
Meditating in the Mandala
An embodied system of practice Watch the Practice SessionsDonate and support Home Retreats
Meditating in the Mandala
An embodied system of practice Watch the Practice SessionsDonate and support Home RetreatsWhat is a Home Retreat? (click to read)
Home Retreats can be tailored to your needs during the lockdown.
We provide:
- Daily, specially recorded teachings
- Related Dharma resources
- Support, perspective and inspiration from our team online during the live retreat
- Live Home Retreat events
- And a chance to connect with the retreat leader to ask questions about your practice.
Whether you have the time to engage with a full-on, urban-retreat style week at home โ or are super occupied already with kids or work and just want some useful structure to book-end your days with a little calm and inspiration: this is for you.
What is a Home Retreat? (tap to read)
Home Retreats can be tailored to your needs during the lockdown.
We provide:
- Daily, specially recorded teachings
- Related Dharma resources
- Support, perspective and inspiration from our team online during the live retreat
- Live Home Retreat events
- And a chance to connect with the retreat leader to ask questions about your practice.
Whether you have the time to engage with a full-on, urban-retreat style week at home โ or are super occupied already with kids or work and just want some useful structure to book-end your days with a little calm and inspiration: this is for you.
๐ง๐ฝโโ๏ธ ๐ง๐ฝโโ๏ธ A series of seven guided meditation workshops with Tejananda, working with our body, heart and mind.
๐ง Listen to Tejananda introduce the retreat
๐บ Watch and subscribe on YouTube
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Dharma practice is dynamic and transformative. The transformation lies in gradually discovering how both we and the world are not at all what we originally supposed! Seeing this, we can begin to uproot the causes of suffering in our own experience.
The approach we take in Triratna can be experienced as a dynamic mandala of five key principles:
- Integration
- Positive Emotion
- Spiritual Death
- Spiritual Rebirth
- Spiritual Receptivity
We progressively integrate mind and body, and discover the power of skilful and positive mental states. Then, directly penetrating and letting go of our delusions, we open more and more to the wonder of what just is.
In these meditation workshops weโll take a body-based approach to these five principles; that is, one based in the living energy of our body and being. Through being open to the energy of the body, and by becoming attuned to its actual nature, weโll discover ways to integrate all five principles into a single, embodied experience of โsimply beingโ.
Tejananda will lead you through daily meditations and inquiries, exploring in some depth the nature of our human experience.
Tejananda has been a leading member of the Vajraloka community for over 25 years and is known for his clarity and good humour. His retreats at Vajraloka are almost always full, so take advantage of this opportunity to access his considerable experience and insight.
All our classes are offered by donation. If you can, donate to allow others who canโt afford it to access these vital Dharma resources when they need them most.
Thank you!
Day 1: Introducing AN EMBODIED, EXPERIENTIAL APPROACH
Introducing the approach and context (click to read)
The Dynamic Mandala (or Integrated Mandala)
Sangharakshita laid out five principles of meditation which became the foundation of Triratnaโs system of practice. This weekโs retreat engages with all of them in an integrated, somatic (ie body-based) way as a way of approaching both shamatha (calming/focused) and vipashyana (insight/wisdom) aspects of meditation.
As regards your existing meditation practices, in many ways it involves simplifying and honing them down to essentials.
A brief overview of the integrated approach:
1. Integration โ becoming present in our experience by attending to posture, soma (body/energy), hara (lower abdomen), core, breath. As hindrances abate, shamatha (calm) manifests.
2. Positive emotion โ further โintegratingโ with the direct somatic experience of the heart centre and its qualities. Opening to any feelings that are present, letting them be what they are. Opening to kindness, sensitivity, confidence, unconditional love, compassion, etc. Allowing or simply noticing that the heart qualities are boundless.
3. Spiritual death โ now, integrating vipashyana (insight/wisdom) inquiry into direct experience. Using prajna (wise discernment) as a nonconceptual โtoolโ to become experientially clear regarding our essential nature and what is. Somatically, exploring shape, boundaries, somatic space, sensations, somatic energy. Inquiring into all kinds of sense experience โ including mental activities โ for the substantial entity which our self-narrative posits that โI amโ.
