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Emptiness is NOT nothing - teaching from Thich Nhat Hanh.

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  • čas přidán 30. 08. 2013
  • "Emptiness is not nothing." Thich Nhat Hanh talks about emptiness - the root window of perception (HERE) within the I AM HERE teaching.
    I AM HERE is a system of teaching presently being introduced world-wide by Dr. Bart ten Berge and Georgi within the Chashymie School of Inner Growth of the International School of Spiritual Psychology (ISSP).
    To receive regular updates of media and workshops from the I AM HERE teaching and details of the release of the book I AM HERE - opening the windows of life and beauty, come join us at the Facebook page: / perception101
    Donations to the channel are gratefully received: www.paypal.me/...

Komentáře • 264

  • @haggaigertz
    @haggaigertz Před 7 lety +34

    I'm crying while I'm listening such wisdom, such revelation! it's amazing!!!

  • @PhilipTikka
    @PhilipTikka Před 8 měsíci +3

    I am currently reading “the buddhas teaching” - my mind understands and forgets, therefore I came here to re-remember.

  • @hiddendimsum1075
    @hiddendimsum1075 Před 2 lety +9

    This teaching made me realize impermanent. Thay is right when he said this teaching has the power to relieve one from suffering. Rest in peace dear master.

  • @saswatabiswas190
    @saswatabiswas190 Před 4 lety +23

    Best Buddhist teacher I have ever seen on internet

  • @tomgeorgearts
    @tomgeorgearts Před 8 lety +93

    I'm still getting used to this concept, but it's getting clearer. The challenge is not just to understand emptiness but to start to SEE the world like that. It opens the door to compassion when you feel the intimate connection between all things and all people.

    • @lukasdohnal1229
      @lukasdohnal1229 Před 8 lety +10

      +Tom George I think that direct experience of "Emptiness" in meditation is absolutely necessary. Buddha was reluctant to describe what he discovered by direct experience extensively, because he knew nature of human mind and wanted to avoid people mistaking the metaphorical finger pointing at the metaphorical moon for the moon itself. I see the only real usefulness of the mental concept of Sunyata in the fact that it serves as a way to put the experience in words, so that when you yourself actually encounter the experience in meditation, you can put that experience into context of the Buddhist teachings, into context of others' experience.. This is extremely important.
      Also, I believe that Brahman, Supreme Consciousness, Supreme Self, God talked about in "Hinduism" and yoga is the same thing as Emptiness. Even though Buddhism talks about "no-self" (anatta) and "Hinduism" about Supreme Self or True Self, both are actually describing the same thing, only using different words.

    • @tomgeorgearts
      @tomgeorgearts Před 8 lety

      Thankyou man, good to hear your reflections. :)

    • @lukasdohnal1229
      @lukasdohnal1229 Před 8 lety +1

      +Tom George I am happy that you found it interesting. :) I am happy to share.

    • @gbornfreereallyfree4928
      @gbornfreereallyfree4928 Před 8 lety +1

      empty of a self here and the world outside there, like if you can see or feel or hear a being, then it exist for you, not just in front of you, but a part of you, you can't be separate from what you're experiencing.

    • @lukasdohnal1229
      @lukasdohnal1229 Před 8 lety

      +gbornfree reallyfree If you say so. I would say it depends on what you consider "separation". It is a mental construct, a concept. It is a word, and as such, a symbol. In this case, it would be beneficial to clearly define the content of the word, so that we know what does it actually mean. Same goes for "I". Then we can truly understand the meaning of "I cannot be separate from what I am experiencing".

  • @mrbatista666
    @mrbatista666 Před 9 lety +28

    I literally cried out of joy watching this beautiful video. Thank you Thay for your wise words and enlightening presence!

  • @kimberleyolliff9636
    @kimberleyolliff9636 Před 9 lety +24

    thank you for sharing. Of course as an American the idea of emptiness and nonself have always been hard for me to comprehend. I have been pondering it for a couple of years and this video helps so much. His words bring me to tears everytime! Thank you again.

    • @nondual
      @nondual  Před 9 lety +7

      Thank you for appreciating, Kimberly. Yes, it's quite different from what is most popularly understood by "emptiness" i.e. rock-bottom depression!

    • @zaffranmoon1580
      @zaffranmoon1580 Před 4 lety

      @@enstigatorofficial you seem to misunderstand, Thay is nothing but compassion. As are the books. I hope you find peace.

