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Venerable Ajahn Golf was born in Bangkok. At the age of twenty, on the 18th of June, B.E. 2549 (2006), he ordained as a monk at a monastery belonging to the Dhammayut Forest Tradition in Udon Thani Province, Northeastern Thailand.
After his ordination, Ajahn undertook rigorous training in the Dhamma under the guidance of several respected masters from various regions, including Sakon Nakhon, Khon Kaen, and Nong Bua Lamphu Provinces. By the conclusion of the Rains Retreat (Vassa) in 2025, Ajahn had completed twenty vassa, signifying twenty years of monastic seniority.
At present, Venerable Ajahn Golf resides at Wat Pa Anuttaro, a forest monastery located in Nong Bua Lamphu Province, where he serves as the abbot.
In his early years of monastic life, Ajahn devoted himself extensively to secluded meditation practice. Only after he felt he had attained a firm and correct understanding of the Dhamma — and possessed both the confidence and sense of responsibility to guide others — did he begin offering Dhamma teachings and leading practitioners on the path of practice.
Venerable Ajahn Golf was born in Bangkok. At the age of twenty, on the 18th of June, B.E. 2549 (2006), he ordained as a monk at a monastery belonging to the Dhammayut Forest Tradition in Udon Thani Province, Northeastern Thailand.
After his ordination, Ajahn undertook rigorous training in the Dhamma under the guidance of several respected masters from various regions, including Sakon Nakhon, Khon Kaen, and Nong Bua Lamphu Provinces. By the conclusion of the Rains Retreat (Vassa) in 2025, Ajahn had completed twenty vassa, signifying twenty years of monastic seniority.


At present, Venerable Ajahn Golf resides at Wat Pa Anuttaro, a forest monastery located in Nong Bua Lamphu Province, where he serves as the abbot.
In his early years of monastic life, Ajahn devoted himself extensively to secluded meditation practice. Only after he felt he had attained a firm and correct understanding of the Dhamma—and possessed both the confidence and sense of responsibility to guide others—did he begin offering Dhamma teachings and leading practitioners on the path of practice.