Category Archives: Uncategorized

Waves and Water Sangha – Joyfully Together

Good afternoon dear friends –

Waves and Water Sangha has been exploring a practice of being “Joyfully Together” over the last weeks. As fall transitions to winter – and this year to the next – we have opportunities to gather for practice in its many different forms. Sometimes two or three of us meet to sit and chant together. Sometimes five or six of us join with family and friends for a Ceremony for the Deceased or a Blessing Ceremony for a child. We travel together to retreats and we offer soup and rides and housekeeping services to each other when we are ill or hurt.

Over the next six weeks we have several opportunities for practice together.

Saturday, November 21: Waves and Water Caretaking Council

The Waves and Water Caretaking Council meets to share our experiences of practice in the Sangha and to discuss matters related to programming, finances, regular caretaking responsibilities on Thursday evenings and training opportunities. We encourage you to let the Council members know if you have any contributions, ideas or concerns you would like to share.

http://wavesandwater.org/site/about/

Sunday, November 29: Global Climate March

The Plum Village Sangha is encouraging us all to participate in Global Climate March on November 29, one day before the United Nations Climate Change Conference in Paris.

In Vancouver, many people will be gathering at 1:00 at the Vancouver Art Gallery. We will post more information on exactly where Sangha members may travel or meet together to participate.

http://plumvillage.org/news/call-to-action-peoples-climate-prayer/

Saturday, December 12: Day of Mindfulness

We will practice together from 9:45 to 3:15 – Exploring the gift of giving and the gift of receiving. Please bring a bag lunch and join us for this celebration of the season.

Thursday, December 24: There will be no regular Sangha gathering.

Thursday, December 31: Sitting and Chanting for Peace

For the last three years, on New Year’s Eve, members of Waves and Water Sangha have joined Mountain Rain Community and other Sanghas that practice in the Wall Street Zendo to chant and sit. We begin sitting at 7:00 and end with 108 bells that finish at midnight. Sitting periods of 40 minutes are followed by walking meditation and chanting. Everyone is welcome to join at any point and leave at any point in the evening.

http://www.mountainrainzen.org/events/2015/12/31/new-years-eve-sitting-and-chanting-for-peace-on-earth

 

 

October 10 Day of Mindfulness (Vancouver) and People of Colour Retreat (Seattle)

Good morning dear friends –

Trees are changing colour, impermanently we experience times of earlier darkness and beautiful big morning moons…. Our practice has so many Dharma doors….

DAY OF MINDFULNESS: On Saturday, October 10, we have the opportunity to gather for a Day of Mindfulness. During difficult times, we can forget to offer thanks for all the fruits of our practice. To live in the world, with our hearts undisturbed by the world, is a great happiness and we will nourish our connection with all beings during the day. Please arrive by 9:45 and remember to bring a bag lunch! We will complete this day at 3:00

PEOPLE OF COLOUR RETREAT, SEATTLE On Friday, Saturday, Sunday October 23, 24, 25th the Mindfulness Community of Puget Sound will host a non-residential retreat with Dr. Larry Ward, a Dharma Teacher ordained by Thich Nhat Hanh and an ordained Christian Minister. The theme of this retreat is “The Alchemy of Grief: Turning Suffering into Light”. The recent and continuing events in the news may have inflamed the generational suffering in our bones. This retreat will explore how Buddhist Psychology and its practices can aid in the process of healing and transforming both our individual and collective suffering into insight and compassion. Participants will experience meditations, Dharma talks and individual/group reflections. For more information: https://dharmagate.wufoo.com/forms/m1ap2lb319l6bvi/

A message from Plum Village concerning Thich Nhat Hanh and our practice

Good evening dear friends –

This message was sent out from Plum Village yesterday:

Plum Village, France
September 8, 2015

To all Plum Village Practice Centers,
To all Practice Centers and Sanghas worldwide,
To our Dear Beloved Friends,

It has been two months now since Thay arrived in America, with the hope of getting more intensive treatment to recover from his stroke. Thanks to the incredible support of our Beloved Community we have been able to obtain the very best doctors and therapists for Thay, across all treatment modalities. We are happy to be able to share that Thay is benefitting from the best of Western, Eastern, conventional, and alternative medical approaches. Thay is receiving acupuncture every day, as well as physical therapy, speech therapy, osteopathy, and neurofeedback, with the support and oversight of a phenomenal team of doctors at UCSF.