    • @enstigatorofficial
      @enstigatorofficial Před 4 lety

      @@zaffranmoon1580 --that would be HUMANISM, which is something different than BUDDHISM. How dare you insinuate I am not at peace, I am on the path of the elimination of all suffering. This charlatan takes advantage of westerners and steals parts of Buddhism and perverts it for a profit. One day i hope you come to understand the truth, and gain actual wisdom. Ignore this fraud in a fake store-bought robe and pursue the true nature of reality as taught by the Buddha.

    • @vindembmw6421
      @vindembmw6421 Před 2 lety

      @@enstigatorofficial apart from the misspelling, your username describes your action very accurately. By your actions, you are indeed an instigator. May you find peace, regardless of what you find to be true 🙏🏼

    • @enstigatorofficial
      @enstigatorofficial Před 2 lety +1

      @@vindembmw6421 may you be enstigated to the true revelation of the Buddha and not fall for the new age froth that is more humanism than Buddhism. This guy here is a load of horseshit and he built more statues to himself than Saddam Hussein. Please avoid OSHO, because that is truly a dangerous cult. don't be an Oshole.

  • @miked.8097
    @miked.8097 Před 4 lety +58

    This person is the closest thing to living Buddha

  • @HolyFosterConner
    @HolyFosterConner Před 8 lety +56

    Wow. This video really struck a chord in me. My father passed away about 2 years back. I'm currently 19, and before he died my parents have been separated for almost 2 years. Before my dad died, I hadn't seen him in 4 years. The reasons are complicated. Lets just say my father wasn't really a good Husband or Father. He ended up drinking himself to death. Anyway, I always wanted nothing to do with him and still feel the same way. After watching this, I don't know what to think anymore. I should stick to my meditation and see for myself whats true and what is not.

    • @siobhanphoenix9789
      @siobhanphoenix9789 Před 8 lety +17

      +follow the light It is complicated. Another teaching is to keep company with people who support you on your path which means to be in god company. For those people that you surround yourself with that they do not wish harm on you or cause it. We can have compassion but if we surround ourselves with people who we cannot help because they don't want it or if we surround ourselves with people who do not contribute to a healthy relationship with us, then it is crazy wisdom. As children of alcoholics it is not our duty or our place in this life to lead them to water. It is not our place to save them or to parent them. It is not an act of disloyalty or a lack of compassion if you do not take this responsibility on yourself. It is very harmful to adult survivors of alcoholics to continue to take responsibility for their parents as they have already been made responsible for an adult, their parent, from a young age. From this situation, we perceive differently. We have trouble trusting our instincts, being able to tell what is the right thing to do from what would be wrong, and we have trouble believing that it is right to take care if ourselves. We easily feel guilty because that is how we have been brought up. There is a group on facebook for adult survivors. Check it out. There are plenty of adult survivors who think exactly the way you do. It is not good for us to carry shame and guilt wherever we go. The shame and guilt is unwarranted. We have done nothing. Our alcoholic parents are responsible for themselves and responsible for getting help. Namaste, Sat Nam, Blessed Be. May the long time sun shine upon you, all love surround you and the pure light within you, guide your way on.

    • @timeparker
      @timeparker Před 7 lety

      There is also a series on here "discovering your true nature" where Thich touches on this as well. It helped me so much.

    • @YabbaDadADo
      @YabbaDadADo Před 7 lety +2

      follow the light I'm sorry to hear of your loss. I lost my dad in the same way as you lost yours. So I know the pain and the suffering you experienced.
      It's been nearly 10 years now since my dad passed away but the more I practice the path the more I understand his alcohol dependency as suffering and not as his choice. He tried to quit but couldn't manage it. So I just remember him in full but have only love and compassion for him, his suffering and all of the other beautiful parts of his nature.
      As a father now I know just how hard it is to be the perfect dad. We can only do our best and work to remove suffering from ourselves in order to lessen the suffering on others. I hope you're well and life is getting better for you.

    • @indexMemories
      @indexMemories Před 6 lety

      A little late. But welcome to the "fathers who suffered from liver cirrhosis" club.

    • @masnsenyuva9182
      @masnsenyuva9182 Před 5 lety +1

      you must forhive him and look forward, like this sage said, there is no inherent self, therfore when we deeply understand this, we become more compassionate to others, espetialy those who were close and not so kind toward us. namaste

  • @astrumdeus7098
    @astrumdeus7098 Před 3 lety +1

    About a year ago I was bored walked down to a neighborhood library to randomly pick out a book. I saw The Miracle Of Mindfulness. I was drawn to it. I've been reading and listening to Thic Nhat Hanh ever since...... Thank you for helping me on my journey

  • @MartinJutras
    @MartinJutras Před 4 lety +10

    The kindness in his eyes strikes me every time.

