Fragrant Palm Leaves

Fragrant Palm Leaves

Dear friends,

This week: we will meet Monday from 7-8:30PM EDT online, Wednesday morning from 7-8AM EDT in person at our meditation space (3812 Northampton Street NW), and Friday 12-1PM EDT online.

This year we will carry on our summer book club tradition, using a section of Thich Nhat Hanh’s Fragrant Palm Leaves as the meditation and dharma sharing topic on Monday nights, starting the book on June 24 and completing it on August 19. 

Please note there is no need to own the book or read the section in advance to enjoy the practice with us. Nor is there a need to attend every practice to benefit from the readings, as each Monday practice will continue to be a stand alone and complete practice. More details below.

This Monday,  Magda will facilitate and offer an introduction to the book. We will be discussing pages 1-20.

Fragrant Palm Leaves comprises two journals that Thich Nhat Hanh (Thay) kept when he was in his 30s. He wrote the first between 1962 and 1963 when he was a student and research assistant at Princeton and Columbia Universities. The second journal starts in 1964, when Thay returned to Vietnam and ends in 1966, one day before the beginning of his exile. 

Invincible love that makes no enemies

Invincible love that makes no enemies

Dear friends,

This week: we will meet Monday from 7-8:30PM EDT in person at our meditation space (3812 Northampton Street NW), Wednesday morning from 7-8AM EDT online, and Friday 12-1PM EDT in person.

Annie will facilitate Monday night. She shares:  

We will read the Five Mindfulness Trainings together. Reading and practicing the trainings is a way to deepen our understanding of the world and our part in it. 

This week after we read the trainings, we will focus on the First Mindfulness Training: Reverence for Life.

Aware of the suffering caused by the destruction of life, I am committed to cultivating the insight of interbeing and compassion and learning ways to protect the lives of people, animals, plants, and minerals. I am determined not to kill, not to let others kill, and not to support any act of killing in the world, in my thinking, or in my way of life. Seeing that harmful actions arise from anger, fear, greed, and intolerance, which in turn come from dualistic and discriminative thinking, I will cultivate openness, non-discrimination, and non-attachment to views in order to transform violence, fanaticism, and dogmatism in myself and in the world.

Songwriter and Dharma teacher Joe Reilly joins our sangha Monday

Songwriter and Dharma teacher Joe Reilly joins our sangha Monday

Dear friends,

This week: we will meet Monday from 7-8:30PM EDT online, Wednesday morning from 7-8AM EDT in person at our meditation space (3812 Northampton Street NW), and Friday 12-1PM EDT online.

We invite you to join us for online sangha with special guest, singer, songwriter, social worker and ordained Dharma Teacher, Joe Reilly.

Joe has been writing and singing songs with the Plum Village community for many years, and he received the dharma lamp from the Plum Village community in 2021 and wrote about that experience:

As you can see, my insight gatha became an entire song! Singing and songwriting are my primary modes of Dharma expression, and thanks to the encouragement of one of my mentors Peggy Rowe Ward, I sang my gatha and it grew into three verses.

Sangha as nourishment and healing: exploring the fifth mindfulness training together

Sangha as nourishment and healing: exploring the fifth mindfulness training together

Dear friends,

This week: we will meet Monday from 7-8:30PM EDT online, Wednesday morning from 7-8AM EDT in person at our meditation space (3812 Northampton Street NW), and Friday 12-1PM EDT online.

Marie will facilitate Monday night. She shares:  

On Monday, we’ll continue to explore the topic of sangha, which Ellen introduced last week, from the lens of the Fifth Mindfulness training, Nourishment and Healing.  

I was moved by Ellen’s written description, and I’ve been reflecting on sangha and my gratitude for it. To me, sangha inter-is with the Fifth Mindfulness Training, Nourishment and Healing.  The practice of coming to sangha - whether it is here at Opening Heart or elsewhere - is like an anchor, calling me back to my true self.  I know and take comfort in knowing that sangha will accept me just as I am, and that, in turn, helps me to accept and better understand myself. 

What are Love and Engaged Mindfulness asking from you?

What are Love and Engaged Mindfulness asking from you?

Dear Friends,

This week: we will meet Monday from 7-8:30PM EDT in person at our meditation space (3812 Northampton Street NW), Wednesday morning from 7-8AM EDT online, and Friday 12-1PM EDT in person.

On Monday, Annie will facilitate.

We will watch a video of a talk by the Dharma teacher Mitchell Ratner (Thich Nhat Hanh’s student for over 30 years) given last month at the Order of Interbeing retreat at Deer Park Monastery. 

