Spring 2011 Shamatha Retreat

Informações:

Synopsis

Dharma talks and guided meditations given six days per week during the Spring, 2011 eight-week Shamatha retreat at the Thanyapura Mind Centre in Phuket, Thailand, with B. Alan Wallace. Podcasts will be posted daily during the retreat.

Episodes

  • 14 Empathetic Joy

    18/04/2011 Duration: 01h30min

    Alan Wallace guides a 24-minute meditation on mudita, or empathetic joy, focusing first on oneself, then spreading outwards to others. During the following question and answer period, Alan answers these questions: 1. During shamatha, do we target the kind of focused attention that doesn't notice outside sensations such as sound, tactile sensations, etc.? 2. How do I know the difference between foreground and background when I am primarily attending to the breath, my attention is with the breath, and at the same time some other thought or feeling arises? 3. Is it okay to generate mental images while practicing in order to become familiar and mindful of these arisings? 4. Where is the place for labeling such as "thinking", "planning", "hearing" etc.? 5. Lama Yeshe says that reincarnation happens between a few moments and seven weeks after one's death. What say you? 6. If one is single pointedly focusing on tactile sensations while eating, can taste fade away? 7. How does one best practice awareness of a

  • 13 Shamatha without a Sign

    18/04/2011 Duration: 29min

    In this 24-minute guided meditation, Alan Wallace teaches the third method of shamatha, awareness of awareness, or shamatha without a sign.

  • 12 Compassion and the Suffering of Conditioned Existence

    16/04/2011 Duration: 01h32min

    After a brief introduction, Alan Wallace guides us in a 24-minute meditation on compassion, focusing on the suffering of conditioned existence and our fundamental vulnerability to suffering. During the following question and answer period, Alan answers the questions: 1. While watching the breath, where should the attention be -- with the feeling and sensation of the breath, or with the observer who is watching the breath? 2. What is the power of thought in terms of the aspiration for all beings to be free from suffering during the meditation on compassion? 3. What is one-taste? 4. How do I know I am progressing with the practice of shamatha? Are there signs? 5. Why must the eyes be open during the practice of settling the mind in its natural state? 6. How do the five jhana factors arise -- linearly, or more organically? When do they reach culmination? 7. How are 'coarse examination' and 'precise investigation' related to shamatha?

  • 11 Settling the Mind in its Natural State: The Background

    16/04/2011 Duration: 37min

    In this morning session, Alan Wallace guides a 24-minute meditation on settling the mind in its natural state, highlighting the background of the space of the mind, paying attention to the intervals between thoughts.

  • 10B Compassion and the Suffering of Change

    15/04/2011 Duration: 01h12min

    This session is the continuation of "10A Compassion and the Suffering of Change" and includes the 24-minute guided meditation on compassion, focusing on the suffering of change. During the following question and answer with the group, Alan answers the following questions. 1. What is the difference between desire without attachment and motivation? 2. In the context of the practice of settling the mind in its natural state, what is the mind? 3. What happens to an arhat after death? 4. What are the internal causes for shamatha?

  • 10A Compassion and the Suffering of Change

    15/04/2011 Duration: 19min

    This is a 20 minute introduction to the practice of compassion that follows in the next podcast, "10B Compassion and the Suffering of Change". Alan Wallace describes the second type of suffering, the suffering of change, including its source.

  • 09 Settling the Mind in its Natural State: The Foreground

    15/04/2011 Duration: 35min

    This morning session includes a guided meditation on the practice of settling the mind in its natural state, focusing on the foreground and the distinct events that are arising within the mind.

  • 08 Compassion

    14/04/2011 Duration: 01h34min

    This afternoon session is a guided meditation on the second of the four immeasurables: compassion. In following question and answer period, Alan answers the following questions: 1. What should one do with strong emotions that well up during shamatha practice? 2. What should one do with the natural arising of compassion or loving-kindness during shamatha practice? 3. Recognizing the importance placed on lights and signs from within the contemplative traditions, does neuroscience offer any insight into the biology underpinning these experiences? 4. What are the mechanisms and role of purification practices within the context of shamatha? 5. Knowing that consciousness and the self are both impermanent, is the observer also impermanent?

  • 07 Settling the Mind in its Natural State

    14/04/2011 Duration: 33min

    In this morning session, Alan Wallace guides us in a 24-minute meditation on 'settling the mind in its natural state' using the domain of phenomena, or the space of the mind, as the object of meditation.

  • 06 Loving-Kindness in All Directions

    13/04/2011 Duration: 01h31min

    In this afternoon session, Alan Wallace gives a 24-minute guided meditation on loving-kindness as it extends out in all directions: a wave of benevolence. He also describes the distinction between self-centeredness, or self-cherishing, and loving-kindness towards oneself. Finally, he touches on the importance of imagination while attending to the realm of possibility in addition to the realm of actuality. During the question and answer period, Alan answers the following questions: 1. Is the substrate consciousness conditioned? Is it impermanent? What are its causes and conditions? Does an Arhat realize rigpa at the time of death, and if so, does that mean they attain Buddhahood? 2. What are pointing out instructions, and what is the distinction between different types of realization? 3. What is the source of sexual energy? How does one deal with sexual energy while in retreat? 4. What is the antidote for intoxication with hedonic pleasure? 5. What is the role of walking meditation in the practice of shamatha?

  • 05 Mindfulness of Breathing, the Third Stage

    13/04/2011 Duration: 32min

    In this morning session, Alan Wallace gives a 24-minute guided meditation on the third stage of mindfulness of breathing. He also describes the preliminary signs of progressing along the path of shamatha.

  • 04 Loving-Kindness for Self and Others

    12/04/2011 Duration: 01h33min

    In this afternoon session, Alan Wallace teaches a guided meditation of loving-kindness, beginning first with one's self, then moving outwards to others. He reminds us that loving-kindness is not an emotion, but rather the aspiration for others to have happiness and the causes of happiness. This is followed by question and answer. Alan answers the questions, "From a Buddhist perspective, what is the effect of the use of hallucinogenic drugs during the teenage years, can it harm the mind, and can meditation help heal the mind, and if so, how?" and, "How does one cultivate joyful effort, especially during mundane tasks?"

  • 03 Mindfulness of Breathing, the Second Stage

    12/04/2011 Duration: 33min

    In this morning session, Alan Wallace gives a guided meditation of mindfulness of breathing, the second stage, focusing on the balance of relaxation and stability.

  • 02 Introduction to Loving-Kindness

    11/04/2011 Duration: 01h31min

    This afternoon session is a 24-minute guided meditation on the practice of loving-kindness, followed by question and answer with the group.

  • 01 Introduction to Shamatha: Mindfulness of Breathing

    11/04/2011 Duration: 32min

    In this morning session, Alan Wallace leads a guided meditation and introduction to the practice of shamatha; the first stage of mindfulness of breathing. He teaches the cultivation of a deepening sense of relaxation.

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