Ten Percent Happier with Dan Harris - How to Suffer Well | Brother Pháp Dung
Episode Date: March 28, 2022In January 2022, Thich Nhat Hanh, the Vietnamese Zen master, peace activist, poet, and author passed away. He was the founder of the International Plum Village Community of Engaged Buddhism. ...Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. called him “an Apostle of peace and nonviolence” when nominating him for the Nobel Peace Prize. Thousands of people came out for his funeral. Brother Pháp Dung is making his second appearance on the show to talk about Thich Nhat Hanh. If you missed it last time he was on, Brother Pháp Dung has an incredible personal story. He was born in Vietnam in 1969 and came to the US at the age of nine. He worked as an architect/designer for four years before becoming a monk. He was very close personally with Thich Nhat Hanh, who he refers to as “Thây,” or teacher, and is now a Dharma teacher himself in Thich Nhat Hanh’s Plum Village tradition.This episode explores:The life of Thich Nhat Hanh: his path to Buddhism in the 1960’s and his exile from Vietnam for opposing the war.The meaning of “wrong view” or wrong perception. What non-separation and inter-being is. Thich Nhat Hanh’s view that birth and death are only notions.Grief, and why learning how to suffer will help you suffer less.Full Shownotes: https://www.tenpercent.com/podcast-episode/brother-phap-dung-432See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Wondery Plus subscribers can listen to 10% Happier early and ad-free right now.
Join Wondery Plus in the Wondery app or on Apple Podcasts.
This is the 10% Happier podcast. I'm Dan Harris.
Hey gang, I've been thinking a lot about individualism lately and how deeply ingrained,
for me at least, the notion is. There's so much emphasis in our culture on individual achievement,
winning, acquiring, getting known, et cetera, et cetera. It can even extend in a warped way to
meditation, which personally I have often subtly misconstrued as some kind of solo athletic
endeavor. I'm definitely not saying that all individualism is bad. For sure, I am not going to give up trying to publish successful books,
grow this podcast and our app, blah, blah, blah. But all the data show very clearly that this is
not a winning strategy for deep and abiding happiness. Today, we're going to talk about
a towering figure who offered what my guests will call medicine for individualism.
This person who we are going to be discussing was a proponent of a concept called interbeing,
which I can only fleetingly understand on a molecular level. I suspect many of you may
have heard about the death in January of Thich Nhat Hanh, the Vietnamese Zen master peace activist,
poet, and author. He was the founder of the International Plum Village Community of Engaged Buddhism. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. called him
an apostle of peace and nonviolence when nominating him for the Nobel Peace Prize back in the 60s.
Thousands of people came out recently for his funeral. I'll admit with some embarrassment that
I've been kind of sleeping on Thich Nhat Hanh for a long time, meaning I've never really taken the
deep dive,
either in my own personal reading or here on the show,
that the man clearly deserves.
In part, that's because by the time I launched this show,
Thich Nhat Hanh was already in failing health.
But either way, we're going to remedy that today, at least partially.
My guest today is making his second appearance on the show.
He's a Dharma teacher in Thich Nhat Hanh's Plum Village tradition.
If you missed it the last time he was on, Brother Phap Yung has an incredible personal story. He was born in Vietnam
in 1969 and came to the U.S. at the age of nine. He worked as an architect and designer before he
decided to make a pretty radical change and become a monk. And after he became a monk, he got very
close personally with Thich Nhat Hanh. In this conversation, we talk about the life of Thich Nhat Hanh, his path to Buddhism in the 1960s,
and his exile from Vietnam for opposing the war, the meaning of wrong view or wrong perception,
what non-separation or interbeing is, Thich Nhat Hanh's view that birth and death are only ideas or notions,
and, of course, we're going to talk about grief and why learning how to
suffer well will help you suffer less. Okay, we'll get started with Brother Fap Young right after this.
Maybe you've stayed in an Airbnb before and thought to yourself,
this actually seems pretty doable. Maybe my place could be an Airbnb. It could be as simple as
starting with a spare room or your whole place when you're away. You could be sitting on an Airbnb and not even know it.
I personally love Airbnbs. My friend Glenn and I just rented an Airbnb in Fort Lauderdale. We're
going to bring our families down to see Inter-Miami play some soccer. Glenn and I both have boys. Our
boys really want to see Messi play. So anyway, I'm really looking forward to all staying in the same place instead of being in hotels where we, you know, maybe run into each other once in a while.
I love the intimacy of all being in the same house. It's really cool.
Maybe you're planning a ski getaway this winter or you've decided to go someplace warm while you're away.
You could Airbnb your home and make some extra money toward the trip.
It's a smart and simple way to use what you already have.
home and make some extra money toward the trip. It's a smart and simple way to use what you already have. Whether you could use extra money to cover some bills or for something a little more fun,
your home might be worth more than you think. Find out how much at airbnb.ca slash host.
When you visit Audible, there are endless ways to ignite your imagination.
When you visit Audible, there are endless ways to ignite your imagination.
With over 750,000 titles, including bestsellers, there's a listen for every type of listener.
Discover all the best in audiobooks, podcasts, and originals featuring authentic Canadian voices and celebrity talent.
Check out Audible Canadian Originals, including The Downloaded, a sci-fi adventure featuring Brendan Fraser and Luke Kirby. A first listen is waiting for you when you start your free trial at audible.ca.
Hi, I'm Anna. And I'm Emily. We're the hosts of Wanderers podcast, Terribly Famous,
a show where we bring you outrageous true stories about our most famous celebrities.
And our latest season is all about the one and only Katie Price.
You might think you know her, you might have an opinion,
but there is way more to the former glamour model than just her cup size.
Yes, this is a woman who's gone from pin-up to publishing sensation.
We all have teenage dreams, and for Katie it was simple, massive fame and everlasting love.
I just wanted to kiss a boy, just one boy.
Well she does kiss a few boys but there are plenty of bumps along the way and when I say bumps I mean terrible boyfriend choices, secret dates with spiky haired pop stars and a tabloid press that wants to tear her apart at every opportunity. And she surprises even herself when suddenly
she becomes a role model for a whole new generation of young women
who want to be just like her.
Want to hear more?
