How did you become involved in the science of meditation?
The Dalai Lama often describes Buddhism as being, above all, a science of the mind. That is not surprising, because the Buddhist texts put particular emphasis on the fact that all spiritual practices – whether mental, physical or oral – are directly or indirectly intended to transform the mind.
So it wasn’t surprising that when a meeting was held in 2000 with some of the leading specialists in human emotions – psychologists, neuroscientists and philosophers – they spent an entire week in discussion with the Dalai Lama at his home in Dharamsala, India. Later we agreed to launch a research programme on the short and long-term effects of mind training – “meditation” in other words.
What have we discovered about meditation and the human brain?
Experiments have indicated that the region of the brain associated with emotions such as compassion shows considerably higher activity in those with long-term meditative experience. These discoveries suggest that basic human qualities can be deliberately cultivated through mental training. The study of the influence of mental states on health, which was once considered fanciful, is now an increasing part of the scientific research agenda.
Do you have to be highly skilled to experience the benefits of meditation?
No, one does not have to be a highly trained: 20 minutes of daily practice can contribute significantly to a reduction of anxiety and stress, the tendency to become angry and the risk of relapse in cases of severe depression. Thirty minutes a day over the course of eight weeks results in a considerable strengthening of the immune system and of one’s capacity for concentration. It also speeds up the healing of psoriasis and decreases arterial tension in people suffering from hypertension.
Tell us about your new book, The Art of Meditation.
The book tackles the question: why should we bother to meditate? The answer is that we all have the potential for positive change, which largely remains untapped. That’s a great pity, because we know the virtue of training and learning. We spend years going to school and training in things like sports, but for some strange reason we don’t think that the same need applies to developing and optimising our human qualities.
Tell us about the Mind and Life meeting that will discuss compassion in economic systems.
At the conference – in Zurich in April – will be some bold economists who can demonstrate that altruists are able to influence global markets. In the past, such studies were often refuted by sceptical financial analysts. However, someone like Ernst Fehr, the famous Swiss economist, will show that if altruists make the rules and it is in the interests of selfish people to cooperate, then society can function in a more cooperative way.
Profile
Matthieu Ricard is a French Buddhist monk with a PhD in molecular biology. He has participated in numerous experiments into the effects of meditation on the human brain
Friday, February 5, 2010
Wednesday, February 3, 2010
Someone Else's Happiness
Sometimes we feel a need to be proven right as we look at someone else’s life choices; it is not that they are necessarily doing anything wrong or hurtful, but they may be living in a different way than we have decided they should be living. Or perhaps our advice turns out to be unappreciated or incorrect, as mine was, and we come face to face with the fact that someone’s happiness does not revolve around us and our fabulous prescience and good sense; instead, it is based on their own good sense, or even on sheer good luck. Can we let go of our need to try to dominate people’s lives and our determination of what the correct outcome of their decisions should be?
- Sharon Salzberg
- Sharon Salzberg
Triple Gem Calendar: February-March 2010
* Precepts Observing/Renewing Ceremony 2010
-Commitment to Your Spiritual Path-
When: Sunday, February 28th 2010
Time: 10.00 a.m. - 12.00 p.m.
Where: Mankato, Minnesota - Location to be announced
Registration: Registration ends February 10th
*Sri Lankan Dinner and Culture Night
Third Annual TGN Mankato Building Fundraiser
Sunday, March 28, 4:00 p.m.
First Congregational United Church of Christ
150 Stadium Court, Mankato
Tickets $20 (children under 6 eat free)
At Buddhist Monks’ Residence
26 Sumner Hills, Mankato
(please buy tickets in advance, a limited number may be available at the door) Please contact us for tickets by phone, e-mail or in person.
For more information, please feel free to contact us at (612) 216-4854
E-mail: info@triplegem.org
*One day Meditation Retreat, March 27, 2010
Registration is required by March 18th
Space is limited for 25 people.
Register Click Now or Call (612) 216 4854 Email us info@triplegem.org
-Commitment to Your Spiritual Path-
When: Sunday, February 28th 2010
Time: 10.00 a.m. - 12.00 p.m.
