Tara Brach - Coming Home to True Refuge

Episode Date: January 4, 2024

Coming Home to True Refuge - While we habitually try to control our life, our true refuge—the source of peace, safety and freedom—is in the direct realization of reality itself. This talk explores... three archetypal portals to true refuge—awareness (buddha), truth (dharma) and love (sangha.) With each we practice short reflections that help bring the particular gateway to refuge alive.

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Starting point is 00:00:01 Greetings. We offer these podcasts freely and your support really makes a difference. To make a donation, please visit tarabrock.com. Namaste. Welcome, friends. I hope you're entering this new year in good spirits. So I thought I'd start with a story that I love. A woman tells about an old, tired-looking dog who wanders into her yard and he has a collar but he doesn't have tags. He looks well fed and clean so she figures he has a home. But he follows her into the house down the hall and falls asleep on her couch and her dogs don't seem to mind. He seems like a good dog so she lets him sleep. An hour later he goes to the door, she lets him out and the next day he's back resumes his position on the couch, takes a nap for an hour, goes home. And this goes on for several
Starting point is 00:01:21 weeks. So she gets curious and she pins a note to his collar and she writes, you know, every afternoon your dog comes to my house for a nap. I don't mind, but I want to make sure it's okay with you. The next day, he arrives with a different note pinned to his collar and it reads this. says he lives in a home with three children. He's trying to catch up on his sleep. May I come tomorrow? Ah. So what draws me to that is such that feeling of welcome, of assumed community and belonging. You know, we often would watch our dog, Jonathan and I would be in the same room with her and that would be when she got really contented, mellow, happy. She could settle in. She's a pack creature and you could feel her nervous system relaxing when we were all together.
Starting point is 00:02:21 She was at home. Most religions and spiritual traditions have the word home with quite a deep meaning. Same thing with the word refuge, which will be exploring today. That home and refuge reflects, and it's a response to this universal longing, to feel belonging, to feel safety, to feel held or resting in a loving space. So the first talk of the new year, for quite a long time now I've been drawn to reflecting on what are called the three refuges, which really are all facets of or gateways to true refuge, truly feeling at home. And this seems particularly relevant as we're entering 24 in our larger world is just in so much crisis. There's so much endangerment and the pace of changes more than most
Starting point is 00:03:30 nervous systems can integrate. So there's such this natural longing for spiritual refuge, that longing deepens. Maybe I'll start by sharing my own first very conscious and memorable sense of refuge. It was about, I think I was around 19. And at the time, I quite notably, was very regularly at war with myself. And so this experience happened. I'd done a U.S. yoga class and it was early spring in New England. So I was walking home to my apartment and I stood by a pear blossoming tree, the fragrance filling the air and there was the night sky with stars and I got very still. So my senses are wide open and I realized that my body and my mind were in the same place at the same time. My body and my mind were in the same place, the same time. And there was a deep
Starting point is 00:04:38 sense of belonging to that tree, to the sky, to all beings. There was this real sense of presence and such a tenderness for the world, such a sense of peace. So this was refuge. I felt at home. and quite notably my awareness was wide open. I wasn't circling in self-centered thoughts. And I named that because in the decades following, I came to discover that this relaxing of selfing, of circling around the self and our thoughts and all orientations, that's that relaxation of that,
Starting point is 00:05:24 you know, what I need, what I want, what I fear was an integral part of truly being at home in my own being and in the world. It's an interesting inquiry, you know, what does feeling at home mean to you? And you might just sense that for yourself. What does it really mean to feel at home. And we might pause together for a few moments as we often do. Perhaps you can sense when recently you did feel truly at home, when there was a sense of true refuge. Was it when you were with dear ones, are in a beautiful place, or maybe listening to music, or dancing, or creative project, or maybe when you are quiet meditating, you know, whatever the circumstances, what was it like to feel truly at home? And what allowed you to feel truly at home?
