|
 |
|
|
|
The greatest gift is the gift of the teachings
|
|
|
|
Dharma Talks
2024-02-21
Meditation: A Welcoming Heartspace
18:00
|
Tara Brach
|
|
Our pathway to peace and happiness is through opening, with tenderness, to our moment-to-moment experience. This meditation guides us first to be awake in our body and senses, and then to include the changing flow of life in a spacious, kind heart. We close with a short verse from poet Dorothy Hunt – “Peace Is This Moment Without Judgment.”
|
Insight Meditation Community of Washington DC
|
|
2024-02-21
“Getting Over Yourself” – A Conversation between Tara Brach and Stephen Josephs
64:48
|
Tara Brach
|
|
Executive coach and author Stephen Josephs has worked with many top business leaders, guiding them in transcending the egoic conditioning that limit their impact on other people, and on societal change.
In this conversation we look at what he’s learned about inner freedom and awakening from his own trauma, from 60 years of spiritual practice, from models of adult development, and from the poetry of Lao Tzu.
Stephen and Tara have been close friends for over 50 years, and she considers him her first inspiration for a dedicated practice of meditation. His website is stephenjosephs.com.
|
Insight Meditation Community of Washington DC
|
|
2024-02-21
Transforming the Judgmental Mind 1
68:12
|
Donald Rothberg
|
|
We frame the session in terms of there being three main inter-related aims of our practice: (1) developing wisdom and insight, (2) cultivating the kind heart and compassion, and (3) acting skillfully and ethically in all the parts of our life. In this context, it's interesting that having insight can still be connected with reactivity; it's possible to be both "right" and see something clearly, and be obnoxious.
We look at one major way in which insight can be enmeshed with reactivity--what I call "the judgmental mind." We first clarify how "judgment" in English is ambiguous, sometimes meaning judgmental, sometimes meaning discerning without reactivity. The judgmental mind combines typically some kind of noticing, insight, observation, etc. with reactivity, and the key to transforming the judgmental mind is to work through the reactivity, using multiple tools.
The last part of the talk outlines our major tools for transforming the judgmental mind, and invites next week's practice. We then have a discussion.
|
Spirit Rock Meditation Center
:
Monday and Wednesday Talks
|
|
2024-02-17
Q&A
24:12
|
Ajahn Sucitto
|
|
Could you speak more on Buddha mind? Does it involve the heart? Is it with us all the time like an inner guide, below the ego and self-constructed identity?
|
Buddhist Retreat Centre, Ixopo, South Africa
:
Regaining the Center
|
|
|
|
|