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Dharma Talks
2011-10-19 Getting Down to more Direct Experience II 57:42
Donald Rothberg
We look further at the mechanisms by which we move away from direct experience. unskillfully, driven by reactivity and papanca (conceptual proliferation). We point to practices of tracking thoughts, emotions, reactivity-that help us ground in more direct experience, leading to greater freedom and responsiveness-personally interpersonally, and collectively.
Spirit Rock Meditation Center Monday and Wednesday Talks

2011-10-18 Inclusion and Exclusion 42:05
Howard Cohn
Mission Dharma

2011-10-18 Understanding Dukkha 43:50
Kim Allen
Dukkha – variously rendered as suffering, unsatisfactoriness, stress, or struggle – is one of the three marks of existence. According to the teaching on the First Noble Truth, the task related to dukkha is to understand it. This talk examines what dukkha is and is not, and offers guidelines for exploring it deeply.
Insight Meditation South Bay - Silicon Valley Tuesday Talks—2011

2011-10-17 Practicing Patience 55:54
Sally Armstrong
Patience, one of the paramis, is a quality that we don’t often appreciate, even though it is tremendously important in our practice and our lives. To be patient is to be fully present for what is, to be with difficulty and challenge without resistance. Patience allows mindfulness and wisdom to deepen, as we meet our experience without agendas or expectations.
Insight Meditation Society - Retreat Center Three-Month Retreat - Part 1

2011-10-17 Causal Relationship - continued 1:27:57
Sayadaw U Jagara
Insight Meditation Society - Forest Refuge July through October 2011 at IMS - Forest Refuge

2011-10-17 Buddhist Studies Course - Mudita & Upekkha- Appreciative Joy & Equanimity - Week 5 1:31:12
Mark Nunberg
Upekkha - Equanimity
Common Ground Meditation Center Buddhist Studies Course - Mudita & Upekkha- Appreciative Joy & Equanimity

2011-10-17 Nothing Left Out 59:58
Jack Kornfield
Spirit Rock Meditation Center Monday and Wednesday Talks

2011-10-16 Karma and the End of Karma 64:24
Guy Armstrong
This talk covers four key areas of the Buddha’s teachings on karma: action, results of action, relation to not-self, and the end of karma. Publishable online for the general public
Insight Meditation Society - Retreat Center Three-Month Retreat - Part 1

2011-10-16 Developing Mindfulness with Children - A Workshop for Adults Afternoon Session 3:03:03
Sharon Salzberg
with Susan Kaiser-Greenland
New York Insight Meditation Center NYI Regular Talks

2011-10-16 Mindfulness According to Early Buddhist Sources 2:37:12
Bhikkhu Analayo
"The aim of my presentation will be to investigate what mindfulness practice is about according to the early Buddhist discourses. These discourses have been preserved in the Pali Nikayas, in the Chinese Agamas, and at times also in Sanskrit fragments and sutra quotations preserved in Tibetan. From a historical viewpoint, these discourses represent the earliest layer of Buddhist textual material and thus take us back as close as possible to the original instructions delivered by the Buddha. In these texts, we find two basic expositions: 1) the fourfold establishment of mindfulness taught in general; 2) the threefold establishment of mindfulness associated with the Buddha himself. First, I will examine the fourfold establishment of mindfulness, based on the way it is depicted in the different extant versions of the Discourse on Mindfulness and the Discourse on Mindfulness of Breathing. Then, I will compare these to the threefold establishment of mindfulness. Through such comparison, I hope to arrive at key aspects of Buddhist mindfulness practice according to the earliest available textual sources at our disposition."
Spirit Rock Meditation Center
Attached Files:
  • Mindfulness According to Early Buddhist Sources by Bhikkhu Analayo (PDF)

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