Mindfulness Meditation Podcast - Mindfulness Meditation with Tracy Cochran 01/24/2022
Episode Date: January 27, 2022Theme: Interdependence Artwork: Lords of the Charnel Ground, Smashana Adipati; Tibet; 18th century; painted terracotta; Rubin Museum of Art; [http://therubin.org/33e] Teacher: Tracy Cochra...n 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 13:45. 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!
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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, Dawn Eshelman.
host, Dawn Eshelman. 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.
And now, please enjoy your practice.
Hi everyone. Welcome to Mindfulness Meditation Online with the Rubin Museum of Art.
My name is Dawn Eshelman. So nice to be your host today.
For those of you who are new joining us, we are a museum of Himalayan art and ideas in New York City.
So glad to have all of you join us for our weekly program where we combine
art and meditation online. So lovely to see you all popping up in the chat. As always, it's just
really nice to see your names and see where you're joining from. Lots of New York City today.
So thank you. Thanks for chiming in and also letting us know how you're
doing, what's going on in your practice, what you're thinking about. We'll have time to dive
into that a little bit later. Today, as we do every week, we will look at an artwork that's
from our collection that's inspired by our theme. We're really having a rich month and few weeks diving into this theme of
interdependence, understanding our interconnectivity and what that means for our practice.
We will hear a brief talk from our teacher today, the wonderful Tracy Cochran. And then we'll sit
together for a short amount of time, 15 to 20 minutes for the meditation guided by Tracy.
So we'll look again together here at this artwork. This is Lords of the Eternal Ground. And here
we're reminded of a foundational Buddhist teaching, which is that death is a part
of life, not separate from it. And here we see two skeleton lords. This is actually a brother
and a sister animated by this ecstatic dance and laughter. They are festive in their demeanor.
They're expressing the joy of being free from attachment.
And they are brother and sister, this male and female figure, interdependent here, and
illustrating also for us the interplay of the masculine and feminine in all beings.
And this garland around each of them, a garland of freshly severed heads and their staffs, their tools. They support
this practice of the deity of Chakrasamvara and are revered here as powerful protectors
of freedom. So with that, I will bring on our teacher today, Tracy Cochran, who is a student
and a teacher of meditation and spiritual practice for decades. She's the founder of the Hudson River Sangha, which is virtual and open to all.
You can find out more about her and her offerings at tracycochran.org. In addition to teaching at
the Rubin, Tracy teaches mindfulness and mindful writing at the New York Insight Meditation Center
in schools, and you can find her all
over the place. She's also a writer and editorial director of Parabola, a beautiful magazine,
a quarterly magazine that seeks to bring timeless spiritual wisdom to the burning questions of today.
So you can find out about those writings, podcasts, and other details at parabola.org.
Please welcome Tracy Cochran. Hi, Tracy.
Hi. Hi, Dawn. Thank you for your presence here. And I thought the best way to introduce the the artwork and even some of the deeper teachings of Thich Nhat Hanh is by way of an Inuit story
about the skeleton woman. Speaking of interconnection and interbeing, because all of
these great myths touch on truths that we have in common. And in this Inuit story,
a fisherman
threw out his net and hauled it in.
And it was heavy with something.
And much to his horror, it was a skeleton.
It was a skeleton of a woman all twisted and loss. flee. But this Inuit fisherman had a moment of mindfulness
as Thich Nhat Hanh would define it, which was
a moment of an energy of
feeling more present, more
able to see. And to see
that what he was doing in particular was fleeing,
was having an attitude of avoidance
and fear. So seeing this,
he settled down enough to be able to take
this net full of bones, and it was
a terrible burden at first,
back to his little house,
his new house.
And there, according to this myth,
he tenderly and mindfully laid out the bones,
carefully noting how they were connected
because everything is interconnected.
And as he worked,
he noticed something extraordinary happening.
This tangle and mass of bones,
this sight he didn't want to see,
and mass of bones, this sight he didn't want to see,
was slowly, slowly coming back to life.
Until it became a real flesh and blood woman, beautiful and alive.
And they became friends, maybe more than friends.
But this story touches something that Thich Nhat Hanh shared and also great teaching of his about interconnection. in his journal. The day his own mother died, a great misfortune has come
to me, a great sorrow. He
couldn't stop grieving for a year.
His mother was dead, and before she died,
we imagine he saw her decline,
her illness, her failing, her diminishment, her loss of faculties, and it filled him with sorrow.
And then one night, he recounted he was sleeping alone in his little hermitage on a mountaintop in Vietnam.
