Mindfulness Meditation Podcast - Mindfulness Meditation with Tracy Cochran 02/14/2022
Episode Date: February 17, 2022Theme: Love Artwork: Attributed to Tenth Karmapa, Choying Dorje (1604–1674) or his workshop; Green Tara; Tibet; 17th century; brass with pigments; Rubin Museum of Art;[http://therubin.org/...33i] Teacher: Tracy Cochran  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 18:38.  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. Welcome to the Rubin Museum of Art and to our weekly practice,
Mindfulness Meditation. I'm Dawn Eshelman. So happy to be here with you today.
And welcome for those of you who are new. We are a museum of Himalayan art and ideas in New York City. So glad to have you all join us for
our weekly program where we combine art and meditation online. Today, as we do every week,
as is our practice, we will take a look at a work of art from our collection and then we will hear
a brief talk from our teacher today. That is Tracy Cochran and we'll have a short sit, 15 to 20
minutes, guided by the fabulous Tracy Cochran.
So we'll take a look at our artwork today and as I bring up our our screen here we are reminded that
our theme this month is love and happy Valentine's Day or bah humbug Valentine's Day, whatever, you know, whatever approach you choose.
But here this month, we're spending a little time with this concept of true, true love.
And that can come in so many forms, right?
So self-care, self-love, love of the community, love of each other.
So many ways in which we can talk about love and appreciate it in our lives. And so today, especially on Valentine's Day,
I think it's so, so lovely and important to connect that to our practice. And this beautiful sculpture here that we're looking at is the fantastic
green Tara. This particular sculpture is from Tibet, 17th century, brass with pigments.
And this is actually created, now oftentimes we don't know the exact artist or we don't have a lot of detail about the exact artist or an artwork was created by many people or a few different people.
And here we actually know that this sculpture is attributed to the hand of Cho-Yung Dorje, who was alive from 1604 to 1674. This is the 10th Karmapa. This was the head of the
Karmakagyi school of Tibetan Buddhism and this was an eccentric figure within the history of Tibetan
art. The 10th Karmapa possessed a very individual style and looked really at a range of traditions for inspiration, including ancient metal work from Kashmir,
and these influences can be seen in this sculpture.
This is again the beautiful goddess Tara who
who really embodies this kind of motherly love, a care, a
protection, and whom practitioners call upon when they feel afraid
or in need of love and support.
And so here we see the expression
of the 10th Karmapa's vision of Tara.
And we see this sort of elliptical shape
of the lotus petals that make up her seat and there's
even like a striated pattern on her on her tight-fitted clothing here and it's just beautiful
to see not only this this figure who's so beloved and embodies this idea of love so much, but also the Karmapa's personal style and the Karmapa's actual
love of craft and even of animals, which is often incorporated into the works of the Karmapa. So
here we see a pair of birds that can be found nestled right above Tara's head right at the top there so let's bring on
our wonderful teacher today Tracy Cochran she's been a student and a
teacher of meditation and spiritual practice for decades she's the founder
of the Hudson River Sangha which is now virtual and open to all And you can find the links to all of her meditations
and works at Tracy cochrane.org. And in addition to teaching here
at the Rubin Tracy's top mindfulness meditation and
mindful writing at New York Insight Meditation Center as well
as schools and corporations in many different settings. Her
writings, podcasts and other details can be
found on her website and also parabola.org. So Parabola, that wonderful magazine that Tracy
helms, is now exploring the theme of wonder. So beautiful. Welcome, Tracy. Great to have you. Thank you. Thank you, Dawn and everyone.
And I'm delighted to be here today on Valentine's Day.
And I know that it's not everybody's favorite day.
I completely understand.
I completely understand.
And as a matter of fact, I am born the day after Valentine's Day tomorrow. And I was born in the small hours of the night.
And I grew up hearing that I was almost a Valentine.