  • @shamansierra4966
    @shamansierra4966 Před 8 lety +30

    emptiness is form; form is emptiness

    • @silence7047
      @silence7047 Před 8 lety +12

      and the truth is the semicolon in the middle.

    • @edgepixel8467
      @edgepixel8467 Před 5 lety

      Shiki fu i ku, ku fu i shiki

  • @TEAMxRONNIE
    @TEAMxRONNIE Před rokem

    I have been struggling with this for so long. Whether empty was a state or sort of existence, or empty was how we aimed to feel. His words finally helped this teaching click. I am ever so grateful that we live in an age that we can still almost participate in teachings of those who have moved on.

  • @karencontestabile6064
    @karencontestabile6064 Před 5 lety +5

    Beautiful! Thanks, Master Thay!

  • @jessieyau2331
    @jessieyau2331 Před 3 lety +1

    Empty of tea,but it's full of air.
    Amazing, I love his voice, his eyes...he's a great teacher.🙏

  • @marianpaintal9334
    @marianpaintal9334 Před 6 lety +2

    Beautiful.... Realistic... realization ...Gratitude.

  • @foshotho
    @foshotho Před 2 lety

    🙏 ❤️ 🌹 thank you Thay for your peace and love ❤️ 🌹 🙏

  • @baptm727
    @baptm727 Před 3 lety +1

    Empty of an independent existence, fullof everything else, beautiful.

  • @BioStuff415
    @BioStuff415 Před 7 lety +22

    Buddha told Ananda that we cannot say something is empty. We must say empty of what. Thay points to what it (all phenomena) is empty of, and that is an independent inherent existence. The way to undermine the delusion we harbor is to contemplate the dependent relationships of phenomena. However, this is still within in the conventional truth. The ultimate condition is inexpressible. It is a meditative condition where the experience of the non-existant independent 'I' is lost. A very subtle object of meditation.

  • @pedestrian_0
    @pedestrian_0 Před 2 lety

    This made complete sense when he said the flower's empty if you consider it existing outside of everything else, rather it's full of life because of everything else that is also working to produce it, application is the same to us; We do not exist outside of everything else, we're the wave with the entire ocean. This is something I've definitely come to understand by myself, you didn't make yourself, you're constantly influenced by the outside, by other people, and you can't control it. It's a nice connection with everyone and everything, peace and love

  • @allenmorgan4309
    @allenmorgan4309 Před 6 lety +1

    Thank you for helping me to realize that everything is a spontaneous arising. Long and short exist together and create one another and give meaning to one another.

  • @blombergk
    @blombergk Před 2 lety +1

    Wow stunningly beautiful

  • @rajangupta732
    @rajangupta732 Před 4 lety

    We are so lucky to have such teachers with us🙏🙏💖

  • @sujitchoudhury8815
    @sujitchoudhury8815 Před 2 lety

    Pranam My Guru. Your wisdom is part of me. Like many things and event without that I am empty. Pranam, You are flowing in the cosmos.

  • @vagabundoenlinea
    @vagabundoenlinea Před 2 měsíci

    Very beutiful teaching, in the internet there is only concepts and a-ton of concepts, but buddhism needs poetry to settle down in our hearts, needs those subtle dance of verses to enter.

  • @BenTalley
    @BenTalley Před 9 lety +17

    I needed this teaching today. Nihilism per dictionary is " extreme skepticism maintaining that nothing in the world has a real existence." There is an unfortunate use of the term "void" esp., in some Buddhist schools. In the West we are noted for our individualism and self interest vs. community good etc. This is acculturated. Part of this is due to mechanistic, materialistic rationalism that only serves to reinforce our suffering. It is very sad for us that we have inherited such a linear consciousness eh? Buddhism evolves in our "mud-like soil." Give it time...

    • @MikeGsaxman
      @MikeGsaxman Před 5 lety +2

      Yes, the immaculate lotus grows from the mud. OM MANI PADME HUM.

    • @Firecelebi
      @Firecelebi Před 4 lety

      Probably why we always struggle to understand emptiness as meaningful in any way as opposed to empty = pointless.
      All the manure we've produced lately will definitely make for some fertile ground.

  • @DavidKarlsson-ti6sb
    @DavidKarlsson-ti6sb Před 2 lety

    I wish I had listened to these at a young age. I would liked to have had many years to ruminate on the teachings.

  • @Gufaatkuen
    @Gufaatkuen Před 2 lety

    Travel well great teacher I will see you everywhere thank you❤️🙏🏼

  • @Ferenz111
    @Ferenz111 Před 9 lety +3

    this is a perfect teaching !

