] I'm at in my life, depending on the
[27:24] events that I'm uh encountering and how
[27:27] I relate to that.
[27:32] And this feeling of not being enough. It
[27:36] doesn't just stop with me, I noticed.
[27:40] But how I relate to myself
[27:43] uh it is also how I relate to others and
[27:46] how I relate to my environment. So I
[27:52] also project um yeah this discriminating
[27:56] mind this comparing mind I project it on
[27:59] others as well like is uh is my partner
[28:03] good enough? Is my family good enough?
[28:07] You know, especially when uh
[28:08] relationships start becoming messy
[28:12] or is our society good enough
[28:16] so much uh going wrong with the wars we
[28:19] are waging is humankind good enough how
[28:23] we are treating mother earth so this
[28:26] question it uh I notice that I'm also
[28:30] projecting it on other things outside of
[28:33] myself
[28:36] so it is not a simple yes or no answer.
[28:39] It's not yes, I'm good enough, no good,
[28:42] not good enough. And there it's
[28:44] finished. But uh I need to recognize and
[28:49] unpack this question a little bit for
[28:51] myself to understand
[28:54] um myself better and to understand where
[28:57] it's coming from.
[28:59] So in this question there can be kind of
[29:02] a fear for to be rejected by peers by
[29:07] partner by family
[29:10] or there may be a feeling of inadequacy
[29:14] and the shame and guilt around it.
[29:17] This can be in uh responsibilities or
[29:20] jobs we hold. is can be um in in
[29:26] education in study
[29:29] and there's uh the pain of comparison in
[29:32] this question and we compare ourselves
[29:35] to uh to our peers they're doing so well
[29:39] in life and look at me where I'm at.
[29:44] It's also the sense of longing to belong
[29:47] to a group
[29:49] to have a group of friends.
[29:52] If I don't have that, am I good enough?
[29:57] So, everyone at different times in their
[30:01] life, I think this question becomes
[30:03] alive
[30:05] because we are uh social beings and we
[30:09] want to belong. So, it is very uh
[30:13] normal. We don't have to beat oursel up
[30:15] when this question arises.
[30:18] Um but it is normal for it to come up.
[30:28] So with this question I feel it is
[30:31] important uh that we learn how to
[30:36] navigate it because the question will be
[30:38] there at times and it is I feel a lot
[30:44] linked to our life events and the
[30:46] emotions that come with it. So it's not
[30:49] so much about the questions but more
[30:51] about our emotions about our inner
[30:53] world. So that is what I would like to
[30:56] share a little bit about today about um
[31:01] why we have these strong emotions and
[31:04] questions uh coming with it and also how
[31:08] can we skillfully navigate this inner
[31:11] world this garden of our mind
[31:14] how do we nourish our well-being and how
[31:17] do we take care of our ill-being
[31:22] may we can uh Listen to one sound of the
[31:25] bell
[31:27] to
[31:29] come back to this moment
[31:32] and feel a space in our body in our
[31:36] conscious reality where we can dwell in
[31:39] well-being.
[31:41] Whether is it is a relaxation in our
[31:44] body which we can pay attention to.
[31:47] Whether it is the sound of the birds,
[31:51] our breathing.
[32:34] So why do we have these feelings? Why do
[32:37] we have our uh our strong emotions?
[32:42] not only the difficult emotions but also
[32:44] the the pleasant emotions, the wholesome
[32:48] and the unh wholesome.
[32:51] So from uh from the moment we uh we are
[32:54] bo born
[32:56] we uh or let's speak for myself. I
[32:59] didn't know so much yet.
[33:01] I still don't know much. But especially
[33:04] when I was born, when I was a baby, uh
[33:07] we don't have any uh any ideas about the
[33:11] world yet. Uh I don't know how often I
[33:14] need to eat or when I need to sleep. I
[33:18] don't have any um intellectual knowledge
[33:22] about that yet. So the way I interact
[33:25] with the world is through my emotions
[33:28] and through my feelings.
[33:30] So maybe
[33:32] I uh I am hungry and I feel this as a as
[33:38] a stress in my body. There is a
[33:40] vibration in my body signaling me like
[33:42] there is something wrong. Something
[33:44] needs to happen and I start to uh have
[33:48] an anxious feeling and I start to cry.
[33:51] So from an early age our feelings our
[33:54] emotions they are trying to tell us
[33:57] something. They try to inform us uh
[34:00] about things like what gives us
[34:02] well-being, what is good for us, what
[34:05] helps us survive or what gives us
[34:08] ill-being, the things that are difficult
[34:10] or that are uh not good for our
[34:12] survival. So when we notice that we
[34:17] actually need more food, we get these
[34:19] feelings um uh of ill-being. Something
[34:23] needs to change here.
[34:26] So as babies we lack this uh ability of
[34:29] making cognitive sense of the world and
[34:32] it becomes a key to our survival uh to
[34:36] be able to notice these feelings then to
[34:38] express them as well to our caregivers
[34:41] who will hopefully be attentive to that.
[34:45] Um this is our way how we get to uh
[34:48] interact with the world. And it doesn't
[34:51] uh just stop when we uh when we grow up
[34:55] but our emotions and our feelings they
[34:58] continue to be important for us to
[35:01] inform us uh how we are doing. Um
[35:07] they are linked to our need to survive
[35:10] and also to our need to belong because
[35:13] we yeah we are social beings. We want to
[35:16] belong to families. We want to belong to
[35:19] communities. We want to belong to our
[35:21] tribe.
