Mindfulness Meditation Podcast - Mindfulness Meditation with Kimberly Brown 09/12/2022
Episode Date: September 16, 2022Theme: Perspectives Artwork: White Tara with Long Life Deities; Tibet; 19th century; Pigments on cloth; Rubin Museum of Art, Gift of the Shelly & Donald Rubin Foundation; http://therubin....org/359Teacher: Kimberly Brown  The Rubin Museum presents 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 14:45.  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!
Transcript
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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 Monday, 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 practice currently held virtually.
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 Insight Meditation Center,
the Interdependence Project, and Parabola Magazine Magazine and supported by the Frederick Lenz Foundation for American
Buddhism. And now, please enjoy your practice. Hello and Tashi Delek. Welcome to Mindfulness
Meditation Online with the Rubin Museum of Art. I am Tashi Chodron and so nice to be back after a
short summer break. Since the last mindfulness session three Mondays ago,
I went to Nepal from Ladakh, and right now I'm in South India.
In fact, I'm in Bangalore City, the Silicon Valley of India.
It's been raining here a lot.
I hope the weather is nice wherever you are,
and I'm so happy to be your host today.
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 online. Inspired from
our collection, we will take a look at a work of art from our collection. We will hear a brief talk from our
teacher and then we will have a short sit, 15 to 20 minutes for the meditation guided by her.
Now let's take a look at today's theme and artwork. The theme this month is perspectives
and the artwork for today is this beautiful Thangka painting of white Tara with long life deities.
It's originated from Tibet and it's a 19th century mineral pigments on cloth.
And the dimension is 27 and a half into 18 and a half into two and a half. That's the estimate.
18 and a half into two and a half.
That's the estimate.
And it's a beautiful painting.
The Tara's perspective in other spiritual practice is like the Mother Mary in Christianity
and the Lakshmi, the goddess in Hinduism.
So the connection with another identity of Tara as well.
The description of this beautiful painting,
as a female Buddha, Tara works for the benefit of all beings and has many manifestations.
This form known as white Tara associates with longevity or long life.
Bestow's longevity, her right hand rests on her knee, displaying the gesture of infinite generosity or supreme generosity, giving bestowing, while the left holds the stem of a pure white lotus
blossoming above her left shoulder. The reverse of the painting, which is the flip side of the painting, is particularly interesting.
It contains a depiction of a stupa with a mandala drawn in its dome and handprints of a Buddhist master.
Prayers and dedications written in gold on the stupa's body state that this painting was commissioned by Yeshe Lopsang Penpa, likely
the 8th Taktsara Rinpoche from 1760 to 1810. Taking refuge in Tara, he dedicates the merit
of the painting's creation to preventing untimely death and other dangers for all sentient beings
and asks to bestow the blessings of a long and auspicious life. The handprints and the small
seal prints underneath them may be his own. Tara is known as Jetundralma. She is most revered in all schools of Tibetan Buddhism. And how you can
identify that this is the White Tara is you look at how she's sitting. So if you look in the central
figure here, her legs are in Vajra position, in full meditation posture, and then her right hand doing the supreme generosity,
bestowing, and left hand holding the stem of the lotus flower. Now, let us bring on our teacher
today, Kimberly Brown. Thank you so much, Kimberly, for being here despite your busy schedule.
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 Insight schools of Buddhism and is a certified mindfulness
instructor. Her new book, Navigating Grief and Loss, 25 Buddhist Practices to Keep Your Heart
Open to Yourself and Others, will be published on November the 1st, and an updated edition of
Steady, Calm, and Brave will be released in January 2023. Both are published by Prometheus
Books. You can learn more about Kimberly on her website. Kimberly, thank you so much for being
here. Thank you, Tashi. It's nice to see you and I'm glad to be back at the Rubin.
You know, today the theme I'm told for this month at the Rubin Museum is perspective
and in keeping with that, I immediately, what came to my mind is the difficulty and the struggles that I and I think almost all of my students and nearly everyone I meet that we struggle with our thoughts with our own thoughts.
If they're painful or upsetting, we don't want to have them and we kind of get in a fight with them.
If they're unkind or critical, then just the thought can bring up shame for us or embarrassment when we think they mean something, that we're a bad person.
Many of us have a lot of anxiety, and anxiety is the result of thoughts about the future.
Thoughts that aren't happening right now nothing's happening right now but our anxiety
is creating or rather the story creates an anxiety and so this relationship with our thoughts
is causing us a lot of suffering because we believe that they're true and because we get caught in them we want we want to push
them away we're having like a fight is that famous zen teacher suzuki roshi he once said
stop the war with yourself so one way we can stop this war with ourselves is to begin to gain some perspective, some space.
And the way that we can do that, and one of the most useful skills is through mindfulness meditation.
It allows us to get some distance from our thoughts.
It gives us some distance from our thoughts. It gives us some space from our thoughts.
And in doing so, they don't seem so real because they're not. They're just horizons,
right? They're just thoughts. They're not facts. There's nothing happening out here. They're just
thoughts, right? So the practice of mindfulness meditation is when we take the time to be quiet
and pay attention to what's arising in our awareness. And thoughts are just a type of
arising, just like sound is an arising, right? My breath isn't arising, taste and smell.