  • @tenzinrabyang6652
    @tenzinrabyang6652 Před 3 lety +1

    The glass is emptiness. Emptiness is the glass. The glass is not other than the emptiness. The emptiness is not other than the glass. Heart Sutra!

  • @KeyaKyea1
    @KeyaKyea1 Před 5 lety +5

    Beautiful and profound wisdom...Gratitude to Thich Nhat Hanh and the sharer!
    One observation though: When the physical father is inconsistent, toxic or mentally sick, then it might be useful for the son to refer as physical father vs 'real' father understood as Cosmic father or Creator/Masculine aspect of God.
    (simply because as long as the son refers himself to the sick being that has given the seed for his existence, as long as he does identify to this 'impossible reference', he will feel himself as sick and mentally unstable and will keep on performing the sick behaviours that caused the wound in the first place. I'd actually would love to have Thich Nhat Hanh's view on this observation.) Thank you and sharing.

  • @rajeshwarihemmadi3229
    @rajeshwarihemmadi3229 Před 2 lety

    Simply blessed to come across this video ...🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏

  • @leelyquan
    @leelyquan Před 8 lety +3

    Amazing viewpoint on eternity.

  • @autumnzolstice9758
    @autumnzolstice9758 Před 2 lety +1

    the end really hit me because I do have problems with my father, he abused me and gave me his name so I had to walk through the world always being reminded of him just by being myself.
    I was able to change my name and gender, my father still has not met the new me and sometimes that is saddening despite how much distance and there is between us

  • @oliverajocovic9133
    @oliverajocovic9133 Před 8 lety +2

    thank you

  • @sjja0903
    @sjja0903 Před rokem

    Very wise gentleman

  • @astro_monist2559
    @astro_monist2559 Před rokem

    Rest in eternal bliss Master Hanh❤

  • @mysmallcap
    @mysmallcap Před 3 lety

    Thank you so much Thich!

  • @patriciawilliams7107
    @patriciawilliams7107 Před 5 lety +1

    Thank you, Thay!

  • @peopleplacesandperspective5564

    Beautiful ❤️🙏🏽❤️

  • @MikeGsaxman
    @MikeGsaxman Před 5 lety +1

    Beautiful!

  • @shanpremachandra7323
    @shanpremachandra7323 Před 3 lety

    A wonderful and meaningful explanation , thank you.

  • @arthurrex6940
    @arthurrex6940 Před 9 lety +2

    I Am Here - Opening the Windows of Life and Beauty. The emptiness of here that allows it all.

  • @TeguhKiyatno
    @TeguhKiyatno Před 6 lety

    Anumodana. Thanks for the explanation of Shunyata ..... (Prajna Paramita Hrdaya Sutra).

  • @Bozhena904
    @Bozhena904 Před 7 lety +2

    Yesterday a friend of mine was hit by a car at 17.45 today I saw that my wristwatch stopped yesterday at 17.45. We're all connected!

  • @user-tv4hl2jl6e
    @user-tv4hl2jl6e Před rokem

    Recognizing for me for the word of lovingkindness i going to type now

  • @tanjorebhuvaneswari3429
    @tanjorebhuvaneswari3429 Před 5 lety +6

    I really wish they would improve the audio quality on this video. His voice is very soft to begin with and the background music almost drowns it. Please remove the background music at least.

    • @stangobuck
      @stangobuck Před 3 lety +1

      You are correct, my friend. Valuable as this little discourse is, the sound ruins it, in a way - near to the end, it's impossible to hear what the venerable bikkhu is saying.

  • @VCaamano
    @VCaamano Před 2 lety

    Thanks for sharing.

  • @kjnightbird1772
    @kjnightbird1772 Před 5 lety

    Yes . . . Wisdom is a silent kind of music all on its own.

  • @dommccaffry3802
    @dommccaffry3802 Před 3 lety

    Such a special being

  • @luzarsacdetoro903
    @luzarsacdetoro903 Před 4 lety +1

    C est costaud!! De la force de l Amour car on est l Amour, de l Amour pour tout car nous sommes le tout et que le rien est tout et que rien n est rien et que rien est l Amour!

  • @wyeth1023
    @wyeth1023 Před 7 lety

    thank you for uploading this!

  • @kiekko673
    @kiekko673 Před 2 lety

    Well, this is exactly how the emptiness
    was explained to me by a Theravada monk in
    a Theravada country.
    This guy, just like Dalai Lama for example
    are true gems, but sometimes they kinda
    let in “known” that Theravada is somehow
    incomplete, lower way or vehicle, when
    in actuality the Buddhist teaching is one
    and the same regardless of tradition. Peace. ✌️

  • @cateholm9426
    @cateholm9426 Před 3 lety

    Thank you.

