[Keelung]
O[Chiayi] From April 29-May 3, 2005, Formosa’s 14th Annual National
Athletic Meet for Universities and Colleges was held at National Chung
Cheng University. About 12,000 athletes from 165 universities and colleges
throughout Formosa participated in the Meet’s numerous sports
competitions held in coordination with the annual Pineapple Cultural
Festival in Wensyong Township, Chiayi County. With its fruit bazaars
and performances by the world-renowned Cloud Gate Dance Theatre and
more traditional Liyuan Drama Workshop, the Meet featured an interesting
blend of athletics and culture.
Initiates
from The Supreme Master Ching Hai International Association participated
in the event by conducting a booth to share Master’s teachings
and another to promote vegetarianism. The practitioners prepared a wide
variety of delectable vegetarian dishes and snacks for visitors to the
Meet’s remote venue, where such fare is in short supply. While
enjoying their food, many guests raised questions about Master and the
Quan Yin Method, which the fellow initiates were happy to answer. All
during the Meet an exhibitor who had been a vegetarian for over a decade
visited the vegetarian booth and confessed, “While both the sumptuous
meals and Master’s wise words leave me greatly impressed, I’m
benefiting more from watching Her lectures on DVD than from the food.”
The Association’s
booths attracted many other people with affinity and a keen interest
in Master’s teachings, including a foreign language student who
had once capitulated to his family’s objection to his being initiated
due to their misunderstanding of the Quan Yin family. Upon learning
the Convenient Method, the young man looked elated and blissful as though
he had become another person. Also, a well-known local celebrity came
frequently to watch Master’s DVDs, staying several hours each
time and being reluctant to leave even at meal times. On the fourth
day of the event, he learned the Convenient form of meditation and expressed
a wish to be initiated into the Quan Yin Method once he became accustomed
to the vegetarian diet.
In
addition, several athletes visited the Association’s booth, some
of whom were Quan Yin Practitioners who were both the best of their
respective institutions and vegetarians as well, demonstrating that
a well-balanced vegetarian diet increases physical strength. For example,
brother Liu, a swimmer from National Central University, said the vegetarian
diet had eased the burden on his body and given him such stamina and
strength that his superiors recommended him for long-distance swimming.
The spokesman
for the Meet, Taipei Mayor Ma Ying-jeou, encouraged the participants
to be well-prepared in advance, fearless about losing at the starting
point and persistent in discovering their own strengths and goals. “The
main challenge in long-distance running and swimming is stamina and
strength,” he said, “and a slow start does not necessarily
mean losing in the end.” Mayor Ma’s insights also apply
to spiritual practice. As long as we pursue the right goal and use our
time well on the spiritual path, we will be able to rise higher and
higher. And if we can rise to all challenges through persistence, we
will definitely achieve good results, be it in spiritual progress or
athletic competition.