A friend or family member shares the news of a life-threatening diagnosis or we see them stumble on a curb or over their words, and in that moment we realize that we’re about to become a companion to someone facing death. Perhaps it’s a conscious choice. Maybe we feel...
Spirituality
A Practice to Meet Bad Habits with Loving-Kindness
Here’s my spiritual practice these days: moment-to-moment I try to be mindful of the arising of ill will in my mind and try to meet it with clear, compassionate response. This reflects the Buddha’s basic instruction on how to work with our negative patterns:...
How to Work with Anxiety on the Path of Liberation
When we investigate the experience of anxiety, the Western approach takes the experience itself as its starting point. What triggered the anxiety? How can we work with it? How can we make it go away? We can never solve our lives. Life is not a thing that can be broken...
The Middle Way of Stress
Life is stressful. Although some people claim that contemporary life is especially stressful, I am skeptical whether that is so. Living beings have always had to struggle for food, for shelter, and for safety. They have always had the stress of finding a mate and...
The Dharma of Fiction
There She Was Emily France on Mrs. Dalloway. Virginia Woolf’s novel Mrs. Dalloway follows a single day in the life of a British socialite in 1923. The plot is simple. Mrs. Dalloway buys flowers in a London shop, has a visit from a former suitor, and hosts a party. But...
How to Experience the True Nature of Mind
According to the Buddha, the basic nature of mind can be directly experienced simply by allowing the mind to rest as it is. How do we accomplish this? Let’s try a brief exercise in resting the mind. This is not a meditation exercise. In fact, it’s an exercise in...
Morning meditation — If only beings would recognise their own true face.
‘If only beings would recognise their own true face as that of the Tathagata whom they so eagerly seek.’ Shen Hui
Morning meditation — Everything is True nature.
‘Everything is True nature. If you apply effort to anything other than finding it, even the smallest amount is a waste.’ ManGong Sunim
Jeffrey Hopkins, American Tibetologist and Tibetan translator, has died
Earlier today Drepung Gomang Monastery posted news about the passing of American Tibetologist and Tibetan translator, Jeffrey Hopkins: Prof. Jeffrey Hopkins passed away yesterday at 10pm Canadian time. […] Monlam Prayer ceremony has been organised tomorrow morning at...
Morning meditation — Anyone who knows that soy sauce is salty.
‘Anyone who knows that soy sauce is salty can practise Zen.’ ManGong Sunim
