Episodes

Wednesday Nov 06, 2019
Zen Master Bankei: Accessing the Unborn Buddha Mind (Oct 2011) (3 of 3)
Wednesday Nov 06, 2019
Wednesday Nov 06, 2019
My message to everyone is that the Buddha Mind is innate in them. From their parents, nothing else is innate. The Buddha Mind is Unborn because it is always here, innate, and it enlightens the mind…The One Mind, Unborn, undefined, this is “the one” that, in everybody, sees images via the eyes, hears sounds via the ears and, generally, when it encounters the objects of the six senses, reveals whatever is seen or heard, felt or thought, with nothing left conceal.
-Japanese Zen Master Bankei, (1622-93)
Bankei was a meditation teacher who presented the path of awakening as something simple, practical, readily apparent and available to anyone who would follow his directions. Although his early meditation practice was quite arduous and strident, after his enlightenment, he realized that accessing the Unborn Born Buddha Mind was a much easier and relaxed process than he had imagined. In this retreat, Dharma teacher Fred Eppsteiner used the teachings and, most importantly, the practices taught by this illustrious master to help students understand and experience this Unborn Buddha Mind that each of us possesses.

Wednesday Nov 06, 2019
Zen Master Bankei: Accessing the Unborn Buddha Mind (Oct 2011) (2 of 3)
Wednesday Nov 06, 2019
Wednesday Nov 06, 2019
My message to everyone is that the Buddha Mind is innate in them. From their parents, nothing else is innate. The Buddha Mind is Unborn because it is always here, innate, and it enlightens the mind…The One Mind, Unborn, undefined, this is “the one” that, in everybody, sees images via the eyes, hears sounds via the ears and, generally, when it encounters the objects of the six senses, reveals whatever is seen or heard, felt or thought, with nothing left conceal.
-Japanese Zen Master Bankei, (1622-93)
Bankei was a meditation teacher who presented the path of awakening as something simple, practical, readily apparent and available to anyone who would follow his directions. Although his early meditation practice was quite arduous and strident, after his enlightenment, he realized that accessing the Unborn Born Buddha Mind was a much easier and relaxed process than he had imagined. In this retreat, Dharma teacher Fred Eppsteiner used the teachings and, most importantly, the practices taught by this illustrious master to help students understand and experience this Unborn Buddha Mind that each of us possesses.

Wednesday Nov 06, 2019
Zen Master Bankei: Accessing the Unborn Buddha Mind (Oct 2011) (1 of 3)
Wednesday Nov 06, 2019
Wednesday Nov 06, 2019
My message to everyone is that the Buddha Mind is innate in them. From their parents, nothing else is innate. The Buddha Mind is Unborn because it is always here, innate, and it enlightens the mind…The One Mind, Unborn, undefined, this is “the one” that, in everybody, sees images via the eyes, hears sounds via the ears and, generally, when it encounters the objects of the six senses, reveals whatever is seen or heard, felt or thought, with nothing left conceal.
-Japanese Zen Master Bankei, (1622-93)
Bankei was a meditation teacher who presented the path of awakening as something simple, practical, readily apparent and available to anyone who would follow his directions. Although his early meditation practice was quite arduous and strident, after his enlightenment, he realized that accessing the Unborn Born Buddha Mind was a much easier and relaxed process than he had imagined. In this retreat, Dharma teacher Fred Eppsteiner used the teachings and, most importantly, the practices taught by this illustrious master to help students understand and experience this Unborn Buddha Mind that each of us possesses.

Wednesday Nov 06, 2019
Padma Karpo's Precious Sun (2 of 2)
Wednesday Nov 06, 2019
Wednesday Nov 06, 2019
Dharma teacher Fred Eppsteiner teaches this two-part series on "Precious Sun," 16th century Padma Karpo's (White Lotus) poetic, insightful, and profound spiritual advice, as found in the appendix of Mind at Ease: Self-Liberation through Mahamudra Meditation. (Please note: a significant portion of the Part 1 includes Fred's answers to students' questions, whereas the beginning of Part 2 includes a discussion of the spirit and practice of loving kindness meditation as well as a guided meditation.)

Wednesday Nov 06, 2019
Padma Karpo's Precious Sun (1 of 2)
Wednesday Nov 06, 2019
Wednesday Nov 06, 2019
Dharma teacher Fred Eppsteiner teaches this two-part series on "Precious Sun," 16th century Padma Karpo's (White Lotus) poetic, insightful, and profound spiritual advice, as found in the appendix of Mind at Ease: Self-Liberation through Mahamudra Meditation. (Please note: a significant portion of the Part 1 includes Fred's answers to students' questions, whereas the beginning of Part 2 includes a discussion of the spirit and practice of loving kindness meditation as well as a guided meditation.)

