Donate  |   Contact


The greatest gift is the
gift of the teachings
 
Dharma Talks
2013-11-27 Dharma Talk 1:16:51
Larry Rosenberg
Cambridge Insight Meditation Center

2013-11-27 Everything Is Given 59:27
Pamela Weiss

2013-11-27 Impromptu Interview with Korean Bhikkhuni 61:56
Sylvia Boorstein
Spirit Rock Meditation Center Monday and Wednesday Talks

2013-11-27 Samatha Supports Insight: Integrating versus Disintegrating 6:46
Ajahn Sucitto
Insight Meditation Society - Forest Refuge November 9 to December 8 2013 at IMS - Forest Refuge

2013-11-27 Morning 38:53
Ajahn Sucitto
Insight Meditation Society - Forest Refuge November 9 to December 8 2013 at IMS - Forest Refuge

2013-11-26 The Joy and Preciousness of Change 59:21
Pat Coffey
Change is the fundamental law of nature. How one learns to skillfully be with unwanted change is the difference between a life of peace and a life of anguish. Mindfulness practice addresses this directly.
Spirit Rock Meditation Center Thanksgiving Insight Meditation Retreat

2013-11-26 Evening 0:35
Ajahn Sucitto
Insight Meditation Society - Forest Refuge November 9 to December 8 2013 at IMS - Forest Refuge

2013-11-26 Monthly Sitting and Inquiry: Nov 26, 2013 67:59
Gina Sharpe
Monthly Sitting and Inquiry: Nov 26, 2013
New York Insight Meditation Center NYI Regular Talks

2013-11-26 Dependent Origination: Death 56:14
Rodney Smith
Birth and aging inevitably lead to dying and death. The Buddha suggests this pattern can be broken by waking up to the sequencing of Dependent Origination. We cannot prevent the body from dying but we can opt out from the paradigm in which "I" die along with it. When we live encased within the idea of "me," with the "me" as real as the physical form we embody, then as the body ages we will fear our death. Interestingly enough, by eliminating everything that lives within the cycle of birth and death, we find our way out of death. Investigating what remains after death or what cannot be born or age can begin to move us away from dependency on form. We cannot rest our answer on the visible world because all we see will be taken away. If _what_ we see dies, perhaps the invisible _seeing_ itself holds the deathless. What is it that sees out of our eyes? Again, not what we see, but the seeing or awareness itself. Awareness gives us the capacity to see, but awareness cannot be seen. Though awareness cannot be seen, it can be intimated through a felt-sense of the body.
Seattle Insight Meditation Society
In collection: Dependent Origination

2013-11-26 Two Aspects of Awareness: Unifying the Cognitive and the Affective 38:12
Ajahn Sucitto
Insight Meditation Society - Forest Refuge November 9 to December 8 2013 at IMS - Forest Refuge

Creative Commons License