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The Buddhist Centre

Podcast The Buddhist Centre
Dharmachakra
News, event coverage, mantras and rituals, Dharma conversations among diverse voices from the Triratna Buddhist Community around the world, keeping you up-to-da...

Episodios disponibles

5 de 454
  • 453: Hinterland Sober Bar - Brewing a New Society in 2025
    Enter Hinterland sober bar, “the realm beyond what’s known”… And meet founders Sanghadhara and Stephen Jeffreys in their cosy, cool, poetic, liminal space for a cocktail and meaningful conversation about how Buddhism and the Dharma can inform modern culture—and people’s social lives—in new ways.  Hinterland has been a passion project from the start. And on this busy Friday evening on one of the busiest nights of the year in one of the hippest areas of Manchester, UK, we hear that passion come pouring through as we discuss ethical work in 2025; and how anyone can impact society by building an entrepreneurial business that is also a commercially counter-cultural social enterprise.  For any building makeover heads out there, we hear how transformative interior and graphic design can express some of our deepest values. And, of course in a sober bar, how the look and feel of a social space can also support recovery through helping us shift how we perceive and experience the world—with no alcohol required. It’s clear talking with Stephen and Sanghadhara that working together can both challenge and enhance a personal friendship, taking it to the next level. And in terms of specifically Buddhist practice, what an amazing testing ground Hinterland has been for the work of attending to their mental states and trying to serve the happiness of others with their energies and their work. Join us over sophisticated hemp and root spirits and delicious vegan food to explore how a bar that attempts to blend an industrial aesthetic with animist sensibilities (through the lens of Japanese minimalism) can be a ground for depth of connection, art and Dharma. And how a drink with friends or strangers can open up a way into new possibilities in our lives when we have that sense of wanting to change… This celebratory tale of inspired Buddhist practice is the perfect podcast to help you rekindle your own new year’s resolutions. Cheers! 🍸🍹 Show Notes Hinterland Bar (Instagram) Wholesome Junkies (Instagram) The Pathfinder (Non-Alcoholic Spirit) The Tale of Tipus’ Tiger (podcast episode) Dark Mountain Manifesto: “The end of the world as we know it is not the end of the world full stop. Together, we will find the hope beyond hope, the paths which lead to the unknown world ahead of us.” Eight Step Recovery: Using the Buddha’s Teachings to Overcome Addiction Santa’s Slaay Cocktail 50ml Pathfinder Hemp and Root Non-Alcoholic Distilled Spirit  20ml Santa Syrup (apple and cinnamon syrup, make your own if you like!) 10ml Lemon juice  Top (75-100ml) with ginger beer Optional splash of sparkling water Fill a hurricane glass with ice Add Pathfinder, Santa syrup, ginger beer and then sparkling water. Garnish with mini candy cane…  See the Santa’s Slaay cocktail for presentation ideas… ✨ *** Visit The Buddhist Centre Live (events year-round on Buddhism, mindfulness, meditation, and culture) Come meditate with us online six days a week! Theme music by Ackport! Used with kind permission.
