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The Four Dharma Seals of Plum Village
The practice of Plum Village is characterized by four essential elements, known as the Four Dharma Seals of Plum Village. Thầy states clearly that if a practice or teaching does not carry these four characteristics, it is not an authentic Plum Village teaching or practice.
He introduces the first seal: “I have arrived, I am home,” as a live framework for present-centered healing. Because our childhood wounds, parents, and ancestors live actively inside our current physical cells, Thầy explains that true transformation happens entirely in the here and now. Rather than going back to the past to find the cause of our ill-being, a practitioner can recognize and heal those wounds as they manifest in the present moment.
Introducing the second seal: “Go as a river,” Thầy removes individualistic illusions, illustrating that our happiness and suffering are collective properties. Just like a beehive or a living organism, the Sangha body must breathe, move, and flow as a single collective stream.
Exploring the third seal: The interbeing of truth and time, Thầy maps out the relationship between conventional and ultimate truth. He notes that while conventional concepts like birth, death, above, and below are useful everyday tools, we must look deeply to touch the ultimate truth of emptiness. Thầy illustrates this interconnected nature through the Four Noble Truths, noting that if you look into a rose and only see the rose, you haven’t really seen the rose yet; you must see the sun, the soil, and the gardener within it. Similarly, looking deeply into one’s suffering instantly reveals its roots, its cessation, and the path.
Finally, Thầy describes the circular nature of time, replacing the linear illusion of a shrinking future with the wonderful metaphor of a circular slide projector where past actions cycle back to manifest as our present. This introduces the fourth seal: “Maturation in every moment.” Thầy details the traditional three categories of karmic maturation—ripening across different times, species, and forms—while uniquely adding a fourth dimension: maturation in a different place.
He concludes that we are not merely this physical body, but the active energy of our cumulative karma, continuously transitioning through time and space like a changing cloud.
This talk was given on a Day of Mindfulness during the spring retreat in 2012. Thầy offered this talk at the New Hamlet, Plum Village, France.