The sangha is gathered together at Magnolia Grove Monastery in Batesville, Mississippi during the 2011 US Teaching Tour with the theme Cultivating the Mind of Love. It is the fourth day of the retreat. This 108-minute question and answer session is from October 1, 2011.
A good question can help many people. It can be a question about our suffering and our happiness.
We begin with a few questions from the children.
1. What are some of the traditional foods in a Buddhist monastery? (4:33)
2. What helps to clear your mind? (13:55)
3. Is it true that if you don’t believe in God that you go to the underworld? (17:32)
4. What kind of Buddha’s are there? (21:40)
Followed by questions from teenagers, young adults, and adults.
1. How can I relate to another person, and love another person, but not experience the three complexes - inferiority, superiority, and equality? (27:14)
2. What would you advise someone who has been diagnosed with attention disorder, or any mental illness, that hinders a person from being in the now. And have had to rely on medications for their whole life. How can they live in the now? (32:40)
3. What would you do if you had a friend who isn’t being loving to each other, and you are caught in the middle? (37:28)
4. How can I not suffer when I see my 26-year old son’s life unraveling due to his drug addictions? I am overcome by grief and despair. (56:45)
5. When facing a decision, where your only see two possible answers - the one you think is right and the one you feel is right - how can you know which one? (1:03:45)
6. What does it mean to be free?(1:23:50)
7. How can a Vietnam veteran, who still suffers from PTSD, communicate to the many generations of Vietnamese people at this retreat that he cared for the Vietnamese? (1:34:23)
We have one more talk in this series from Mississippi. Stay tuned.
If you appreciate this teaching, please consider making a donation to support the ongoing efforts of the online monastery. Please make a note with your donation that it was because of this talk.
A good question can help many people. It can be a question about our suffering and our happiness.
We begin with a few questions from the children.
1. What are some of the traditional foods in a Buddhist monastery? (4:33)
2. What helps to clear your mind? (13:55)
3. Is it true that if you don’t believe in God that you go to the underworld? (17:32)
4. What kind of Buddha’s are there? (21:40)
Followed by questions from teenagers, young adults, and adults.
1. How can I relate to another person, and love another person, but not experience the three complexes - inferiority, superiority, and equality? (27:14)
2. What would you advise someone who has been diagnosed with attention disorder, or any mental illness, that hinders a person from being in the now. And have had to rely on medications for their whole life. How can they live in the now? (32:40)
3. What would you do if you had a friend who isn’t being loving to each other, and you are caught in the middle? (37:28)
4. How can I not suffer when I see my 26-year old son’s life unraveling due to his drug addictions? I am overcome by grief and despair. (56:45)
5. When facing a decision, where your only see two possible answers - the one you think is right and the one you feel is right - how can you know which one? (1:03:45)
6. What does it mean to be free?(1:23:50)
7. How can a Vietnam veteran, who still suffers from PTSD, communicate to the many generations of Vietnamese people at this retreat that he cared for the Vietnamese? (1:34:23)
We have one more talk in this series from Mississippi. Stay tuned.
If you appreciate this teaching, please consider making a donation to support the ongoing efforts of the online monastery. Please make a note with your donation that it was because of this talk.