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Retreat Dharma Talks

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2014-09-16 Introduction to Mindfulness Course - 2014 7:51:06
Mark Nunberg
2014-09-16 Practice for Difficult Times 37:34
Howard Cohn
2014-09-16 Breath: An Intimate Focus for Attention 45:06
Shaila Catherine
This talk was given as a part of the series "Enhancing Mindfulness Skills: A Seven-Week Series Dedicated to Cultivating Transformative Insight." How do we approach the breath? The breath can be used in a variety of ways to enhance mindfulness and to cultivate the insight into impermanence. Observing the breath calms the mind and allows us to tune into present moment experience. By observing the changes in breathing we can assess our feelings, emotions, and moods. Realizing the impermanent, conditioned, changing nature of the breath supports a skillful and powerful recollection of death. Let this contemplation of death be poignant enough to stir a sense of urgency. Reflect on what is really important in life.
2014-09-17 Being the Knowing 39:40
Doug Phillips
2014-09-17 The Power of Myth 53:49
Pamela Weiss
2014-09-21 The Second Noble Truth 41:23
Jason Murphy
2014-09-23 Cultivating Kindness 34:43
Howard Cohn
2014-09-23 Body: A Matter of Life 47:34
Shaila Catherine
This talk was given as a part of the series "Enhancing Mindfulness Skills: A Seven-Week Series Dedicated to Cultivating Transformative Insight." This talk focuses on "Four Elements." It is a traditional practice of mindfulness of the body. In ancient India, the materiality of the body was thought to be composed of four elements—earth, fire, wind and water. These four elements, in turn, have twelve characteristics—(earth) heaviness and lightness, hardness and softness, roughness and smoothness; (fire) heat and coolness; (wind) pushing and supporting; (water) fluidity and cohesion. All of these characteristics can be known with our mind and in our body. Discerning the characteristics of material elements will lead to a profound contemplation of impermanence and death. Seeing the impermanence of the body, we know we cannot control it. The body is not-self, it is not possessable, not I, and not eternally me. Understanding the impermanence of material elements and this body composed of elements, we learn to let go. This talk concludes with a guided meditation of body scans, with emphasis on the four elements and their respective characteristics.
2014-09-24 Dharma Talk 47:42
George Mumford
2014-09-27 Growing Inner Resources 56:40
Rick Hanson
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