Aware of the suffering caused by unmindful consumption, I am committed to cultivating good health, both physical and mental, for myself, my family, and my society by practicing mindful eating, drinking, and consuming. I will practice looking deeply into how I consume the Four Kinds of Nutriments, namely edible foods, sense impressions, volition, and consciousness. I am determined not to gamble, or to use alcohol, drugs, or any other products which contain toxins, such as certain websites, electronic games, TV programs, films, magazines, books, and conversations. I will practice coming back to the present moment to be in touch with the refreshing, healing and nourishing elements in me and around me, not letting regrets and sorrow drag me back into the past nor letting anxieties, fear, or craving pull me out of the present moment. I am determined not to try to cover up loneliness, anxiety, or other suffering by losing myself in consumption. I will contemplate interbeing and consume in a way that preserves peace, joy, and well-being in my body and consciousness, and in the collective body and consciousness of my family, my society and the Earth. Aware of the suffering caused by unmindful
consumption, I vow to cultivate good health, both
physical and mental, for myself, my family, and my
society by practicing mindful eating, drinking, and
consuming. I vow to ingest only items that preserve
peace, well-being, and joy in my body, in my
consciousness, and in the collective body and
consciousness of my family and society. I am
determined not to use alcohol or any other intoxicant
or to ingest foods or other items that contain toxins,
such as certain TV programs, magazines, books,
films, and conversations. I am aware that to damage
my body or my consciousness with these poisons is
to betray my ancestors, my parents, my society, and
future generations. I will work to transform violence,
fear, anger, and confusion in myself and in society
by practicing a diet for myself and for society. I
understand that a proper diet is crucial for self-transformation
and for the transformation of society. Whenever we take a bath or a shower, we can look
at our body and see that it is a gift from our parents
and their parents. Even though many of us do not
want to have much to do with our parents--they may
have hurt us so much--when we look deeply, we see
that we cannot drop all identification with them. As
we wash each part of our body, we can ask
ourselves, "To whom does this body belong? Who
has transmitted this body to me? What has been
transmitted?" Meditating this way, we will discover
that there are three components: the transmitter,
that which is transmitted, and the one who receives
the transmission. The transmitter is our parents. We
are the continuation of our parents and their
ancestors. The object of transmission is our body
itself. And the one who receives the transmission is
us. If we continue to meditate on this, we will see
clearly that the transmitter, the object transmitted,
and the receiver are one. All three are present in our
body. When we are deeply in touch with the present
moment, we can see that all our ancestors and all
future generations are present in us. Seeing this, we
will know what to do and what not to do--for
ourselves, our ancestors, our children, and their
children. At first, when you look at your father, you probably
do not see that you and your father are one. You
may be angry at him for many things. But the
moment you understand and love your father, you
realize the emptiness of transmission. You realize
that to love yourself is to love your father, and to
love your father is to love yourself. To keep your
body and your consciousness healthy is to do it for
your ancestors, your parents, and future
generations. You do it for your society and for
everyone, not just yourself. The first thing you have
to bear in mind is that you are not practicing this as
a separate entity. Whatever you ingest, you are
doing it for everyone. All of your ancestors and all
future generations are ingesting it with you. That is
the true meaning of the emptiness of the
transmission. The Fifth Precept should be practiced
in this spirit. There are people who drink alcohol and get drunk,
who destroy their bodies, their families, their society.
They should refrain from drinking. But you who have
been having a glass of wine every week during the
last thirty years without doing any harm to yourself,
why should you stop that? What is the use of
practicing this precept if drinking alcohol does not
harm you or other people? Although you have not
harmed yourself during the last thirty years by
drinking just one or two glasses of wine every week,
the fact is that it may have an effect on your
children, your grandchildren, and your society. We
only need to look deeply in order to see it. You are
practicing not for yourself alone, but for everyone.
Your children might have a propensity for alcoholism
and, seeing you drinking wine every week, one of
them may become alcoholic in the future. If you
abandon your two glasses of wine, it is to show your
children, your friends, and your society that your life
is not only for yourself. Your life is for your
ancestors, future generations, and also your society.
