Hành Trình Vô Ngã by
Vô Ngã Vô Ưu
Transcript of Thich Nhat Hanh English Dharma Talks
43 Healing is Possible through Resting
Dharma Talk given by Thich Nhat Hanh
on July 30, 1997 in Plum Village, France.
Good morning, my dear
friends.
Welcome to the third
week of our summer opening. Today is the thirtieth of July 1997, and we are in
the Upper Hamlet. We have been practicing pebble meditation during the past two
weeks, and I hope that the children who just arrived yesterday and today will
continue with our practice of the six pebbles. There are children who have been
here for the last two weeks, and they will show you how to practice pebble
meditation. You’ll have to make a small bag like this, and find six pebbles
like this, little pebbles. Wash them very carefully, dry them, and put them
into the bag.
Today we will learn a
short poem together, young people and also less young people. We are going to
use the pebbles to practice the poem also. It would be wonderful if you can
memorize the short poem in order to practice. Many of you know it by heart
already, but there may be a few of you who have not been introduced to the
practice of this poem: “In, out. Deep, slow. Calm, ease. Smile, release.
Present moment, wonderful moment.” I guess most of us can sing it already.
Shall we sing?
In, out.
Deep, slow.
Calm, ease.
Smile, release.
Present moment,
Wonderful moment.
This is a wonderful
poem, because every time you practice it you’ll feel much better within your
body and your mind. When you are angry, when you are worried, when you suffer,
if you know how to practice that poem then you will feel much better right away
after one or two minutes.
I am going to remind
you of the way to practice. First, “in” and “out.” It means that when I breathe
in, I know I am breathing in. It’s easy. And when I breathe out, I know I am breathing
out. I don’t mix the two things up. Breathing in, I know it is my in-breath.
Breathing out, I know this is my out-breath. By that time, you stop all the
thinking, you just pay attention to your in-breath and your out-breath. You are
100 percent with your in-breath and your out-breath.
It is like holding a
baby in such a way that you hold it with 100 percent of yourself. Suppose this
is a baby and I hold the baby like this. I hold the baby with 100 percent of
myself. Remember, there are times when your mother holds you like this. Have
you seen the image of the Virgin Mary holding the baby Jesus? She holds him
like that: 100 percent. So here, our in-breath is our baby, and we hold our
in-breath 100 percent. “Breathing in, I know that I am breathing in.” You just
embrace your in-breath, nothing else. Don’t think of anything else. That is the
secret of success.
When you breathe in,
you just breathe in, you do nothing else. Do you think you can do that? I am
asking the adults also, do you think you can do that? Just embrace your
in-breath with 100 percent of yourself — mind and body together. And when you
breathe out, you embrace your out-breath. You identify your in-breath as your
in-breath, because when I hold my baby I know this is my baby, not something
else. So, “in, out” means, “breathing in I know this is my in-breath, breathing
out, I know this is my out-breath.” It’s very simple, but it’s wonderful. I am
sure that if you try it, after two or three in-breaths and out-breaths you will
feel much better already. I can guarantee it because I have done it and I
always feel wonderful.
If you are about to
cry, if you are about to kick or hit someone else because of your anger, and if
you know how to go back to yourself and practice “in, out” for three times, I
am sure that you’ll be different. You will not cry, you will not kick, you will
not punch because you are a much better person after the practice of “in, out.”
Today, try and you’ll see the power of the practice.
Then after you have
practiced “In, out” three, four, or five times, you’ll feel that your in-breath
has become deeper and your out-breath becomes slower. Because when you are
angry, when you are in despair, when you suffer, your in-breath and out-breath
are very short and not calm at all. But then after having breathed in and out
peacefully, your in-breath will be very smooth. Your out-breath, also. So the
quality of your breathing has been improved. Your in-breath is deeper and
calmer, your out-breath is also deeper and calmer. That is why we can practice
“deep and slow.”
