Wednesday, May 1
Forget Christmas, let every day be Thanksgiving!

Thanksgiving is here again in the States and, although I was not brought up with it and often barely eat more than a tofurkey sandwich unless people invite me over (hint?!), it has become my favorite holiday. People everywhere stop to count their blessings, and this makes them feel grateful and appreciative, so it is a good day. (Not for turkeys, however, not a good day for them at all. I don’t like the role that turkeys are forced to play. So p’raps don’t invite me over for the meal part after all… or the football… but the rest of it, yeah!)

Back in the day, from what I’m told, the first settlers gave thanks for good harvests. Nowadays most of us are a good deal more removed from the source of our food, which means that what it takes to get food onto our plates every day is hidden from us unless we really stop to think about it. But although I may not be thinking about the background of my frozen peas as I plop them in the pan and then gobble them down with my tofurkey, I am just as dependent on those who planted, grew, harvested, packaged and delivered my food as the early settlers were. In fact, the chances are that these days a good deal more people are involved in the process of getting food into my stomach to sustain my life for another 24 hours. On Thanksgiving we have a better chance of remembering this, and the thought pleases us for we feel supported.

I’d like to have Thanksgiving every day (no turkey, no football, no lines at the airport, but the good bits!). And I can, there is nothing stopping me. For one thing, I can remember how lucky I am to have this precious human life. For another, I can remember how this precious human life and every single one of my needs and enjoyments come from the kindness of others.

Lucky me
prize: precious human life

In the meditation on our precious human life we count our blessings because this life is right now giving us an unprecedented opportunity to make serious spiritual progress even on a daily basis, yet it is so almost unbelievably rare — a fact that becomes obvious if we compare our situation to that of most other living beings. Even the simplest things in life are precious, such as being able to walk or talk or write or taste, something we often don’t realize until we no longer have them due to sickness, disability or death. Traditionally in Buddhism we count 18 blessings, called the eight freedoms and the ten endowments – chances are you have every one of these (if you want to know for sure, you can check out Joyful Path of Good Fortune.

Don’t let this be true for you: “You don’t know what you’ve got till its gone.”

Thanks to others!

Then in the kindness of others meditation we contemplate in as much personal detail as we can where exactly each of these blessings comes from?! Quick answer: Others.

Geshe Kelsang says:

Our body is the result not only of our parents but of countless beings who have provided it with food, shelter and so forth. It is because we have this present body with human faculties that we are able to enjoy all the pleasures and opportunities of human life… Our skills and abilities all come from the kindness of others—we had to be taught how to eat, how to walk, how to talk, and how to read and write… Our spiritual development and the pure happiness of full enlightenment also depend on the kindness of living beings. ~ Transform Your Life

Great full

Remembering all this makes us feel grateful. We feel “full” for all that is “great”! We need gratitude to feel good about our lives and also as a foundation for love and compassion for others. Whenever we recall any kindness someone has shown us, studies and our own experience show that we feel instantly better, and closer to them. (A 15th century etymology for gratitude is “pleasing to the mind”). Gratitude predisposes us to many positive states of mind. So when we take a little time to itemize all the kindness we have received since the day we were born, we can overflow with happiness! As we fill up with happiness, it seems to push all our negative, selfish minds out, for there isn’t room for both – like scum being pushed out the top of a bottle when we fill it up with clean liquid.

On the other hand, when we feel depleted, exhausted or ungrateful it is easy for the negative moods to settle in. We feel we are lacking something, hollow, and project that on the world around us, which feels bereft of happiness and support. We can develop attachment for external objects to fill us up, and if we see others’ experiencing good things we can easily feel envy for the things we feel we don’t have.

“Hang on a minute”, I hear some of you say. “I don’t have that much to be thankful for – my life is in fact a huge mess and it is all their fault.” If we find ourselves pursuing this depressing line of thought, we can go back to the precious human life meditation. To be able to even think about these things means we must have a precious human life – so with that established we can stop dwelling on what is wrong with our lives and instead remember everything we have going for us. Then we can ask ourselves where each of our freedoms and opportunities actually comes from. (Answer above!)

We choose what we think about, so we might as well choose to smell the roses rather than stick our nose in the stinky garbage can.

Happy Thanksgiving to you too, Mister Turkey

Happy Thanksgiving everyone! Please give this article to anyone who might like it.

(Postscript: despite the title of this article, Christmas can be cool too… more later.)

Please like Kadampa Life on Facebook if you do.

Based on 40 years' experience, I write about applying meditation and modern Buddhism to improve and transform our everyday lives and societies. I try to make it accessible to everyone anywhere who wants more inner peace and profound tools to help our world, not just Buddhists. Do make comments any time and I'll write you back!