Starting point is 00:06:45 The common denominator of true refuge is a sense of presence. When we feel truly at home, will also notice in the background there is a sense of presence. Now, maybe when I invited you to reflect, you found that there has not been that much of that sense of homecoming. And the block to presence, the block to refuge, is unprocessed fear. I mean, if we really examine, and you might sense this, there's a kind of persistent background hum of fear a lot of the time. And it's what drives the self-centered thoughts that keep us from feeling at home. It drives our busy doings. So we can often move through the day really preoccupied
Starting point is 00:07:53 and anxious, always thinking there's a problem to solve, that there's something to do or to work out, that if we're not busy or vigilant, something bad will happen. And often the sense of that we're not prepared for what's next, that there's something around the corner that's going to be too much to handle. I suspect you've noticed this. And in a big way, this hum of fear comes from our basic vulnerability as mortal creatures. I mean, if we're really looking at our lives, there's whole domains we can control and manage, but the really deep big swaths of life are out of control, you know, our emotions, the process of aging, sickness, death, losing others, the weather, what other beings feel and do, you know, it's out of
Starting point is 00:08:53 control and humans through the ages have apprehended this core vulnerability. So William James wrote this. He said all religions and spiritual traditions begin with the cry help. And we can sense the truth in that, that it's our response to feeling helpless in the face of uncontrollable forces. And so religions often respond to the cry help
Starting point is 00:09:30 with messages like, you will be be saved if you behave a certain way or believe a certain way or affiliate a certain way. For some, you will be saved if you're amongst the chosen. These are the promises of refuge. Yet the contemplative, the mystical depths of most religions and spiritual paths point to something qualitatively different, that the only true refuge is in. in reality. That's the only true refuge in reality, in isness or beingness, in what we are beyond the story of ourselves or others. The only true refuge is reality itself. The poets have said it
Starting point is 00:10:26 in a million different ways. Kabir writes, the God you love is inside. It's what's here now. So the core inquiry in all spiritual traditions is, you know, what is the pathway to realizing true refuge to homecoming? And it's really interesting that many different traditions converge on three archetypal, totally interrelated gateways to refuge. And they're different faces of the same gem. And the words that I think best express them are awareness, truth, and love. And as we'll discuss in Buddhism in the Pali script, these are described as Buddha, Dharma, and Sanga. And that if we learn to deepen our attention to any of these portals, we come into reality. Okay, so it's natural that we move through life seeking belonging, seeking safety, seeking peace,
Starting point is 00:11:43 and yet rather than presence, rather than reality, what's true in the moment, we habitually leave presence and go for what I call false refuge. And it's not false because it's bad, it's not a good bad thing, it's false because it actually obscures the portals to true refuge and it doesn't deliver. In other words, it doesn't give us the peace, the safety, the freedom we seek. We need to be on to our false refuges. You know, we need to be onto them so we have the choice to undo what's keeping us from what we long for. And so I'll spend a little time with this and review just so you can sense as you can, kind of as you're entering this new year, what are the false refuges that you're habituated to
Starting point is 00:12:41 and just to bring more awareness because awareness is the superpower that undoes them? So false refuges are triggered by our survival brain, which is designed, it regularly signals to us. something's missing so that that's a way to ensure that we'll go after food, sex, shelter, things that help us survive, and it regularly signals something's wrong so that we keep activated to protect ourselves. And yet, as we know, and you can see this in our evolutionary unfolding, the sense of something missing is no longer hitch to survival. we can have enough to eat, we can be okay on that level.
Starting point is 00:13:29 And yet it still drives us. There's this what the Buddhist call if only mind. If only I had more fill in the blank, I'd feel better. And it leads to grasping. It leads to grasping on having more food or more drugs or more money or more possessions. I often think of Rita Rudner who wrote, Someday I want to be rich. Some people get so rich, they lose all respect for humanity.
Starting point is 00:13:57 That's how rich I want to be. You know, if only mine. And when we're in if only mind, no matter what it's hitched on, there's not a sense that now matters. In other words, if something's missing, we're leaning towards a future time and that's when they'll be real life. That's when life will be meaningful. You know, we're waiting until we're pregnant and we can have a child or we're waiting for an intimate partner.
Starting point is 00:14:28 I should probably reverse those two. We're waiting for a different-sized body. We're waiting for a promotion. We're waiting for our teen to get into a certain college or we're waiting to retire. But there's a sense that real life is ahead and we leave reality right here. We're not here for life. Now, a major false refuge comes from the sense of not good enough. What's missing is feeling good enough.
Starting point is 00:14:59 So that leads us chronically trying to be someone who's more indifferent. And it's interesting just to check if that's a sense. If there's a sense of as you are is not enough, which of course means you can't just rest in presence, that you're supposed to be something more and different. And it often leads to seeking approval. You know, we're social creatures, so we're hooked on how the world sees us. And I can speak personally here that, you know, I realized in my teens and in more in my 20s how hooked I was on seeking approval.