4. Spiritual rebirth โ the corollary of any seeing-through of a previously held illusion (i.e. a โspiritual deathโ), is the state of positive freedom from that illusion and seeing โwhat isโ, in its absence. With any such deepening or paradigm shift, there sooner or later comes an arising of unintegrated โstuffโ (โlaundryโ) that needs integrating โ this is the โworkโ of the spiritual rebirth aspect.
5. Receptivity โ effortless and spontaneous integration and embodiment of all the previous principles. Formless shamatha-vipashyana. Unbounded, whole, undivided being.
At any given moment youโll be working with one of the principles mainly, but aspects of the others are potentially involved. The idea is to โintegrateโ the successive principles โ the โpreviousโ ones are carried on into the next principle thatโs being brought into focus.
Introductory comments from Tejananda (4 mins)
Audio PlayerIntroducing Embodied Meditation - A Workshop, Day 1 (9 mins)
Audio Player
Meditating in the Mandala, Day 1 Live Meditation
Day 2: Integration: exploring Body (somatic) awareness
Integrating through the body (click to read)
Integration (embodied presence)
This primarily means integration of dissipated energies, in the broadest sense. Deluded states are characterised by mental proliferation and distraction (prapanca) and little awareness of the other sense fields. So-called โconcentrationโ practices use the mental quality of attention to focus awareness on a single object โ commonly the breath โ and bring attention back to the object whenever proliferation resumes. Eventually, the mind quietens down. However, there are more relaxed and less wilful ways of achieving access or โbasic presenceโ.
Posture is a way into embodiment and presence:
- grounding/earthing โ bringing awareness to the strong sensations at the base of our posture (buttocks, legs, feet).
- Aware of the effects of gravity, a direct โenergeticโ connection with the earth.
- Sense of โliftโ or rising energy via breathing up from the earth, through the core, or using the โsky hookโ tugging at the top of the head.
- Alignment and poise โ tuck chin without bending neck forwards and subtly check whether the torso is leaning over in one direction or other. Find the โsweet spotโ of optimum poise in the upper body.
- Let go of whatever tensions, contractions etc. can be let go of. There will most likely be tensions that are resistant at present, but explore to what extent they will allow release.
- Hara, heart and head: Bringing these three centres into awareness and harmonious relation can open out a deeper sense of embodiment and presence.
Getting into โbasic presenceโ โ or access: Whatever somatic method you are using for โintegrationโ, itโs a question of addressing whatever factors are hindering you from steady presence in whatever youโre focusing on. โBasic presenceโ is when the hindrances are all in abeyance and youโre basically present in whatever is arising.
A somatic way of addressing hindrances:
- Having a sense of the hara, heart and โcoreโ or central channel (the area of this behind the heart centre is often effective) are the basis of this approach. This doesnโt interrupt your โintegrationโ practice insofar as you are still focusing on an aspect of your somatic experience.
- With โsinkingโ hindrances (sloth, torpor), bring the awareness up to the crown of the head and open the eyes, maybe looking straight ahead or slightly upwards.
- With โupwardsโ or heady hindrances (restlessness/anxiety and doubt), try โenfoldingโ the thoughts in awareness and on the in-breath, bringing them down into the hara where, on the out-breath, they dissolve.
- With both desire (projecting forward, towards) and aversion or ill-will (projecting backwards, away), bring awareness strongly into the core, e.g. the part of the โcentral channelโ behind the heart and just in front of the spinal column.
The advantage of this approach from the point of view of calming the mind (shamatha) is that it involves the minimum of thinking about what hindrance youโre in and what antidote to use โ awareness โunhooksโ from the hindrance and returns to the soma directly and the mental activity tends to reduce of itself.
All the same, if these somatic approaches donโt work for you, feel free to use other appropriate antidotes. The underlying question is: โis this reducing mental proliferation or not? Always feel free to try a different approach if the one youโre using is not reducing proliferation.
