Friday, September 27, 2024

Via Daily Dharma: Where Are You?

 


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Where Are You?

Look at every part of the body in detail. Or look at its elementary properties. Exactly where are you in any of those things? There’s no you in there at all.

Phra Ajaan Suwat Suvaco, “A Home for the Mind”


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Living with Intention
By Lama Aria Drolma
Dharma teacher Lama Aria Drolma on reorienting our perpetual decision-making tendencies to cultivate a more purposeful life. 
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Thursday, September 26, 2024

Via GBF:20 New Videos of Dharma Talks

This month we added 20 more VIDEOS to our growing library of dharma talks. Between now and the end of the year, we will post 20 more videos each month. 

Where to Find the Videos
  1. On the GBF YouTube channel, in our Dharma Talks - VIDEO playlist
    Be sure to subscribe to the channel to be notified immediately when each new video is posted. 
  2.  
  3. On the GBF website. Each talk has its own page where the audio and video are posted along with a summary. Here are links directly to those most recently added:
Enjoy!

Love & Light,
Tom Bruein

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Via Dhamma Wheel | Right Action: Reflecting upon Social Action

 


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RIGHT ACTION
Reflecting Upon Social Action
However the seed is planted, in that way the fruit is gathered. Good things come from doing good deeds; bad things come from doing bad deeds. (SN 11.10) What is the purpose of a mirror? For the purpose of reflection. So too social action is to be done with repeated reflection. (MN 61)

A person is content with any clothing they may get, speaks in praise of such contentment, and does not try to obtain these things in improper or unsuitable ways. Not getting these things, one does not worry, and getting them one makes use of them without being greedy, obsessed, or infatuated, observing such potential dangers and wisely aware of how to escape them. (AN 4.28)
Reflection
Just as we practiced cultivating contentment in regard to food last month, today we are invited to work with our relationship to clothing. Discontent is a persistent cause of social discord, and contentment contributes to people getting along with one another. If we envy what other people have or yearn for something we don’t have, the seeds of unhappiness are sown and watered. Such suffering is unnecessary.

Daily Practice
We are not being asked here to have disdain for fashion, or taste, and it is not suggested that what we wear does not matter at all. As with so many other aspects of our lives, we are being invited here to examine the relationship we have with ordinary things such as the clothing we wear. It is healthy and helpful to focus more on what we have than on what we want and to avoid the pitfalls of becoming greedy, obsessed, or infatuated.

Tomorrow: Abstaining from Intoxication
One week from today: Reflecting upon Bodily Action

Share your thoughts and join the conversation on social media
#DhammaWheel

Questions?
Visit the Dhamma Wheel orientation page.



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Via Daily Dharma: Universal and Innate Potential

 


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Universal and Innate Potential

The Buddha, in his radiant enlightenment and benevolence, not only welcomed everyone onto the path but also proclaimed that each of us—irrespective of gender, class, or background—holds the innate potential for enlightenment.

Nhi Yến Đỗ Trần, “‘Is There a Woman Buddha?’”


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Four Buddhist Teachings on Emptiness
By Simeon Mihaylov
Tracing the history and evolution of the concept of sunyata.
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Via The Tricycle Community \\ Three Teachings: Welcoming Vulnerability

 

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September 26, 2024

A Pathway to Empathy for Ourselves and Others
 
Not-self (anatman), one of Buddhism’s three marks of existence, tells us that there is no unchanging, permanent self. No one has a fixed or independent identity. Rather, each of us is a result of causes and conditions, and what we may think of as a solid self is constantly changing and interdependent on these similarly ever-changing causes and conditions. We exist in relation to everything and everyone around us. From this Buddhist perspective, we don’t have relationships; we are relationships.

Acknowledging dependence on others may be uncomfortable for some, but as psychoanalyst and Zen teacher Barry Magid says, by opening up to others and accepting our reliance on them, we open up to ourselves. Vulnerability invites us to hold space for emotions and truths, even difficult ones, that arise within us. 

Counterintuitive as it may seem, vulnerability, Magid says, is freeing. “As long as we are afraid of feeling vulnerable, our defenses will kick in to try to get life under control, to manipulate ourselves or other people. But instead of either controlling or sequestering our feelings, we can learn to both contain and feel them fully.” 

As meditation teacher and author Tara Brach points out, we are all vulnerable, and embracing this “shared vulnerability” breaks down unnecessary walls. Ultimately, it gives rise to compassion. 

This week’s Three Teachings welcomes vulnerability in life and practice, with each other and with ourselves.

Relationships Won’t Fix Our Problems, But They Can Help Us Grow By Barry Magid 

Psychoanalyst and Zen teacher Barry Magid discusses the value of vulnerability—of opening up to each other and our emotions—even though it can, understandably, put us on edge.
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Exploring Vulnerable Compassion With Lama Rod Owens

Meditation teacher, author, and activist Lama Rod Owens says, “Vulnerability is the development of empathy for ourselves.” Referencing his personal experience, he explains how vulnerability can lead to compassion.  
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The Boundary of Our Freedom By Tara Brach

Meditation teacher and author Tara Brach reflects on the potential of unconditional acceptance to lower the walls in our hearts and let the light shine through.
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