Starting point is 00:15:43 you know, looking good, impressing with knowledge or grades or political work. And then when I got involved with yoga and meditation, you know, being the best yogi, you know, just trying to prove myself. And underneath it, if I'm worthy, then I belong and I'll be loved. But I was hooked. And so I remember somewhere along the line, I started asking myself the question, what would be enough? What would help me feel like there was nothing missing? And over the last decades, there have been two major insights from that question.
Starting point is 00:16:30 You know, what would be enough? It's a really, it really helped me. And the first one was that no matter the accomplishment, no matter how much it seemed I was getting approval, it never was lasting enough to eliminate not enough. In other words, a fix would only last a short time. I kept having to do more to try to get back to okayness. So I was on this ongoing ride of inflate, deflate, inflate, inflate. The second realization was that the moments of truly feeling enough, intrinsic worth, belonging, had nothing to do with approval.
Starting point is 00:17:16 They were not hitched to accomplishing anything. They really arose, that enoughness arose in moments of gratitude. of love, of quietness, of presence. And in those moments there wasn't even identification as a self. I wasn't concerned with self. You know, I remember one retreat I led and there was an elderly woman. I say that and I realize she's probably elderly as in my age. distorted as you get older. And she touched, as I described, those moments of enough as I am, nothing missing, and really deep peace. And when we met, she shared sadly really, why did I have to wait so long to realize I didn't need to keep proving myself, that the
Starting point is 00:18:20 moments of proving myself were actually blocking the sense of enough. So, my friends, the sign of false refuge, if you stop and investigate, is it doesn't really work. It's like drinking salt water. It takes us away from home. Okay, so I've named some false refuges that come from that sense of something's missing. There's also the false refuges that come from the sense of something's wrong. And then we have to seek refuge from the unprocessed fears around something's wrong, which again leads us to going after drugs or food that numb us, going after distraction. I mean, there are billions of wormholes online that we just lose ourselves in, being hooked on a screen. Because when we're hooked on a screen, we're not having to feel the rawness of
Starting point is 00:19:22 unprocessed fear. You know, they call it the weapons of mass distraction, right? We get hooked on the false refuge of workaholism. There's always a sense of a problem to fix. And then there's the obsessive thinking, which really is a false refuge where we're constantly trying to solve a problem or worrying or figuring out something, just to sense how many moments are you circling and trying to figure out something. It brings to mind this classic story of a novice in a monastery and he's asking a senior monk, you know, what happens after we die? And the senior monk says, well, I don't know. And this upsets the novice. He says, well, I thought you were a Zen monk. And the response was, I am, but I'm not a dead one. So, false refuge,
Starting point is 00:20:24 trying to figure out, trying to, you know, in some way distracting ourselves. And it's just so poignant that life is what's happening while we're inside the incessant inner dialogue, the planning, the worrying, the tech wormholes. I'll name one more very pervasive false refuge that has been quite a place of learning for me and that's blame. And I talk about it a lot because whenever there's a sense that something's wrong, we seek a place to blame. And it could be ourself or it could be others. It's a way to try to control things. And it's such an important flag of false refuge. And I'm not talking about wise discernment of knowing, oh, this is causing this. I'm talking
Starting point is 00:21:21 about the energy of blame, the anger, the making bad, because blame often turns to aggression. You know, I quoted Rita Rudner before. She has another one where she says, my grandmother was a very tough woman. She buried three husbands. Two of them were just napping. Blame, blame and aggression. You know, the point here is that false refuges take us from presence, they take us from love, and they make us smaller. They keep us in the sense of self and other. They create divides and they lead to violating others. And it's our existential predicament to feel that something's missing or something's wrong and
Starting point is 00:22:16 And our very quick reflex of the survival brain is to go for false refuges. Lily Tomlin says that for fast acting relief, try slowing down. And I think that's a great, wise response around false refuge. Not to add judgment to them, that's just another false refuge. But see if we can slow down and with interest and care, just notice them and notice how they take us from presence and notice how they actually don't give us what we want. And you might pause here and we'll pause together and just reflect for a moment. Take a few full, deep breaths, if it helps you to close your eyes, close your eyes.
