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The greatest gift is the
gift of the teachings
 
Dharma Talks
2022-05-20 Guided meditation: relaxing the grasping 26:47
Narayan Helen Liebenson
Insight Meditation Society - Forest Refuge May 2022

2022-05-20 Guided Meditation 19:19
Ajahn Sucitto
Gathering ourselves into a field of collective awareness, we tune into a sense of shared belonging and support with other human beings.
Gaia House The Indriya: Allies for Liberation

2022-05-20 Metta instructions in guided meditation 58:14
Oren Jay Sofer
Overview of Metta practice with instructions for working with the benefactor
Insight Meditation Society - Retreat Center Metta: Lovingkindness Retreat

2022-05-19 Guided meditation on "the evolution of awareness" 20:51
Rodney Smith
Insight Meditation Society - Forest Refuge May 2022

2022-05-18 Meditation: Awake and Alive (18:27 min.) 18:26
Tara Brach
This guided practice includes a body scan, and an opening to the awareness that includes all of life. From that wakeful openness we offer a relaxed attentiveness to the changing flow, and close with loving kindness to ourselves and our world.
Insight Meditation Community of Washington DC

2022-05-18 Guided Meditation - Grief and Compassion (Retreat at Spirit Rock) 30:49
Matthew Brensilver
Spirit Rock Meditation Center Spring Insight Meditation Retreat

2022-05-18 Guided meditation: regret and repentance 23:47
Narayan Helen Liebenson
Insight Meditation Society - Forest Refuge May 2022

2022-05-18 Resting on the Six Sense Bases 35:07
Dhammadīpā
a guided meditation, part of the Wednesday Morning Meditation series at Dassanāya Buddhist Community
Dassanāya Buddhist Community

2022-05-17 Guided Meditation on Body and Affect (Retreat at Spirit Rock) 59:22
Matthew Brensilver
Spirit Rock Meditation Center Spring Insight Meditation Retreat

2022-05-16 The Most Basic Truths: Gateways to Freedom | Monday Night Talk 53:39
Jack Kornfield
When I first entered the monasteries in Thailand and Burma, I was taught everything is anicca (impermanent), dukkha (unsatisfactory), and anatta (no-self). The reason these were repeated over and over again is because if you see these, you see with the eyes of wisdom. Because everything is changing, the more you cling and hold on, the more you suffer. To free ourselves, we need to quiet the mind through some mindfulness in meditation. Then, instead of identifying with the changing conditions, we learn to release them and turn toward consciousness itself, to rest in the knowing. My teacher Ajahn Chah called this pure awareness, "the original mind," or resting in "the one who knows." As the Jiddu Krishnamurti said, “It is the truth that liberates, and not your efforts to be free.” With practice, we discover the selflessness of experience; we shift identity. We can be in the midst of an experience, being upset or angry or caught by some problem, and then step back from it and rest in pure awareness. We let go; we release holding any thought or feeling as "I" or "mine." We release the whole sense of identification, and the conditioned world is just anicca (impermanent), dukkha (unsatisfactory), and anatta (empty of self) -- it has nothing to do with our true nature. We learn to trust pure awareness itself. This is one of the ways Ajahn Chah taught about liberation. Awakening is always here and now. Practicing this way, your life is transformed.
Spirit Rock Meditation Center Monday and Wednesday Talks

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