Wednesday Nov 06, 2019
Looking Deeply: The Buddhist Meditative Practices of Direct Investigation (4 of 4)
Wednesday Nov 06, 2019
Wednesday Nov 06, 2019
The cultivation of mindfulness and tranquil abiding allows us to perceive reality more clearly and to live a more peaceful and happy life. The waters of our life become calmer and less murky. Yet, without insight into the nature of reality or true understanding of the nature of ourselves and our mind, we can never experience the depth and profundity of life discovered by the Buddha and all the masters since. Thich Nhat Hanh has continually taught that his students must practice mindfulness (smirti), stopping (samatha) and deep looking (vipashyana) to truly experience the fruits of Dharma practice.
During this retreat, Dharma teacher Fred Eppsteiner offered Buddhist teachings and meditation practices related to vipashyana (vipassana), or the cultivation of insight that produces true wisdom. This refers to our capacity to see into the true nature of reality, i.e. directly understanding the true nature of all mental and physical phenomena. The second training of the Fourteen Mindfulness Trainings of the Order of Interbeing instructs us that, truth is found in life, and we will observe life within and around us in every moment. The insight practices of deep looking and investigation that Fred shared during this retreat showed us how to do this.

Wednesday Nov 06, 2019
Looking Deeply: The Buddhist Meditative Practices of Direct Investigation (3 of 4)
Wednesday Nov 06, 2019
Wednesday Nov 06, 2019
The cultivation of mindfulness and tranquil abiding allows us to perceive reality more clearly and to live a more peaceful and happy life. The waters of our life become calmer and less murky. Yet, without insight into the nature of reality or true understanding of the nature of ourselves and our mind, we can never experience the depth and profundity of life discovered by the Buddha and all the masters since. Thich Nhat Hanh has continually taught that his students must practice mindfulness (smirti), stopping (samatha) and deep looking (vipashyana) to truly experience the fruits of Dharma practice.
During this retreat, Dharma teacher Fred Eppsteiner offered Buddhist teachings and meditation practices related to vipashyana (vipassana), or the cultivation of insight that produces true wisdom. This refers to our capacity to see into the true nature of reality, i.e. directly understanding the true nature of all mental and physical phenomena. The second training of the Fourteen Mindfulness Trainings of the Order of Interbeing instructs us that, truth is found in life, and we will observe life within and around us in every moment. The insight practices of deep looking and investigation that Fred shared during this retreat showed us how to do this.

Wednesday Nov 06, 2019
Looking Deeply: The Buddhist Meditative Practices of Direct Investigation (2 of 4)
Wednesday Nov 06, 2019
Wednesday Nov 06, 2019
The cultivation of mindfulness and tranquil abiding allows us to perceive reality more clearly and to live a more peaceful and happy life. The waters of our life become calmer and less murky. Yet, without insight into the nature of reality or true understanding of the nature of ourselves and our mind, we can never experience the depth and profundity of life discovered by the Buddha and all the masters since. Thich Nhat Hanh has continually taught that his students must practice mindfulness (smirti), stopping (samatha) and deep looking (vipashyana) to truly experience the fruits of Dharma practice.
During this retreat, Dharma teacher Fred Eppsteiner offered Buddhist teachings and meditation practices related to vipashyana (vipassana), or the cultivation of insight that produces true wisdom. This refers to our capacity to see into the true nature of reality, i.e. directly understanding the true nature of all mental and physical phenomena. The second training of the Fourteen Mindfulness Trainings of the Order of Interbeing instructs us that, truth is found in life, and we will observe life within and around us in every moment. The insight practices of deep looking and investigation that Fred shared during this retreat showed us how to do this.

Wednesday Nov 06, 2019
Looking Deeply: The Buddhist Meditative Practices of Direct Investigation (1 of 4)
Wednesday Nov 06, 2019
Wednesday Nov 06, 2019
The cultivation of mindfulness and tranquil abiding allows us to perceive reality more clearly and to live a more peaceful and happy life. The waters of our life become calmer and less murky. Yet, without insight into the nature of reality or true understanding of the nature of ourselves and our mind, we can never experience the depth and profundity of life discovered by the Buddha and all the masters since. Thich Nhat Hanh has continually taught that his students must practice mindfulness (smirti), stopping (samatha) and deep looking (vipashyana) to truly experience the fruits of Dharma practice.
During this retreat, Dharma teacher Fred Eppsteiner offered Buddhist teachings and meditation practices related to vipashyana (vipassana), or the cultivation of insight that produces true wisdom. This refers to our capacity to see into the true nature of reality, i.e. directly understanding the true nature of all mental and physical phenomena. The second training of the Fourteen Mindfulness Trainings of the Order of Interbeing instructs us that, truth is found in life, and we will observe life within and around us in every moment. The insight practices of deep looking and investigation that Fred shared during this retreat showed us how to do this.

Wednesday Nov 06, 2019
Swampland Flowers: Teachings of Zen Master Ta Hui (2 of 2)
Wednesday Nov 06, 2019
Wednesday Nov 06, 2019
Swampland Flowers is a selection of teachings by Chinese Zen Master Ta Hui (1089-1163). Culled from letters and lectures, the book offers Ta Hui's clear, practical advice, particularly to lay people. Ta Hui emphasized that liberation is available to everyone in any walk of life, and that any occupation can be a form of Zen practice. Dharma teacher Fred Eppsteiner shares a number of these wonderful teachings in this series, which also includes questions and answers with students about practice, in general, at the beginning of each audio.