Where: Mankato, Minnesota - Location to be announced
Registration: Registration ends February 10th
*Sri Lankan Dinner and Culture Night
Third Annual TGN Mankato Building Fundraiser
Sunday, March 28, 4:00 p.m.
First Congregational United Church of Christ
150 Stadium Court, Mankato
Tickets $20 (children under 6 eat free)
At Buddhist Monks’ Residence
26 Sumner Hills, Mankato
(please buy tickets in advance, a limited number may be available at the door) Please contact us for tickets by phone, e-mail or in person.
For more information, please feel free to contact us at (612) 216-4854
E-mail: info@triplegem.org
*One day Meditation Retreat, March 27, 2010
Registration is required by March 18th
Space is limited for 25 people.
Register Click Now or Call (612) 216 4854 Email us info@triplegem.org
Wednesday, January 27, 2010
Accident leads to meditation practice
January 15, 2010
Accident leads to meditation practice
Bruce Brown
bbrown@theadvertiser.com
When Chuck St. Romain was granted a new lease on life, he also received a new view of how to live that renewed oppportunity more fully.
A hunting accident came perilously close to killing St. Romain, but his traumatic journey through that experience led to an appreciation of meditation and a spiritual awakening.
"I was duck hunting south of here," St. Romain said. "I slipped, heard a bang, got shot and was bleeding from my head. At first, I was terrified. Then that shifted into sadness, and I told those with me to tell (wife) Barb and (daughter) Claire that I love them, because I didn't think I'd see them again.
"Then I shifted into this incredible awareness of my breath. I was so present with my breath, so connected. My terror had eased dramatically."
The surgeon at the hospital in Cameron Parish told St. Romain that if the bullet had been a half-inch from where it was, he would have died instead of suffering a frightening scalp wound.
"I wanted to understand," said St. Romain, a licensed clinical social worker.
"It was no accident that it happened. I was overwhelmed. I wanted to let the universe teach me. I decided to go investigate meditation."
St. Romain has been practicing meditation for 14 years now. He has translated that discovery into Spirit Path Meditation and Spiritual Enrichment Center in Lafayette, which provides weekly meditation sittings, frequent retreats and book study for clients.
He also teaches courses through UL's Potpourri program, this spring offering Insight Meditation.
"Lafayette has been amazingly open (to meditation)," St. Romain said. "There are a lot of wonderful things going on."
As with his brush with death, St. Romain starts participants on their journey by Vipassana, a focus on breathing. They grow to appreciate Metta, compassion and loving kindness practices.
"Most who try meditation are experiencing some kind of distress," St. Romain said. "We try to help them. Some come through curiosity, and they love the idea. But you can't come and sit one time and expect a miracle. It's a daily thing. In our culture, people plan. They can't just be in the moment.
"Some are afraid of what it will do to their religious beliefs. But I'm gentle with that. Some are afraid, because as you get quiet your body begins to reveal the tension it has.
"The body is incredible. It's wounded. Emotions come out. People get afraid and want to move. In our culture, we do a lot not to reveal pain. But they need to get that fear out of the way. The human condition is that we have a great capacity for unbelievable joy and pleasure."
St. Romain guides clients through those stages of hesitancy, concern and uncertainty to a calm state. It's something that takes patience, which he has learned.
"We deal with impatience," he said. "They begin to feel tense and agitated. But you have to be present for everything. You have to stay with that breath, stay in the moment."
Advanced meditation practitioners can find themselves in an "altered state."
"I sometimes have the feeling I'm levitating," St. Romain said. "Of course I'm not, but we're so not used to the capacity we have."
That awareness can come on the cushion on the floor during sessions, or in exercises focused on each movement in walking. Touching a car door handle or brushing teeth are other opportunities for previusly unrealized sensasions.
"We have the capacity to experience life fully," said St. Romain. "I've come to appreciate the moment."