23 Comments

    • Luna Kadampa – Based on 40 years' experience, I write about applying meditation and modern Buddhism to improve and transform our everyday lives and societies. I try to make it accessible to everyone anywhere who wants more inner peace and profound tools to help our world, not just Buddhists. Do make comments any time and I'll write you back!

      Gotta start with us, today. Then it’ll spread.

  1. kazzzab – I’m a 50 year old free spirit these days. I’ve been married and had 2 fantastic girls who make me proud every day. I’ve always worked around family. I’ve always had a background process within my awareness. I qualified as a counsellor in 2007, divorced in 2009, and started to renovate houses while working in a local building society for steady, reliable income. I eventually realised the external renovations were a parallel process with my internal journey. I’ve studied Buddhism, was brought up a Roman Catholic and find spiritual teachers who’ve discovered enlightenment on earth and learning from our life situation and people we meet, for there are no accidents, the teaching that takes us to our higher power, and I have always strived to be the best person I can be. What would I like to do to make a difference while I’m fit and healthy enough to do it, and it has to be something amazing? In 2016, I entered the Great North Run representing the Newcastle Building Society’s annual charity, The Percy Hedley Foundation. I couldn’t even run round the block in March and by September I was running 10 miles, with the help of These Girls Can Run, a local running club in my area. This showed me I could do anything I put my mind to. I followed my heart and from talking to Sophie, my oldest daughter, who has worked in the National Careers Service, I decided to be an English teacher. In 2018, I graduated in an FdA, which is a foundation degree in Education and Training for Language Specialists. On my Placement I taught functional skills English for the first year and ESOL in the second. I taught at Centrepoint for 6 months, a charity for homeless young people. I saw the difference learning English made to the students lives. They needed the language to integrate into the UK, to find work. I learned that English was the global language and I had a qualification and was an English native speaker, and there was a large demand for those things worldwide. My 25 year old and my 22 year old daughters were pursuing their careers. Sophie has a degree and is working as a support worker, heading toward social work, and Hollie has a degree and is doing a Masters in Mass Communication. She helps local businesses improve their turnover by publicising their offer and more, she has done proof reading work, and website media work, to maximise business potential. Hollie set up this blog. She’s so clever. I’m so proud of her. I came up with the perfect plan. My tenant served notice on the flat. I moved the girls into the flat, put a long term tenant into my house and moved out to Cambodia to teach Khmer children English and have the opportunity to help them have a more prosperous future. Sophie manages properties in her job so she also manages mine. I trust her implicitly and she makes me proud everyday. I can still be back home for helping with grand children, but this time is my chance to be free to pursue my life changing goals. Isn’t this amazing! Why not follow my journey... next stop Italy! Ciao for now! ... Lock down rudely interrupted my processes both external (obviously) and internal. See my new bio site on Word Press here https://wordpress.com/site-editor/kazzzab.wordpress.com to catch up with Karen Bell, Geordie Hypnotherapist, mind-changer, mother, woman.

    I’d like a Kadampa Life article on alcohol please.

    I’m very close to excluding alcohol from my life. My only reluctance is that I will be excluding myself from sociable “get togethers.” There are no people in my life who do not use alcohol as a sociable influence. I’m angry with it. It takes lives, childhoods and we need to wake up to the psychological harm it does.

    • Luna Kadampa – Based on 40 years' experience, I write about applying meditation and modern Buddhism to improve and transform our everyday lives and societies. I try to make it accessible to everyone anywhere who wants more inner peace and profound tools to help our world, not just Buddhists. Do make comments any time and I'll write you back!

      I guess it could be an article on overcoming addictions?

    • Luna Kadampa – Based on 40 years' experience, I write about applying meditation and modern Buddhism to improve and transform our everyday lives and societies. I try to make it accessible to everyone anywhere who wants more inner peace and profound tools to help our world, not just Buddhists. Do make comments any time and I'll write you back!

      Every day!! 🙂

    • Luna Kadampa – Based on 40 years' experience, I write about applying meditation and modern Buddhism to improve and transform our everyday lives and societies. I try to make it accessible to everyone anywhere who wants more inner peace and profound tools to help our world, not just Buddhists. Do make comments any time and I'll write you back!

      Thank you Sharon!

