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Dharma Talks
2007-10-01 Vipassana Meditation The Science Of Mindfulness 60:07
Ruth Denison
Instructional overview of the Four Foundations of Mindfulness, focusing on intentional investigation, your attention with an allowing attitude. Vipassana, clear seeing, as outcome to this practice.
Spirit Rock Meditation Center Vipassana: Awareness of the Nature of Life

2007-09-30 Seeing through Obstacles to Mindfulness 60:28
Mark Nunberg
Dharma Talk
Common Ground Meditation Center

2007-09-29 Four Foundations of Mindfulness 64:43
Akincano Marc Weber
Gaia House The Presence of Heart

2007-09-28 Mindful Awareness Of The Five Hindrances 62:22
Rebecca Bradshaw
Discusses mindfulness and understanding of hindrances as doorways to freedom
Insight Meditation Society - Retreat Center Three-Month Retreat - Part 1

2007-09-19 Mindfulness of the Body 56:38
Mark Nunberg
Dharma Talk
Common Ground Meditation Center

2007-09-10 Viriya - Patience And Courage 54:22
Carol Wilson
Viriya is a quality of mind that is an essential aspect of our path; frequently mentioned by the Buddha. Often translated as “effort” we can easily confuse this quality with one of striving or “efforting” which leads to suffering. Viriya: patient courage supports mindfulness and wisdom.
Insight Meditation Society - Forest Refuge September 2007 at IMS - Forest Refuge

2007-09-08 Mindfulness of Depression 51:51
Amita Schmidt
Ways to use mindfulness to help with depression.
Insight Meditation Center of Pioneer Valley

2007-09-02 Mindfulness Has No Preferences 50:40
Carol Wilson
The Buddha said that we continue to live in hostility, with confusion, because we hold onto preferences. Mindfulness practice helps us recognize and trust that awareness has no preferences
Insight Meditation Society - Forest Refuge September 2007 at IMS - Forest Refuge

2007-08-23 Working With The Three Poisons 54:34
Mark Coleman
How to work with the three fundamental attitudes or habitual tendencies of mind that obscure our ability to be present and how the mindfulness ultimately reveals and liberates these forces so we can abide more in the peace of our true nature.

2007-08-21 Enlightenment and Mindful Awareness 62:50
Lama Surya Das
Unlike the three Western monotheistic religions, Buddhism is not a religion of the book. Rather, Buddhism is based on the Buddha’s enlightened experience. More specifically, among other things, the Buddha was an early scientist. He said that if you reproduce his experiment by cultivating the Eightfold Path, your can replicate the same enlightenment result in yourself. There is no need for any beliefs, cosmology, dogma or creed. Indeed, all sentient beings are endowed by the luminous Buddha nature. The Buddha merely serves as a mirror for us to see our own enlightened nature. However, this means that we need to have the wisdom to see our true nature as it really is. This wisdom is described as the “right view” in the first step of the Eightfold Path. The problem is how can we see things as they really are when our attention is so scattered and our view is so obscured by poisons such as greed, hatred, delusion, pride and jealousy? The answer is through mindful awareness. Indeed, mindful awareness is something that we can learn even the first time we meditate. Eventually, we can reach a state of effortless awareness. This clear seeing allows our mindfulness to create some space between the stimulus and our response. Instead of knee-jerk, blind response, our mind has more time to choose a more skillful, intelligent response, thus, leading to more freedom and proactivity.
Insight Meditation South Bay - Silicon Valley

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