Breathing in, I know
that my in-breath has become deeper, and the deeper it is, the more pleasant it
becomes. Try to practice breathing in for a few times and you’ll see that it is
deeper. And when it is deeper, you’ll feel a lot of pleasure. When you breath
out, you say, “Breathing out, I know my out-breath has become slower, slower,
more peaceful.” If your breath is deeper, you are deeper. If your breath is
slower, you are slower. It means you are more peaceful. So, breathing in, I
know that my breath has become deeper. Breathing out, I know that my breathing
has become slower. It’s wonderful.
You might use your
pebbles also. If you are practicing sitting meditation, you put the pebbles on
your left, you bow to the pebbles, and you pick up a pebble with two fingers.
One pebble. You look at it and you put it in the palm of your left hand and you
begin to practice breathing in, breathing out. “In, out.” The practice is
smooth. “In, out.” Once more. “In, out.” You’ll feel much better. Then, I use
my two fingers to take the pebble up and I put it on my right side. I have
practiced “In, out” already.
Now, I’d like to
practice, “Deep, slow.” So, I take another pebble. I look at it. I put it in my
left hand and I begin to practice. “Deep, slow.” It has become deeper by
itself, you don’t have to make it deeper. It has become deeper by itself alone
because you have practiced already three times “In, out.” That is why your
breath becomes deeper naturally, and slower. Let us practice together “Deep,
slow” three times. “Deep, slow” [pause for three breaths]. Good, we have
finished with “Deep, slow. We pick up the pebble and put it on our right side.
Now we practice the
third line, “Calm, ease.” It means, “Breathing in, I feel calm. Breathing out,
I feel I take everything at ease.” This exercise is very wonderful to practice,
especially when you are nervous, when you are angry, when you don’t feel
peaceful in yourself. Quick, quick! You have to go back to your in-breath and
out-breath and practice “Calm, ease.”
This is an exercise
given by the Buddha himself in a sutra called Anapanasati Sutra, The Sutra on
Mindful Breathing. “Breathing in, I calm the mental formations in me. Breathing
out, I let go.” I let go of my anger. I calm my anger, I calm my worries, I
calm my jealousy. And I let go of my anger, I let go of my jealousy. I think
that adults have to practice together with the children. Every time the child
is angry then her mother or her father should take her hand and invite her to
practice. “Calm, ease.” “Let us, together, practice calming and easing.
‘Breathing in, I calm myself. Breathing out, I let go’” at least three times
and you will feel much better.
You can begin right
away with “Calm, ease” or you might begin in a classical way with “In, out”
first and then “Deep, slow” and then “Calm, ease.” Either way is good. The
Buddha dharma is wonderful. The moment you take the dharma up and practice you
begin to feel better right away. And as you continue the practice, your quality
of being always continues to improve.
I propose to you to
practice three times ‘Calm, ease’ but no one prevents you from practicing more
than that: four times, five times, six times, if you like it. I think you will
like it because it makes you suffer less. And if you can practice eight times,
ten times, you’ll feel much better. “Calm, ease.”
Then you’ll come to
the fourth pebble, and that is “Smile, release. Smile, release.” “Breathing in,
I smile.” You can smile now. You may feel it is very difficult to smile, too
difficult to smile. But after having practiced three or four times you feel
that you are able to smile. And if you can smile, you’ll feel a lot better. You
may protest, “Thay, I have no joy in me, why do you want me to smile? That’s
not natural.” Many people ask me like that, not only children, but grownup
people. They protest, “Thay, I have no joy in me. I cannot force myself to
smile, it would not be true, it would not be natural.”
I always say that a
smile can be a practice, a kind of yoga practice. Yoga of the mouth: you just
smile even if you don’t feel joy and you’ll see after you smile that you’ll
feel differently. Sometimes the mind takes the initiative and sometimes you
have to allow the body to take the initiative.
