This blessed month of Ramadan is a good time for reflection into our own lives. This is a wonderful talk by the Buddhist teacher Thich Naht Hanh.
Mindful Consumption
Thich Naht Hanh
All
things need food to be alive and to grow, including our love or our
hate. Love is a living thing, hate is a living thing. If you do not
nourish your love, it will die. If you cut the source of nutriment for
your violence, your violence will also die. That is why the path shown
by the Buddha is the path of mindful consumption.
If
we look deeply, we will see that eating can be extremely violent.
UNESCO tells us that every day, forty thousand children in the world
die because of a lack of nutrition, of food. Every day, forty thousand
children. And the amount of grain that we grow in the West is mostly
used to feed our cattle. Eighty percent of the corn grown in this
country is to feed the cattle to make meat. Ninety-five percent of the
oats produced in this country is not for us to eat, but for the animals
raised for food. According to this recent report that we received of
all the agricultural land in the US, eighty-seven percent is used to
raise animals for food. That is forty-five percent of the total land
mass in the US.
More
than half of all the water consumed in the US whole purpose is to raise
animals for food. It takes 2500 gallons of water to produce a pound of
meat, but only 25 gallons to produce a pound of wheat. A totally
vegetarian diet requires 300 gallons of water per day, while a
meat-eating diet requires more than 4,000 gallons of water per day.
Raising
animals for food causes more water pollution than any other industry in
the US because animals raised for food produce one hundred thirty times
the excrement of the entire human population. It means 87,000 pounds
per second. Much of the waste from factory farms and slaughter houses
flows into streams and rivers, contaminating water sources.
Each
vegetarian can save one acre of trees per year. More than 260 million
acres of US forests have been cleared to grow crops to feed animals
raised for meat. And another acre of trees disappears every eight
seconds. The tropical rain forests are also being destroyed to create
grazing land for cattle.
In
the US, animals raised for food are fed more than eighty percent of the
corn we grow and more than ninety-percent of the oats. We are eating
our country, we are eating our earth. And I have learned that more
than half the people in this country overeat.
Mindful
eating can help maintain compassion within our heart. A person without
compassion cannot be happy, cannot relate to other human beings and to
other living beings.
The Buddha
spoke about the second kind of food that we consume every day--sense
impressions--the kind of food that we take in by the way of the eyes,
the ears, the tongue, the body, and the mind. When we read a magazine,
we consume. When you watch television, you consume. When you listen
to a conversation, you consume. And these items can be highly toxic.
There may be a lot of poisons, like craving, like violence, like anger,
and despair. We allow ourselves to be intoxicated by what we consume
in terms of sense impressions. We allow our children to intoxicate
themselves because of these products. That is why it is very important
to look deeply into our ill-being, into the nature of our ill-being, in
order to recognize the sources of nutriment we have used to bring it
into us and into our society.
The
Buddha had this to say: "What has come to be - if you know how to look
deeply into its nature and identify its source of nutriment, you are
already on the path of emancipation." What has come to be is our
illness, our ill-being, our suffering, our violence, our despair, and
if you practice looking deeply, meditation, you'll be able to identify
the sources of nutriments, of food, that has brought it into us.
Therefore
the whole nation has to practice looking deeply into the nature of what
we consume every day. And consuming mindfully is the only way to
protect our nation, ourselves, and our society. We have to learn how
to consume mindfully as a family, as a city, as a nation. We have to
learn what to produce and what not to produce in order to provide our
people with only the items that are nourishing and healing. We have to
refrain from producing the kinds of items that bring war and despair
into our body, into our consciousness, and into the collective body and
consciousness of our nation, our society. And Congress has to practice
that. We have elected members of the Congress. We expect them to
practice deeply, listening to the suffering of the people, to the real
causes of that suffering, and to make the kind of laws that can protect
us from self-destruction. And America is great. I have the conviction
that you can do it and help the world.
You can offer the world wisdom,
mindfulness, and compassion.
Nowadays
I enjoy places where people do not smoke. There are nonsmoking flights
that you can enjoy. Ten years ago they did not exist, nonsmoking
flights. and in America on every box of cigarettes there is the
message: "Beware: Smoking can be hazardous to your health." That is a
bell of mindfulness. Mindfulness of smoking is what allowed you to see
that smoking is not healthy.
In
America, people are very aware of the food they eat. They want every
package of food to be labeled so that they can know what is in it.
They don't want to eat the kind of food that will bring toxins and
poisons into their bodies. This is the practice of mindful eating.
But
we can go further. We can do better, as parents, as teachers, as
artists, and as politicians. If you are a teacher, you can contribute
a lot in awakening people of the need for mindful consumption, because
that is the way to real emancipation. If you are a journalist, you
have the means to educate people, to wake people up to the nature of
our situation.
Every one of us can transform himself or herself into a
bodhisattva doing the work of awakening. Because only awakening can
help us to stop the course we are taking, the course of destruction.
Then we will know in which direction we should go to make the earth a
safe place for us, for our children, and for their children.
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