|
Dharma Talks
2022-08-21
Dukkha Without Tanha: Integrating Buddhist Insights and Neuropsychology
1:32:03
|
Rick Hanson,
William Edelglass
|
|
As the First Noble Truth, the Buddha pointed to dukkha: some experiences are painful; enjoyable experiences are impermanent; and all phenomena lack an enduring essence.
Dukkha is routinely (mis)translated as “suffering” or “unsatisfactoriness” - but these are not inherent in it! The Buddha’s liberating teaching in his Second Noble Truth is that it is tanha - “craving” - which turns dukkha into suffering.
Biologically, we crave when we feel something is missing or wrong. So, in this conversation with Rick Hanson, we'll explore how to build up a sense of fullness and balance that’s hardwired into the nervous system, and grow the inner strengths that can meet our needs without craving . . . and face the challenges of life with an unshakable core of contentment, love, and inner peace.
|
Barre Center for Buddhist Studies
|
|
2022-07-27
A Guided Meditation Cultivating Equanimity and Compassion
37:48
|
Donald Rothberg
|
|
After basic instructions in (1) settling and stabilizing attention, and (2) practicing mindfulness, there is 5-minute period of settling and stabilizing. Then there are several practice suggestions for cultivating equanimity, especially by noticing and exploring reactivity and any appearances of the "Eight Worldly Winds." After another 10 minutes or so, there is also guidance in two main ways of developing compassion, through opening in mindfulness to what is difficult or painful, and through a three-step self-compassion practice from Kristin Neff.
|
Spirit Rock Meditation Center
:
Monday and Wednesday Talks
|
|
2022-04-24
Tonglen Meditation
19:32
|
Amita Schmidt
|
|
Tonglen is a guided meditation of Tibetan origin that is a reparative response to pain. It is a meditation that actually helps create connection in the midst of suffering. Tenzin Choedrak, during his time of torture, made a daily dedication, "May some human greatness be accomplished through this suffering."
|
Clintonville Sangha Ohio
|
|
2022-04-17
Hauntingly Beautiful
20:10
|
Ayya Medhanandi
|
|
Where is safety in this world? As the Buddha taught: “Not apart from awakening and austerity, not apart from sense restraint, not apart from relinquishing everything do I see any safety for any living being”. So with unshakeable faith, not faltering in the face of difficulty or pain, we nurture heroic patience and compassion. Wisely probing and seeing the Noble Truths of suffering, its cause, its ending, and the way beyond suffering, we hasten to follow the Noble Eightfold Path into the stream and across – to our freedom
|
Toronto Theravada Buddhist Community (TBC)
|
|
2022-04-17
Invite the Miraculous
26:47
|
Ayya Medhanandi
|
|
In the face of horrific suffering, how can we abide in the ground of love, protected from every kind of pain? True path effort – inspired courage leaning on virtue – ardently works its way into the heart. Through the power of forgiveness, patient enough to love without blame, we touch the fount of compassion itself. We invite the miraculous.
|
Toronto Theravada Buddhist Community (TBC)
|
|
|
|