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Retreat Dharma Talks

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2014-10-05 Mindfulness and Climate Action : 1 1:13:52
Thanissara, Jack Kornfield, Ruth King, Tara Brach
Thanissara with Tara Brach, Ruth King and Jack Kornfield.
In collection: Mindfulness and Climate Action
2014-10-06 How To Be An Earthling 49:21
Wes Nisker
2014-10-07 Integral Awakening in Context and Personal Exploration 56:19
Amma Thanasanti
2014-10-07 Luminous is the Mind 34:20
Howard Cohn
2014-10-08 Climate Change And Not Knowing 51:21
Pamela Weiss
2014-10-12 Mindfulness and Climate Action : 2 69:28
Thanissara, Ayya Anandabodhi, Rev. angel Kyodo williams, Susie Harrington
Thanissara with Rev. angel Kyodo williams, Ayya Anandabodhi Bhikkhuni and Susie Harrington. In this conversation, Susie Harrington mentioned two sources: Kerry Nelson’s offering of online workshops at A Place for Peace as well as Vinit Allen’s Sustainable World Sourcebook. Both offer ways to engage individually but also at the community level.Rev angel Kyodo williams mentioned the site What Is Missing? from Maya Lin offering an interactive experience of all that has been and continues to be lost to which you can add your own accounting.
In collection: Mindfulness and Climate Action
2014-10-12 Real Leadership 34:10
Pamela Weiss
2014-10-12 Real Leadership 34:10
Pamela Weiss
2014-10-14 Questions & Answers 38:32
Howard Cohn
2014-10-14 Many Kinds of Thoughts 41:01
Shaila Catherine
This talk was given by Shaila Catherine as a part of the series "Enhancing Mindfulness Skills: A Seven-Week Series Dedicated to Cultivating Transformative Insight." Mindful of the thinking process, we explore how thoughts function in our lives. Unwholesome mental patterns can reinforce obsessive desires, identification, rigid opinions, and attachment to belief systems. What patterns are most common for you—planning, rumination, fantasy, rehearsing, daydreaming, judging, comparing, fixing, instructing? We observe the types of thoughts that arise, and reflect on whether those thoughts support our values and purpose. We learn to let go of unskillful thoughts and then focus our attention so that we use the mind skillfully. Buddhist tradition identifies three sources for proliferating thought: craving, conceit, and views. By examining the sources of conceptual proliferation, we can curb the wandering tendencies of mind.
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