Mindfulness Meditation Podcast - Mindfulness Meditation with Kimberly Brown 02/02/2023
Episode Date: February 10, 2023Theme: Loving Kindness Artwork: Snake Goddess Manasa; Northeastern India; ca 12th century; phyllite; Rubin Museum of Art; http://therubin.org/36aTeacher: Kimberly Brown The Rubin Museum p...resents a weekly online meditation session led by a prominent meditation teacher from the New York area, with each session focusing on a specific work of art. This podcast is a recording of the live online session and includes an opening talk and 20-minute sitting session. The guided meditation begins at 11:12. This meditation is presented in partnership with Sharon Salzberg, teachers from the NY Insight Meditation Center, the Interdependence Project, and Parabola Magazine. To attend a Mindfulness Meditation online session in the future or learn more, please visit our website at RubinMuseum.org/meditation. If you would like to support the Rubin Museum and this meditation series, we invite you to become a member and always attend for free. Have a mindful day!
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Welcome to the Mindfulness Meditation Podcast presented by the Rubin Museum of Art.
We are a museum in Chelsea, New York City that connects visitors to the art and ideas of the Himalayas
and serves as a space for reflection and personal transformation.
I'm your host, Tashi Chodron.
Every Thursday, we present a meditation session inspired by a different artwork from the Rubin
Museum's collection and led by a prominent meditation teacher from the New York area.
This podcast is a recording of our weekly in-person practice. In the description for each episode,
you will find information about the theme for that week's session, including an image of the
related artwork. Our mindfulness meditation Podcast is presented in partnership with Sharon Salzberg
and teachers from the New York Inside Meditation Center,
The Interdependence Project, and Parabola Magazine,
and supported by the Frederick P. Lenz Foundation for American Buddhism.
And now, please enjoy your practice.
Hello, everybody. Tashi Delek!
And welcome!
Welcome to the return of in-person mindfulness meditation at the Rubin Museum of Art.
I'm Tashi Chodron, Himalayan Programs and Communities Ambassador.
It's so wonderful to see so many familiar faces here.
It's so wonderful to see so many familiar faces here. So I'm curious, how many of you have attended mindfulness meditation in person in the theater?
May I see your hands?
Okay, wonderful.
And how many of you are first time?
Wow.
All right.
So it's like 50-50.
But for the last three years, we've been doing virtual.
And I'm curious to know how many of you have attended virtual meditation online. Okay. So
we are very even. Wonderful. So those of you who are first time, we are a Museum of Himalayan Art
and Ideas in New York City. And we are so glad to have all of you join us for our weekly program where we combine art and meditation.
And inspired from our collection, we will take a look at work of art from our collection.
We will hear brief teaching from our teacher.
And so thrilled to, you know, so fortunate to introduce Kimberly Brown today to have her back and we will have a
short sit about 15 to 20 minutes for the meditation guided by Kimberly and I like to show you the
art connection for today as well as the theme for this month so this month's theme is loving kindness and the art connection for today's session is this beautiful
sculpture of green tara in tibetan she's known as dolma tara emanates in 21 different forms
out of the 21 forms two of the most popular and the common taras are white Tara and green Tara, each associates with certain role. And
so the green Tara associates with enlightened activity and how you can identify which Tara
it is. In the painting, you can see the colors. White Tara comes in white in color, of course,
and then green Tara comes in green in color in the Thangka painting.
But whereas in the statue, how you can identify which Tara it is, is you look at how she's
sitting.
So green Tara is often sitting in a royal ease position, as you see here, left leg folded,
right leg extended.
So this is a royal east position and the Tara's left
hand is holding a lotus stem and the lotus flower is sprouting on her left
shoulder and the Lotus symbolizes awakening purity all of beautiful
symbolization and then the right hand the mudra is in a supreme generosity you see her palm facing
up resting on her right knee so this is a supreme generosity Tara is often referred to as the mother
of all savior so she's a perfect expression of loving kindness So this beautiful sculpture is origin from Tibet, is a 17th century sculpture.