And I'm sure my mother didn't intend to create this feeling, but it created a
feeling that I had just missed the boat. I just wasn't quite a valentine. I was born on the day
when all the big hearts full of chocolates were 50% off.
It was over.
That chance at true love.
And you might feel something like that, that this is not a day for you.
It's not a theme for you. There is this feeling that love comes from someone special outside of us.
So I want to invite you, I want to invite
all of us, including me, right now
even before we meditate
to soften and open to the idea that love is here.
Tara, this image of green Tara, white Tara, all of her aspects,
is that she is a force of an energy of the most generous love.
That she comes to you when you call, according to the tradition.
She is here.
And one of the things I love about Buddhist cosmology is that it presents a world where multiple myriad,
countless worlds are happening at the same time.
But countless worlds are happening at the same time.
So that this beautiful figure, this embodiment of compassion, isn't something from long ago, but something that's happening right here. And the story of Tara in the Tibetan tradition, since this is a museum of Tibetan
art and image from that tradition in that region, the story was that the great Bodhisattva of compassion. Someone full of compassion
was sitting on a mountaintop picture,
a huge mountain in Tibet,
gazing down at all the manifestations of suffering
that he saw below him in the whole world.
Every kind of suffering, lovelessness, pain, rage, grief,
all of it caused, in his view, by ignorance.
Ignorance of our connection.
All of it caused by the fear and rage and grasping that comes from ignorance,
that comes from loneliness and feeling cut off.
And he cried and cried and it pooled.
These tears made a pool around his feet
that grew and expanded until they became a lake.
And out of the lake came a lotus.
And the lotus rose and opened.
And in the heart of it was Tara,
this beautiful, feminine embodiment of compassion.
And this might seem to you a far away tale
beautiful but far away
but I invite you to think of
the calm that comes
after tears
let yourself think of that
you cry your heart out.
And at a certain point, that quells and calm comes.
And sometimes with that calm, there's a feeling, I know I've had it, of giving up in the sweetest sense.
It's a feeling of here I am.
Here I am.
I give up all attempts to strive for something I don't have or was bitterly denied and all attempts to hide
myself.
Just for a moment, sometimes we're just
peacefully there.
And this knowing of that
feeling of being completely seen right there is where Tara comes in, where a love and compassion appears.
That essence is acceptance.
acceptance. And recently we lost the great teacher, Dignot Hahn,
but we still have his teachings.
And one of my favorite and
perfect Valentine's Day teaching
is teaching for self-love.
And again, I invite you to just bring your attention to yourself and let yourself know that along with everyone here and the thousands of people that will listen to this podcast, there are things, feelings, edges that you don't want other people to
see.
A bit of shame, a bit of hurt, a bit of anger, a grudge, something that you think doesn't
belong here.
And I invite you to let this energy of love and compassion
come to just those parts.
Just those parts.
And Thich Nhat Hanh offers the mantra, hearts, just those parts.
And Thich Nhat Hanh offers the mantra, darling,
I'm here. Darling,
I'm here. And just
let yourself picture and hear and feel
into that being said.
Not to the best of you when you feel pulled together and peaceful,
but to that part, that lingering sorrow, that grudge,
that part that you might find troublesome, let that mantra come to that part and offer its accepting, non-judging, loving gaze.
Tara is famous for protecting us against all kinds of forces lions and floods and fire and snakes
and I invite you to see that this means difficult feelings and hurts
and forces inside ourselves, that they too deserve love and compassion.
welcomed here, so that we can become whole, wholly
ourselves, completely loved.
And Thich Nhat Hanh offers a few
other mantras, and it's perfectly okay just to say
with, darling, I'm here.
And he adds, if you wish, I see that you're here.
And that makes me so happy.
This energy, because true love isn't just an attachment or a romantic attraction, but an energy that sees seeks expression, that needs to be healed.
I see that you're here, and that makes me happy.