Follow Terribly Famous wherever you listen to podcasts
or listen early and ad-free on Wondery Plus on Apple Podcasts
or the Wondery app.
Brother Fap Young, welcome back to the show.
Oh, thank you, Dan.
Nice to be with you again.
It's great to be with you.
I wish we were getting together under happier circumstances, but it is what it is, to use a cliche.
So first of all, just to say condolences.
I know that Thich Nhat Hanh was a major figure in
your life, so I'm just sending you my condolences. Yeah, thank you. Yeah, our community, our
monasteries have been very blessed to see all the love that people are pouring in. And we feel
our teacher is not only loved, but he's continuing. They're really convicted to continue the practice
and continue his message and to spread more love and more peace. So this is a continuation.
I think it might make sense to start with a little bit about Thich Nhat Hanh's personal history for people who might not be familiar
with him? I know you interacted with him as a student and friend and then not as a historian
or journalist, but would you be able to just give us a little background so we have it?
Yeah, I've been reflecting a lot last couple of weeks. And yeah, he's a product of history as Martin Luther King, JFK.
They were a product of a certain time in the 50s.
So our teacher is a product of that time.
And so you can imagine this young man in Vietnam, like very chaotic.
War is happening.
This is the 60s. He'd been studying
Buddhism already as a young person from his brother who became a monk. So in his study of
the history of Buddhism, he saw how Buddhism, if it's connected to the country, to the nation,
it can actually be a very good guide for the nation, for politics, for peace. So this is in the midst of like trying to
find a solution to this war, all this bombing, as well as, you know, during that time, Vietnam was
trying to come out of colonial times. After World War II, Vietnam was divided as the Middle East was.
So a lot of foreign countries came and brought their stuff
to our country. So there was also the spirit of also finding independence. So that's very related
to Buddhism. So in the early days, even our teacher shared that he was struggling to find a way where
he saw many monks disrobe and to fight for independence. But he knew that was not the
answer, violence and war. And so this is the inspiration from the beginning to try to find
an answer in the teachings and the practices of Buddhism. So it inspired him to become a monk.
So this is the origin. He's very convicted to find another path rather than to accept a foreign domination, the French, or to go with the insurgents, the rebels.
So he's trying to find a middle way, another way of peace.
And then he moves on to try to renew Buddhism.
Because at that time, there was a lot of Buddhism
that was very devotional and staying in the temple.
And so he gave birth to a way
where you take the practice out and you do service
and to help poor people and the villages
that were being bombed and destroyed.
So that's the beginning of engaged Buddhism.
And Thayda shared many times in his talks that, you know,
when the bombs are dropping outside, you cannot just sit in the temple and chant.
You have to get up and go out and help.
So while helping, he also got burnt out as well.
So he knew that there was an element of contemplation of reviving oneself. So he founded
the first center in the south of Vietnam called Phung Boi, Fragrant Palm Hermitage, where he would
take many of the young youths to revive themselves and then go service again. So it's the beginning
of engaged Buddhism where contemplation, meditation, and action go hand in hand. So there's a kind of
sustainability, a resilience that you need, because when you're out there and going against things,
you get deplenished. So you can see the path of Thay, where he's trying to find a way, another way.
And then the war escalated, and America came the troops came and more bombs and so on. So
he knew that it's not going to stop. He was like so depressed at some point, almost hopeless.
So he decided to go to the U.S. to call for peace and tell them all this bombing doesn't help.
You're turning more Vietnamese people to become more violent.
So Thai went to the U.S.
And he was criticized for that.
He was giving a press conference and someone said,
why are you here in America?
Why don't you go back and help your country, fellow villagers, and so on?
And he said, well, the root of the war is not in Vietnam. It's in the American people,
the government and politics. And that became the peace movement. And it was where he met
Martin Luther King, Thomas Merton, that tour that he went around to try to get all the religious
leaders to come together. So the vision is that the war, the destruction of Vietnam
kicked them out of the country because he had to go and find out where the origin of all this
violence was. And in calling peace, he was criticized both by the North and the Southern
government of Vietnam. So he was exiled. So that's how he ended up being in the West for over 40 and 50 years. And being in the West, he began to see the suffering in the West and why wars happen because of the wrong perception and so on.
And that's the beautiful thing about Buddhism.
It just, it looks at the situation, whatever it is.
whatever it is.
So it's not in a sense it's an Asian Buddhist thing,
but it's more like the Buddhist practice is to look at what is the suffering here and why does it create so much hate, war, and so on.
So Thay began to adapt the engaged Buddhism and develop the new way
and again, continuing to renew Buddhism.
So that is more appropriate for the Western mind, for the more modern mind.
And he started to give retreats.
And he saw that a lot of the suffering, a lot of the hate and wrong perception,
wrong view about what it means to have a meaningful good life,
as well as wrong perception about other people, is the root of war.
Because people have like a war inside.
They're not able to find that true contentment.
So that is the origin.
Why you would actually blame and have a scapegoat and create an enemy.
So anyway, that's my reflection of how our teacher,
Harisal, loved as well as accessible. He was so accessible because he was able to change Buddhism again, to adapt
to the ills of society, which is restlessness, discomfort, whatever, all these mental illness
that we have because the West, the culture is so oriented to succeed, fame, power,
material things. But those things without a spiritual dimension, without a kind of a deeper
calling of why you exist, rather than just satisfying your needs and your senses and your comforts. And he saw the ideas of individualism as well as materialism
with some of the basic sources in the human being.
So the kind of like selfishness, stinginess, and so on.
It just erodes the heart.
So this is where love, meditation, compassion, as well as seeing other
people suffering as our own suffering. Interbeing was born from this. Thay's idea, that word,
brings you the whole concept of Buddhism as that when someone else suffers, it's also us suffering.
And we have to see when they're happy, we're also happy.
So this is kind of like medicine for individualism.
And materialism, he brought a spiritual dimension or a kind of guidance in the non-material aspects of our lives.
And reviving what love means in the West.
Many talks, I would say, well, love is a little, the word is I love you.
I love my car and I love my country and so on.
So I just give you an example.
There was a period of when I was a monk where Thay taught a lot to revive again.
What our views are about what true love is
and loving ourself and how to love relationship.