These are all arising from moment to moment and they come and they go, right?
And it's funny because for whatever reason, we privilege our thoughts more, you know?
We think of them as somehow more real than sound, you know, more lasting, right?
But that's just because we're kind of folding onto them and fixing them and we're not able to get a lot of space, right?
So in mindfulness meditation, we pay attention to everything that arises, right?
Thought that arises about lunch and the sound of a siren
and our breath, right? And as we practice and practice, you can start to notice that all of
these arisings are impermanent. They come and they go, right? And we can further start to develop a capacity to allow them to come in.
To not have to grab on to thoughts that we like.
No.
Oh, what am I going to have for lunch?
Oh, I'm going to have momo bun.
And to not push something away.
Oh, I just had that.
My sister drives me crazy.
I shouldn't think that.
Oh, I don't want to have this.
Instead, to allow thoughts to
come and go not give them any more charge and in fact in the in buddhist psychology
it said that the way we perceive is that we have an eye sense and the eye receives the light. We have an ear sense and the ear receives the
sound. And in the same way, we have a mind sense and this mind sense receives the thought.
And what that's pointing at is that most of our thoughts, we didn't choose to have them.
They arise just like scent or taste or light.
There's one thing, thinking, you know, choosing to work on something, to study, to read, that is thinking and that's a conscious, deliberate act.
And we need to do that. It's wonderful. We're lucky to have such thoughts.
But most of our thoughts simply arise through causes and conditions.
thoughts simply arise through causes and conditions. I am sure all of you, or I'm going to guess, have had an experience of walking down the street and some old song pops into your head for no reason.
The reason is simply the light was a certain way and you had certain unconscious associations and
up popped that thought. So you didn't put it there. So you're not going for it. And you can allow it, you know, to come and to go. Of course, it takes practice. And we have obstacles to doing this. And the
obstacles are our habits and our conditioning, right? Some thoughts seem more desirable,
Some thoughts seem more desirable. Some have more charge. Some are old ingrained habits or even our thoughts that someone else told us about ourselves.
And so when these thoughts arise, they seem so real and they seem so full of energy and we get really caught what do i mean by caught well we start building on them
we start proliferating thoughtful proliferation so you know a simple example is i'm sitting here
i'm practicing i'm thinking about lunch now i can with mindfulness sit with, let it come and go, notice the light and the sound.
But I might start thinking about lunch
and where I'm gonna have it and what it's gonna look like.
And is there enough food in my refrigerator for that?
All I might have to go to the store, okay?
And off I go.
That's getting caught.
And the practice is to start to notice where we're caught,
bring ourselves back and let
ourselves begin again now in practicing in this way what we're doing and this is part of the
perspective is um we're creating that sort of space right there's more um distance between our ability to be aware, our awareness, and our thinking and our thoughts, right?
You'll hear certain teachers, they'll say we're building a bigger container.
You'll often hear we're creating space, right?
These are really common ways of starting to understand how we don't have to be so caught and so fraught with our thinking and our thoughts.
We don't have to allow them to create suffering for us.
Allow them to be, see them for what they are, and let them come and go.
and allow them to be see them for what they are and let them come and go one of the reasons that the white tara is the selection today is because tara is the deity or
one of the deities that we can call upon to help us remove obstacles. We can ask her to remove illness or ill health so that we have physical health, those obstacles.
And we can also ask her to remove the obscurations and hindrances that we have to well-being in our own minds.
Right. So we are free.
in our own minds, right? So we are free from suffering.
So today we'll do a practice to help us open up
with mindfulness to what's arising,
to help us receive, receive light and smell and taste,
receive thoughts, receive feelings,
and just let them come in. When they go, let them go.
You won't have to push them away. We will do a little breathing and body mindfulness. We'll do
a little bit of metta meditation, loving-kindness meditation to focus and concentrate our mind and open our heart. And then we'll do a little
bit of open awareness mindfulness. We will get to develop that sense. You can have a taste
of making a little space around your thoughts. So wherever you're at, find a place where you can sit still and be comfortable.
And wherever you are, please put your devices out of reach.
Okay, I'm imagining you're watching on a computer or a phone.
That's great.
Just set it aside, right?
Don't check your emails.
Give yourself this next 20-ish minutes just to be.
Do something nice for yourself.
And as you're settling, I am going to request that Tara come to our meditation today.
And, you know, you can believe in her as an actual deity or you can believe in Tara as being the wise and compassionate aspect of all of us.
So, Om Tare Tutare Ture Soha.
Om Tare Tutare Ture Soha.
Om Tare Tutare Ture Soha.
Tare Ture Soha. Tara, please come here to the Rubin Museum mindfulness session. Please protect us all and please help us remove the obstacles to our good health and our mental well-being. So I'd like you to go ahead and, you know, you can just close your eyes
and start to notice, notice that you're here. Okay, what does that mean? Well, you'll feel
perceptions and notice your body sensations. So allowing sound to enter your ears, allowing taste, allowing smell,
experiencing your feet, your seat, your belly, relaxing your shoulder blades,
relaxing at the back of your head, and relaxing your forehead and your cheeks and your jaw.
