Liberation Park upcoming sessions: February 15th & March 1st at Wesley UMC
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Following up on our first session of the year -- anumodana -- I will offer a guided meditation in appreciation. This is another way to ground ourselves, especially when the news coming at us is "bad." Appreciation balances other tendencies, such as envy and over-criticalness. A pleasant plus is that it tends to be joyful, though that isn't "the goal."
Following up from our last discussion, let's consider khanti, patient endurance and tolerance. Buddha described khanti as "the supreme crucible," tapas, the spiritual fire or austerity that incinerates "defilements" (GAHFD*). In preparation, please reflect on these questions:
- When you are perturbed, provoked, or having a button pushed, how are you able to settle and avoid harmful retaliation?
- Once skillfully contained, how do you endure the inner heat or turmoil?
- Are there particular perturbations, provocations, and buttons that require your most special care?
* GAHFD is my current acronym for the kilesa, the volitional, reactive, destructive emotions such as greed, anger, hatred, fear, delusion, pride, and shame. (Note: Some of these -- anger and fear -- also have a non-volitional counterpart that is simply a biological response to threat and danger.)
Location information -- Important! The church doors will be locked. The evening's hosts will arrive early to set up and meet you at the door. Please use the 721 King Street entrance, where one of us will be waiting to greet you. Knock if you don't see anyone. There will be plenty of parking on the street. The church also has parking space off of 8th St.
Meditation starts at 6:30 pm. Please arrive 5-10 minutes before then. The "Lounge" where we will be meeting has many chairs. If you prefer to sit on the floor, please bring your own mat and cushion.
Dāna (donations, gifts, free-will offerings) to sustain Liberation Park and support our work are most welcome.
Doug McGill continues to post daily reflections from U Tejaniya. They are short, pithy, and often brilliant. A good way to return attention to core practice concerns. Click here to subscribe.
Next sessions: March 1st and March 15th.
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