Over the years, our sangha has had many conversations about what it means to be an engaged mindfulness practitioner and how we live our practice in the world. Since October 7, I have heard from several sangha members, worried about statements and activities coming out of Plum Village, ARISE (Awakening through Race Intersectionality and Social Engagement), and Opening Heart – especially those that are calling for peace in Israel and Gaza. 

Planting a Sangha

Planting a Sangha

Dear friends,

This week: we will meet Monday from 7-8:30PM EDT in person at our meditation space (3812 Northampton Street NW), Wednesday morning from 7-8AM EDT online, and Friday 12-1PM EDT in person.

On Monday, Ellen will facilitate.

“The next Buddha will be a sangha.”

— Thich Nhat Hanh (from the Plum Village website)

I’ve recently had the opportunity to experience sangha at a deeper level and think more about it.

What is a sangha?  The word comes from the Sanskrit word for community.  They can be big or small and are a way to carry forward, teach and practice Thay’s teachings.

I realize, after many years of attending the Opening Heart Mindfulness Community Monday gatherings, how much I’ve taken the sangha for granted when it’s actually a rare, precious gift for me and hopefully for you.

Myriad beings at Thich Nhat Hanh's root temple

Myriad beings at Thich Nhat Hanh's root temple

Dear friends,

This week: we will meet Monday from 7-8:30PM EDT online, Wednesday morning from 7-8AM EDT in person at our meditation space (3812 Northampton Street NW), and Friday 12-1PM EDT online.

On Monday night, Magda will facilitate. She will explore the insights of non-duality and interbeing based on her recent experience visiting Thich Nhat Hanh’s (Thay’s) Root Temple in Vietnam, Tú Hiéu, where Thay became ordained as a young man and returned near the time of his continuation. Magda will give the first of a series of sharings on the topic. She will also share some photos she took at the monastery.

Practicing Non-duality with the word AND

Practicing Non-duality with the word AND

Dear friends,

This week: we will meet Monday from 7-8:30PM EDT in person at our meditation space (3812 Northampton Street NW), Wednesday morning from 7-8AM EDT online, and Friday 12-1PM EDT in person.

On Monday, Annie will facilitate.

The word and practice of AND has come up for me in a few places lately.

At a recent retreat at Blue Cliff Monastery, Sister True Vow talked about practicing AND as a pathway to generating happiness, AND as a way to let go of the concepts of right and wrong. 

In my training with Inner Relationship Focusing, we also practice using the word AND in order to welcome all the different parts of ourselves. We may say, “Something in me is angry AND something in me doesn’t like my anger.” 

I really like practicing AND as a way to accept difficult circumstances in my own life without getting overwhelmed. For example, rather than saying only “I have a chronic disease,” I can say, “I have a chronic disease AND right now the medicine for it is working.”

Taking care of ourselves so we can listen deeply

Taking care of ourselves so we can listen deeply

Dear friends,

This week: we will meet Monday from 7-8:30PM EDT online, Wednesday morning from 7-8AM EDT in person at our meditation space (3812 Northampton Street NW), and Friday 12-1PM EDT online.

This Monday night, we will read the Five Mindfulness Trainings and focus our attention on the Fourth Training. Annie and Camille will co-facilitate.

“When people use violent words with us there is a way for us to be able to listen and respond so that the violence can come to an end – the violence can be transformed.” – Sister True Virtue

Annie writes:

The Fourth Mindfulness training suggests that one of the ways we create more suffering is by our “inability to listen to others.” 

My husband and I have been married for nearly 37 years. And over those years, our mindful speech and compassionate listening has been improving, albeit slowly. One very helpful practice has been to stop imagining what he must be thinking while he is talking and instead to simply listen to what he is saying. 

Experiencing Phuong Boi with my Dharma eyes

Experiencing Phuong Boi with my Dharma eyes

Dear friends,

This week: we will meet Monday from 7-8:30PM EDT online, Wednesday morning from 7-8AM EDT in person at the AU Labyrinth in honor of Earth Day, and Friday 12-1PM EDT online.

Magda will facilitate Monday night.

DHARMA EYES

“But when our ‘spiritual eyes’ are opened, we never lose the ability to see the wonder of all dharmas, all things” (Thich Nhat Hanh, Fragrant Palm Leaves, p. 102).

On my recent pilgrimage to Vietnam to commemorate the second anniversary of Thich Nhat Hanh’s (Thay’s) continuation, I do my best to view everything with dharma eyes. My entire experience at Phoung Boi, the retreat founded by Thay at the Dai Lao Mountain in the B’su Danglu forest, feels like an act of mindfulness.

