|
|
Donate |
Contact
|
|
|
 |
|
|
|
The greatest gift is the gift of the teachings
|
|
|
| |
|
Dharma Talks
|
2026-05-24
Right View as an Organizational Principle for Life
1:25:10
|
|
Gullu Singh
|
|
|
Right View is seeing in a way that aligns with reality. It is not a static belief or fixed opinion, but an ongoing, dynamic, experiential alignment with what is true. Right View brings the mind and heart into harmony, like a wheel properly set on its axle. With Right View comes clarity. We begin to see the distortions caused by clinging, greed, hatred, and delusion, and that seeing empowers us to act in ways that reduce suffering.
One of the most important teachings on wise view, the Sammādiṭṭhi Sutta (MN 9), offers a simple organizing principle—a kind of Dhamma algorithm—that, when practiced, can lead to greater well-being, deeper wisdom, and ultimately freedom from grief, sorrow, lamentation, dukkha, and distress.
The slides referenced in the talk can be found at https://links.gullusingh.com/e005e6
|
|
Spirit Rock Meditation Center
:
BIPOC Voices - Series
|
|
|
2026-05-21
What Does it Mean to Practice Community? James and Nina Raddy
36:19
|
|
James Baraz
|
|
|
In this talk James introduces Nina Raddy, a member of our IMCB community, who shares from her own experience of community practice and helping build Community Village, a vibrant, peer-led meditation community for people in their 20s and 30s in the Bay Area. She'll explore how generosity, wholesome friendship, and simply showing up for one another can themselves become profound practices.
Buddhist teachings place great emphasis on spiritual friendship and sangha — the community of practitioners — as essential supports for the path. Yet in a culture that often emphasizes individualism and disconnection, sangha can seem like a good idea but not something we truly experience to the extent we wish we had. Data from the U.S. Surgeon General emphasizes that lacking social connection carries a mortality risk comparable to smoking up to 15 cigarettes a day, making community engagement a biological necessity rather than a comfort. Community acts as the vital antidote to the modern public health crisis of isolation, transforming deep-seated loneliness into a foundation for emotional and physical survival. What does it mean to practice community?
|
|
Spirit Rock Meditation Center
:
Equanimity: Cultivating Emotional Balance, Resilience, and Well-Being in Difficult Times
|
|
|
2026-05-21
Metta as a Way of Life: Refuge and Response in a Fractured World
21:42
|
|
Oren Jay Sofer
|
|
|
Drawing on the Mettā Sutta, this talk from Clear Dharma Sangha explores mettā as a way of life, a profound wish for the safety and happiness of all beings, and a way of seeing. Through the practice of the neutral person, we begin to extend goodwill beyond preference — and to cultivate a refuge that steadies us not to escape, but to turn toward the world with clarity, courage, and care.
|
|
Online
|
|
|
2026-05-13
Guided Meditation on Developing Concentration (Samadhi) 2
44:31
|
|
Donald Rothberg
|
|
|
We review at the beginning the basic instructions for cultivating concentration (samadhi), including attention to posture, a variety of possible areas of focus (with most attention given to the breath, including the technique of practicing with the "three-part breath"), and balancing "not too tight" and "not too loose." We also review the main challenges that can arise in such practice, and how to work with these challenges. Then we practice mostly in silence, with a discussion period at the end of the sitting.
|
|
Spirit Rock Meditation Center
:
Monday and Wednesday Talks
|
|
|
2026-05-10
Q&A
35:05
|
|
Ajahn Sucitto
|
|
|
Questions are précised: Q1 Sometimes it's difficult to know what the right thing to do is. Or perhaps doubt arises when the moment has passed and you think maybe I misunderstood or I misinterpreted. Q2 05:49 How do we resolve things that in the heart remain unresolved, unfulfilled for a long time, even over generations and continue to unsettle us? Q3 13:00 You said earlier that thoughts don't have an endpoint. The image that came to my mind was scrolling on a phone. Could you talk a little more about that? Q4 21:31 Could you explore the process of resolution. Is there something that I can do to integrate the energies? Q5 25:57 I want to ask about clinging and letting go. How is the clinging happening? What is the difference between repressing/ pushing away and letting go?
|
|
Sumedharama Monastery
|
|
|
2026-05-09
Tranquil and Alert: Viriya and the Art of Balanced Effort
49:33
|
|
Sharon Salzberg
|
|
|
Drawing on the legend of the Buddha touching the earth and the Barre town motto that named her retreat center, Sharon Salzberg explores viriya — the pāramī of energy, effort, and courageous application. This talk examines how right effort lives in the middle way between strain and indolence, how the integration of inner and outer work makes the dharma real, and how we claim our own right to aspire to freedom.
|
|
Refuge of Belonging
|
|
|
2026-05-07
When in Doubt, Relax!
40:22
|
|
James Baraz
|
|
|
Practice can sometimes feel complicated with so many different techniques and instructions on how to extricate oneself from identifying with our experience. Using approaches from Tibetan Dzogchen and other non-dual teachings this talks explores the profound simplicity of letting go of all trying as a way to come back to our true nature.
|
|
Insight Meditation Community of Berkeley
|
|
|
2026-05-02
Evening Dharma Talk - The Middle Way
55:39
|
|
Yuka Nakamura
|
|
|
The Buddha called the noble eightfold path the middle way. The middle way stands for a basic principle that can be applied to many areas of our life. Our relationship to sense pleasures, energy, emotions, social responsibilities and hope vs. fear. It means not getting caught in dualities or polarities, not fixating on any extreme, but finding creative ways to deal with the complexities and ambiguities of human life.
|
|
Gaia House
:
A Path for Here & Now
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|