[35:23] So
[35:25] when there are um things happening
[35:28] events happening in our life that
[35:30] threaten this survival often this is
[35:33] when these emotions come up and I'm
[35:36] saying this uh to know that they are
[35:41] natural and they are healthy also our
[35:45] unh wholesome or are more challenging
[35:47] emotions they have a reason to be so we
[35:51] don't have to discriminate ate against
[35:53] them when we feel a sadness coming up,
[35:55] when we feel an anger coming up, when we
[35:58] feel despair coming up, but we can
[36:01] recognize what it is they want to uh uh
[36:04] tell us.
[36:07] So
[36:08] our greed for example, it's it can be
[36:12] seen as a drive to go after our most
[36:15] basic needs. Greed is maybe an excessive
[36:18] form of that. But our need for food, our
[36:21] need for sex, for reproduction, for
[36:25] security, connection. So that is where
[36:27] this emotion stems from.
[36:30] Or
[36:32] when we have hatred,
[36:35] um it is also hatred is also excessive
[36:39] an excessive way uh for this emotion to
[36:42] come up. But it is there to um help us
[36:46] recognize that we need to defend
[36:48] oursself against uh certain threats we
[36:51] perceive.
[36:53] So they are they are very natural. They
[36:56] helped us to survive and they will
[36:58] continue to help us if we know how to
[37:00] listen to them.
[37:04] So besides why we have then I would also
[37:08] like to share a little uh a little bit
[37:10] on um how this works,
[37:14] how our emotions works because
[37:18] understanding this it can uh give us a
[37:22] lot of agency.
[37:30] So let me go to the board for that.
[37:54] So we have um
[37:57] in the plum village tradition um
[38:02] we have a model of conscious experience
[38:06] a model of uh how we perceive reality
[38:10] and how consciousness works.
[38:13] So I would like to explain a little bit
[38:15] about this model
[38:26] and we know that this is just a model
[38:28] that I'm presenting. It is not reality
[38:31] but we try to describe reality as best
[38:34] as we can.
[38:36] So
[38:39] let's call this here
[38:50] our perceived uh reality, our inner
[38:53] experience.
[38:55] Normally we draw it as a circle but
[39:01] today is Easter
[39:03] so I figured
[39:07] so this uh represents our mind and um
[39:12] there are at least two two layers to our
[39:14] mind to our consciousness.
[39:20] We have the upper layer called mind
[39:23] consciousness
[39:27] that is very small
[39:37] mind consciousness and the lower layer
[39:40] is called store consciousness.
[39:51] So the upper layer is uh that is really
[39:54] what we are conscious of. This is our
[39:56] conscious experience. It is uh kind of
[39:59] our interface with the world
[40:02] and the lower layer of our
[40:05] consciousness. Um in modern psychology
[40:09] it is uh roughly equivalent to like our
[40:13] uh unconsciousness, our subconsciousness
[40:16] and
[40:18] uh there we carry all the potentials. We
[40:21] carry all the seeds for our experience
[40:24] and we have all the seeds in us. So
[40:28] within us there are wholesome seeds. We
[40:31] have the seed of love, the seed of
[40:33] peace,
[40:35] the seed of joy,
[40:37] seed of hope,
[40:40] seed of ease.
[40:43] But we also have unh wholesome seeds.
[40:47] We have the seed of anger.
[40:51] We have the seed of hatred,
[40:54] sadness,
[40:56] fear
[41:00] and wholesome or un or unh wholesome
[41:02] that is not good or bad. These are not
[41:05] judgments but uh they are wholesome
[41:09] because they make us feel whole. They
[41:11] are conducive to our well-being. And the
[41:14] unh wholesome seeds they are they make
[41:17] make us feel less whole and they uh
[41:20] offer us ill-being.
[41:37] I thought I had it somewhere but maybe
[41:40] not.
[41:43] So
[41:45] um this uh this represents our mind and
[41:51] the way we interact with the world uh
[41:53] there is a constant input and output
[41:55] going on and that determines what our
[41:58] inner world looks like. So we have uh as
[42:03] input we have the six senses.
[42:07] So
[42:11] this is turning into a very beautiful
[42:13] Easter egg.
[42:20] So we have our eyes,
[42:30] we have our ears.
[42:34] We have our nose.
[42:39] We have our tongue
[42:45] and we have we have our uh body
[42:52] and we also have our mind
[42:56] as a sense
[43:00] and so there is a a constant input and
[43:04] output.
[43:06] that determines how we are going to
[43:07] feel.
[43:10] And
[43:13] in terms of input, the the Buddha put
[43:16] this in four categories.
[43:18] So we take things in through our eyes,
[43:21] through our ears, through our nose, our
[43:23] tongue, our body, and through our minds,
[43:25] through our thinking. And the Buddha um
[43:30] shared about
[43:34] the four nutrients
[43:46] and they are edible foods.
[43:53] Our
[43:57] sense impressions,
[44:08] volition
[44:15] and consciousness.
[44:29] and
[44:31] they will determine how we are feeling.
[44:34] So uh our edible food and sense
[44:36] impressions they come uh through the
[44:40] five sense organs
[44:43] and our valition and consciousness is
[44:45] comes through the uh sense organ of the
[44:48] mind.