Finding somatic space: Once proliferation and dullness has died down, youโre in access or basic presence โ youโre really present in or as whatever experience is happening. Being aware of the whole breathing body, notice whether the sensations are โheavyโ or โlightโ โ does a body sensation have any weight as such? Get a sense of the soma as a โcloudโ of living, energetic and ever-changing sensations. Then, using the metaphor of the cloud, become aware of the โspaceโ in which the sensations are happening. Can you find any boundaries to that sense of space? Having a sense of unbounded somatic space is helpful when it comes to the โintegratedโ approach to positive emotion and the โboundless statesโ of love, compassion, joy and equanimity.
Tejananda explains his approach to integration (5 mins)
Audio PlayerExploring Integration - Meditation Workshop, Day 2 (24 mins)
Audio Player
Meditating in the Mandala, Day 2 Live Meditation
Day 3: opening to the heart
Opening to heart qualities (click to read)
Positive emotion (heart qualities)
On the basis of somatic integration, bring awareness to the heart centre โ another aspect of the soma โ as youโre experiencing it now. Notice and let go of any assumptions that the heart โoughtโ to be a certain way. What are its qualities now? Possibilities could include anything between open or contracted, blissful or painful, connected or disconnected, richly alive or just inaccessible, and so on. Be open to whatever turns up, turn towards it. Simply doing this is already an activity of metta and compassion.
You can drop a question into the heart, such as โwhat is the heartโs wish?โ or โwhat does my heart most deeply long for?โ If you remain open, you may find a word, image or feeling emerges which reveals more of the heartโs nature to you. You can, in fact, drop any โexistentialโ question or inquiry into the heart in this way. Be clear that the response comes from your heart & being, rather than from the conceptualising mind.
Metta โ benevolence, well-wishing, goodwill, unconditional kindly regard, or simply love โ and other divine abode qualities need to be โsimpleโ to be integrated. Itโs fine to do the full metta bhavana practice if this is helpful or needful at this stage, but what is โintegratedโ is the simple sense of all-pervading metta that the final stage involves. This involves first contacting metta as โalready hereโ โ can you simply open to it and find it? If you just assume itโs here to be opened to, you may well discover that it actually is. Then you allow it to pervade โwhatever is hereโ in direct experience, i.e. everything that we sense and are (not just what we conceive as โin meโ). Keep with awareness of the heart and see whether the benevolence seems to be located in, or radiate from, the heart. There can come a moment when the heart centre โignitesโ with the divine abode quality, but donโt be concerned if it doesnโt happen in this way for you.
Then, recollecting somatic space, recognise that the boundary of โwhat I amโ is just a mental assumption and can be let go. The benevolence or compassion etc. can now become boundless, without limits. It can include particular individuals (people, animals, trees, rocksโฆ) or be โwithout an objectโ, which means simply for everyone and everything โ there arenโt any rules, let it take its course. This brings the practice into the area of spiritual death โ there is just metta rather than it being โmyโ metta, or โmeโ having metta for โthemโ.
Unconditional love: this is realising that maitri is just here or โsimply isโ โ not me or mine, not โwhat I amโ in the limited-self sense (to that, it is โotherโ) but what I am in the ultimate or true sense. Thus it can seem either โotherโ or โhereโ โ or both. Itโs not the โmettaโ that โI bhavanaโ, i.e. not what I fabricate โ itโs unconditional (=unconditioned) love, sensitivity, compassion, joy, equanimity, peace, gratitude, confidence-trust and other โheart qualitiesโ.
Can I open to unconditional love that is already here and doesnโt need to be developed?
Tejananda on a somatic approach to positive emotion (3 mins)
Audio PlayerMeditating on Boundless Love - A Workshop, Day 2 (15 mins)
Audio Player
Meditating in the Mandala, Day 3 Live Meditation
Day 4: a somatic approach to spiritual death
Introducing a somatic approach to spiritual death (click to read)
Spiritual death (seeing through)
Spiritual death has two aspects โ the wisdom practices we do in order to make the dharma teachings experiential and any actual arising of insight, the latter being a โseeing throughโ of a particular delusion or โseeing clearlyโ. This could be called an actual spiritual death โ what has โdiedโ is a delusion we were holding onto. Weโll look at this latter aspect more under the heading of spiritual rebirth.