  • @KesleyCage
    @KesleyCage Před 6 lety

    My understanding of this teaching on emptiness, is that wholeness is constant and undying. This wholeness could be called the One Self, it is empty because it contains no fragments, parts or anything other than itself. This wholeness, which I am calling the One Self is completely empty. Everything inside the One Self, is the One Self only, and it is empty of any other separate thing. There is no separate thing. Every thing inter-exists.
    The appearance of many selves within the One Self is contained by the Self, and is not other than the Self. Human beings on Earth feel separated from each other, and the cosmos, because we believe we exist alone - we do not recognize our non-separateness. Failure to recognize our connections causes suffering.
    Perhaps our illusion of separateness was there only for the joy and pleasure of realizing our non-separateness i.e. the truth, greatness, beauty and ineffable mystery of who and what we are. Who we are together is really the 'I am'. Each individual is the 'I am' seen through the gaze of separateness by the material senses, but wholeness can be perceived through the spiritual senses. Spirit means breath - metaphorically, it is the breath that connects us all. What does this wholeness feel like to the spiritual senses? Emptiness. It is non-grasping.
    The material reality is Samsara, Maya, Illusion. The body and all its senses is a vehicle for the One Self to explore its own elements and depths through that body, and the many bodies it contains within itself. All beings on the Earth - monkeys, hedgehogs, bats, kuala bears, palm trees, dandelions, bacteria, are the many eyes and senses of One opulent being. Even the criminally-convicted abuser resting in his prison cell is the One Self.
    Possibly, the One Self descends far into the darkness of illusion and separateness, in order to experience the ecstasy of returning to truth i.e. the realisation of Oneness, and the divine glories, blessings and clear insight that brings.
    So-called good feelings may be hints or signs that the Self is close to realization. The good feelings are produced by the Self, and the Self is the wholeness, the fullness, the One experiencing and the observer who contains the feelings. All feelings are produced by the Self good and bad, and they temporarily inter-exist depending on the closeness of realization of Selfhood.
    So-called good and bad feelings may come and go according to how near or far one is from the spiritual sense of wholeness. Wholeness far transcends all definition of good or bad feeling. It is everything, every feeling, interacting.
    Suffering may be a call to align with the true nature of the One Self - inspiring a desire to move toward love and connection, compassion, safety and a sense of wholeness in the individual. Suffering is not punishment, it is an invitation back to the to the true perspective of wholeness, and love is the effect or symptom of coming closer to the realization of wholeness. The One Self is both the cause and the effect, and transcends both. The love that signals Oneness can be pointed to with words, for example: Agape, unconditional love, loving kindness, compassion, complete peace, joy, serenity, attachment to nothing, non-attachment, striving for attachment only to the One Self (which is striving to avoid attachment to fragmented illusions, and attaching only to wholeness - acknowledging one's non-separateness, and this is in Reality non-attachment).
    Individual does not mean separate or alone, it literally means in-dividual i.e. non divided, non dual.
    The true nature of the Self is inter-being; everything is One, Whole, Integrated, Completely Connected, Non-separate.
    Emptiness means contains nothing other than itself, it is already whole, full, complete. It is made up off all the elements. It inter-exists. Emptiness contains no separation.

  • @Abornazine_
    @Abornazine_ Před 4 lety +5

    Wish the music was a touch lower. It was making it harder to hear him and his accent is sometimes a challenge for those of us with hearing issues.

  • @Flaytt744
    @Flaytt744 Před 7 lety +1

    Nagarjuna's Catuskoti (fire fuel) example awakened me

  • @thanhluan007
    @thanhluan007 Před 4 lety

    love this

  • @ElaKozak-cd9bg
    @ElaKozak-cd9bg Před 6 dny

    🙏❤️🌺🌸🌺true

  • @VCaamano
    @VCaamano Před 2 lety +1

    Constructive criticism. The music is beautiful, but distracts from the teaching. He speaks softly and it’s hard to hear. Thank you for posting this.

  • @maeodok-laoskorat7097
    @maeodok-laoskorat7097 Před 3 lety +1

    Love ❤️

  • @triceadawkins3092
    @triceadawkins3092 Před 4 lety +2

    Where is the full dharma talk?

    • @nondual
      @nondual  Před 4 lety

      It's on the Plum Village channel here: czcams.com/users/plumvillageonline

  • @tm-bg4so
    @tm-bg4so Před 6 lety +3

    It is really hard to accept the emptiness. It shocks me out completely.