[44:52] So with edible foods we mean everything
[44:55] that we uh that we eat it will have an
[44:58] effect on us. Um really the things we
[45:01] take in through our mouth
[45:04] and with the sense impressions we mean
[45:07] everything else that we take in through
[45:09] our other senses.
[45:11] So the things we see, the things we
[45:13] hear, the things we smell.
[45:18] Uh with volition
[45:20] it is also a s a nutrient, a
[45:22] nourishment.
[45:24] Um it means our aspiration, our will
[45:29] and it also drives us and determines how
[45:34] we are feeling. And we can, this may
[45:37] sound strange, but when we uh uh when we
[45:40] feel very excited about something, when
[45:42] we have a lot of energy for something,
[45:44] we can go on for hours and hours without
[45:48] the need to eat, the need to sleep. And
[45:50] this is really an energy that nourishes
[45:52] us and and drives us. And there's also
[45:57] the uh the nourishment, the nutrient of
[46:00] our consciousness. And this is our
[46:03] collective consciousness.
[46:05] So
[46:07] um the collective has an impact on us.
[46:10] If we are in an environment where
[46:13] everyone is very peaceful or everyone is
[46:16] joyful you receive a lot of smiles
[46:20] like Plum Village for example then uh
[46:23] that does something to to our
[46:25] well-being.
[46:27] And so this input is happening at all
[46:30] times. We are constantly taking things
[46:33] in whether we are aware of it or not. We
[46:37] are nourishing ourselves constantly.
[46:40] So it is important uh to recognize this
[46:44] and we can ask ourselves the question
[46:46] like what am I consuming at this moment
[46:51] and we learn to recognize what it
[46:54] brings.
[46:56] Besides our input, we also have an
[46:57] output.
[47:06] And the output is our actions of the
[47:10] Buddha called this uh the triple action.
[47:21] And these are the actions of
[47:26] body, right?
[47:35] Our actions of body, speech and mind.
[47:44] We can also see that uh body and speech
[47:47] is more in this domain and the mind more
[47:50] in this domain.
[47:55] Let me have a quick peek over here.
[48:05] So what happens
[48:09] when uh when we look at something
[48:12] um it waters certain seeds. So when we
[48:15] consume something when we have an input
[48:18] let's say we look at um
[48:28] make a little bit more space here
[48:35] when we see
[48:45] the Easter Bunny, for example,
[48:56] something like that.
[49:03] You see, when we see the Easter Bunny,
[49:05] it it nourishes a lot of joy in us.
[49:10] So we see something it comes through the
[49:12] sense of our eyes and it waters the seed
[49:15] of joy and in us a feeling is born.
[49:20] So a flower is born in the garden of our
[49:23] mind
[49:25] and when we look at something that
[49:26] brings us well-being
[49:29] something wholesome we get a pleasant
[49:31] feeling. So uh joy is watered in us. But
[49:36] if we maybe um
[49:41] there are also of course our difficult
[49:43] seeds are being watered.
[49:46] What's something that's difficult for
[49:48] you?
[49:50] Something that brings us makes us angry.
[49:54] Nobody angry
[49:58] organizing travel.
[50:01] >> Organizing travel.
[50:05] And where where does that go? I suppose
[50:07] uh I suppose that is more from here. But
[50:10] let's say we have a conversation about
[50:12] it with uh with our friend and we speak
[50:14] about organizing travel. So we have the
[50:17] input through our ears. We have a
[50:19] conversation and we hear about it and it
[50:22] waters very different seeds in us. It
[50:24] waters a seed of uh of anger in us.
[50:35] Good.
[50:43] Let's listen to one sound of the bell.
[51:43] So
[51:44] understanding how our conscious
[51:47] experience works, it can give us a lot
[51:49] of agency.
[51:52] Often when our emotions come up um
[51:57] they seemingly come out of the blue that
[52:01] our future is coming to us and bad
[52:04] things happen to us and we feel certain
[52:07] ways about it. But when we understand
[52:10] that we are actually building our inner
[52:14] world ourself by the way that we uh that
[52:19] we consume. It gives us a lot of agency.
[52:23] So we can get to understand better what
[52:27] we need to consume that gives us
[52:29] well-being and what are the things that
[52:32] we consume that give us ill-being.
[52:36] And the same is uh is true for our
[52:38] actions. What are the things that I'm
[52:41] doing in my life that bring me more
[52:43] well-being, that bring me happiness,
[52:45] that bring me joy, peace, ease? and what
[52:49] are the things that I'm doing that give
[52:50] me more suffering that make me angry
[52:53] that make me sad. So recognizing that we
[52:58] are um active participants
[53:01] that um helps us make better decisions
[53:05] in life.
[53:07] And our actions they are straight away
[53:09] our input as well.
[53:12] Just it's not just our output is just
[53:14] like uh this candle here. It is um
[53:18] acting in a certain way. It is offering
[53:20] light to the world. It is offering its
[53:22] heat. But it straight away has an effect
[53:25] on the candle itself. It is lighting uh
[53:29] its own being and it's also melting
[53:32] itself. So the output is straight away
[53:35] the input.
