13 July 2026

The Way to Peace & Creativty - Living Mindfully Without Attachment

 "Living Mindfully Without Attachment" 

(应无所住而生其心)

The video in Chinese delves into the famous diamond sutra phrase that transformed the life of Huineng (the Sixth Patriarch of Zen Buddhism). It explores how letting go of mental attachments can bring peace to modern lives.



1. The Meaning of "Dwelling" (住) and Detachment

  • What is "Dwelling"? In Zen philosophy, "dwelling" means getting stuck, trapped, or overly attached to a specific thought, expectation, or emotion. Where your mind gets stuck is where your suffering begins.

  • Breaking Attachments: The ultimate goal is to break inner attachments—whether it is an obsession with the ego, reputation, specific outcomes, or the past. Buddhism doesn't deny the existence of these things; it warns us not to treat them as permanent anchors we must desperately cling to.

2. Three Common Blind Spots of Attachment

  • Dwelling in the Past: Many people torture themselves by repeatedly revisiting past regrets. True "letting go" doesn't mean forcefully forgetting the past; it means ensuring the past no longer dictates your present life.

  • Dwelling on Others' Opinions: A hidden source of modern anxiety. People often exhaust themselves by tying their self-worth to delayed text replies, casual jokes, or how others perceive them.

  • Dwelling on Gains and Losses: Wealth, success, and praise are temporary states ("illusions") formed by fleeting circumstances. Treating them as permanent anchors leaves you enslaved to them.

3. Practicing the Balance: "Non-Attachment yet Active Living"

  • Non-Attachment (无所住): Reclaim your mind. Be sincere but do not people-please. Treat others well, but stop using their reactions to grade your own worth.

  • Active Engagement (生其心): Non-attachment doesn't mean becoming cold, lazy, or indifferent. You must still work hard, take responsibility, and fully commit to the present. The key is not binding your self-worth to the ultimate outcome. Be dedicated but not obsessed; put in the effort but don't treat the result as a final judgment on your soul.

4. The Mind is a Pathway, Not a Warehouse

The core message is about learning to loosen your grip. Your mind should function like a clear pathway, not a cluttered warehouse. Let joy pass through, let the storms pass through. By keeping your mind free of old baggage and rigid expectations, you create space for new light to enter.

A Lesson in Boundaries - How Gratitude becomes Hatred!

Title: "升米恩,斗米仇" – A Lesson in Boundaries

We've all heard the saying: "升米恩,斗米仇" 

— "A liter of rice earns gratitude; a peck of rice breeds resentment."

It sounds cynical, but it's a brutally honest truth about human nature.

The takeaway is simple: Help too much, too often, and your generosity stops being a gift—it becomes an expectation. When that expectation isn't met (and eventually, it won't be), gratitude turns into resentment.

Why this happens:

  • Small favors feel like blessings.

  • Big, ongoing favors feel like entitlements.

  • People remember what they didn't get far more than what they did.

The fix: Be kind, but set boundaries. Help people get back on their feet—don't carry them forever. True generosity empowers; it doesn't enable.

As historian Wang Liqun put it: "善良必须带有锋芒" — kindness must have its edges. Without principles, kindness is just weakness in disguise.


So go ahead, be generous.
Just remember—sometimes the kindest thing you can do is know when to stop.