Artist is Karmapa, the 10th Karmapa in fact, who is the head of Karmakajuk school, which is one of
the four schools in Tibetan Buddhism. That is Nyingma, Sakya, Kajuk Gelug and the Van Prih Buddhist. Now some of the signature or the very
individualized style of 10th Karmapa is those beautiful birds that you see sitting on top.
If you look right on top there with this beautiful arch flower in the nestle in the middle of the flower. The Karmapa is known to love animals,
especially associated with the birds in his art.
And then these really bulky,
like very, wow, volume,
like hairdo on the left side of Tara.
This is another signature look of Karmapa and now let's
bring on a teacher for today we're so fortunate to have Kimberly Brown back
Kimberly Brown is a meditation teacher and author she leads classes and
retreats that emphasize the power of compassion and kindness meditation to
reconnect us to ourselves and others. Her teachings provide an approachable pathway to personal and collective well-being
through effective and modern techniques based on traditional practices.
She studies in both the Tibetan and inside schools of Buddhism
and is a certified mindfulness instructor.
So please help me in welcoming Kimberly Brown. Kimberly, thank
you so much for being here.
This is the first time that I've taught indoors with people since pre-pandemic.
It is such an honor and a delight and i would like all of you just to take a moment if you're
able just to look around you might have to look behind you and just notice that we are together
again it seems sometimes like oh you can meditate by yourself.
You can meditate anywhere.
You're just being quiet.
And yet, to be in the presence of others, with others in silence,
there is still a communication and there is still a presence that we feel.
So thank you for coming tonight and today and sharing your practice again.
So the theme is loving-kindness.
Many of you know loving-kindness, the original Pali word,
which was from the early Buddhist tradition, is metta,
and the Sanskrit word for loving-kindness is maitri.
and the Sanskrit word for loving kindness is Maitri. It's translated to loving kindness,
which is kind of an awkward word. We don't use that so often, but it's used because its literal translation, love, is a bit mixed up for many of us. We love our new shoes, and we love a television program,
and we cling to someone we want to love us. So we use loving kindness as a way to express
a certain sort of love, a love that wishes us to be happy and everyone to be happy. And this quality of love is related to compassion, it's related to
joy, and of course it's related to wisdom, you know, all three. And I work with a lot of students to develop compassion and usually for their selves, for myself. In our culture,
many of us feel selfish to offer ourselves love and compassion or we feel maybe we have to keep
it all to ourselves and we can't give it to anybody else because we don't have enough.
Right? And so what's really the most valuable, I think, valuable thing about practicing and sitting quietly with ourselves is we start to notice that we already have this quality of
compassion. We already have the quality of love, of joy, and of wisdom.
And it's just there for us to develop it. We also have it in a way that it's boundless.
So we have to worry about having enough of it. And it's indiscriminate. That means
everybody here deserves it, right? And no one here deserves love and kindness more
than me, and I don't deserve love and kindness more than any of you. A great Indian teacher,
Shantideva, wrote the importance of equalizing self and other. And so in our practice today, and if you've ever done loving kindness
practice, part of the experience of it is beginning to give it not only to ourselves,
not only to people we like, but others, strangers, people we don't like, even animals.
So before we begin our practice, I would just like to remind you
all that you do have these qualities. And this Tara statue, it's a representation of a quality
that we all have. And Tashi Chodron pointed out that this is still a living tradition
and it's a living tradition right here too
in Tibetan we translate this as a deity
but the word is Yidam
Y-I-D-A-M, Yidam
and that has a sense of a connection
our mind streams are all connected to Tara. Now you don't have to
believe in an outside God to know that you have compassion and joy and wisdom and love inside of
you. So keeping that in mind, keeping that knowledge, that trust that you too have a Tara within you. So
everyone go ahead and close your eyes and also relax. You don't have to sit Hold upright. Just notice that you're breathing.
Bringing your attention to the weight of your body in your seat. And in the silence you might
recognize, notice the presence of others.
And I'd like each of you to remember, recognize, recall the motivation that brought you here today, the intention.
Each of you have an individual personal intention maybe you just thought it would be fun
maybe you're struggling and you'd like to learn
to be more understanding of yourself or maybe of others
whatever your intention is
please appreciate it
rejoice in your beneficial wisdom.
