Episodes

Saturday Jan 11, 2020
Mind Trainings Daylong Retreat Session #4 - Fred Eppsteiner
Saturday Jan 11, 2020
Saturday Jan 11, 2020
Daylong Retreat | November 23, 2019
In this Daylong Retreat, Dharma teacher Fred Eppsteiner and Ken Lenington comment on a number of the slogans offered in “The Seven Points of Mind Training,” a venerated text well known for its' pithy sayings that help us apply the full breadth of the Buddha’s Mahayana teachings to daily life. These slogans, or mind trainings, focus on how the Unconditioned Awakened Mind can beneficially manifest in the life of ordinary beings in order to give rise to loving-kindness, compassion, and understanding in all the activities of our lives. The transformation of seemingly adverse situations into the path of awakening is a unique focus of these mind trainings. Fred helps us understand how the teachings and practices presented in this text can be applied in our lives and how we can use whatever is occurring in our lives to fuel our transformation.

Saturday Jan 11, 2020
Mind Trainings Daylong Retreat Session #3 - Ken Lenington
Saturday Jan 11, 2020
Saturday Jan 11, 2020
Daylong Retreat | November 23, 2019
In this Daylong Retreat, Dharma teacher Fred Eppsteiner and Ken Lenington comment on a number of the slogans offered in “The Seven Points of Mind Training,” a venerated text well known for its' pithy sayings that help us apply the full breadth of the Buddha’s Mahayana teachings to daily life. These slogans, or mind trainings, focus on how the Unconditioned Awakened Mind can beneficially manifest in the life of ordinary beings in order to give rise to loving-kindness, compassion, and understanding in all the activities of our lives. The transformation of seemingly adverse situations into the path of awakening is a unique focus of these mind trainings. Fred helps us understand how the teachings and practices presented in this text can be applied in our lives and how we can use whatever is occurring in our lives to fuel our transformation.

Saturday Jan 11, 2020
Mind Trainings Daylong Retreat Session #2 - Ken Lenington
Saturday Jan 11, 2020
Saturday Jan 11, 2020
Daylong Retreat | November 23, 2019
In this Daylong Retreat, Dharma teacher Fred Eppsteiner and Ken Lenington comment on a number of the slogans offered in “The Seven Points of Mind Training,” a venerated text well known for its' pithy sayings that help us apply the full breadth of the Buddha’s Mahayana teachings to daily life. These slogans, or mind trainings, focus on how the Unconditioned Awakened Mind can beneficially manifest in the life of ordinary beings in order to give rise to loving-kindness, compassion, and understanding in all the activities of our lives. The transformation of seemingly adverse situations into the path of awakening is a unique focus of these mind trainings. Fred helps us understand how the teachings and practices presented in this text can be applied in our lives and how we can use whatever is occurring in our lives to fuel our transformation.

Saturday Jan 11, 2020
Mind Trainings Daylong Retreat Session #1 - Fred Eppsteiner
Saturday Jan 11, 2020
Saturday Jan 11, 2020
Daylong Retreat | November 23, 2019
In this Daylong Retreat, Dharma teacher Fred Eppsteiner and Ken Lenington comment on a number of the slogans offered in “The Seven Points of Mind Training,” a venerated text well known for its' pithy sayings that help us apply the full breadth of the Buddha’s Mahayana teachings to daily life. These slogans, or mind trainings, focus on how the Unconditioned Awakened Mind can beneficially manifest in the life of ordinary beings in order to give rise to loving-kindness, compassion, and understanding in all the activities of our lives. The transformation of seemingly adverse situations into the path of awakening is a unique focus of these mind trainings. Fred helps us understand how the teachings and practices presented in this text can be applied in our lives and how we can use whatever is occurring in our lives to fuel our transformation.

