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Episode 34: Beginning a Meditation Practice

Episode 34 of the Buddhism for Everyone with JoAnn Fox podcast, hosted by JoAnn Fox, titled "Episode 34: Beginning a Meditation Practice" was published on June 3, 2019 and runs 51 minutes.

June 3, 2019 ·51m · Buddhism for Everyone with JoAnn Fox

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In this episode we explore how to start a daily meditation practice and the basic mechanics of meditation. Many people misunderstand meditation, thinking we are trying to empty our mind of thoughts. Good luck with that! :) There are several different types of meditation, such as breathing meditation, analytical meditation and tantric meditation. In this episode, you're encouraged to try a ten minute daily meditation this week. The meditation will begin by watching your breath to calm the mind. Then we contemplate the benefits of cherishing others for several minutes. This analytical meditation culminates in generating the intention to cherish others, feeling the wish and promising ourselves to do it. There is a more detailed explanation of the meditation below.

This meditation has five parts (or stages) 

(This is a common meditation from a Tibetan Buddhist lineage)

  1. Breathing meditation to calm and focus the mind.
  2. Analytical meditation stage
  3. Placement meditation stage
  4. Dedication of your good karma to benefit all beings
  5. Mindfulness practice during your daily life

The Meditation on Cherishing Others

  1. Breathing meditation. Begin by watching your breath at your nostrils.for a ten minute meditation, this stage could last about 2 minutes, more or less. Instead of paying attention to thoughts, allow your only thought to be watching the breath. Like watching the water lapping at the shore, calm the mind by watching the gentle rise and fall of the breath at the tips of your nostrils. When your mind wanders, without judging yourself, bring it back to the breath.
  2. Analytical meditation. Then we move from breathing meditation to contemplating a virtuous object. "Virtuous" simply means that it is a cause of peace in the mind. In this meditation, we contemplate the benefits of cherishing others for several minutes, around 6 minutes for this ten minute meditation.

         The Benefits of Cherishing Others

* Cherishing others is the cause of all happiness. In this stage of the meditation, we might analyze the following points…..Good karma is the root cause of every moment of pleasure or happiness, from wealth and beauty to a moment enjoying a magnificent sunset. For example, we gave to others in the past and that created the karma for us to have enough resources in this life. Why did we give to others in the past? Because we cherished them and felt their happiness was important, we gave to them to alleviate some need they had--like hunger-- or to give them pleasure. Every positive action we undertook in the past was motivated by cherishing others in some way. Thus, every happiness we enjoy comes from having cherished others in the past. Even a sky filled with diamonds is not as valuable as this mind of cherishing others. I must make cherishing others my main practice in daily life.

             * Solves all problem

             * Makes relationships harmonious and stable

             * Is the cause of success and happiness in this life

             * Cherishing others leads to all good qualities.

             * Leads to the lasting peace and bliss of full enlightenment

  1. Placement meditation. Briefly remind yourself of a benefit that affected you the most, and generate the strong intention to cherish others. Place your mind on this intention and hold it for a few moments.

 

  1.  Imagine that from your wish to cherish all beings, you transform into a being of pure, universal love. Your body fills with light. You imagine this light has the actual power to give happiness to others. Imagine you send this light to all beings. Imagine living beings and their sufferings in particular; for example, you can imagine that to all the lonely, the light brings them companionship...to the hungry, it brings food...and so on. Lastly, the light rays you send out transform all beings into beings of pure love also. 

 

  1. Dedicate. Arise from meditation and dedicate the good karma you created the happiness and peace of all living beings, without exception.

 

  1. Mindfulness practice in daily life...try to keep your intention throughout the day to cherish others.

 

Better than a thousand ritual sacrifices

Offered every month for a hundred years

Is one moment's homage offered

To one who has cultivated herself. (106)

 

Better than a hundred years

In the forest tending a ritual fire

Is one moment's homage offered

To one who has cultivated himself. (107)

 

Whatever sacrifice or offering a merit seeker

Might perform in an entire year

Is not worth one-fourth as much as

Expressing respect to those who are upright. (108)

 

For the person who shows respect

And always reveres worthy people,

Four things increase:

Life span, beauty, happiness, and strength. (109)

 

Better than one hundred years lived

With an unsettled [mind],

Devoid of virtue,

Is one day lived

Virtuous and absorbed in meditation. (110)*

 

Better than one hundred years lived

With an unsettled [mind],

Devoid of insight,

Is one day lived

With insight and absorbed in meditation.

