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In this episode of The Eric Vaz Show, Eric turns to the very first verse of the Dhammapada, placing one of Buddhism’s oldest teachings inside the most modern of spaces: a student’s bedroom at midnight, lit by a laptop glow, pulsing with deadlines, comparison, and quiet panic. What unfolds is an intimate look at how the mind writes stories faster than life unfolds, and how suffering follows those stories as predictably as a wheel follows the foot of the animal that pulls the cart.
Through the lens of Buddhist thought, university life, and the lived reality of neurodivergent minds, Eric reflects on what actually happens when a single sentence in a group chat convinces us that we do not belong. The raw facts stay the same. It is the mind that bends them into identity. And once we see that, even briefly, the night becomes a gentler place.
Can an ancient verse help us meet modern anxiety with a different kind of awareness?
🎙️ Episode Highlights
• The first verse of the Dhammapada and its image of mind leading experience• Why university life amplifies stories of comparison and self-doubt• The distinction between fact, story, and the body’s immediate response• How neurodivergent pattern-seeking minds create catastrophes in seconds• Practical ways to interrupt the cycle before the wheel begins to roll
🧘 Takeaway
The assignment is not the storm.The story is.When we learn to see the difference, the wheel slows, and the night softens.Awareness begins where the mind stops insisting on its own narrative.
Written, hosted, and narrated by Eric Vaz, Ph.D.Produced by The Eric Vaz ShowMusic by licensed ambient composers (royalty-free)© 2025 Eric Vaz — All Rights Reserved
By Eric VazIn this episode of The Eric Vaz Show, Eric turns to the very first verse of the Dhammapada, placing one of Buddhism’s oldest teachings inside the most modern of spaces: a student’s bedroom at midnight, lit by a laptop glow, pulsing with deadlines, comparison, and quiet panic. What unfolds is an intimate look at how the mind writes stories faster than life unfolds, and how suffering follows those stories as predictably as a wheel follows the foot of the animal that pulls the cart.
Through the lens of Buddhist thought, university life, and the lived reality of neurodivergent minds, Eric reflects on what actually happens when a single sentence in a group chat convinces us that we do not belong. The raw facts stay the same. It is the mind that bends them into identity. And once we see that, even briefly, the night becomes a gentler place.
Can an ancient verse help us meet modern anxiety with a different kind of awareness?
🎙️ Episode Highlights
• The first verse of the Dhammapada and its image of mind leading experience• Why university life amplifies stories of comparison and self-doubt• The distinction between fact, story, and the body’s immediate response• How neurodivergent pattern-seeking minds create catastrophes in seconds• Practical ways to interrupt the cycle before the wheel begins to roll
🧘 Takeaway
The assignment is not the storm.The story is.When we learn to see the difference, the wheel slows, and the night softens.Awareness begins where the mind stops insisting on its own narrative.
Written, hosted, and narrated by Eric Vaz, Ph.D.Produced by The Eric Vaz ShowMusic by licensed ambient composers (royalty-free)© 2025 Eric Vaz — All Rights Reserved