Sometimes the spirit
leads, and sometimes the body can lead. This is why when you have joy, you
naturally smile. But sometimes you can allow the smile to go first. You try to
smile and suddenly you feel that you don’t suffer that much any more. So don’t
discriminate against the body. The body also can be a leader, not only the
spirit. I propose that you try this when you wake up during the night. It’s
totally dark. Breath in and smile, and you’ll see. Smile to life. You are alive,
you smile. This is not a diplomatic smile, because no one sees you smiling. Yet
the smile is a smile of enlightenment, of joy — the joy you feel of being
alive.
So smiling is a
practice, a yoga practice. Don’t say, “I have no joy, why do I have to smile?”
Because when you have joy and you smile, that is not practice, that’s very
natural. When you don’t have joy and you smile, that is a real practice. You
know there are something like 300 muscles, small and big on your face. Every
time we get very angry or worried all these muscles are very tight. When people
look at you with that tension on your face, they don’t see you like a flower.
People are afraid of you when all the muscles on your face are tense like that.
You look more like a bomb than a flower. But if you know how to smile, in just
one second, all these muscles are relaxed and your face looks like a flower
again. It’s wonderful.
So we have to learn
to smile and then we’ll look presentable right away. Look into the mirror and
practice, and you’ll see that the practice of the smile is very important. It
brings relaxation and you can let go. You feel that you are released from the
grip of the anger, of the despair.
[Bell]
On my right, there
are already four pebbles. Now I’d like to practice the fifth pebble. This is
the most wonderful practice. The fifth pebble can bring you a lot of joy, a lot
of enlightenment, a lot of delight. That is “Present moment, wonderful moment.
Present moment, wonderful moment.”
This is a very deep
teaching of the Buddha. The Buddha said that it is possible to live happily
right here and right now. We don’t have to go to the future. We don’t have to
go elsewhere to be happy. We can be happy right here and right now. You don’t
need more conditions to be happy, you have enough conditions to be happy right
here and right now. If we know how to be ourselves and to look inside and
around ourselves, we see that we have had enough conditions to be happy. That
is the practice of living happily in the present moment.
When you breathe in,
you feel that you are alive. Life is available to you, now: the blue sky, the
white cloud, the green vegetation, the birds singing. Plum Village is here.
Many friends are here. Your daddy is still alive, your mommy is with you, your brother
is there, your sister is there. You have strong feet. You can run. You have eyes that can help you
to see everything. There are many conditions for your happiness, you don’t need
anything else, you can be happy right away. You stop running. That is the
practice. Because there are people who run all of their lives; they run because
they think that happiness is not possible in the here and the now.
So this is a
wonderful teaching of the Buddha. You breath in and you say “Present moment.”
It means, “I establish myself in the present moment. I don’t run any more.”
This is the practice of samata, stopping. Stop running. I am wonderful like
this in my sitting position or my walking position or even in my lying down
position. It’s wonderful like that, I don’t need to run any more. Stopping.
Present moment, wonderful moment. It’s wonderful that you are alive.
To be alive, that is
a miracle. Imagine a person who is already dead. You might not have seen a dead
person but maybe you have seen a dead bird, a dead animal. No matter what you
do, the animal cannot come back to life. Whatever you do, whatever you say, the
animal is not able to listen, to hear. A dead person is also like that. She
lies on the bed and no matter what you do, you cannot revive her. You cannot
bring her into life again. You cry, you beat your chest, you pull your hair.
But that person is already dead.
So, when you look at
yourself, you see you are still alive. You see the person you love is still
alive. That is wonderful. You have to wake up to that fact. The teaching of the
Buddha is the teaching of waking up, waking up to see that all these wonderful
things are still available. So you stop running, you establish yourself in the
present moment. “Breathing in, I am in the here and in the now. Present moment.
Breathing out, I feel this is a wonderful, wonderful moment.”
The Buddha said life
is available only in the present moment. The past is gone, the future is not
yet here, you have only one moment to be alive. That is the present moment. So
simple and so deep. You have an appointment with life. You should not miss that
appointment. Life is most precious. You’ve got to meet her, you’ve got to be
with her. And you know something, life is only available in the here and the
now, in the present moment. So don’t miss your appointment with life. Don’t
miss the present moment. That is why the fifth practice is wonderful. If you
practice like that, you get a lot of joy whether you are on your cushion or on
your bed or in the position of walking meditation. “Present moment, wonderful
moment.”
