The Heart of the Matter

Thich Nhat Hanh answers three questions about our emotions.

By Thich Nhat Hanh

Michael S. Wertz for TricycleMy desire for achievement has led to much suffering. No matter what I do, it never feels like it's enough. How can I make peace with myself? The quality of your action depends on the quality of your being. Suppose you’re eager to offer happiness, to make someone happy. That’s a good thing to do. But if you’re not happy, then you can’t do that. In order to make another person happy, you have to be happy yourself. So there’s a link between doing and being. If you don’t succeed in being, you can’t succeed in doing. If you don’t feel that you’re on the right path, happiness isn’t possible. This is true for everyone; if you don’t know where you’re going, you suffer. It’s very important to realize your path and see your true way.

Happiness means feeling you are on the right path every moment. You don’t need to arrive at the end of the path in order to be happy. The right path refers to the very concrete ways you live your life in every moment. In Buddhism, we speak of the Noble Eightfold Path: right view, right thought, right speech, right action, right livelihood, right effort, right mindfulness, and right concentration. It’s possible for us to live the Noble Eightfold Path every moment of our daily lives. That not only makes us happy, it makes people around us happy. If you practice the path, you become very pleasant, very fresh, and very compassionate.

Look at the tree in the front yard. The tree doesn’t seem to be doing anything. It stands there, vigorous, fresh, and beautiful, and everyone profits from it. That’s the miracle of being. If a tree were less than a tree, all of us would be in trouble. But if a tree is just a real tree, then there’s hope and joy. That’s why if you can be yourself, that is already action. Action is based on nonaction; action is being.

I am busy from early in the morning until late at night. I am rarely alone. Where can I find a time and place to contemplate in silence? Silence is something that comes from your heart, not from outside. Silence doesn’t mean not talking and not doing things; it means that you are not disturbed inside. If you’re truly silent, then no matter what situation you find yourself in you can enjoy the silence. There are moments when you think you’re silent and all around is silent, but talking is going on all the time inside your head. That’s not silence. The practice is how to find silence in all the activities you do.

Let us change our way of thinking and our way of looking. We have to realize that silence comes from our heart and not from the absence of talk. Sitting down to eat your lunch may be an opportunity for you to enjoy silence; though others may be speaking, it’s possible for you to be very silent inside. The Buddha was surrounded by thousands of monks. Although he walked, sat, and ate among the monks and the nuns, he always dwelled in his silence. The Buddha made it very clear that to be alone, to be quiet, does not mean you have to go into the forest. You can live in the sangha, you can be in the marketplace, yet you still enjoy the silence and the solitude. Being alone does not mean there is no one around you.

Being alone means you are established firmly in the here and the now and you become aware of what is happening in the present moment. You use your mindfulness to become aware of every feeling, every perception you have. You’re aware of what’s happening around you in the sangha, but you’re always with yourself, you don’t lose yourself. That’s the Buddha’s definition of the ideal practice of solitude: not to be caught in the past or carried away by the future, but always to be here, body and mind united, aware of what is happening in the present moment. That is real solitude.

I’m still afraid of losing my mother or another loved one. How can I transform this fear? We can look deeply to see that our mother is not only out there, but in here. Our mothers and fathers are fully present in every cell of our bodies. We carry them into the future. We can learn to talk to the father and the mother inside. I often talk to my mother, my father, and all of the ancestors inside me. I know that I am only a continuation of them. With that kind of insight, you know that even with the disintegration of the body of your mother, your mother still continues inside you, especially in the energies she has created in terms of thought, speech, and action. In Buddhism we call that energy karma. Karma means action, the triple action of thinking, speaking, and doing.

If you look deeply, you’ll see already the continuation of your mother inside you and outside of you. Every thought, every speech, every action of hers now continues with or without the presence of her body. We have to see her more deeply. She’s not confined to her body, and you aren’t confined to your body. It’s very important to see that. This is the wonder of Buddhist meditation—with the practice of looking deeply you can touch your own nature of no birth and no death. You touch the no-birth and no-death nature of your father, your mother, your child, of everything in you and around you. Only that insight can reduce and remove the fear.

From “Answers from the Heart” ©2009 by Thich Nhat Hanh. Reprinted with permission of Parallax Press.
Image: © Michael S. Wertz

Comments

Christains Often Feel This Way Too

Although I am a Christian and not of the same faith, I too often have a difficult time continuing in happiness sometimes. I find that meditation through prayer is the one things that always help me to stay grounded in my faith and brings me true happiness when I remain committed to my own rituals. I enjoy making others happy, but when I find myself being burdened by it, I must rethink my reasons for doing it in the first place. You must truly feel the need to give to others and share yourself with them from your heart and not from a sense of duty. Interesting site and thanks for the opportunity to get an insight into the beliefs of others.

The flip side

As the author in the article, I too have suffered greatly on my spiritual path. (I think it is a given that most do in one form or another)

I like making people happy also. But I have become aware over the years that this is actually a bad thing for me at times. When you become so fixated on the idea that pleasing other people will make you happy, you can very much undermine your entire spiritual being.

I'm not saying that we shouldn't make others happy. I think that we all live a life of service to another, whether we want to admit it or not. But if you don't take care of your own needs and don't care for your true self first, you may not be around for long enough to make other people happy anyway!

Balance, in all things, I guess.

Regards,

Frank
Stop Smoking Weed Blog

 

I totally agree

Even though I am a Christian, I totally agree that bringing happiness to others is a good thing, but you yourself should also gain happiness from it. While it might be good to give happiness to someone else in some way, if you yourself are not happy because of it, it somehow diminishes the act and is only half as good an action as it could and should be. If you have your heart in the right place, happiness will come to you as well just because you shared happiness elsewhere!

Wanting can become a trap

I think the power to bring happiness to others comes from the grace that fills your own being when you are more fully awake to your own essential goodness, one might even say divinity. This comes from "being" totally free of wanting to do anything since the wanting can lead us down a path of attachment. Of course in some way we must have the intention to uncover our own goodness and this is an active process. With time all that convinced us that we were in some way not good enough (illusion) will fall away and reveal our true nature. And this like the tree will be enough to bring happiness and light to all that comes into contact. This grace can be felt when in the presence of beauty in all its forms. Having the intention to discover or uncover that which is true within you (beauty) will bear fruit and radiate outwards into the world.

WS

hawkscry.blogspot.com

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