To stop drinking two glasses of wine every week is a very deep practice, even if it has not brought you
any harm. That is the insight of a bodhisattva who
knows that everything she does is done for all her
ancestors and future generations. The emptiness of
transmission is the basis of the Fifth Precept. The
use of drugs by so many young people should also
be stopped with the same kind of insight. In modern life, people think that their body belongs
to them and they can do anything they want to it.
"We have the right to live our own lives." When you
make such a declaration, the law supports you. This
is one of the manifestations of individualism. But,
according to the teaching of emptiness, your body is
not yours. Your body belongs to your ancestors,
your parents, and future generations. It also belongs
to society and to all the other living beings. All of
them have come together to bring about the
presence of this body--the trees, clouds, everything.
Keeping your body healthy is to express gratitude to
the whole cosmos, to all ancestors, and also not to
betray the future generations. We practice this
precept for the whole cosmos, the whole society. If
we are healthy, everyone can benefit from it--not
only everyone in the society of men and women, but
everyone in the society of animals, plants, and
minerals. This is a bodhisattva precept. When we
practice the Five Precepts we are already on the
path of a bodhisattva. When we are able to get out of the shell of our small
self and see that we are interrelated to everyone and
everything, we see that our every act is linked with
the whole of humankind, the whole cosmos. To keep
yourself healthy is to be kind to your ancestors, your
parents, the future generations, and also your
society. Health is not only bodily health, but also
mental health. The Fifth Precept is about health and
healing. "Aware of the suffering caused by unmindful
consumption, I vow to cultivate good health, both
physical and mental, for myself, my family, and my
society..." Because you are not doing it only for
yourself, to stop drinking one or two glasses of wine
a week is truly an act of a bodhisattva. You do it
everyone. At a reception, when someone offers you
a glass of wine, you can smile and decline, "No,
thank you. I do not drink alcohol. I would be grateful
if you would bring me a glass of juice or water." You
do it gently, with a smile. This is very helpful. You set
an example for many friends, including many
children who are present. Although that can be done
in a very polite, quiet way, it is truly the act of a
bodhisattva, setting an example by your own life. Everything a mother eats, drinks, worries about, or
fears will have an effect on the fetus inside her.
Even when the child inside is still tiny, everything is
in it. If the young mother is not aware of the nature
of interbeing, she may cause damage to both herself
and her child at the same time. If she drinks alcohol,
she will destroy, to some extent, the brain cells in
her fetus. Modern research has proven this. Mindful consumption is the object of this precept.
We are what we consume. If we look deeply into the
items that we consume every day, we will come to
know our own nature very well. We have to eat,
drink, consume, but if we do it unmindfully, we may
destroy our bodies and our consciousness, showing
ingratitude toward our ancestors, our parents, and
future generations. When we eat mindfully we are in close touch with
the food. The food we eat comes to us from nature,
from living beings, and from the cosmos. To touch it
with our mindfulness is to show our gratitude. Eating
in mindfulness can be a great joy. We pick up our
food with our fork, look at it for a second before
putting it into our mouth, and then chew it carefully
and mindfully, at least fifty times. If we practice this,
we will be in touch with the entire cosmos. Being in touch also means knowing whether toxins
are present in the food. We can recognize food as
healthy or not thanks to our mindfulness. Before
eating, members of a family can practice breathing
in and out and looking at the food on the table. One
person can pronounce the name of each dish,
"potatoes," "salad," and so on. Calling something by
its name helps us touch it deeply and see its true
nature. At the same time, mindfulness reveals to us
the presence or absence of toxins in each dish.
Children enjoy doing this if we show them how.
Mindful eating is a good education. If you practice
this way for some time, you will find that you will eat
more carefully, and your practice of mindful eating
will be an example for others. It is an art to eat in a
way that brings mindfulness into our life. We can have a careful diet for our body, and we can
also have a careful diet for our consciousness, our
mental health. We need to refrain from ingesting the
kinds of intellectual "food" that bring toxins into our
consciousness. Some TV programs, for example,
educate us and help us to lead a healthier life, and
we should make time to watch programs like these.
