Transcript
[0:00] Today is October 5th in the year 2025.
[0:06] We're in the new hamlet
[0:11] of plum village
[0:13] and we are welcoming our retreatens who
[0:16] have come for a week to practice with us
[0:22] in terms of happy farmers
[0:27] and the topic of the week's practice and
[0:30] learning and experience is rooted in
[0:34] healing. ing a journey to healing with
[0:39] Mother Earth.
[0:41] This is very beautiful.
[0:46] I think we've all had a taste, so to
[0:49] speak, of of our mindfulness practices
[0:53] that we do.
[0:55] We learn about slowing down,
[0:59] relaxing,
[1:02] stopping when we hear the sound of the
[1:04] bell and then coming back to ourself
[1:09] with mindful breathing.
[1:13] And this simple practice
[1:16] helps our mind
[1:18] come back to the present moment.
[1:21] Instead of thinking about the future or
[1:24] the past,
[1:27] we remain really firmly established in
[1:30] the here and now.
[1:33] And as farmers, I believe this is one of
[1:37] your greatest capacities is to be truly
[1:41] present with the earth.
[1:43] in the present moment.
[1:46] So it's a wonderful practice to bring to
[1:50] your farming uh moments or the farming
[1:55] uh activities you do the breathing while
[2:00] working with your hands or while
[2:03] walking.
[2:05] And the second basic practice we've all
[2:09] had the opportunity to do together is
[2:12] the mindful walking.
[2:15] And we walk gently on mother earth.
[2:18] Especially now
[2:21] when some parts of the earth, mother
[2:24] earth, some parts of the globe, mother
[2:27] earth uh is not experiencing a lot of
[2:31] gentle footsteps.
[2:33] So let us offer her our love and peace
[2:38] with every step that we make. And we can
[2:42] do this.
[2:44] And as farmers
[2:46] uh you have the opportunity to to offer
[2:50] your love to the earth. uh when you
[2:54] plant when you
[2:57] um cultivate
[2:59] uh weed um and uh appreciate the the
[3:05] crop that he has offered.
[3:08] So it's a very beautiful practice.
[3:12] The Buddha recommended that um a talk be
[3:17] delivered in terms of the the audience
[3:21] listening
[3:23] according to the needs of the audience.
[3:25] So
[3:27] please allow me this morning to to focus
[3:30] on the the happy farmers who are with us
[3:34] today.
[3:36] And uh of course there'll be the
[3:38] teachings as well, but the the focus
[3:41] will be for our friends who've come.
[3:43] This week
[3:46] we've had rain.
[3:49] Farmers are usually very happy when it's
[3:52] rain when it rains.
[3:55] Um, I would like to tell you
[3:59] a little bit about
[4:03] the beginnings of our happy farm.
[4:07] It's its early life
[4:11] before it became a happy farm. Would you
[4:14] like to hear? I thought I would tell you
[4:16] a little bit about this happy farm. So
[4:21] in [clears throat] the early days of New
[4:23] Hamlet,
[4:25] we had a vegetable garden.
[4:29] Very, very sweet. A vegetable garden.
[4:33] And who was the gardener? Who was the
[4:36] main gardener
[4:38] who took care of everything?
[4:41] It was Sister Bowam.
[4:44] And those of us who live here know
[4:47] Sister Bam very well.
[4:50] how she really loved growing vegetables
[4:54] and the flowers.
[4:58] And
[4:59] she loved so much to bring the best
[5:02] seeds to the garden that they were
[5:05] imported from Vietnam
[5:08] uh to give us the beautiful aromatic
[5:11] aromatic herbs that we eat. Latia to the
[5:17] pill herb and special coriander.
[5:22] Um other other vegetables
[5:26] um that are unique to Vietnam.
[5:31] Um we had the opportunity to grow these
[5:35] in our little garden.
[5:38] Uh there was of course the bitter melon
[5:41] and a kind of summer squash that grew
[5:45] down. We built the trellis. [snorts] It
[5:49] was sort of a vine and it just grew down
[5:52] and we'd have to pick it because it just
[5:55] kept growing. It was sort of green
[5:58] smooth skin. Uh so this was another sort
[6:02] of exotic vegetable.
[6:06] Well, happy farm was al excuse me the
[6:10] garden was also at the fragrant
[6:12] wellhouse where maybe some of you are
[6:15] staying where the [clears throat] the
[6:19] lines are for hanging your clothing.