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  • 452: The Three Body Solution - Healing and Belonging In Community
    Home Retreats help us inject some of the powerful teachings of the Buddha directly into our everyday lives. This week we’re joined by Balajit, Singhashri and Viveka to talk about what lies behind their latest week-long collaborative venture with The Buddhist Centre [Live] - the enigmatically titled ‘The Three Bodies of Belonging’.  In this episode we dive into the the traditional Buddhist teaching / images / metaphors / experiences of the three kayas (‘bodies’): Dharmakaya, Samboghakaya and Nirmanakaya. These are correlated respectively, via Urygyen Sangharakshita’s reading of the Tibetan yogi and mystic Milarepa, with human mind, speech and physical body. The discussion that arises out of this takes in not just what it means to belong - but also questions of longing: what the heart yearns for, how we conceive of liberation itself via an embodied and relational approach to Awakening. We explore what individuality and collectivity look and feel like in the light of the trikaya - how the whole of the teaching is pointing to human potential where we have the same faculties, senses, heart, body and mind as the Buddha and everyone else who has ever trodden this path. In that sense, like Buddhism at its best, it’s a profoundly hopeful, healing conversation requiring honesty, vulnerability and a new perspective on ‘self’, ‘other’ and our relationships in the face of the universe. How do we change our stories to allow for genuine and profoundly transformative connection in a suffering world? How might we resource ourselves to blow open wide our own “window of tolerance” for whatever arises in life and become beings with a boundless heart? Join us on the Home Retreat - live or after the fact - to discover with other seekers the luminous and boundless possibilities beyond trauma, fear, anxiety, heartbreak and all that holds us back from a true sense of belonging. N.B. The audio quality in some parts of this recording were affected by a poor connection at times. Show Notes 🧘 Join us live for ‘The Three Bodies of Belonging’ Home Retreat (October 25-31 2024) 👥 Staci Haines - Exploring Trauma and Resilience in the Body 👥 Prentis Hemphill - Embodiment and Community 📖 ‘Mending Wall’ by Robert Frost (‘Good fences make good neighbors.’) 🎧 ‘The Inconceivable Emancipation - Themes from the Vimalakirti Nirdesha’ (lecture series by Sangharakshita) 🎧 The Sangha or Buddhist Community by Sangharakshita 🧘 Forces for Good: Challenging Emotions as Portals to Liberation (Home Retreat to do anytime!) 🧘 Explore the archive of Home Retreat on The Buddhist Centre Online  *** Visit The Buddhist Centre Live (events year-round on Buddhism, mindfulness, meditation, and culture) Come meditate with us online six days a week! Theme music by Ackport! Used with kind permission.
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  • 451: Animated by the Dharma
    Mandarava has always been a maker. Her way into puppetry came initially through trying to make sense of deep family grief. Mandarava’s work is brimful of magic - filtered through fairy tales, her own deep immersion in illustrative art and the realm of stories accompanying long-cherished images, both from childhood and her further adventures as a grown-up. We hear about her exploration of female figures from the Buddhist and other mythic traditions, including the resonances between old mythologies and certain kinds of visualisation meditations that feature imagery representing a rich seam of possibilities for transcendent Buddhist practice. Aryajit, animator extraordinaire, was inspired as a boy by Star Wars’ retelling of classic mythology. It was a major influence on his deciding to live out the Buddhist path as “the adventure of my life”; and to help make the tradition new in his own work animating many aspects of that path. His work appears extensively on The Buddhist Centre Online, explaining and evoking in brilliant ways both the nuances of the Dharma and the life of the Buddha as a set of nested myths and stories that still resonate today when re-presented in this way. Watch any of his animations (see the show notes below!) and you can feel his own quietly passionate heart in the work.  