Young Adults
Young adults often encounter Buddhist practice while navigating identity, uncertainty, mental health, relationships, and the pressure to define a meaningful life. The practitioners in this theme show how the Dharma can offer both direction and community during a formative period of change.
Mingo reflects on questioning the Christianity of their upbringing and exploring different spiritual and secular worldviews before finding a deeper connection with Buddhism. Aaron describes the instability that followed an intense awakening during college, including struggles with substances, unresolved habits, and the difficult work of grounding spiritual experience through ethics, yoga, and meditation. Zselyke, raised within a Buddhist family, shares how meditation and teachings on impermanence help her approach challenges with greater perspective while learning how to offer spiritual advice without imposing it on others.
Together, their stories reveal that young adulthood can be a powerful time of spiritual discovery, but also one marked by confusion, isolation, and the need for trustworthy guidance. Buddhism offers them more than relief from stress—it provides tools for examining identity, developing discipline, finding community, and living with a clearer sense of purpose.
Register to explore their complete stories and discover how young adults are bringing Buddhist practice into the realities of modern life.
