Happy New Year.

We’ve just spent a very peaceful and meditative evening leading up to the stroke of midnight when we saw the New Year in chanting the Parittas as those present each lit a stick of incense to symbolise letting go of the old and determining to do better in the future.

We had our usual Monday evening sitting with a little talk from me that focussed on letting go, not just of the past but the future as well. Just as the revolving wheel hits the ground always at one place only, so really our lives are lived just in the present even if our minds don’t usually acknowledge that. Afterwards we had tea and were joined by the little group who are in retreat at Bhavana Dhamma. I read to them a few passages about some of the great forest monks of the past, passages that focussed particularly on overcoming fear. The last few words I read were one monk’s appraisal of what threatened Thailand at the time. Instead of mentioning insurgency as everyone present expected he pointed to kilesa, defilement, greed and anger and all the rest, as the greatest threat. And so it is. It’s the enemy within that we ought to be most careful of. My hope for the New Year is that more of us may make a better job of facing that enemy.

Earlier in the day we had a visit from Karen who has not long returned from Burma, where she saw something of the terrible events that gripped that sad and beautiful land a few weeks ago. She described arriving somewhere soon after a monk had been tied to a lamppost and beaten to death. What can you say! Arrests and brutality are common and the people live in fear. What can you say, what can you do but determine to hold fast to what is good.