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Dharma Talks
2012-01-31 Introduction to Mindfulness - Week 3 1:29:52
Mark Nunberg
Class
Common Ground Meditation Center

2012-01-31 Cultivating Liberating Understanding 49:49
Shaila Catherine
This talk explores the theme of right view or right understanding through a teaching found in the Middle Length Discourses of the Buddha (MN 43). This sutta lists five factors that assist the development of right understanding when liberation is the aim and fruit of the path. These five supportive conditions include virtue / morality, wide learning / reflection, discussion of what was learned, tranquility / calmness, and insight. The talk considers each of these factors in turn.
Insight Meditation South Bay - Silicon Valley
In collection: Buddhist Perspectives on Right View

2012-01-30 Buddhist Studies Course - The Five Spiritual Faculties - Week 4 63:38
Mark Nunberg
Common Ground Meditation Center Buddhist Studies Course - The Five Spiritual Faculties

2012-01-30 A Mind Free 50:54
Mark Coleman
The Buddha's teaching on Papancha - the proliferating tendency of mind - obscures a natural freedom and peace. This talk explores how proliferation happens conditioned by desire, aversion, views and the sense of personal identity and how awareness is key in understanding this pattern and freeing it.
Spirit Rock Meditation Center Monday and Wednesday Talks

2012-01-29 All Pervasive Metta 21:58
Amma Thanasanti
Colorado Springs Dharma Punx
Shakti Vihara

2012-01-29 All Pervasive Metta - Q&A 37:40
Amma Thanasanti
Colorado Springs Dharma Punx
Shakti Vihara

2012-01-28 First Talk 35:58
Jason Murphy
Spirit Rock Meditation Center Teen New Year's Retreat

2012-01-28 Morning Guided Meditation: Grounded and Spacious 31:06
Julie Wester
Spirit Rock Meditation Center Way of the Sacred Feminine

2012-01-27 Psychotherapy and Meditation 1:47:01
Mark Epstein
This evening’s talk will address the overlap between psychotherapy and meditation, from the perspective of a Western psychiatrist whose introduction to the study of the mind came through Buddhist meditation. Discussion will center on how primal emotions like aggression and desire are handled. While it is often assumed that Buddhism counsels suppression or eradication of such energies, Mark Epstein will propose another model. Drawn from his studies of both D.W. Winnicott and the Buddha, this evening’s presentation will use the Buddha’s own inner struggle as a model for our own. Meditation instruction will be offered. Mark Epstein is a Harvard trained psychiatrist with a private practice in New York City. A longtime student of Joseph Golstein and Jack Kornfield, he is the author of a number of works about the overlap of Buddhism and psychotherapy, including Thoughts without a Thinker, Going to Pieces without Falling Apart, and Psychotherapy without the Self.
New York Insight Meditation Center NYI Regular Talks

2012-01-26 The Sacred Feminine 56:57
Spring Washam
Spirit Rock Meditation Center Way of the Sacred Feminine

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