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Accident leads to meditation practice
Bruce Brown
bbrown@theadvertiser.com
When Chuck St. Romain was granted a new lease on life, he also received a new view of how to live that renewed oppportunity more fully.
A hunting accident came perilously close to killing St. Romain, but his traumatic journey through that experience led to an appreciation of meditation and a spiritual awakening.
"I was duck hunting south of here," St. Romain said. "I slipped, heard a bang, got shot and was bleeding from my head. At first, I was terrified. Then that shifted into sadness, and I told those with me to tell (wife) Barb and (daughter) Claire that I love them, because I didn't think I'd see them again.
"Then I shifted into this incredible awareness of my breath. I was so present with my breath, so connected. My terror had eased dramatically."
The surgeon at the hospital in Cameron Parish told St. Romain that if the bullet had been a half-inch from where it was, he would have died instead of suffering a frightening scalp wound.
"I wanted to understand," said St. Romain, a licensed clinical social worker.
"It was no accident that it happened. I was overwhelmed. I wanted to let the universe teach me. I decided to go investigate meditation."
St. Romain has been practicing meditation for 14 years now. He has translated that discovery into Spirit Path Meditation and Spiritual Enrichment Center in Lafayette, which provides weekly meditation sittings, frequent retreats and book study for clients.
He also teaches courses through UL's Potpourri program, this spring offering Insight Meditation.
"Lafayette has been amazingly open (to meditation)," St. Romain said. "There are a lot of wonderful things going on."
As with his brush with death, St. Romain starts participants on their journey by Vipassana, a focus on breathing. They grow to appreciate Metta, compassion and loving kindness practices.
"Most who try meditation are experiencing some kind of distress," St. Romain said. "We try to help them. Some come through curiosity, and they love the idea. But you can't come and sit one time and expect a miracle. It's a daily thing. In our culture, people plan. They can't just be in the moment.
"Some are afraid of what it will do to their religious beliefs. But I'm gentle with that. Some are afraid, because as you get quiet your body begins to reveal the tension it has.
"The body is incredible. It's wounded. Emotions come out. People get afraid and want to move. In our culture, we do a lot not to reveal pain. But they need to get that fear out of the way. The human condition is that we have a great capacity for unbelievable joy and pleasure."
St. Romain guides clients through those stages of hesitancy, concern and uncertainty to a calm state. It's something that takes patience, which he has learned.
"We deal with impatience," he said. "They begin to feel tense and agitated. But you have to be present for everything. You have to stay with that breath, stay in the moment."
Advanced meditation practitioners can find themselves in an "altered state."
"I sometimes have the feeling I'm levitating," St. Romain said. "Of course I'm not, but we're so not used to the capacity we have."
That awareness can come on the cushion on the floor during sessions, or in exercises focused on each movement in walking. Touching a car door handle or brushing teeth are other opportunities for previusly unrealized sensasions.
"We have the capacity to experience life fully," said St. Romain. "I've come to appreciate the moment."
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Calendar of events
This Week In Mankato
Mondays
Meditation
7:00 pm to 8:15pm
Location: First Congregational United Church of Christ
150 Stadium Ct, Mankato
This is a meditation class good for experienced and beginneing open thinkers. Discussion is followed by guided meditation.
Wednesdays
Sutra Discussion group
6:00 pm - 7:00 pm
Location: Monks' Residence (Mankato)
A group discussion of Buddhist sutras, beginning January 20th.
Meditation Group II
7:00 pm - 8:00 pm
Location: Monks' Residence (Mankato)
This is a meditation class for open thinkers. Discussion is followed by guided meditation.
Sundays
Meditation
10:00 a.m. to 10:40 a.m.
Location: Monks' Residence (Mankato)
We will practice Metta meditation for about 40 minutes, followed by Dhammapada studies. The Dhammapada is a collection of Buddha's Dhamma teachings on the way of life that leads to ultimate happiness.
Paramitha Group
4:15 p.m. to 5:45p.m.
