Donate  |   Contact


The greatest gift is the
gift of the teachings
 
Dharma Talks in English
2009-07-11 Having Fun (Skillfully) 36:40
Ajahn Sucitto
The experience of having fun, enjoyment, is an energy. The problem comes when we locate it externally, then attach to it, self-orient around it. A skilful person knows how to cultivate pleasure in themselves. Practise with meditation. Find out what blocks it and what encourages it. The Buddha taught pleasure as a way to awakening.
Cittaviveka Vassa Retreat

2009-07-11 Walk Back to Center 18:31
Ajahn Sucitto
In whatever activity we engage in, meditation through the postures is a matter of returning to presence – to that awareness which can know. With walking, don’t do the walking, meditate the walking. Maintain a core presence that doesn’t participate and doesn’t shut anything out. Meet everything with openness and alertness, like a mother welcoming her children.
Cittaviveka Vassa Retreat

2009-07-09 Opening the Door 16:43
Ajahn Sucitto
Encouragement to make an effort with the retreat form. Give particular attention to posture. To clean and purify you have to open up the house, open up the body. Open up the world, the doors to heaven and hell. Whatever comes through, keep the door open, let the energies blow through. Body is where we can break the cycle of samsara.
Cittaviveka Vassa Retreat

2009-07-08 Part 4 - Wise Practice - Taking Refuge in Awareness 1:15:55
Tara Brach
This four week series reviews many key components of Buddhist meditation practice. Beginning with intention and attitude, we cover the strategies that help us arrive in presence, the key elements of mindfulness, working with difficult emotional states and the practices that awaken our heart. Each week will include guided meditations and reflections.
Insight Meditation Community of Washington DC IMCW Wednesday Evening Talks

2009-07-08 Awakening the Force of Non-Harming 7:38
Mark Nunberg
Dharma Talk
Common Ground Meditation Center

2009-07-08 Morality - Second in a series of the 10 Paramitas 56:49
Sylvia Boorstein
May these precepts be the Cause of Happiness Note: Quality is not great. Talk was recorded at too high a compression rate.
Spirit Rock Meditation Center Monday and Wednesday Talks

2009-07-08 The Freedom Beyond Grasping 47:37
Sharda Rogell
Gaia House Insight Meditation and Contemplative Inquiry

2009-07-07 Practice Q and A 56:36
Rodney Smith
Rodney Smith addresses questions on practice with a theme of investigation.
Seattle Insight Meditation Society

2009-07-07 Three Chants Expressing Aspects of Compassion, and Some Reflections 66:46
Catherine McGee
Gaia House Insight Meditation and Contemplative Inquiry

2009-07-07 How Real is the Real World - Asalha Puja 54:33
Ajahn Sucitto
The so-called real world is concocted from our fears, beliefs, obsessions. All of which are changeable and conditioned. There is a real that the Buddha spoke of: he called it the peaceful, the sublime, the unbounded. It’s not located in time and space, but it’s experienceable. Form and function, when appropriately considered and applied, can serve as our vehicle to the real.
Cittaviveka Vassa Retreat

Creative Commons License