[53:38] So now that we un hopefully understand a
[53:41] little bit more of how uh how this works
[53:44] and we nourish our inner world. Let us
[53:46] uh take a look at how we can nourish the
[53:49] good seeds. How we can water the good
[53:52] seeds that so that our inner world can
[53:55] uh be beautiful that our the garden of
[53:58] our mind that we can see mostly
[54:01] beautiful flowers
[54:05] and
[54:07] maybe a note there that um
[54:12] yeah there is a there is a deep
[54:13] connection between our happiness and
[54:15] suffering and it uh
[54:19] um it may seem seem that in Plum Village
[54:22] we talk and it's true we talk a lot
[54:24] about joy about peace about happiness
[54:28] uh because these are very important
[54:31] but by no means we are saying to repress
[54:35] or suppress our difficult emotions or to
[54:38] ignore them to run away from them like
[54:41] it is not spiritual bypassing that we
[54:43] are doing here but we uh need to find a
[54:47] balance within oursel so that we can
[54:49] live a happy life and we speak a lot
[54:53] about nourishing the good conditions and
[54:55] the good conditions uh that bring us
[54:57] well-being because in my daily life
[55:02] if I would put a number to it like 90%
[55:06] uh that I want to be in touch with joy
[55:08] in my life with peace and 10% with
[55:11] difficulty like that might seem out of
[55:14] proportion but actually if 10% of my
[55:18] daytoday I am uh dealing with my
[55:21] suffering that's almost two and a half
[55:24] hours every day like that is already a
[55:28] lot. So that's why our emphasis is also
[55:31] very much on uh nourishing our
[55:34] well-being.
[55:38] So from the very basic I feel it is
[55:41] something super important to mention uh
[55:44] is uh
[55:47] our eat our eating that we eat well that
[55:50] we sleep well and that we have exercise.
[55:54] These are three things that are so key
[55:56] to our well-being.
[55:58] And for just for me to have really a
[56:02] base level of feeling well in my body
[56:04] and mind. So if you are in a time of
[56:07] your life where things are not going
[56:10] well, where you feel uh potentially
[56:12] quite uh quite depressed, look first at
[56:15] these three things. Uh look, am I
[56:18] getting enough sleep? Am I eating well
[56:21] and healthy? And am I moving my body? Am
[56:24] I moving my energy around? And with the
[56:27] these uh three things, they seem very
[56:31] straightforward. But for before I came
[56:34] to the monastery,
[56:37] I didn't know
[56:40] or I knew but I didn't apply like I
[56:45] yeah I ate very unhealthy and my sleep
[56:48] was um very irregular. uh in the
[56:52] weekends it was always just a couple of
[56:54] hours and I would catch up throughout
[56:56] the the working week and it was messy
[57:00] and yeah so to have these basics in
[57:03] order it gives us a solid foundation for
[57:05] our well-being to be born
[57:09] and beside that we also nourish our
[57:11] wholesome seed and our well-being
[57:13] through the the formal practices we
[57:16] have. So every time we have sitting
[57:18] meditation, we have walking meditation,
[57:21] we have eating meditation. These are
[57:24] times that we uh engage with activities
[57:28] that bring us well-being, that give us a
[57:30] sense of calm, that give us a sense of
[57:33] peace, of ease, of relaxation.
[57:37] And
[57:40] we do that uh throughout the day.
[57:44] also the deata practice that I uh that I
[57:48] mentioned the poems I sang three this
[57:51] morning
[57:53] but we have many of them and
[57:57] how many do we have
[58:00] 99
[58:05] uh we have 99 gatas 99 poems to go along
[58:10] with all the activities uh uh in our day
[58:14] And
[58:16] when we practice that this infuses our
[58:19] day with um first of all presence
[58:22] because we are aware what we are doing
[58:25] when we are doing it but it also offers
[58:28] a certain spirit.
[58:30] You know the songs they are very uh
[58:32] beautiful and they nourish the good
[58:34] seeds. So it sets a a certain atmosphere
[58:37] in which to engage with the activity. So
[58:41] when I when I wake up and I smile and I
[58:44] recognize that life is so precious like
[58:47] it it nourishes a certain feeling in me.
[58:51] If you feel inspired to learn more about
[58:53] that, there is a book called present
[58:56] moment wonderful moment which is
[58:58] available in the bookshop and you can uh
[59:02] uh
[59:04] you can either buy it or make some
[59:06] pictures of it everything okay
[59:09] uh to also practice them in your daily
[59:11] life.
[59:17] Besides our formal activities, I think
[59:20] it is very important that we learn to
[59:23] recognize what the things that we can do
[59:27] in our life that bring us more
[59:28] well-being.
[59:31] And for myself, well, drinking tea is
[59:34] one of them. So, every morning I start
[59:36] my day like that for for one hour.
[59:40] And often after drinking tea, we have
[59:44] sitting meditation.
[59:46] Uh and that's uh we sit for half an
[59:48] hour. Again, I'm nourishing my peace and
[59:52] my my freedom for half an hour. The next
[59:55] thing I do after sitting, I go to my
[59:57] room. I drink some coffee. There's a lot
[1:00:01] of caffeine in my life. And that's the
[1:00:04] energy of awakening. And uh often I I
[1:00:08] practice calligraphy.
[1:00:11] I do that for maybe an hour. So when I
[1:00:15] practice calligraphy, I know that is an
[1:00:18] that is an uh that it is an activity
[1:00:20] that it is repeatable and every time
[1:00:24] when I do it, I feel better afterwards.
[1:00:28] So when I just engage with the activity,
[1:00:32] I don't have to think about anything. I
[1:00:34] don't have to plan, but I just let the
[1:00:37] ink flow on the paper. I don't worry
[1:00:39] about the outcome. And after doing that
[1:00:42] for for an hour, I feel more at ease. I
[1:00:45] feel more pleasant.
