Spring 2011 Shamatha Retreat

Alan Wallace

Dharma talks and guided meditations given six days per week during the Spring, 2011 eight-week Shamatha retreat at the Thanyapura Mind Centre in Phuket, Thailand, with B. Alan Wallace. Podcasts will be posted daily during the retreat.

  • 30 minutes 13 seconds
    94 Finishing with Loving-kindness

    In this final session, Alan brings us back to the first immeasurable of loving-kindness with a guided meditation which focuses on loving-kindness first for oneself, and then spreading out to all begins.

    Thank you for listening to these podcasts. If you have found them of value, please consider donating to the Santa Barbara Institute.

    4 June 2011, 11:16 am
  • 1 hour 7 minutes
    93 Integrating Into the Outside World

    Editor's Note: Due to multiple recording errors, this afternoon's podcast is an optimized recording from an iPhone. Because of this, it is difficult to hear clearly. My very sincere apologies. If anyone can improve the quality further, I would love to publish a better version. Please email Lizzy at [email protected] if you are interested.

    Also, Alan requests that transcriptions of the afternoon sessions from the past two weeks be created. If you are interested in transcribing one or more afternoon sessions, please email [email protected] with the name of the podcast you want to transcribe. This will be of great benefit to many people.

    This afternoon, Alan first guides a beautiful meditation that integrates shamatha, equanimity, compassion, and loving-kindness. He then summarizes the pith points of the last two days of discussion on the development of science and its relationship to the science of the mind of Buddhism.

    After that, [55:00] Alan gives us tips for integrating back into the "outside world," and we finish the afternoon with a comment from a participant.

    3 June 2011, 2:07 pm
  • 5 minutes 43 seconds
    92 Easy Comings and Goings
    This morning, Alan first speaks about Dharma practice during periods of transition. This is followed by an unguided meditation, which is not included.
    3 June 2011, 2:43 am
  • 2 hours 7 minutes
    91 Final Afternoon Session: The History and Development of Buddhism

    Although there are two more days of retreat, this is our last afternoon session. Alan begins by jumping right in to a guided meditation in which he "puts us through the paces" of the three types of mindfulness of breathing, settling the mind in its natural state, awareness of awareness, and, finally, vipashyana.

    This is followed by a long question and answer period. [26:55] Alan answers these questions from the group, particularly focusing on the final three questions.

    1. I have noticed during the retreat how the English language, with personal pronouns an integral grammatical structure, both serves to assist the development of a concretized sense of self/ego and duality, and then becomes like their protector. (I understand most languages represent individuals or groups to a lesser or greater degree (except for Thai, Burmese, and Japanese).)

    I experimented during the retreat with not using "I, me or mine" and it showed just how deeply ingrained the constructed sense of the world and self is in language.

    What is your advice about negotiating the dissonance between language, encoding as it does samsara and ultimate reality, especially anatta, that we are seeking to understand and experience?

    2. I am aware of the Tibetan custom of not talking about meditative experiences and realizations. As we begin to talk - and soon will be home and doubtless facing the questions of loved ones and acquaintances ("So how did it go? What did you get to?!?") - do you have any advice on how we talk about our retreat? Or our plans for the future? Could you say a little about why the Tibetans take this attitude of saying little or nothing? Is it relevant for us and does it apply to a very ordinary level of experience?

    3. Are vividness and clarity simply alternate translations of the same Tibetan/Sanskrit term or do they carry a difference in meaning? Also Gen Lamrimpa mentions 'lucidity' and 'strength of clarity'; what is the distinction?

    4. In one of the talks you mentioned briefly that after the Buddha lived, it did not take very long till different interpretations of his teachings started to emerge. Can you tell us a little bit more how the different schools of Buddhism were formed? (How long after the Buddha we can say there was 'Buddhism'?)

    5. How did Buddhism develop also to a religion and why do you think it did?

    6. Do all schools of Buddhism share the [worldview + practice + way of life] being the heart of the teachings?

    2 June 2011, 12:00 pm
  • 8 minutes 19 seconds
    90 Morning Q&A #3

    This morning we begin with an unguided meditation (not included in this recording) and then Alan answers the following questions from the group:

    1. Could you clarify the terms mind, awareness, and consciousness? Do you use them interchangeably?

    2. You mentioned sem and rigpa. What about lo?

    2 June 2011, 2:43 am
  • 1 hour 41 minutes
    89 Integrated Vipashyana

    This afternoon Alan leads a guided meditation [6:25] that integrates the three different methods of vipashyana as taught by Padmasambhava.

    After the guided meditation [31:40], Alan talks about the history and development of science by answering the following questions:

    1. When did the different schools and interpretations of scientific discovery occur?

    2. How did natural philosophy develop into science?

    3, How did scientific materialism occur?

    4. When did scientific materialism become state religion?

    5. Do all branches of science share the same worldview?

    1 June 2011, 11:29 am
  • 8 minutes 6 seconds
    88 Evaluating Practice
    This morning, Alan speaks about skillful means for evaluating our practice and determining whether our aspirations are being fulfilled or not. The following unguided meditation is not included.
    1 June 2011, 2:59 am
  • 1 hour 23 minutes
    87 Vipashyana: Identifying Rigpa
    In this afternoon session, (today's morning session did not include any guidance or teachings and was not recorded) Alan Wallace continues to teach on vipashyana. We begin this afternoon with a 24-minute meditation [1:10] with guidance from the direct words of Padmasambhava. After the meditation, Alan elaborates and gives commentary on the text, which is available online. We conclude the session with a brief (7 minute) guided tonglen meditation.
    31 May 2011, 11:26 am
  • 1 hour 6 minutes
    86 Vipashyana: Continuing the Search

    This afternoon, we review the teachings from Saturday afternoon (#84) and practice in the same way. The unguided meditation is not included. There is no question and answer; instead, Alan gives some final remarks after the ~55 minute dharma talk and meditation period.

    Link to the notes from this talk: http://sbinstitute.com/PodcastNotes/Vipashyana%20Instructions.htm

    30 May 2011, 11:20 am
  • 4 minutes 2 seconds
    85 Releasing the "Shoulds" and Relaxing
    This morning, Alan reminds us to continue to "downshift" and loosen up if we find we are unsatisfied with the quality of our meditation. This brief introduction is followed by an unguided meditation, which is not included.
    30 May 2011, 3:27 am
  • 1 hour 37 minutes
    84 Vipashyana: Searching for the Mind
    This afternoon Alan continues with a second method of vipashyana, "Engaging in the Search for the Mind," again from Padmasambhava's "Natural Liberation," with reference as well to Tsongapa's teachings on the same subject. The dharma talk lasts most of the session, and we conclude with a final seven-minute silent meditation (included), followed by final remarks.
    28 May 2011, 11:33 am
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