Episode 505: Looking Into the World

In this episode Elizabeth reflects upon the provocative poem composed by the renowned contemporary teacher, Chogyam Trungpa Rinpoche, entitled, “Looking Into the World.”

“It’s not a cozy poem,” says Elizabeth, “It’s a reflection on loneliness. It is an incantation to distrust. It is a tribute to the freedom and confidence that comes from standing on our own two feet.” Put your familiar and conventional views aside for this wonderful exploration.

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Elizabeth Mattis Namgyel
Episode 504: “Hook and Ring”

In Episode 504, Elizabeth explores devotion, one of the many aspects of faith. Through stories and inquiry, she brings us through various meanings of devotion. Elizabeth examines devotion as an experience, along with cultural and interpersonal challenges that can arise through misunderstanding the teacher/student dynamic. When understood more clearly, devotion hastens the process of spiritual awakening for the student.

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Jennifer Kern
Episode 503: The Ineffable

All great spiritual lineages point us back to that which defies concept and language. Authentic practitioners describe awakening as being touched by a sense of awe, overcome by the beauty, fierceness and power of being. To be in AWE is a natural human experience. Ironically, so is the discomfort that leaves us restless with the experience, making it almost impossible to bear. Our inability to bear the ineffable gives rise to dualism and our conflict with faith.

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Jennifer Kern
Episode 502: Hail the impossible!

At 7:15 am on August 7th, 1974, 1,300 feet above a gathering crowd, French high wire artist, Philip Petit, renowned for his unauthorized public stunts, stepped onto a 131-foot wire rigged between the twin towers of New York City's World Trade Center. In this episode, Elizabeth recalls Petit 's "impossible" display of human courage and confidence as an analogy for faith, why we need to cultivate it, what it is, and how it works.

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Jennifer Kern
Episode 501: Faith Beyond Belief and Doubt: The “F” Word

In this episode, Elizabeth takes us on a journey through the term ‘faith.' We may assume we know what faith is, but most of us have never truly explored its nuance or spectrum of meanings. We often use the term faith to refer to: dogma, fundamentalism, doctrine, confidence, devotion, conviction, just to name a few. In the context of contemporary culture, there are those who suggest that we replace the world faith with spirituality, but Elizabeth requests us not to write-off faith so glibly. Faith carries with it the undeniable tension between our search for security and the limits of our ability to know. Faith keeps us connected to the heart of the human condition.

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Jennifer Kern
Episode 403: The Self: Into the Watery Depths

In episode 403, “Into the Watery Depths,” we will continue on with our theme: The Self: Walking the Middle Way Path, by introducing the second Century spiritual genius, Nagarjuna.  Nagarjuna is considered the father of the Middle Way school, because he was responsible for re-energizing and clarifying the authentic meaning of the Prajnaparamita (Transcendent Wisdom) Sutras, which are concerned with accurately discerning reality.

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Jennifer Kern
Episode 402: The Self: Mind and Its World

In this podcast Elizabeth introduces us to the Buddha’s most essential insight: “dependent arising,’”and leads us through a classic Middle Way investigation: “Can you locate where your mind ends and where the world begins?” leading us to a deeper understanding of mind and its world.

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Jennifer Kern
Episode 401: “The Self: Beyond Existence and Extinction”

If one were to ask, “What did the Buddha teach?, it would be accurate to reply, “The Middle Way.  Middle Way wisdom challenges the unexamined assumptions we have about things,

what the Buddha called ‘extreme views.’  In this podcast Elizabeth introduces the meaning of ‘extremes' and the 'Middle Way' in the context of living and dying.

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Jennifer Kern
Life is Rich!: Sacred World - Through the Eyes of Prajnaparamita

Our life - our world - can be rich…and it can also be a bitch. We walk the terrain of multiple - maybe infinite - grounds. We move in and out of these overlapping spaces.They are not geographical territories, but rather various ways we encounter our human condition as our mind and its world engage in the playful exchange we call, ‘experience.’