And he saw the breakdown of family and community.
So again, Buddhism adapting to the ills
of where he was at in Europe, in America.
So he was touring and gave many retreats
and big retreats, huge retreats, 800, 900 people, and sometime over a thousand in Toronto. And what were people looking
for? They were looking for ways to like take care of themselves because nobody was teaching them
that. So meditation is to learn to love ourselves, to care for ourselves.
And then from that, you'll have the space to take care of other people, take care of the planet.
And so this is the root of why a whole nation, a whole group of people would actually condone
bombing other countries. Because it's like if you haven't suffered and healed and empathized
and see your connection and love life and love every human being even those who are we call our
enemies so this goes in circle of how th again, always finding the root
of why there's so much suffering, violence,
the origin of a war.
And so this is from my own reflection.
And for me personally, how wonderful,
not as a monk or anything,
just as a human being to have actually sat in his presence.
It's an energy that I don't feel with many people, other human beings.
It's a kind of concentration, a kind of spiritual power.
And for me, Thay has dedicated his whole entire life since 16
to not only be a human being, but to be of service.
And that's the connection to happiness, or how you say,
a fulfilled life is not one to just satisfy our own wants. Anything living is actually
giving a flower, a tree, shade, fruits. And then there's a cycle to that life process.
And so I've come to see Thai as this tree that's just like, and you serve others,
whether it just may be a little shade,
a coolness is okay.
But for him, he's offered so much energy
to so many people around the world
from all walks of life.
And yeah, of course I'm biased.
I'm his student, so I'm praising him.
But, yeah, it's just in my heart.
That's what the feeling and letting it live through me and getting inspiration to, yeah, make this life worth it.
Because I will have to also return to the earth.
And so I've been really just invoking our teacher's spirit of service and help people suffer less and find a more meaningful life.
I was hoping when I asked you the question to get some background on him and you gave me a better answer than I had even fantasized about.
But you said a bunch of things in there that I really do want to follow up on because it's so interesting. You use this term wrong perception or wrong view, that the root of war is this wrong perception or wrong view that human beings harbor.
What exactly is the wrong perception or wrong view?
Yeah, we have a wrong view of separation, that they are different from us, right? And we have also wrong view that they are hurting us, hating us, and being violent to us because they also have wrong views, you see?
So when someone suffers and they have a wrong perception about us, they will cause us harm.
and they have a wrong perception about us, they will cause us harm.
So we, in turn, also have a wrong view, a wrong perception about them, right?
And so it doesn't mean that in a historical sense,
there are nothing wrong events, right?
But the right view is like, okay, let's listen to them and see how they perceive us.
So it's back and forth.
In a relationship, your husband and wife, partner and partner, it's always happening.
We have an idea that, okay, they are like that.
And the next day we treat them like that.
And we put them in a box, but they're more than that.
And our perception should be alive.
It should be very moment by moment. So why is wrong perception is because we create that in our
head. Okay, my father is like that. But maybe he's like that because of other things. So our views are not complete.
Because your father, he suffered.
And as a child, he was raised a certain way.
And now you understand why he's like that.
Your view is a little bit more correct in the sense it incorporates.
And hopefully, if it's correct view, right view, you'll have more empathy, more compassion, more understanding.
Therefore, the hate, the blame, the discrimination,
the wanting to hurt him, it lessens
and possibly even not be there.
And this has happened to me over and over again.
And individually, as well as a group of people, can have wrong perception with another group of people based on the information they have.
And it's not complete.
And it might even be wrong information.
Or two cultures, two groups of people in different parts of the planet.
We build a perception through the media, through things
about those kinds of people. And we give them names and we kind of reinforce that view and we
get locked by that view. But if you go to the other country and maybe say you look like them
and you disappear into their culture and you live there for a year or two.
You have a different perspective.
And then you come back a year later.
I'm sure you have a different perspective of those people that we would call many names.
In Vietnam War, that's what happened.
They thought we were going to become communists.
And so they were afraid of communism the world pictured after
world war ii that fear affects the view the perception so they gave us many names during
that era which i won't repeat because it's you know based on that fear that is underlying that
view you begin to act and behave very destructively and you start to like blame. And this is nothing
new. I mean, there are many documentaries that show you the historical events and why certain
people in power, statesmen made decisions that is like so inhuman and requiring us to stop and
listen to the other person, even we are fearful of them
or like judge them, requires some courage, requires some compassion. Because we've also
been victims of wrong perception. When someone blames us and they're like, no, but I didn't mean
that. And it's like, yes, you did. No, but I didn't really. Trying to convince them is very hard. So we've also been victims
of wrong perception, wrong views, as we do with other people. We project what we believe in.
And so do you understand? One is like full-on wrong. You have wrong information. The other
is that you don't have complete information. You don't know the history, the conditions of why that happened,
why it made them do what they do.
Because they have wrong perception about us.
So it's that separation again.
But when you begin to, you know,
touch a more deeper sense of like,
yeah, they're suffering and we need to find out, because they are also our brothers, our sisters.
They are also our siblings, part of the human family.
We have wrong perceptions about the planet, the environment, the trees, the water,
that they're for our use.
So we have these ideas that actually is detrimental to our existence as a
species, let alone the planet and other species and so on.
So we have views about what happiness is as well.
And that is not complete.
We think, oh, we're going to get that job.
We're going to get a promotion.
We'll be happy but when you get the promotion you see that actually you have less time you have more money but you
are more pressured so what you thought was happy actually becomes part of you now you're like okay
oh boy now i see you know so these are real stories that I've heard and collected
and I've experienced as well.
So always recheck our perception, our view.
So our teacher has a line, always ask ourselves a mantra.
Are you sure?
Am I sure?
So don't be sure.
Are you sure?
Am I sure?
So don't be sure.
So have a little doubt because it opens up to investigating.
And it's very hard to do, by the way, especially when you know you're right or when a group of people know that they're right.
Yeah, that's where we are at right now.
It's crazy.
