Mindfulness Meditation Podcast - Mindfulness Meditation with Tracy Cochran 11/29/2021
Episode Date: November 30, 2021Theme: Transforming afflictive emotions Artwork: Stupa, Tibet; ca.13th century or 14th century; Copper alloy inset with turquoise; Rubin Museum of Art; [http://therubin.org/333] Teacher: T...racy 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 17:26. 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.
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, good afternoon and welcome to Mindfulness Meditation Online with the Rubin
Museum of Art. I'm Dawn Eshelman, great to be here with you. And for those of you who are new to us,
we are a museum of Himalayan art and ideas in New York City and so glad to have you all here joining us for our weekly program. This is where
we combine art and meditation, and we practice together online. I hope you all are well. I hope
you've had a great sort of kickoff to the season of feasting, and happy Thanksgiving, happy Hanukkah,
and today we'll just come together in a way that I think will be, can be really grounding,
especially as we kick off this holiday season, to practice together.
And I'll share a few things going on here at the museum before we dive in today.
One is that the Shrine Room is open again again and we have some new Shrine Room projects.
So come and check it out.
Family Sundays are back and sold out
and it's so exciting to have families
really taking over that third floor of the Mandala Lab
and being such a presence in the museum.
It's really exciting.
And we are offering art making projects for free every Sunday.
You do need to secure a ticket in advance.
And it's just great to have families really back in the museum spaces in this way again.
And we are really excited about our latest installation, the Mandala Lab. This is where emotions can turn to wisdom, and this is where you can explore really interactive, really engaging
experiences. These thought-provoking, playful experiences, including scents that you can smell that might evoke different memories or associations for you,
video art, these short video artworks that have been created by five different artists,
sculpture, including a Paulding-Weinrub sculpture that is really offering a guide for breathing,
and, oh my goodness, some really amazing percussion instruments,
gongs that you can strike and submerge into water.
So this is all in the spirit of bringing you along an inner journey
focused on self-awareness and your awareness of others
so that you can see and smell and touch and breathe your way through the space
and really grapple with some big questions about how we deal with
afflictive emotions and how we might transform those afflictive emotions into wisdom. And that
is our theme this month. We're touching upon for the last time here today, transforming
afflictive emotions. And we have a beautiful artwork to share with you, a stupa, that really
kind of frames this whole concept for us. So let's take a deeper look at today's artwork. And again,
this idea of transforming afflictive emotions. So we're looking at
a beautiful stupa here. This is copper alloy inset with turquoise. This is from
13th to 14th century Nepal and it's quite a large piece. If you are
regular at the Rubin Museum you may have seen this piece because it's off and out
but it's typically displayed on a pedestal that's about waist high.
And then the object is about as tall as a grown adult.
So it's quite large, maybe a bit smaller than that.
And the stupa is a symbol.
It is found across all Buddhist traditions and it can come in all sizes.
Actually, it can be as large as, actually. It can be as large
as a building, and it can be as small as a traveling amulet. So it originated in India as a
mound made to hold sacred remains like those of the historical Shakyamuni Buddha. But this is
not limited to the mortal remains of a holy person it can also include objects associated with that
person such as clothes sacred texts etc while a statue or a painting of a buddha represents
the divine body of an enlightened being and a book symbolizes divine speech the stupa
represents the mind the mind of supreme spiritual awakening. And that is how it is a symbol of
Buddhahood. So it's this physical embodiment, this almost kind of talisman to this potential we all
have to transform afflictive emotions into wisdom and to really transcend and connect with that piece of enlightenment that is
in all of us. So it is my great pleasure to bring on our teacher today, Tracy Cochran. Tracy has
been a student and a teacher of meditation and spiritual practice for decades. She is the founder
of the Hudson River Sangha, which is now virtual and open to all. You can learn all about
that at tracycochran.org. And in addition to teaching here at the Rubin, Tracy has taught
mindfulness meditation and mindful writing at the New York Insight Meditation Center, as well as in
schools and corporations and all over the place. She is also a writer and the editorial director of Parabola, an acclaimed quarterly magazine that seeks to bring timeless spiritual wisdom to the burning questions of the day.
Her writings and podcasts and much more about her can be found on her website and on parabola.org.
Hi, Tracy. Thanks so much for being here.
Thank you. I'm very happy to be here.
And just like the theme we just mentioned and stupas, we tend, I thought it would be interesting to reflect for a few moments on what we enshrine inside and also outside. And I can't help but think of a New Yorker cartoon
that I saw years ago that showed people not Buddhist culture, but in Celtic culture, culture standing around a huge and mysterious monument saying, I can't wait. I just love
picturing how people many, many years from now will stand in front of this and say,
what the heck is this? And it was a place like Stonehenge or Newgrange. And just like in Buddhist culture,
there are sacred places and sacred mounds and sacred amulets and sacred,
like we saw smaller objects that preserve and encase reminders of what once was.
And in some instances, this is the Buddha.
It's a reminder that awakening is possible. And one of the great gifts of the Buddha in particular is that he always reminded people that he was a human being.
That what he could do, others could do. In the West, what is referenced,
Newgrange in Ireland,
an ancient mound
that was indeed a complete mystery.
And they thought it was probably
a cemetery of type.
And they discovered quite by accident
that it was also
a very special observatory
designed to let the dawn light of winter solstice pass through a passageway
and illuminate a chamber and a spiral.
spiral. But the point is that in all of these cases, as wondrous as it is to have these reminders that human beings once did such things, the Buddha awakened, achieved to see that all of us are gathered together to open to today.