[6:22] Sister Bowium made a garden
[6:26] and once she planted pumpkins
[6:30] so we had lots of pumpkins
[6:33] and then another time she wanted an
[6:36] artichoke garden. So we had lots of
[6:40] artichokes
[6:42] but they weren't exactly the kind we
[6:44] could eat.
[6:47] It was a wonderful time.
[6:50] Um,
[6:52] watering the garden was done with a
[6:56] hose.
[6:58] Do Do any of you remember what a hose
[7:00] looks like? I don't know if your gardens
[7:03] have hoses now, but we we had a hose, a
[7:06] garden hose, and then a nozzle at the
[7:10] end, and you could turn the nozzle and
[7:13] have a very fine spray or else a more
[7:17] streamlined
[7:19] uh source of water.
[7:23] And we also had one little u sprinkler
[7:28] so to speak, sort of an arc, and it
[7:31] would turn to the right and the left,
[7:34] and the water would go to the right and
[7:36] to the left. And because we had only
[7:40] one, we would have to move it to
[7:43] different places in the garden.
[7:47] It took a long time to water the garden
[7:50] with the hose.
[7:53] The young sisters were there in the
[7:55] morning before sunrise
[7:58] watering the garden
[8:01] and then after sunset in the evening.
[8:05] So you can imagine how happy we were
[8:08] when it rained.
[8:11] And in the summer um everyone was not so
[8:16] happy because during the summer retreat
[8:20] the children in the children's program
[8:24] love to have um
[8:27] games with the sisters really. It was
[8:30] called a soccer or football championship
[8:34] playoff.
[8:36] And this was always an anticipated event
[8:41] in the summer retreat. In those days,
[8:43] the kids could stay for one month. So
[8:47] whenever it rained, the gardeners were
[8:50] so happy because we don't have to water
[8:53] the garden. But the kids and the
[8:55] sisters, oh, too bad it's raining.
[9:00] So rain is really wonderful. Kind of
[9:02] depends on what your plans are.
[9:06] So that's the history of uh of what is
[9:11] now
[9:13] uh transformed into a happy farm.
[9:17] And we thank our I would like to really
[9:19] offer our deepest gratitude and thanks
[9:23] to sister Bim. And now we have Sister
[9:27] Phoenix who has taken over the
[9:29] stewardship
[9:31] and uh our long-term lay friends. Uh
[9:35] there was um Geraldine
[9:39] Charlotte
[9:40] and others.
[9:42] Um
[9:47] >> yeah. Yeah. I I'm getting there. I'm
[9:49] getting to Revy. [laughter]
[9:52] She's so much appreciated. You think I
[9:55] won't say her name, but I am. I'm
[9:57] getting to it. So, the compost team uh
[10:00] has done a lot. Yeah. And now the star
[10:05] is Revy. [laughter] So,
[10:08] so she has, you know, she transformed
[10:11] our little garden into a farm. We have
[10:15] an irrigation system. And, you know,
[10:19] it's it's so nice. we don't have to
[10:21] stand there with the hose, but she's
[10:24] added a lot more from her knowledge and
[10:27] experience.
[10:29] Um,
[10:31] yeah. So, we we we're very happy to have
[10:34] all of you here today and I I hope you
[10:38] enjoyed hearing a little bit about the
[10:40] past life of our happy farm.
[10:44] There was a little garden once.
[10:46] Um, oh yeah, Sister Bam herself would go
[10:51] to the farmers and order the fertilizer.
[10:56] I guess it was you call it manure.
[10:59] There were cow farmers across the road
[11:02] and also horse. She got the horse stuff.
[11:06] So we things were fertilized and then
[11:10] she would also go to Gamver
[11:13] and buy the 50 L bags of soil
[11:20] an or something soil
[11:22] 50 L bags and she she got these and we'd
[11:25] bring them back. And so yeah, we're very
[11:29] grateful to so many who have contributed
[11:32] to the the happy farm we have now. So
[11:38] thank you. Let's enjoy a sound of the
[11:40] bell
[11:42] and come back to
[11:46] our body.
[11:48] Our body is the earth. Let's nourish the
[11:53] earth in our body with oxygen,
[11:57] um, calmness,
[12:00] peace.
[12:11] [music]
[12:16] >> [music]
[12:21] [music]
[12:25] [bell]
[12:53] >> And so living in New Hamlet over the
[12:56] years, we saw how
[13:00] um
[13:02] Sister Bam and the other sisters
[13:04] cultivated the land.