You know, it's very scary because people are so easily triggered because they're so convinced that they're right. So that's kind of my experience personally, as well as watching
what happens to groups of people with views. You know, I just want to share, like when you see two
people arguing, like you're friends and they turn to you and like, when you see two people arguing, like, you're friends,
and they turn to you and say, what do you think? You're like, well, I don't know. It's like,
both of you can be right. You know, it's like, no, you cannot say that. One of us is right. And
I was like, no, I don't have a view about it. You see it? Oh, I love that because I've been into that situation. It was like, both of you can be right. Come on.
And it's because you're not so self-interest in that situation. You're the third party
that has no view about it. That is amazing. If it's an accident, it's great. But like when you're
in it and you want to get to that spot is very hard
because we have views about ourself and who we are identity and what our principles are what our
truths are that lock us down they're like a prison because you see they're just your ideas
and that's why we suffer when people disagree or they have a different view. Anyway, that's a good example
that always reminds me when two people are having views and I'm the third person. I'm like,
both of you are right. And that is possible. Coming up, we're going to talk about non-separation
or interbeing and how community is a corrective to a culture seemingly centered around the
self-interested individual. That and more right after this.
I'm Afua Hirsch. I'm Peter Frankopan. And in our podcast, Legacy, we explore the lives of some of
the biggest characters in history. This season, we delve into the life of Mikhail Gorbachev. This season has
everything. It's got political ideology. It's got nuclear Armageddon. It's got a love story.
It's got betrayal. It's got economic collapse. One ingredient that you left out, legacy. Was
he someone who helped make the world a better place, saved us all from all of those terrible
things? Or was he a man who created the problems and the challenges of many parts of the world today those
questions about how to think about Gorbachev you know was he unwitting character in history was he
one who helped forge and frame the world and it's not necessarily just a question of our making there
is a real life binary in how his legacy is perceived. In the West, he's considered
a hero. And in Russia, it's a bit of a different picture. So join us on Legacy for Mikhail Gorbachev.
Hello, I am Alice Levine, and I am one of the hosts of Wondery's podcast, British Scandal.
On our latest series, The Race to Ruin, we tell the story of a British man who took part in the first ever round the world sailing race.
Good on him, I hear you say. But there is a problem, as there always is in this show.
The man in question hadn't actually sailed before. Oh, and his boat wasn't seaworthy.
Oh, and also tiny little detail, almost didn't mention it. He bet his family home on making it to the finish line.
What ensued was one of the most complex cheating plots in British sporting history.
To find out the full story, follow British Scandal wherever you listen to podcasts,
or listen early and ad-free on Wondery Plus on Apple Podcasts or the Wondery app.
In talking about wrong view, early on in your answer, you mentioned the idea of separation.
This has always been a tough nut to crack for me, and I suspect I'm not alone on this.
To understand the opposite of the fallacy of separation, it's sometimes called non-separation or as your teacher called it, interbeing.
And I wonder if you could help us get there
because on some level, like I'm looking at you
on my computer monitor right in front of me,
like you and I are not the same people.
So we are separate on some level, right?
So what's wrong view or wrong perception about that?
In terms of a human relationship, when someone is suffering in their situation, you feel.
So it's a kind of key for us to actually see the human journey.
And when you see someone else happy, right?
And you, there's somehow you just, and it's a practice.
That's when you don't have that separation, you also feel their joy, their happiness.
And you're so happy that they're evolving and they're growing as a human being.
And you feel that's you.
I mean, because you benefit from it.
I mean, people say, oh, you're selfish.
But actually, when you benefit, you're just a nicer person to them.
So it's always this kind of like intermingling
and the thing that I have my experience is like when you are not taking care of yourself you're
not taking care of other people because you hide from people you're not very open to listening to
other people you just want to like take care of your own thing so in a way you don't have enough space
to allow the interconnection to happen and like a mother and a child when the mother is balanced
as if she's truly knows the love is coming from a deeper space she's not overloaded overbearing
the way she treats her child is very different. When she's overwhelmed,
bombarded with things, or when the father is overwhelmed, all of a sudden there's a separation.
You don't care for your child as if she or he was your own. That's because you're overloaded. So
when that love comes, there's no self-interest or other interests.
That concept doesn't come up.
And I experienced that with my mother, my father, and I experienced it with my siblings.
This is when I'm whole, I'm taking care of myself.
I have space within me.
And then you have more space for others.
So in relationship-wise, it's very practical.
It's not a philosophical thing where you say, you are different and I'm different.
It's not different or the same.
And that's the crazy thing about Indian logic.
It doesn't tell you what something equals to.
It just tells you it's not to.
That's what drives me crazy in Buddhism.
They don't tell you what it is. It just tells you it's not two that's that would drive me crazy in buddhism it's like they don't tell you what it is
it just tells you it's not two so you say no tell me what it is it's just not two i don't know if
you looked at the indian logic but that's the non-dualism and there's a whole tradition based
on that teaching not to i mean it's like in the gate.
Of their monastery.
It says not to.
Can you believe that?
The whole lineage based on that teaching.
Which what does that mean?
It means stay open.
What does that teaching mean?
It's just stay open.
Don't make blocks.
And walls.
And separation. The water is blocks and walls and separation.
The water is not me.
Well, actually, if you look more deeply, the water is you.
Every moment you breathe.
So these are these ideas that we have.
She is not me.
Right?
And this is a hard thing on the human realm because we are so biologically trained and we kind of need that to survive as a child development, right?
There's a certain age around two to six where the child is beginning to have a self-awareness.
It's amazing.
I love looking at studies and so on that they experiment on children
and when they start to see that.
And as you mature, you grow on, you create the identity, you see?
So it's biologically in us and it serves a function,
but it also is a limit.
And so the spiritual practice is not easy.
Because sometimes it seems like it conflicts with the biological aspect.
But if you look at some of the people I admire, they have quite more spiritually evolved.
And you talk to them, they don't harbor any hate.
And they're just very open.
And so for me, yeah, it's not everybody.
I mean, you do have to survive in the situation that we're in the world.
So our culture is very based on that.
And that's why it's hard to actually make a living and survive in the world
because you get taken advantage of.
If you're just like, oh, no, I'll help you with your project.
You don't know, take it.
It's yours.
You wouldn't survive because our culture is very based on the individual and the separation
and self-interest and bottom line, my bottom line, my side of the fence.
So I have to also say that it's not very practical.