[1:00:49] And often after that in our days, uh
[1:00:52] there's a dharma talk at 9:30.
[1:00:55] Awesome. Of course,
[1:00:58] watering the good seeds yet again. And
[1:01:01] this is followed by walking meditation
[1:01:03] which we get to uh experience soon again
[1:01:07] where I can connect with myself, connect
[1:01:09] with mother earth and I don't have to do
[1:01:12] anything.
[1:01:13] And then it's lunchtime.
[1:01:16] I didn't even have to cook but there's
[1:01:18] food on the table, delicious food and
[1:01:21] it's followed by a nap. You know this is
[1:01:25] like heaven.
[1:01:27] So you see our well-being and how we are
[1:01:32] feeling we are really making that
[1:01:34] ourself with the things that we are
[1:01:36] nourishing ourself with and with the
[1:01:38] activities that we are doing.
[1:01:41] Here in the monastery it is quite easy.
[1:01:44] We live in a very wholesome environment
[1:01:46] and everything that we do it is set up
[1:01:50] to nourish these wholesome seeds so so
[1:01:53] that we can feel well in oursel.
[1:01:56] But very key is that I'm actually
[1:01:58] engaged in the activity that I'm
[1:02:00] actually practicing.
[1:02:03] Because walking meditation where I get
[1:02:06] to connect with myself, with mother
[1:02:08] nature, with the SA around me, it is
[1:02:12] only beneficial when we are actually
[1:02:14] doing right that and that we are not
[1:02:19] walking
[1:02:20] with our mind there, there there. It's
[1:02:23] natural for us for that to happen. But
[1:02:26] it is uh the practice that we bring our
[1:02:29] attention back to this moment.
[1:02:36] So this is the
[1:02:39] watering the good seed. This is the
[1:02:42] first level of uh transformation
[1:02:46] at the root. So we we have our uh store
[1:02:50] consciousness
[1:02:53] and
[1:02:55] the seeds that are present there
[1:02:58] we are not solely responsible for that.
[1:03:02] The seeds they are there through our
[1:03:06] parents and through education through
[1:03:09] society.
[1:03:11] So uh when we are born we already have a
[1:03:14] package
[1:03:16] and the quality of our life depends very
[1:03:19] much on the quality of the seeds that
[1:03:21] lie in our consciousness
[1:03:23] but knowing that um we are already born
[1:03:28] with a certain package. Uh we we are not
[1:03:31] solely responsible for that.
[1:03:34] So that can maybe be a sigh of uh
[1:03:37] relief.
[1:03:40] We
[1:03:44] yeah we have that through our education
[1:03:47] through our society but also through our
[1:03:50] ancestry
[1:03:51] through our spiritual ancestors through
[1:03:53] our blood ancestors
[1:03:55] and we have all the seeds there. Um but
[1:04:00] we can uh slowly help to transform them
[1:04:04] and transforming these seeds we don't do
[1:04:06] that just for ourself but we do that for
[1:04:08] our whole lineage and we're not only
[1:04:11] responsible for them but we these seeds
[1:04:15] they are collective.
[1:04:18] So we have a collective responsibility
[1:04:21] there
[1:04:24] and when we water the wholesome in us uh
[1:04:28] if we have more peace in our life more
[1:04:31] joy in our life that strengthens the
[1:04:33] seed uh the seeds as well in our store
[1:04:36] consciousness. So at the root these
[1:04:39] seeds of happiness these seeds of peace
[1:04:41] of joy of well-being they are growing
[1:04:44] and growing. It is neuropathways that we
[1:04:48] are strengthening and it gets easier and
[1:04:50] easier to touch these seeds.
[1:04:54] And this is by itself already very
[1:04:57] transformative
[1:04:58] when the proportion of good seeds to bad
[1:05:01] seeds is 90% 10% the 10% we can deal
[1:05:06] with it.
[1:05:09] So this is um
[1:05:12] yeah don't underestimate the strength of
[1:05:14] nourishing the good seeds. I think the
[1:05:17] first time that I came to Plum Village
[1:05:20] in 2014
[1:05:22] I was um yeah there was a time where I
[1:05:25] was very lost. This was after the the
[1:05:28] relationship that ended which I shared
[1:05:30] about and not knowing what to do with my
[1:05:33] life and
[1:05:36] um
[1:05:37] in the first week I I got here in such a
[1:05:41] mess. I was so stuck in myself. I was
[1:05:44] here for a 21-day retreat and the first
[1:05:47] week I cried every day. I was just there
[1:05:51] was so much that I had not dealt with
[1:05:54] and
[1:05:56] I think nourishing the good seeds was
[1:05:59] one of the most important things that I
[1:06:01] learned because I was so stuck also in
[1:06:05] my mind. I was not in touch with life
[1:06:08] because
[1:06:10] actually being in touch with life there
[1:06:13] is so much going well here being this
[1:06:16] that that first week in Plum Village I
[1:06:18] saw everyone smile around me. We were
[1:06:21] taught to be in touch with our steps
[1:06:24] with nature and to actually feel well
[1:06:27] and this was available all the time
[1:06:29] before me but I had not touched it. So
[1:06:33] to actually be in touch with the
[1:06:35] well-being, our experience is one of
[1:06:38] well-being. And the difficulties that I
[1:06:41] had, they g grew smaller and smaller in
[1:06:45] comparison because there was space in
[1:06:47] me. So don't underestimate this joy,
[1:06:51] happiness, and peace.