With Thay’s advanced age, the severity of the hemorrhage, as well as various complex health issues, recovery is extremely challenging. When Thay first started physical therapy, Thay was very engaged and enthusiastic with his therapists and the program that they had created for him. Preparing for Thay’s sessions of physical therapy, we could all feel the joyful determination in his body language. We would tell him, “Thay, let’s get ready for physical therapy” and Thay would raise his fist in the air and smile, as if to say “Let’s go!”

However, the level of fatigue and physical discomfort that Thay was experiencing when we first arrived in the US limited his ability to participate in the sessions. With the help of the whole team of doctors and therapists we have been able create an integrated program of treatment which allows Thay to have restful sleep, and more alertness, ease and peace in his body, enabling him to more fully participate in the sessions of therapy.

A recent breakthrough has been that whilst using a partial weight support walking frame, Thay’s right leg has started to make small movements, initiating the stepping motion.

Thay has received training from three different speech therapists over the last two months, one of whom was able to help Thay speak his first words since the stroke. It was a legendary day. We are happy to be able to share his very first words:

In, out (several times)
Happy (several times)
Thank you (several times)

and “Vui quá” (meaning, “So happy,” in Vietnamese)

It was like a guided meditation. Everyone was crying and laughing at the same time, including Thay.

Unfortunately, as the speech therapist who helped him to achieve this breakthrough lives far from San Francisco, she had to go back home after three days and Thay lost some momentum. We have tried a number of other speech therapists but have not been able to maintain Thay’s initial rapid progress. We are still looking for a local speech therapist, ideally fluent in Vietnamese, who would be able to work with Thay several times per week.

Besides all the medical treatments and therapy, Thay has been able to enjoy the Bay Area, going to visit the beach at least twice a week, enjoying beautiful views of the city and the Golden Gate Bridge, being in touch with nature and the wonderful fresh Pacific air. Every day Thay continues to remind us to enjoy the wonders of life, often pointing at the blue sky and helping us come back to the present moment. Sometimes Thay playfully switches roles with the doctors and therapists, putting a finger on his lips and inviting them to stop. In these moments he often indicates for us to prepare tea so his doctors can have a chance to enjoy a cup of tea in mindfulness. One therapist knelt down by his side, looking out of the window and began to cry silently. She later shared with us that it was perhaps the first time in her life that she had really stopped and appreciated the blue of the sky.

A very good friend of Thay’s came to visit and shared his own experience of balancing his intention to live in the present moment with the natural wish for a loved one to recover as much as they can. He said that every moment with Thay is a “bonus moment,” and that all we have to do is cherish these bonus moments. Every moment that Thay has to breathe, to smile, and to enjoy the blue sky is indeed a bonus moment, reminding us all to appreciate life fully, without expectation, peacefully accepting things as they manifest.

This is the spirit in which we have been continuing our large mindfulness retreats, both in Europe and now in the United States. We know that it has long been Thay’s deepest wish to build a Beloved Community of practitioners, and it has been powerful and joyful for thousands of us to come together and realise that dream in France, Germany and now here at Blue Cliff Monastery in New York, where we have just finished a 5-day retreat. We have generated a strong collective energy in our silent sitting meditations under starlit skies, and in our walking meditations along streams and forest paths. We have sung together, laughed together, cried together, and celebrated the miracle of community. We see so clearly our Teacher’s presence here with us at this retreat; he is not only in San Francisco. As Thay said in 2009 when for health reasons he could not be at the retreat in Colorado:

The presence of the Sangha carries Thay’s presence. Please let me walk with your strong feet, breathe with your healthy lungs and smile with your beautiful smiles.

With great gratitude we thank you for keeping your practice alive, with your mindful breathing, your mindful steps, and your gentle smiles. When we come together to generate a strong collective energy of mindfulness, compassion and insight, we are manifesting Thay’s vision for our collective future. Together we are discovering ways to continue Thay’s legacy of bringing peace, happiness and healing to ourselves and the world.

Please join us at our retreats and events in the US this fall: tnhtour.org

With love and trust,

The Plum Village Monks and Nuns

Future official reports on Thay’s recovery will be posted from time to time at plumvillage.org, langmai.org, villagedespruniers.org, and www.facebook.com/thichnhathanh.