That's why I became a monk. It's like, I don't need a job. I can't get fired.
So you don't think you can live non-separation or not to, if you're not a monk?
You need a community. You need like-minded people. I mean, you need support. Yeah, because it's hard. You drive on the freeway and it's basically all about that. Get off my lane. Why did you do that? So you have to drive very differently. I'm in LA right now and having to drive and I have to really protect my mind because it's very easy to harbor a wrong thought.
because it's very easy to harbor a wrong thought.
So how do you practice compassion and non-separation while driving?
It's like, oh, okay.
I know you're in a hurry.
Okay, go for it.
Okay.
See, you try not to harbor hate.
Oh, it's amazing practice.
It's like, okay, okay, I see.
All right.
I know you're in a hurry.
Okay, you're probably pretty angry. I can feel that energy with that cut. So, you know, you don't see different, but you understand
that the culture, the environment is so stressful for people when their lives are so distraught.
You feel for them. So I don't have hate. I am totally watchful.
Of course, I don't go slow down, let everybody cut in front of me
because I'll make the guy behind me very upset.
So I have to be skillful.
So yeah, you practice non-separation on the freeway.
It's very real.
And so every day we drive the freeway,
we can possibly reinforce that kind of anger and frustration.
It's like, why did you do that?
Oh, like, you know, no, you're not getting in.
No, I'm not letting you getting in.
So you reinforce it all the time in our culture.
So, sorry, that's kind of a little bit off freeway,
but I've been living with that last couple of days.
It's not off at all.
I think it's actually spot on.
You know, I want to bring it back to your teacher, Thich Nhat Hanh,
on this point of interconnectedness or interbeing,
this tricky notion of, as my friend, the great meditation teacher,
Seben A. Selassie says, we're not separate, but we're not the same. So holding that in your mind,
seeing how we are connected, but we are also on some level individuals too. There is a quote that
I've heard often attributed to your teacher, which is,
if you look at your own mind long enough, you will eventually see Hitler.
In other words, don't get too judgmental about other people's actions,
because it's all right there in you too. Yeah, that's a real tough practice. And that's something I also have to practice with.
And the word into being is beautiful because it allows us to also be a self. In Buddhism,
non-self is so idealized, you know. Oh, non-self, it's like the Holy Grail, right? But it's also a
trap to think of non-self because it's a kind of like a ascetic practice, a fear of becoming a self.
But in a way, our experience of the world is that there is an us, a very individual, unique us.
So into being, there's an interaction with others and their environment from the food we eat,
the water, and so on. But another aspect of it that needs to be dealt with at the same time is continuation.
So into being is also a transference of energy.
So we are a self, but we are our ancestor.
We are our parents.
We are our culture.
So that is the escape from non-self.
No, you can be a self, but just don't get caught in it.
You are your parents.
You are a product of your culture, which is real experience.
You go and I put you in the Middle East.
I put you in India.
You will be very distinct.
And in living there for 10, 20 years, you will evolve.
So you are also your environment. So this is
interbeing dance that we are doing with other people. So always transferring energy through
sharing, through words, through presence, through energy, as well as continuing when that energy
comes into us. So when we've been with our teacher, we know his teaching,
we've heard his words, his dharma, his practice,
and if we can touch, that energy continues in us.
So in a way, there's also the idea of continuation,
like a cloud, right?
A cloud becoming rain, becoming river, and then becoming ocean and becoming cloud again.
Continuation into being.
The cloud goes into the tree, becomes a fruit.
Someone eats the fruit.
Where is the cloud?
So there's into being.
It's a beautiful way to describe the workings of reality, of how things work.
Everything that's alive is because there is also death.
We got to find new words for it because it's so like dark and white.
But like things change, like the fourth season.
So there's this dance of interbeing.
And this is a hard practice.
It's not something we understand it, but to come in touch with it requires training.
Because we, again, we are also not just spiritual, we're also biological.
So there's like, hey, where's my shoes?
No, I need my shoes back.
You know, we got to also live in the historical historical dimension so that's why they're called
concentrations they're not like philosophical concepts in buddhism there's a interbeing
is the concentration that means you hold it you maintain it and you look at it every time you
drink tea every time you turn on the water, you hold that.
And if you're lucky, you begin to see more deeply into things.
And so they're called keys, they're called concentration, they're called mantra sometimes.
So in the Buddhist practice, these concepts are not to describe reality and how it works, but they're for us to hold
and to look into things, to look deeply with. So that's why it's concentration,
mindfulness, concentration, and insight. So those three energies, these concepts,
or else it's Buddhist studies. You can go and write a 100-page academic paper on it, which is fine.
But the Buddhist practice is for us to hold and to look at our world, ourself, and the reality of how things work.
Because we have wrong ideas about it.
And that's our teacher's whole life.
He saw that happening.
That's of all Buddhist there they they begin to see
their perception that's like huge in the buddhist practice the origin of suffering is our wrong
views our wrong perception that's like wow that's the key and that's why we sit and that's why we
breathe and he's been teaching that.
All his retreats, he's helped people to just slow down,
to have some space, and then to look at ourselves.
Why we continue to behave like we do.
And from that insight will come healing, transformation, basic formula.
And Thay and the whole 2,500 years of tradition,
that's all it is to help us have a different view.
You spoke a while ago about continuation. Brings to mind another quote from your teacher.
He wrote a book called No Death, No Fear. And in that book, he wrote,
birth and death are only notions. They are not real. You touched on this a little bit, I think, in your previous
answer. But could you say more about what your teacher was pointing out with that?
Yeah, our teacher teaches us a lot with this about our notions about birth and death as this moment
when we were born in the hospital, and then your parents get a certificate when you
were born the hour exact hour and when you die you get a certificate and it has to say the right
hour it's like but in fact we are living and dying in each moment you know right now you are alive
because there are cells like yielding to new cells liver, every seven years is a new liver.
So our concept of like, okay, this is when we're born and this is when we die.
It's like, we are doing that all the time.
And Thay would humorously share to the audience,
say, you know, if we give a birthday every time
for a new cell that is born in our body,
it would be like running out of time
giving all these birthday parties.
Meaning that each day there's a birthday party for you,
as well as a cremation party, right?
So life and death is an actual cycle.