The most โbasicโ insight from which the path of vipashyana really begins is seeing through the deluded view of existing as a substantial and separate โselfโ entity. We constantly reinforce this self-view by immersing ourselves in โthe story of meโ. Along with this view goes a largely unconscious cognitive-emotional holding to our being separate and special (including especially flawed, unlovable, etc.).
Before anything else, itโs important to bring the โstory of meโ into consciousness โ become aware of our telling it, whether the story is a happy or a painful one. Then we use insight practices to see directly that the separate, independent, substantial โselfโ which our self-narrative takes as โmeโ is, in fact, โnot me, not mine, not myself, not what I amโ.
Itโs important to be clear that the not-self teaching is pointing to a delusory view of separation which gives rise to dukkha (suffering/unsatisfactoriness) โ itโs not implying that somehow โwe donโt existโ โ this is a common misunderstanding. It is the delusion itself which is not real and itโs this which โdiesโ when the self-view is seen through.
If weโre not a substantial, separate self, what are we? In a sense, weโre just what weโve always been โ the not-self teaching does not negate experience of body, senses, memories, relationships, personality and other proclivities โ all of these still arise, but they do so without the often-painful narrative of a separate โmeโ, sustaining the self-view. This is something of the import of the Buddhaโs teaching to Bahiya. We do not exist in a substantial, separate or independent way; rather, we are completely connected and interdependent with life, others and the world โ with wholeness or totality.
The occurrence of a spiritual โdeathโ, in the sense of an arising of insight, represents the seeing-through and waking up from a delusion which has been tightly held energetically-emotionally. It is the deluded view that โdiesโ and as a direct result we wake up to the immediate experience of energetic-emotional freedom around that release.
If a seeing-through is thorough, it will tend to persist. If thatโs the case, seeing and knowing that the โselfโ to which the self-view refers does not exist can be directly and non-conceptually recollected at any time.
If the seeing-through is more of the nature of a glimpse, that kind of direct recollection wonโt be possible and you may have a sense of trying to โget back toโ the insight. It would be better to engage one of the โbasic insightโ methods above.
There can be energetic / somatic / phenomena around an insight which are by-products, e.g. priti, bliss, lights, visionary experiences, and these can be mistaken for the โactual insightโ. Hence, when they cease, it can feel like the insight has been lost, but this is not (necessarily) the case.
Looking into the self-view: We cling to the self-view in a variety of ways so we need to use a variety of perspectives:
a) To enter into the territory, we can contemplate of the six-elements or five skandhas as โnot me, not mine, not my selfโ in order to get a sense that โweโ are simply the processes of the elements and skandhas โ no separate, stable entity can be found. Also reflecting that the principle of dependent arising, โthis being, that becomesโ, etc. demonstrates that no phenomenon exists substantially in its own right or from its own side.
b) With the experiential somatic approach, integrating the spiritual death aspect is quite straightforward. Having already become integrated somatically, with the positive emotion being integral, you integrate the spiritual death aspect by non-conceptually inquiring into direct experience of the body. Experiential inquiry can then be extended into the other sense fields.
โ Having โintegratedโ embodiment and heart-qualities, have direct experience of the โsomatic cloudโ as somatic energy and somatic space then โlookโ or โfeelโ into your immediate non-conceptual experience of the somatic body.
โ Explore the sense of โsolidityโ regarding body experience vs. finding as sense of โsomatic spaceโ. This can profitably have been done already as an aspect of somatic integration and can lead to direct experience of openness / emptiness of soma. Itโs also helpful in getting a sense of the boundless aspect of metta and the other brahmaviharas.