Starting point is 00:23:23 sense entering a new year, and for those that don't experience this calendar time as a new year, entering a new day or a new moment, because this is always relevant. You're sensing what are the false refuges you want to hold with more awareness? You're really asking, what are the habits that take me from presence, take me from heart? again, not judging, just bringing the power of awareness to what's here, noticing that they don't actually bring you what you long for. And then in a very simple way, feel your aspiration to turn towards true refuge to what will help you access peace, open-heartedness, freedom. So, as I mentioned, in Buddhism and all the deep spiritual contemplative past, there's
Starting point is 00:25:03 this inquiry of what really brings true refuge. And so we'll reflect on the three portals of truth, love, and awareness. And with each, there are two dimensions we'll look at. And one's the outer, like in our lives, how do we take refuge in? what we're doing in our activity that wakes up that dimension of true refuge. And then there's the inner practice. What is the inner experience that we can explore? And we'll start with refuge in truth, which in Buddhism is called refuge in the Dharma.
Starting point is 00:25:45 And truth means the path, the way things are, the living reality. And the outer way that we take refuge in the Dharma or in truth is by engaging in whatever supports presence, whatever supports more presence. And for many of us, it's taking the time for a retreat, whether it's emptying a day so that we can have some quietness, are doing three days or a week or a month, whatever we can do, but doing a meditation retreat. For others, it's doing the training that comes with a meditation course or having a meditation group that we practice with.
Starting point is 00:26:37 For some, it's certain books that help us deepen presence or certain podcasts are being in the natural world. One woman writes, My six-year-old grandson was floating in a lake with mountains and forests all around and he exclaimed, I have nature all over me. I love that. Presence with nature reveals our nature, reveals truth. It connects us with that intrinsic life-loving life energy,
Starting point is 00:27:12 the sentience that we share with the entire living world, with animals and trees and plants and birds and insects. When we're in the natural world, we realize who we are, beyond a separate self, which is the freedom of true refuge. So the outer gateways of refuge in truth, refuge in Dharma, or whatever deepen presence, and it's really an ongoing exploration and experiment. What helps to increase your presence with life, a direct experience of living reality? The inner practice of refuge and truth is, is paying attention to what's here and now.
Starting point is 00:27:57 And the two questions that can help us find this inner refuge is what is happening inside me right now. And can I be with this? With care, can I be with this? What is happening inside me right now? And can I be with this? Those two questions are the essence of mindfulness. the practice we often do together, mindful presence. There's a wonderful image that I love of Swami Satchad Ananda, who's a Hindu yogi,
Starting point is 00:28:44 and he's on a surfboard in the waves doing tree pose, you know, the yoga posture, the tree pose. And the caption underneath is, you can't stop the waves, but you can't stop the waves, but you you can learn to surf. And I think that's great instructions we're taking refuge in truth, the portal of truth, is that the waves are going to keep coming, the waves of life, the challenges, the joys, the sorrows, and we can find homecoming in the midst of a changing world by learning to befriend what's happening moment to moment, befriending that hum of fear. whatever way it expresses. I think of one woman taking refuge in the dogma in truth.
Starting point is 00:29:37 She was at a new job, super qualified, but the CEO of this company was a harsh critical guy, cut people off, he was intimidating, and she got anxious around him. And she described having brain freeze at the weekly executive meetings. And so I asked her what she did. did before the meetings and she would busy herself. I mean, she took false refuge. She would try to do things, organize her emails and so on. And so I invited her to explore what it really meant to take refuge and truth before the meetings. And we practiced a little and asked those questions, what is happening inside me right now? And she could feel the fear in her body, her heart kind of clutched in her, you know, heart racing and so on, can I be with this with care?
Starting point is 00:30:33 And what she found when she asked that question was a sense that, oh, well, I can be with this. This is just part of me. It belongs. And I use that language a lot. This belongs. It's like a wave in the ocean. And what she realized as she kept paying attention is that fearful part in her just wanted to be accepted. It wanted it to be okay that it was there. It didn't want her to feel bad or wrong for having fear. That is so wise. So what she would do during the meetings, fear would come up and some part of her, she'd kind of whisper to herself, this belongs. It's okay. And she'd still feel anxious, but there was more space, more inner freedom, because she was taking refuge and truth.
Starting point is 00:31:27 She wasn't running from reality. She was opening to reality. And in the moments that we truly open to reality, take refuge in Dharma and truth, no resistance, we discover an openness of peace and freedom beyond our fears. This is the poet Danna Falls. There is no controlling life. Try corraling a lightning bolt containing a tornado. Damous dream and it will create a new channel.