And this is what, you know,
for us to look at everything in our world that our eyes touches has a cycle you think that
boulder that mountain has always been there and that it will always be there it has a slower cycle
archaeologically and you don't see it so these notions that you know of death is a kind of a human construct. Of course, in our existence for 80, 90 years,
we manifested like this.
So our teacher in one of his new foundings
is to emphasize manifestation.
And this is a very deep Buddhist teaching
that when conditions are favorable,
something will manifest.
There's enough moisture,
enough heat and cold in the air
will manifest. When there's enough condition, certain things will manifest, as well as mental
concepts as well. So manifestation based on the conditions, the favorable condition.
So life and death is a kind of like a manifestation. We manifest for 80, 90 years and we do not die and become nothing.
We continue through our books, our videos, our words, our memories that we leave in others.
So we're a little caught in wanting to be in this form.
I want to come back as Dan, as Brother Phob Yung.
I don't want to come back as anybody else.
I like myself.
You see the suffering?
That's why the Buddha emphasized so much like the root of our suffering is self.
Our wanting to just be self.
Because our human culture,
we had to do that to survive,
but we're so caught in it.
I know I don't want to continue as somebody else.
And there's some aspects of us will continue more strongly than others.
And we might see our teacher
strongly in other people than others.
And you go, oh, Thay is reincarnated.
There he is. But again again it's that attachment to want to find our teacher in that uniqueness
that's the suffering and we can't see our teacher in different form so that's why our teacher always teaches like the cloud doesn't die.
It becomes other things.
If you look deeply, you will see the cloud
and you will not mourn
because you will see, ah, okay.
Because you're not caught in one form only.
So for me, it is a practice.
It's not easy.
Because again, you mourn and you are sad
and you have to deal with that.
Because that's also beautiful about being human.
And that's what actually brings meaning and things.
So suffering and happiness is not separate.
It's not like the practice is not to suffer when we lose something.
It's how you suffer when something dies.
It's how to come and reconcile and let that life force revive in you
and in other people, in the community, in other people all around the world.
So there's a way to be sad, the way to suffer,
and not to be attached and grabbing and trying to look for Thai
and trying to go to Vietnam and be near him and be next to the coffin.
We fear death very much because we fear becoming nothing or becoming not us
because we're so attached to ourselves.
And we are reinforced every day by our culture and the people around us.
You're so unique.
You're so special.
You deserve a birthday today.
And when they don't remember your birthday, you become very sad.
It's like, how come they didn't remember my birthday?
So we have to look again and see how our culture creates that.
And we think we're happy because of that.
They recognize us.
They know who I am.
But you're changing every day.
If they know who you are and they stick with that, in 10 years, you will suffer because they think they know you.
That's what happens to couples
to a relationship how come you're not like the person i married honey
you're so different how come you're not what's wrong with you you don't seem like yourself
you see that all these phrases okay i need to be myself. Okay, I need to put up
that front, who they think that I am. I have to be like that to them. It's a kind of suffering.
If you become famous, you got to hold this identity forever. That is suffering. You become
known by other people, then you got to put up that image so how
come dan is not like himself lately wow he's so different this year and all of a sudden you're
like okay all right i gotta like get my act together and then you have to be that dan for
them i i'm sorry i don't mean it personally, but it relates to, yeah, our culture is very interesting.
Like I'm a monk and all that goes with it.
And I have to go perform and be a monk is a suffering.
Oh boy.
Yeah.
So you have to be very careful.
So actually, I wanted to share that our teacher humanized Buddhism.
We idolize it.
So this is very scary.
Made it into a thing, a Santa Claus.
And I think Thay really humanized it, allowed us to suffer, but to practice with it.
And then when we know how to suffer, we will create less suffering.
So death, sorry to mention that, because it's involved with that.
A lot of people suffer. My father just recently passed away, just two months before our teacher.
So this is something our family had to deal with. And we had a ceremony and, you know,
it's the same thing with our teacher, continuing my dad, my father. So this is to reconcile and get to see that cycle.
So I've been going around looking and seeing cycles in things.
And it's very healing.
I look at a tree and I see a cycle.
I see a season.
I look at the mountain.
I see a longer cycle.
I see my brother.
I see a cycle. I see a cycle.
I see his ancestor, continuation.
So interbeing, continuation, cycles, rhythms.
And I think that's helped me heal and to be aware of a bigger picture.
Coming up next, we're going to talk about the grieving process,
continuing Thich Nhat Hanh's work, and how learning to suffer well will help you suffer less.
Car accidents are dramatic enough, so the claims process shouldn't be.
Thankfully, TD Insurance Auto Centers are a one-stop auto claim shop for all your car
insurance needs.
There, you'll find everything under one roof, including a helpful on-site claims advisor to walk you through the process.
Hello.
A certified mechanic to give your vehicle the attention it needs.
And even a rental car to help you get back on the road quickly and confidently.
Avoid the drama. Learn more about TD Insurance Auto Centers Online. TD, ready for you.
This podcast is brought to you in part by Audible.
Every year offers us the opportunity to get closer to the best versions of ourselves.
No matter where you are on your well-being journey, Audible is there for you.
They have an ever-growing selection of stories to inspire, sounds to soothe, and voices that have the potential to
change your life. Sometimes we need a little encouragement to truly spark change in our life.
If you need something a little more than someone simply telling you to
be more positive, check out Don Miguel Ruiz's The Four Agreements. He dissects how people
impose limitations on themselves that rob them of true
joy and provides a simple-to-follow code of personal conduct to start living life more freely.
Get closer to the best you with Audible. Explore a wealth of well-being titles like bestsellers,
new releases, and exclusive originals. Listen now on Audible.
releases and exclusive originals. Listen now on Audible.
You've done all of this training, taking care of your own mind, in many ways,
preparing for moments where impermanence becomes very much not theoretical. The last time you were on this podcast, you talked about this really complex relationship you had with
your dad. And then another person, your teacher, who was a father figure to you, to lose both of
them in two months, notwithstanding the amount of training you've done to be able to surf the waves
of life. Has it been difficult for you? What has it been like for you one thing that is occurring to is finding ways for me to care
to continue to care because a kind of loneliness a kind of retreat a kind of like
yeah the culture wants us to be sad only and i know my practice recently is to counterbalance
it with caring.
