Mt Rainier National Park by Vijay Chebium

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@happinessandfruit
Mt Rainier National Park by Vijay Chebium
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Whispers of gold // Part 10
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.
Thich Nhat Hanh, “The Heart of the Matter”
Photography by mika05011972
“Every morning when I wake up I dedicate myself to helping others to find peace of mind. Then when I meet people, I think of them as long term friends; I don’t regard others as strangers.”
— The Dalai Lama
“Compassion is a beautiful flower born of understanding. So when you get angry with someone, practice breathing in and out mindfully. Look deeply into the situation to see the true nature of your own and the other person’s suffering, and you will be liberated.”
— Thich Nhat Hanh
“In our former lives, we were trees. Maybe we have even been oak trees ourselves. This isn’t just Buddhist theory; it’s science. The human species is a very young species - we appeared on the Earth only recently. Before that, we were rock, we were gas, we were minerals, we were single-celled beings. We were plants, we were trees, and now we have become humans… You just sit down and breathe and look, and you can see your past existences… We can learn from everything that is around, that is in us… Everything is preaching the Dharma.”
—
Thich Nhat Hanh -“Being Peace”
Thich Nhat Hanh gems
Nature teaches us simplicity and contentment, because in its presence we realize we need very little to be happy.
Mark Coleman, “A Breath of Fresh Air”
“Live quietly in the moment and see the beauty of all before you. The future will take care of itself.”
— Yogananda
To acknowledge that you are dying is to recognize that you are alive.
Dean Rolston, “Memento Mori”
When we believe that happiness should take a particular form, we fail to see the opportunities for joy that are right in front of us.
—Thich Nhat Hanh, “Cultivating Compassion”
It doesn’t matter what is happening. What matters is how we are relating to our experience.
—Tara Brach, “Making Room for Desire”
“World peace must develop from inner peace. Peace is not just mere absence of violence. Peace is, I think, the manifestation of human compassion.”
— Dalai Lama
“Ten years ago I was in India visiting the ex-untouchable community of Buddhists. A friend who belonged to the caste organized the trip for me. I was sitting on the bus, enjoying the landscape outside, contemplating the palm trees and the vegetation. Suddenly I turned and I saw him looking very tense. There was no reason why he had to be tense like that. I thought that he was trying to make my visit pleasant and maybe that was the reason he was so tense. I told him, “Dear friend, I know that you want to make my trip pleasant, but I am already very happy. I’ve already enjoyed the trip. So why don’t you sit back, smile, and relax?” He said, “Okay,” and he sat back and he tried to relax. I was pleased and I turned my face toward the window again and I enjoyed the palm trees and other things. But just a few minutes after when I looked back at him he was as tense as before. He was not able to relax, to allow himself to relax. I knew that he belonged to that section of the population that had been struggling for many thousand years. He was discriminated against. He had suffered so much, his ancestors and himself and his children. So the tendency to struggle has been there for many thousand years. That is why it was very difficult for him to allow himself to rest. We have to practice in order to be able to transform this habit in us. The habit of struggle has become a powerful source of energy that is shaping our behavior, our actions and our reactions.”
— Thich Nhat Hanh - Thich Nhat Hanh gems
Gravity doesn’t care whether you believe in it or not by hjl on Flickr
Shuku Nishi