The greatest gift is the
gift of the teachings
 
Dharma Talks given at Spirit Rock Meditation Center
2022-08-10 Practicing with the Hindrances 64:08
Tuere Sala
Spirit Rock Meditation Center The Elements: Cultivating Embodied Experience of Emptiness & Fullness

2022-08-10 Relaxing the Edges of Time: Four Cardinal Teachings for a Lifetime of Practice 69:59
Heidi Bourne
Spirit Rock Meditation Center Monday and Wednesday Talks

2022-08-07 Generosity - Our Innate Nature 56:58
Pawan Bareja
Spirit Rock Meditation Center BIPOC Voices - Series

2022-08-03 August 3rd Dharma Talk 1:49:21
Sylvia Boorstein
Spirit Rock Meditation Center Monday and Wednesday Talks

2022-08-03 Morning sit with instruction (Retreat at Spirit Rock) 59:53
Matthew Brensilver
Guided Meditation: Attitude, Attention, Awareness
Spirit Rock Meditation Center Young Adult Insight Meditation Retreat

2022-08-03 Lungta: Riding the Windhorse 49:45
Ari Lathuras
Spirit Rock Meditation Center Spirit Rock - Rainbow Sangha

2022-08-01 Embodiment and the Dharma Continuum 59:21
Margarita Loinaz
Spirit Rock Meditation Center

2022-07-31 I'm Not Ok. You are not Ok. That's Ok. 1:10:58
Nolitha Tsengiwe
Spirit Rock Meditation Center BIPOC Voices - Series

2022-07-28 Self-Care for Parents Dharma Talk (Retreat at Spirit Rock) 50:04
Diana Winston
Most parents are exhausted, over-committed, guilty, and burnt out. This talk explores how to increase our capacity for self-care using principles of the dharma. We explore the challenging voices that prevent us from being self-compassionate, and how we can work with them. We then talk about how to increase "outer self-care" -- practical things parents can do, and then "inner self care"-- increasing joy as a radical act and finding a depth of well-being no matter what is happening in life.
Spirit Rock Meditation Center The Family Retreat

2022-07-27 Developing Equanimity and Compassion Together 68:53
Donald Rothberg
We begin by examining again the nature of equanimity, identifying seven core qualities of equanimity, including a kind of faith or confidence, illustrated with Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.'s account of his midnight "cup of coffee" experience. We point to two typical distortions of equanimity--being overly cool and cut off some from the awakened heart, and disconnecting from action. We then look at the nature of compassion, and see how the development of compassion helps us to respond to these two distortions. In a parallel way, we see how several typical distortions of compassion, such as pity (the "near enemy"), burnout, and confusion (or lack of wisdom), are remedied by the development of equanimity! Together, they help us develop wisdom and the awakened heart, supported by courage (as we learn from the Vietnamese Buddhist tradition).
Spirit Rock Meditation Center Monday and Wednesday Talks

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