So like, for instance, my father, we took his ashes and we planted a cedar tree down in the monastery.
In the place where he actually had a hammock one time when he came up here.
And he was laying in the hammock escaping.
And he didn't go to the Dharma Talk activity.
So I knew he was down there.
I came down.
And it's the only time he's laying there in that hammock swinging. He said, this is a very peaceful place. I like it. And that's the only time he's
ever condoned my becoming a monk. So we planted it down there in the campground and all my families
came and my niece and nephew and we mixed the ashes and we planted the tree. And yeah, it's just a beautiful
way to not only commemorate our father, but also to continue to care for others and the tree.
So now my niece and nephew, they can come up and take care of the tree and add something into it.
They can come up and take care of the tree and add something into it.
It's fine.
For me, that's been very helpful to go down to take care, water the tree,
and then take care of my brothers, my other younger monastics,
to take care of lay friends.
So in a way, continuing what our teacher would want us to do.
So you also need a way out because there's a tendency to actually be what they call a grieving process, which happens. You feel sad, I take a walk. The other day we did
a moonwalk in California. I don't know where you're at, but on this side of the planet, the moon
is full. The other night we did a moonwalk with all these young men who are here at the planet. The moon is full. The other night, we did a moonwalk with all these young men
who are here at the monastery. And I was walking for my teacher with him and along with other
young men who are walking with me in the moonlight under these oak trees. No flashlight. He was like,
I felt my teacher really alive in me and in all of us.
This is what he would do.
Oh, well, I mean, translating.
He loves walking meditation.
But in a way, there's a kind of sadness.
And then there's also a kind of a care and having other activities that allow the energy to flow forward.
I don't know.
That's my own personal practice in having dealt with this and reflecting on it.
And there's a lamp in my room that I light.
And I bring remembering.
So mindfulness is another word.
It's smriti in Sanskrit.
It also means remembering.
in Sanskrit.
It also means remembering.
That's what's wonderful that we miss in the translation of the Buddhist practice in the West.
When you're mindful, that means you remember.
Isn't that amazing?
Most times we're forgetful is we're somewhere else.
We're not present.
So remembering,
and this includes remembering who we are,
our continuation,
remembering that it's grateful
that I'm alive right now.
When we're forgetful,
we get caught in our thinking
and our concept,
our sadness,
our hate, anger.
So we forget
that there are other things happening as well.
So remembering that there's these insights that,
okay, let's continue Tai's work, continue our teacher's aspiration,
his dedication to serve and to help better the world, better the planet.
So for me, there's also that kind of like,
this is what I've been practicing with.
Of course, we need time to be in solitude,
to be alone and to allow that.
So I've taken time to do that.
I've hiked, sat alone,
and the practice is to help us also not enjoy,
but to allow that, to honor that.
Because, you know, winter is not summer.
So don't ask for summer in the winter.
For me, it's acknowledging all the seasons within us.
And that's the practice.
So it's not like to always everything is spring,
flowering, fruitful and harvesting.
Sometimes it is winter.
And you just need to put on a little extra layer and be okay with it.
So that's the humanistic side of Buddhism.
There's nothing wrong with being with that.
So I've had to deal with that as well.
And I'm so happy that our teacher has taught me, taught us to be okay with that.
Don't try to be happy and joyful and there for everybody all the time.
That's not how nature works with our emotions.
It's also a cycle.
So, yeah, and honoring that.
And not hiding, not running, but, yeah, knowing what is appropriate for the moment.
That's been my practice, yeah.
I'm very lucky because I'm in a community and I'm in a situation where I can make that choice.
Of course, it's not the reality for everyone.
People have real practical survival kind of situation.
And when we do this, we are doing it for them
because everyone's condition is different.
So we try to make it more accessible to many people as possible
so we're not just protecting our own privileged lifestyle.
So we've been opening our monastery so people can come up
and find what they need and find the space that they need. And that's what our teacher would want,
to continue our life and to just continue to serve.
Before you and I got together to chat, you had a conversation with my colleague DJ,
one of the producers on this show, and there was something you said that he passed along to me that really stuck out to me.
And it picks up on everything you've just been discussing. You were talking about how you've
been dealing with the death of your dad and also of your teacher. And you said,
it's good to suffer. We should suffer well. Yeah. I kind of paraphrased a teacher. He said it more eloquently.
If we learn how to suffer, we will suffer less.
And so it's just my way of translating where I'm at.
And like, well, I'm feeling some kind of like wanting to retreat a little bit and learning how to do that well, do the best that I can.
And yeah, I think that's understandable. But again, recently, I just realized, man, I live a very, yeah, I'm just so grateful.
Because not everyone has that opportunity.
We're so busy, we're so entrenched that they don't have that opportunity to do their best.
Because they're bombarded one after the other.
And that's why I'm so more convicted to, yeah, to provide refuge, to make our community strong
and more people take on the path because people just don't know how to suffer.
Actually, I recently gave a Dharma talk and unfortunately I had my moment and I burst
out crying.
I was like, well unfortunately I had my moment and I burst out crying I was like well I did my best I didn't know I was gonna break down like in a drama talk but I did because it's like
I was just sharing about my teacher and how someone loved him so much and all of a sudden I
just felt his love for our teacher and Tai's love for everyone else. So the tears wasn't like about sadness.
It was just like, how wonderful.
It's like, God, the love, you can feel it.
And the tears sometimes look like you're sad, but actually it's love.
So that is for me when I say to do it well means to,
if you're going to cry, just cry.
Do a good job of crying, you know. I did my best,
right? I wasn't the solid, hold it together and like, you know, our teacher just passed and look
at him. He's so amazing, you know. No, I broke down. I was like crying and I didn't feel ashamed
about it actually. That was liberating. So this is just another way of trying to be authentic to myself.
And I think that's very connected to being happy,
not to try to be somebody, some monk for other people.
But yeah, it's kind of a little raw, a little bit raw.
And fortunately, my personality is kind of like that.
I don't mind that as long as it's not too way off.
is kind of like that. I don't mind that, as long as it's not too way off.
