There is a deep malaise in our
society. Just look at the way young people consume drugs, as a way to forget. These
are the seeds of war, and we have to acknowledge this if we want to transform
them. We have to do it together, looking deeply into the nature of war in our
collective consciousness. The war is in our souls.
Many if us are not healthy within, and yet we continue to look for things that only harm us more. We come home from work exhausted, and we do not know how to relax. We feel a kind of vacuum in ourselves, so we turn on the television. We live in a society where we always feel we are lacking something, and we want to fill it. If we don't turn on
Many if us are not healthy within, and yet we continue to look for things that only harm us more. We come home from work exhausted, and we do not know how to relax. We feel a kind of vacuum in ourselves, so we turn on the television. We live in a society where we always feel we are lacking something, and we want to fill it. If we don't turn on
the
tv, we eat or read or talk on the telephone. We are always trying to fill our
void with something.
Some people even do social or political work
this way. But doing this only makes us less satisfied, hungrier, and we want to
consume more. We feel alienated from ourselves. There is so much anger and fear
in us, and we want to suppress them, so we consume more and more things that
only increase the level of toxicity in us. We watch films that are filled with
screaming and violence. We read magazines and novels filled with hatred and
confusion. We do not even have the courage to turn off our tv, because we are
afraid to go back to ourselves.
The night I heard President Bush give the order to attack Iraq, I could not sleep. I was angry and overwhelmed. The next morning in the middle of my lecture, I suddenly paused and told my friends, "I don’t think I will go to North America this spring". The words just sprang out. Then I continued the lecture. In the afternoon, one American
student
told me, " Thich, I think you have to go to the United States. Many
friends there feel the same way you do, and it would help if you go and support
them." I did not say anything. I practiced breathing, walking, and
sitting, and a few days later I decided to go.
I saw that I was one with the American people,
with George Bush, and with Saddam Hussein. I had been angry with George Bush,
but after breathing consciously and looking deeply, I saw myself as President
Bush. I had not been practicing well enough to change this situation. I saw
that Saddam Hussein was not the only person who lit the oil wells in Kuwait.
All of us reached out our hands and lit them with him.
In our collective consciousness, there are some seeds of nonviolence, and President bush did begin with sanctions. But we did not support and encourage him enough, so he switched to a more violent way. We cannot blame only him. the President acted the way he did because we acted the way we did.
It is because we are not happy enough that we
had a war. If we were happier, we would not take refuge in alcohol, drugs,
violence and war. Young people tell me that the most precious gift their
parents can give is their own happiness. If Father and Mother themselves are
happy, the children will receive seeds of happiness in their own consciousness,
and when they grow up, they will know how to make others happy too. When parents
fight, they sow seeds of suffering in the hearts of their children, and
with that kind of heritage, children grow up unhappy. These are the roots of
war. If children are unhappy, they will look for other things that are exactly
like war- alcohol, drugs, and some tv programs, magazines, films, and other
violent "cultural products".
Our society is sick. When we put a young person in this society without trying to protect him or her, he or she will receive violence, hatred and fear every day and get sick. Our conversations, our tv programs, our advertisements, our newspapers, our magazines all water the seeds of suffering in young people and not so young people.
How can we transform our individual consciousness and the collective consciousness of our society? How can we refrain from consuming more toxic cultural products? We need guidelines- a diet- and we need to practice watering the seeds of peace, joy, and happiness in ourselves. The most important practice for preventing war is to stay in touch with what is refreshing, healing, and joyful inside us and all around us. If we practice walking mindfully, being in touch with the earth, the air, the trees, and ourselves we can heal ourselves, and our entire society will also be healed. If the whole nation would practice watering seeds of joy and peace and not just seeds of anger and violence, the elements of war in all of us will be transformed.
We must prepare ourselves, whether we have one minute, ten years or one thousand years. If we don't have time, there is no use in discussing peace, because you cannot practice peace without time. If you have one minute, please use that minute to breathe in and out calmly and plant the seeds of peace and understanding in yourself. If you have ten years, please use the ten years to prevent the next war. If you have one thousand years, please use the time to prevent the destruction of our planet.
Transformation is possible, but it takes time. There are already seeds of peace in those we call "hawks", but they need us to water their seeds of peace and understanding or else their seeds of anger and aggression will continue to dominate them. Do not feel discouraged. Just by your way of looking at things and doing things, you influence others. Approach everyone with love and patience, and try to water the positive seeds in them. We have to help each other, being skillful, kind and understanding. Blaming and arguing never help. People everywhere saw the policemen beating Rodney King. When I first saw that video on French TV, I felt that I was the one being beaten, and I suffered a lot. I think you must have felt the same. All of us were being beaten at the same time. We were all victims of violence, anger, misunderstanding and the lack of respect for our human dignity.
But as I
looked more deeply, I saw that the policemen that were beating Rodney King were no different from myself. They were doing it because
our society is filled with hatred and violence. Everything is like a bomb ready
to explode, and we are all a part of that bomb; we are all co-responsible. We
are all the policemen and the victim.
In the practice of mindfulness, we nurture the ability to see deeply into the nature of things and people, and the fruit is insight, understanding, and love. Because we have not practiced deeply enough, violence has become the substance of our society. Putting the policemen in jail will not solve this fundamental problem. We accept violence as a
way
of life and as a way to deal with problems. If we are not mindful- if we do not
transform our shared suffering through compassion and deep understanding- then
one day our child will be the one who is beaten, or the one doing the beating.
It is very much our affair. We have to look at
the roots of the problem and not just on the surface.
No comments:
Post a Comment