And his mother came back to him and sat with him.
He was dreaming.
He thought, just dreaming.
She was beautiful and young, was flowing here. But then he awakened and went outside
and looked up at the moon
and looked at the palm of his own hand
and realized it resembled his mother.
That this body he inhabited
had come to him from his mother
and his father and his grandparents
and his ancestors.
But more than that, his life was imbued with the love and presence of his mother.
He could not be separate from her.
of his mother. He could not be separate from her.
So, and again, beautiful little story, but how do we actually access this in our moments of fear and despair and our moments of feeling like we want to run away, not just about things that have happened outside,
but our own painful feelings.
We so want to change them.
How can we be otherwise?
Thich Nhat Hanh taught
from one of the core teachings of the Buddha.
In fact, the teaching that the Buddha gave to his beloved disciple Ananda on practically the evening, maybe actually the evening of his own death, the Buddha's own death.
of his own death, the Buddha's own death.
And that teaching is be an island unto yourself.
This doesn't mean to be cut off or shut down, to flee.
It means bring your attention home to this body.
What do we do when something is too painful to bear? First, come home to the body and just breathe just for a moment.
Just for a moment.
And Jigna Thakta, the Buddha, is here in that very energy of sensation, of presence,
that seeing, that seeing that opens to allow for acceptance,
accepting the whole of what's happening.
That seeing that shines is the Buddha.
We take refuge in Buddha, Sangha, Dharma.
It's here in us.
Buddha is mindfulness
Dharma is just noticing
sensation and breath
in doing this we remember
we can't help but remember that
we interbe.
As he would put it, air comes in, air goes out.
Sensation appears because the body has life.
It's given to us.
We take refuge in Sangha. Sangha is remembering that every part of ourselves, every feeling, including our fear and our sore heart and our impulse to run away, is welcome here.
Welcome.
is welcome here.
Welcome.
So be an island.
Being an island unto ourself as Buddha taught,
as Thich Nhat Hanh taught,
as we can practice,
we begin to be able to see
what Thich Nhat Hanh meant when he said, I'm more
than this body. We begin
to be able to see that the
skeletons are also
alive, alive in us.
So let's sit together.
Let's sit together and see.
And we take a comfortable seat.
Very gently
welcoming yourself to be present here with every part that appears today.
You could feel joy or sorrow, or you might not know why you feel it could be a tangle.
Just let it be.
Welcome.
Welcome.
And notice that there's an attention here that can come to the sensation of being in a body.
Can attend to the rhythm of the breathing.
to the rhythm of the breathing,
the weight of the feet on the floor,
the hands in the lap. Just noticing without comment or judgment how it feels to be here today. And notice that you can let everything be just as it is.
Let thinking happen and sensation of heat or cold
or anything else you might sense or hear. and just allow it to be seen
and sensed by a light of awareness
that doesn't judge
by an energy of mindfulness
that accepts with loving kindness. And notice that when you get taken by thinking or dreaming or picturing, you can gently come back again to the sensation of being present.
Noticing that this presence is open, that it includes the body and beyond the body. Let yourself rest in presence, noticing that it's vibrant, that it nurtures and supports you.
Not with words, but with energy.
With a light of awareness that accepts.
With love. Thank you. When you get lost in thinking, just come home to the body, to the rhythm of breathing, to the sensation of being present. Noticing that you are held in a light of awareness
that is open,
kind,
completely accepting. Thank you. Notice how it feels not to strive, not to do but just to rest
in presence
letting yourself be
nourished and supported
and lit up
by a light of seeing
that isn't thinking,
judging, commenting,
but just receiving Adjust receiving.
Holding.
Touching. Thank you. just sink let go of striving
and sink into sensation
into the body. Thank you. And notice that stillness can mean letting go of striving, running, doing, and letting Running.
Doing. Doing.
Just allowing yourself
to be fully seen by an awareness that doesn't comment.
Just cease.
Just sustain. And notice that there's an energy inside you that's also outside an energy of life of presence Thank you. and notice how it feels
to belong
to life
to be part of it
to be beloved here. Every part, every feeling acceptable? Worthy of interest and care? Thank you. Thank you.
Thank you, Tracy.
Thank you.
That concludes this week's practice.
If you'd like to support the Rubin and this meditation series, we invite you to become a member.
If you're looking for more inspiring content, please check out our new podcast, Awaken, hosted by Laurie Anderson.
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Now available wherever you listen to podcasts.
Thank you for listening,
and thank you for practicing with us.