But other programs bring us toxins, and we need to
refrain from watching them. This can be a practice
for everyone in the family. We know that smoking cigarettes is not good for our
health. We have worked hard to get the
manufacturers to print a line on a pack of cigarettes:
"WARNING, SMOKING MAY BE HAZARDOUS TO
YOUR HEALTH." That is a strong statement, but it
was necessary because advertisements to promote
smoking are very convincing. They give young people the idea that if they don't smoke, they are not
really alive. These advertisements link smoking with
nature, springtime, expensive cars, beautiful men
and women, and high standards of living. One could
believe that if you don't smoke or drink alcohol, you
will not have any happiness at all in this life. This
kind of advertising is dangerous; it penetrates into
our unconscious. There are so many wonderful and
healthy things to eat and drink. We have to show
how this kind of propaganda misleads people. The warning on cigarette packs is not enough. We
have to stand up, write articles, and do whatever we
can to step up campaigns against smoking and
drinking alcohol. We are going in the right direction.
At last it is possible to take an airplane flight without
suffering from cigarette smoke. We have to make
more effort in these directions. I know that drinking wine runs deep in Western
culture. In the ceremony of the Eucharist and the
Passover seder, wine is an important element. But I
have spoken to priests and rabbis about this, and
they have told me it is possible to substitute grape
juice for the wine. Even if we don't drink at all, we
can still get killed on the streets by a drunk driver. To
persuade one person to refrain from drinking is to
make the world safer for us all. Sometimes we don't need to eat or drink as much as
we do, but it has become a kind of addiction. We
feel so lonely. Loneliness is one of the afflictions of
modern life. It is similar to the Third and Fourth
Precepts--we feel lonely, so we engage in
conversation, or even in a sexual relationship,
hoping that the feeling of loneliness will go away.
Drinking and eating can also be the result of
loneliness. You want to drink or overeat in order to
forget your loneliness, but what you eat may bring
toxins into your body. When you are lonely, you
open the refrigerator, watch TV, read magazines or
novels, or pick up the telephone to talk. But
unmindful consumption always makes things worse. There may be a lot of violence, hatred, and fear in a
film. If we spend one hour looking at that film, we will
water the seeds of violence, hatred, and fear in us.
We do that, and we let our children do that, too.
Therefore we should have a family meeting to
discuss an intelligent policy concerning television
watching. We may have to label our TV sets the
same way we have labelled cigarettes: "WARNING:
WATCHING TELEVISION CAN BE HAZARDOUS
TO YOUR HEALTH." That is the truth. Some
children have joined gangs, and many more are very
violent, partly because they have seen a lot of
violence on television. We must have an intelligent
policy concerning the use of television in our family. We should arrange our schedules so that our family
has time to benefit from the many healthy and
beautiful programs on TV. We do not have to
destroy our television set; we only have to use it with
wisdom and mindfulness. This can be discussed
among the family and the community. There are a
number of things we can do, such as asking the TV
stations to establish healthier programming, or
suggesting to manufacturers to offer television sets
that receive only stations that broadcast healthy,
educational programs, like PBS. During the war in
Vietnam, the American army dropped hundreds of
thousands of radio sets in the jungles that could
receive only one station, the one that made
propaganda for the anticommunist side. This is not
psychological warfare, but I think many families
would welcome a TV set that would allow us to see
only healthy programs. I hope you will write to TV
manufacturers and TV stations to express your
ideas about this. We need to be protected because the toxins are
overwhelming. They are destroying our society, our
families, and ourselves. We have to use everything
in our power to protect ourselves. Discussions on
this subject will bring about important ideas, such as
to how to protect ourselves from destructive
television broadcasts. We also have to discuss in
our families and communities which magazines that
we and our children enjoy reading, and we should
boycott those magazines that spill toxins into our
society. Not only should we refrain from reading
them, but we should also make an effort to warn
people of the danger of reading and consuming
these kinds of products. The same is true of books
and conversations. Because we are lonely, we want to have
conversations, but our conversations can also bring
about a lot of toxins. From time to time, after
speaking with someone, we feel paralyzed by what
we have just heard. Mindfulness will allow us to stop
having the kinds of conversations that bring us more
toxins. Psychotherapists are those who listen deeply to the
sufferings of their clients. If they do not know how to
practice to neutralize and transform the pain and
sorrow in themselves, they will not be able to remain
fresh and healthy in order to sustain themselves for
a long time. The exercise I propose has three points: First, look
deeply into your body and your consciousness and
identify the kinds of toxins that are already in you.
