My challenge with my gratitude practice

Dear Friends,

I’ve been a fan of gratitude lists and the practice of gratitude for a while. There are so many benefits of gratitude which you can read about from Web MD here or Plum Village here .

I recently realized that one of the places I am challenged is in feeling and expressing gratitude for other humans. I can easily feel gratitude for my safe warm home, my two cuddly dogs, or the beautiful zinnias blooming in my yard. And I can even find gratitude for folks who are distant from me or passed away, like my grandma or Thich Nhat Hanh.

More challenging is to feel gratitude for the people who I see or talk to on a regular basis. The people I take for granted. In fact, I can feel annoyed by people because they aren’t living up to my expectations, often noticing what they don’t do instead of what they do.

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Offering daily care for our bodies

Dear friends,

These last couple of years have been hard on most of our bodies. In addition to COVID, like me you may have faced health challenges or feel disconnected from your body because of all the physical distancing, working from home, or lack of access to health care.

I have been trying to offer my body a guided deep relaxation at least once a day. What I find is that a short (15-30 minute) deep relaxation can reset my nervous system and my mind and help me drop into the present moment more fully. While I often fall asleep for part of the meditation, that doesn’t seem to keep me from feeling the benefits. Sometimes I don’t realize how much tension I have been holding in my body until I am able to let it go through the relaxation practice…

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Who is responsible for our suffering?

Dear Friends,

Last month, my friend Mitchell recommended that we both read Edith Eger’s book, The Choice. I found her description of her life before, during, and after the Holocaust to be quite amazing and inspiring. Eger became a psychotherapist, so in addition to telling her story, she analyzes her experiences through a psychological and spiritual lens.

Eger survived Auschwitz, moved to the United States, married and had children. She carried her childhood trauma with her, and she found herself looking around to find a source for what was making her so miserable. She concluded that her husband was the problem, and so decided to divorce him.

Once she was alone with herself and her feelings, she noticed that she was still unhappy and realized that quite a bit of her suffering was coming from inside. She writes, “I have become my own jailer, telling myself, ‘No matter what you do, you will never be good enough.’”

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No matter what happens we belong in the world

Dear Friends,

A book group in our meditation sangha has been reading You Belong by Sebene Selassie. It’s an excellent book, and the second time I have read it.

Right now, my feeling of belonging is challenged as I move through a personal crisis harder than anything I have faced before. When we emerge from this crucible, nothing and no one involved will be the same. There is much uncertainty and sadness, and in the past this would have caused me to feel separate from others. I would have felt I didn’t belong because of it or that I won’t belong if and when my life changes. But I know deep down that I still belong no matter what happens, and here’s a little about how I came to this insight…

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Rachel Switala Comments
Laziness Revisited

I hope you have been enjoying the summer days and have had some time for what Thich Nhat Hanh calls laziness. I made myself laugh pretty hard when, after writing this letter, I looked back at a blog I wrote one year ago and it was almost exactly the same message!

I’m going ahead with this newsletter anyway for three reasons: because I believe we can’t hear often enough the virtues of slowing down and taking time to rest, because I have a few new thoughts about laziness, and because I’m too lazy to write on a new topic.

Years ago, I learned a new way to think about laziness from the Zen master Thich Nhat Hanh. Here’s how he describes what taking a Lazy Day means:

You may have an idea about the lazy day: Lazy day is a day when I can do what I like to do, but that is not a lazy day. Lazy day is a day when you refrain from doing anything; you resist doing things, because you are used to doing things. It can be a bad habit: if you are not doing anything, you have to die. You cannot bear the thought of doing nothing. It has become a habit. That is why, when you do not do anything, you suffer.”

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Rachel SwitalaComment
An unexpected insight while receiving the Dharma Lamp

On June 10, I was honored to receive the dharma lamp transmission at a ceremony at Plum Village France. This ceremony is an encouragement from the community to share the teachings I have received since I first encountered Thich Nhat Hanh in the 1990's.

For the ceremony, I wrote the following "Insight Gatha":

Seeing the skull with teeth in these foggy rainy woods,

I know this wildly free, composting world is mine, is me.

All of us will arrive home together chanting Namo ‘Valo,

Leaving nothing but our love and a few muddy footprints behind.

I wrote this verse based on an experience I had walking in the woods in the Blue Ridge mountains in May. I walk regularly in these woods which are far from any other houses and trails and on which I have seen bear, turkey, deer, and coyote scat. On that particular day, it was pouring rain and quite dark. Roger and Woody, our 20-lb terriers, were running off leash as we passed the abandoned cabin that was once a girl scout camp.

Roger stopped running and became obsessed with sniffing something I couldn't see, so I walked over to investigate. It was the skull (of a deer I believe) with all its teeth still intact. It startled me at first and I called him away from it.

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How can we enjoy everyday nirvana?

Dear friends,

The three marks of existence are the three concepts that are true for everything. In many Buddhist lineages, the three marks of existence are Impermanence, Non-self, and Dukkha (suffering). In fact, I used this model when writing about the three marks in my book, Things I did When I Was Hangry: every thing is impermanent, nothing has a separate self, and every thing is marked with suffering. (For the Three Marks/Seals of Existence, scroll to the end of the blog.)

Thich Nhat Hanh (Thay) disagrees. He says that the three marks are impermanence, non-self, and nirvana. In The Heart of the Buddha’s Teaching (p 20), he says:

It is not difficult to see that a table is impermanent and does not have a self separate from all non-table elements, like wood, sun, furniture maker, and so on. But is it suffering? A table will only make us suffer if we attribute permanence or separateness to it. When we are attached to a certain table, it is not the table that causes us to suffer. It is our attachment…:In several sutras the Buddha taught that nirvana, the joy of completely extinguishing our ideas and concepts, rather than suffering, is one of the Three Dharma Seals.

