Mindfulness Meditation Podcast - Mindfulness Meditation with Kimberly Brown 12/21/2023
Episode Date: December 29, 2023Theme: Ritual Artwork: OBOE (GYALING); Probably Central Tibet; early 20th century; Wood, silver, turquoise; Rubin Museum of Art, Gift of Shelley and Donald Rubinhttp://therubin.org/37rTeacher...: Kimberly BrownThe Rubin Museum of Art presents a weekly 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 recorded in front of a live audience, and includes an opening talk, a 20-minute sitting session, and a closing discussion.The guided meditation begins at 11:44. This meditation is presented in partnership with Sharon Salzberg, teachers from the NY Insight Meditation Center, the Interdependence Project, and Parabola Magazine. If you would like to attend Mindfulness Meditation sessions in person 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
Discussion (0)
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.
Good afternoon, everyone. Tashi Delek, and welcome.
Welcome to Mindfulness Meditation at the Rubin Museum of Art.
I am Tashi Chodron, Himalayan Programs and Communities Ambassador,
and I'm so happy to be your host today.
We are a global hub for Himalayan art with a home base in New York City,
and we're so glad to have all of you join us for our weekly program
where we combine art
and meditation. Inspired by our collection, we will first take a look at work of art. We will
then hear a brief talk from our teacher, Kimberly Brown, 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 ritual,
the ritual of coming here once a week. And there are so many rituals, you know, this month
especially it's the ritual where gift giving, celebrating holidays, Christmas, all of that. And we just celebrated Diwali and Hanukkah.
All of these are ritual in one way, right?
And the art connection for today's session is this beautiful Jalim.
It's handpicked by our teacher.
And this is a oboe known as Jalim in Tibetan word, origin Central Tibet, 20th century.
It's wood, silver, and beautiful inlay of turquoise, about 25 and a half into five and
half into five and a half inches.
And this is a ritual object.
The jaling is similar to obol.
Both instruments have a double reed.
These exquisite Jialings are adorned with silver and turquoise.
Jialings are played on ceremonial occasions.
It is also used during rituals to invoke the deity,
and when the teacher is entering the temple or the monastery or during procession
and the welcoming the teachers and invoking the deities and the local spirits, this is
often used for peaceful deity practice as well.
Here we see two examples of a Jalang because Jalangs are generally played by two in pair
and they are also played by monks and nuns or laypeople sometimes.
This enables the sound to continuously flow.
Jarlings have an important function within sacred Tibetan music, especially during the ritual performance.
The other instruments that typically constitute the ritual orchestra are the tungchen, the really long
instrument, and gungling, which is often used during the wrathful deity practice, often known
as thai bone, tungkar, the conch shells, daru and tibu, the damarus and the bell and silian symbols. The instrumental music is interspersed with chanting.
So now let's bring on a teacher for today. Our teacher is Kimberly Brown. 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 School of Buddhism and is a certified mindfulness instructor.
Inside School of Buddhism and is a certified mindfulness instructor.
Kimberly, thank you so much for being here.
And please help me in welcoming Kimberly Brown.
Well, hello everyone.
Happy solstice.
I was thinking a lot about what does ritual mean
and
when the Ruben
what they do for us meditation teachers
is they send us a couple
works of art from the collection
and ask us which would we prefer
I prefer the oboe works of art from the collection and ask us which would we prefer.
I preferred the oboe, the jialing, because I have experienced it.
And just like Tashi Chodron said, out in Queens, there are a number of Tibetan centers.
There are some in Manhattan, but there's a big Tibetan population in the neighborhood I live in, in Jackson Heights. And one particular center called Dharma House,
when teachers come from abroad, you know, kind of well-known teachers or teachers that
aren't often available to give teachings in New York City, when they come, everyone assembles outside, outside of the center on the sidewalk,
and they roll out a red carpet, and they play these special instruments
to herald the arrival of the teacher.
It is incredibly joyful.
And this ritual in this tradition,
all rituals in this tradition, are not simply to entertain or to show devotion or to
serve as anything except another way to wake up. Waking up in this tradition, it means seeing clearly.
