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Dharma Talks
2021-08-08 Using embodied intelligence 7:46
Ajahn Sucitto
Practice with sustaining open space for phenomena to arise and move within. Sensitive to what’s going on, but not contracting around it, body remains spacious and open. It’s possible to experience sense contact without intrusion, remaining internally clear, free from congestion.
Sunyata Buddhist Centre :  Open Stability

2021-08-08 Embodied intelligence 25:17
Ajahn Sucitto
We are familiar with conceptual intelligence, but body and heart intelligence need to be trained. These do not interpret or think about phenomena, but experience it directly – feeling, sensing, responding. Exploring things as phenomenal rather than as myself, there’s no need to understand them; instead let them pass with dispassionate, open stability.
Sunyata Buddhist Centre :  Open Stability

2021-08-08 Balance internal and external 2:56
Ajahn Sucitto
Use the experience of deepening attention in your practice, to really see what’s around you. You can practice mindfulness when you move around off the cushion. Often we live in the cocoon of an assumed environment that is not really what’s there. Take a fresh look. Pay attention.
Sunyata Buddhist Centre :  Open Stability

2021-08-08 Open into the given 27:58
Ajahn Sucitto
Mindfulness is the heart's awareness. It can help us be embodied,present, and show up for life. The embodied sense is warm, cohesive and is sustained through the rhythmic flow of breathing. The sense of ‘I am’ sits in the center of that embodied sensitivity. This sense is a given and cannot be created; but mostly its ignored because we're too busy ‘doing’ to receive it.
Sunyata Buddhist Centre :  Open Stability

2021-08-08 Little me and the sabotage 48:21
Ajahn Sucitto
We live at the meeting point of perceptions and impressions with their reactions and cannot stop suffering until we see beyond that domain. Stability and the awareness of the ever-changing nature of experience are both essential. From this perspective we see how the pressure to be harmonious with others captures the heart. This is a form of sabotage; it creates inner conflict, and a person – little me – who is never happy. When there is conflict, it’s important to find common ground with others, prior to negotiating the details.
Sunyata Buddhist Centre :  Open Stability

2021-08-07 Dharma Talk: Karma and Finding a Purpose in the Chaos of Life 49:12
Jaya Rudgard
Gaia House Inside-outside: the mystery of I, me, mine

2021-08-07 Guided Meditation - Letting Go Into Curiosity and Kindness 33:46
Ayya Santussika
Karuna Buddhist Vihara

2021-08-07 Thoughts 23:37
Ayya Santussika
Karuna Buddhist Vihara

2021-08-07 Chanting Together 14:58
Jaya Rudgard
Gaia House Inside-outside: the mystery of I, me, mine

2021-08-07 Equanimity: The Time is Now 1:42:30
DaRa Williams
True North Insight Black, Indigenous, and People of Colour Retreat

2021-08-07 Metta: Love Is Strong 45:41
Dawn Mauricio
True North Insight Black, Indigenous, and People of Colour Retreat

2021-08-07 Teachings and Guided Meditation 51:44
Gavin Milne
The Nature of Experience and What This Offers Us
Gaia House Inside-outside: the mystery of I, me, mine

2021-08-07 Love is not a reward 49:34
Ajahn Sucitto
When we give the citta our attention, there is a possibility for it to offer its four treasures - kindness, compassion, appreciative gladness, equanimity. These treasures are a virtual immune system, protecting one from the hostilities in the world. They free us from seeking adoration from others as well as comparing ourselves to and competing with others. Whereas a narrow form of love is used as a social training and diminishes healthy acceptance and self view, authentic love is a natural and shared medium for mutuality-based life.
Sunyata Buddhist Centre :  Open Stability

2021-08-07 Q&A 47:26
Ajahn Sucitto
Q1- How to deal with strong floods of sankhāra, in dealing with my role and identity as a Mother. Q2 – Are the qualities of the heart conditioned in the same way as intellectual abilities or physical strength. Q3 – I have a 17 year old dying cat. She suffers a lot and rejects the comforting medicine of the vet. Is this cat wisdom? Q4 What would be a sequence for a daily meditation practice? Q5 Are dharma and dhamma the same? Q6 Can we use the 5 indriyas to solve the 5 hindrances? Q7 How to deal with a band of pain around the back. Q8 Healthy attachment is important for example in childhood development. How do we know if it is OK to have an attachment or not.
Sunyata Buddhist Centre :  Open Stability