  • @ersterkommentar2415
    @ersterkommentar2415 Před 8 lety +4

    Shunyata is the realization of no durance in every thing and, like thich nath hanh said: the complete knowledge of interaction. Conscious or not.

  • @shadowolf3998
    @shadowolf3998 Před 6 lety

    It looks like the concept of oneness, I have come to notice it to be true as well as being an existence of infinite possibilities. Everything is potential energy.

  • @gra6649
    @gra6649 Před 6 lety

    Before "Anything" arises in the mind there is emptiness. Or another way of saying it is, before there is something"To know" there is "Knowing". So lets say there is a cup. The cup is "Knowing, or Emptiness" manifested as a cup. It's the same with everything else, including ones self. "Knowing" without anything to know is "Emptiness". "It's like water and ice, without water no ice" (Zen Master Hakuin). That's how it was it was explained to me, and how I understand it.

  • @Vincent-om2lg
    @Vincent-om2lg Před 2 lety

    What is that piece of music? Beautiful. Beautiful teachings too.
    Sadhu sadhu sadhu

  • @pokesmile1712
    @pokesmile1712 Před 3 lety

    ty

  • @vicbrown42
    @vicbrown42 Před 4 lety +1

    Background music is too loud

  • @itchaban
    @itchaban Před 2 lety

    What music is this....its lovely

  • @Duck72432
    @Duck72432 Před 3 lety

    Ok first person to actually break this down where it made some sense.

  • @25bmax
    @25bmax Před 8 lety +1

    How about follow the middle path. No duality like opposite of right and wrong, rich and poor. The true reality is no birth and no death or no coming and no going.

  • @TheDeepening718
    @TheDeepening718 Před 2 lety

    "Man is made only of non-man elements", which means all is one, which means there is an Ultimate Ground or Spirit in Buddhism, which means Buddhism does NOT differ from Vedantism in this manner.

    • @TheMahayanist
      @TheMahayanist Před rokem

      No. Vedanta claims there is an eternal absolute ultimate ground, Brahman. Buddhism doesn't not. There is no ultimate in Buddhism.

  • @noahchen5030
    @noahchen5030 Před 9 měsíci

    💙💙💙

  • @ZedarThokme
    @ZedarThokme Před 8 lety

    Lovely

  • @armanhossainanubhab1055
    @armanhossainanubhab1055 Před 4 lety +1

    Nirvana means what?
    1/ Going into extinction and erasing one self into non-existence (Absence/ Death/ No awareness of that one self) and will no longer exist into the existence. (If this is the freedom then the person wouldn't feel any bliss of it, because that person wouldn't be there anymore to feel bliss or stay aware of what's going on)
    2/ Leaving mind, body, emotion etc and becoming detached of it, later going beyond it and meeting the true self, which is actually nothingness or emptiness. (Not going into extinction but going beyond the regular aspects).
    3/ None of them but a type of higher consciousness, wisdom or enlightenment.
    4/ Becoming free from every single thing (even from existence, Universe etc) and no longer connecting with anything except emptiness or nothingness, everything will happen at one's own will, nothing will bound them from anything, they have free will and can do anything they want. (But that person haven't died or got erased, person is still there having bliss of freedom).
    Which one is right? No.1 and 3 I got from basic or knowledge and information that's around. No. 2 and 4 are my thoughts. If I am not right, then correct me and tell me what really it is and please be sure that the thing you agree with is the right one.
    Finally, is going into non-existence, becoming extincted, a positive thing or negative? I see it as negativity because a life wouldn't exist anymore, it's like doing suicide but this suicide is permanent, that being is erased and won't return anymore, it's like the death but even worse than death, after death the person still exists without mind or body but going into non-existence means a great trouble, there would be no life, no life will exist after if it really means cutting your own self off from existence. (It's my opinion and comment towards it, don't take it negatively).
    This comment hasn't made for criticism, I am here just for accurate and right information, please reply if possible. I am seeking knowledge so whatever I go for, I go for right thing, the thing I expect, not something which is very unexpected.

  • @melglitter300
    @melglitter300 Před 9 lety +3

    Namaste. free me from the sufferings of samsara.

    • @KJ-dv6pf
      @KJ-dv6pf Před 4 lety

      You can be shown a path and a glimpse of the “end” but you must ultimately walk it yourself to reach the end

  • @ngs8022
    @ngs8022 Před 10 dny

    What Thay explained was Anātman. Is he saying Anātman coincides with Śūnyatā?