It means recognizing that everything is impermanent. Everything's always changing,
every moment. It means that we all struggle and we have suffering, you know, some very deep suffering and some just that moment to moment,
oh, this is boring, right? It also means recognizing our interdependence, that all of us
affect each other and that our words and our actions are really meaningful. So in this way,
we all can use rituals in this way. And Tashi Trojan was mentioning,
well, you know, December in the United States, at least, there are lots and lots of what we call
rituals. Whatever your religious background, it's very likely you're participating in giving gifts or throwing parties or putting up a tree or a menorah.
Whatever it is, it may be at this point, it's no longer really a ritual, but rather a routine,
rather something that, you know, we do maybe because it's pleasant, you know, or fun.
But we can make our routines more like a ritual, more meaningful, more
significant. Everything we can use to remind us of our precious life, of how valuable our words
and our actions are, and how we share in the world with everyone else.
So these rituals, first of all, they help us pay attention.
That sound really grabs your attention, right?
But you can do that, you know, even with your morning coffee, right?
That's a routine many of us have, a coffee or a tea.
You might make it, you might go and buy it,
but it's very likely you have some sort of routine in that way. And you can alter that and change it to a ritual by being, first
of all, paying attention to it, putting down your phone, really being with either the action of
making it or the action of receiving it.
You can do this with a sense of gratitude, right?
Gratitude, because that's one of the deepest ways we can pay attention, to know what we have.
We have coffee.
Coffee, oh my God, it doesn't grow, I don't think it grows anywhere in the United States.
It has to be grown very near the equator.
So this is a very, very special, even though mundane, item that almost all of us use, right?
So that's one thing.
You bring attention to it, right?
You can also, you can use it to connect to others, right? I'm using coffee as an example. It could be tea. It could be that every day you take the subway or you drive your car to work, right? These
are routines. But in these routines, you can use your attention. You can use your sense of understanding what you're grateful for,
what you have in that moment, and how it connects you to others. So that an example of coffee,
all the coffee growers, the roasters, how it got to you. Took a lot of hands, right? The subway.
I mean, lots of people keep that subway going. And, of course, your car.
Somebody made that car.
We got gas from all over the world here to propel us.
And finally, the third piece of taking a routine and making it more of a ritual
is it can remind us what's valuable and important to us, what really matters.
You know, giving gifts, sometimes I don't have a particular religious background,
but I give gifts every year, and there's always a couple on my list that are like,
oh, I just have to buy something for them, right?
have to buy something for them, right? Turning that ritual into, okay, who is this person,
right? Whether I care for them or I don't care for them, whether I like them or not,
it's another living being, right? They're on my list for a reason. Maybe I'm related to them. Maybe they do work in my building. And I can take a moment to be mindful of their experience, that they're just like me.
They have loves and joys and suffering and struggles, and bring a certain appreciation
there. So that's what I'm going to suggest today. And we're going to do a practice now
that we consider all of these routines that we have and transform them into rituals. Because
from a wisdom view, everything is sacred, not just special things, not just that jollying, right? This little thing is sacred.
Why? Because it exists, right? Because all of us can apprehend it and see it.
Because it's made of wood and someone made this somewhere. A tree grew for this little thing,
right? So that's the kind of attention we want to bring.
Without guilt, without shame, oh no, why do I have this and no one does?
That's not what we're saying.
Saying first, appreciate.
First, know.
Then, how can everybody have coffee?
Or how can everybody enjoy a peaceful, safe life?
What are the causes and conditions that can bring that?
But that comes next.
First, a ritual is to pay attention, to recognize what you have,
and to know how connected we all are.
So today, you know, it's the solstice and many traditions in the Northern Hemisphere.
You know, this has always been a time of deep reflection, a time of gratitude,
a time to honor that the earth is not something we control, right?
It's out of our control that the days are going to get a little bit longer
over the next few weeks, right, starting tomorrow.
And it's not in our control that tonight is going to be a very long night.
is going to be a very long night.
So recognizing this deep and precious vulnerability that we all share,
as well as our joys and our sorrows.