Saturday Jan 11, 2020
Mind Trainings Daylong Retreat Introduction - Fred Eppsteiner
Saturday Jan 11, 2020
Saturday Jan 11, 2020
Daylong Retreat | November 23, 2019
In this Daylong Retreat, Dharma teacher Fred Eppsteiner and Ken Lenington comment on a number of the slogans offered in “The Seven Points of Mind Training,” a venerated text well known for its' pithy sayings that help us apply the full breadth of the Buddha’s Mahayana teachings to daily life. These slogans, or mind trainings, focus on how the Unconditioned Awakened Mind can beneficially manifest in the life of ordinary beings in order to give rise to loving-kindness, compassion, and understanding in all the activities of our lives. The transformation of seemingly adverse situations into the path of awakening is a unique focus of these mind trainings. Fred helps us understand how the teachings and practices presented in this text can be applied in our lives and how we can use whatever is occurring in our lives to fuel our transformation.

Saturday Jan 11, 2020
Learn the Three Difficult Points (2019)
Saturday Jan 11, 2020
Saturday Jan 11, 2020
December 15, 2019
In this Dharma talk to students of the Florida Community of Mindfulness, Dharma Teacher Fred Eppsteiner continues the series on the Lojong (Mind Trainings) teachings explaining slogan 44: "Learn the three difficult points."

Saturday Jan 11, 2020
The Dharma of Scrooge (2019)
Saturday Jan 11, 2020
Saturday Jan 11, 2020
December 22, 2019
In this Dharma talk, Fred Eppsteiner relates the story of the transformation of Ebenezer Scrooge from Dickens', "A Christmas Carol." Through this story, Fred explains how we can all transform the suffering we experience from living a life devoted to self into a happy, meaningful life filled with love and compassion for others.

Monday Dec 09, 2019
Monday Dec 09, 2019
June 9, 2017
In this talk, Dharma teacher Fred Eppsteiner explains that both happiness and unhappiness are conditions of our mind. He says that mindfulness is essential to develop so that we can be aware of whether we are cultivating wholesome or unwholesome mind states. In this way, we can be sure to cultivate only wholesome mind sates which give rise to a happy mind. He goes on to explain how we must practice where we are in our spiritual development, not where we wish we were. Although the path is about cultivating the skills that can take us from where we are now to where we want to be, we must begin with acceptance and unconditional love toward ourselves, exactly as we are right now.

Monday Dec 09, 2019
The Fundamentals: The Four Seals of Buddhism (6 of 6) (2019)
Monday Dec 09, 2019
Monday Dec 09, 2019
Non-residential Retreat | October 2019
In this series, Dharma teacher Fred Eppsteiner discusses The Four Seals of Buddhism. The Four Seals are what the Buddha taught to help people clearly understand the fundamental characteristics that ‘stamp’ all human experience. They are the Buddha’s understanding of reality and thus can be confirmed through our own experience. Through analytical introspection and direct observation, the essential truths of reality can be clearly seen by anyone who contemplates these Four Seals. This facilitates the birth of true wisdom so that we can live with greater discernment, intelligence and an enhanced ability to make wise decisions and choices in our life.
The Four Seals are impermanence, unsatisfactoriness, non-self, and nirvana or true peace.

Monday Dec 09, 2019
The Fundamentals: The Four Seals of Buddhism (5 of 6) (2019)
Monday Dec 09, 2019
Monday Dec 09, 2019
Non-residential Retreat | October 2019
In this series, Dharma teacher Fred Eppsteiner discusses The Four Seals of Buddhism. The Four Seals are what the Buddha taught to help people clearly understand the fundamental characteristics that ‘stamp’ all human experience. They are the Buddha’s understanding of reality and thus can be confirmed through our own experience. Through analytical introspection and direct observation, the essential truths of reality can be clearly seen by anyone who contemplates these Four Seals. This facilitates the birth of true wisdom so that we can live with greater discernment, intelligence and an enhanced ability to make wise decisions and choices in our life.
The Four Seals are impermanence, unsatisfactoriness, non-self, and nirvana or true peace.