Starting point is 00:32:03 Resist and the tide will sweep you off your feet. Allow and grace will carry you to higher ground. The only safety lies in letting it all in. The wild and the weak. fear, fantasies, failures, and success. When loss rips off the doors of the heart, our sadness veils your vision with despair. Practice becomes simply bearing the truth. And the choice to let go of your known way of being, the whole world is revealed to your new eyes.
Starting point is 00:32:43 Refuge in truth. Refuge in the Dharma. And we'll just do a very brief practice or taste of it. you might let your attention go inward, take a few full breaths, and scanning your life, just in some situation that feels difficult, that throws you off balance, brings up some challenging emotions where you get reactive. And again, feel yourself right here now, feel your body breathing, and just ask those two questions. The first question is, what is happening inside me? And if it helps to put your hand on your heart, really contact your body and what you're
Starting point is 00:33:45 feeling, breathing with what's here, what is happening inside me? Can I be with this, with care? Can you say this belongs? How and grace will carry you to higher ground? Just breathing, feeling what's here. Maybe the reactions and the difficult emotions are still there, but can you sense a bit more space? you sense that that feeling of self, the story of self, isn't quite a solid. There's a little more porousness. And the choice to let go of your known way of being, the whole world is
Starting point is 00:34:45 revealed to your new eyes. So this is refuge in Dharma and truth. The second portal, refuge in Sanga are love. Traditionally, the word Sanga meant the spiritual community of monks and nuns and lay people, but the larger meeting is really our web of loving relationships. And spiritual path is often compartmentalized. It's separated from our world of relationship. There's some idea of meditating on our own in a cave. You know, that from tricycle, the Buddhist magazine, that personals I love, tall, dark, handsome Buddhist looking for himself. Refuge in reality means that this whole web of relationships we're opening to, attending to. And that means that we are willing to feel the vulnerability
Starting point is 00:35:48 and feel the goodness of being in relationship. embodied. There's a Harvard study that many are familiar with. Eighty years longitudinal study, what brings happiness more than anything else, its close relationships. The Buddha said, this is one of the most famous quotes, the good friends of the whole of this holy life. So, spiritual friends, beloved community, it reminds us of what's important. It helps to affirm our value. It's the space that we can join together in serving and playing and celebrating and awakening. The outer refuge, when we talk about inner and outer for refuge and love, the outer refuge is consciously relating, bringing presence to relationships.
Starting point is 00:36:49 Consciously. friends, family, more formally in groups, whether it's a 12-step group or a mindful friends group as we do in the Cloud Saga, Kaliana Meta is what's described in the Buddhist communities, rain partners, meditation with others in different communities. The bottom line is, as Luis Goselino says, it's survival of the nurtured. We need this personally and spiritually to remember. or belonging to each other to support each other on the path. One aging couple described their support for each other, he was losing his vision so she
Starting point is 00:37:32 could help guide him, bring alive the beauty and what was out there and she's losing her hearing and he helps on that. And they were with another couple talking about memory and talking about this memory clinic and describing different techniques, you know, visualization, associated. and what a difference it was making for them. But when his friend asked for the name of the clinic, he went blank. And then a smile broke across his face and he said, what do you call that flower with the long stem and thorns?
Starting point is 00:38:07 You mean a rose? Yes, that's it. He turns to his wife, Rose, what was the name of that clinic? We all need help. And of course, that's a silly example. the ways we need each other and one of the deepest ways is to mirror each other's goodness. You know, we forget. We forget who we are. We get caught in that self-centered spiraling of thoughts that keeps us small. We need each other to help us remember that we matter.
Starting point is 00:38:44 There's a story I heard years and years ago, shared by a Catholic nun, and it has stayed with me over these years because of just what we're talking about. So she was teaching in a small Catholic school and got to know the students over the years and was very fond of one. His name was Mark. He was mischievous and totally respectful and fun. And she remembers one year in high school, his class was having a difficult season. The new math was hard and each was stuck in their own insecurities and they were tense with each other. And at one point she had them put aside their studies and list the other students on paper and think of the nicest thing they could say about that person.
Starting point is 00:39:37 And they all had to hand that in. And a Monday she gave each student their list. And they're totally, you know, surprised and touched, you know, really, I never knew I meant so much to anyone. I didn't know others like me so much. So the papers weren't mentioned again, but it was a meaningful experience. Several years later, you know, after the students had graduated, she was returning from a trip, this teacher, and her parents let her know the sad news.
