Dear friends,
This week, we will meet Monday evening, December 1, from 7-8:30PM ET in person at our meditation space (3812 Northampton Street NW); Wednesday morning, December 3, from 7-8AM ET online; Thursday morning, December 4, from 7-8AM EDT online; and Friday, December 5, 12-1PM ET online/in person (Hybrid).
This week we will recite the Five Mindfulness Trainings and focus our discussion on the First Training. Rachel H will facilitate.
I am too often surprised by the anger I find in myself when I stop long enough to pay attention. How can that be – that such an important feeling can go around in disguise so much of the time?
In reading the First Mindfulness Training: Reverence for Life, I was struck by the reference to anger. While I generally don’t kill, I certainly get angry. Sometimes I can see it and handle it skillfully. Other times, I get overcome or I shut down. In those cases, harmful actions are more likely to arise.
In the Buddha’s Sutra on the Four Establishments of Mindfulness (from Thich Nhat Hanh’s book, Awakening of the Heart: Essential Buddhist Sutras and Commentaries) it reads:
When anger is present in him, he is aware, “Anger is present in me.” When anger is not present in him, he is aware, “Anger is not present in me.” When anger begins to arise, he is aware of it. When anger already abandoned will not arise again in the future, he is aware of it.