Location: Monks' Residence (Mankato)
This is a committed group that studies the practical application of Dhamma in day-to-day life. We share specific documents via e-mail and read them prior to the meeting. Contact Bhante Sathi for information on joining this group.
Announcements
*** Precepts Observing/Renewing Ceremony 2010
for more info Click
*** Buddhist Teacher Certification
(Course 1 - Buddhist Teachings for Daily Life) more info Click
***Journey to TGN's second home in Chanhassen, MN
For more information click here
Mondays
Meditation
7:00 pm to 8:15pm
Location: First Congregational United Church of Christ
150 Stadium Ct, Mankato
This is a meditation class good for experienced and beginneing open thinkers. Discussion is followed by guided meditation.
Wednesdays
Sutra Discussion group
6:00 pm - 7:00 pm
Location: Monks' Residence (Mankato)
A group discussion of Buddhist sutras, beginning January 20th.
Meditation Group II
7:00 pm - 8:00 pm
Location: Monks' Residence (Mankato)
This is a meditation class for open thinkers. Discussion is followed by guided meditation.
Sundays
Meditation
10:00 a.m. to 10:40 a.m.
Location: Monks' Residence (Mankato)
We will practice Metta meditation for about 40 minutes, followed by Dhammapada studies. The Dhammapada is a collection of Buddha's Dhamma teachings on the way of life that leads to ultimate happiness.
Paramitha Group
4:15 p.m. to 5:45p.m.
Location: Monks' Residence (Mankato)
This is a committed group that studies the practical application of Dhamma in day-to-day life. We share specific documents via e-mail and read them prior to the meeting. Contact Bhante Sathi for information on joining this group.
Announcements
*** Precepts Observing/Renewing Ceremony 2010
for more info Click
*** Buddhist Teacher Certification
(Course 1 - Buddhist Teachings for Daily Life) more info Click
***Journey to TGN's second home in Chanhassen, MN
For more information click here
Monday, January 4, 2010
Five tips for better meditation
This posting is from yesterday's Chicago Tribune. Enjoy!
For some novice meditators, the quest for inner peace can get a bit … stressful.
Do I "om?" Picture a white-sand beach? Breathe white light out of my nostril? Can I scratch that itch on my back before I lose my mind?
Studies show that meditation has many health benefits, from lowering blood pressure to boosting happiness. But nothing defeats the purpose like stressing out about it. So let's keep it simple.
Stephan Bodian, a California psychotherapist and author of "Meditation for Dummies," recommends mindfulness meditation as best for stress reduction. In mindfulness meditation, you let yourself be fully present in the moment by focusing on your breath.
Bodian offered five pointers:
1: Breath: Breathe naturally, without forcing anything. Notice the sensation at your nostrils, and the rise and fall of your chest and belly as you breathe. When your mind wanders, gently bring it back to your breath.
2: Posture: Feel free to sit cross-legged, kneel, sit on a chair or lie down — whatever's most comfortable. The most important thing is posture: Your back should be straight but not rigid, so imagine that you're being pulled toward the sky with a string attached to the crown of your head. Try not to fidget or squirm; instead of immediately reacting to discomfort, be aware of how it affects you.
3: Eyes and tongue: Close your eyes, keep them open or leave them half open, but pick one way and stick with it throughout the meditation. To stabilize your tongue, rest it lightly on the roof of your mouth. This Zen technique is believed to cut down on subvocalization, which is when your tongue moves slightly with the thoughts that pass through your head.
4: Routine: You're more likely to incorporate meditation into your daily routine if you have a designated time and spot for it. Pick a quiet corner in your home, and turn off electronics. Mornings are good, before you drink any coffee so you're not wired. Try not to meditate after a heavy meal or just before bed because you tend to be sleepy. Set a timer to alert you to the end of your session to frame the meditation and give it a ritualistic quality. Aim to meditate at least five days a week; there's not much benefit if you do it once a week or every now and then.
5: Time: Meditating 20 to 30 minutes daily is ideal, but if you only have five or 10 minutes, go for it. There is no "right" way to meditate, so let go of goal orientation, and don't try to track your progress.
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