Monks of The Way

Monks of The Way Monks of The Way is a nonprofit 501(c)(3) organization, 12131 W. Rosewood Drive, El Mirage, AZ. 85335.

Mission:To share the teachings of Buddha, universal truth, and to change the world through compassion and kindness

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04/30/2026

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On May 1st, thousands of organizations across the country are calling for a day of “No School, No Work, No Shopping” to disrupt the violent billionaire takeover of our country and to put working families first.

We encourage you to join your local May Day action to demand:

- Tax the rich so our families, not their fortunes, come first.
- ICE Out. No private army serving authoritarian power.
- Expand democracy, not corporate power. Defend free and fair elections, not a rigged disaster.

Find a May Day action near you: http://maydaystrong.org/

Image description: A yellow background with large black text that reads, "SAY NO. NO SCHOOL NO WORK. NO SHOPPING. FRIDAY MAY 1, 2026." At the top is a black banner with "MAY DAY 2026" repeating in yellow and white text. At the bottom is a black banner that says "WORKERS OVER BILLIONAIRES >>> MAYDAYSTRONG.ORG" in white and yellow text.

The Four Noble Truths (Detailed Version) This expanded version includes multiple sutta references, similes, and deeper e...
09/06/2025

The Four Noble Truths (Detailed Version)
This expanded version includes multiple sutta references, similes, and deeper explanation.
Truth 1: Life is Suffering
The Buddha explained suffering as part of life: birth, aging, sickness, death, sorrow, lamentation, pain, grief,
and despair. Even being with those we dislike or losing what we love is suffering.
Primary sutta: SN 56.11; SN 36.11
Pali: idam dukkham ariyasaccam…
Transl.: ‘This is the noble truth of suffering.’
The Buddha compared this truth to the first work of a doctor: to recognize the illness. He also said: ‘Whatever is
felt is included in suffering.’ (SN 36.11)
Truth 2: Suffering has Cause
The cause of suffering is craving (tanha). This craving comes in three forms: craving for pleasure, craving for
becoming, and craving for non-becoming. Craving is rooted in ignorance and keeps the cycle of rebirth turning.
Primary sutta: SN 56.11; SN 12.2
Pali: tanha ponobhavika…
Transl.: ‘It is craving which brings renewal of being…’
The Buddha compared craving to thirst. Just as a thirsty person keeps drinking but is never satisfied, craving
always seeks but never finds enough.
Truth 3: Suffering has Cure
The end of suffering comes when craving is abandoned, like a fire going out when it has no fuel. The Buddha
called this Nibbana: the unconditioned peace beyond craving, hatred, and delusion.
Primary sutta: SN 56.11; SN 22.37; Ud 8.1
Pali: yo tassayeva tanhaya asesa-viraga-nirodho…
Transl.: ‘The fading away and cessation of that very craving…’
He said: ‘Whatever is subject to arising is subject to cessation.’ (SN 22.37) And: ‘There is, monks, the unborn,
unbecome, unmade, unconditioned.’ (Ud 8.1)
Truth 4: Suffering has End
The way to end suffering is the Noble Eightfold Path: right view, right intention, right speech, right action, right
livelihood, right effort, right mindfulness, right concentration. This is like the medicine the doctor gives.
Primary sutta: SN 56.11; AN 8.19
Pali: idam dukkhanirodhagaminipatipada…
Transl.: ‘This is the noble truth of the path leading to the cessation of suffering.’
The Buddha said: ‘Just as the great ocean has but one taste, the taste of salt, so too this Dhamma has but one
taste, the taste of freedom.’ (AN 8.19)

Insight – Seeing the True Nature of ThingsInsight is not an ornament to thought, not a new collection of ideas to embell...
09/04/2025

Insight – Seeing the True Nature of Things
Insight is not an ornament to thought, not a new collection of ideas to embellish the mind. It is a seeing through, a sudden opening into reality as it has always been. Thera Soma described it in The Way of Mindfulness (1998) as a complete transfiguration of the inner life, a turning in the very way the mind looks, feels, and experiences.
He wrote:
❛ Insight is the understanding of the true nature of things by which a complete transfiguration of the mental life takes place in the seer, enabling him to transcend birth and death. The understanding of the true nature of things comes down to insight into the impermanence, unsatisfactoriness, and selflessness of all conditioned phenomena.❜
When the eye of insight opens, existence no longer rests on solid ground. What once seemed firm and lasting shows itself to be profoundly impermanent (anicca; anitya). What one hoped to hold as a source of enduring joy reveals itself as unsatisfactory (dukkha; duḥkha). What was taken to be a ‘self’—a guarantor of possession, control, and continuity—appears empty of essence (anattā; anātman).
These three marks (tilakkhaṇa; trilakṣaṇa) are not concepts bound to words. They are recognized in direct seeing: the arising and passing of thoughts, the delicate nature of sensations and feelings, the ungraspable current of the body shifting from moment to moment. In this seeing, the illusion of permanence dissolves—and with it the illusion of a core, a ‘soul,’ hidden somewhere behind it.
This insight is not nihilism, not a denial of life. It is awakening—waking into the living stream itself, free from the burden of trying to fix or possess it. When the futility of grasping is seen, the mind grows still. When no appearance offers lasting ground, an unexpected freedom is revealed: the freedom not to cling, not to resist, but simply to rest in what arises and fades.
Here lies the transfiguration to which Thera Soma points: the life of the mind is transformed. Where craving and fear once prevailed, clarity and space emerge. Where one was bound to birth and death—to the endless arising and passing of an imagined ‘I’—there opens a vastness that needs nothing more.
Insight is never something one possesses. It is the very release of possession, the letting go of ownership. It is awakening into a reality that is always changing, and that, in its very transformation, reveals itself as free. Thus life may be lived with nothing to gain and nothing to lose. What remains is simplicity, clarity, and the quiet of a mind unbound.
The subtitle of this article, “seeing the true nature of things,” points to the Pāli word yathā-bhūta—the direct beholding of reality as it is, without the veil of desire or aversion. In this simple word the Path itself resounds: a seeing that neither adds nor takes away. It is also the name of my website, where this silent and open gaze forms the heart of all that appears in dependent origination (paṭicca samuppāda; pratītyasamutpāda).