— Buddha, The Dhammapada

 

References:

The Dhammapada, by Buddha. Translated by Gil Fronsdale. Shambala, Boston and London, 2011, pp. 12.


Great Treatise on the Stages of the Path to Enlightenment, by Je Tsongkhapa, Volume 2. Pages 35-37. Translated by the Lamrim Chenmo Translation Committee. Joshua Cutler, Editor-in-Chief, and Guy Newlan, Editor.

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True North Insight: Rick Hanson's most recent Dharma talks via dharmaseed.org I first encountered Buddhism in 1974, and it blew the doors wide open for me with its profound and practical insights into the mind, suffering, and true happiness. Over time I gravitated to the original teachings of the Buddha, embodied in the Theravadan tradition, for their down-to-earth clarity, and important sources for me have included the teachers of Spirit Rock Meditation Center and the Pali Canon itself. More recently, I've explored grounding the dharma in modern evolutionary neuropsychology - "neurodharma" - recognizing how mind arises dependently upon the body, especially the nervous system as it tries to meet ancient needs for raw survival. I am especially interested in using these approaches to heighten the learning - the cultivation (bhavana) - from beneficial experiences (otherwise often wasted on the brain) to reduce the underlying sense of deficit and disturbance that causes the craving that causes suffering and harm. Overall, I feel amazingly blessed to have the opportu Thanissara's most recent Dharma talks (Spirit Rock Meditation Center) via dharmaseed.org Thanissara, from London, was a nun for 12 years in the tradition of Ajahn Chah and has taught internationally for over 30 years. She is co-founder of Dharmagiri Sacred Mountain Retreat, South Africa, Sacred Mountain Sangha, California, and Chattanooga Insight, Tennessee. She has an MA in Mindfulness Psychotherapy Practice from the Karuna Institute UK and is co-author of Listening to the Heart, A Contemplative Guide to Engaged Buddhism, author of Time To Stand Up, An Engaged Buddhist Manifesto for Our Earth, and several books of poetry. She is a member of the Teacher Council at Spirit Rock and co-guiding teacher of Sacred Mountain Sangha. Spirit Rock Meditation Center: Konda Mason's most recent Dharma talks via dharmaseed.org Konda was introduced to Tibetan Buddhism in 1982. Her love for Vipassana began in 1996, working with Jack Kornfield at the Vallecitos Retreat Center. She has been a regular yoga teacher at Spirit Rock since 1997, teaching many retreats including the annual Metta Retreat and many of the POC retreats. Konda’s dharma training includes the East Bay Meditation Center Commit to Dharma program, Spirit Rock Community Dharma Leader and she is currently in the 2020 Spirit Rock Teacher Training program. Konda has taught daylongs, retreats and workshops. She sits on the Board of Directors of Spirit Rock Meditation Center and is on the Advisory Board of the Namchak Foundation Learning Circles. In addition to her spiritual pursuits, Konda is a social entrepreneur, earth and social justice activist. She is the Co-Founder and former CEO of Impact Hub Oakland, a beautiful co-working space that supports socially engaged entrepreneurs and changemakers. Common Ground Meditation Center: Ajahn Jotipalo's most recent Dharma talks via dharmaseed.org Ajahn Jotipālo was born in 1965 in Indiana. He received a B.A. from Wabash College and worked for six years in technical sales. He became interested in Theravada Buddhism after sitting several Goenka retreats. While on staff at the Insight Meditation Society in Barre, Massachusetts, he met Ajahn Amaro and Ajahn Punnadhammo. After leaving IMS, he spent three months with Ajahn Punnadhammo at the Arrow River Forest Hermitage in Thunder Bay, Ontario, Canada. Ajahn Jotipālo came to live at Abhayagiri in 1998 and subsequently spent two years training as an Anāgārika and Sāmaṇera. He ordained as a Bhikkhu with Ajahn Pasanno as preceptor on Ajahn Chah's birthday, June 17, 2000. Since that time, Ajahn Jotipālo has also stayed at Ajahn Chah-branch monasteries in Thailand, Canada, and New Zealand. He has returned to Abhayagiri for the vassa of 2012.
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