We each have to be our own doctor not only for our
bodies, but also for our minds. After we identify
these toxins, we can try to expel them. One way is to
drink a lot of water. Another is to practice massage,
to encourage the blood to come to the spot where the toxins are, so the blood can wash them away. A
third is to breathe deeply air that is fresh and clean.
This brings more oxygen into the blood and helps it
expel the toxins in our bodies. There are
mechanisms in our bodies that try to neutralize and
expel these substances, but our bodies may be too
weak to do the job by themselves. While doing these
things, we have to stop ingesting more toxins. At the same time, we look into our consciousness to
see what kinds of toxins are already in there. We
have a lot of anger, despair, fear, hatred, craving,
and jealousy--all these things were described by the
Buddha as poisons. The Buddha spoke of the three
basic poisons as anger, hatred, and delusion. There
are many more than that, and we have to recognize
their presence in us. Our happiness depends on our
ability to transform them. We have not practiced, and
so we have been carried away by our unmindful lifestyles.
The quality of our life depends very much on
the amount of peace and joy that can be found in
our bodies and consciousness. If there are too many
poisons in our bodies and consciousness, the peace
and joy in us will not be strong enough to make us
happy. So the first step is to identify and recognize
the poisons that are already in us. The second step of the practice is to be mindful of
what we are ingesting into our bodies and
consciousness. What kind of toxins am I putting into
my body today? What films am I watching today?
What book am I reading? What magazine am I
looking at? What kind of conversations am I having?
Try to recognize the toxins. The third part of the practice is to prescribe for
yourself a kind of diet. Aware of the fact that there
are this many toxins in my body and consciousness,
aware of the fact that I am ingesting this and that
toxin into my body and consciousness every day,
making myself sick and causing suffering to my
beloved ones, I am determined to prescribe for
myself a proper diet. I vow to ingest only items that
preserve well-being, peace, and joy in my body and
my consciousness. I am determined not to ingest
more toxins into my body and consciousness. Therefore, I will refrain from ingesting into my body
and consciousness these things, and I will make a
list of them. We know that there are many items that
are nutritious, healthy, and delightful that we can
consume every day. When we refrain from drinking
alcohol, there are so many delicious and wholesome
alternatives: fruit juices, teas, mineral waters. We
don't have to deprive ourselves of the joys of living,
not at all. There are many beautiful, informative, and
entertaining programs on television. There are many
excellent books and magazines to read. There are
many wonderful people and many healthy subjects
to talk about. By vowing to consume only items that
preserve our well-being, peace, and joy, and the
well-being, peace, and joy of our family and society,
we need not deprive ourselves of the joys of living. Practicing this third exercise brings us deep peace
and joy.
Practicing a diet is the essence of this precept. Wars
and bombs are the products of our consciousness
individually and collectively. Our collective
consciousness has so much violence, fear, craving,
and hatred in it, it can manifest in wars and bombs.
The bombs are the product of our fear. Because
others have powerful bombs, we try to make bombs
even more powerful. Then the other nations hear
that we have powerful bombs, and they try to make
even more powerful bombs. Removing the bombs is
not enough. Even if we could transport all the bombs
to a distant planet, we would still not be safe,
because the roots of the wars and the bombs are
still intact in our collective consciousness.
Transforming the toxins in our collective
consciousness is the true way to uproot war. When we saw the video of Rodney King being
beaten on the streets of Los Angeles, we did not
understand why the five policemen had to beat a
defenseless person like that again and again. We
saw the violence, hatred, and fear in the policemen.
But it is not the problem of the five policemen alone.
Their act was the manifestation of our collective
consciousness. They are not the only ones who are
violent and full of hatred and fear. Most of us are like
that. There is so much violence in all big cities, not
only Los Angeles, but also San Francisco, New
York, Washington, D.C., Chicago, Tokyo, Paris, and
elsewhere. Every morning, when going to work,
policemen say, "I have to be careful or I may be
killed. I will be unable to return to my family." A
policeman practices fear every day, and because of
that, he may do things that are quite unwise.
