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Questions and Answers
Questions and Answers
Thich Nhat Hanh
· April 10, 2014
· Upper Hamlet, Plum Village, France
Transcript
English
English
French
A superb guided meditation by Thay, in French, in the Dharma Cloud Temple (Upper Hamlet) during the French retreat (2014).
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Concerning
my
blood
family,
with
whom
we
have
experienced,
and
are
still
experiencing,
very
great
difficulties,
the
question
is
essentially
whether
we
can
make
peace
with
someone
who
does
not
want
it.
Knowing
that
this
person
is
important
because
he
is
our
father,
who
is
paranoid,
in
the
psychiatric
sense
of
the
word,
[he
has
a]
mental
illness,
who
is
consumed
by
hatred,
anger,
contempt
for
society,
for
others,
and
therefore,
deeply,
for
himself,
and
who
has
created
much
difficulty,
much
suffering
in
my
family.
He
is
the
one
who
created
this,
he
is
the
one
who
destroyed
everything,
and
we
reestablished
some
contact
but
he
decided
to
cut
all
ties,
that
was
ten
years
ago.
And
so,
we
live
very
well
without
him.
But
I
think
we
always
keep
a
[...]
knowing
that
he
is
a
very
lonely
person,
very
unhappy,
and
that
he
is
our
father.
And
so,
since
we
know
that
he
does
not
want
contact
with
us,
and
that
we,
we
would
like
to
[...]
I
think,
for
what
he
calls,
but
he
does
not
wish
to
have
contact.
Dear
Thay,
dear
Sangha,
our
friend
has
shared
[...]
her
family
situation,
she
shared
that
her
father
[...],
and
that
he
has
caused
a
lot
of
suffering
in
the
family,
and
that
he
cut
off
all
contact
ten
years
ago,
and
even
though
the
children
have
decided
to
reconnect,
he
does
not
seem
to
want
to
be
in
contact
with
them.
And
so
the
question
is,
how
can
we
make
peace
with
someone
who
does
not
want
it?
In
the
past,
we
tried
to
do
something
with
him,
with
her,
but
we
did
not
succeed.
Perhaps
it
was
because
we
did
not
choose
the
right
approach.
One
thing
is
clear:
when
a
person
is
suffering,
they
need
someone
by
their
side
who
has
freshness,
who
has
peace.
We
need
that.
And
this
is
the
highest
form
of
reconciliation.
To
say
nothing,
to
ask
nothing,
not
even
for
reconciliation.
There
is
no
need
to
speak,
no
need
to
say
that
reconciliation
is
necessary.
If
you
have
enough
freshness,
enough
peace,
then
your
presence
by
his
or
her
side
will
be
able
to
calm
them.
They
seek
to
be
near
you,
simply
and
naturally.
So
the
question
is
the
quality
of
our
presence.
We
need
to
equip
ourselves
with
a
pleasant,
serene,
refreshing,
unconditional
presence.
Everyone
needs
this
kind
of
presence.
You
do
not
ask
for
anything,
you
do
not
propose
anything,
you
simply
want
to
sit
with
him
for
a
while.
And
if
you
have
this
freshness,
this
peace
in
you,
this
compassion
in
you,
of
course
they
will
feel
it.
Next
to
a
peaceful
person,
we
feel
much
better.
Even
if
we
are
not
a
doctor,
a
nurse,
or
a
therapist.
So
presence
is
very
important.
And
we
can
arrange
for
such
a
presence
to
be
possible.
With
a
little
skillfulness,
we
can
arrange
to
have
such
a
presence.
A
simple
presence,
without
conditions.
Father,
I
want
to
spend
a
few
minutes
by
your
side.
I
need
it.
I
have
nothing
to
ask
of
you.
And
we
can
write
a
letter.
If
we
cannot
call,
we
can
write
a
letter.
Writing
a
letter
is
much
easier.
Because
if
we
are
not
happy
with
the
letter,
we
can
rewrite
it.
And
then
we
can
also
look
for
a
friend
who
has
easy
access
to
your
father,
he
or
she
can
speak
for
you.
And
this
can
give
him
or
her
a
different
image
of
you.
Because
he
must
have
an
image
of
you
that
he
does
not
like.
So,
a
person
who
can
approach
him
can
say
things
that
will
give
him
another
image
of
you,
an
image
closer
to
reality.
So
this
is
something
that
can
be
done
as
well.
We
have
a
monk
here
who
comes
from
Hanoi,
the
son
of
a
communist
official.
And
the
fact
that
the
young
man
became
a
monk
made
his
father
suffer
a
lot.
He
refused
to
speak
to
our
young
monk.
And
he
never
replied
to
a
letter
written
by
the
young
man.
The
young
man
is
now
a
Dharma
[teacher].
He
has
practiced
well,
very
well.
And
after
having
suffered
because
of
this
lack
of
contact
and
communication,
Thầy
suggested
to
him
to
write
a
letter.
Not
to
make
a
phone
call,
but
to
write
a
letter.
A
true
love
letter.
And
he
spent
weeks
meditating
on
the
content
of
his
letter,
with
the
support
of
his
brothers
and
sisters
in
the
monastic
community.
He
wrote
things
like
this.
Father,
I
live
in
Plum
Village,
in
Upper
Hamlet.
And
from
time
to
time,
my
brothers
tell
me
that
I
have
this
virtue,
that
virtue,
like
discipline,
diligence,
things
like
that.
And
I
did
not
really
believe
much
in
these
virtues
that
I
have.
But
they
keep
telling
me
that
I
have
such
virtues.
And
finally,
I
had
to
accept
that
I
do
have
these
virtues.
And
I
wonder
where
these
virtues
come
from.
And
I
found
the
answer.
It
is
from
you,
Father.
It
is
from
you
that
I
have
received
these
virtues
and
I
feel
very
grateful
to
you.
And
now,
I
have
only
one
wish,
Father.
I
wish
to
know
about
my
ancestors.
Because
it
is
our
ancestors
who
transmitted
these
virtues
to
you,
and
you
to
me.
And
I
have
a
very
deep
need
to
know
my
ancestors.
Can
you
tell
me
about
our
ancestors?
If
you
cannot
help
me,
who
will
help
me,
Father?
A
rather
simple
letter.
He
received
a
reply
of
about
twenty
pages.
And
communication
was
restored
after
just
one
letter.
So
it
is
not
many
things
that
we
need
to
do,
just
one
thing,
done
well.
A
letter
can
transform
everything.
So
do
not
lose
courage.
Spend
a
few
weeks
walking
in
mindfulness,
breathing
in
mindfulness,
consulting
your
friends;
and
perhaps
you
will
write
a
letter
like
this
to
renew
the
connection,
to
help
your
father
to
change.
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