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Explore every episode of the podcast Diggin' the Dharma

Dive into the complete episode list for Diggin' the Dharma. Each episode is cataloged with detailed descriptions, making it easy to find and explore specific topics. Keep track of all episodes from your favorite podcast and never miss a moment of insightful content.

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TitlePub. DateDuration
The Secular-Traditional Divide Examined: Four Guys Talk Dhamma | Roundtable with Clear Mountain Monastery09 Nov 202501:01:02

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This week is a special episode, recorded thanks to Ajahn Kovilo and Ajahn Nisabho at Clear Mountain Monastery. Our conversation touched on themes Secular Buddhism vs Traditional Buddhism, the sacred, belief in rebirth, saddhā (faith), Mundane Right View vs Transcendent Right View, attachment to views, and much more!

Clear Mountain Monastery will release a video of this discussion on their YouTube channel in December.

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Devas, Nagas, Yakkhas, a Halloween Episode02 Nov 202500:26:39

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It's Halloween as Jon and Doug record their episode, so the discussion is about the supernatural beings in Buddhism, their history, how they reflect our own inner and outer states, and how we can practice with them. 

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Practice as Refuge and Recharge15 Jun 202500:26:47

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These are difficult times, and our practice can be a true refuge and an opportunity to recharge.  However, it’s also possible for meditation to become a means of escaping or bypassing what’s happening in the world or our personal experiences.  Ideally,  true refuge recharges us and increases our capacity to face the world and with what Bhikkhu Bodhi calls “conscientious compassion.”  Jon and Doug have a lively discussion about how our practice supports us in these times.


Link to Bhikkhu Bodhi's Commentary on Protecting Human Dignity and the Threat of Moral Nihilism: https://www.lionsroar.com/commentary-protecting-human-dignity-from-the-threat-of-moral-nihilism/

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Embodied Meditation and a Guided Meditation25 Dec 202200:28:09

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In our final podcast of 2022 we'll take another look at embodied meditation, following a retreat that Jon was just on.  As a special gift, Jon will lead us on a wonderful guided meditation illustrating how seeing this embodiment can work in our practice.

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Holiday Book Recommendations and a Retreat18 Dec 202200:28:34

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Jon has just got back from a long retreat, so we discuss his experiences, as well as offering a few book recommendations for the holidays and New Year. Go to our website for titles and some links!

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What's Up With Our Logo?11 Dec 202200:23:46

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Is our "Diggin' the Dharma" logo a problem? Doug and Jon react to some recent comments on a thread at Doug's YouTube channel that expressed the concern that the logo was offensive in depicting the Buddha with a shovel.   It's an opportunity to look at the teachings of "rites and rituals" as well as the concept of spiritual materialism.



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This Fathom Long Body04 Dec 202200:25:07

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"Yet it is just within this fathom-long body, endowed with perception and cognition, that I declare that there is the world, the origination of the world, the cessation of the world, and the path of practice leading to the cessation of the world.”  In this quote from the Rohitassa sutta  the Buddha addresses the knowing  body.  All that we know  and experience is in this body.  
So embodied practice is not the practice of cognitive understanding (though this is important) but rather a result of our direct experience.   Embodied practice is when our actions are a result of  heartfelt wisdom.  Where the rubber meets the road.
Doug and Jon discuss what is meant by embodiment and how do we know when we know.

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Post-Thanksgiving Edition- Buddhist Practice and Food27 Nov 202200:29:43

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As we head out of the week of Thanksgiving we consider eating and food in the context of early Buddhist practices.   For those of who are used to eating three meals a day--a very western European way-- the notion of eating on the early Buddhist monastic schedule  of one basic meal a day before noon would seem rather strange if not impossible to hold to.  Of course, we don't go out for alms rounds to obtain our food and our daily schedules are quite different.   There is also the question of our attitude toward food and eating.    In this episode Doug and Jon explore eating as a practice and how meditation and Buddhism impacts (or not!) their food habits.

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Pre-Thanksgiving Episode: Practicing Gratitude20 Nov 202200:26:14

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For our listeners in the US, we are beginning Thanksgiving week. It's a perfect time to consider gratitude and how it integrates into our lives.  And if you're not in the US it's still a good time!  

As always, thank you all for listening, and for your continued support!

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Things are Not as they Seem. . . Working with Perception13 Nov 202200:25:23

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Perception is one of the Five Aggregates of Clinging and critical to our understanding of self and the world we live in.   It is through mindfulness and our meditation practice that we start to see through the trap of our own perceptions.  We don't see things as they are, we things as we are" (attributed to Anais Nin).

Bhante Gunaratana's book is: Meditation on Perception.

