|
 |
|
|
|
The greatest gift is the gift of the teachings
|
|
|
|
Dharma Talks
2015-09-02
Learning to Respond, Not React
1:19:00
|
Tara Brach
|
|
When stressed, we often react with looping fear-thoughts, feelings and behaviors that cause harm to ourselves and/or others. This talk offers three interrelated strategies that can serve us when we’re triggered by stress, and help us find our way back to our natural wisdom, empathy and wholeness of being. By de-conditioning habitual reactivity, we are increasingly able to respond to our life circumstances in ways that serve healing and awakening.
|
Insight Meditation Community of Washington DC
:
IMCW Wednesday Evening Talks
|
|
|
2015-09-01
Make Me One with Everything
59:50
|
Lama Surya Das
|
|
Lama Surya Das speaks about his most recent book, “Make Me One with Everything, Buddhist Meditations to Awaken from the Illusion of Separation.” Becoming one with everything, by seeing through separateness, is the heart of what Lama Surya Das calls “co-meditation.” “Co” means with. So, co-meditating is not just meditating with other people, but with everything that arises. This opens the door to what Buddhists call “everyday Dharma,” which integrates mindful Dharma into daily life. Everything is the object of our meditation; there are no distractions. When we co-meditate, we are being one with everything, not against it nor apart from it. This is the meaning of “inter-being.” This is also the answer to our great loneliness and the alienation that we feel today.
|
Insight Meditation South Bay - Silicon Valley
|
|
2015-09-01
On vedana
68:34
|
Patrick Kearney
|
|
Here we explore the Buddha’s concept of vedanā, or feeling, more thoroughly. We see the intimate link between contact (phassa), the immediacy of experience, and feeling. All experience is already accompanied by feeling; or, we can say that we are already moved by this experience. We are moved toward holding by pleasant feeling (sukha vedanā), toward rejection by painful feeling (dukkha vedanā), or toward delusion by neither-painful-nor-pleasant feeling (a-dukkha-(m)a-sukha vedanā). Feeling presents us with a world that we have already assessed as requiring response, and have already responded to.
|
Blue Mountains Insight Meditation Centre
:
Month Long Retreat led by Patrick Kearney
|
|
|
|
|