Venerable Master Hsing Yun says, “Sometimes being ill isn’t necessarily a bad thing. It makes those who care about you cherish you more. It also brings joy to those who envy or exclude you. This, too, is a form of dispelling misfortune. Joy can turn to sorrow, and misfortune can bring blessings—nothing is absolute in all things.” (來源:佛光山;Source:FGS)
A few years ago, I experienced an outbreak of hives. I underwent allergy tests twice, but the cause remained elusive. Recently, the hives returned with a vengeance and launched a relentless assault day and night. While dealing with this incessant itch, I chuckled to myself, “As long as it doesn’t reach my face, I’m fine! I still have my face!”
However, my face was soon plagued by another affliction that made me miserable—peeling! I don’t apply any makeup—I wonder what I did to deserve this shameless degree of peeling. When I visited the dentist, my peeling caught his attention more than my teeth did. He sympathetically offered remedies and repeatedly encouraged me, a person facing adversity, saying, “You should emulate Shen Nong who tasted a hundred herbs. Keep at it!”
I am also greatly bothered by floaters in my vision; it looks like tiny black mosquitoes are flying everywhere. A venerable who also experiences this condition told me that what she sees are effervescent and magical “floating clouds.” Hmm! It seems that practitioners indeed perceive things differently. I strain my eyes hard, but mosquitoes are still just mosquitoes!
There’s a saying, “A practitioner should carry three parts of illness to understand the importance of the spiritual path.” In essence, this means that those without physical ailments may find it challenging to appreciate the impermanence of life and may thus struggle to dedicate themselves to spiritual practice. Although my “illness” may not amount to even three parts—perhaps just one part—I have already realized the lack of control over my physical body. Does this count as a trace of embarking on the spiritual path?
I might be portraying my “illness” in an exaggerated and humorous manner, but it doesn’t mean my feelings are shallow. As a healthcare professional, I have witnessed the cycle of life and death. I’ve held the hands of the dying, witnessing their final breath. I’ve also experienced the other side—being a family member anxiously waiting outside the intensive care unit, feeling like a lone boat navigating a vast sea in the dark. Therefore, even in the delivery room, witnessing the birth of new life, the cries of the newborn and the congratulations around me make me wonder— “What joy is there in life?”
“What joy is there in life?” I’ve thought deeply about this question since my early 20s when I first became a nurse in the intensive care unit. I once stood on a connected outdoor bridge between hospital floors, gazing at a bright moon, silently questioning, “What joy is there in life?”
How should we view life? Some are part of the “YOLO” (You Only Live Once) crowd, advocating for immediate enjoyment because life is short. I lean more towards the advice in Samantabhadra Bodhisattva’s Verse for Reminding the Assembly: “The day has passed, and our lives diminish accordingly. We are like fish in shallow water—what joy is there? O, great assembly! Cultivate diligently, as if extinguishing flames atop one’s own head. Be mindful of impermanence and do not be indolent!”
I still haven’t found the middle way between indulgence and abstaining from pleasure. Finding the middle way is a lifelong lesson for me!
Even though the founder of Fo Guang Shan, Venerable Master Hsing Yun, has altered the sequence of “birth, aging, sickness, and death” to a more optimistic “aging, sickness, death, birth,” the word “sickness” still evokes concern in most people.
How much illness can you endure? How much illness can you withstand to cultivate a mind of the path? Or perhaps, do you not need to be sick to have a firm mind of the path?
Around 1955, when Venerable Master Hsing Yun was less than 30 years old, he was diagnosed with acute rheumatoid arthritis, which could potentially spread throughout his body and posed a risk of death. The suggestion was to amputate both legs to save his life. Venerable Master Hsing Yun wrote— “This humble monk felt no fear; on the contrary, the thought arose that even if my legs were amputated, it would spare me from running around outside, enduring the hardships of walking. From then on, I could reside in the temple, dedicating myself to studying and writing. That, too, would be a source of contentment in life.”
Venerable Master Hsing Yun says, “Sometimes being ill isn’t necessarily a bad thing. It makes those who care about you cherish you more. It also brings joy to those who envy or exclude you. This, too, is a form of dispelling misfortune. Joy can turn to sorrow, and misfortune can bring blessings—nothing is absolute in all things.”
I greatly admire Venerable Master Hsing Yun, who said he was “friends” with illness throughout his life. In 2016, at the age of nearly 90, he underwent surgery for a cerebral hemorrhage. During the recovery period, he continued writing “One Stroke Calligraphy”, using the proceeds from charity sales for the “Good Seedlings Project” scholarship fund. He said, “ I’m not sick, just a bit inconvenient.”
Venerable Master Hsing Yun also wrote about how, despite falling and breaking his leg, he continued preaching everywhere. While lying in bed after his leg surgery, he expressed gratitude for the kindness of Most Venerable Hsin Ping, the abbot of Fo Guang Shan at the time, who took care of him at night. Most Venerable Hsin Ping sat on the sofa, and whenever Venerable Master Hsing Yun needed to shift or move a bit to relieve post-anesthesia discomfort, Most Venerable Hsin Ping would stand up from the sofa and ask what he needed.
Venerable Master Hsing Yun suggested that Most Venerable Hsin Ping switch places with him, thinking it might be more comfortable for him to sit on the sofa. Most Venerable Hsin Ping did as suggested, but after a while, he jumped up from the bed, saying, “Venerable Master, no! Wait a moment. The nurse is coming to give a shot, and they might inject the wrong person!”
So, they decided not to sleep. The two of them talked, laughed, and found it quite amusing. Being ill is not all bad.
I laughed! May I learn from Venerable Master Hsing Yun!