Now I would like to
ask you to sing and I will practice. I practice for you. I will practice
breathing in and out and I enjoy for you. Okay.
[The community sings: “In, out. Deep, slow. Calm, ease. Smile,
release. Present moment, wonderful moment.”]
I think by now,
everyone knows the gatha by heart. I would like to tell you that this gatha is
also good for practicing walking meditation. We shall do walking meditation
after the talk and you may like to walk peacefully and happily with this poem.
You breathe in and you make two steps. You say, ‘In, in.” Then you breath out
and you make another two steps, “Out, out.” That is walking meditation. You
don’t do anything else. Your mind and your body are totally for the breathing
in, the breathing out, and the making of steps. You are perfectly concentrated
in walking and breathing, you are not concerned with other things. And you can
continue with “In, out” like that for a few minutes. If you want to walk a
little bit quicker, you can make three steps while breathing in and breathing
out.
You do it very
naturally, in such a way that you get a lot of pleasure. Don’t be so serious,
so solemn. You do it very, very, very naturally. “In, in, out, out.” If you
enjoy walking, you feel wonderful. You are doing the practice correctly. After
some time, you switch into ‘Deep, slow.” “Deep, deep, slow, slow. Deep, deep,
slow, slow.” Very concentrated. And we shall be walking with you. Everyone is
concentrated. Everyone is peaceful. Everyone is joyful. The energy of joy and
of peace will radiate from each person, and if we walk in the sangha like that,
we will receive the collective energy and it will be very, very strong.
There is still one
pebble left. But for this gatha we don’t need all six pebbles, we need only
five. After you have practiced five gathas, your sitting meditation is done. So
you hear the sound of the bell, you collect your pebble, and you put it in your
small bag.
Do you think my small
bag is beautiful? I like this color very much. If you want to have your bag in
yellow or orange, you are welcome. Make a very beautiful pebble bag for your
meditation because you are going to practice using it here. And when you go
home you’ll continue to use your pebble meditation bag. If the adults want to
imitate, they are welcome. It’s wonderful. There are those of us who have
rosaries — 108 — and the use of the rosary is exactly like the use of the
pebbles. But I think this way is fun.
So, please, young
people, I think today you have a lot of things to do. Do them joyfully. I hope
the children who have been here for one or two weeks will transmit the teaching
of the pebble meditation to the newer children and then we will practice
together. Now, when you hear the bell, please stand up and bow to the sangha
before you go out and continue the practice.
[Bell]
I would like to give
a little bit more instruction about [conscious breathing]. Don’t try to breathe
in. Don’t make any effort of breathing in. It is very important. Allow yourself
to breathe in naturally. You breathe in any way, why do you have to make a
determination to breathe in? That is the point. Allow yourself to breathe in
normally. Only pay attention to your in-breath. Don’t say, “My in-breath, come
here, I will tell you how to do it.” No. You allow yourself to breathe in,
that’s all. Short or long, you allow it to be the way it is. Be completely
non-violent while holding your baby. Don’t force your baby to be like this or
to be like that, allow it to be as it is. Embrace it only with your
mindfulness. It is very important.
When you love
someone, you allow him to be or allow her to be. Don’t say, “If you don’t do
this, I will not love you.” This is already the practice of love. Allow your
in-breath to be itself. Just embrace it with the energy of mindfulness.
“Breathing in, I am aware that I am breathing in.” That’s all. The impact will
be great.
Many people practice
like they are in a hard labor camp. You force yourself, you make too much
effort, and you tire yourself out after some time. If you know how to allow
yourself to rest, to allow your in-breath and your out-breath to flow in and
out naturally, you will never get tired. You only need to light up your
mindfulness and to be aware of it. Like when you turn on the light, you just
turn on the light. And because of the light you are aware that the bell is
there, your friend is there. Awareness is like that. So you recognize your
in-breath as an in-breath, your out-breath as your out-breath, and you embrace
them with love.
