Mindfulness Meditation Podcast - Mindfulness Meditation with Tracy Cochran 09/25/2019

Episode Date: September 27, 2019

The 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 i...s 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 15:04. If you would like to attend Mindfulness Meditation sessions in person or learn more, please visit our website at RubinMuseum.org/meditation. This program is presented in partnership with Sharon Salzberg, the Interdependence Project, and Parabola Magazine. Tracy Cochran led this meditation session on September 25, 2019. To view a related artwork for this week's session, please visit: https://rubinmuseum.org/mediacenter/tracy-cochran-09-25-2019-podcast

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Welcome to the Mindfulness Meditation Podcast. I'm your host, Dawn Eshelman. Every Wednesday at the Rubin Museum of Art in Chelsea, we present a meditation session led by a prominent meditation teacher from the New York area. This podcast is a recording of our weekly practice. If you would like to join us in person, please visit our website at rubinmuseum.org meditation. We are proud to be partnering with Sharon Salzberg and teachers from the New York Insight Meditation Center. In the description for each episode, you will find information about the theme for that week's session,
Starting point is 00:00:50 including an image of a related artwork chosen from the Rubin Museum's permanent collection. And now, please enjoy your practice. Good afternoon, everybody. Welcome. Welcome to the Rubin Museum of Art and to today's mindfulness meditation practice. Great to see you all and to be here with you. My name is Dawn Eshelman. I'm head of programs. I see so many familiar faces. Hello. And who is here for the first time? Welcome. Who comes every week if they can? Welcome back. And somewhere in between.
Starting point is 00:01:46 Great. Great to have all of you. Great to have everybody who's listening via podcast. And yeah, just a reminder to those in the room, we podcast these sessions. They're available for free. You can check them out on our website, rubenmuseum.org slash meditation. And you can also find them on iTunes, Insight Timer, and some other platforms. So that's pretty cool. Insight Timer, and some other platforms. So that's pretty cool. We are engaged in this year-long conversation all about power, the power within us, the power between us. And we've been talking about these ideas of fear and hope as things that can either minimize or bolster our own personal power. And this month we are focusing on hope. And I think what is, you know, most interesting about both hope and fear is that they are both dealing with things that are beyond our control. So whether we're fearful about something or hopeful about something. It's finding our footing in the unknowable, really.
Starting point is 00:02:50 And I think that's something that relates so strongly to the experience of meditating, right? When we are just in that place, exercising those muscles at the mental gym, so to speak, place exercising those muscles at the mental gym, so to speak, but really, really trying to live in that place of curiosity, of possibility, of not knowing. So the artwork we're looking at today really embodies this idea of hope. This is called The Wish-Fulfilling Tree, and this is a piece created by the artist Saran Chirpa. And he created it following the devastating earthquake that struck Nepal in 2015. And he's originally from Kathmandu. So he returned to make this artwork with local craftsmen from the area. This is a seven layer bronze mandala and that's really a kind of a 3d version of a painting that we would normally see as a
Starting point is 00:03:53 mandala and it represents an idealized cosmic universe and wish fulfilling trees are found across Hinduism, Buddhism, and Jainism, and they're meant to satisfy worldly and celestial desires. And so with that concept of hope in mind today, I think it's apropos to know that this piece is both a memorial to the destruction wrought by the earthquake, but also a wish for the future. Tracy Cochran is here with us today. So nice to have you back Tracy, as always. She's a writer and the editorial director of the quarterly
Starting point is 00:04:31 magazine Parabola, which is right here. And you can also find it upstairs in our shop or online at parabola.org. This issue is all about mercy and forgiveness and has essays from everyone, from Martin Scorsese to a Sufi master inside. So this looks like an amazing read, How to Forgive, The Art of Mercy. So enjoy that. Check it out upstairs. And in addition to teaching here at the Rubin, Tracy teaches at New York Insight and every Sunday at Hudson River Sangha in Tarrytown.
Starting point is 00:05:10 You can find her online at TracyCochran.org. Please welcome her back, Tracy Cochran. Thank you. I couldn't help but pick a tree of hope that comes right out of desolation, right out of the rubble of someone's country. and if we haven't experienced that quite we have experienced it personally we have all experienced desolation in our way and it's so beautiful that he created a wish-fulfilling tree right in the midst of that. And as was said, this is an ancient myth that goes back to the very beginning of Hinduism. A wish-fulfilling tree.
Starting point is 00:06:30 It had gold roots and a silver trunk and lapis limbs and diamond fruit. And it was so beautiful and generous. so beautiful and generous. And eventually Indra, the king of gods, moved it to heaven because human beings kept wishing for such stupid things. And we do. We do. And I was trying to think, how could I connect with this gorgeous myth?