Non-residential retreat with Waves and Water Sangha

Dear Friends

Our third non-residential retreat – Silence, Stillness, Sangha – is only one weekend away. Please let us know if you are planning to attend – this will support our planning process. You will find more information concerning the retreat as well as the registration form at : http://wavesandwater.org/site/retreats-2

On Saturday evening, there will be an opportunity for participants to receive or renew the Three Refuges and Five Mindfulness Trainings. You may also receive a Dharma name at that time. If you are interested, please contact us at wwsangha@gmail.com as soon as possible.

Tomorrow evening, Thursday, we will be reciting the Trainings and Sangha members who have participated in the Ceremony will be sharing their experiences – including their decision to receive the Training and the consequences of this on their lives and practice. You are warmly invited to attend, especially if you are curious about formally receiving the Mindfulness Trainings. We will discuss what it means to “study, practice, and observe” them. We will especially discuss how they are aspirational in the context of our lives and how it is possible to receive one or two or three or four or five Trainings.

Waves and Water non-residential retreat….

Stillness – Silence – Sangha

Waves and Water Sangha reminds you of our third non-residential retreat from Friday night, September 11 through Sunday morning, September 13.

We invite you to register as soon as possible, especially if you would like to receive or renew the Three Refuges and Five Mindfulness Trainings on Saturday.  Please contact wwsangha@gmail.com as soon as possible.

Friday evening will include an introduction to Buddhist practice in the Plum Village tradition with sitting, walking and tea meditation.

Saturday will be a full day and evening of practice to allow us to experience an extended period of mindfulness and meditation. In the morning we will have sitting, walking and Sutra Service with tea meditation and a videotaped Dharma talk by Thich Nhat Hanh. In the afternoon, we will practice Deep Relaxation as well as walking, sitting and tea meditation, Dharma Discussion. Saturday evening there will be sitting and walking meditation and participants will have the opportunity to receive or renew the Three Refuges and Five Mindfulness Trainings.

Sunday will continue with silence, sitting, walking, and Touching the Earth practice outdoors around the fountain and still pool in Mountain View Cemetery (Fraser and 41st Avenue).

Everyone is welcome for full-time or part-time participation in the retreat – whether an experienced practitioner in this or another spiritual tradition or someone who is simply interested in exploring the experience of mindfulness, meditation and community practice.

More information and the registration form are available on the Waves and Water website : www.wavesandwater.org. If you require further information, please contact: wwsangha@gmail.com.

Day of Mindfulness Saturday August 8

Dear Friends,

Waves and Water Sangha will be holding a Day of Mindfulness on Saturday, August 8 from 9:45 am- 3:15 pm at Mountain Rain Zen Centre (2016 Wall Street, Vancouver). We will be practicing with our current focus: Finding Our True Home: Living in the Pure Land Here and Now. Finding our true home in this present moment allows us to recognize the true wonders within and around us. When we get lost in forgetfulness, how do we recollect the deepest aspirations of our heart?

The day will consist of sitting and walking meditation, sutra service, mindful eating, deep relaxation after lunch, and practicing with the chants, songs and gathas that support us. All are welcome. Please bring a bag lunch. Tea will be provided.

Suggested donation is $10-$25 and everyone is welcome – your presence is a gift. Please do not let financial issues determine your decision to attend!

For more information, please email us at wwsangha@gmail.com

Vancouver Non-Residential Retreat in September

Stillness – Silence – Sangha

Waves and Water Sangha in Vancouver invites you to attend their third non-residential retreat from Friday night, September 11 through Sunday morning, September 13. Practicing in the tradition of Zen Master Thich Nhat Hanh, we will engage in sitting, walking and tea meditation, mindful meals, a videotape Dharma Talk by Thich Nhat Hanh, Dharma sharing, Sutra Services and other Plum Village practices. There will be a Ceremony for the Transmission of the Five Mindfulness Trainings on Saturday evening. Anyone interested in receiving or renewing the Five Mindfulness Trainings is asked to contact wwsangha@gmail.com as soon as possible.

Friday evening will include an introduction to Buddhist practice in the Plum Village tradition with sitting, walking and tea meditation.

Saturday will be a full day and evening of practice to allow us to experience an extended period of mindfulness and meditation. In the morning we will have sitting, walking and Sutra Service with tea meditation and a videotaped Dharma talk by Thich Nhat Hanh. In the afternoon, we will practice Deep Relaxation as well as walking, sitting and tea meditation, Dharma Discussion. Saturday evening there will be sitting and walking meditation and participants will have the opportunity to receive or renew the Five Mindfulness Trainings.