Then in no time at
all, their quality of being will be improved. Like a suffering baby who is
kicking, is crying, is vibrating. You don’t say, “Now, stop, don’t cry, don’t
be agitated!” You don’t say this. You don’t do anything; you don’t intervene.
You don’t force it to be the way you want. Just pick up the baby and embrace it
with all your being. When you have the energy of tenderness, of love and of
care, that energy will naturally penetrate into the baby and there will be a
transformation. Many of you have been a mother or a father and you know this. Just
hold the baby with your tenderness, with your whole presence. And that whole
presence, body and mind concentrated we call mindfulness (and you are capable
of being mindful, you know). So you cultivate your mindfulness so that you will
be mindful more, to be there for your suffering, for yourself, for your beloved
one.
In sitting meditation
you do like that also. Don’t struggle in order to sit. Allow yourself to sit in
a relaxed way. “Smile, release.” Remember, there was a time when you’d sit in
your living room watching television? You could sit for one hour, even two
hours? And you didn’t complain that you had pain in your shoulders or arms. You
just allow yourself to sit. Sitting meditation is not a struggle. If you take
it to be a struggle, you’ll be tired. After fifteen minutes you’ll feel pain in
your shoulders and in your head. So, allow yourself to rest. When you practice
sitting meditation, walking meditation, allow yourself to rest. It is possible
to rest while practicing walking meditation, sitting meditation, mindful
breathing. In fact, this practice I offer to you as a means of resting.
Many of us take
vacations. But during the time of the vacation we don’t know how to rest. Then
after the vacation, we are more tired. So, we now allow ourselves to rest our
body and our spirit. Here, we are learning the art of resting. Meditation as
the practice of resting.
Our body has the
capacity of healing itself. You know that. When you get a cut in your finger,
do you have to do anything? No. You only have to keep it clean and in a few
days it will be healed. Your body has a number of problems within because you
have not allowed it to rest. If you know the art of total relaxation, the art
of allowing your body to rest, most of these troubles will go away after a few
weeks.
When an animal is
wounded in the woods, it knows how to do this. It seeks a peaceful corner in
the forest and it lays down for several days. Several generations of ancestors
have transmitted to them the wisdom that this is the only way to restore
themselves. They don’t have doctors, they don’t have pharmacists, but they know
how to rest. They don’t need to run after their prey, they don’t need to eat — in
fact, they fast during these three, four, five days of resting. And one day the
animal is healed and it stands up and it goes to look for a source of food.
We don’t know how to
do like animals. In order to get well quickly we bring a lot of interventions
into our body: we take a lot of drugs, we undergo a lot of treatments. But we
don’t know how to allow our body to rest. So learning how to allow your body to
rest is a very important practice. Love your body. You learn total relaxation
and you can do it several times a day. Five minutes is enough, ten minutes.
Even three minutes are already very good if you know how to allow your body to
rest completely.
And for your spirit,
it is the same. Our consciousness is able to heal itself. It has the power of
self healing but you don’t allow it to rest. You continue to feed your consciousness
with your anger, your worries, your thinking, and so on. You don’t believe in
your consciousness. You are seeking for a means to heal it but you don’t know
how to allow yourself to rest. You keep thinking the whole day and you keep
worrying the whole day. You never allow yourself to rest. If you know how to
practice total relaxation, you’ll know how to smile and how to send your smile
to different parts of your body. During that time, you have stopped thinking
and worrying because you are focused on your body, your breathing, your
walking. When you practice mindful breathing, when you practice “In, out, deep,
slow,” not only can you nourish yourself — body and spirit — but you can also
stop your thinking. Stopping the thinking, stopping the worries, is very
important.
Our mind is like a
cassette tape turning nonstop day and night. We have a habit. You are not
there, because you are carried away by your thinking, by your worries. You may
get lost in the past, regretting the past or being caught in the suffering that
you endured during the past. You suffered in the past already but now you want
to suffer more by recalling the past. You call your past back in order for you
to suffer more. Why do you have to show it several times, your suffering? Cows,
when they eat grass, they swallow and then they bring it up again and swallow
for a second time. Many of us do the same. We have suffered already in the
past. But we want to bring our suffering back to the present moment and suffer
more. We like that.