Sutta:
https://suttacentral.net/an10.60/en/sujato 

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The Buddha Walks into a Voting Booth. . .06 Nov 202200:30:17

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With the upcoming election in the US we will look at politics and Buddhism. Should we allow our Buddhist ideals to influence our voting? What would the Buddha himself have said in the midst of so much partisanship and how do the teachings on "holding to fixed views" fit into our own political dialogues?  Jon and Doug have an animated discussion on this important topic without implying how you should vote.  But you should vote!


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Musk, Twitter, and Right Speech30 Oct 202200:29:07

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As we record this episode, Elon Musk has recently purchased Twitter. His purchase raises all sorts of questions relevant to Buddhist practice, perhaps most importantly of Right Speech. What should be allowed online? How should we practice on Twitter or other social media platforms?  Does our written communication actually inline with our intent and do we have a sense of how it might land with others?  This is where our mindfulness practice truly makes a difference.

Someone is wrong on the Internet! https://xkcd.com/386/
Key and Peele Text Gone Wrong

Small Kindnesses

By Danusha Laméris

I’ve been thinking about the way, when you walk
down a crowded aisle, people pull in their legs
to let you by. Or how strangers still say “bless you”
when someone sneezes, a leftover
from the Bubonic plague. “Don’t die,” we are saying.
And sometimes, when you spill lemons
from your grocery bag, someone else will help you
pick them up. Mostly, we don’t want to harm each other.
We want to be handed our cup of coffee hot,
and to say thank you to the person handing it. To smile
at them and for them to smile back. For the waitress
to call us honey when she sets down the bowl of clam chowder,
and for the driver in the red pick-up truck to let us pass.
We have so little of each other, now. So far
from tribe and fire. Only these brief moments of exchange.
What if they are the true dwelling of the holy, these
fleeting temples we make together when we say, “Here,
have my seat,” “Go ahead — you first,” “I like your hat.”




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Is Fame a Route to Happiness or Suffering?23 Oct 202200:28:48

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The Buddha  became a pretty famous guy, but what did fame mean to him?   Did he even think about it?   Fame was not something he sought.  He just taught and became well known through his teachings.   If he had access to social media would he have used it?    Fame and renown is certainly not the secret to happiness but so many strive for it.  Join us as we discuss this interesting topic and what it means to us.

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Practicing Acceptance08 Jun 202500:27:35

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Jon and Doug discuss the Buddhist practice of acceptance. How would the Buddha have framed it? How can we work with acceptance today, and how might an attitude of acceptance make our lives better?

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The Usual Suspects-- the Five Hindrances16 Oct 202200:27:05

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Doug and Jon discuss the five hindrances that the Buddha had to overcome on the night of his enlightenment. We find them not only cropping up in our formal meditation practice, but in our everyday lives as well. How should we deal with them? We have lots of tips.

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The Great Equalizer--the Buddha's Five Reflections09 Oct 202200:27:03

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The Five Reflections are a teaching which confronts us directly with the realities of life.   These reflections are the great equalizer-- no matter your status in life,  your income, your age, your race,  your sex, or any of your identities, these Five Reflections are a reminder of what's really true.   
This podcast is a perfect follow-up to Dying before you Dye!

A link to the sutta in which the reflections occur:
https://suttacentral.net/an5.57/en/sujato

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Dying Before You Die02 Oct 202200:29:04

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Turning toward death through various meditation practices can be transformative and liberative.   In this episode Doug and Jon discuss how they practice with this and the impact it has had on their lives.


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All of the Pleasure, None of the Clinging25 Sep 202200:30:08

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People often think of Buddhism as a very austere and all about renunciation.  In this episode we discuss the difference between worldly and unworldly pleasures and perhaps can dispel some of these mis-understandings.  

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Buddhism in the Natural World 18 Sep 202200:25:39

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Buddhism was originally practiced in the forests and it was evolving at a time when much of society was seeing itself as a separate from nature by trying to control it.   The Buddha, it is written, always went into the forest  when he took leave from his sangha for retreat.  In this episode, Doug and Jon explore the importance of reconnecting with the natural world as part of our practice.  What do we learn about ourselves and how the core teachings,  particularly around 'non-self'  are illuminated through re-connecting with the natural world. 

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Generosity- it's more than just giving11 Sep 202200:26:09

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Generosity is the first instruction the Buddha would give to laypeople, it's also one of the deepest and most helpful teachings in Buddhism. We will consider generosity, and how it can be manifest in our lives.