And I see that you suffer, and that's why I'm here
let yourself feel we have this
fictional idea that if we yearn and
pray and I don't know what
we search online and we'll find just the right person to
grant this seeing to us. But it's
here. It's here right now
inside you and around us.
It's an energy of love
and compassion that's
vast. And the last
phrase he sometimes included
was, darling, I suffer
and I need your help.
This is an invitation
again,
not to hide what we are,
but to let it be seen.
And this can seem like an exquisite act of daring,
even in private conditions like we're in right now, do I dare to let this hurt, this broken heart be seen,
be touched by an attention that doesn't comment, doesn't judge.
Just that.
And the last thing I'll say,
because you came here to sit,
not just to listen to a talk,
is that we can really let ourselves
do something very special here,
which is give up.
Not give up in the sense of keeping a grip on what we think we know. I will never find love. Maybe for others, but not for me. Whatever it is,
to give up in the sense of just sinking into the body, letting go like the
calm after tears. Let yourself
not know. Let yourself
not fix, not
rush to a conclusion, not strive,
but to simply be present
in the body in the most simple
and basic way and
let yourself soften. You don't even have to do
the work of opening
completely, but just softening a little the work of opening completely
but just softening a little bit
to trust that there's
more here than your thinking
than your fears
than your arm ring and contraction
that maybe, just maybe than your arm ring and contraction.
That maybe, just maybe,
there's a light of awareness that's full of love and compassion
that's also present.
That just maybe Tara isn't a tale
from another time and another culture,
but right here saying,
darling, I'm here for you.
So let's take a comfortable seat.
And comfortable also means upright.
If you can be upright, some people need to lie down.
People need to lie down.
But if it's possible for you to sit, sit with the straightest back you can let yourself have.
And this being in alignment is so that we can have a more complete experience of ourselves,
body, heart, and mind.
So let yourself sit straight if you can.
Feet on the floor, or if you're sitting on the floor,
take a firm seat.
Back straight.
It can help to let the abdomen be just a little bit pulled in,
just a tiny bit to help straighten you.
And just notice how it feels to be here today.
And notice
without thinking about it, just let yourself
take in an impression.
self take in an impression.
And notice that this attention
begins to soften us.
It's a little bit like sitting in
warm sunlight.
And let the attention go where it wishes to go.
It might go to a place of tension or to the sensation of feet on the floor
or hands in the lap
or the feeling of gravity in the whole body
or the movement of breath.
And notice that thinking can still happen,
and memories and sensations and feelings of all kinds. And at the same time, you can bring the attention home to the body and the present moment.
And notice that this attention
is warm,
compassionate,
compassionate, and that you can let everything be touched by it.
If painful thought or feeling or memory appears, just let it be seen and notice how that feels
to be accepted, cared about, not in words, but in attention.
and attention that's boundless and interested
and completely accepting of what is here. just rest in this stillness which doesn't mean perfect silence
but softness
not resisting not striving but softness. Not resisting.
Not striving.
Let yourself sink into sensation.
Giving up all striving, all efforts to be other than this. And notice as you let yourself soften and open that you don't feel alone.
There's a presence here, an awareness that sees that is with you. that is in you making this movement
of return
of coming home
to the experience
of the present moment
opens us.
And acceptance, including us aliveness, warmth, and ease. Thank you. Notice that you can begin again anytime.
again anytime.
When you notice that you've drifted into thinking or dreaming, gently come back again
to the body and to presence.
And notice how it feels to be completely
accepted,
the going out and the coming back, all of it accepted,
natural,
of interest,
welcome. Welcome. And notice how it feels to have that vast attention, not be remote, but close, caring.
Saying without words, darling, I'm here for you. Notice how it feels to be completely seen and accepted
by a laughing attention Thank you. Notice how it feels to be beloved
to be welcome
all of you, every part. Thank you. Notice how it feels to be more here.
To be seen.
To be loved and cared about. Thank you.
Thank you, Tracy.
Thank you.
That concludes this week's practice.
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