[13:07] uh they turned the earth over and um
[13:12] fresh air and the sunshine penetrated
[13:15] the soil and they did everything that I
[13:19] think all of you farmers are doing now.
[13:23] The Buddha has given us some wonderful
[13:25] teachings
[13:27] in terms of cultivating
[13:30] and he said cultivate the mind.
[13:35] The bhavana is the cultivation and the
[13:39] chitta bhavana is learning how to
[13:42] cultivate our mind.
[13:45] So how can we imagine doing that?
[13:51] Um Tai wrote some very beautiful
[13:55] verses on
[13:58] um cultivating our mind, understanding
[14:01] our mind. It's actually in a book called
[14:05] um understanding our mind.
[14:09] uh was first called transformation at
[14:11] the base and he wrote 50 verses about
[14:16] how to understand and cultivate our mind
[14:20] and the first verse is
[14:24] um mind is a field
[14:29] in which all kinds of seeds are sown.
[14:36] Every kind of seed is kept
[14:40] in the soil of our mind. It has been
[14:44] called also the earth.
[14:47] And the mind is understood as having a
[14:50] very deep layer called the store
[14:53] consciousness.
[14:56] The deepest layer of our mind is where
[14:59] all these seeds
[15:02] stay
[15:04] and they stay in a very sleeping
[15:08] state.
[15:10] So what do we mean by these seeds the
[15:12] bijas?
[15:14] So these are impressions we have
[15:16] received
[15:19] even when we were in the womb of our
[15:21] mother.
[15:23] They have been transmitted to us by our
[15:27] ancestors,
[15:30] by school, by society,
[15:33] and by all of our experiences.
[15:38] Now, how do we receive this these
[15:41] experiences?
[15:43] Through our sense organs
[15:46] in the present moment.
[15:48] So what happens in the present moment
[15:52] that comes through our sense organs, our
[15:56] eyes, our ears, our nose, our tongue,
[16:01] the sense of touch, the body, and our
[16:04] mind.
[16:05] All of these impressions
[16:09] go down to the deepest level of our
[16:11] mind.
[16:13] And I'd like to start drawing a picture
[16:15] of this as Tai very often did in
[16:19] describing the mind and cultivating
[16:23] the mind and cultivating different seeds
[16:27] in the mind. Particularly we want to
[16:30] learn about cultivating the seeds of
[16:34] happiness, of joy,
[16:37] of love, of peace and well-being.
[16:46] >> [cough and clears throat]
[17:08] >> Take you this way.
[17:31] So, Ty would draw a circle. I'll draw a
[17:34] circle. Now,
[17:36] it represents the mind, but it's not the
[17:39] mind. So, if you were to have a brain
[17:43] surgery,
[17:44] please don't ask the surgeon if he found
[17:47] the circle with all the seeds.
[17:51] It's a picture, okay?
[18:05] This is the deepest level of the mind
[18:07] that I was talking about the store
[18:09] consciousness.
[18:11] Okay. The allaya.
[18:13] So let's see what kind of seeds could be
[18:16] there.
[18:21] Mindfulness. Wow.
[18:25] It's a very wonderful important seed
[18:29] that
[18:31] can grow and become very strong and
[18:35] available for us
[18:38] when we practice mindful breathing and
[18:41] mindful walking. For example, also
[18:45] mindful eating and being aware of your
[18:48] hands when you're working on the farm or
[18:53] in the earth. It's mindfulness is having
[18:58] contact with something.
[19:01] Mindfulness has an object always.
[19:05] So mindful breathing means I'm in touch
[19:08] with my my breath, my breathing in and
[19:12] out. Mindful walking means I'm aware of
[19:16] my feet touching the earth. Okay. The
[19:20] experience of touching. Yeah.
[19:23] Mindfulness. Okay, let's see what other
[19:26] kinds of seeds. Do you have any seed
[19:28] positive seeds you'd like to uh put in
[19:33] the diagram? Does anyone have any?
[19:36] [clears throat]
[19:36] >> Joy.
[19:37] >> Joy. Yes. Okay.
[19:42] Another one.
[19:45] >> Patience.
[19:47] Patience.
[19:48] >> Patience. Yes. Right.
[19:59] Okay.