Buddhist Global Relief website:
https://www.buddhistglobalrelief.org

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Q&A with a Listener and Member: Children, Non-attachment, and the Military04 Sep 202200:38:47

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This special episode Jon and Doug take questions from Sorrell, one of their generous member-donors over at Buy Me a Coffee. They discuss having children in a Buddhist context, how thorough non-attachment can be in lay life, as well as Sorrell's experiences on deployment in the navy.

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What Are the Goals of Practice?28 Aug 202200:24:49

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Is Buddhist practice only about attaining enlightenment, or are there other things it can help us with? If so, what would they be? Is it OK to focus on something less than the ultimate goal? We'll look at these questions and more.

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The Triple Gem and the Refuge it Provides21 Aug 202200:28:58

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In this episode Doug and Jon exploring the practice of taking refuge.  The Triple Gem refers to Buddha, Dharma and Sangha.   This is considered a True Refuge.  A refuge that doesn't fade that is always there.  It is both a practice and a commitment and a very important part  of Buddhism.  We explore the different ways to interpret these gems as well as understanding the difference between this True Refuge and the false refuges we often seek.

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Dealing with Politics in the Buddhist Context14 Aug 202200:28:15

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The Buddha taught that we don't hold to fixed views.   Politics often finds its way into spiritual context and can be a slippery slope.    Some of us may assume that all Buddhist have the same stance on particular issues but this is rarely the case.    Some political situations are important to bring up in a Buddhist context and a definitely place of investigation. How do we work with our own fixed views and the fixed views of others.   Our practice, may bring us to a place of softening such views which then might  create a place of common ground.

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Guarding the Sense Doors and Practicing with Social Media01 Jun 202500:29:19

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The Buddha taught that guarding the sense doors is an essential part of practice.  Of course, social media didn’t exist 2500 years ago.  These days it’s so easy to get caught in the vortex of social media.  Jon and Doug discuss how they guard (or not) the sense doors in the current media reality.

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Bhikkhu Bodhi and the War in Ukraine: Lessons for Buddhists?07 Aug 202200:27:57

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How do we deal with war If we are practicing the precept of non-harming (non-killing)? What are we supposed to do, and how are we supposed to feel about the situation in Ukraine? Eminent monastic scholar and practitioner Bhikkhu Bodhi has a recent article where he discusses this issue, with particular emphasis on the war in Ukraine. We discuss the article and the idea of warfare in Buddhism.

Link to the article:
https://www.lionsroar.com/buddhism-nonviolence-and-the-moral-quandary-of-ukraine/

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"Digital Dharma" one of the topic from The Future Of American Buddhism with Special Guest Upayadhi17 Jul 202200:29:16

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In this episode we continue our discussion with Upayadhi on a recent conference she attended, where one topic involved the influence of the digital world on Buddhist dharma. We discuss  its current pluses and minuses and what the future holds.


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The Future of American Buddhism? With Special Guest Upayadhi10 Jul 202200:31:28

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Our guest Upayadhi recently spent time at a fascinating conference on the topic of "the future of American Buddhism". We discuss the conference and some of her reactions to it. What's the future look like? Who's involved?

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What is Enlightenment Anyway?03 Jul 202200:29:21

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The Third Noble Truth says there is freedom from Dukkha.  We have experiences of this freedom often but don’t often recognize them for what they are.  It’s been said that “enlightenment is an accident and meditation makes us more accident prone”.  There is certainly some truth in this.  In this episode we look at Enlightenment from some different perspectives. 

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Finding Joy in the Joy of Others!26 Jun 202200:27:41

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While it can be hard to believe, there is no limit to the amount of joy in the world.  Yet, at times it certainly feels that way.   Sympathetic Joy, or Resonant Joy is the third of the Divine Abodes and like the quality of compassion it has the capacity to weaken the boundary between self and other.  Doug and Jon discuss the role of the quality in their own lives.


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Compassion-- Is it a quality we are born with?19 Jun 202200:26:05

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Compassion is one of the Divine Abodes.    Doug and Jon discuss whether this is an innate quality or one that needs to be learned.    How do we cultivate that quality and perhaps uncover what is already here.

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Working with Desires -- the wholesome and the unwholesome12 Jun 202200:29:34

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Desire can be the source of great Dukkha whether fulfilled or not.   Some desires, however are wholesome and these should be pursued, but even these can be a source of Dukkha.   Working with desires is an important part of practice.  Doug and Jon discuss their different approaches.

Books mentioned:
Anālayo, Compassion and Emptiness

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The Non-Commandments-- the Buddha's teachings on Ethics05 Jun 202200:27:52

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Unlike the 10 Commandments in the Judeo-Christian traditions which tell you what not to do, The Buddhist Precepts are actually practices and while they can be read like commandments, that is really not the point. 
Doug and Jon speak to how they work with Five Practice Precepts in the early Buddhist teachings. 