 At the start of the visit, Sister Tue Nghiem asks us to serve as Thay’s continuation: “Wherever we sit, Thay sat at the very spot. Wherever we walk, we are walking in Thay’s footsteps. Let’s enjoy the place with Thay’s feet, Thay’s eyes, Thay’s ears, and Thay’s heart.” Having read Thay’s book Fragrant Palm Leaves, where he describes this hermitage vividly and with nostalgia, I try to take in every detail through my physical and spiritual eyes. Feeling extremely privileged, I aspire, through my writing as well as the accompanying illustration, to share Phuong Boi with those who would have loved to be here but could not.

Love You, Mamma Earth!

Love You, Mamma Earth!

Dear friends,

This week: we will meet Monday from 7-8:30PM EDT in person at our meditation space (3812 Northampton Street NW), Wednesday morning from 7-8AM EDT online, and Friday 12-1PM EDT online.

On Monday, Susie will facilitate.

“The earth is you. You are the earth. When you realize there is no separation, you fall completely in love with this beautiful planet.” - Thich Nhat Hanh

Camping last summer, I took time to lay on the earth like my dog, Bodhi. We got to listen to what Mother Earth was conveying. I had just finished reading Deepak Chopra’s book Abundance: The Path to Inner Wealth, which is about abundance of non-monetary treasures as well as having an open and abundant mindset for life.

Last year in Hawaii, I booked a massage appointment – the first one in many years. My massage therapist is also a healer of many other modalities. 

After the trip, we continued to communicate via Zoom, and I asked questions about the next step in my journey: how I can end my career with a soft landing and potential legacy? She suggested I ask the earth what to do next. Now my meditations include pulling in the earth’s wisdom so I can be more aware of the next right path.

Joy and Letting Go Mindfully

Joy and Letting Go Mindfully

Dear friends,

This week: we will meet Monday from 7-8:30PM EDT online at our meditation space (3812 Northampton Street NW), Wednesday morning from 7-8AM EDT in person, and Friday 12-1PM EDT online.

Monday (April 1) is a newcomers night - learn more and sign up here

Ellen will facilitate Monday night.

I've had the privilege of facilitating a few times this year already. In reviewing my topics and comments, I realized they were all focused on challenges and on difficult emotions. Yet I've been thinking a lot lately about joy and about how mindfulness can encourage my joy. My sense is I rarely experience joy, but reading and listening to Thay’s teachings on joy, I wonder if the joy is there and  I'm not seeing it or allowing myself to experience it.  

Simple joys abound: the blossoming flowers in my garden now, listening to a wonderful song when I"m sitting at my kitchen table working late in the evening and pausing to really hear it, having dinner or coffee with good friends, or appreciating that I'm two blocks away from Rock Creek Park with all its wonderful paths and beauty. 

What does “love” mean?

What does “love” mean?

Dear friends,

This week: we will meet Monday from 7-8:30PM EST in person at our meditation space (3812 Northampton Street NW), Wednesday morning from 7-8AM EST online, and Friday 12-1PM EST in person.

On Monday, Annie will facilitate and we will read the Five Mindfulness Trainings (more info here) and focus on the third mindfulness training, True Love (full text of this training is below). 

The third mindfulness training ends with the words: “Practicing true love, we know that we will continue beautifully into the future.” But what is “true love” exactly?

I have noticed lately that we say, “I love you” more easily and more often to our friends and family than we did when I was a girl. We also say, “I love this book” and “I love this restaurant.” But what does the word love really mean when said so casually?

And what does true love mean in the context of a committed intimate relationship or a close friendship? What if we decide we don’t love that person anymore? Do we have any responsibility to love? Does love allow for loving from a distance?

Dr. Marisela Gomez, Dharma teacher, author and VOLAR co-organizer joins our sangha

Dr. Marisela Gomez, Dharma teacher, author and VOLAR co-organizer joins our sangha

This week we will meet Monday from 7-8:30PM EST online, Wednesday morning from 7-8AM in person at our meditation space (3812 Northampton Street NW), and Friday 12-1PM EST online.

On Monday evening, Magda and Marisela will facilitate.

In commemoration of Black History Month and International Women’s Day, Opening Heart’s Engaged Mindfulness group invited Dr. Marisela B. Gomez to facilitate Monday night. We are honored to have Dr. Gomez, who recently co-authored Healing Our Way Home: Black Buddhist Teachings on Ancestors, Joy, and Liberation with Valerie Brown and Kaira Jewel Lingo.