So everybody, I'd like you to go ahead
and just close your eyes.
You can, you know, Everybody, I'd like you to go ahead and just close your eyes.
You can, you know, there's always this transition from not meditating to meditating.
Notice what's that difference for you, okay?
For most of us, the difference is
in how you're paying attention, right?
So noticing that
shift.
Allowing yourself to
pay attention to your breath.
To the light
entering your eyes and smell and taste.
And you're probably noticing some plans or thoughts, ideas you might have right now.
That's okay. Just don't hang on to them.
For this brief meditation, you don't have to fix anything or figure anything out.
There aren't any problems you need to solve right now.
And recognizing that you yourself are not a
problem to be solved. Many, many meditation students here in the United States approach
this practice as some sort of self-improvement journey.
there's nothing wrong with you that needs to be fixed.
Your nature is wise and open.
And this practice allows us to tap into that, to recognize it.
And for each of you, I would like you to consider what was your intention for coming here to the Rubin today?
You're choosing to practice meditation.
No one's making you do it.
You live in New York City. You could be doing
anything you wanted. And yet here you are at the Rubin, sitting quietly without your devices. Whatever your intention is, your particular reason for being here, your motivation,
all of our motivations here today are beneficial.
here today are beneficial. Each one of us came here to take care of ourselves, to be more patient,
to be more mindful, to develop compassion and love for people we know. and so rejoicing in this
rejoicing that you have such a motivation
that you have such an intention
if you think about it
sitting quietly like this
developing a beneficial intention
that you have.
This would transform the world.
So that's why we say
rejoice
in this motivation.
Thank yourself.
You could say silently
thank you.
And thanking everyone here today.
Thanking the Reuben,
thanking Tashi Children, and thanking Tim,
thanking all of the volunteers,
all of the members that allow this to be possible.
Jason up in tech.
And right now I'd like you just to rest your attention
in sound.
Now that's interesting because it's kind of quiet here.
So allowing yourself to notice the sounds further away from you,
the sounds near to you, and also
you might notice as you're resting your attention on your ears
that you hear silence. Thank you. Thank you. If you're falling asleep, you can gently open your eyes
and just let your gaze softly look down toward the floor.
And this is a practice where you don't have to do anything.
You are just receiving the sound. Thank you. This is a practice of resting.
You'll often hear people talk about letting go allowing
welcoming
being with
these are all synonyms
just resting your attention
on the sounds entering your ears
you don't even have to listen
just allow them to come to you. Thank you. You might notice boredom arise or planning or remembering.
That's okay. Gently come back to the sounds and the lack of sound, the moments of no sound. Thank you. In this way, sound is no distraction.
It's the focus of our attention.
Just for another minute or so. Thank you. And as you're resting your attention here and allowing yourself to receive,
we'll take a moment to practice a very common ritual in all the Buddhist traditions.
It's called dedicating the merit.
This requires, first of all, mindfulness and attention,
that your words or your actions have been beneficial, have been towards the good.
That's number one in the ritual.
Number two is that doing actions that are beneficial and towards the good
have impact on others, have outcomes through your words and your deeds.
And finally, that we could share whatever merit, whatever potential is created
when we have thoughts and words and actions that are beneficial.
So today, coming together like this, practicing meditation, developing our hearts and our minds, this is towards the good.
Whatever merit is created from this coming together, whatever potential, whatever virtue, let's share it
and we can share it with those in the world
who are living in places of disaster
of war
through our efforts
may they be safe and protected
may their minds be free from hatred
and fear.
Through our efforts, may we bring about the conditions for safety and well-being for everyone. You can open your eyes.
You could move or stretch, Whatever seems beneficial to you.
Thank you so much for that, Kimberly.
Thank you, everyone.
Many, many blessings.
That concludes this week's practice.
To support the Rubin and this meditation series,
we invite you to become a member at rubinmuseum.org
slash membership.
And to stay up to date with the Rubin Museum's
virtual and in-person offerings,
sign up for our monthly newsletter
at rubinmuseum.org slash enews.
I am Tashi Chodron. Thank you so much for listening. Have a mindful day.