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Dharma Talks
2020-12-13 The Dharma Life -- session 6 - Awakening and The Dharma Life 1:27:37
Kim Allen
Insight Santa Cruz

2020-12-13 The Art and Practice of Forgiveness 4:23:24
Phillip Moffitt, Noliwe Alexander
The art of forgiveness begins with connecting to the heart. The practice involves learning skills such as metta, mindful acknowledgement, and compassion. Practicing these skills enables you to free yourself from painful identification with past events. This is a day to bring remorse or grief about past actions and move beyond feelings of guilt and shame. Likewise, if someone has wronged you, you will be guided toward holding them in accountability without closing your heart. Additionally, forgiveness practice will move you toward clarity and acceptance for the ways you have let yourself down. Practicing forgiveness allows you to move from a heavy, remorseful heart and a reactive mind to a heart that’s light but still feels regret, and a mind that is calm and clear. The day will be held with periods of guided silent sitting and walking meditation practice, instruction in the art and practice of forgiveness, and a forgiveness ceremony, with opportunities to ask questions to the instructors.
Spirit Rock Meditation Center

2020-12-13 Q&A 37:42
Ajahn Sucitto
Can you comment on the other 3 foundations of mindfulness aside from body; is ‘heart-mind’ the translation for citta; is kamma self-perpetuating; please say more about tendency of untrained mind to outflow and how to reverse them; differentiate interdependency and toxic co-dependency in relationships; please explain mindful internally, externally, and both; please speak about how we can manage fear in this time of Corona virus; what is meant by ‘citta is released’; how do we work with aversion, like chemical sensitivity; what is the difference between citta as direct knowing and citta as learning; can you speak more about cleaning out the citta?
Dharma College

2020-12-13 Love Everyone Or Die 24:23
Ayya Medhanandi
We may speak of or feel that we know about death but until we truly contemplate, approach and move into death, what do we know? This is a tale about looking into the eye of a tortoise shell butterfly while it lay dying on the shrine. Straining as it reached up towards us waving its frail antennae when it heard our chanting, we felt at one even with this tiniest of creatures - who also wanted only to be loved.
Toronto Theravada Buddhist Community (TBC)

2020-12-13 Embodied Presence 48:03
Ajahn Sucitto
With mindfulness of body, we have a place where we can withdraw from the constructed world and come into direct experience. The body acts as a giant sense organ – feeling, sensing, open to it all. The body can clean encumbrances we would otherwise carry around with us.
Dharma College

2020-12-13 Day 2 Instructions - Getting Comfortable with Discomfort 61:41
Zohar Lavie
Gaia House Mettā and Insight

2020-12-12 The Four Foundations of Mindfulness ~ A Template for Training the Mind 36:06
Ayya Santacitta
Guided Meditation
Aloka Vihara Forest Monastery

2020-12-12 The Four Foundations of Mindfulness ~ An Introduction 33:35
Ayya Santacitta
Aloka Vihara Forest Monastery

2020-12-12 The First Foundation of Mindfulness ~ 3 Contemplations of the Body 33:51
Ayya Santacitta
Guided Meditation
Aloka Vihara Forest Monastery

2020-12-12 Guided Mettā to Easy Relationship 44:47
Nathan Glyde
Guided well-wishing and kindness practice as part of the heart training of mettā practice. Particularly emphasising getting to know the particular qualities we are radiating in this intentional practice. Includes sending mettā to oneself, and to all beings in the world.
Gaia House Mettā and Insight

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