[20:03] I like compassion. Is that okay? Can we
[20:06] add it? All right. Good. [laughter]
[20:17] >> Love. Love. Yes. Oh, wonderful.
[20:28] I remember we remember Tai talked about
[20:31] love and understanding. Okay. How about
[20:35] understanding? Is that pretty positive?
[20:38] Okay.
[20:53] Pardon?
[20:55] Loving kindness or kindness. Okay.
[21:06] Well, we have so many positive seeds in
[21:10] our star consciousness.
[21:12] Okay. Maybe there's some seeds that um
[21:16] are not quite positive yet. What do you
[21:18] think? Anger.
[21:21] We seem to specialize in that.
[21:25] I [laughter] don't It's in all the
[21:27] talks.
[21:36] >> Yeah.
[21:38] >> Hate.
[21:40] >> Hate. Yeah. Okay. anxiety.
[21:49] Yes.
[21:51] >> Yes. It's of course. So the opposite of
[21:54] all of these. Well, we could write on
[21:56] this side, but it would take a long
[21:59] time. Do we have climate anxiety?
[22:03] Anxiety. Okay.
[22:10] All right. So now how are these seeds
[22:14] going to wake up and get watered?
[22:17] Because when a seed wakes up and
[22:19] receives enough stimulation, it's going
[22:22] to come up to the level of our mind, our
[22:27] thinking mind. All right? So it's going
[22:31] to receive water through the eyes,
[22:35] [clears throat]
[22:37] our ears, what we hear.
[22:40] Eyes, ears. Okay.
[22:47] Nose,
[22:51] tongue,
[22:54] and body.
[23:06] [snorts] So, we see the beautiful
[23:08] sunrise. It's very beautiful now. The
[23:10] sky is pink. Have you noticed that?
[23:14] Yeah. Okay. We see the beautiful
[23:16] sunrise. Oh, it's pink.
[23:20] That has watered the sea in the seed of
[23:23] joy. And then it will spring up as a
[23:27] flower of joy.
[23:32] All right. But suppose um someone speaks
[23:36] or gets angry or criticizes
[23:39] something I've done or or something like
[23:42] that. Has that ever happened?
[23:45] Maybe. Okay. So, our ears have heard uh
[23:51] some unkind words. Well, whoops. That
[23:54] goes. And what is the seed of anger or
[23:58] maybe fear? We're scared. a person would
[24:01] talks like that. So
[24:05] someone's anger can water my seed of
[24:08] anger. I say why why do you say that to
[24:11] me? So okay now anger has been watered.
[24:16] So
[24:18] whoa comes up as a flower
[24:21] but it's not too happy.
[24:24] >> It's not a happy flower.
[24:26] So what do we do? We we know we're on
[24:29] the path of uh
[24:33] of healing. We want to heal our our
[24:37] suffering, our wounds. What do we do?
[24:42] >> Mindfulness.
[24:44] >> Yes. Okay.
[24:46] Our mindfulness will come and help.
[24:50] So at that moment, we won't say
[24:53] anything. Stop. I'll breathe in and out.
[24:57] My friend, mindfulness, please come and
[24:59] help me right now. Okay, mindfulness is
[25:03] there just ready to help and it's very
[25:07] generous. Wow, that's mindfulness.
[25:12] A good friend smiling
[25:15] to embrace the anger. Yeah.
[25:21] All right. So that is the diagram of
[25:25] seeds in our store consciousness.
[25:28] How they can be watered in the present
[25:31] moment.
[25:33] So the seeds come from the past. They've
[25:36] been planted
[25:38] and we experience
[25:41] their waking up in our mind in the
[25:44] present moment.
[25:46] So the two basic practices
[25:49] stopping recognizing
[25:52] the feelings coming up and emotions
[25:54] coming up. Let me take care of it with
[25:57] my mindfulness. Embrace it or I need to
[26:01] do some walking.
[26:04] you walking 10 minutes or 1 hour and
[26:08] mindfulness
[26:10] will change the energy of that seat and
[26:13] help it return
[26:15] smaller, less strong.
[26:20] So, let's just practice breathing. We've
[26:23] been talking about that. And um hearing
[26:28] the sound of the bell, we know we can
[26:31] take care of ourself
[26:33] and enjoy breathing.
[26:46] [music]
[26:51] >> [music]
[27:23] >> In the springtime,
[27:25] we notice that flowers will suddenly
[27:29] come up from the earth. They've been
[27:32] sleeping
[27:34] here. We notice the daffodils, the
[27:38] junkil,
[27:39] they manifest first.