The future is not yet
there but we think of it and we worry, and we become scared. We are not capable
of dwelling in the present moment where life is. Life and its many wonders are
available inside of you and around you and yet you are not able to touch its
wonders because you get lost in the past, in the future, and also in your
projects, your worries. How can your mind rest and restore itself? Our mind
also has the capacity of self healing just as our body.
Remember when you
lost someone very dear, you suffered, and you thought that you’d never restore
yourself, you’d never be able to forget that suffering. You thought that the
suffering would dwell with you, the wound would be with you, forever. But some
time later you got used to it and you were able to go on with life. This means
that your mind, your spirit, was able to heal itself.
We have to trust our
spirit in the way we trust our body. Our spirit has the power of self healing
if only we know how to allow it to rest and don’t continue to feed it with more
worries, with more projects, with more fear. The practice of mindful breathing,
mindful walking, enjoying the contemplation of the sky, of the vegetation, of
being with friends, enjoying things in the present moment, helps you to stop these
kinds of feelings — the heart and the spirit filling with worries and fear. You
will heal in the inside.
During the time you
are here in Plum Village, you are surrounded by many friends who are practicing
resting, recuperating themselves. Do a lot of total relaxation, mindful
relaxing, walking, and sitting meditation, and enjoying doing things mindfully
to help the sangha.
[Bell]
Many of us have had
the good fortune of having a loving father, a loving mother, a loving teacher,
or a loving brother or sister or friend. We have to call on them for help.
Whether they are still alive or they have passed away, they are always there in
you.
A father always wants
to love his child. That is the deepest nature of a father. If you see that your
father does not love you, it is because he was not able to manifest his love,
that’s all. No one had helped him to express his love. All fathers, deep
inside, want to love their child. But if they say, “I hate you! I don’t
recognize you as my child!” that is because they do not know how to do it. It
does not mean that a father does not love his child. You also, you love your
children even if your children do things you consider to be negative, that
irritate you. Still, deep inside you, the love you have for your children is
still intact. You only need to learn how to express your love. There are many
people who think that their father or their mother doesn’t love them, many are
victims of such a vision. But, according to my experience, all fathers love
their children, deeply. All mothers, also. Even animals, they love their
children.
When you look into
your hand — if you look deeply — you’ll see that this hand of yours is also the
hand of your mother and your father. Because you are a continuation of him, you
are a continuation of her. This hand has been transmitted to you by your
mother, by your father. It is also the hand of your ancestors. So, don’t think
that this is only your hand. This is the hand of several generations. And you
are going to transmit this to your children and their children.
All your wisdom, all
the wisdom, all the experience, all the suffering, all the happiness of all the
generations of your ancestors are here in your hand. Our ancestors, their
wisdom, their happiness, their sorrow, their hope, their fear are there inside
you. They all have been transmitted to you. In every cell of your body you find
everything: all the hope, all the fear, all the happiness, all the suffering of
all the ancestors are in each cell of you. Now mankind is capable of cloning
itself. We need only to take one cell, any cell of our body, and we can
duplicate ourselves.
This means that in
each cell there is the presence of you as a whole. The one is the all, that is
the teaching of the Buddha in the Avatamsaka Sutra. And in each cell of our
body there is hell, there is the Pure Land. There is the Buddha, there is Mara,
there is Jesus, there is Satan, there is happiness, there is sorrow, in just
one cell. All our ancestors can be touched, can be found in one cell, because
one cell contains everything. And this is not just an abstract idea. You have
heard of the technique of cloning. We know that one cell can manifest as the
whole thing. So look in your own hand, and you’ll see that the cells in your
hand are also the cells of your father, your mother, your ancestors. Many of
them were wise, were happy. Call on these elements within yourself to come and
help you and rescue you.
