Most viewed - Audio Library |

120801-LRR-32k-Prayers-The_Seven_Limbs-English.mp3The Seven Limb Prayer - English2292 viewsEnglish chanting by Ven. Sarah Thresher
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Wisdom_of_Emptiness.mp3Wisdom of Emptiness2287 viewsTenzin Palmo met her Guru, His Eminence the eighth Khamtrul Rinpoche in India and became one of the first Westerners to be ordained as a Tibetan Buddhist nun. She remained with Khamtrul Rinpoche and his community in Himachal Pradesh, northern India, for six years and then he directed her to the Himalayan valley of Lahaul in order to undertake more intensive practice. Tenzin Palmo stayed in a small monastery there for several years, remaining in retreat during the long winter months. Then, seeking for more seclusion and better conditions for practice, she found a nearby cave where she remained for another 12 years, the last 3 years in strict retreat. She left India in 1988 and went to stay in Italy where she taught at various Dharma centres.
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Sallekha_Sutta_46_XLVI_Mahasi_Sayadaw_p333-338.mp3Sallekha Sutta - A Discourse on the Refinement of Character2283 views46. Bhayanana, Adinavanana and Nibbianana
Sallekha Sutta by Mahasi Sayadaw,
Translated by U Aye Maung (read by Ven. Rakkhita)
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File02_(AM)_Introducing_Mahasi_method.mp3Introducing Mahasi Method2266 viewsPatrick Kearney's Vipassana Retreat Talk at Bodhi Tree Monastery (2009)
Today we introduce the method of meditation we are practising during this retreat. Yesterday morning we just brought a sense of open curiosity to the examination of mind/body experience. This morning we are applying system to this investigation, stimulating what the Buddha calls yoniso manasikara, “appropriate attention.†We do this through the meditation method created by Mahasi Sayadaw of Burma (1904-1982), which is structured by his division of experience into primary and secondary object, along with the fundamental activities of noting, naming and noticing.
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28_Track_28.mp3ANGULIMALA2256 views“Stop thee! Oh saffron princely monk,
“who hastens on like falling rain,
“ I want a finger from thy hand
“To finish off my bloody chain.â€
“I do not run, you run instead
“please stop awhile and follow me,
“Angulimal, I ‘m not content,
“to know that thou are not yet freeâ€
“please throw that bloody chain aside,
“there is a better, nobler way,
“To live thy life and reach that truth,
“Angulimala, for you to-day.â€
And hours want by the Indian time,
While Buddha’s sinless way he heard,
And sinner changed to blessed saint,
And preach’d he out the hollowed word.
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track01_introduction-to-meditation.mp3(01) Vipassana Meditation Retreat2251 viewsTrack01 Introduction to Meditation - 10 Vipassana Retreat Talks, by Sayadaw U Janaka (6/12/2003)
The opening evening talk during an intensive Vipassana(Insight) meditation retreat in the Mahasi Sayadaw tradition of Burma, by the abbot and meditation master of Chanmyay Meditation Centre, Yangon, Myanmar.
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01_What_Is_Kamma_pt1.mp31. What is Kamma? (Part 1)2249 viewsWhat is Kamma? Why are there inequalities of mankind? Is everything due to Kamma? Can Kamma be changed? Is the Buddhist doctrine of Rebirth a mere theory or an evidentially based verifiable fact? What is the cause of rebirth? How does rebirth take place on the Buddha’s teaching of no-soul?
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07_Clearly-knowing-daily-activities.mp3(7) Clearly Knowing Daily Activities2227 viewsClearly Knowing Daily Activities requires one to have full knowledge of what one is doing as one is doing it - i.e. having present moment awareness.
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06_Matrimony.mp36. A Buddhist Wedding Song (Songs)2215 views
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BT05A.MP3Lecture 5. (a) Rebirth and Kamma2189 viewsThe lectures explain the Dhamma from the perspective of Theravada Buddhism, the oldest continuous Buddhist school, whose scriptures, the Pali canon, give the most accurate picture of what the historical Buddha himself actually taught. The lectures are intended to be basic enough to be of value to beginners without previous study of the Dhamma, and deep and through enough to be of interest to long-term students seeking to extend and clarify their understanding.
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