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  • In /The Dhammapada/, Buddha says, “What we are today comes from our thoughts of yesterday,

  • and our present thoughts build our life of tomorrow: our life is the creation of our

  • mind.”

  • So according to Buddha, our thoughts determine our future.

  • And what kind of futures are possible?

  • The Buddha says, “If a man speaks or acts with an impure mind, suffering follows him

  • as the wheel of the cart follows the beast that draws the cart

  • If a man speaks or acts with a pure mind, joy follows him as his own shadow.”

  • So Buddha is saying that there are two possible futures: a future of suffering or a future

  • of joy.

  • And the future you create depends on your thoughts.

  • But how do your thoughts determine your future?

  • Well, thought comes before action.

  • Think about it.

  • Before you move, you have to have a thought about how or where you're going to move.

  • Even if you say, “I'm going to stop thinking and then move to disprove what you're saying,”

  • you would be contradicting yourself.

  • Because you're thinking about /that/ movement right now!

  • So although there may be some distance between the thought and the action, the thought always

  • comes before the action.

  • And our actions create our futuresthat's an easy idea to understand.

  • So if you actions depend on your thoughts, the right thoughts lead to the right actions

  • which leads to joy.

  • But the wrong thoughts lead to the wrong actions which lead to suffering.

  • So how do you have the right thought?

  • Thoughts arise out of memory.

  • You're thinking right now, and what are you thinking in?

  • Words, maybe images.

  • And for the most part, these are words you've heard, or images you've seen, in the past.

  • Maybe you've read them in a book or heard someone else say them.

  • And of course, you can combine your memories to create something new.

  • We call that imagination, but that's a topic for a different video.

  • So if right thought depends on right memory, what determines right memory?

  • Memory comes from our experiences, and that's easy enough to understand, so I won't explain

  • it.

  • So right memory comes from right experience, but what determines right experience?

  • Experience comes from attention.

  • There are a lot of things going on around you right now.

  • Maybe the sun in shining, the air is moving, the room is warming up, people are walking

  • by, people are working outside, something is going on in India, or China, or Canada,

  • something's happening on social media, so on and so forth.

  • But hopefully, you're just paying attention to this video.

  • So you're not really experiencing all of those other things.

  • Your experience of the world is shaped by where you direct your attention.

  • So right attention leads to right experience.

  • But what determines right attention?

  • Before I get to that, I wanna return to the quote I read earlier.

  • Buddha said that right thought depends on a pure mind.

  • Now that's a very interesting term: a pure mind.

  • What does purity mean?

  • Imagine a cup of water.

  • We can call it pure.

  • But once we add some contaminant to it, like food colouring for example, we say it's

  • impure.

  • It's lost its purity.

  • So purity is like an original state which can be lost through contamination.

  • So what is the original state of the mind?

  • When we were children, everything was new to us.

  • We were seeing the world for the first time.

  • Things caught our attention, and we took the time to notice them.

  • And for the most part, we followed our interests, we explored the world, and we voluntarily

  • encountered new things.

  • And because of this, we learned so much.

  • But then what happens?

  • One day, we come across something new that frightens us or causes us pain.

  • We realize that the world can be a scary and dangerous place, and we have to make a decision:

  • do we continue to explore the world and risk encountering the scary and the dangerous,

  • or do we seek security and comfort?

  • If we choose security, we stop exploring the world, and if we stop exploring the world,

  • we stop learning, and if we stop learning, we stop growing, and if we stop growing, we

  • begin shrinking.

  • We start to decay.

  • We become weaker and less capable of thriving.

  • So let's go back to the question I asked earlier: what is right attention?

  • It's attention that comes from a pure mind—a mind uncontaminated by fear.

  • So the right thoughts lead to the right actions which lead to joy.

  • So your thoughts determine your future.

  • And right memory leads to right thought, right experience leads to right memory, and right

  • attention leads to right experience.

  • And what is right attention?

  • An attention that voluntarily explores the world with courage.

  • An attention that leaves its comfort zone, that follows its genuine interests into the

  • unknown and discovers something new and transformative.

  • An attention still capable of learning and growth.

  • It's attention uncontaminated by fear.

  • Who would all the hero's of our stories bewhether it's Harry Potter, Frodo, or

  • Katnissif they never left behind the world of comfort, overcame fear, and voluntarily

  • confronted the unknown world?

  • So if fear is the ultimate contaminant of attention, how do we remove it?

  • I actually talked about this in another video titled /Buddha - Conquer Fear, Become Free/.

  • I'll put a link to it in the description, but before you go, please consider liking

  • this video.

  • And I highly recommend watching my other video on fear, because it'll pick up where this

  • one left off and really build nicely

  • on

  • top

  • of it.

In /The Dhammapada/, Buddha says, “What we are today comes from our thoughts of yesterday,

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