[1:06:54] But it is also uh inevitable that we do
[1:06:58] have our storms in life, that we do have
[1:07:00] our difficulties in life.
[1:07:02] Um this is part of life. Things don't
[1:07:06] always go as planned. We there is
[1:07:09] sickness in life. There is separation.
[1:07:12] There is uh there is death and that can
[1:07:15] stir up a lot of difficult emotions as
[1:07:18] well.
[1:07:20] So
[1:07:22] I think it is important to know when we
[1:07:27] can uh practice being in touch with the
[1:07:29] joy and uh when we take can take care of
[1:07:32] our difficult emotions.
[1:07:37] I find it uh very helpful.
[1:07:50] to because we have different teachings
[1:07:53] and those who have been here more often
[1:07:56] maybe you've heard the teaching like
[1:07:58] changing the peg
[1:08:00] uh when we encounter difficulties
[1:08:03] uh means like changing CD if you are um
[1:08:07] listening to a CD that gives you a lot
[1:08:10] of sadness just change the CD listen to
[1:08:13] something more Beautiful. So that is one
[1:08:16] way to deal with our difficulty to for
[1:08:18] the time being to look in a different
[1:08:20] direction. But we also have teachings
[1:08:23] where we learn to embrace and be with
[1:08:25] our difficulty. And it is important to
[1:08:28] know when to apply what. So I think of
[1:08:32] it uh in this way
[1:08:38] that
[1:08:41] we have a a comfort zone.
[1:08:53] And we have
[1:08:57] when we go uh further away from our
[1:08:59] comfort zone, we have um
[1:09:02] curiosity zone
[1:09:05] where we can be curious.
[1:09:09] And when we go too far out of uh our
[1:09:11] comfort zone, um
[1:09:15] how do we call that? The danger zone. I
[1:09:19] don't know.
[1:09:21] Danger.
[1:09:33] So when we are encountering difficult
[1:09:37] emotions, let's say there is a very
[1:09:40] strong sadness coming up in me or a very
[1:09:42] strong anger.
[1:09:44] If I can dwell in my comfort zone, when
[1:09:47] that emotion can arise and there is
[1:09:50] enough space in me and I have nourished
[1:09:52] enough stability throughout the day,
[1:09:55] then I can practice being with it. When
[1:09:58] I when I get a bit out of my comfort
[1:10:01] zone, gets a bit discomfort, bit little
[1:10:04] bit uncomfortable, but I can still um
[1:10:08] there's still enough space and I can
[1:10:10] still be curious about it. I still have
[1:10:13] my agency and I still know what is
[1:10:16] happening with me. So I can still be
[1:10:18] with the emotion.
[1:10:20] But when I go too far out of my comfort
[1:10:23] zone and when I'm while being in touch
[1:10:26] with the emotion, I'm just spiraling
[1:10:28] down that is a time not to be in touch
[1:10:31] with it for the time being.
[1:10:34] So we need to know what our resources
[1:10:36] are when we get here. So it is a
[1:10:40] difference between being uncomfortable
[1:10:43] with a strong emotion or being
[1:10:45] disregulated with a strong emotion. So
[1:10:48] when we find ourselves disregulated
[1:10:51] uh then it is time to really change the
[1:10:53] pack and try to engage with something
[1:10:56] else entirely
[1:10:58] and this can look different for
[1:11:01] different people and I think it is
[1:11:03] important for us to know what it looks
[1:11:05] like for us. So for example when I find
[1:11:09] myself uh in a lot of uh sadness
[1:11:14] uh the thing that I and when thinking
[1:11:18] about it I just spiral down. I want to
[1:11:21] disengage from the story and I want to
[1:11:24] um engage with activities that bring me
[1:11:28] stability and that can be for example uh
[1:11:31] seeking out friends. I can go with a for
[1:11:35] a walk with uh uh with one of one of my
[1:11:38] brothers.
[1:11:42] So, we need to know when to apply that.
[1:11:47] Maybe I'll stay here for a moment.
[1:11:52] Um
[1:11:55] cuz there's another uh
[1:12:01] when I feel I can be with emotion and
[1:12:05] care for it, there is a certain way that
[1:12:08] uh that we can do that and there's a a
[1:12:11] helpful acronym there that I would like
[1:12:13] to share.
[1:12:16] We love uh we love these little lists in
[1:12:19] Buddhism. As you might might see, we
[1:12:21] have the four nutrients, the triple
[1:12:23] action and we also have the uh this
[1:12:27] little list which is how we can take
[1:12:30] care of our difficult emotions. So when
[1:12:33] a difficulty arises and I do feel space
[1:12:37] for it, the first thing that I want to
[1:12:39] do is to recognize it.
[1:12:48] Is this with an S or with a Z?
[1:12:57] Depends. And
[1:13:00] I I think it's UK and US. Yeah,
[1:13:04] we we embrace both.
[1:13:08] So the first thing that I want to do is
[1:13:11] recognize that there is a difficulty in
[1:13:13] me and the sooner that I can do that the
[1:13:16] better. So when a sadness or an anger is
[1:13:21] still very small when it is a small
[1:13:23] irritation or a small annoyance that is
[1:13:26] the best way when to recognize it when
[1:13:29] it hasn't gathered strength yet.
