Mindfulness Meditation Podcast - Mindfulness Meditation With Tracy Cochran 05/24/2021
Episode Date: May 25, 2021Theme: Awareness Artwork: White Tara with Long Life Deities; Tibet; 19th century; pigments on cloth; Rubin Museum of Art; gift of the Shelley & Donald Rubin Foundation; [http://therubin.o...rg/321] ; Teacher: Sharon Salzberg 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 11:25. 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, 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, everybody. Welcome to Mindfulness Meditation Online here with the Rubin Museum of Art.
I'm Dawn Eshelman, great to be here with you.
We're a museum of Himalayan art and ideas in New York City, and it's great to be with
you all for our weekly program where we combine art and meditation online.
We are looking at a work of art together from our collection.
Then we'll hear a brief talk from our teacher, who is today the fabulous Tracy Cochran.
And then we'll sit together for a short guided meditation by Tracy, 15 to 20 minutes.
Okay, so we're actually going to take a look together at this artwork that we were looking at.
This selection for you today is inspired by the theme we've been discussing all month,
which is awareness, right?
And we've been talking about the relationship between awareness and enlightenment.
The object that we're looking at today, this is white Tara with long life deities.
This is from 19th century Tibet
and this is pigments on cloth. This is a Tonka painting and here we see the beautiful
Tara. We know that she can be depicted in many forms. This is White Tara and in this form
and in this form she represents and bestows longevity so long life right and we see that she's seated as she often is on her lotus throne and that she has a beautiful kind of nimbus behind
her which is that dark blue color in the background and then this sort of gradation of orange kind of ochre behind
her. And she's a female Buddha. She's the kind of most known and beloved female deity in this lexicon
and she works for the benefit of all beings. I think today we want to draw special attention to a really remarkable detail here, which is that she has eyes not only in the front
of her face, not only here on the third eye on her forehead, but she has eyes on
the bottoms of her feet, on the palms of her hands as well and this really represents this idea of pristine
awareness so this ability to be amazingly aware and that that's connected to divinity we'll learn
more about tara and i can't help but point out the many, many beautiful pink lotuses behind her.
But for now, we'll pause and bring on our teacher, Tracy Cochran. Tracy has 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 the link for her weekly meditations can
be found on her website, tracycochran.org. So in addition to teaching here at the Rubin,
Tracy has taught mindfulness meditation and mindful writing at the New York Insight Meditation
Center and schools, corporations, other venues all over the world. She's a writer and the editorial
director of Parabola Magazine magazine which is an acclaimed quarterly
magazine that brings timeless spiritual wisdom to the burning questions of today and you can find a
lot more about her her podcasts on her website and also parabola.org thank you so much for being here, Tracy. Well, thank you, Dawn, and I'm delighted to be back, and like all of you
who are sitting with me today, we're coming back to our bodily experience, and sometimes I can feel kind of anxiety producing or disappointing.
I don't want to come back to just my experience.
I want something better.
And when we sit down together and look at an image like the one we just saw,
it can seem like something so far away. And in a certain sense,
it is. It came from Tibet, it came from another time, and it depicts something that seems to come
from another world, someplace very far from where we might be sitting,
what we might be feeling right now.
But what I would like you to consider
is that, first of all, these beautiful, sacred images
weren't originally hanging in museums.
They were in places that people traveled to
to have a special feeling about themselves,
to be reminded of what their true potential was.
was. And Tara in particular is like the best friend youing loyalty. Tara made a vow that she was going to show up again and again and again and again. No matter what was going on, if you need Tara's presence.
Tara is there.
So just think about that for a moment. No matter what is going on,
no matter what you're feeling,
notice how it feels if you're accompanied by a friend who is the very embodiment of compassion, of allowing.
Seeing you with loving eyes, reminding you of your true potential, your true goodness.
And notice that even if nothing has changed in terms of your outer circumstances,
you feel more free, more at ease.
more free, more at ease.
And then consider that Tara isn't somebody separate,
but an aspect of you,
an aspect of your own possibilities
that you forget, I forget.
When we're anxious and afraid, we contract.
And we think we don't have what we need,
or we're not strong enough, or smart enough, or young enough.
And then when Tara is present, that little bit of kindness, that little bit of compassion, we begin to settle down and open up and remember that we belong to the world.
We belong here.
We're not alone. Tara is our own innate potential to meet life, to be part of it, with compassion and wise awareness.
And this awareness, she has all these eyes,
is not just an awareness of the mind.
It's not just thinking.
It's an awareness of sensing.
It's an awareness of sensing.
And one thing I love about this awareness that is associated with enlightenment is that it refers not just to a light in the head, but to a feeling of lightning, of things being less heavy.
And yesterday, to some of my friends, I read a single line of poetry from Emily Dickinson that I'd like to share again.
And she writes,
I'd like to see her again.
And she writes,
not knowing when the dawn will come,
I open every door.
And what if we think those doors as our senses, sense doors, touch and smell,
and an inner sensation, and every way that we experience life.
And what if we don't strive, but just relax back into the feeling of being present. And notice that as we do this, we can't help but open to a new possibility,
a new sense of compassion or resilience, a sense of accompaniment.
But let's practice this, not just hear about it.
So take a comfortable seat and let your eyes close,
if you're comfortable with closed eyes.
And just notice how it feels to be here today. Notice how it feels to be with other people, even though they're far-flung.
They're with you, accompanying you
and see that there is an awareness here an awareness inside you
that isn't just in the head.
It is also sensation.
Touch the feeling on the skin.
The movement of breath, the sense of gravity, of weight.
Let everything be present. Notice that when thinking happens, this is perfectly natural. And then we can see this with great gentleness and gently come back to the sensation of being present in a body.
Noticing how awareness with kindness softens you, softens tension, opens the fist of thought. Let yourself rest in awareness. Experience it as acceptance.
Without limit.
You are welcome here. Thank you. And when you get lost in thinking, in picturing, gently come back again.
Rest in your bodily experience and notice how it feels to be seen with kindness and
acceptance. Thank you. Thank you. And notice, as you relax and settle, a presence appears that is awareness, Inside and outside. Thank you. And see that resting in awareness, you feel accompanied.
Not alone, not separate from life, but open to it, held by it. Thank you. Thank you. And notice that there's nothing, no feeling, no thought that this awareness can't touch with kindness and interest and acceptance. Thank you. Thank you. Just rest in presence, in awareness. Thank you. And notice that you feel more open, lighter. Thank you. Notice how it feels to be completely welcome,
to be just as you are. And open to a greater awareness. Thank you. Thank you. Notice how it feels to experience a lifting of fear. Thank you. Thank you, Tracy.
Thank you all for joining us.
We will see you in two weeks, two weeks time.
Have a wonderful two weeks.
Take good care.
That concludes this week's practice.
If you would like to support the Ruben and this meditation series, we invite you to become
a member.
Thank you for listening.