You have blood
ancestors and you also have spiritual ancestors in yourself. If I only have
blood ancestors, I cannot be myself, as I am now. Now I use my eyes in such a
way that my ancestors did not. I have learned the Buddha’s way of looking. I
look at things with mindfulness. I look at things and touch the nature of
interbeing in them. The way I look at the sky, at a pebble, as a person, is
very deep. And without the Buddha, my teacher, I could not look like that. The
way I breathe, the way I walk, also. My feet, walking, are also the feet of the
Buddha. I am walking with the Buddha’s feet. Not only do I walk with my mothers
feet and my fathers feet, but also I walk with the feet of the Buddha, because
each step I can generate joy and peace.
You have your beloved
father in you. You have your beloved mother in you. You have your beloved
teacher in you. Your teacher may be Jesus, your teacher may be Buddha, and,
according to your practice, your teacher is more or less evident, powerful, in
you.
Suppose you have a
painful spot on your body. Why don’t you call on your father, your mother, your
ancestors, to come and help? Touch that painful spot with the energy of
healing, of love. Because you know that deeply in him, your father loves you,
deeply in her, your mother loves you, deeply in him, your teacher loves you and
wants you well.
Suppose you have a
tumor that might become important and the doctors say that the only way is to
open you up and take it and throw it out. That is our tendency. If there is
something that we don’t want, we tend to cut it out and to throw it away: surgery.
We have created the painful things in our body and we don’t want them any more,
we want to throw them out. It is the same with your mind, your consciousness.
There are tumors in your consciousness, the tumor of hate, of despair, of
depression. And we also want to cut and throw it out.
That is a way of
life, a habit of thinking that we have learned from this new society. If you
don’t want anything, you eliminate it either by using a gun or a knife. We have
to look deeply into our civilization and to see in what direction we are going.
When we have something painful in us, we don’t know how to take good care of
it. We don’t know how to embrace it the way we embrace our child. We want to
take it, to throw it out. We want to punish it.
So, breathe in
deeply, and see that this hand is the hand of your father, your loving father,
or your loving mother or your loving teacher. Even if she is no longer alive,
she still is real in you because every cell in you is also her. Every cell in
you is also him. Call on them to help. There are healthy cells in you, and the
healthy cells will come to rescue the cells that are not so healthy. Because
you do not know how to take care of them, some of them are tired and are being
transformed into a problem.
So breathe in and
bring your father, your mother, and your loving teacher back into your hand.
You call the name of your father, the name of your teacher and suddenly your
hand becomes the hand of your mother, your teacher. And then, when you breath
out, touch the painful spot. Breathe slowly. Transmit all these energies to the
painful spot. And after you finish, do it again. Breathe in, call his name, and
you make him alive, you make her alive. The energy of your father or your
teacher will be present in your hand. And when you breathe out you smile, and
the energy of your father or your teacher will penetrate into you. Practice
like this every day, whether in a sitting position or in a laying down
position.
In the moment of your
practice you are totally relaxed. You have faith in the people who love you,
who want to wish you well. Then you make them present in the form of energy and
you use that energy to touch and heal. Your hand has a healing power. You don’t
need someone else. Every one of us has a healing power within himself or
herself, an energy you can generate into the palm of your hand. That energy is
stored within each cell of your body. Learn to do it with your body. If you
have a liver that does not work so well, that is suffering, concentrate
yourself, inviting your father, your mother.
I have no doubt that
my father always loved me. And I don’t consider my father as nonexistent,
because my father is in every cell in me. When I call on him, he is back in
every cell in my body. When I generate that energy called the energy of a
loving father, I touch myself and say, “Father, please help” And your father
will be transmitting to you this energy. During that time you feel peaceful,
knowing you are being loved, being taken care of by your father.