Because practicing like this benefits you and others.
So I'm saying thank you to yourself.
And also, maybe thank you to the Rubin Museum
for having us back here again and hosting us.
to the Rubin Museum for having us back here again and hosting us, for creating a treasury of these beautiful, beautiful images.
Thanking each other for coming out on a cold day today. And bringing your attention now to your feet, to your seat, to your belly, your shoulder
blades, to the back of your head.
Bringing your attention to your forehead and your cheeks and your jaw. Allowing sound to enter your ears and smell. And you
might notice thoughts, plans, associations, feelings. Just as you notice light entering your eyes and smell.
And choosing now to rest your attention on your heart center, the center
of your chest. If you'd like you can place your hand there.
And I'd like you to make a connection with what is usually traditionally called a benefactor.
This is a being who has loved you so easily and delighted in you.
And if you cannot think of one, use Tara today.
So bring this benefactor to your mind, to your heart.
You might imagine them, visualize them, or just feel their presence here with you.
And give them these wise phrases of metta.
May you be gentle with yourself.
May you feel safe and strong.
May you be gentle with yourself. May you feel safe and strong. May you be gentle with yourself.
May you feel safe and strong.
May you be gentle with yourself.
May you feel safe and strong.
And continuing to silently repeat these phrases,
just for a couple of minutes,
like you're giving a gift to this benefactor. Diolch yn fawr. Thank you. Diolch yn fawr. Just using your awareness to notice where is your attention.
Maybe you have to reconnect with this benefactor and begin again. May you be gentle with yourself. May you feel
safe and strong. And for just two more minutes, silently repeating these gifts. Diolch yn fawr. May you be gentle with yourself.
May you feel safe and strong.
And you can let go of this connection
with this benefactor, noticing your breath,
allowing sound to enter your ears,
light to enter through your eyelids,
feeling the weight of your body
and your breath.
And now connecting with yourself.
You could imagine yourself,
maybe imagine you're looking in the mirror,
or imagine yourself in a time of struggle or difficulty,
or maybe just connecting with your beautiful presence
by putting your hand on your heart
and giving yourself this same metta, this same loving kindness.
May I be gentle with myself. May I feel safe and strong.
May I be gentle with myself. May I feel safe and strong. May I be gentle with myself. May I feel safe and strong.
May I be gentle with myself. May I feel safe and strong.
And silently repeating these phrases, gently, like you're giving yourself a gift. Diolch yn fawr. Thank you. And once again, just paying attention.
Where are you right now?
If you've lost your connection with yourself, that's okay.
Come back.
Begin again.
May I be gentle with myself.
May I feel safe and strong. And just for two more minutes, giving yourself this wisdom. Thank you. May I be gentle with myself.
May I feel safe and strong.
Just taking a moment here to include, include the benefactor, include yourself, include
everyone in this room, include whoever's calling.
Include your family, your friends,
your pets. Also include all the people you don't like that annoy you and frustrate you.
And all the strangers that you'll never meet.
May we be gentle with ourselves. May we feel safe and strong.
May we be gentle with ourselves. May we feel safe and strong. You can let go of this technique. Allow yourself just to rest here for a moment. I'm going
to invite the bell to ring. And please stay still until you can no longer hear it,
at which time you can move, open your eyes,
bring your attention to our conversation.
Thank you.
Thank you so much, Kimberly, for that beautiful session.
That concludes this week's practice.
To support the Rubin and this meditation series,
we invite you to become a member at rubinmuseum.org membership.
If you are looking for more inspiring content,
please check out our other podcast, Awaken,
which uses art to explore the dynamic paths to enlightenment
and what it means to wake up.
Season 2, hosted by Raveena Arora, is out now and explores the transformative power of emotions
using a mandala as a guide, available wherever you listen to podcasts.
And to stay up to date with the Rubin Museum's virtual and in-person offerings,
sign up for a monthly newsletter at rubinmuseum.org
slash enews. I am Tashi Chodron. Thank you so much for listening. Have a mindful day.