  • @manbu7849
    @manbu7849 Před 5 lety

    There are different theories about emptyness : Sunyata is penetrated by highest karuna and highest wisdom. This wisdom is in hinduism a characterstic of the Ishvara and in Mahayana of Samantabhadra. In Hinduism it is the Akasha of the trimurti, which emanates the shabda , the vajra-nada of Jamgon Kongtrul . An absolute empty emptyness could not have a creative impuls. In Theravada a kind of emptyness is mentioned in the Culasuññata Sutta and at the end of Satipatthana Sutta. Nagarjuna thaught in his Śūnyatāsaptati that things exists only in complete dependence on causality. The Madhyamaka saw Sunyata as beyond the highest Samadhi and so above the nirvana. Asanga rejected Emptiness and Nirvana and pointed to an area beyond(Parinirvana).

  • @dwanderful1
    @dwanderful1 Před 5 měsíci

    Its unfortunate someone played loud music over the message

  • @mariusbaltazarrozenberg-ho9367

    I want to ordain as a monk under Thich Nhat Hanh.

  • @TreeGreenOak
    @TreeGreenOak Před 7 lety +6

    WOW we all made of the same star dust just like our planet the sun the moon and the universe.

  • @JonasAnandaKristiansson

    The Master

  • @randybyrnes5000
    @randybyrnes5000 Před 2 lety +1

    music got too loud at the end. He has a meek delivery.

  • @Gitte585
    @Gitte585 Před 2 lety

    🙏

  • @AndyMossMetta
    @AndyMossMetta Před 4 lety +1

    Many thanks for posting this lovely teaching. Perhaps the background music towards the end of the video was not helping us to better receive this lovely direct heart communion?. 'All is practice' I hear you say! True but not correct.

    • @nondual
      @nondual  Před 4 lety

      Those were early days. One of the first videos on the channel. Since then the Zen penny dropped that less is more. Still, the value in the wisdom we hope outweighs the discomfort of our editorial clumsiness :-)

    • @AndyMossMetta
      @AndyMossMetta Před 4 lety

      @@nondual A lovely reply .....and yes it does.

  • @colleendeane7888
    @colleendeane7888 Před 4 lety

    Music is superfluous

  • @mdinnen5930
    @mdinnen5930 Před 4 lety

    I enjoyed this video and appreciate Thay's teachings. However, as someone who has had a difficult relationship with parents (both biological and stepparents), just saying that I can't separate myself from them is not always helpful. There are times in life where those of us who have been abused by others MUST make at least a physical separation from those people in order to protect ourselves and heal. I am 40 and still trying to do this work. I think Thay started to touch on this when he said even if we don't like our parent or don't get along, we are still connected, there is no way to not be connected, and from knowing this, we can heal our anger. But I really wish he would've said more, especially speaking to those cultures (such as American) where connection with ancestors and elders has really been lost and the extreme focus is on the individual and what they want and desire or what they don't want and push away. Perhaps that was not the aim of this video, which I understand; no one can cover all topics all the time. Perhaps folks out there know another video or resource from Thay which addresses the deep pain that some of us carry from our parents and ancestors and how to heal that pain while acknowledging that sometimes we DO need to think of ourselves as separate, if only during the time we are going through healing and cannot sanely associate ourselves with those who have hurt us.

    • @jesuschrist1501
      @jesuschrist1501 Před 4 lety +1

      Its all in the taoist teaching. He is talking about the mental burden that you carry with yourself when you interact with your fellow parents, its what also helped shape who you are, the continuation of their actions. But the deeper underlining of his message is to still your mind (embrace emptiness) and accept that its part of due course that they had an effect on you, it is NOT to say you MUST have an answer to their actions that you despise or suffered from, this is against the teaching of taoism and buddhism, and from this you will continue to suffer mentally till you have the right answer, which is basically impossible, because your answer will not change them, it starts with you, and the answer is, as buddhaism and taoism teaches, to be mindful of your experiences. Once you accept this, your mind will rest and then slowly work yourself up by practicing unconditional love, you will start to see the world in a different light.... A peaceful one albeit.

  • @sonam0007
    @sonam0007 Před 6 lety

    Very true.

  • @santelang
    @santelang Před 6 lety +1

    I feel sorry for those disciples and the this good sir nhan. What he is saying is not Nirvana or total extinction. Emptiness he described​ as cloud become rain, rain become vapour and vapour again cloud. This thing is not under Nibbana, it's a vicious circle of birth and death, a wheel. One needs to penetrate this beyond, that's the final extinction. Without a natural light and faith one can't cross over. one need a boat to bisect that circle. Awake my friend!