You've talked about how you feel privileged to be in a monastery. You have the space to suffer well,
but what can the rest of us who are in the hurly-burly of quote-unquote normal life,
what can we learn from you and your teacher about how to suffer better at the very least?
Yeah, I think one is community, right?
Finding community, finding friends.
And the other is simplifying our lives,
reorienting on what really matters for us.
Sometimes we're so busy and so filled up, even on the weekend, because underneath it, we are dissatisfied with something.
So to revisit that, to make space in your life, in your day, in your moment, whatever that is.
And I don't think we're meant to be just working.
I think there's a little bit more than that. To enjoy your life before you're laying on the hospital bed and it's like, well, no one told me, you know, and it's too late.
So for me, I think each one of us to really make space and do things that nourish our human aspect, our spiritual aspect. And that's all what people lack and want is to feel that they're
like okay that they are enough and meditation mindfulness all that is to help us slow down
and to really be that person where we're at and not to run not only after material things but run after a view
about ourself and having community helps having communities and having meetings together
gatherings so there's some accountability the interbeing so you're not feeling well but you
show up and then all of a sudden you see that your mental state is momentarily
and it changes because you're interacting.
So the way we structure society, very individualistic,
own apartment, own box, and so on.
Separation that somehow it's not sustainable.
And that's what our teacher is for a lot of his life.
He encourages us to build community, to build a sangha when you return.
That's because it's not sustainable to live 24 hours with the same person.
It's just not sustainable.
We need more of a kind of village-like interaction. I think I'm inspired by that because, you know,
I was trained as an architect and I love building spaces
for people to feel that, to connect, to feel spacious,
to touch silence, to touch nature.
So community, environment, and to have that kind of space.
Simplify. Simplify simplify your life how much more do you
want then that's so in against our culture though to have less wow and you see that everywhere from
the fast food from the market to these super mega markets now and then now with online, it's like Amazon and so on.
These things, the more we accumulate these things, there's a cost to that.
And we need to look, what is the cost?
Look at our relationship.
Look at who we are.
Are we any happier because of this promotion
or having all these things?
Anyway, that's the thing that I kind of broke out of,
so it's very personal.
And it's doable.
It's just having enough rather than always looking for more.
It's like, okay, and then you have more time.
And then all of a sudden you have more space in your mind and then you start to see what real happiness is and that will help kind of
counterbalance when you suffer when winter comes you have enough wood so you don't feel the harshness of winter because you've been gathering wood.
So for me, that's an urban life reality.
We need time to actually prepare wood
because we're not always going to be yippity-yippy.
So that's what we do here in the monastery.
We provide refuge.
It's open every Sunday for people to come, find what they need. They can have consultation with us, and we teach them the monastery. We provide refuge. It's open every Sunday for people to come find what they
need. They can have consultation with us and we teach them the practice and they go back and do
what they need to do and they get better and better. And this is something possible. So you
don't have to become a monastic, just a little bias about it. But no, our vision is for people
to have communities communities have community centers
in the urban environment where they're at so sanghas they're meeting in homes but it would
be amazing to have like centers that are like like it used to be church churches and temples
but now we have to envision like community centers
where it's like the exercise gym or like the yoga gyms.
You go there and actually you connect with yourself
and you connect with other people.
Can you imagine every major metropolitan having not just one but many?
That is the vision.
To balance again the individualism and the materialism
with the medicine of spiritual,
not in some mystical sense,
but very practical human spirituality.
So it's not like fluffy.
And again, having less.
So materialism.
So dana base, offering, service, doing things for others, community service, helping the less fortunate.
So for me, the answer for materialism, individualism, which is the root of militarization.
Why we have become more police, more guards, more guns.
If you look at the history of civilization and its evolution,
it's very linked to when it breaks down
and we become very war-oriented.
And this is what's happening,
not just in this country, but throughout the world.
But on an individual, back to why our teachers come to the West to help each person find community, find ways to live more sane, more healthy, more compassionate.
I just want to say it's been incredible talking to you, and I really appreciate you doing it at a difficult time for you and for your whole community.
So thank you.
Thank you, Dan, for continuing your path and growth.
And yeah, I'm just so happy to hear about you and what you're doing.
And yeah, always it's a privilege and honor to support that coming together with you.
And thank you for reaching out. My pleasure. And let's do it again. Let's a privilege and honor to support that coming together with you. Thank you for reaching out.
My pleasure. And let's do it again. Let's keep doing it. I love talking to you.
Okay. Well, you take care.
Thanks again to Brother Fab Young. Always great to have him on the show.
Thanks as well to everybody who works so hard to make the show a reality.
Samuel Johns, Gabrielle Zuckerman, DJ Kashmir, Justine Davey, Kim Baikama, Maria Wartell, and Jen Poyant. Also our friends over at Ultraviolet Audio who do our audio engineering.
We'll see you right back here on Wednesday.
If you like 10% Happier, and I hope you do, you can listen early and ad-free right now by joining
Wondery Plus in the Wondery app or on Apple Podcasts. Prime members can listen ad-free right now by joining Wondery Plus in the Wondery app or on Apple Podcasts. Prime members
can listen ad-free on Amazon Music. Before you go, tell us about yourself by filling out a short
survey at wondery.com slash survey. I'm hiring, but where can I find potential candidates?
Hundreds of thousands of Canadians with disabilities are ready and eager to work.
Help create an inclusive workplace that benefits everyone.
Find the tools and resources to help you hire persons with disabilities at Canada.ca slash right here.
A message from the Government of Canada.
Today, hip-hop dominates pop culture, but it wasn't always like that.
And to tell the story of how that changed,
I want to take you back to a very special year in rap.
88, it was too much good music.
The world was on fire.
I'm Will Smith.
This is Class of 88,
my new podcast about the moments, albums, and artists
that inspired a sonic revolution
and secured 1988 as one of hip-hop's most important years.
We'll talk to the people who were there.
And most of all, we'll bring you some amazing stories.
You know what my biggest memory from that tour is?
It was your birthday.
Yes, and you brought me to Shoday.
Life-size cardboard cutout.
This is Class of 88,
the story of a year that changed
hip-hop. Follow Class
of 88 on the Wondery app or
wherever you get your podcasts.