Noticing that you're breathing, experiencing the top of your head, experiencing your forehead, your cheeks, your jaw, experiencing the
back of your head, the back of your neck, experiencing your shoulder blades, the
middle of your back and your lower back, experiencing your throat and your chest,
your belly and your abdomen, experiencing your shoulders and the tops of your
arms, your elbows, your lower arms, your hands, the tops of your hands and the palms of your hands,
experiencing your seat, the backs of your thighs, the tops of your thighs,
Experiencing your seat, the backs of your thighs, the tops of your thighs, your knees, your lower legs, the tops of your feet, and the soles of your feet.
Experiencing your head.
Experiencing your torso.
Experiencing your arms.
Experiencing your legs. legs, experiencing your body.
And I'd like you to bring your attention to your breath. Now you can find a spot, find
where you can feel this breath, maybe the tip of your nose, maybe your chest, maybe your belly.
Okay, in fact, it would be useful if you could take your hand and put, maybe your belly. In fact it would be useful if you can take
your hand and put it on your belly and just starting to count your breaths. One
inhale, one exhale is one. The next inhale, the next exhale is two. We're counting at
your own time up to five. When you get to five, begin again at one. We're just going to do this
for a minute or so. And the trick is, can you be with your breath without trying to manipulate it,
change it, just resting on your breath. Count to five, begin again. Thank you. Counting one more full breath. And now bringing your attention to your heart center, the center of your chest.
And make a connection with someone who's easily loved you.
Easily loved you, not a complicated relationship.
It would be a pet, teacher, an aunt, an uncle from your past,
in the present, either way. And just giving them this loving kindness and wisdom phrase.
May you be free from inner and outer harms and dangers. May you be free from inner and outer harms and dangers.
May you be free from inner and outer harms and danger.
Continuing to repeat this phrase silently,
as though you're giving a gift to this loved one. Thank you. Thank you. May you be free from inner and outer harms and dangers.
Keeping this connection with this benefactor, this one who has loved you easily, keeping that connection and now adding yourself.
You might imagine the two of you together.
You might just feel both of your presence and giving both of you the same wisdom.
May we be free from inner and outer harms and dangers.
May we be free from inner and outer harms and dangers.
May we be free from inner and outer harms and dangers.
And just taking a minute here to silently repeat this phrase.
And so you're giving a gift to both of you. And beginning to include more beings, including everyone you're close to, your family, your friends, your pets.
May we be free from inner and outer harms and dangers,
including some people you really are frustrated by or angry with or don't like.
May we be free from inner and outer harms and dangers,
May we be free from inner and outer harms and dangers.
Including everyone on this call today, on this mindfulness session,
people you might know and lots of strangers,
may we be free from inner and outer harms and dangers.
May all beings be free from inner and outer harms and dangers. Coming back to your breath, letting go of these phrases.
See if you can anchor your attention in one spot where you feel your breath.
Maybe your belly, maybe your chest, maybe the tip of your nose.
And if you struggle with this breathing meditation, which I did, I have asthma,
you can use sound. Just rest all your attention in the sound entering.
But either way, pick a spot and just rest your attention.
Receiving the breath or receiving the sound. Thank you.. And now using your wisdom, if your mind is very busy and it is not settling down today,
that's okay. There's nothing wrong. And continue to keep your focus on your breath
or on keeping your mind steady.
But if your mind seems pretty steady today
or if you're feeling kind of sleepy,
then you are invited to begin to open up
to receive other sensations.
You can keep your anchor.
If you get lost, come back to the breath or sound.
But opening up with mindfulness and noticing what's arising.
Thoughts, smell, taste, light entering your eyes.
The tense muscle, your breath.
the tense muscle, your breath. And as you practice, do as little as possible,
because you only need to receive just for about two minutes. Thank you. Checking in, where is your attention if it's caught in a thought plan a story that's great
you get to notice that and choose where you'd like to bring your attention bring it back to your
breath more sound let yourself rest here.
And opening up again.
Paying attention to the unfolding of light, to the rising and falling of thoughts and perceptions. Thank you. And for the next minute or so, you can stop meditating, but keep your posture.
Keep your stillness.
Just allow yourself to rest here,
not meditating and not not meditating. Thank you. yourself for your practice today, using your mindfulness to recognize that this is a beneficial action, that it's useful and skillful for you and everyone in your culture.
And whenever you're ready and comfortable, you can bring your attention back to the screen,
to our conversation.
Thank you. Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you, Kimberly.
That was such a beautiful session.
That concludes this week's practice.
If you would like to support The Rubin
and this meditation series,
we invite you to become a member of The Rubin.
If you're looking for more inspiring content,
please check out our other podcast, Awaken, a podcast that uses art to explore the dynamic paths to enlightenment and what it
means to wake up. Available wherever you listen to podcasts. Thank you for listening. Have a mindful day.