    • @godofgodseyes
      @godofgodseyes Před 5 lety

      If this version of emptiness is absence of something relative to another, it is not nibbana. A distorted path from the main goal of Buddhism.

  • @lukasdohnal1229
    @lukasdohnal1229 Před 8 lety +3

    "Mister Bodhisattva tell us" :D

  • @JayBe23
    @JayBe23 Před 10 lety +1

    the cosmos is within these words

  • @Jackitate
    @Jackitate Před 7 lety +2

    Emptiness (Shunyata) doesn't mean EMPTINESS in the ENGLISH SENSE.

  • @karamjitsingh8179
    @karamjitsingh8179 Před 5 lety

    Exactly !!!

  • @CaddilacJoe1
    @CaddilacJoe1 Před 6 lety +1

    I mean you can understand the heart sutra but coming to the conclusions on your own is doing the work so you train yourself to see the truth of the words within everything it takes time what's hard for me is explaining this to Christians or people in are American society its hard

    • @heavilymeditated2263
      @heavilymeditated2263 Před 5 lety +1

      Caddy Joey: i understand what you mean. Don't waste your time in explaining it to someone who's level of perception is not on par with yours. They haven't developed the mental tools along with the openness to comprehend such teachings.

  • @kurtpiket6739
    @kurtpiket6739 Před 7 lety

    The atomic body contains an emptiness, where the spirit of oneness is present and attracts all energy inside for growing in oneness.
    This is in a scientific way: dark/unknown energy, which is the base of spiritual universe.
    Here a spiritual evolution happens, from duality/bipolarity into oneness. Enlightenment ist the beginning, fulfilment follows.

  • @KMO325
    @KMO325 Před 4 lety

    Thank you for posting this video! What lecture or video is this taken from? I really want to see the whole thing.

    • @ChefVegan
      @ChefVegan Před 3 lety

      It’s called plum village channel. This video was stolen from it.

  • @patcasey1
    @patcasey1 Před 3 lety

    His words are great, there is no need for music. It takes away from the message and is distracting. I was not able to watch beyond 5:22

  • @damiencross5110
    @damiencross5110 Před 9 lety +12

    I am still afraid of the notion of emptiness. I fear eternity from both perspectives: I would not want to be immortal, but I also fear the temporal nature of "me." It's like damned if you do; damned if you don't.

    • @nondual
      @nondual  Před 9 lety +10

      One of the gifts of processes of emptiness is the liberation of deeply ingrained unconscious fears of death. In emptiness, there is a realization of the you that remains when all temporary formulations of self are released. We all recognize it, sooner or later, one way or another, It is a source of tremendous strength.

    • @NangongReng1973
      @NangongReng1973 Před 9 lety +1

      I assume you to be a Christian. That's why it's very complicated for you to understand what is emptiness .because your mind has been steeped into Christian doctrines for so long.Just for your info, Buddhism is not a religion ,so you don't have the misconception that I should forsake my religion to practice Buddhism. Internet is a powerful tool for knowledge. That day I just watched a talk about Buddhism when the Venerable mentioned that if you reach the highest state as the Buddha , even Nirvana or emptiness doesn't exist.

    • @damiencross5110
      @damiencross5110 Před 9 lety +6

      NangongReng1973 Your base assumption is wrong. For future reference, don't try to base your perspective of a person off of a CZcams comment and subsequently go on some tangent trying to educate the person on what Buddhism is. I kinda found your comment annoying.
      I have been "studying" Buddhism for years (although I am still a lay person and have just scratched the surface I'm sure). I guess I get emptiness from an intellectual perspective, but it still doesn't ease my fear of the cessation of my consciousness or the impermanence of everything.
      Also, emptiness is one of the paths to realization (Nirvana), according to Buddhist thought. Nirvana is the elimination of preconceived notions or concepts, so while emptiness still "exists" (since the nature of everything is emptiness/impermanent), a Buddha will have no use for it.

    • @butterflybeatles
      @butterflybeatles Před 9 lety +3

      NangongReng1973 The notion that "Buddhism is not a religion" is simply hogwash.

    • @damiencross5110
      @damiencross5110 Před 9 lety

      butterflybeatles It's not. That's like saying existentialism is a religion. It's a school of philosophy, a way of looking at the world. Adhering to the concept of "no self" and "emptiness" is actually very scientific.

  • @25bmax
    @25bmax Před 8 lety

    How about follow the middle path. Duality are opposite pairs of the extremes.. Example rich or poor, good and bad or beautiful and ugly. The reality of true nature is no birth and no death, no coming and no going.