Sometimes there is no real danger, but because he
suspects he may be shot, he takes his gun and
shoots first. He may shoot a child playing with a toy
gun. One week before Rodney King was beaten, a
policewoman in Los Angeles was shot in the face
and killed. It is natural that the police in the area
became angry when they heard this, and they all
went to the funeral to demonstrate their anger and
hatred to society and to the administration for not
providing them with enough safety. The government
is not safe either--presidents and prime ministers get
assassinated. Because society is like this,
policemen and policewomen are like that. "This is,
because that is. This is like this, because that is like
that." A violent society creates violent policemen. A
fearful society creates fearful policemen. Putting the
policemen in jail does not solve the problem. We
have to change the society from its roots, which is
our collective consciousness, where the root energies
of fear, anger, greed, and hatred lie. We cannot abolish war with angry demonstrations.
We have to practice a diet for ourselves, our
families, and our society. We have to do it with
everyone else. In order to have healthy TV
programs, we have to work with artists, writers,
filmmakers, lawyers, and legislators. We have to
step up the struggle. Meditation should not be a drug
to make us oblivious to our real problems. It should
produce awareness in us, and also in our families
and in our society. Enlightenment has to be
collective for us to achieve results. We have to stop
the kinds of consuming that poison our collective
consciousness. I do not see any other way than the practice of these
bodhisattva precepts. We have to practice them as a
society in order to produce the dramatic changes we
need. To practice as a society will be possible only if
each of us vows to practice as a bodhisattva. The
problem is great. It concerns our survival and the
survival of our species and our planet. It is not a
matter of enjoying one glass of wine. If you stop
drinking your glass of wine, you do it for the whole
society. We know that the Fifth Precept is exactly
like the first one. When you practice non-killing and
you know how to protect the lives of even small
animals, you realize that eating less meat has do
with the practice of the precept. If you are not able to
entirely stop eating meat, at least make an effort to
reduce eating meat. If you reduce eating meat and
drinking alcohol by fifty percent, you will already be
performing a miracle; that alone can solve the
problem of hunger in the Third World. Practicing the
precepts is to make progress every day. That is why
during the precept recitation ceremony, we always
answer the question of whether we have made an
effort to study and practice the precept by deep
breathing. That is the best answer. Deep breathing
means that I have made some effort, but I can do
better. The Fifth Precept can be like that, too. If you are
unable to completely stop drinking, then stop fourfifths,
or three-fourths. The difference between the
First and the Fifth Precept is that alcohol is not the
same as meat. Alcohol is addictive. One drop brings
about another. That is why you are encouraged to
stop even one glass of wine. One glass can bring
about a second glass. Although the spirit is the
same as the First Precept, you are strongly
recommended not to take the first glass of wine.
When you see that we are in great danger, refraining
from the first glass of wine is a manifestation of your
enlightenment. You do it for all of us. We have to set
an example for our children and our friends. On
French television they say, "One glass is all right,
but three glasses will bring about destruction." (Un
verre ça va; trois verres bonjour les dégâts.) They do
not say that the first glass brings about the second,
and the second brings about the third. They don't
say that, because they belong to a civilization of
wine. Here in Plum Village, in the Bordeaux region
of France, we are surrounded by wine. Many of our
neighbors are surprised that we don't profit from
being in this area, but we are a pocket of resistance.