โ We impute weight and lightness in the body, but are sensations โheavyโ or โlightโ in themselves? Discern whether, in your immediate experience, the body is solid and bounded or spacious and unbounded. Then look (with awareness, not the conceptual mind) for the โmeโ our narrative imputes when we think, for example, โthis is my bodyโ. Where is this โmeโ in the โsomatic cloudโ โ can it be found? What do we suppose it it would look or feel like if we actually found it?
โ Then, can you actually experience an โinsideโ separate from โoutsideโ (i.e. inside โmeโ or outside โmeโ)? At first, itโs probably most accessible via the body as โsomatic cloudโ and the sphere of sounds.
c) Recollect (or discover) that neither past, future nor present can be found in experience, that time is a mere concept โ itโs always โnow oโclockโ. Right now โwhenโ can the separate self-entity we suppose โourselvesโ to be actually exist?
d) If the thought arises โIโm the thinkerโ, look at how thoughts arise. Can you find a self-entity which somehow pre-thinks and decides the thought โIโ am about to have? Do โweโ ever actually decide the thought weโre going to have next? Even with thoughts that seem quite deliberate.
e) If it seems that โIโm the deciderโ, take a walk (without any pre-planning) and notice how it comes about that we go this way or that, walk on this side of the road or the other โ how do what we subsequently define as โdecisionsโ actually arise? Do they arise from an executive self-in-the-head, or from a whole admixture of contingent arisings?
Tejananda on his approach to spiritual death (5 mins)
Audio PlayerAn Approach to Spiritual Death - Meditation Workshop, Day 4 (22 mins)
Audio Player
Meditating in the Mandala, Day 4 Live Meditation
Day 5: spiritual rebirth: the ecstasy & the laundry
Introducing spiritual rebirth (click to read)
Spiritual rebirth (freedom)
Spiritual rebirth as a principle is the natural corollary of a spiritual death. As mentioned above, an actual experience of โspiritual deathโ or vipashyana is an arising of insight โ a shift from what I thought was the case about some aspect of โmeโ or โthe worldโ to a clear, experiential, non-conceptual knowing โthis is how it actually isโ. This means an aspect of delusion has been seen through. Such seeings-through can be temporary or persistent.
Spiritual rebirth arises as a direct knowing together with a genuine shift in our way of being. What weโve seen through is one of our self-sustaining โego stratagemsโ. These stratagems always involve self-referential, afflictive โnegativeโ emotions (klesha).
As these stratagems cause and indeed are dukkha (unsatisfactory), when one of them has been seen through, there is a sense of liberation and freedom. This is the โpositiveโ corollary of a spiritual death โ the sense of freedom when a certain dukkha-causing holding on or delusion has simply dropped away โ and it can be quite blissful for a while. Sometimes itโs not so much blissful as just a kind of wholesome feeling โ it just feels โrightโ.
Enjoy it when itโs like this because generally, sooner or later, it just becomes the โnew normalโ and no longer feels like anything special. Though actually, if you look back, youโll almost certainly notice that there is less secondary dukkha in your experience now. Another very likely development following any such shift in our being is the emergence of previously unacknowledged layers of reactivity. This is good news! Working with this insightfully is the active aspect of spiritual rebirth.
The fundamental โbasicโ insight โ the actual spiritual death โ is seeing directly the illusoriness of the view we have of โmeโ (atta) as potentially permanent, satisfactory and substantial. Put another way, itโs a direct seeing that the supposed separate โselfโ is merely a product of our internal narratives (stories) โ it doesnโt exist outside of our narratives. Thus the self-view could also be described as the โnarrative selfโ. Either way, this view is what is seen through.
As long as the self-view is intact, there is always an underlying sense of lack โ sometimes described by theists as a โGod-shaped holeโ. Whether weโre theists or not, all humans feel this lack as itโs a fundamental aspect of โsecondaryโ dukkha, and we attempt to remedy it via acquisition and rejection, i.e. getting what we want (craving) and avoiding whatever feels threatening (aversion). This โholeโ can never be filled because it is ultimately nothing other than the very view, or rather deeply held belief, that we are separate and lacking.