Sunday will continue with silence, sitting, walking, and Touching the Earth practice outdoors around the fountain and still pool in Mountain View Cemetery (Fraser and 41st Avenue).

Everyone is welcome for full-time or part-time participation in the retreat – whether an experienced practitioner in this or another spiritual tradition or someone who is simply interested in exploring the experience of mindfulness, meditation and community practice.

More information and the registration form are available on the Waves and Water website : www.wavesandwater.org. If you require further information, please contact: wwsangha@gmail.com.

Please register as soon as possible to help us plan the retreat.

Please pass this information to others who may be interested.

An update on Thay’s health and his move to USA

Official Announcement

Plum Village, France
July 14, 2015

To all Plum Village Practice Centers,
To all Practice Centers and Sanghas worldwide,
To our Dear Beloved Friends,

Since our last update, Thay has been able to communicate more clearly a very strong wish to intensify his recovery program. Thay is very determined to do everything possible to recover both his physical movement and speech. After many options were presented to Thay, he made a clear decision to travel to the United States to receive a more intensive rehabilitation program that could be specifically adapted to his needs.

We are happy to report that Thay arrived safely on the West Coast of the United States on the afternoon of July 11. In order to make the flight as safe as possible for Thay, he was flown in a private jet, generously offered by a kind friend. He was accompanied by Sister Chan Khong and the team of attendants who will be continuing their round-the-clock care for him during this new stage of recovery. Thay’s rehabilitation will be guided by a team of distinguished neurologists specializing in stroke and cognitive rehabilitation at UCSF Medical Center.

We remain deeply grateful to all the bodhisattvas on the medical team in France, in particular the doctors and nurses at the University Hospital of Bordeaux. It is thanks to their loving care, professionalism, and kindness that Thay has made such remarkable progress. In preparation for Thay’s flight, they even set aside a whole day to conduct thorough medical tests to ensure he would be strong enough to make the journey.

With a new US team of doctors, we are confident Thay will continue to progress to his maximum capacity. It is a new chapter for our Teacher and our community. The doctors recommend that Thay follow an intensive program of therapy for five to six months, including hospital visits during which he will have access to the latest innovations in robotic rehabilitation techniques, as well as physical training with specialists. Thay will also have therapists visit and train with him at home during the other days of the week.

During the flight, Thay was relaxed and at ease, eager to practice walking meditation through the plane with the help of his attendants. He enjoyed looking out of the window and contemplating the icebergs passing beneath. When the flight finally touched down, Thay was determined to leave the plane on foot rather than in a wheelchair, and he smiled with the joy of arrival.

Thay’s diligence and determination are a powerful message for us all. Thay’s heart and mind will never abandon us or the practice. Although he cannot speak to us, he continues to transmit the essence of the practice. He continues to be with his beloved community, even in times of difficulty.

Let us renew our efforts to practice and connect with our Sangha, whether locally or at mindfulness retreats in practice centers around the world. Let us open our hearts and reach out to our loved ones and to those who are suffering and need a little kindness. We know that with every mindful step and breath, our collective energy of practice and togetherness is supporting our Teacher’s healing.

We have been able to assist Thay in realising his intention to come to the US thanks to the extraordinary generosity and support of a few friends. Now we would like to invite you all to participate in this new chapter of his journey. Thay has shown tremendous courage and determination in every moment since his stroke last November. Let us come together to do everything we can to support him. Many of us have expressed our appreciation to Thay by sending beautiful letters, cards, and well wishes over the past months. We are so grateful for this outpouring of love. And we invite you to express your gratitude for Thay in another concrete way, by helping us to take care of his medical costs at this pivotal time. Our wish is to raise the necessary funds as a collective manifestation of the love of the whole community – your contribution, no matter how small, will be an important support for Thay’s healing.  

The new team of specialists is preparing an estimate of overall costs for Thay’s rehabilitation program, and we expect it to be in the hundreds of thousands of dollars. Your gift will actively help give Thay the best possible chance of recovering his ability to walk and talk again.

We invite you to contribute at www.thichnhathanhfoundation.org/healingthay. We will keep this page updated with the latest information on Thay’s health care and our collective progress towards the fundraising goal. All gifts made through the Thich Nhat Hanh Foundation are tax deductible for US donors.

We are deeply grateful for your generosity.

May you and your loved ones be peaceful, happy and light in body and spirit. May you experience your own deep healing and transformation on the beautiful path of practice that Thay has opened up for us all.