Dr. Gomez is an Order of Interbeing member, a Plum Village Dharma Teacher, and a community public health activist scholar, who has been organizing in various capacities for equitable and sustainable alternative models for community development for more than 25 years in Baltimore, Maryland. 

Twenty-four brand new hours

Twenty-four brand new hours

Dear friends,

This week: we will meet Monday from 7-8:30PM EST in person at our meditation space (3812 Northampton Street NW), Wednesday morning from 7-8AM EST online, and Friday 12-1PM EST online.

This Monday evening Annie was scheduled to facilitate. However, there’s been a change in schedule and Camille will facilitate.

Annie’s original topic below:

Even in the best of times, it can be challenging to get out of bed and remember to practice mindfulness. But when I remember to start my day with some mental reminders, such as a few mindful breaths or steps, my whole day leans more toward ease and joy. Practicing mindfulness in the morning doesn’t mean we can’t enjoy our favorite coffee drink or I can’t enjoy my new favorite Oolong tea. And it doesn’t mean we have to be all perky and bubbly. (I surely am not.) 

Am I really listening?

Am I really listening?

This week we will meet Monday from 7-8:30PM EST online, Wednesday morning from 7-8AM in person at our meditation space (3812 Northampton Street NW), and Friday 12-1PM EST online.

On Monday evening, Camille will facilitate.

The fourth mindfulness training (of the Five Mindfulness Trainings, or Five Precepts, developed during the time of the Buddha) is the practice of deep listening and loving speech. It teaches us that when we speak lovingly and listen compassionately, we can help relieve suffering and promote reconciliation and peace, both in ourselves and in others. Thich Nhat Hanh (Thay) teaches that with compassionate listening, you listen with only one purpose: to “help him or her to empty his heart.” Even if they say things that are full of wrong perceptions, you can give them a chance to speak and to suffer less.  

The Habit Energy of Worrying

The Habit Energy of Worrying

Dear friends,

This week we will meet Monday from 7-8:30PM EST in person at our meditation space (3812 Northampton Street NW), Wednesday morning from 7-8AM EST online, and Friday 12-1PM EST online.

This Monday evening Camille will facilitate. Camille shares:

I have had the habit energy of worrying over many things. Most of the time my worry has stemmed from fear of things that might happen in the future. The fear of my kids getting sick, of my parents dying, and the fear of change have often held me captive, so much so that I begin to feel it not only in my thoughts and mind but also in my body. The result of this can cause restless sleep, inconsistent eating habits, and anxiety, all contributing to a very tired body and mind.

Creating space to hold Suffering

Creating space to hold Suffering

This week we will meet Monday from 7-8:30PM EST online, Wednesday morning from 7-8AM in person at our meditation space (3812 Northampton Street NW), and Friday 12-1PM EST online.

On Monday evening, Marie will facilitate.

Recently my practice has been a bit different. I’ve been touching peace and joy more than usual so that I have more capacity to hold, witness and sometimes transform suffering. As I write this, I’m smiling. I realize how odd these words would have sounded to my younger self, who was raised to be endlessly empathetic, often burnt myself out and felt guilty about my good fortune.

What, specifically, have I been doing?

The power and gift of awareness

The power and gift of awareness

Dear friends,

This week we will meet Monday from 7-8:30PM EST in person at our meditation space (3812 Northampton Street NW), Wednesday morning from 7-8AM EST online, and Friday 12-1PM EST online.

This Monday evening Ellen will facilitate. Ellen shares:

Lately,  I’ve been thinking about awareness, its connection to mindfulness and the power of awareness in bringing more compassion, connection and pausing.

In Thay’s book, Peace Is Every Step,  he has an entry called “Nourishing Awareness in Each Moment.”  He talks about the “lures” in life, the things that lead us to become “lost and scattered.”  I recognized the “lures” or distractions that pull me in different directions every day. They pull me away from myself and from true, compassionate connection with others. 

Joyfully aligning our life with the Five Mindfulness Trainings

Joyfully aligning our life with the Five Mindfulness Trainings

This week we will meet Monday from 7-8:30PM EST online, Wednesday morning from 7-8AM in person at our meditation space (3812 Northampton Street NW), and Friday 12-1PM EST online at our meditation space.

Annie will facilitate, and shares:

Dear Friends,

This week we will meet online. Annie will facilitate and we read the Five Mindfulness Trainings. This week we will have two special guests from our community – Rachel Switala and Conor Lane - who have just received the Five Mindfulness trainings at a ceremony on January 6 in Oakton, Virginia.

The FIve Mindfulness trainings are ethical statements that can help us align our life with our deepest intentions. The trainings are based on the practices of understanding and loving kindness toward ourselves, our communities, and the world.