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Dharma Talks
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2025-02-20 Mettā & Forgiveness, Be Kind 1:20:01
Ariya B. Baumann
Forgiveness is a way of letting go of the past. We forgive ourselves and others for our own sake so that we can live without the burden of resentment or holding a grudge.
Chanmyay Myaing Meditation Centre 11th Annual Metta Retreat 2025 - Part 2

2025-01-12 Guided Meditation: Forgiveness Practice (Retreat at Spirit Rock) 47:04
Donald Rothberg
We begin with a short overview of the nature of forgiveness and forgiveness practice. Then there is a guided practice of forgiveness, followed by discussion.
Spirit Rock Meditation Center Mettā Retreat: Teachings and Practices to Cultivate a Wise, Awakened, and Responsive Heart

2025-01-05 Guided Mettā–Forgiveness- Gratitude Meditation (no phrases) 43:58
Akincano Marc Weber
Guided practice on the themes of mettā, gratitude, connectedness, and forgiveness
Insight Meditation Society - Retreat Center Embodying the Heart of Wisdom: New Year’s Retreat

2024-12-21 Passions of Buddha, Pt.2 : Boundless Compassion 1:26:13
Nathan Glyde
An Online Dharma Hall session includes a Guided Meditation, a Dharma Talk, and responses to unrecorded questions. A three-part series examining the role of passion, compassion, and dispassion on the Buddha's path to peace. This week, the freedom pathway and fruit of compassion. Including the interplay between compassion, forgiveness, and healing of the heart; the well-being that comes from the cultivation of a boundless expansive heart—and how this way we can resource ourselves beyond habitual routes (that don't really work) towards satisfaction and well-being that (really does).
Gaia House Online Dharma Hall - December 2024

2024-12-18 Revolutionary Love: A Conversation with Tara Brach & Valarie Kaur 58:07
Tara Brach
In a divided, reactive, and violent world, how do we embrace love and joy? How do we genuinely include our opponents in our hearts? What gives us the courage to bring our whole being into serving and savoring? And what is our vision for a new world? In this fresh and profoundly relevant conversation, Tara Brach and Valarie Kaur explore the challenges and potential of these turbulent times. Valarie, a Sikh activist, filmmaker, civil rights lawyer, and author, shares insights from her powerful books, including See No Stranger and her recent works, World of Wonder and Sage Warrior. Together, Tara and Valarie reflect on: How Revolutionary Love can be a guide in times of division and despair. Valarie’s ancestral teachings on surviving apocalyptic times with courage. The role of joy, music, and community in building resilience and connection. Forgiveness, reconciliation, and transforming anger into meaningful action. Visioning a new world while staying rooted in hope, presence, and love. Learn more about Valarie and the Revolutionary Love project at www.revolutionarylove.org . Valarie’s latest books can be found on her website at https://valariekaur.com/books/.
Insight Meditation Community of Washington DC

2024-12-14 Q&A- The source of metta 47:59
Ajahn Sucitto
00:19 Q1 What is the relationship between citta and yoniso manisikara? 05:27 Q2 Faith arises with the ability of the citta to realize the origins of suffering. Nekkhamma is the release anticipation of suffering [?]. Confusion arises here. The process of renunciation for the citta rather than thought. Is this the point where the felt sense doesn’t push forward or stand and enters the path? 08:45 Q3 After the high school shooting 96 km northwest of us that left 4 dead, we can feel the heat. False alarms on social media, another layer of community anxiety and mistrust arises. Our community is predominately black, transient, low income, familiar with violence. … How to step back and recognize the citta is unbalanced? How to avoid being too aggressive and suspicious? 11:12 Q4 How to skillfully investigate myself with a very challenging individual at work?13:01 Q5 When I started mediating 20 years ago I was taught that forgiveness was a preliminary practice to metta. This makes sense to me, especially with the deep groove of self-criticism I see in my mind. 13:56 Q6 I am chronically ill living a restricted and isolated life. It is a great joy but I feel remote from any attainment. Do you have any advice? 14:58 Q7 I recognize a form of vibhava tanha in nihilism that manifests as an inability to move forward in life. As I pondered this i came across a phrase : “Contemplate the dhamma body” and it felt so good.
Dhamma Stream Online Sessions

2024-11-01 Three Dharmettes: The 5 Daily Reflections, Supports for Maranasati, and Forgiveness (Retreat at Spirit Rock) 54:17
John Martin, Kodo Conlin, Nikki Mirghafori
Spirit Rock Meditation Center Befriending Mortality: Living An Awakened Life Through Mindfulness of Death (Maraṇasati)

2024-10-19 Every Forgiveness is a Waking Up 3:58
Ayyā Anuruddhā
Madison Insight Meditation Group :  Noble Mind, Fearless Heart

2024-10-19 Anger and Forgiveness, Guided Meditation 20:20
Ayyā Anuruddhā
Madison Insight Meditation Group :  Noble Mind, Fearless Heart

2024-10-19 Anger, Forgiveness, and Gratitude 18:00
Ayyā Anuruddhā
How can we remain calm and inwardly strong when we feel anger or fear, greed or grief? Meditate with new eyes – keen, open, attentive, and dare to forgive even difficult feelings or troubling conditions. Stay present, stop and witness fear's end, because stopping to see is just like turning on a light. There is more clarity to know fear as impermanent, and to observe the nuance of the fear of fear itself. It's not my fear or my anger but unpleasant sensation. So we depersonalize and pour gratitude into the new moment with the quintessential balm of peace – forgiveness.
Madison Insight Meditation Group :  Noble Mind, Fearless Heart

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