Get to know Ariyananda
The name Ariyanandā was given to me by my teacher. It means noble bliss.
I appreciate the beauty, diversity and universality of this world. I deeply hope for a world where human goodness can shine forth with care for our home planet and her people; truth is over tribe, peace is over profit, compassion is over cruelty.
We are never separate from the rest of all that there is. Universal wellbeing starts with our own wellbeing and our wellbeing is fundamentally connected with the wellbeing of all lives. I do my bit to help humans live well and restore connectedness through sharing what I practise, engaging in community work and social movements, volunteering in different organisations from community gardens to hospice, and simply sharing my full presence.
I grew up in a bustling city called Guangzhou near an ancient monastery where I used to go play as a child and go for consolation and calm as a teenager. During my childhood I was enthralled by my grandma's chanting of the Heart Sutra and watching elders doing Qigong under an ancient Bodhi tree. They took root in my young heart and the tree of practice started to grow in 2010 when I left home in search of something. I did not know what I was searching for until I found myself in a Thai forest monastery waking up at 4am to meditate. Since then, I have been trained mainly with master Xu Changde in Wu style Taichi (internal art), Goenka in Vipassana meditation, Ajahn Sucitto, my primary teacher, in Buddhist practice and Qigong, Dr Huang Liang and Dr Feng Liyi in Classical Formulas (Jingfang) in Traditional Chinese Medicine.
They have helped me grow and inspired me to share the wisdom of living well with others. They forever have my deepest gratitude, along with other teachers I encountered on this path, including Tenzin Palmo, Lin Liangchuan, Peter Wayne, Jack Kornfield, Jon Kabat-Zinn, Dan Siegel, all the inspiring people associated with the Mind & Life Institute, and those in Ajahn Chah's lineage in the Thai forest tradition.
In recent years, I have spent a big part of my life living in forest monasteries to deepen my practice and when I was asked to share my practice, I felt perhaps it was time to be more engaged and share what I have learned with the 'world'.
My practice also led me to do a research master's while I was teaching full-time at Swansea University. It was an interdisciplinary research project using an arts-based phenomenological approach, entitled Artistic Anatomy of Pain Experience: An Exploration through Interviews and Image Making with First-person Interpretation, which investigated the multifaceted experience of pain, drawing on neuroscience, psychology, phenomenology, Buddhist psychology, Taoist thinking and Traditional Chinese Medicine. With a focus on the influence of contemplative practices and culture on perception, it aimed to open up the possibility of relations with pain through the insights from lived experience. It concluded that the participants who gained insights through contemplative practices are more likely to be comfortable with discomfort. This inspired me to quit lecturing and directly work with people to cultivate a tool to live with ease.
I am honoured to serve as a guide or simply a companion to anyone who finds my support helpful on their path. I look forward to learning with you.


Ariyanandā, M.A, FHEA
investigator of humanness, educator of the heart, TCM practitioner, researcher, creative, grower
Training
Mindfulness teacher specialised in MBCT (Mindfulness-based Cognitive Therapy) - training with Bangor University
I meet the UK Good Practice Guidelines for Mindfulness-Based Teachers
M.A by Research on pain experience
Mental Health First Aid
Cert. Counselling
Dip. Acupuncture and Moxibustion
BSc(Hons) Acupuncture (in progress)
Permaculture Design
Adult and Children Safeguarding
Buddhist Healthcare Chaplain
(endorsment by BHCT)
Enhanced DBS
Fully insured
其他語言Other languages
廣東話 Cantonese
普通話 Mandarin
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© 2025 by Ariyananda