Or in the West, these people were so sensitive and observant that they came to see exactly
when darkness turned to light, when the days that were darker became lighter.
But there's a tendency in us to not just cling, but to think that, oh, that awakening happened
in another time, that something passed.
And in another time, that's something past.
There's a kind of poignancy and longing for what we think of as past.
And instead, we tend to personally enshrine painful experiences.
And this too is completely natural.
It's natural to have defenses to guard and protect our wounds.
But this is a practice
for softening and opening this way,
for coming to see that we're not just those little stupas inside
that protect our hearts, our broken hearts,
or our long-ago states of love and joy now passed.
It's also a practice for opening to see that we're not just those benchmarks, those experiences
that was long ago cherished holidays for that matter.
We're also an awareness that's fluid,
that flows around all those attachments,
all those things we cling to,
whether they're sacred to us or our hidden, protected pain.
sacred to us or our hidden protected pain, our secret
envy, our rage,
our loneliness, whatever it is,
we're also an awareness
that sees. And it's interesting
to note it sounds quite outrageous, but it's quite true.
That as much as we cherish this tradition that's come to us from the time of the historical Buddha and before,
of the historical Buddha and before.
As much as we cherish our own higher states,
we've had moments of waking up.
It's heartening to know that there is more to come.
And often we tend to think of a wonderful example of the way the mind
comes to kind of cherish its own
painful emotions. It's that there's
a tendency in us always to
think that we already know. We know what's going to happen.
We know, and we know because things have happened to us early in our lives. And what's coming is bound to be like that, or maybe worse.
And so we come to be driven in a sense that this is the second day of Hanukkah,
which it's, even if you didn't grow up with Hanukkah,
it's interesting to know that detail in the story,
to note that detail in the story that there was a fear
that there wouldn't be enough light,
that the oil wouldn't last
to keep the lamp lit.
And notice how often we lead with such a feeling of fear or grasping,
oh, I need to make this work.
I need to control it.
There won't be enough.
And see that when we sit down to practice together,
That when we sit down to practice together, we open to the realization that we are more than enough.
And the great Christian writer C.S. Lewis once wrote a description that is wonderfully apt for this practice.
And he spoke of God.
He means a higher awareness,
an awakened mind,
like the stupa represents.
And he said the way we approach opening to this higher mind, this divine,
is like inviting it in to fix up our house and and we watch this is how practice begins get like a new paint job and maybe the roof is repaired
and all the leaks are tended to and we feel more comfortable as we do when we begin to sit less stress.
But suddenly, this awareness starts doing unexpected things, knocking down walls and opening windows
and putting on towers and holding wings.
and putting on towers and holding wings.
And it seems very alarming and frankly even destructive until we discover moment by moment
that what's being opened and prepared
is so much bigger and better than we could have imagined clinging to the past,
clinging to our past experiences, that we might have pictured some cozy little cottage
where we would always be safe.
And what's being created moment by moment when we bring the attention to the present moment is a palace,
a wonderful new place where this higher intelligence, this greater awareness plans to reside.
to reside.
So as we come to sit today,
I invite you to notice
your stupas,
your treasured things inside and outside
and let them be
and also notice an attention that's greater, that flows around them like a stream around rocks. So let's take our seat and just let yourself be completely welcomed by your own attention.
Welcome. So that you can have a more complete experience of yourself, body and heart and mind.
An experience of the whole of yourself.
So let your eyes close
if you're comfortable with closed eyes
if not you can lower your gaze
but closed eyes is wonderful
for turning the attention
within the attention within.
And just notice how it feels to be sitting here
just like this
without striving for
a better state or a state that you may have experienced in the past, just let yourself be exactly like this.
And notice that this attention, this seeing that is present present softens you.
It relaxes you just a bit. And just let it travel where it seeks to travel, like water flowing downhill.
tension or pain or just settle in your feet or your hands, wherever it seeks to light And just let yourself sense how it feels to come home to sensation, to being in a body. And notice that there's a presence here, an aliveness.
It's inside you and also surrounding you.
surrounding you.
When we come home to sensation,
we open to the aliveness of life. Thank you. And see that when you drift into thinking,
this is completely natural,
and that you can bring the attention back again
to the sensation of sitting here,
breathing, sensing,
opening to a presence that sees without comment,
without judgment, with kindness,
with complete acceptance. Thank you. And see that if a thought or an emotion or any combination comes up that feels painful or difficult,
you can use the mantra,
This belongs.
This belongs.
There is a presence here, an attention
that meets everything that
comes up with kindness
and interest and loving acceptance. Thank you. Whenever you feel lost or taken by thinking or feeling, just come back to sensation.
back to sensation, to feet on the floor, to a presence inside you that meets everything without comment, with seeing,
with kind acceptance. Thank you. See that when you're seen by an attention that's light, not judgment.
It's literally enlightening.
When you see this, you begin to see that you flow.
That you're not fixed. Thank you. Notice that there is a light of attention inside you that's warm and responsive and kind. Thank you. And notice that you can come home to this awareness, that you can rest in an awareness that isn't thinking,
that is presence. Thank you. See that you can let things be and find ease opening. Thank you. Just rest in awareness. Noticing how alive you are. Thank you. Tracy, thank you so much.
Thank you.
That concludes this week's practice.
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