  2. I am grateful and thankful for all those kind dharma teachers and spirtitual guides, who, bound by compassion, made great effort to bring the precious dharma to us, over the centuries, from far away lands, in keeping with a pure lineage. We are extraordinarily fortunate that these teachings and kind teachers have appeared in our world. I am grateful to you too Luna. Peace and love,

    • Luna Kadampa – Based on 40 years' experience, I write about applying meditation and modern Buddhism to improve and transform our everyday lives and societies. I try to make it accessible to everyone anywhere who wants more inner peace and profound tools to help our world, not just Buddhists. Do make comments any time and I'll write you back!

      It is amazing when we stop to think about it how the Dharma has managed to travel over here through time and space, and we have managed one way or another to run into it 🙂 Thank you for the reminder, Joe. xx

  3. eatupsecondhelpings

    When my 10-year-old son had his appendix out a few years ago, and had to eat jelly and clear fluids for two days, he said “I’ll never take eating properly for granted ever again!”

    He does take it for granted now, of course, like most of us do – but every now and then he reminds me of what he said that day!

    Btw – tofurkey ???!!!

    • Luna Kadampa – Based on 40 years' experience, I write about applying meditation and modern Buddhism to improve and transform our everyday lives and societies. I try to make it accessible to everyone anywhere who wants more inner peace and profound tools to help our world, not just Buddhists. Do make comments any time and I'll write you back!

      Good example of noticing what we have going for us… !

      Tofurkey is turkey made from tofu, tastes alright actually!

    • Luna Kadampa – Based on 40 years' experience, I write about applying meditation and modern Buddhism to improve and transform our everyday lives and societies. I try to make it accessible to everyone anywhere who wants more inner peace and profound tools to help our world, not just Buddhists. Do make comments any time and I'll write you back!

      😉

  4. I totally agree with Vajra Sister, and thanks also for all your effort in the generation of this. May you have a happy Thanksgiving every day.

    • Luna Kadampa – Based on 40 years' experience, I write about applying meditation and modern Buddhism to improve and transform our everyday lives and societies. I try to make it accessible to everyone anywhere who wants more inner peace and profound tools to help our world, not just Buddhists. Do make comments any time and I'll write you back!

      Thank you so much!

    • Luna Kadampa – Based on 40 years' experience, I write about applying meditation and modern Buddhism to improve and transform our everyday lives and societies. I try to make it accessible to everyone anywhere who wants more inner peace and profound tools to help our world, not just Buddhists. Do make comments any time and I'll write you back!

      it sure is, but were you referring to something in particular?

  5. I have looked forward to Thanksgiving holiday all my life. Whether I have enjoyed the experience is another matter. I know now that my Dharma practice has changed the way I look at the celebration. I must admit I indulge in eating the turkey. I struggle with this all the time and on this holiday I just like eating turkey. My attitude is this – I am so thankful for knowing I have a mind. I am thankful I can try to control my mind each and everyday. Sitting at a dinner table with a dozen or so other uncontrolled minds certainly provides the edge of experience I desire. I prepare myself for the dinner by indulging in tantric practice for as many hours as i can and then off I go to the pureland for a wonderful feast. Sometimes I forget about the enlightened being I have generated myself as – and get caught up on getting my share of all the fixings. I am thankful to be able to practice patience and work on my fear. Thanksgiving Day dinner is a wonderful stage for the play of emptiness to appear. I am too fixated on my items of attachment and repulsed by items of aversion to enjoy the play. This year i will try harder. Thanks for the post – will be thinking about my precious human life now too!

    • Luna Kadampa – Based on 40 years' experience, I write about applying meditation and modern Buddhism to improve and transform our everyday lives and societies. I try to make it accessible to everyone anywhere who wants more inner peace and profound tools to help our world, not just Buddhists. Do make comments any time and I'll write you back!

      Thanks Ike. It is true that Tantric techniques for transforming attachment into bliss can be a very helpful, even vital, way for transforming enjoyments; but we have to be real careful that we don’t use it to just increase our attachment or justify our indulgences. If in any doubt, best to stick to the minds of non-attachment and contentment as taught in the stages of the path 🙂

      • Luna, you are so right what you say about attachment. I have found myself getting attached to the idea of not being attached. I try to transform aversion too! I have found them to be two sides of the same coin. If we stay with unpleasant feelings long enough and don’t run from them they resemble bliss and can be blurred. I learned this at a Vipassana 10-day retreat. My leg pain eventually disappeared until 5 minutes before the end of the hour. I became attached to the idea the pain would end and the pain became unbearable for those 5 minutes! Have a great holiday.

    • Luna Kadampa – Based on 40 years' experience, I write about applying meditation and modern Buddhism to improve and transform our everyday lives and societies. I try to make it accessible to everyone anywhere who wants more inner peace and profound tools to help our world, not just Buddhists. Do make comments any time and I'll write you back!

      🙂

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