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The Self at the Edge: How Craving Draws the Borders of Who We Think We Are
We often imagine the “self” as something deep inside — a core, a center, a solid identity we must discover or protect. But in meditation, something remarkable becomes visible: The self doesn’t live at the center at all. It lives at the edges — wherever craving defends or pursues something. Whatever craving wants, we call me . Whatever craving rejects, we call not me . The self is not a stable essence. It is a border drawn by longing, fear, and preference. And every time we
The Dancing Buddha
Nov 233 min read


Choosing the Mind That Awakens: How Morning Practice Shapes the Consciousness That Rises
There is a moment each morning that most of us miss—a quiet doorway between sleep and waking where a new consciousness forms. Today, during my morning meditation and qigong, I had an insight so clear and experiential that it deserves to be shared. As I woke, I noticed something subtle: The consciousness that rose this morning was not the same consciousness that fell asleep last night. It wasn’t just a shift in mood or energy. It was a different being awakening, a fresh const
The Dancing Buddha
Nov 183 min read


Releasing the Hungry Ghost | Free Guided Meditation for Craving & Peace
The Ghost Within In Buddhist teaching, the hungry ghost — preta — is a being trapped in endless craving. Its mouth is tiny, its stomach vast, and nothing it consumes ever satisfies. But this image is not about some far-off realm; it is a mirror for the mind that has lost its center. Whenever we are ruled by wanting — more comfort, more attention, more escape — we are walking in the hungry-ghost world . The ghost hungers not only for food or pleasure, but for the feeling of
The Dancing Buddha
Nov 103 min read
🌸 There Is No Self in Any Thing — The Buddha’s Vision of Emptiness
The Buddha’s Vision of Reality In the quiet of his awakening, the Buddha saw that all things — the body, the mind, even the mountains and stars — are without self . What we call a “self” or an “object” is not an independent thing but a collection of conditions : arising, changing, and dissolving in endless flow. This insight is called anattā , the principle of non-self . It means that in the deepest truth, there is no “me,” no “you,” and no “thing” that stands alone. Everyth
The Dancing Buddha
Nov 92 min read
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