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The greatest gift is the
gift of the teachings
 
Dharma Talks
2020-09-09 Your Practice is Your Life 17:34
George Mumford
Cambridge Insight Meditation Center

2020-09-09 Awakening from the Trance of Bad-Othering 46:31
Tara Brach
Great spiritual leaders of social movements teach that true transformation arises from realizing our interconnectedness, and the light of the divine in each being. Sadly, through human history, much suffering has come from perceiving others as bad-others, flawed humans who are excluded from our heart. This talk looks at how our stories and mistrust of others—in personal relationships and in our society—can lead to cycles of violence, harm, and deepening alienation. We then explore the inner process that helps us shift to “bad behavior, not bad human” and allows us to respond to suffering with love-in-action.
Insight Meditation Community of Washington DC

2020-09-07 Finding Freedom from Becoming 27:19
Brian Lesage
This talk offers one way of beginning to understand the dynamic of becoming through a few examples and an initial way of practicing with it.
Flagstaff Insight Meditation Community FIMC Monday Night Talks

2020-09-07 Manifesting Metta in All Directions 27:19
Dhammadīpā
A guided meditation offered as part of the Sunday evening program of Sacramento Buddhist Meditation Group (SBMG)
Aloka Vihara Forest Monastery

2020-09-07 The Immeasurable Mind of Metta 56:54
Dhammadīpā
A talk given as part of the Sunday program at Sacramento Buddhist Meditation Group (SBMG)
Aloka Vihara Forest Monastery

2020-09-06 The First Noble Truth: Dukkha 1:27:22
Eugene Cash
San Francisco Insight Meditation Community

2020-09-06 Practicing Dukkha and the End of Dukkha in a Time of Crisis 67:21
Donald Rothberg
The Buddha said, “I have taught dukkha [usually translated as “suffering”] and the end of dukkha.” This teaching is the heart of our practice, yet it is often misunderstood or even confusing to people, primarily because there are at least four different understandings of dukkha in the teachings. We’ll explore the nature of the teaching, emphasizing particularly the interpretation of dukkha as "reactivity" (particularly linked to the teaching of the Two Arrows or Two Darts), which comes in two forms--grasping or greed, and compulsive pushing away or aversion. We'll point to how we might practice with the teaching at this time of crisis--in our formal practice, in our practice in daily life, and in our work, service, and/or activism.
White Heron Sangha

2020-09-06 Q&A – Desire, Hatred, Deathless and Boundaries 44:45
Ajahn Sucitto
How to manage inconvenient feelings of attraction; reacting impulsively towards sexual desire and hatred; working with boredom and drowsiness; how does one turn towards the deathless; is nibbana “a ground of being”; what does the use of “internal and external” mean?
Cittaviveka At Home with the Homeless: Ajahn Sucitto Locked Down

2020-09-06 Guided Meditation – Arrive at the Basis 10:57
Ajahn Sucitto
Citta has its own basic clarity and sanity. Practice to establish citta on its own ground, where there is no suffering. This is the upright citta, the foundation for all the virtues leading to awakening.
Cittaviveka At Home with the Homeless: Ajahn Sucitto Locked Down

2020-09-05 Mettā Can Go Everywhere To Everything 56:03
Nathan Glyde
A meditation and reflection about metta and emptiness
Gaia House Online Dharma Hall - Sept 2020

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