[1:13:32] But when we are um uh carried away, when
[1:13:36] we are not very mindful throughout our
[1:13:38] day and maybe suddenly we realize that
[1:13:41] we are angry. Uh but that is a good
[1:13:44] thing. We recognize that we are angry
[1:13:47] because from the moment we recognize it,
[1:13:50] we have a chance. We have a chance to do
[1:13:52] something uh about it.
[1:13:55] The next thing we want to do is we want
[1:13:57] to accept it.
[1:14:06] and
[1:14:09] acceptance. Accepting a difficult
[1:14:12] emotion, accepting
[1:14:15] that I'm angry,
[1:14:17] that is uh uh very important for me to
[1:14:21] be able to bring it to a different state
[1:14:24] as well.
[1:14:27] If I cannot accept it, I act as if it's
[1:14:30] not a part of me.
[1:14:32] Anger, I'm not I'm not an angry person.
[1:14:36] I am right in what I'm saying and I'm
[1:14:38] not angry about it. Um
[1:14:41] uh so first we need to uh learn to
[1:14:44] accept it.
[1:14:49] And the next step
[1:14:56] is that we learn to embrace it.
[1:15:00] So when
[1:15:02] something happens that makes me angry,
[1:15:07] say my uh my colleague says something to
[1:15:10] me, the seed of anger arises. I
[1:15:13] recognize it. I learn to accept it like
[1:15:16] yes this is part of me and that is okay.
[1:15:20] It has something to say. I want to
[1:15:22] embrace it and embracing my emotion that
[1:15:25] has a lot to do with the spirit and the
[1:15:28] uh the environment I create for it. So I
[1:15:31] want to do this very tenderly.
[1:15:35] And Taift often uh Tai our teacher he
[1:15:39] often says like a mother embracing a
[1:15:41] child. So this is also how we want to
[1:15:44] deal with our own emotions.
[1:15:46] When a child is angry, you don't
[1:15:50] reprimand it. Or when a child is sad,
[1:15:52] you don't reprimand it. You are just
[1:15:55] there for it and try to calm it down.
[1:15:57] And we can calm it down by just
[1:15:59] mindfully being present.
[1:16:04] Once we have helped our emotion to calm
[1:16:07] down a bit,
[1:16:11] we can look look deeply.
[1:16:26] Looking deeply means that we
[1:16:30] learn to understand the emotion. Learn
[1:16:33] to understand what this anger is trying
[1:16:35] to tell us. What is this sadness sadness
[1:16:38] trying to tell me? So that uh insight
[1:16:41] can arise.
[1:16:43] We learn to recognize what the
[1:16:46] conditions were that brought it about
[1:16:48] that my anger has arisen. Uh and we can
[1:16:52] learn to recognize the patterns. So we
[1:16:55] get to understand oursel better. We get
[1:16:58] to understand what are the things that
[1:16:59] make me angry. So I can try to avoid
[1:17:02] them in the future.
[1:17:05] What are the things that make me happy
[1:17:06] and try to nourish them in the future?
[1:17:11] So this is a helpful way to uh remember
[1:17:15] what to do when we encounter difficulty.
[1:17:18] An easy way for me to remember this
[1:17:21] acronym is uh
[1:17:24] israeli.
[1:17:27] It's just uh an easy way to remember it
[1:17:39] and I don't want to bring a
[1:17:41] controversial term.
[1:17:43] There are many uh
[1:17:46] beautiful people as well also in Israel.
[1:18:01] Maybe we'll have one sound of the bell.
[1:18:52] I hope that this is concrete enough for
[1:18:55] everyone.
[1:18:57] Um,
[1:19:00] knowing how to deal with my difficult
[1:19:02] emotions. That is one of the most
[1:19:04] important skills that I learned here. I
[1:19:06] think before coming uh to the
[1:19:11] to Plum Village, I used to run away a
[1:19:13] lot from my difficulties.
[1:19:16] I used to uh be lost in consumption.
[1:19:19] This is what we often hear in society or
[1:19:23] the prescription for our difficulties.
[1:19:25] You just consume more and more.
[1:19:30] And because I didn't have a way to deal
[1:19:33] with and to be with my difficulties.
[1:19:36] So I tried to find it either
[1:19:41] uh in in drinking or in smoking weed or
[1:19:44] in uh gaming thousands of hours uh just
[1:19:49] to not be in touch with the difficulties
[1:19:51] that were alive in me. But now living in
[1:19:55] the monastery I've learned a better way
[1:19:57] to be with it. So to put this really
[1:20:00] concrete like when I am uh sad and I
[1:20:04] recognize that I'm sad.
[1:20:06] This happened uh recently when uh I lost
[1:20:11] someone in my life. Someone passed away
[1:20:14] and I recognize it and I start
[1:20:17] practicing walking meditation. I can be
[1:20:20] there. I have enough space in me and I
[1:20:22] can be there with the emotion
[1:20:25] and I try to get out of the story. I try
[1:20:29] um to just feel what it feels like.
[1:20:33] Where do I feel this sadness in my body?
[1:20:36] Maybe it is in my throat or in my chest.
[1:20:39] And I try to to calm it down. I try to
[1:20:42] relax it and release it right there in
[1:20:44] the body.
[1:20:46] And I can also do this with other
[1:20:48] difficult emotions just through uh being
[1:20:51] there with the bodily sensations.
[1:20:55] It is a lot easier to be there at that
[1:20:58] level. And when I can relax it in the
[1:21:01] level of the body, I also relax it in my
[1:21:04] mind. There is our body and our mind are
[1:21:08] very intertwined.