Starting point is 00:40:11 that Mark, that student, had been killed in Vietnam. And so she attended the funeral along with all the classmates. And at one point Mark's father took her aside and he said, we want to show you something. And he took his wallet out of his pocket. They found this on Mark when he was killed. We thought you might recognize it. And opening the wallet, he carefully removed two worn pieces of notebook paper that obviously had been taped, folded, and refolded many times. And she knew that they were the papers,
Starting point is 00:40:46 the ones that were people had listed good things in this case about Mark, what his classmates had said about him. Mother said, thank you so much for doing that, as you can see, Mark treasured it. And Mark's classmates started to gather around and one just smiled and said, I still have my list. It's in the top drawer of my desk at home. And his wife, and his wife wife said, well, Chuck asked me to put this in our wedding album. Well, I have mine too. Another said it's in my diary and then another one reached into her pocketbook and took out her wallet and shown her worn, frazzled list of the group. I carry it with me all the time. I think we all saved our list. And that was when this teacher said she finally sat down and cried. Because
Starting point is 00:41:33 remembering our goodness and the goodness of others, it connects us. in this poignant, timeless way. This refuge in love, refuge in Sanga, naturally extends to the wider community. It just leads to widening circles, including more and more in our hearts. I think of St. Teresa Vavila says, only at the shrine where all are welcome,
Starting point is 00:42:08 will God sing loudly enough to be heard? So the last element I'll mention about the outer refuge of Sunga, of being awake in relationships, is that it really takes intentionality and willingness because we tend to want to hide our vulnerability. You might listen to the words of the poet Mark Nipo. He's so good. He says we waste so much energy trying to cover up who we are when beneath every attitude is the want to be loved, and beneath every anger is a wound to be healed, and beneath every sadness is a fear that there will not be enough time. When we hesitate in being direct, we unknowingly slip something on,
Starting point is 00:43:01 some added labor protection that keeps us from feeling the world, and often that thin covering is the beginning of a loneliness which have not put down diminishes our chances for joy. It's like wearing gloves every time we touch something and then forgetting that we chose to put them on, we complain, nothing feels quite real. In this way, our challenge each day is not to get dressed to face the world, but to un-glove ourselves so that the doorknob feels cold and the car handle feels wet and the kiss goodbye feels like the lips of another being soft and unrepeatable. This is the refuge in Sanga in love.
Starting point is 00:43:58 It's that practice of reality of ungloving ourselves so that we can wake up with each other. The inner gateway is any reflection, any way of paying attention that opens your heart. anytime you are paying attention in a way that brings tenderness, brings kindness, brings care, you are taking refuge in love, in Sanga. And we'll just pause here and do a very simple inner practice that is refuge in love. And again, if it helps you to close your eyes or lower your gaze, please do so.
Starting point is 00:44:42 feel the breath and let the breath gather your attention, bringing to mind someone that you care about, that you feel a connection with that's uncomplicated. It can include someone that's no longer alive, it can include a pet, and take some moments to sense what you love about this being, their goodness, their humor, what they look like when they're showing you love, their intelligence, their awareness. Imagine letting them know what you appreciate, letting them know their goodness, how they receive that. Just imagine. And feeling your care, you might mentally whisper their name and say, thank you, or say, I love you. And sensing the quality of tenderness and of togetherness of, of
Starting point is 00:46:32 the invisible yet very real link connectedness, who you are in that togetherness, just sense how there's less selfing that you're open to something larger to that field of loving. This is the gateway of love of Sunga. You might take a few breaths and open your eyes and the last gateway, the last facet on the jewel is described as taking refuge in Buddha, in Buddha nature, in awareness. And the word Buddha means awake, awake awareness. The outer refuge in Buddha or awareness is reflecting on others who express the qualities of inner freedom, of love, of wisdom, of spiritual realization.