Prasannavira from The Windhorse Trust was instrumental in helping fund Aryajit’s new animated series, ‘The Legend of the Buddha’. We talk about helping shape a Buddhist context to fund creators and innovators. And how bringing up his own children within a broadly Buddhist culture informed by classic stories and images has helped him as a parent. We also hear about Prasannavira’s own trove of mythic reference points, including Studio Ghibli’s ‘The Tale of the Princess Kaguya’. And about his early days as a Buddhist in London, profoundly affected by modern evocations (inspired by Tibetan tradition) of the great guru Padmasambhava. There’s so much to enjoy in these thoughtful exchanges: from the legacy of classic British children’s television and theatre to the life of the imagination itself. We explore how stories can help us work with past trauma to figure out a realistic path through life in relation to our ideals. And the connections between new work in animation, illustration, puppetry, drawing and painting and established traditions of folk and classical Buddhist art (from India, China, Japan and elsewhere). Whether it’s the value of dramatization, theatre and ritual for evoking the best of Buddhism, or how being “good” at art isn’t the point - everything flows in this fun episode about how to never lose touch with the sense of wonder and creativity we have as kids, and need now more than ever. Show Notes Home Retreats by Mandarava and Nagasiddhi (with original puppetry and set design): 🎬 The Myth of Innana (including silhouette storytelling) 🖥️ In the Footsteps of the Buddha (puppet storytelling each day in session 2) — Aryajit’s animation work:  🎬 Guide to the Buddhist Path (Legend of Buddha)   🖥️ Discover Buddhism    🎬 Letting Go of Fear    🖥️ Follow Aryajit on Substack  |  🎗️Support Aryajit’s ‘Legend of the Buddha’ project! — Star Wars:  🎨 Original concept art by Ralph McQuarrie     Source myth and legend: 🖥️ Overview  |  🎬 The Power of Myth by Joseph Campbell  | 🖥️ George Lucas on the mythology of Star Wars Star Wars model making: 🖥️ Overview  |  🎨 Image gallery  |  🎬 Industrial Light and Magic model makers (documentary) — Oliver Postgate and Peter Firmin (Bagpuss | Ivor the Engine | The Clangers):  🖥️ The History of Smallfilms  |  🎬 A Life in Smallfilms (documentary) — The Wombles:   📚 Books by Elizabeth Beresford (illustrated by Margaret Gordon)  |  🎬  Watch the animated series  — The Tale of the Princess Kaguya by Isao Takahata (Studio Ghibli):  🎬 Japanese trailer  |  US trailer (dubbed) 🎧 The Procession of Celestial Beings (from 'The Tale of Princess Kaguya') — Lottie Reiniger animation:  🖥️ The Art of Lottie Reiniger  (The Metropolitan Museum, NY)  🎬 Silhouette Animation: The Genius of Lotte Reiniger (video lecture by Nannina Gilder) — Other sources of inspiration: 🖥️ Illustrator John Bauer and Princess Tuvstarr (Cottongrass) 🖥️ Buddha: Japanese manga series by Osamu Tezuka 🖥️ The Lincoln Imp 🎬 Blending indigenous Mexican culture in retelling the Tibetan Book of the Dead 🎨 The work of Alison Harper 🎨 The Impermanence of Everyone: In Studio With Buddhist Artist Hugh Mendes (Paramabodhi) 🎨 Buddhist art by Aloka 📖 The Artist and the Sangha by Aloka 🖥️ Padmasambhava and other Buddha and Bodhisattva figures 🎬 Bedknobs and Broomsticks (Walt Disney):  Trailer   |   Excerpt — Podcasts episodes on the life of the imagination:  🎧 The Many Jewels: Buddhism, Writing and the Arts 🎧 The Heart of Imagination in Buddhism with Vishvapani and Amitajyoti 🎧 Mindfulness and Imagination with Vidyamala and Vishvapani — With grateful thanks to: 🖥️ The Windhorse Trust 🖥️ FutureDharma Fund *** Visit The Buddhist Centre Live (events year-round on Buddhism, mindfulness, meditation, and culture) Come meditate with us online six days a week! Theme music by Ackport! Used with kind permission.
