Bonus Track #9: 2026 Buddha's Birthday Celebration
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You know how to show respect when it’s obvious and ceremonial. The harder question is what you do when it’s ordinary, messy, and nobody is watching including how you treat your own mind.
We start with kongyang, the Buddhist practice of offering, and strip it down to its real function. Incense, fruit, water, flowers, chanting, even the way we present ourselves become training tools for humility, gratitude, and intention. Then we widen the lens: the Buddha’s post-awakening insight that everyone has Buddha nature, which means everyone is a future Buddha. If that’s true, why do we reserve our deepest reverence for a distant ideal, while treating the people closest to us and ourselves with impatience, entitlement, or neglect?
The conversation lands on a sharp mindfulness practice: every thought that arises is effectively an offering to your own Buddha nature. So what are you placing on that inner altar all day long? Worry, anxiety, jealousy, anger, self-hate? We talk about ego, preference, and the ways we “split” ourselves into the part we praise and the part we punish, then bring it back to daily life: traffic, chores, relationships, and the moments where practice leaks out the fastest. If temple is the training ground, life is the real ground.
If this hit a nerve, subscribe, share this bonus track with a friend, and leave a review with the one “offering” you’re ready to stop giving yourself.
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Dr. Ruben Lambert can be found at wisdomspring.com
Ven. MyongAhn Sunim can be found at soshimsa.org
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