Starting point is 00:47:43 So whoever inspires you in that, for some it may be the historical Buddha who reminds us, really the whole teaching of the Buddha is you have the potential to wake up, to be free. So it might be Jesus, it might be any of the awakened beings and any of the religions or traditions that inspire us and that remind us, beings that remind us of our own, own awakening heart and mind. So that's the outer refuge. And we all have the capacity to be inspired by others because it's a reflection of what's possible. The inner refuge in Buddha nature, in open awake awareness, it can be helpful to imagine a sense of boundless, formless sea of awareness. And the waves are the passing experiences of sound and images and thoughts
Starting point is 00:48:49 and feelings. Our habit is to attend to the waves. And refuge in the Buddha in awareness is realization of that background, that sea of consciousness, of knowing, of sentience. Let's just take a moment to experiment. It helps again to... You might close your eyes here. Let yourself arrive right in the moment and for the next few seconds, stop being aware. Starting now, stop being aware. Just stop being aware. Okay, that's enough. It becomes clear. Awareness is always here. Now take a moment to just notice the awareness that's here. What's it like? Are there any words? that express what's the awareness like.
Starting point is 00:50:14 Perhaps you can sense the quality of openness. That includes even the most distant sounds. It's boundless. Awareness is boundless, open, that sea, that boundless sea. And perhaps you can sense the quality of wakefulness. It's not just open. There's also a wakefulness, a noticing, a cognizance of all that's happening. And perhaps you can also sense a kind of tenderness or warmth with the changing life.
Starting point is 00:50:59 You might feel the sensations that are living through your body right now, your hands, your heart, your belly. Just feel them. Now sense how awareness is inside your body. As you feel sensations, you know that awareness is in and through your entire body. and listening to sound. Listen. You can also sense awareness as in and through all of space. In and through your body, in and through space, a continuous sea of awareness.
Starting point is 00:51:53 Relax back. Just be that awareness. Noticing the changing sounds, sensations. Now it's quite natural that the mind focuses on a certain sound or a certain sensation or a thought. And when that happens to reconnect with the sea of awareness, just ask, what's aware of this? What is listening right now? What is aware of the thought? There's nowhere to land.
Starting point is 00:52:51 You can just ask that question, kind of turn towards the mind and then relax back, resting in and as awareness itself. the ocean aware of the changing waves. The teacher's Srinar Sargadata says as you watch your mind, you discover yourself as the watcher. When you stand motionless, only watching, you discover yourself as the light behind the watcher. That source alone is, go back to that source and abide there. if you stay in open awareness you find that it is permeated with a light and love you have never
Starting point is 00:54:04 known and yet you recognize it at once as your own nature more true than any story of a temporary or limited itself this is taking refuge in awareness in buddha Okay, my friends, you might take a few full breaths. So this talk and these reflections are the different gateways to true refuge, homecoming. You know, if we look at daily life yesterday, today, we can see that there was a lot of forgetting. We were in trance, all of us, on autopilot at times, the false refuges. and there's also moments of remembering where there's more presence, more homecoming.
Starting point is 00:55:13 And I often think of the whole path as forgetting and remembering and that these three gateways, when their conscious can deepen remembering. And what are we here for, you know, but to remember to become all that we are? So we practice bringing presence to truth what is happening right here and can I be with it? Bringing presence to love, opening to our shared vulnerability and hurts and to the intrinsic
Starting point is 00:55:44 goodness that's here, offering our care. And we take refuge in awareness, noticing that behind any experience there's wakefulness and space of formless presence that's our home. And here's the thing that depending on your temperament, you might emphasize one gateway over another. They all activate each other and all of them serve to awaken us beyond a small self and reconnect us with the peace and the freedom of what we really are. You know, in the Buddhist tradition, there's a simple reflection of taking refuge.
Starting point is 00:56:30 It's often used at the beginning of meditation and I invite you to experiment with that if it seems to serve you, we'll close with this reflection. So in this I'll be reciting a simple phrase of taking refuge and you can whisper it to yourself. Okay, again, take a moment to arrive, to feel yourself here for the spinal reflection. I take refuge in the Buddha in awareness. So repeating that and sensing what it means to you to take refuge in awake awareness in your own luminous presence. What does it mean?
Starting point is 00:57:31 I take refuge in awareness. I take refuge in the Dharma in truth. And sense what it means to you to take refuge in the aliveness of the present moment. I take refuge in Sanga, in love. And again, sense what it means to take refuge in loving, refuge in living with an open heart and a shared prayer. May all beings find refuge in presence, in truth, in love, in awareness. May all beings live from wisdom and love.
Starting point is 00:58:40 May all beings experience a growing inner freedom. And may there be peace, justice, and compassion in our world. Thank you, friends. Thank you for your presence, your care. I look forward to being together as we move through the months to come. Blessings and love to each.

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