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The Meditation Industrial Complex- Part 1-- Making a living teaching meditation and dharma29 May 202200:26:25

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We both manage to make a living teaching dharma and meditation.   How  do we balance the ideal of "dana" - the practice of generosity -- with the reality of a western capitalist economic system.  

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Unconditional Friendliness?- It's a big Ask22 May 202200:27:55

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The first of the Four Divine Abodes (Brahmaviharas) is Unconditional Friendliness (Metta) and for many this is a very challenging practice.  In this episode Doug and Jon explore how this has impacted their own practice,  various ways the practice can be done and how it becomes integrated into everything we do.

One translation of the sutta on lovingkindness by Bhante Sujato: https://suttacentral.net/snp1.8/en/sujato

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The Role of Faith or Confidence in Our Practice27 Apr 202500:28:29

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Jon and Doug discuss the role of faith or confidence in Buddhist practice, how it can be useful and also how it can be misused.

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Learning How to Respond Appropriately to Tough Situations15 May 202200:30:22

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We'll discuss a recent example of self-immolation, as well as difficulties some of the Buddha's senior disciples had with serious illness. How do we face challenging situations in our personal lives and in society.  It's going to be a pretty deep episode, but worth spending time with.

Doug's YouTube episode Buddhism on Suicide and Euthanasia: https://youtu.be/a62ZgVWANz4

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Being an Investigative Reporter of Our Own Experience!08 May 202200:29:04

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In the Seven Factors of Awakening- one of the maps in the early teachings- Investigation is the second factor after Mindfulness.  Doug and Jon speak discuss what it is we are investigating.    What are the questions we can plant that bring insights into a new light.
 

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So Many Ways to See: The Buddhist Maps for Liberating the Mind01 May 202200:29:26

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In the early Buddhist teachings there are many, many lists!  Quite a few of these provide different ways of exploring our experience.  They are maps to liberate the mind.  In this episode, we look at the some of these teachings and how they have helped our own practice. 

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Why do I Take Things so Personally? - More on Non-Self24 Apr 202200:25:19

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We'll discuss how the practice and realization of non-self in Buddhism helps us see through We don’t know about you, but seems like most of us can take everything so personally.  This is an other form of suffering which the Buddha’s teachings attribute to clinging to self-view.  It’s seems unavoidable until we start to hold to who we think we are a bit more lightly.

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Who Am I Really? The Buddha's teaching on Non-Self17 Apr 202200:28:49

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Doug and Jon start a conversation on one of the most misunderstood and yet probably the most important of the Buddha’s teachings.  The teaching of Anatta- usually defined as “non-self”.    Join us as we as we try to clarify without adding more confusion.

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Dukkha: I Can't Get No Satisfaction!10 Apr 202200:25:46

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Dukkha: unsatisfactoriness, suffering, or just untranslated it's the difficulty that we find in our lives. We'll discuss how it's understood and experienced. How do you see it in your life?

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How Our Lives Change03 Apr 202200:24:33

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In this episode we'll discuss anicca or change and impermanence, how it effects our lives. Doug's recent experience with a house fire will provide a good example!

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Ignorance---It's not what you think!27 Mar 202200:27:15

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The last of the three poisons and the root of all dukkha.    
What is ignorance in Buddhism and how does it harm us? 

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How Does Anger Show Up in Our Lives20 Mar 202200:26:56

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Anger, ill-will, hatred.  What does the Buddha teach us about this and how does it change the way we deal with these powerful emotions.

The sutta on the three types of people with anger: 
https://suttacentral.net/an3.132/en/sujato

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Who Are You Calling Greedy?13 Mar 202200:28:09

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How does greed-- or desire-- arising in our lives?  It's subtler than we think. What is greed, what are its effects, and how should we look skillfully at our intentions so as to defuse it?

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Silence and Solitude09 Mar 202500:27:45

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Silence and solitude are two forms of Buddhist practice of great depth, but also some difficulty for many. Jon and Doug discuss how they appear in the early texts, and how we can practice with them today.

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Integrating Mindfulness Into Our Lives06 Mar 202200:26:42

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What have we discovered as mindfulness and meditation have been integrated into our lives?  We share lots of tips!  

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What is Mindfulness?27 Feb 202200:28:55

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These days with the overuse of the word "mindfulness" we look at what the early teachings tell us about this practice and how it relates to the “modern mindfulness movement”.

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Why Meditate?20 Feb 202200:26:28

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It's a good question, why do we meditate anyway?  In this episode we discuss the technicalities of meditation and what it really is in relationship to the practices in the early Buddhist teachings.

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