Retreat Dharma Talks
at Spirit Rock Meditation Center
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March Insight Meditation One Month Retreat
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2023-02-25 (29 days)
Spirit Rock Meditation Center
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2023-03-01
Vedanā: The 2nd Foundation of Mindfulness (Retreat at Spirit Rock)
61:31
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Tempel Smith
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Key to all of our suffering and eventual freedom, mindfulness of vedanā disrupts our unconscious struggle to reject unpleasant experiences, crave pleasant experiences, and ignore neutral experiences. Since vedanā is a tone or aspect of every moment in the stream of our consciousness, it beocmes increasingly clear our agitation with life begins with reactivity to vedanā, and the training of a new kind of well being comes as we develop the ability to breath inside the stream with all three vedanās.
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2023-03-02
Practical Instructions for Mindfulness of Vedanā (Retreat at Spirit Rock)
63:31
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Tempel Smith
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With a wise expectation of the three kinds of vedanā, we steady our mindfulness to intimately connect with unpleasantness, pleasantness, and neutral experiences. This is the first step with vedanā. The second is to cool off the old habits of reactivity , and the third is seeing vedanā is not inherent in the objects of our attention. Vedanā arises due to contact with the 6 sense doors, and operates on its own independent conditinality. This is difficult to see in daily life, and a precious opportunity on silent retreat.
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2023-03-02
Guided Metta Meditation (Retreat at Spirit Rock)
47:35
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Dana DePalma
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A Guided Metta Meditation emphasizing the integration of Metta and Insight Meditation, including utilizing Sylvia Boorstein's phrase, "May I meet this moment fully; May I meet it as a friend," and variations of the second phrase such as "May I meet it with _______ (kindness, compassion, gentleness, patience, curiosity, receptivity, etc.). Includes a poem by Matty Weingast from "The First Free Women."
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2023-03-04
Curiosity about what is True
59:17
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Dana DePalma
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Dhammavicaya, often translated as "investigation of the dharma", is one of the 7 factors of awakening. This talks explores dhammavicaya as a naturally arising curiosity in relationship to what is true which does not necessarily have to be framed in words.
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