Remember when you
were a small child, you had a fever and your tongue was so bitter you didn’t
want to eat anything? And your front felt like it was burning and when your
mother came, she put her hand on your forehead, and suddenly you felt like you
were in paradise. Just one hand. You felt much better with the presence of your
mother and just one hand. Don’t think that hand is no longer there. It is still
there because your hand is the continuation of your mother’s hand. And if you
call on her, “Mommy? Please help,” when you breath in and then, when you put
your hand on your forehead and you breath out, you will receive exactly the
same energy. Nothing is lost.
Take care of your
body in such a way. Allow your body to rest in whatever position you are. And
later you will be able to take care of your spirit, your ailing spirit, in the
same way. You have blocks of pain, of sorrow, of fear, of despair within
yourself. You have to embrace these blocks of pain and sorrow exactly in the
same way. Call on them to help.
The Buddha-to-be is
not something abstract. The Buddha is very deep in me because I have learned
the practice. I have learned to look in the way the Buddha looked. I have
learned to breathe the way the Buddha breathed. I have learned to walk in the
way the Buddha walked. On the Gridhrakuta Mountain where the Buddha stayed more
than twenty years, I sat there and I contemplated the very sunset that he had
contemplated. I was looking with my eyes and his eyes at the beautiful sunset.
You also are capable
of looking with your Buddha eyes. In your daily life you are used to looking
with your eyes, the eyes that do not have the energy of mindfulness and
concentration behind them. But with your mindful breathing, you can generate
the Buddha eyes in you. When you use these eyes to look, you will see things
much differently. It is like having a pair of binoculars and if you bring them
up to your eyes, you can see differently. So, you have the Buddha eyes
transmitted to you by your teacher. Why don’t you use them? Just breathing in,
breathing out, generates the energy of mindfulness and suddenly, you have the
Buddha eyes. Looking with the Buddha eyes, you will not get angry. You will
despair.
You should not have
any complex. The Buddha is enough, Jesus is enough. Jesus said so, “I am in the
father, the father is in me, I am in you, and you are in me.” Very clear. You
can’t deny that teaching in the heart of Christianity.
So, if the Buddha is
in you, why don’t you call on him for help? You just breathe in and breathe out
and Buddha will be alive, you can use Buddha eyes, Buddha hands. “Dear Buddha,
please help,” and suddenly you have the hand of the Buddha available to you.
How simple. What else do you practice? What else do you learn? This is very
simple, easy to understand, and yet very deep. The healing that you want, you
can provide by yourself. You are supported by the sangha, by the Dharma, by the
Buddha, every moment of your daily life. If only you know this, you will
realize that support is always available and then you will not feel alone and
scared.
So today, in the
Dharma discussion, please discuss this practice. Allow us to rest. Allow our
body to rest. There are techniques of resting. You may not be used to them but
they are good habits to learn. We have learned the other kind of habit of not
resting, and now we have to learn a positive habit to be able to rest — bodily
and mentally. And we have to share with each other the ways we do this to
arrive at a relaxed state of the body and of the mind.
Walking is a way of
resting, sitting is a way of resting, eating is a way of resting. Don’t
struggle. We have struggled all our lives, we have gone nowhere at all. Stop
the struggle and take care of our body, our mind. Practice resting and
restoring ourselves and we’ll go very far.
We will get together
and discuss this. We will share our experience of the practice of resting.
There are brothers and sisters who have been in the practice longer, they can
share their practice. You may ask questions. And we practice the first day, the
second day, and then we’ll meet again and share again our practice. If you have
any difficulties, if you have any questions, or if you have some success, some
joy in your practice, please share these with other people.
We practice as a
sangha. There are dharma teachers available in our midst, there are also
brothers and sisters who are familiar with the teaching and the practice. So do
profit from their presence.
And when you feel
concentrated and mindful, and you enjoy your practice of walking, of breathing,
of smiling, then you’ll contribute a lot to the sangha. Because if we see you
relaxed, walking mindfully, smiling, breathing mindfully, we will be reminded
to do the same. Together, we’ll produce that collective energy that will
nourish us. When we go home, we can continue the practice even with our
children. Because the children in Plum Village proved that they are capable of
the practice.
44 Walking into the Kingdom of God
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