Posts in Dharma Talks
Noah Levine Dharma Talk: Community | Sangha

March 30, 2020 Finding a community to practice with is important on several levels: we need like-minded people to inspire us, to support us, and to challenge us when we get stuck. The Buddha felt that community was so important that he included it in the traditional ritual of “taking refuge,” or committing to the path of freedom. Committing to that path, dedicating our life to going against the stream, consists of committing to awakening (Buddha), finding out the truth about reality (dharma), and participating in community (sangha).

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Noah Levine Dharma Talk: Forgiveness

March 16, 2020, A huge part of the revolutionary path of awakening is forgiveness. In this Dharma talk, Noah reflects on forgiveness as an act, as a practice of love, and the humility that we can all have when we forgive, over and over, ourselves and others – unceasingly.

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Noah Levine Dharma Talk: The Heart-Mind's Liberation

March 9, 2020 The Buddha teaches that we can get free. All of the ways we are causing our own suffering; clinging, aversion, self-centeredness, greed, hatred, delusion – our uneasiness –we have the capacity to stop creating suffering. This is the core of the Buddha’s teaching. It’s one of the most radical things, and it’s one of the things that sets him apart from almost all other traditions.

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Dharma TalksNoah Levine
Noah Levine Dharma Talk: Equanimity

March 2, 2020 The Brahmavihārā’s are the wisdom of the heart and the mind that remains when all of the causes of suffering have been removed. When greed, hatred and self-centered delusion are no longer running the show, what remains is; a quality of kindness for all living beings, a feeling of compassion for all of the pain in the world - both internal and external – a sense of appreciation and empathy, and the fourth quality, equanimity, is really important in order to have a balanced experience of compassion, a balanced experience of kindness and appreciation.

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Noah Levine Dharma Talk: Appreciation | Muditā

Feb 24, 2020 Developing and uncovering a sense of appreciation for happiness. For other people’s happiness. Muditā is translated as appreciative joy. Of taking joy and letting your heart and mind rejoice in someone else’s happiness. I believe this is one of the reasons the Buddha said this path, Buddhism, goes “Against The Stream”.  Jealousy, envy, self-centeredness, comparing mind, judging mind, is really easy and totally natural to human beings. Taking pleasure, celebrating and enjoying other people’s happiness, people who are having more success than you, more joy than you…it’s so easy to get petty about it – to maybe even suffer about it.  All of Buddhism has one goal: To end suffering, to see clearly what is causing unhappiness and suffering in our lives, and to transform, to awaken, and to no longer suffer.

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Dharma TalksNoah Levine
Noah Levine Dharma Talk: Loving-Kindness

Feb 17, 2020 Loving-kindness is the experience of having a friendly and loving relationship toward ourselves as well as others. The experience of loving-kindness toward ourselves is perhaps as simple as bringing a friendly attitude to our minds and bodies. Typically, we tend to judge ourselves and be quite critical and harsh in our self-assessments, identifying with the negative thoughts and feelings that arise in our minds. Being loving and kind isn’t our normal habit, so training the heart-mind to be kind is another task of the inner rebellion, and another tool of the outer revolution. Mindfulness brings the mind’s negative habits into awareness.

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Dharma TalksNoah Levine
Noah Levine Dharma Talk: Compassion

Feb 10, 2020 Dharma talk by Noah Levine: How Do We Develop Compassion? Compassion is totally natural on some level, and it’s somewhat foreign when it comes to meeting our own pain with tenderness, care, friendliness, our survival instinct when we feel pain, is to hate it. It’s radical to learn to tolerate it, to have empathy, mercy and compassion towards our own pain.

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Dharma TalksNoah Levine
Noah Levine Dharma Talk: Generosity

Feb 3, 2020 Refuge in the Buddha gives us the roadmap to see things clearly. To be awake. To respond appropriately to life; with compassion, non-attachment, forgiveness, and not taking things so personally all the time. We take refuge in our own potential to do this, our own Buddha nature, and we take the action by practicing the Dharma.

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Dharma TalksNoah Levine