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  • 451: The Heart of Imagination in Buddhism
    The mind liberated from the pressure of the will is unfolded in symbols W.B. YeatsThese days, mindfulness is everywhere. How can engaging with images - with imagination itself - take our awareness deeper and help us connect with something truly transformative? Join our guests Vishvapani and Amitajyoti to explore how a Buddhist perspective on consciousness can help move us towards a life touched more fully by a sense of creativity and freedom.  In this episode, we look at imagination within the framework of Triratna’s system of practice, an approach to Buddhism that represents a naturally unfolding process of experience emerging from the dedicated cultivation of awareness and kindness: Integration, meaning embodied awareness. Positive emotion: an open, loving and empathic heart. Spiritual Death: releasing limiting attitudes, and finding a more authentic way of being. Spiritual Rebirth: the realm of imagination that brings an expanded experience of ourselves and opening to a sense of mystery Spiritual Receptivity: resting in the freedom of open, spacious awareness and creative flow Each stage here is a doorway to a more creative realm that we can access whatever our circumstances.  We also evoke the place of nature as intertwined with the life of the imagination. Resonance, empathy, connection with the world around us - with practice, these qualities in experience can be sustained as a flowing, organic, enriching state of being.  The hopeful, practical vision here - the efficacy of cultivating a heart of imagination - can give us the confidence to allow our images, symbols and myths to open us up to new ways of living. Enlightenment is the state of irreversible creativity Urgyen Sangharakshita Show Notes 🧘 Join us live for the ‘Heart of Imagination’ Home Retreat (or catch up later!) 📖 W. B. Yeats, ‘The Symbolism of Poetry’ 🎧 Listen to talks on the system of practice in Triratna 🖥️ Vishvapani is a writer, broadcaster and mindfulness teacher with over four decades’ years experience of Buddhist practice 🖥️ Amitajyoti is a visual artist and a teacher of art and mindfulness with over 30 years experience of Buddhist and art practice. 🧘 ’Mindfulness and Imagination' Home Retreat with Vidyamala and Vishvapani (2023) *** Visit The Buddhist Centre Live (events year-round on Buddhism, mindfulness, meditation, and culture) Come meditate with us online six days a week! Theme music by Ackport! Used with kind permission. Podcast episode image by Amitajyoti
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  • 450: Taking Responsibility - Happiness and Transformation with Mahamati
    Prayer to Manjushri, Bodhisattva of Wisdom May all beings experience happiness and its causes Be free from suffering and its causes, Never be parted from happiness And dwell in the condition of equanimity Ever since his introduction to Buddhism in 1976, Mahamati has been attracted to collective, collaborative contexts. He was, from the start, delighted to find a group of people with whom he could live his whole life, practising and working together with a vision for the transformation of both self and the world. This has long characterized his relationship with the Triratna Buddhist Order and with its founding teacher, Urgyen Sangharakshita, whose lecture The Meaning of Spiritual Community ignited something magic in Mahamati’s life that continues to find new expression today. This vision of transformation is what Mahamati will be bringing to a major role in our community as Chair of the College of Public Preceptors, starting in November 2024. Mahamati speaks about Triratna’s primary mission - and his own spiritual life - in terms of responding to suffering in the world and a vision of ‘transcendent happiness’. Understanding what that might mean - and how that works, both at an individual level and at the level of serving a spiritual community - is key.  We hear about the many-layered role of the College of Public Preceptors: its central role in welcoming new members into the Order, upholding an established lineage of practice (particularly after the death of Sangharakshita in 2018), and addressing ethical issues. What shines through most is the deeply personal lifelong connection that marks ordination into our particular community; how people are transformed through a shared sense of common project ready to meet the challenges and sorrows of the world. Happiness and the potential for it is never far away throughout the conversation as Mahamati unfolds his own sense of how that initial act of commitment - choosing to become a Buddhist - blossoms and fruits over time into a path of service and of responsibility capable of changing a life in quite profound ways. An encouraging, inspired evocation of the opportunities to serve that light up a life lived on the Buddhist path. Show Notes 🖥️ The Triratna College of Public Preceptors (website) 🎧 Listen to more talks from Mahamati on Free Buddhist Audio 🎧 The Meaning of Spiritual Community 🎧 The Six Distinctive Emphases of the FWBO by Sangharakshita 🖥️ Addressing criticism of Triratna  🎧 Listen to talks on The Greater Mandala 🎧 Listen to evocations of Manushri, the Bodhisattva of Wisdom *** Visit The Buddhist Centre Live (events year-round on Buddhism, mindfulness, meditation, and culture) Come meditate with us online six days a week! Theme music by Ackport! Used with kind permission.
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News, event coverage, mantras and rituals, Dharma conversations among diverse voices from the Triratna Buddhist Community around the world, keeping you up-to-date with the latest in our sangha. Check out our other podcasts! Buddhist Voices (https://audioboom.com/channel/buddhistvoices) | Free Buddhist Audio (http://itunes.apple.com/podcast/free-buddhist-audio-community/id75081757)  (iTunes) | Dharmabytes (http://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/dharmabytes-from-free-buddhist/id416832097) (iTunes)
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