09/02/2025
01/18/2025

What is a Buddha and does it even matter 🤔

12/21/2024

Secular Buddhist monk ordaining part 1 the four truths

financials october & november 2024
12/19/2024

financials october & november 2024

SN 2.2 Āmagandha Sutta(Food and the True Meaning of “Stench”)Question:Wild millet, grains of grass and pulse,young shoot...
11/04/2024

SN 2.2 Āmagandha Sutta
(Food and the True Meaning of “Stench”)

Question:
Wild millet, grains of grass and pulse,
young shoots and roots and jungle fruits—
Dharma-gained and by the Peaceful eaten,
they who speak no lies desiring sensual pleasures.

But who, eating food that’s well-prepared and cooked
of Sālī-rice, all other things to eat,
delicious, by others donated specially
that one, O Kassapa, is like a carrion-stench.

“No carrion-stench is mine”, you say like this,
that it does not apply to you, O Brahma-kin—
while eating sālī-rice, all other things
with flesh of fowls so very well prepared;
the meaning of this, O Kassapa, I ask:
Your food, what sort of carrion-stench it has?

Answer:
Taking life, torture, mutilation too,
binding, stealing, telling lies, and fraud;
deceit, adultery, and studying crooked views:
this is carrion-stench, not the eating of meat.

Those people of desires and pleasures unrestrained,
greedy for tastes with impurity mixed in,
of nihilistic views, unstable, hard to train:
this is carrion-stench, not the eating of meat.

The rough, the cruel, backbiters and betrayers,
those void of compassion, extremely arrogant,
the miserly, to others never giving anything:
this is carrion-stench, not the eating of meat.

Who’s angry, obstinate, hostile and vain,
deceitful, envious, a boastful person too,
full of oneself, with the wicked intimate:
this is carrion-stench, not the eating of meat.

Those of evil ways, defaulters on debts,
imposters, slanderers, deceitful in their dealings,
vile men who commit evil deeds in this world:
this is carrion-stench, not the eating of meat.

Those people unrestrained for living beings here,
taking others’ property, on injury intent,
immoral, harsh and cruel, for others no respect:
this is carrion-stench, not the eating of meat.

Towards others greedy or hateful—they attack them,
ever on misdemeanours bent,
they go to darkness after death;
such beings as this fall headlong into Hell:
this is carrion-stench, not the eating of meat.

Not from fish and flesh tasting and not by nudity,
not by the plucking of head-hairs,
nor growing of matted locks,
not by the smearing of the ashes of the dead,
not wearing abrasive skins,
not following sacrificial fires,
or worldly austerities for gaining immortality,
nor mantras, nor offerings,
oblations, seasons’ services
can purify a mortal still overcome by doubt.

Who lives with sense-streams guarded, well-aware,
in the Dharma firm, enjoying gently rectitude,
beyond attachments gone, all dukkha left behind,
that wise one’s unsullied by the seen and the heard.

Narrator:
Again, again the Radiant One this topic taught
to that knower of the Vedas, in those mantras expert,
thus clarified the Sage in verses sweetly-sounding.
Him of no carrion-stench, free who’s hard to trace.

Having listened to these verses well-spoken by the Buddha,
free of such stench, all dukkhas dispelling,
he of humble heart bowed at the Tathāgata’s feet
and there and then requested his own Leaving-home.

MindAll experience ispreceded by mind,led by mind,made by mind. (Dhammapada 1) Kindness“Kindness for the world is happiness.” (Udāna 2.1) Nirvana“Nirvana is the highest bliss.” (Dhammapada 204) Mindfulness“Mindfulness, I declare, is useful everywhere.” (Saṃyutta Nikāya 46.53) Unshake...

Impermanence can be a bitch yeah so I know it really hurts when a relationship ends we lose our loved ones but that does...
09/20/2024

Impermanence can be a bitch yeah so I know it really hurts when a relationship ends we lose our loved ones but that doesn't mean we should stop ☸️🙏☸️

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12131 W. Rosewood Drive
El Mirage, AZ
85335

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