[27:42] So, where do you think they've been?
[27:47] They've been in the earth like all of
[27:50] our seeds so to speak in the depth of
[27:53] our consciousness
[27:55] after the daffodils
[27:57] then the peckerette
[28:00] the dandelions the iris come up where
[28:04] have they been
[28:06] sleeping in the earth like all of the
[28:10] seeds in our consciousness
[28:13] and seeds really means experience
[28:15] eriences,
[28:19] the experiences we've had, the
[28:22] experiences our ancestors have had that
[28:26] have been transmitted to us.
[28:31] So part of the practice of understanding
[28:36] healing is to go back to the title
[28:41] rooted in healing. the roots.
[28:46] We want to discover
[28:48] our roots
[28:50] from our ancestors,
[28:52] our blood ancestors, and our spiritual
[28:55] ancestors.
[28:57] Understand these roots. And we'll have a
[29:00] practice this week that I wrote that
[29:04] helps us
[29:05] look deeply into these roots we have.
[29:10] And we know that roots are very
[29:12] powerful. The bamboo forest has an
[29:16] amazing roots network. How do we know
[29:20] that in the spring a little bamboo shoot
[29:24] will will pop up out of the earth about
[29:27] 3 m 6 m
[29:30] away from the forest. How did it get
[29:33] there? The roots.
[29:36] Uh we also know trees have a wonderful
[29:39] network of communication and roots how
[29:43] they help one another. So roots are very
[29:46] deep and part of our healing is
[29:50] understanding
[29:51] and appreciating
[29:53] the best qualities
[29:56] of our roots. Of course, we know there
[30:00] has been suffering and um
[30:04] a a lot of despair connected with some
[30:06] of the expression of uh ancestors and
[30:11] their actions and roots. But then the
[30:14] the way of of healing is to focus more
[30:18] on watering
[30:20] the very positive seeds that are in our
[30:25] our consciousness. How do we do that
[30:29] with our sense organs?
[30:33] My eyes can see the sunshine now. How
[30:36] wonderful.
[30:37] My ears hear the song of the birds.
[30:43] My nose smells the fragrance of the
[30:45] flowers of the pine forest, the earth,
[30:49] the good earth.
[30:52] My tongue tastes
[30:55] the nectar of the dharma. Well,
[30:58] [panting]
[30:59] my tongue tastes maybe a good cup of
[31:02] coffee is enough in the morning. Taste
[31:05] the the the the beans or whatever or the
[31:10] tissan. My tongue tastes the chamomile.
[31:14] Uh it's it's lovely and my body is
[31:20] relaxed. All right. So we have these
[31:23] practices that will help us focus our
[31:27] attention and energy on how to heal.
[31:32] And applying this to mother earth, we
[31:36] want to express our love and
[31:39] appreciation
[31:40] for the beauty of mother earth.
[31:45] How she has sustained all life, giving
[31:48] birth to all species,
[31:51] nourishing, holding, and healing all
[31:56] bodhic sappa ga. She's a great bodhic
[31:59] sappa whom Thai loved very much. The
[32:04] planet earth is a bodhic sappa.
[32:08] And you know what?
[32:10] We are also bodhic safas. Do you know
[32:13] why
[32:15] we have compassion? That's ava
[32:22] of great compassion.
[32:25] We have that seed. All right.
[32:28] Now understanding. We have the seed of
[32:31] understanding. That's mandushri
[32:34] bodhicatta
[32:38] working mindfully and with joy.
[32:42] Wow. Samanta
[32:44] bodhic sappa.
[32:46] We can be samantadra bodhic sappa
[32:50] working with joy with mother earth
[32:55] and fearless and uh persevering
[33:00] patience. [snorts] Okay.
[33:03] City garpa. Okay. So well why not just
[33:09] water these seeds and we are bodhic
[33:12] sappa that meaning we have the mind of
[33:14] love and we want to help and above all
[33:18] help mother earth
[33:23] let's enjoy sound of the bell and we'll
[33:26] move on
[33:28] and
[33:30] I was invited to give a short dharma
[33:33] talk which is a real challenge.
[33:36] [laughter]
[33:37] What are we five more minutes?
[33:39] It's okay to give you time to be on the
[33:44] happy farm. And now there's sunshine.