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What are our energy vampires?

Dear friends,

I recently had our solar panels serviced, and Marquis, the man who serviced them, told me to check my house for "energy vampires."

I didn't know exactly what an energy vampire was, so he explained that an energy vampire is a piece of equipment that is secretly draining power, even when it's turned off.

This reminded me of a line from Thich Nhat Hanh’s Fourteen Mindfulness Trainings (the 14th) that says, "we are determined to ... learn ways to preserve and channel our vital energies(sexual, breath, spirit) for the realization of our bodhisattva ideal.

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A Buddhist Practice for Labor Day

Dear friends,

I wrote a short piece on using the buddhist practice to find common ground among divided views. It was written in the spirit of Labor Day in trying to follow the example of the unions who put aside differences to get the best outcome for the whole.

You can read the article on Medium here . Would you help me reach more people by reading and — if you're inspired — liking and sharing?

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Rachel SwitalaComment
Laziness: an insult or a practice?

Dear friends,

Since I'm on vacation this week, I thought we might consider the benefits of being lazy. This is a photo of Lake Michigan where we have are being very lazy.

In my household growing up, being lazy was an insult. If we kids were ever caught playing or reading when there was work to be done, we were called a ""lazy bum" and immediately put to work.

On my first retreat with Thich Nhat Hanh, I learned about the "lazy day". During each week of each retreat I've ever been on, there has been one day set aside as a lazy day. On lazy days we don't have a schedule and we do whatever brings us joy. It sounds good, but it can be challenging for me!

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Annie Mahon Comments
The Introvert’s Guide to resocializing Post-Lockdown.

Dear Friends,

Yesterday, I hosted my first in-person group event in more than 18-months.

It was a lot of fun and, as an introvert, also a bit stressful.

I know that for many people, the return to normalcy may be mentally and economically healing. But for me and other introverts I know, it feels like we are going through the turnstile at Disney World.

I like being alone, and am not sure I want to go back to socializing.

You can get a sense of my introverted tendencies by knowing that one of my intentions for the year 2020 was: “I embrace my introversion and my desire to be at home working alone, and have plenty of unscheduled time.” As a result of COVID-19, I was granted my wish to be working from home alone, only two months after I made it.

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Annie MahonComment
“Build, block, be”: a mindful response to challenging times

Dear friends,

Our friends over at Plum Village interviewed me last week and our talk - where I answer four questions - is published on their site!

In this talk, we cover mindfulness in the face of challenge, my daily rituals, the immense joy I get from community and why, and what mindfulness groups are like on Zoom!

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Annie MahonComment
Buddhist Wisdom on using Anger to Protect Ourselves & Others from Harm

Dear Friends,

If we are enraged by listening to the news during this challenging season, we can use our mindfulness practice to turn toward our rage and make good use of it in order to protect the most vulnerable and oppressed.

In addition to serving the common good, using our anger in this way releases the stuckness that we often feel when anger builds up inside of us.

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Annie MahonComment
5 Wonderful Mindfulness Practices That Carried Me Through Cancer Treatment.

Dear Friends,

This month I wrote about my recent foray into cancer and cancer treatment and how my mindfulness practice supported me.

It’s been published here in Elephant Journal. Would you help me reach more people by reading and — if you're inspired — liking and sharing?

Also, once you're there, please don't forget to follow me on Elephant Journal!

Thank you for supporting me and sharing my story. I'm hoping it will help others who are diagnosed with cancer, or experiencing other forms of suffering.

READ ARTICLE HERE

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Annie MahonComment
Contagious Feelings: How our Trauma & Biases are Passed Down through the Generations

Dear Friends,

This month's blog is up on Elephant Journal... It's about dealing with our internal biases and feelings that we inherit from our families and culture...

Would you help us reach more people by reading and — if you're inspired — liking and sharing? Click below to go to article on Elephant Journal.

Thank you and enjoy!

READ ARTICLE HERE

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Annie MahonComment
The Practice of Never Disparaging

Dear Friends,

While reading about the Lotus Sutra, I came across a figure who I find to be one of the most inspiring in all of Buddhism-- the Bodhisattva Sadaparibhuta, whose name can be translated to “Never Despising” or “Never Disparaging”.

The story of Sadaparibhuta is that he was the one person who could see that each and every one of us has Buddha Nature. And since each of us is really a Buddha, underneath our sometimes shabby exteriors, Sadaparibhuta realized that it wouldn’t make sense to disparage or despise anyone.

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Annie Mahon Comments
We Make the Path By Walking

Traveler, there is no way, the way is made by going.
By walking you make the path, and when you look back,
You see the track where you should never walk again.

-Antonio Machado

Dear Friends,

In September 2001, after seeing the devastation brought on by war and conflict, I decide to take a small compassionate step toward healing. I started a class teaching mediation and mindfulness to the 3rd graders in my kids’ elementary school. Later I added kids yoga classes, and within a year, I found a room to rent at the corner of 39th and Northampton Streets in NW DC. Nearly 20 years on, three important communities have formed from these small seeds: the nationally recognized Peace of Mind school program, Circle Yoga Cooperative, and Opening Heart Mindfulness Community.

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Annie Mahon Comments
We

Dear Friends,

When I first started studying mindfulness with Thich Nhat Hanh, he spoke a lot about the need for a sangha – a community of practice. He said, “You allow the sangha to transport you like a boat so that you can cross the ocean of sorrow.”

There is an often-quoted story about the Buddha. When the Buddha was asked whether spiritual friends were half of the path to awakening, he said no. He went on to say that spiritual friends are actually the whole of the path.

The whole? What about meditation and doing the dishes mindfully?…

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Annie Mahon Comments