[1:21:11] So healing it on in the body is also
[1:21:14] healing it in the mind.
[1:21:17] And this is the second level in which we
[1:21:22] transform also the seeds that are uh uh
[1:21:27] in our store consciousness when they
[1:21:29] arise and we have enough space we can be
[1:21:32] there with them. So we get to understand
[1:21:35] them and so they can change for the
[1:21:37] better.
[1:21:39] And there's also a third level of
[1:21:42] transformation at the base. And this is
[1:21:45] a time in our life when we feel very
[1:21:48] stable, when we feel very solid, when we
[1:21:51] have a lot of peace in us and everything
[1:21:54] is going well
[1:21:56] and
[1:21:59] we can actively bring up seeds that we
[1:22:03] know are there. But we only do this
[1:22:06] during a time where we feel a lot of
[1:22:08] stability already.
[1:22:10] So we can we have all had difficulties
[1:22:14] in life probably and maybe there are
[1:22:16] things that are not quite digested yet
[1:22:19] that are not quite transformed yet and
[1:22:23] when we have and they do have an
[1:22:26] influence on our life. Uh they are
[1:22:28] latent and they do manifest in our in
[1:22:31] our habits. Uh so actively bringing them
[1:22:35] up and looking at them uh it can be very
[1:22:39] healing. This can also be the traumas
[1:22:42] we've had in the past. But as I said
[1:22:45] like there is a time and place to do
[1:22:48] that. We do that only when we have done
[1:22:50] the first level. When we have when we
[1:22:53] nourish our daily life with well-being
[1:22:56] to create the space to create stability
[1:23:00] and when we know that when things come
[1:23:02] up at the second level um how we take
[1:23:06] care of them then only can we go to the
[1:23:08] the third level and uh look at what
[1:23:12] happened in the past.
[1:23:15] So don't be uh uh in too much of a rush.
[1:23:19] When I came to retreat for the first
[1:23:22] time, I wanted to go third level
[1:23:24] straight away. I want to transform my
[1:23:26] stuff. I want to transform my
[1:23:28] difficulties. I think that's the
[1:23:31] attitude that a lot of people coming
[1:23:33] here have like I just want to go through
[1:23:35] my difficulties. I don't want them to be
[1:23:38] there.
[1:23:39] But um
[1:23:42] we need to have space in us to do that.
[1:23:44] First there needs to be an environment
[1:23:46] where the difficulty can be seen, where
[1:23:48] it can be heard and where it uh can
[1:23:52] transform. So we first work on that
[1:23:54] loving environment.
[1:24:01] I think it's uh pretty enough. H is this
[1:24:04] enough? It's good enough.
[1:24:09] So I hope uh
[1:24:12] yeah I hope we learned a little bit more
[1:24:14] on uh why we have our strong emotions
[1:24:18] that we have seen that they are natural
[1:24:21] they are part of us and also how they
[1:24:24] arise so that we do have the agency and
[1:24:27] I hope we have a little bit of a better
[1:24:30] foothold that when they arise that we
[1:24:32] also know what to do what we can do in
[1:24:34] such a situation.
[1:24:43] I want to be respective of the time but
[1:24:45] there's a whole dimension of the
[1:24:46] question that I haven't touch with uh
[1:24:48] touched on. I hope we will uh touch on
[1:24:52] that in the dharma talk to come because
[1:24:54] actually initially when I heard the
[1:24:56] question also am I good enough?
[1:25:00] My first reaction like who is this eye?
[1:25:04] Am I good enough? Who is this I
[1:25:07] good? What is good? What is bad? So
[1:25:11] there is this besides the very practical
[1:25:14] and pragmatic and what is very relevant
[1:25:17] there's a whole dimension to it also
[1:25:19] where we can transcend our duality or
[1:25:23] can transcend our ideas about uh being a
[1:25:26] self being this eye and be in touch with
[1:25:30] the reality of interbeing.
[1:25:34] This was also what I brought uh uh in my
[1:25:38] heart today. Am I good enough to
[1:25:43] to sit here and offer a tar? But my
[1:25:47] consolence is that I know that it is not
[1:25:50] just me sitting here.
[1:25:53] I am a stream of life. I am my ancestor
[1:25:58] sitting here. All the good things that
[1:26:00] you've heard today, they are there
[1:26:02] because of our spiritual ancestry,
[1:26:05] because of the teachings that have been
[1:26:07] around for thousands of years.
[1:26:09] All the bad things I do take
[1:26:11] responsibility for partially
[1:26:15] that is also also due to uh due to my
[1:26:18] seeds.
[1:26:21] But when I can be in touch with this
[1:26:23] with
[1:26:25] um
[1:26:26] that I am much more than just this that
[1:26:30] I am
[1:26:32] that I am my ancestors
[1:26:34] that I am mother nature
[1:26:37] that we are children of the stars then
[1:26:40] this questions becomes very different
[1:26:43] like I this question dissolves yes I'm
[1:26:46] good enough life is very beautiful life
[1:26:49] is such a miracle So, so I hope uh in
[1:26:52] the days to come we experience that as
[1:26:55] well and we also have one more talk
[1:26:57] where I hope brother Fapu will share a
[1:27:00] little bit about that.
[1:27:02] Thank you for your attention.
[1:27:06] We can listen to three sounds of the
[1:27:08] bell.