With love and trust

The Monks and Nuns of Plum Village

As Thay’s recovery is progressing well, we will offer updates only from time to time. We will keep our global community informed of any major developments, and provide information on how you can continue to support Thay’s healing. All official announcements will continue to appear at plumvillage.org, langmai.org, villagedespruniers.org, and www.facebook.com/thichnhathanh.

Finding our True Home: Pure Land practice with Waves and Water Sangha

2015 07 08

Dear friends –

The sun setting in the west reflects on an open north-facing window. I cannot see the sun and yet I can see the sun! I am so fortunate to have such a lovely home. Sitting four stories up in an old and honourable house with good friends around me, it is often easy to feel that I have found a true home in the material world – a great support for the True Home in my heart.

For the next few months Waves and Water Sangha will be practicing with Thich Nhat Hanh’s book, “Finding our True Home: Living in the Pure Land Here and Now.” Tomorrow, Thursday, we will begin by learning something about the context for Thay’s commentary on the Amitabha Sutra and the practice of Pure Land Buddhism. We will listen to practitioners chanting Amitabha’s name and begin to learn the song, “Here is the Pure Land” based on a poem by Thay and found in the front of the book. We will discuss how we can, every day, find the Pure Land within us and around us.

The Plum Village Dharma Seal is “I have arrived, I am home.” The next Thursday, we will read together Brother Protection’s post on the Deer Park website: How can the practice of Arriving, Home, offer relief to the climate crisis and our collective suffering?” This will build on our practice last month of understanding how our body and the earth’s body are one.

We will then continue with the commentary in Finding our True Home, exploring the practice of Recollection and the levels of Pure Land practice. In our fourth week, we will engage with a Sutra Service that includes the Smaller Amitabha Sutra and ask ourselves “where do we find the precious jewels, the wonderful sounds in our own lives?”

Following our usual schedule, August 6 will be the full Ceremony for the Recitation of the Five Mindfulness Trainings and, as we move into August, we will continue our study and practice based Thay’s commentary – including “beyond the notion of within and without” and “how happiness and suffering inter-are.”

May we all smile in mindfulness and dwell in the present moment,

Bethan

p.s. We have posted “Here is the Pure Land” on our website at RESOURCES > PLUM VILLAGE PRACTICE SONGS: http://wavesandwater.org/site/resources/plum-village-practice-songs2/here-is-the-pure-land/

Update on the health of our teacher in Plum Village

Dear friends –

When we receive a message from across the oceans like the one below it seems so clear how we inter-are. Below is an update on Thay’s health – a visible manifestation of the fruits of practice…. Please smile – and consider how we can encourage each other to practice, together, however we are able.

Official Announcement

Plum Village, France
June 28, 2015

To all Plum Village Practice Centers,
To all Practice Centers and Sanghas World Wide,
To our Dear Beloved Friends,

We are happy to report that Thay’s health has improved greatly since he returned to his Plum Village Hermitage in early April. Every day Thay has been out in nature, enjoying the blossoms, listening to the birds and resting at the foot of a tree. Thay enjoys lying in his hammock next to the running creek, in the fresh cool of the bamboo grove he planted more than thirty years ago.

Doctors and nurses continue to visit Thay, and he receives physiotherapy, massage and acupuncture daily. The team of attendants continue to care for Thay and support his needs around the clock.

Despite his advanced age, Thay has been making remarkable progress.

One day, Thay decided for himself that he was ready to start swallowing solid food, and directed his attendants to prepare an apple, then a lemon and then an avocado. Thay enjoyed each bite with great delight, chewing each mouthful at least forty times before swallowing. Everyone was very surprised. Thay’s mindfulness, concentration and joy to really savor the food was remarkable. Since that day, with great concentration and determination, Thay has been able to enjoy feeding himself. The sisters have been investing their love and creativity in preparing diverse nutritious healthy food for Thay, which he eats with delight. As soon as Thay was able to nourish himself with several wholesome meals a day, he surprised all the doctors by successfully removing his own feeding tube, without any complications. Thay smiled, and we all smiled.

