On the Path with Thay A longtime student reflects on 30 years with the Vietnamese master.
Back in the ’80s, I had a friend named Michael Attie, a lay Zen
practitioner known in the media as the “lingerie monk” because he once
organized a sitting group on the roof of his business, Playmates of
Hollywood, one of the world’s largest lingerie stores. Thanks to his
persistence one Sunday in 1987, I agreed to accompany him to see a
Vietnamese Buddhist monk and antiwar activist giving a talk under the
“teaching tree” of the Ojai Foundation, 90 minutes by car from Los
Angeles. The Foundation was created by Joan Halifax, then an
anthropologist who worked with Joseph Campbell, the mythologist and
writer widely known for his now often-repeated slogan “Follow your
bliss.” It was meant to bring Native American teachers and Buddhist
masters together to teach in a natural power spot facing the
dramatically sculpted Topa Topa mountains.
From the moment that I laid eyes on Thich Nhat Hanh (known to
students as “Thay,” meaning “teacher” in Vietnamese), I was struck by
how quietly impassioned he was. I will always remember how he began the
talk: “Dear brothers and sisters—our appointment with life is only
available in the present moment.” One had the sense that this gentle yet
vehement monk was offering himself as a living example of a Buddha for
us to scrutinize.
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