The self-view together with the craving and aversion which support it arise directly from delusion or ignorance (avidya) โ literally our โnot-knowingโ that permanence, satisfactoriness and substantiality are simply unavailable. The โnarrative selfโ โ our mind โ is always seeking something which we hope will permanently and dependably fill the โempty holeโ in our being thus confirming our substantiality and giving us the real lasting satisfaction we long for. This is never going to happen โ because itโs based on the delusion that permanence, satisfactoriness and substantiality are actually available.
All these stratagems to โfill the holeโ, are called kleshas, or โafflictionsโ. Kleshas are โself-support stratagemsโ which have become deeply entrenched, compulsive habits (samskaras) in which we impulsively and compulsively engage. As the dharma primarily addresses the cause and cessation of dukkha, our practice is first and foremost oriented to countering and seeing-through the kleshas.
We counter them initially โ and indispensably โ through undertaking ethical precepts and cultivating states of shamatha or โcalm abidingโ, in which the hindrances are in abeyance. We ultimately see through them via the practice of vipashyana or spiritual death. In terms of the โintegrated practiceโ there are two ways that you might approach the vipashyana aspect. One is called โbringing the kleshas to the pathโ โ this is from Mahamudra, but itโs actually found in various forms in all the major Buddhist paths and involves experientially deconstructing negative emotions and seeing their emptiness directly.
The other has been characterised as โsitting with your own shitโ! This is also known โ less colloquially โ as shamatha-vipashyana.
For shamatha-vipashyana practice, set up your meditation posture and get to a point where all the principles so far are integrated and accessible. Then sit, without deliberately moving, with whatever experiences, feelings, emotions and so on arise, but resist impulses. Impulses to move, scratch etc. are a quick fix for any uncomfortable feelings. By resisting the impulses, the uncomfortable feelings and embodied (unconscious) traumas weโve been resisting then emerge into consciousness.
If an impulse takes you โout of the practiceโ, come back to the posture: grounding, poise/balance, breathing โupโ the core, tucked chin, relax. This โdown-regulatesโ you from โflight, fight, freezeโ reactions in a very direct way. Then breathe into the hara โ lying down or sitting up. Relax and connect with the open, impartial space-awareness of the soma and deeply feel the sensations. This can be very effective in releasing and healing traumas.
Tejananda evokes the idea of spiritual rebirth (5 mins)
Audio PlayerMeditation on Spiritual Rebirth - A Workshop, Day 5 (12 mins)
Audio Player
Meditating in the Mandala, Day 5 Live Meditation
Day 6: receptivity โ the centre of the mandala
Introducing spiritual receptivity (click to read)
Receptivity (wholeness)
In terms of the dynamic mandala, this is the central principle, which embodies and integrates all the others. In the centre, there is no doing or cultivation (bhavana) โ itโs a โnon-practiceโ, a formless meditation. Itโs just simply being โ whatever happens just happens. This means there is no interference from the โnarrative selfโ. While thoughts about just about anything can still arise, they are just passing through โ there is no โstickinessโ.
While this is what might optimally be happening in just sitting, what actually arises will tend to be a reflection of where we are with the other four principles. Sangharakshita recommended just sitting at the end of any other practice and in terms of the integrated practice, what transpires in the just sitting will reflect which principle weโve mainly been working with.
For example, if weโre working mainly with integration and hindrances are still present, the just sitting is likely to full of prapanca, dullness, or both. Itโs nevertheless still worth just sitting at the end of the meditation period because sometimes the very effort that we are making is keeping us in prapanca rather than helping release it. This is often the case when itโs a forced and goal-oriented kind of effort.
Similarly, whether we have reached the point of basic somatic presence (access), opened up heart qualities (benevolence, etc.), got a sense of the boundlessness of the body or are assimilating an insight that has arisen, the just sitting will tend to reflect and embody this effortlessly. So the centre of the mandala has a kind of chameleon-like quality โ it reflects whatever and wherever we โareโ, which in principle could be anything from complete delusion to complete awakening.
