Ep. 592 – One Undivided Reality with Buddhist Teacher Haemin Sunim
Mindrolling with Raghu Markus
Be Here Now Network
4.7 • 543 Ratings
🗓️ 2 May 2025
⏱️ 62 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
Summary
International bestselling author and Zen Buddhist teacher Haemin Sunim joins Raghu Markus to explore awakening, emotional healing, and returning to joy in a unified reality.
In this episode, Raghu and Haemin explore:
- Haemin’s early spiritual influences, including his fascination with J. Krishnamurti
- Understanding genuine freedom as freedom from the known
- Oneness and the truth of a unified, non-dual reality beyond inner and outer divisions
- The formless nature of awareness and unconditional love
- Awareness as an independent presence, not something we own
- Befriending emotions and seeing the roots of stress and trauma
- Facing our shadow and recognizing where resistance lives in us
- Turning inward to examine personal triggers rather than blaming others
- Questioning limiting beliefs and inherited thoughts from childhood
- Welcoming difficult emotions with compassion, as Ram Dass once taught
- The deep longing to return home to our true, unified self
- Experiencing the natural joy of being versus the tension of needing to be right
- Seeing our shared humanity—even in those we consider enemies
- Cultivating compassion and answering the call to serve others
This episode is sponsored by Reunion & Dharma Seed:
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About Haemin Sunim:
Born in South Korea and educated at Berkeley, Harvard, and Princeton, Haemin Sunim received formal monastic training from Haein monastery in South Korea. He taught Asian religions at Hampshire College in Massachusetts for seven years. He is one of the most influential Zen monks in the world. His first book, The Things You Can See Only When You Slow Down, has been translated into more than 35 languages and sold over four million copies. His second book, Love for Imperfect Things, was the number one bestseller of 2016 in South Korea and became available in multiple languages in 2019. Haemin resides in Seoul when not traveling to share his teachings. Check out his website to learn more and grab yourself a copy of his most recent book, When Things Don’t Go Your Way.
“Though there is an objective world out there, it is not ‘out there’. It is how the mind creates this world seemingly outside of us. In fact, it’s not outside of us. There is no inner and outer division—it’s just our conceptual distinction. In reality, there is one, undivided reality.”- Haemin Sunim
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Transcript
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| 0:00.0 | Hey, everyone, it's Ragu, back with Mind Rolling, and we're just speaking my guest is in Seoul, South Korea, right? |
| 0:27.1 | And here I am near Los Angeles. His name is Haman Sunim. Is that good pronunciation? |
| 0:35.0 | Yeah. Yeah. We're just meeting up. |
| 0:38.3 | And Haman's done such wonderful work in this world, aside from authoring books, |
| 0:45.3 | and he is a monk, and offering a lot of very, very positive energy. |
| 0:55.0 | We don't know each other, but I know that just from reading a little of the book and |
| 1:01.0 | just seeing you in the video. So welcome. Thanks for being here. |
| 1:07.0 | Oh, thank you for inviting me. |
| 1:11.7 | Yeah. |
| 1:15.9 | Okay, so we need to hear about you, though, |
| 1:18.4 | because you, you know, we just talked, |
| 1:20.1 | because I was saying I was near L.A., and you said, yeah, I used to live in L.A. |
| 1:23.6 | Well, can we start when you're a child in South Korea? |
| 1:29.1 | What led you to this path? |
| 1:43.5 | I think when I was 15 or 16, I had sort of existential crisis, and I didn't want to be in Korea, |
| 1:47.0 | and I wanted to go see beyond. And I didn't want to be in Korea and I wanted to go see beyond. |
| 2:04.5 | And I felt as though I was thrown into this life, you know, and you were just waking up and realizing that the life of the movie, it has been already started, and then you just have to figure it out, you know, where am I? Oh, I mean, Korea. Oh, what am I? Oh, I'm a human, you know, |
| 2:10.5 | I am Asian. So it felt a bit of, it felt quite foreign to me, you know, at that time. |
| 2:19.9 | Oh, yeah. |
| 2:20.3 | And then... |
| 2:20.5 | How old are we talking about when you start to have this kind of awareness? |
| 2:24.5 | Like, you know, ever since I was very young, |
... |
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