[33:47] We'll hear a bell.
[33:55] [music]
[34:00] [music]
[34:23] So we want to practice appropriate
[34:27] attention. Okay, that is to
[34:31] [clears throat]
[34:32] give more of our bare attention
[34:36] our
[34:38] that we use our sense organs to pay
[34:42] attention to things that are wholesome.
[34:46] We'll
[34:48] not spend too much time uh for example
[34:51] with social [clears throat] media, but
[34:54] it's up to you to decide. But to be
[34:57] aware of the effect of when you see
[35:01] something, hear something,
[35:04] [clears throat] think certain thoughts
[35:06] or hear conversations,
[35:09] what effect is it having on me? What
[35:12] effect is it having on the earth in me?
[35:16] Is it creating happiness
[35:19] or [clears throat] I'm suffering? So
[35:21] later this week, there will be five
[35:23] guidelines that'll help us. Identify
[35:28] identify this.
[35:31] [clears throat]
[35:32] I thought about what would be one
[35:36] obstacle to healing
[35:39] and of course there could be many
[35:41] obstacles but I chose one and that is
[35:45] the obstacle of criticizing
[35:49] self-criticizing
[35:50] criticizing myself.
[35:54] >> [clears throat]
[35:54] >> I I uh I don't have kind thoughts about
[35:59] myself. I'm you know really give myself
[36:02] a hard time. I'm judgmental. I I'm not
[36:08] my best friend sometime with
[36:10] self-criticism
[36:12] but also criticism coming from others
[36:16] addressed [clears throat] to me. I don't
[36:18] know if this is widespread but I I have
[36:22] discovered that being criticized we can
[36:26] lose confidence in ourself
[36:29] with negative self-t talk. Well, who's
[36:32] there to
[36:34] to disagree?
[36:36] I'm just
[36:38] I'm saying negative things about myself.
[36:41] Who will disagree? There's just me
[36:43] talking to me. So, uh, criticism and and
[36:48] this can be an obstacle,
[36:52] but it doesn't have to. Okay? And the
[36:55] way out is to look deeply to ask, is it
[37:00] true?
[37:03] You may be right, but are you sure?
[37:07] Now I want to read to you
[37:12] a a situation that occurred in the
[37:15] Buddha's life [snorts] and
[37:18] [clears throat] it's found in Tai's book
[37:20] old path white cloud white clouds
[37:25] and [clears throat] it's from the suta
[37:27] nepata 1 verse four five and also the
[37:32] samyukta nikaya
[37:34] uh book 7 11. So I'll read the section
[37:39] to you and we'll see we'll understand
[37:42] something
[37:44] uh how Buddha handled it.
[37:48] Okay.
[37:50] [clears throat]
[37:51] One afternoon
[37:53] as the bikus passed by rice fields they
[37:57] were stopped by a wealthy farmer from a
[38:01] noble cast. His name is Bad Vaja.
[38:07] He owned several thousand acres.
[38:12] Sounds like big egg, doesn't it? Big
[38:15] agriculture. Yeah,
[38:17] maybe not. [laughter]
[38:20] We're We're simple farmers. Okay.
[38:23] >> [clears throat]
[38:23] >> It was the season for plowing and he was
[38:27] out directing the efforts of hundreds of
[38:31] laborers.
[38:33] When he saw the Buddha pass by,
[38:37] he stood directly in his way and said
[38:42] with some contempt,
[38:46] "We are farmers.
[38:48] We plow,
[38:50] sew seeds,
[38:52] fertilize,
[38:54] tend, and harvest crops in order to eat.
[39:02] You do nothing.
[39:04] You produce nothing.
[39:06] Yet you still eat. You are useless.
[39:11] You don't plow, sew, fertilize, tend, or
[39:16] harvest.
[39:18] Woo, that's a criticism
[39:20] to the Buddha. I would never say that,
[39:23] but he didn't know what [laughter] he
[39:25] was talking to Buddha. Or maybe Yeah.
[39:28] Anyway.
[39:30] Anyway, okay. Now, listen what the
[39:32] Buddha said.
[39:34] The Buddha responded,
[39:37] "Oh, but we do.
[39:40] We plow, sew, fertilize, tend, and
[39:44] harvest.
[39:47] Then where are your plows, your
[39:49] buffaloos, and your seeds?
[39:52] What crops do you tend?
[39:55] What crops do you harvest?