More recently, Thay has begun to develop his vocalisation, joining the attendants when they hum or sing. The first time this happened, one of the sisters was chanting in Vietnamese the name of Avalokita, the Bodhisattva of Great Compassion: Nam Mo Bo Tat Quan The Am. Thay suddenly pronounced the final sound “Âm” (pron. “um”) clearly and on cue. Miraculously, the word “Âm” actually means “sound”. Thay looked at those around him, his eyes gleaming, as if to say “everything is possible”. It was a very moving moment, and the attendants all gathered to continue to chant with Thay. Since that very first “um”, Thay now enjoys singing and humming every day, all the familiar Plum Village tunes in Vietnamese, English and French. At this point, Thay is able to voice the melody and, once in a while, he can form a word. He raises his arm in such a way as to express the meaning of each line, and has great joy and surprise every time he is able to produce a clear and accurate word.

Thay’s therapists have been struck by his extremely strong will to recover, and have pointed out to us that this is the most important factor in his rehabilitation. Thay has been very determined to train himself so he can recover his physical strength and regain his balance and posture. Thay is clear about what he wants to do, and what he does not want to do. He is now able to sit by himself, beautifully upright. In the last three weeks Thay has wanted to start walking, even though his right side remains paralysed. With the support of one attendant behind, and one at his right leg to help move it forward, Thay now practices walking meditation in the garden, several times a day. We can feel Thay’s delight and freedom at each step. Even though it takes great effort, we can see that, for Thay, each step is a step of victory, an affirmation of life and joy to be alive on this beautiful Mother Earth.

From time to time the whole monastic community of 150 monks and nuns has come to practice walking meditation with Thay. Last week we could feel Thay’s joy to see his disciples, and his happiness to lead the sangha in walking meditation. Thay pointed to the blue sky, the swaying bamboo, the smile of a brother, directing us to enjoy the present moment. Thay’s courage, determination and joy, despite his physical limitations, was a clear teaching for all those present as we walked behind Thay with our two healthy feet. With every step, Thay demonstrated that he will continue to practice no matter what the conditions. Thay was affirming that he would never desert the Path. He was encouraging us to stay on the path, and enjoy the wonders of life.

We would like to thank everyone for offering your loving support to Thay and the sangha through the past months. We are deeply grateful for your energy of compassion and prayers, and for your commitment to continue to practice mindfully and deeply for Thay. A special thank you to those who have sent us beautiful children’s drawings for Thay’s room and those who have sent us heartfelt donations to support Thay’s care.

The lotuses are blooming in our ponds, the plums are ripening in our orchards, and we are preparing our hamlets to welcome our guests for the Summer Retreat, around 800 people each week, for a whole month. The Summer Retreat is one of Thay’s favorite times of year. We will welcome families and children, and the Dharma Talks will be given by Thay’s continuation in the form of his Senior Dharma Teachers. Under the shade of the oak trees, bamboo groves and verandas in the late afternoon sun, we will see many circles of friends sharing deeply with one another. Hearts will be open, tears will be shed, as the sound of the bell reverberates.

Nine years ago Thay was asked,
“You will be 80 this year. Do you plan to retire as a spiritual teacher at any point?”

This is the answer he gave:

In Buddhism we see that teaching is done not only by talking, but also by living your own life. Your life is the teaching, is the message. And since I continue to sit, to walk, to eat, to interact with the Sangha and people, I continue to teach, even if I have already encouraged my senior students to begin to replace me in giving Dharma talks. In the last two years, I have asked Dharma teachers, not only in the monastic circle but also in the lay circle, to come up and give Dharma talks. Many of them have given wonderful Dharma talks. Some Dharma talks have been better than mine. I see myself in my continuation, and I will not retire. I’ll continue to teach, if not by Dharma talks then in my way of sitting, eating, smiling, and interacting with the Sangha. I like to be with the Sangha. Even if I don’t give a Dharma talk, I like to join walking meditation, sitting meditation, eating in mindfulness and so on. So don’t worry. When people are exposed to the practice, they are inspired. You don’t need to talk in order to teach. You need to live your life mindfully and deeply. Thank you.

These inspiring words are our compass as we prepare to lead retreats for thousands of people in the coming months: here in Plum Village this Summer, at the EIAB in Germany in August, and on the Miracle of Mindfulness Tour of the United States this fall. Please join us.

May you cherish the presence of those you love, and enjoy each step together.

With love and trust,

The Monks and Nuns of Plum Village

As Thay’s condition is now stable, and his path of recovery is long, we will post updates only occasionally. We will keep our global community informed of any major developments in Thay’s recovery. All official updates will continue to appear at plumvillage.orglangmai.orgvillagedespruniers.org, and www.facebook.com/thichnhathanh.