Sunday, January 11, 2026

VIa FB

 


When Hope Meets Peace...
A profound moment, quietly captured on video — a gentleman stands before Venerable Bhikkhu Paññākāra, and suddenly, words fall away. His eyes fill. His hand presses to his heart. And then, overcome by something deeper than explanation, he breaks down and embraces him.
We may never know what was carried in his heart at that moment.
Watch the video in the pinned comment.
Perhaps it was hope he had been searching for, long and silently.
Perhaps it was peace he had forgotten was even possible.
Perhaps it was simply the relief of realizing — I am not alone.
Whatever it was, it was real.
It was human.
It was unmistakably beautiful.
Moments like this are why the Walk for Peace continues across the United States — not as a protest, not as a demand, but as a gentle presence. A living reminder that peace does not arrive through force or noise, but through compassion made visible.
This walk is for the hearts that are tired.
For those carrying grief they’ve never spoken aloud.
For those who need to know that peace is still possible…
That hope still exists…
That loving-kindness has not disappeared from this world.
Peace and compassion begin when we truly see one another — with softness, without judgment, without the need to harm through words or actions. We choose to listen more than we speak, to understand rather than to win. And when differences arise, we do not turn away; we reach out instead.
Love does not need to be grand to be powerful — only sincere.
Compassion does not need to be loud — only consistent.
When the heart becomes calm, peace is born within.
And from there, it spreads — quietly, steadily —
from one human heart to another.
This is why we walk.
The Walk for Peace is a 120-day, 2,300-mile pilgrimage across the United States, begun by Buddhist monks from the Huong Dao Vipassana Bhavana Center in Fort Worth, Texas, and heading to Washington, D.C., to spread peace, compassion, and loving-kindness through quiet presence rather than slogans or demands. Accompanying them is Aloka the Peace Dog, a rescue dog whose steady steps and gentle spirit have become a beloved symbol of the journey. As of now, they have already walked over 70 days along this sacred path, moving through multiple states while touching hearts with each step.

VIa FB


 

San Francisco Buddhist Center


 

Saturday, January 10, 2026

Meditation Month Day 10

 

Day 10
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PRACTICE PROMPT

What is it that cannot be known?
 
Notice that anything we can know is always partial and limited. The total, the limitless, and the unconditional can never be grasped by the thinking mind. A mind that seeks an answer cannot arrive at unconditional freedom, because thought can only divide reality into fragments and then cling to those fragments as fixed views.

When we clearly see the limits of thinking, striving naturally softens, and we can rest in the open space of not-knowing. Ask yourself: What is it that cannot be known?
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Via Daily Dharma: What Is Sitting?

 

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What Is Sitting?

What do we mean by “just sitting”? “Sitting” means sitting, walking, working, eating, speaking, and being silent. “Just” means that there is nothing in the world that is not sitting.

Barry Magid, “Uselessness”


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What the Karma?
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