[39:59] He was saying, "Show me." The Buddha
[40:02] answered,
[40:04] "We sew the seeds of faith and
[40:08] confidence
[40:10] in the earth of a true heart." That's
[40:13] all of you practitioners. Yeah.
[40:17] Our plow is mindfulness
[40:21] and our buffalo is diligent practice.
[40:25] [snorts]
[40:26] Our harvest is love and understanding.
[40:32] Sir, without faith and confidence,
[40:36] understanding and love, life would be
[40:40] nothing but suffering.
[40:43] Wow, that's beautiful answer. So
[40:48] the land lord, land owner, excuse me,
[40:50] was so impressed by this that he bowed
[40:55] down before the Buddha and asked to be
[40:58] accepted as a lay disciple.
[41:01] Now that's really beautiful. Yes.
[41:05] So all of us are are plowing and with
[41:09] our our practice of mindfulness and we
[41:13] can continue uh this week knowing that
[41:17] certainly the Buddha is happy with our
[41:19] our kind of farming. Um
[41:24] I I have just maybe one minute left. I
[41:28] want to offer
[41:31] just one one way to to deal with
[41:36] maybe it's called
[41:38] uh climate anxiety or sadness or
[41:41] whatever if if we're keeping in touch
[41:44] with
[41:46] the
[41:48] the global picture for mother earth
[41:51] somewhere
[41:52] and um
[41:57] is possible to still be happy though.
[41:59] Okay.
[42:01] So, nature is always there for us. Uh
[42:05] the sun is still rising.
[42:07] The rain nourishes the the vegetables,
[42:11] the fruit trees. So, there is still
[42:14] life.
[42:15] And mindful practice helps us enjoy the
[42:19] beauties of life in the present moment.
[42:23] We focus on what is going well.
[42:26] what trees in the forest are still
[42:29] healthy.
[42:30] So mindfulness gives us this opportunity
[42:34] to smile to life in us and around us.
[42:40] The beauty, the the joy, the peace, the
[42:44] well-being, it's still available.
[42:48] Even though what we may read or hear
[42:51] about is is the opposite, but come back
[42:56] to what is still beautiful and
[42:58] nourishing.
[43:00] So [clears throat] here's a a little
[43:03] verse I will end with
[43:07] and it goes, the world is burning up or
[43:12] drowning in rain.
[43:15] Some countries just have torrancets and
[43:17] floods and it's too much.
[43:22] Yet this morning being outside
[43:26] the soft air touches my cheek
[43:31] and I hear that it breezes through the
[43:34] leaves of the trees. The trees standing
[43:38] tall
[43:40] and the leaves swish like waves reaching
[43:45] the amazing shore.
[43:50] Look at the sky. Baby blue is the sky.
[43:54] No clouds or sing, no obstacles.
[43:59] The sun sits silently
[44:03] and a few leaves are starting to fall,
[44:08] announcing autumn
[44:10] is drawing near.
[44:16] Yet this morning, the gentle soft breeze
[44:21] is everywhere,
[44:24] sweeping in happiness for us all.
[44:29] So we have our sense [snorts] organs.
[44:33] Okay. The touch, seeing, hearing and
[44:37] appreciating.
[44:39] So let us continue our practice with
[44:42] this possibility this week. And we wish
[44:47] you all a very
[44:49] joyful and happy and nourishing week of
[44:56] transforming and healing
[44:59] um with the happy farm and the staff and
[45:03] the sisters. And here's a wonderful book
[45:07] that arrived in my hands last night from
[45:10] Revi. It's called the Buddha's mindful
[45:13] farm organic agriculture and
[45:17] sustainability as Buddhists bringing the
[45:21] wisdom and the practices
[45:23] and the love and the peace from the
[45:26] teachings of the Buddha to farming.
[45:30] Yeah. So I let you all know about this
[45:34] and Revy will be a source if you want to
[45:36] know more. Thank you dear friends for
[45:39] listening. I'm Yeah. Thank you. And have
[45:44] a lovely day. And we'll hear three
[45:46] sounds of the bell to to renew the earth
[45:50] of our mind, the soil in our
[45:53] consciousness with mindful breathing.
[46:06] >> [music]
[46:07] [bell]
[46:19] [bell]
[46:35] [music]
[46:43] [bell]
[47:03] [music]
[47:08] [music]
[47:40] >> So dear Tai, dear SA. Go.