However, if the other four principles have been well integrated, just sitting can be a genuine state of shamatha-vipashyana, a relaxed, effortless presence imbued with openness or receptivity and absence of ego-grasping. This is where the underlying formless โ โunformedโ or unfabricated โ (asaแน
khata) nature of things can potentially come โinto viewโ spontaneously.
Non-forming is in contrast to forming (saแน
khata). Forming is another way of talking about the deluded mental activity which characterises โsamsaraโ.
Having integrated the other four principles and just sitting in a very positive, open and receptive state, some kind of dharma โpointingโ to or โpointing-outโ of ultimate truth can now be very effective. If the words or images strike home, mental construing, forming and fashioning can suddenly cease of itself and there is a glimpse โ or more than a glimpse โ of what is asaแน khata, unformed, non-forming, or โunborn, unbecome, unmade, unfabricatedโ.
At this point it can be helpful to have some very pithy โpointing-outโ text or phrase at your disposal, such as the Buddhaโs teaching to Bahiya, or part of Padmasambhavaโs direct introduction to the nature of mind from โSelf-liberation Through Seeing with Naked Awarenessโ. There are plenty of other examples โ though this seems to be most effective if you hear someone else saying it out loud. If no-one else is available, try bringing the phrase or the part of it that resonates most to mind and then โjust let go and go where no mind goesโ โ there is nothing you can do to โmake it happenโ.
Tejananda introduces spiritual receptivity (5 mins)
Audio PlayerMeditation Exploring Receptivity - A Workshop, Day 6 (12 mins)
Audio Player
Meditating in the Mandala, Day 6 Live Meditation
Day 7: practicing IN the dynamic mandala
The mandala in relation to the body (click to read)
The โIntegrated mandalaโ in relation to body and being
HARA / GUT โIntegrationโ โ connection of the bodyโs energy with that of the earth, biosphere, spaciousness โฆ
HEART โPositive emotionโ โ unconditional love, heart wish, compassion, soul, connection
HEAD โSpiritual deathโ โ clarity, spaciousness, openness โฆ
ENTIRE BODY โSpiritual rebirthโ โ opening to โthisโ as it is, beyond concepts; suchness โฆ
WHOLENESS โReceptivityโ โ integrating all the above, beyond inside/outside, space/time and any dividedness โฆ
This is rough and by no means exhaustive. Any of these qualities can be accessed from other centres, and of course the last two are increasingly holistic.
Tejananda on practising beyond the retreat (3 mins)
Audio PlayerThe Whole Mandala - Meditation Workshop, Day 7 (24 mins)
Audio Player
Meditating in the Mandala, Day 7 Live Meditation
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Thank you from our team and from the online community around the world!
May you be well!
To all of you at The Buddhist Centre Online, please accept this gift of ยฃ1,000 from Adhisthana. Itโs just a small token of our appreciation of all that your team is doing right now in these extraordinary times. Youโve managed to respond very quickly to the Covid19 situation, creating online resources for the Triratna community and whoever else may be looking for a sense of meaning and support during this phase.
Youโve also given our worldwide community a chance to meet collectively: listening to your podcasts, watching your live events, etc. I have certainly felt I was participating in something much larger than just my personal lockdown space. So, thank you! Iโm also aware that it takes a lot of time to create these connections and resources, and I feel very appreciative of the time-pressure and the extra effort it is demanding of you all.
To all of you at The Buddhist Centre Online, please accept this gift of ยฃ1,000 from Adhisthana. Itโs just a small token of our appreciation of all that your team is doing right now in these extraordinary times. Youโve managed to respond very quickly to the Covid19 situation, creating online resources for the Triratna community and whoever else may be looking for a sense of meaning and support during this phase.
Iโm also aware that it takes a lot of time to create these connections and resources, and I feel very appreciative of the time-pressure and the extra effort it is demanding of you all. Thank you!
Stay connected to community
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With deep thanks to Tejananda for his generosity in providing the resources for this course as well as leading live events each day.
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