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At the recent International Vipassana Teachers’ meeting, “Earth Care Week” was born. Each year, during the first week of October, teachers and members of the greater community will come together to celebrate our planet and engage with environmental issues, including climate change. We will explore ways to bring care for the Earth into our practice.
A Young Man’s Longing
This past January, I joined five other educators for the 2013 Certificate Program in Mindfulness for Educators, jointly sponsored by the Center for Mindful Inquiry (Brattleboro, VT), the Barre Center for Buddhist Studies, and the Antioch University New England Center for School Renewal. The program includes bookend weekend retreats in January and December, a five-day mid-summer study retreat, and numerous readings from Buddhist and educational sources that are written and dialogued about both on retreat and in online forums. The learning community that has formed amongst the cohort of educators, the two principal teachers, and the two assistant teachers is joyfully unlike anything I have experienced.
One ‘Easy’ Step to Happiness?
Eight easy steps to happiness. Yet another viral Facebook update to mock me. As I sit here, feeling relatively unhappy myself, I wonder “what is wrong with me that I cannot find happiness in this Huffington Post article?!?!?!” Oh right. Because that would be ridiculous.
Game for Generosity?
In the fundamental teachings of the Dharma, the practice of giving, or dana, in all forms is considered an important pillar of practice. It is the first of the 10 Paramis (heart/mind qualities of an awakened being), and the first of the three pillars of Dharma—giving, ethics and the cultivation of wisdom. Development of a heart of generosity (Pali: caga), from which dana naturally flows, is viewed in the teachings as the ground upon which virtue and wisdom are developed, the path to and the expression of enlightenment. Caring and selfless offering of time, attention, resources, and support is an expression of interdependence and a letting go that leads to happiness. Fundamentally, it is a template for the heart that lets go, frees itself from attachment and thus, dukkha.
Insight Dialogue
When I’m listening, I’m almost always planning what the next words out of my mouth will be. I try, rather unsuccessfully, to be more present while communicating, but it wasn’t until my first day of Insight Dialogue practice that almost infinite layers pasted over possible mindfulness.
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