2021-08-07 Guided Meditation - Standing 2 23:23
Ajahn Sucitto
In some ways we don’t do very much in standing meditation. We use the body to adjust the body energy rather than the mind with the heart gently enquiring: “How is this now?” With the whole body in focus we can experience the body’s natural intelligence.
Sunyata Buddhist Centre :  Open Stability

2021-08-07 Balancing indriya (36:59) 36:56
Ajahn Sucitto
The search for stability and happiness is a reasonable one, it’s just generally pointed in the wrong direction. We overlook our own center as the source for non-suffering. Proper cultivation of the 5 indriya culminate in such a state. Their potency is not so much in each individual quality, but in how they blend – both balancing and enriching each other.
Sunyata Buddhist Centre :  Open Stability

2021-08-07 Meditation heart, body and mind co-operating 28:00
Ajahn Sucitto
The qualities of heart, body and intellect can come together in mutual support. Upright steady body; comfortable heart that’s not straining; mind listening, acting as a coach. This is entering into proper relationship – you can get great strength from just this.
Sunyata Buddhist Centre :  Open Stability

2021-08-06 Time, Breath meditation, Dhamma talk on new translation project 1:35:55
Bhante Sujato
Bhante Sujato on the concept of time, then guiding a breath meditation. Dhamma talk presenting a new translation project in a cooperation of Sutta Central and the Oxford Center of Buddhist Sudies: all the still missing canonical texts – suttas and commentaries – from Pāli into English.
Lokanta Vihara

2021-08-06 Die Sieben Bojjhanga ~ Erwachungsfaktoren ermöglichen Loslassen 30:51
Ayya Santacitta
Aloka-Dharma-Zoom
Aloka Vihara Forest Monastery

2021-08-06 Teachings and Guided Meditation 52:39
Jaya Rudgard
Five Elements Practice
Gaia House Inside-outside: the mystery of I, me, mine

2021-08-06 Reflection on goodwill 11:18
Ajahn Sucitto
Acknowledge the capacity and willingness we have as humans for goodwill – and the horrific capacity we have for ill will. We use our practice to turn our attention towards goodwill and to exercise our ability to notice and generate heart energies. Metta allows us to put aside harmful energies and thoughts and to be grateful for the expanded state of mind that it brings. Equanimity means staying emotionally present regardless of our reaction to experience. We avoid perfectionist tendencies and ideas about what we should or should not do and maintain a generous heart.
Sunyata Buddhist Centre :  Open Stability

2021-08-06 Guided standing meditation 45:13
Ajahn Sucitto
Notice that the body knows how to stand, how to balance, by itself - with no mental effort. Enjoy your feet as the chief of the management team and spread your attention to other members of the team.
Sunyata Buddhist Centre :  Open Stability

2021-08-06 Chanting - Divine Abidings 10:00
Ajahn Sucitto
Ajahn reviews the physical and conceptual approach to chanting and leads (at 06:27) the Divine Abidings Chant
Sunyata Buddhist Centre :  Open Stability

2021-08-06 Q& A On effort and relaxation 34:48
Ajahn Sucitto
00:41 Q1 I have trouble relaxing with my meditation. Samadhi seems more available when I sit on the couch with a cup of tea. What can you suggest? 16:47 Q2 Receiving or attuning to what is given can be tricky due to our family and social conditioning. How do we deal with this conditioning? 24:15 Q3 When I sit or walk my body sucks in the air and holds it for maybe 5 seconds. Should I just observe this or is my practice misguided?
Sunyata Buddhist Centre :  Open Stability

2021-08-06 Moving out of meditation 6:22
Ajahn Sucitto
A practice of lingering and noticing what has passed has an open and steadying effect. This is an aspect of mindfulness: to not rush onto the next thing but notice what’s there. This is where samadhi arises. Give yourself a set period of time while meditating, then make the movement out of meditation free and aimless.
Sunyata Buddhist Centre :  Open Stability

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