Dharmabytes From Free Buddhist Audio

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Synopsis

Dharmabytes features bite-sized dharma, three times a week, from the Free Buddhist Audio archives. Themed in conjunction with our weekly full length talk podcast, these are inspiring short extracts from over 5,000 talks on Buddhism, meditation and mindfulness!Tune in, be inspired!

Episodes

  • Death as Loss or Death as Gateway

    17/02/2011 Duration: 05min

    Todayand#8217;s Dharmabyte moves us into the theme of Death as the Buddhaand#8217;s Parinirvana is celebrated across the Buddhist world. and#8220;Death as Loss or Death as Gatewayand#8221; is an extract from Vidyamalaand#8217;s talk and#8220;Dying to Liveand#8221;, which will be our next featured full length podcast. Confronted with impermanence and death the questions of who and what we are burn into us. Bereavements and losses of all kinds can be met with a kindness and awareness that gently ease the burden, allowing something of peace to enter our lives again. Talk given at the Western Buddhist Order Womenand#8217;s Convention 2003

  • Reality as Change – Poetry and Impermanence

    14/02/2011 Duration: 06min

    Todayand#8217;s Dharmabyte: Reality as Change and#8211; Poetry and Impermanence is from a thoughtful and sympathetic talk by Srivati on the most delicate of tasks in any life and#8211; how to live in the present moment. Exploring the subtle aspects of past and present, of memory and expectation, we encounter impermanence as the touchstone of our experience through the practice of writing and#8211; especially poetry. Dharmabyte selected from the talk, and#8220;Becoming a Citizen of the Present.and#8221; Talk given to the Western Buddhist Order national Order weekend, 2001

  • The Suffering of a Wasted Life

    10/02/2011 Duration: 11min

    Todayand#8217;s Dharmabyte, and#8220;The Suffering of a Wasted Lifeand#8221; is a track from the inspiring talk and#8220;Generating Bodhi Mindand#8221; by the dynamic Vajratara of Sheffield Buddhist Centre. Our speaker beautifully guides us through the second section of Tsongkhapaand#8217;s short text on The Three Principle Aspects of the Path as she challenges us to examine our own suffering created in not living fully to our potential. Talk given at Taraloka, May 2009.

  • The Six Perfections

    07/02/2011 Duration: 08min

    Todayand#8217;s Dharmabyte, and#8220;The Six Perfectionsand#8221; is a reminder from our last podcast where Nagapriya beautifully and clearly led us through his understanding of and#8220;The Ideal of Universal Awakeningand#8221;. In this little golden Dharma-nugget we are reconnected with the Six Perfections, a reading from the Bodhicaryavatara by Shantideva, and the 10 Bhumis or stages of the Bodhisattvaand#8217;s Path. This is from the second talk in a five-part series called Visions of Mahayana Buddhism given at the Manchester Buddhist Centre, 2009.

  • Buddhist Conversion and The Bodhichitta

    03/02/2011 Duration: 04min

    Welcome to Dharmabytes! In and#8220;Buddhist Conversion andamp; The Bodhichittaand#8221;, Sangharakshita, the founder of the Triratna Buddhist Order and Community, introduces the talk and#8220;The Arising of the Bodhicittaand#8221;. Here, in his classic form, Urgyen Sangharakshita describes the act of Conversion within Buddhist practice. Two contradictory trends that are discernible in the spiritual life: withdrawing from the world and compassion for it. The arising of the Bodhichitta or and#8216;Will to Enlightenmentand#8217; resolves this dichotomy. Talk given in 1965.

  • Dharmabytes – The Buddha and Reality

    25/01/2011 Duration: 04min

    Welcome to the first installment of our new Dharmabytes podcast, where Free Buddhist Audio serves up a bite-sized portion of Dharma from the wealth of audio talks in our archives. In this excerpt from Sangharakshitaand#8217;s talk and#8220;The Buddha, God and#038; Reality,and#8221; he clarifies the gap between the clouded lenses of space and time through which we see the world and the and#8216;clear visionand#8217; that comes with Enlightenment, as achieved by the Buddha. Talk given in 1966. Part of the series Introducing Buddhism.

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