1. I know this is the only moment

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    Breathing in, I calm body and mind.
    Breathing out, I smile.
    Dwelling in the present moment
    I know this is the only moment.

    “Breathing in, I calm body and mind.” This line is like drinking a glass of ice water–you feel the cold, the freshness, permeate your body. When I breathe in and recite this line, I actually feel the breathing calming my body, calming my mind.

    “Breathing out, I smile.” You know the effect of a smile. A smile can relax hundreds of muscles in your face, and relax your nervous system. A smile makes you master of yourself. That is why the Buddhas and Bodhisattvas are always smiling. When you smile, you realize the wonder of the smile.

    “Dwelling in the present moment.” While I sit here, I don’t think of somewhere else, of the future or the past. I sit here and I know where I am. This is very important. We tend to be alive in the future, not now. We say, “Wait until I finish school and get my Ph. D. degree, and then I will be really alive.”

    When we have it, and it’s not easy to get, we say to ourselves, “I have to wait until I get a job, in order to be *really* alive.” And then after the job, a car. After the car, a house. We are not capable of being alive in the present moment. We tend to postpone being alive to the future, the distant future, we don’t know when. Now is not the moment to be alive. We may never be alive in our entire life. Therefore, the technique, if we have to speak of a technique, is to be in the present moment, to be aware that we are here and now, and the only moment to be alive is the present moment.

    “I know this is the only moment.” This is the only moment that is real. To be here and now, and enjoy the present moment is our most important task. “Calming. Smiling, Present moment, Only moment.” I hope you will try it.

    ~Thich Nhat Hanh

  2. A smile makes you look better, younger, friendly, kind

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    Smile, it gives your face something to do. And it looks good on you too. So smile a while. Smile is a magician. It has the power to add values to your face – – it makes you look better, younger, friendly, kind, and approachable. Smiling creates a sense of good feeling, good- will, trust and rapport. Smiling boosts the immune system, and slows heartbeat and breathing rate. Smiling can soften the heart and move people. A warm smile can work wonder and accomplish miracle for yourself and others. Smiling makes a difference in life- – it enables greater trust and cooperation, as well as increased earnings or rewards. If you always put a smile on your face, you are more likely to enjoy a lucky and happy life. Source: coolnsmart

  3. Relationship…

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    Nourishing yourself in a way that helps you blossom in the direction
    you want to go is attainable, and you are worth the effort. ~Deborah Day

    “The most powerful relationship you will ever have is the relationship with yourself.”
    –Steve Maraboli

  4. A young boy of migrant workers

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    Migrants’ kids at risk: CDRI
    Instead of attending classes, many of the children take up jobs to add to the family’s earnings in between remittances or to make up for shortfalls. Children from migrant households are 27 per cent more likely to have income-earning work, and for child labourers who were already employed before the adults left, their burden increases; migration is likely to add 7.4 hours on children’s workload per week, according to the report.

    Caption: A young Cambodian boy loads bricks into a kiln in Kandal province last year. A new report suggests that children of migrant workers are more likely to stop schooling and join the labour force. Photo: The Phnom Penh Post/Hong Menea

    http://kimedia.blogspot.com/2014/10/migrants-kids-at-risk-cdri.html

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  5. Healing the hurt that won’t go away

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    No one wants to be bitter. It sneaks up on us.  Bitterness is unforgiveness fermented. The more we hold onto past hurts the more we become drunk on our pain and the experience can rob us of the joy we can find in anything.

    Bitterness occurs when we feel someone has taken something from us that we are powerless to get back.  We hold on to the hurt in an attempt to remind ourselves and others of the injustice we’ve experienced in the hopes that someone will save us and restore what we’ve lost. Unfortunately, bitterness only makes our sense of the injustice grow. It does nothing to heal the wound caused by the injustice.  In fact, it causes the wound to become infected with anger.

    When we are hurt, we have a tendency to turn the painful events over and over in our head or tell anyone who will listen about our pain–even over and over again. It is fine to talk to people we think can help us heal the hurt, facilitate reconciliation or help us rebuild our lives, but other than that, we should do what we can to stop dwelling on the story of our injury ourselves and stop speaking of it so freely to others. 

    Source: Patheos


  6. Healing the hurt that won’t go away

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    No one wants to be bitter. It sneaks up on us. Bitterness is unforgiveness fermented. The more we hold onto past hurts the more we become drunk on our pain and the experience can rob us of the joy we can find in anything.

    Bitterness occurs when we feel someone has taken something from us that we are powerless to get back. We hold on to the hurt in an attempt to remind ourselves and others of the injustice we’ve experienced in the hopes that someone will save us and restore what we’ve lost. Unfortunately, bitterness only makes our sense of the injustice grow. It does nothing to heal the wound caused by the injustice. In fact, it causes the wound to become infected with anger.

    When we are hurt, we have a tendency to turn the painful events over and over in our head or tell anyone who will listen about our pain–even over and over again. It is fine to talk to people we think can help us heal the hurt, facilitate reconciliation or help us rebuild our lives, but other than that, we should do what we can to stop dwelling on the story of our injury ourselves and stop speaking of it so freely to others.

    Source: Patheos

    http://leelavadeeflower.blogspot.com/2014/10/healing-hurt-that-wont-go-away.html

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  7. Even though it is sometimes difficult to smile

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    Even though life is hard, even though it is sometimes difficult to smile, we have to try. Just as when we wish each other, “Good morning,” it must be a real “Good morning.”

    We have the seed of everything in us, and we have to seize the situation in our hand, to recover our own sovereignty. When we sit down peacefully, breathing and smiling, with awareness, we are our true selves, we have sovereignty over ourselves.  ~Thich Nhat Hanh

Hermit of Tbeng Mountain

Sachjang Phnom Tbeng សច្ចំ​​ ភ្នំត្បែង is a very long and interesting story written by Mr. Chhea Sokoan, read by Jendhamuni Sos. You can click on the links below to listen. Part 1 | Part 2

List of Khmer songs