In this episode, I would like to invite you to walk the terrain of four grounds with me.the haunted ground; the playground; the training ground; and the sacred ground.

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Jennifer Kern
Episode 304: Where is “the” World?: Sacred World-Through the Eyes of Prajnaparamita

What do you see when you think about the world?

You might picture a rainforest or desert, You might envision people pushing their way through a crowded subway terminal on their way to work. You might imagine a household or a war zone.

You might think to yourself: “the world is a mess,” or feel touched by the beauty of this place and the beings that inhabit it.

Where exactly is “the” world?

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Jennifer Kern
Episode 302: Sacred World: Awakening Natural Intelligence

When we honestly assess our human condition, we find that our aspiration for wellbeing can be selfishly driven.

We often fail to connect the dots between our innermost longing and the way we move through life. To bring our actions together with our true intentions requires discernment, or prajna, in Sanskrit. Prajna is an inherent resource - but if we don’t recognize, develop, and use it, it will remain dormant.

The question we need to ask ourselves is:  “How do we wake it up?”

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Jennifer Kern
Episode 301: Sacred World: Through the Eyes of Prajnaparamita

Most spiritual traditions offer teachings on “sacred world” - the promise of a life beyond struggle - the search for a place of ease. This is a noble human quest. And yet, the ‘sacred' often seems to be a place other than where we find ourselves now. How do we reconcile the tension between the spiritual and temporal aspects of life? This is our conundrum. And presents us with a genuine opportunity to explore something crucial to our human being.

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Jennifer Kern
Episode 209: The Beloved Community

Marc Andrus is the Bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of California. His leadership is focused on key issues related to peace and justice, civil rights, and the environment. Bishop Andrus has just released a new book: Brothers in the Beloved Community: The Friendship of Thich Nhat Hanh and Martin Luther King Jr. In this interview, Elizabeth and Bishop Marc discuss the powerful connection between spirituality and activism, the nature of interdependence, and bodhisattvas in our world.

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Jennifer Kern
Episode 208: Opening the Heart Sutra

In this episode, Elizabeth shares her love of the most quintessential text of Mahayana Buddhism: The Heart Sutra. She weaves her heartfelt comments through a musical composition of the text, performed by Chime Mattis. The episode is an insightful and devotional presentation that can be used for both practice and contemplation.

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Jennifer Kern
Episode 207: Our Human Being

In this episode, Our Human Being, Elizabeth shares how, as electronic communication, machine intelligence and global culture become more a part of our world, she is feeling a deep personal need to examine and clarify what it means to be human. She brings her inquiry into the Buddhist context by questioning what the Buddha meant when he said that it is in the human realm that we have the great potential for awakening.

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Elizabeth Mattis Namgyel
Episode 206: Don't Be So Predictable

In this episode, Elizabeth and her son, Dungse Jampal Norbu, discuss his project the "Everybodhi Podcast". In his podcast, and this interview, Dungse Jampal offers a fresh and contemporary look at one of Mahayana Buddhism's seminal texts - "The Seven Points on Mind Training", or as it's more commonly known, Lojong. Elizabeth and Dungse la discuss several of Lojong's 59 pithy and playful slogans which were intended to challenge, open and counter our ordinary, habitual mind. It is easy to misinterpret these short slogans and misunderstand their sometimes provocative tone. Dungse Jampal shares his deeply reasoned appreciation of the many precious commentaries available to dharma students today.

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Elizabeth Mattis Namgyel
Episode 205: Science Magic Grace

In this episode, Elizabeth speaks with her dharma friend, Jakob Leschly, a long time practitioner, teacher and translator for Siddhartha’s Intent. They cover many topics in this conversation, including the differences between modern science and Buddhist science, the practice of critical inquiry and the challenges of looking at our own mind. At the heart of the discussion they share their experiences of the late master, Dilgo Khyentse Rinpoche, and his impact on their lives.

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Jennifer Kern