Starting point is 00:07:14 I didn't grow up with a wish-fulfilling tree. But I did grow up with trees. I did grow up with trees and I remember one in particular when I was a little girl I had a butternut tree in my backyard that had a limb at exactly the right height for pulling myself up. So it must have been a low tree. But I pulled myself up, and I could flip around and land on my feet, and I felt as agile and powerful as a panther. And the tree gave that to me. And the tree gave that to me. And I would take refuge in this tree typically after I was in some kind of scrape inside the house,
Starting point is 00:08:21 which happened with great frequency. Because I was a little girl with a twin brother. And back in those days, I had a keen sense of gender inequality. That behavior that got me in trouble would be praised in a boy. The being daring. I remember my mother saying, you always have to have your face right in the lion's mouth, don't you? Things like that. So I would go to the tree. I would go to the tree. And in the tree, I would feel like it was good to be brave and daring and wild. I would get back in touch with my human nature.
Starting point is 00:09:33 And I remember P.L. Travers, the author of Mary Poppins, who helped found Parabola, who helped found Parabola, once said that all children have aboriginal hearts. She was from Australia. And I think all people do, too. Original heart, original body, original mind. So I would play this fantasy game where I was sort of like Mowgli in Jungle Book. I was fluid, girl to boy to panther.
Starting point is 00:10:24 fluid, girl to boy to panther. And I could also teleport. I could go to India, to the forest. I was also, this is inexplicable, a spy. So when the situation called for it, I could teleport to various trouble spots with my panther to see if I could be of help. So what does this have to do with wish-fulfilling trees, with hope, and with the Buddha. The Buddha, the night before he
Starting point is 00:11:13 sat down to achieve awakening, had a memory of childhood, he remembered sitting under a tree, feeling completely okay, completely not harassed by adults, completely free. free. And he's depicted as sitting cross-legged, playing at being the Buddha he would become. He wasn't a little girl pretending to be a boy and a panther and a spy, but what those two things had in common is this feeling that under the words and the stories, we're part of a bigger story. We're fluid. We're not fixed. We're connected to life. We're connected to the life of our common humanity.
Starting point is 00:12:35 All the way back to the first people. Hunters and gatherers. We have that kind of attention. And we have a heart like the earliest people who could feel the goodness of life. And a body that has perceptions and senses, just like the first people, that can hear birdsong and sense the air and be with the trees and be calmed and informed and steadied by them. These are gifts that are given to us from our common past,
Starting point is 00:13:34 and we can go back to it in times of desolation and despair. desolation and despair. And we begin to realize that there's a hope that doesn't mean that everything's going to be easy. It's the hope that we have inside us capacities and strengths and sensitivities will help us through no matter what. And it's a knowing, this hope, that we're not separate. We're just like the trees who are not separate. They're connected intricately with other trees. In the same way, we are not alone. We're part of life a much greater life
Starting point is 00:14:49 and we're capable of a much greater story no matter what so why don't we sit together and experience this? Let yourself take root. Feel what it's like to have your feet planted firmly. Taking root. Taking root here like a tree and let yourself stretch up
Starting point is 00:15:33 straight and tall as straight and tall as you can and just notice how it feels to be here right now. Don't think, just sense. See that this attention that doesn't judge. And let the attention come to the breath without changing it. Just be with in-breath and out-breath. And the sensation of sitting you're being taken. Gently come home again to the body and the breath and the sense of being here now. Thank you.... And see that being still means coming home, opening to what's present, coming out of thinking, back to the body and the moment. Thank you. and see as you soften and open
Starting point is 00:21:00 there's a presence here inside you that isn't fixed, but something flowing, open, alive. Thank you.... When you get taken by thinking or dreams, gently come home to this river of life inside you. Thank you. See how a lot stillness is. Thank you. Thank you. Coming home to the body we discover a presence that's greater than thinking, that's inside and outside, That sees without judgment with kindness. Thank you. And see that you can always come home to this presence and be welcomed. Thank you. Come away seeing that you're part of life, supported by it, and that you're meant to be here. Thank you very much. Thank you very much. That concludes this week's practice. If you'd like to attend in person, please check out our website,
Starting point is 00:31:10 rubinmuseum.org slash meditation to learn more. Sessions are free to Rubin Museum members, just one of the many benefits of membership. Thank you for listening. Have a mindful day.

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