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Lotus, Mud and Emotional Storms: Mindful Breathing Answers for Young and Old

Thich Nhat Hanh · August 2, 2009 · Plum Village, France · Audio Only
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Today’s session began with questions from children, teens, then adults, each ringing the bell and breathing three times before speaking.

  1. How do plants grow? Sit close, breathe, observe—biologists do this work.
  2. Why don’t monastics fall in love? Monks and nuns practice celibacy so they can devote their time to practice, love without suffering, and help others.
  3. How did you decide to become a monk/Buddhist? Thay’s family was already Buddhist; at school five friends discussed their futures—four became Buddhist monks, one a Catholic monk. To be a Buddhist means having compassion, understanding, openness; ideas and labels aren’t required.

Noble silence and laughter support each other if we remain fully aware. A non-dualistic view sees suffering and happiness “inter-are”: like lotus and mud, one nourishes the other. Feelings are impermanent; strong emotions are “storms” in our “store consciousness.” To handle them, practice belly breathing—focus 100 % on the rise and fall of your abdomen until the storm passes.

Five skandhas:
• form
• feelings
• perceptions
• mental formations
• consciousness

Each emotion is one of fifty-one mental formations; we are much more than any single emotion.

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