Please help us. When I was a novice, I learned that from time to time
we had to use alcohol in preparing medicines. There
are many kinds of roots and herbs that have to be
macerated in alcohol to have an effect. In these
instances, alcohol is allowed. When the herbs have
been prepared, we put the mixture in a pot and boil
them. Then they no longer have an intoxicating
effect. If you use some alcohol in cooking, the result
may be the same. After the food is cooked, the
alcohol in it will not have an intoxicating nature. We
should not be narrow-minded about this. No one can practice the precepts perfectly, including
the Buddha. The vegetarian dishes that were offered
to him were not entirely vegetarian. Boiled
vegetables contain dead bacteria. We cannot
practice the First Precept or any of the precepts
perfectly. But because of the real danger in our
society--alcoholism has destroyed so many families
and has brought about much unhappiness--we have
to do something. We have to live in a way that will
eradicate that kind of damage. That is why even if
you can be very healthy with one glass of wine every
week, I still urge you with all my strength to abandon
that glass of wine. I would also like to say something about not using
drugs. As alcohol has been the plague of one
generation, drugs are the plague of another. One
young girl in Australia told me that she did not know
anyone in her age group who does not take drugs of
one kind or another. Often young people who have
taken drugs come to meditation centers to deal with
the problem of facing life as it is. They are often
talented and sensitive people--painters, poets and
writers--and by becoming addicted to drugs they
have, to a small or large extent, destroyed some
brain cells. It means that they now have little stability
or staying power, and are prone to sleeplessness
and nightmares. We do what we can to encourage
them to stay for a course of training in the meditation
center, but because they are easily disillusioned,
they tend to leave when things become difficult.
Those who have been addicted to drugs need
discipline. I am not sure that a meditation center like
Plum Village is the best place to cure victims of drug
addiction. I think that experts and specialists in this
field are better equipped than we are. A meditation
center should be able to receive educators and
specialists in drug addiction as well as the victims of
drug addiction for short courses in meditation to
make its resources available where they are truly
needed. The practice that we offer is that of the Fifth Precept,
to prevent someone from becoming involved with
drugs in the first place. Parents especially need to
know what spiritual food to give their children. So
often, children feel spiritually starved by the wholly
materialistic outlook of their parents. The parents are
unable to transmit to the children the values of their
spiritual heritage, and so the children try to find
fulfillment in drugs. Drugs seem to be the only
solution when teachers and parents are spiritually
barren. Young people need to touch the feeling of
deep-seated well-being within themselves without
having to take drugs, and it is the task of educators
to help them find spiritual nourishment and wellbeing.
But if educators have not yet discovered for
themselves a source of spiritual nourishment, how
can they demonstrate to young people how that
nourishment may be found? The Fifth Precept tells us to find wholesome, spiritual
nourishment, not only for ourselves but also for our
children and future generations. Wholesome,
spiritual nourishment can be found in the moon, the
spring blossoms, or the eyes of a child. The most
basic meditation practices of becoming aware of our
bodies, our minds, and our world can lead us into a
far more rich and fulfilling state than drugs could
ever do. We can celebrate the joys that are available
in the simplest pleasures. The use of alcohol and drugs is causing great
damage to our societies and families. Governments
work hard to stop the traffic of drugs. They use
airplanes, guns, and armies to do so. Most people
know how destructive the use of drugs is but they
cannot resist, because there is so much pain and
loneliness inside them, and the use of alcohol and
drugs helps them to forget for a while their deep
malaise. Once people get addicted to alcohol and
drugs, they might do anything to get the drugs they
need--lie, steal, rob, or even kill. To stop the drug
traffic is not the best way to prevent people from
using drugs. The best way is to practice the Fifth
Precept and to help others practice. Consuming mindfully is the intelligent way to stop
ingesting toxins into our consciousness and prevent
the malaise from becoming overwhelming. Learning
the art of touching and ingesting refreshing,
nourishing, and healing elements is the way to
restore our balance and transform the pain and
loneliness that are already in us. To do this, we have
to practice together. The practice of mindful
consuming should become a national policy. It
should be considered true peace education.
Parents, teachers, educators, physicians, therapists,
lawyers, novelists, reporters, filmmakers,
economists, and legislators have to practice
together. There must be ways of organizing this kind
of practice. The practice of mindfulness helps us be aware of
what is going on. Once we are able to see deeply
the suffering and the roots of the suffering, we will
be motivated to act, to practice. The energy we need
is not fear or anger; it is the energy of understanding
and compassion. There is no need to blame or
condemn. Those who are destroying themselves,
their families, and their society by intoxicating
themselves are not doing it intentionally. Their pain
and loneliness are overwhelming, and they want to
escape. They need to be helped, not punished. Only
understanding and compassion on a collective level
can liberate us. The practice of the Five Wonderful
Precepts is the practice of mindfulness and
compassion. For a future to be possible for our
children and their children, we have to practice. by Thich Nhat Hanh In his book entitled "For a Future to be Possible" |