Monastic

Sister Phú Nghiêm

Sister phu nghiem

Sister Chân Phú Nghiêm (Gift from Heaven) was born in central Vietnam in 1981 and immigrated to the United States at the age of ten with her parents and eight siblings, settling in the Sacramento area. Raised in a Buddhist family, she was introduced to the Plum Village tradition through her older sister, who ordained as a nun in 1994. However, as a teenager, she was not initially drawn to monastic life, enjoying the vibrant energy of youth and the connections of family and friends.

She pursued a degree in interior design at Fresno State and entered the corporate world, working in commercial interior design. While she was successful in her field, she found the working environment and social culture increasingly misaligned with her values. The fast-paced lifestyle, emphasis on external achievements, and pressures of professional networking led her to question whether this was the life she truly wanted to live. In particular, she noticed how much she had changed—drinking more, socializing differently, and feeling disconnected from the simplicity and depth she had once known.

During this period of questioning, her monastic sister visited and encouraged her to explore an alternative path. Taking a break from work, she traveled to Green Mountain Dharma Center in Vermont, a Plum Village practice center. From the moment she arrived, something in her recognized this way of life as home. The rhythm of the day, the mindful way of eating, walking, and being with others, and the depth of presence in the community all awakened something long dormant in her heart. It felt like a continuation of the values she had been raised with, but in a more intentional, embodied form.

Encouraged by Sister Chân Không, she wrote a letter to Thầy (Zen Master Thích Nhất Hạnh) expressing her aspiration to ordain. After returning home briefly, she spent two years as an aspirant at Deer Park Monastery before officially ordaining as a nun in Plum Village, France, in 2008. Soon after, she was asked to help establish Magnolia Grove Monastery in Mississippi, a request she accepted, even though she found it emotionally difficult to leave the community she had grown to love.

Helping to build a monastery from the ground up was an immense challenge. Many of the monastics who arrived at Magnolia Grove were also new, having been displaced from Vietnam due to the closing of Bat Nha Monastery. As one of the few monastics with experience living in the West, Sister Phú Nghiêm found herself in a leadership role—helping others adjust, navigating logistics, and supporting the daily life of the community. It was a period of deep learning but also great stress. She often found herself overworking, experiencing daily migraines and stomach pain from the intensity of responsibility. Eventually, she recognized the need to care for herself and made the decision to return to Deer Park Monastery, where she could reconnect with the foundational practices of mindfulness and ease.

Over time, Sister Phú Nghiêm has learned to integrate work and practice in a way that is nourishing rather than depleting. She now prioritizes presence in daily activities—mindful steps, truly enjoying meals, and deepening her relationships with her siblings in the Sangha. She has found that as her relationship with herself becomes more honest and kind, her relationships with others naturally transform as well.

Her mother ordained as a nun in 2010, two years after her own ordination. While this was a profound and meaningful transition, it also created challenges within her family, particularly for her father, who struggled with the absence of both his wife and daughter. For many years, he found it too painful to visit the monastery, though in recent years he has begun reconnecting. Now, Sister Phú Nghiêm is embracing a new chapter of her practice—caring for her aging mother while continuing her own spiritual path. She sees this as an opportunity for deep learning, patience, and love.

Reflecting on monastic life, she describes it as a luxurious way to live—not in the material sense, but in its richness of heart and spirit. The precepts, fine manners, and daily practices of mindfulness allow monastics to live beautifully, with grace, kindness, and true freedom. She sees the monastic path as one of refinement, where with time, one becomes more open, more loving, and more connected to the vastness of life.

A Dharma teacher in the Plum Village tradition, originally from Vietnam and a U.S. citizen, born in 1981, she entered monastic training in 2008 at the age of 27 and received the novice precepts on September 20, 2008, at Pháp Vân Temple – Plum Village, with the Dharma name Tâm Nghiêm Vĩnh and the Dharma title Chân Phú Nghiêm. She belongs to the Cây Sen Trắng (White Lotus Tree) ordination family.

She received full ordination on February 27, 2012, during the Tình Huynh Đệ (Brotherhood) Great Ordination Ceremony.

She is the 557th disciple of Thầy in the Plum Village lineage, the 43rd generation in the Lâm Tế (Linji) Zen tradition, and the 9th generation of the Liễu Quán Dharma branch.

Ordination Date

September 20, 2008

Name Translation

Gift from Heaven

Birthplace

Vietnam

Lamp Transmission

Sister Phu Nghiem was transmitted the lamp in 2018 during a monastic retreat at Plum Village, receiving the transmission gatha:

"The essence of the Zen gate is celestial nobility,
 Radiant and dignified in harmonious strength.
 With each step, the Dharma blossoms,
 Holding the precious jewel, beyond rise and fall."

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