Hope

by Hyo Jin Moon

Sunday 28 October 2007
Belvedere Training Center
Tarrytown, NY,

Unofficial notes by Joe Kinney
BelvedereTalks@Gmail.com

Good morning [Good morning]

Is everything okay with you? [Yes]

Hey, long time no see. Good to see you. [Addressing one brother]

Do you have hope? [Yes]

Hope in you? [Laughs] Hope in humanity? Hope in the future?

I guess hope means something that’s going to be better. Right? For all of us, right, all of us. Not just me. Because hope has a greater range than just self awareness or self existence. Okay so …

There are a lot of doomsday sayers you know, apocalyptic stuff that they propound on to a religious community based on revelations and stuff. It’s based on a dream-state kind of babbling. Because what you see is what you get. That’s what you see.

When we can see it, we can change it. That’s the nature of mankind. That separates us from any other creations in creation. If we can recognize something, in absolute, we can change it because we have that control.

That is the greatest blessing. We have that control of that absolute as if we are a Divine creator. So when it’s absolutely, undeniably obvious and in your face, everybody wants to be good. Not everybody wants to be bad.

Original mind, put those principle words aside. People want to be good in the end. How can you deny yourself the change, the opportunity, the better, that you can have when you know that this kind of stuff is in your face?

Of course you can see the horrible atrocities that people can commit to each other in a maximum range. In terms of degree, it’s maximum. You can’t go beyond this. You can’t do more evil. Man can’t do more evil to one another. And it’s apparent, and you see it every day on television and stuff, internet or whatever. Thank God for the multimedia. Right?

Once we can recognize our wrong, that’s when we can truly change. You have to truly understand your wrong to truly change.

So why do you have hope? I see hope in my youngest kid. He’s a bug, you know, because he’s little and just slithers around on his belly all over the place. It’s a bug. To me it’s a bug. It’s not human yet. [Laughter] And the little bug will turn into a monkey and start to somehow turn into a human some day. [Laughter]

Well he is a little bug and so independent. If I drop dead tomorrow, he’s going to make it. So that’s hope for me. That’s not to say that I plan on dying tomorrow. I want to see that little kid grow up and see him make little bambinos and I want to see it. You never know. That is what I wish. You take it as it comes. But that’s a hope for me.

And you go to a third world country and just a little thing that you give to a poor child and you see that face light up. That’s hope right there. You can do a ton of that stuff.

Many times it’s that subjectivity, that we all have, that clouds us about the visions of tomorrow. Why do you want to take something that is so cloudy and dark when you can also choose the opposite? You make that choice. That’s the problem. You’re subjective.

Individual responsibility means that you have to make decisions sometimes and that sometimes, the decisions that you make, can screw you up. Why? Because it starts something. It starts the wrong cycle of stupid thinking. And who are you going to fault for what you have done? You can’t fault anyone other than yourself in the end.

So even when you come to objectivity, you can’t always just be objective. You have to have some kind of center and finding that stuff is difficult. How do you balance your subjectivity and your objectivity and have that center> Because you know it’s that stuff. You will feel up. You will feel subjective. You will feel objective. You will naturally have that kind of rhythm.

But how do you balance that stuff? Sometimes you force it, sure. But beyond that point, without you knowing, you have that natural rhythm, but how do you balance it? So that’s why you have to find that center.

I don’t know what your limitations are. I don’t because everybody has limitations. Your limit, you have to know. You have to figure it out otherwise you’re not going to be anything because you’re trying to get something beyond what you can provide for yourself.

That’s why understanding your basic limitations, yourself, is much more important than anything else before you do anything else. How can you help somebody when you’re …

Even trying to better yourself, you have to know your limit so you can choose the proper stuff for yourself. Right? You don’t want to be a rock star do you? [Laughing] Maybe some people do. Some people have that kind of … but not every body can be that stuff. Choose your stuff.

In order to choose that stuff, you have to know your limit. Just because it looks good, sounds good, that does not mean it is for you. See your limit, you’re responsible for it. Knowing your limit, you’re responsible for it. That’s individual responsibility. From there, you start. From there you nurture yourself to grow. You mature and ultimately you grow into perfection, and become something that is you. And we need a lot of stuff like that to make a great, greater society.

When you look at America, this is the greatest nation. But basically people want stability, security, and continuity. And you think America is an ideal world? You think it can provide that, the basic stuff the citizens demand forever? I don’t think so. It will change. It has to change. Obviously it’s not perfect, to say the least. Okay? It will change. It has to change.

But that’s what basically people want in civilization. And you want to create an ideal civilization. So how do you go about achieving that? You have to look at yourself individually. And you have to know your limitations. You know what I’m saying. You have to know your limitations first before you start demanding stuff from others. That’s the most important thing.

When we can do that, when we can control ourselves to that degree, yes, there’s hope in humanity. If I can start to do that, starting from me, there’s hope in me. But if that can be synchronized, then there’s a hope for whatever that is greater. Okay?

Hope. YOU BUILD IT! The fate is in our hands, our fate. You build it, nobody else. Don’t pray to God. You build it. God is showing you the way. You build it, and don’t blame anyone else. Okay?

Hey! We have hope! We can do it! Just take it easy. Be patient. Take it step by step. You don’t need to hurry. You aren’t going anywhere. We’re trapped on this little marble until it changes for the better.

Don’t get ahead of yourself. Pace yourself out. Look at the others. Okay? Because we all have to do that to change the world, not just me. Okay. So pace yourself out.

Yeah, I’m sharing my personal kind of stuff, learning and whatever, personal realization, observation. But God through my Parents gave birth to me so you don’t get credit for whatever. If I did something to you, you don’t want to do that.

Sometimes, you just want to walk away. You have to know how to do that stuff. It’s not yours. Don’t be selfish. Because it’s so easy to be selfish, isn’t it? You aren’t going to make it to the top taking the easy way out. Right?

So, take care of yourself.

I’ll see you next week. [Thank you Hyo-Jin-nim]