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04_cultivating_love.pdf04 Cultivating the Sublime States5299 viewsPatrick Kearney
Cultivating the sublime states of love, compassion, joy and equanimity. This is an example of a serenity practice which also has implications for insight.
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4sublime_states.pdfThe Four Sublime States6165 viewsVen. Nyanaponika Thera
Four sublime states of mind have been taught by the Buddha: Loving-kindness (metta), Compassion (karuna), Sympathetic Joy (mudita), Equanimity (upekkha) These four attitudes are said to be excellent or sublime because they are the right or ideal way of conduct towards living beings They provide, in fact, the answer to all situations arising from social contact. They are the great removers of tension, the great peacemakers in social conflict, and the great healers of wounds suffered in the struggle of existence. They level social barriers, build harmonious communities, awaken slumbering magnanimity long forgotten, revive joy and hope long abandoned, and promote human brotherhood against the forces of egotism.
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6.mp3Questions and Responses1212 viewsPracticing Vipassana 06: Questions and Responses
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Day10QandA_AuspiciousDaysClosingCeremoniesPart_2.MP3Questions and Answers, Auspicious Days, Closing Ceremonies (Part 2)1822 viewsDay Ten: Part 2: Questions and Answers, Auspicious Days and the Closing Ceremonies at the 2009 10-day Vipassana Retreat at Bodhi Tree Forest Monastery, Australia.
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Day10QandA_AuspiciousDays_ClosingCeremoniesPart_1.MP3Questions and Answers, Auspicious Days, Closing Ceremonies (Part 1)2020 viewsDay Ten: Part 1: Questions and Answers, Auspicious Days and the Closing Ceremonies at the 2009 10-day Vipassana Retreat at Bodhi Tree Forest Monastery, Australia.
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gqga03.mp303Good Question, Good Answer1626 views(3) Answers to questions that people often ask about the Buddha's teachings, by Australian monk, Venerable S. Dhammika.
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gqga04.mp304 Good Question, Good Answer1515 views(4) Answers to questions that people often ask about the Buddha's teachings, by Australian monk, Venerable S. Dhammika.
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know-see.pdfKnowing and Seeing4666 viewsVen. Pa-Auk Sayadaw
Talks and Questions and Answers at a meditation retreat in Taiwan by Venerable Pa-Auk Sayadaw. This book details two approaches to insight meditation, namely, tranquility and insight and bare-insight meditation. These two methods are essentially identical, starting from four-elements meditation and continuing into insight meditation. In this book the reader has an explanation of the classic instructions for both methods. The talks in this book were given by the Sayadaw (teacher), from Pa-Auk, Mawlamyine, Myanmar, while he conducted a two-month meditation retreat at Yi-Tung Temple, Sing Choo City, Taiwan.
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QuanYin001.jpgQuan Yin012332 viewsKnown as the goddess of Mercy. Translated into Chinese, the name is "Kuan Shih Yin"or Quan Yin
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QuanYin002.jpgQuan Yin022027 viewsKnown as the goddess of Mercy. Translated into Chinese, the name is "Kuan Shih Yin"or Quan Yin
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