Meditation Instruction. From Turning the Mind into an Ally -Sakyong Mipham Rinpoche. Shambhala

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  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 8 พ.ค. 2012
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    Mindfulness practice. How to meditate. The bonus 21-minute guided meditation by Sakyong Mipham with detailed instruction on how to practice meditation. From the DVD "Turning the Mind Into an Ally". Available from Shambhala Media at www.shambhalamedia.org/Product...
    The perfect companion to the book Turning the Mind into an Ally.
    In this video of a public talk based on his bestselling book "Turning the Mind into an Ally", Sakyong Mipham shows how to turn the mind towards the practice of meditation in everyday life. His lively instructions offer us inspiration as well as powerful tools for accessing our own strong and supple minds.
    From a talk at Dalhousie University, Halifax NS, March 2003. Includes guided meditation.
    Centre Productions
    Director: James Hoagland
    DVD. 97 minutes
    The book "Turning the Mind into an Ally" is available from Shambhala Media at
    www.shambhalamedia.org/Product...
    Foreword by Pema Chödrön. Turning the Mind Into an Ally offers basic guidelines for those interested in learning more about Buddhist meditation. Sakyong Mipham's instruction and discussion of the virtues of peaceful abiding are followed by suggestions for thematic contemplative meditations on topics such as birth, old age, and death. The book includes three useful appendices, outlining the posture of meditation and offering simple instruction for contemplative meditation.
    Riverhead Books
    Softcover, 5" x 8"
    236 pp.
    The Sakyong, Jamgön Mipham Rinpoche - Video and Text Biography, Schedule, Contact, etc. www.sakyong.com./sakyong.php
    Closed captioned and translated video biography at • Video Biography. The S...
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    Facebook: Sakyong Mipham / sakyong
    Twitter: #!/SakyongMipham
    The Sakyong's Books & Media at Kalapa Media at www.kalapamedia.org/SearchResu...
    Numerous written teachings online at www.sakyong.com./archive.php?category=teachings
    Shambhala Sun Magazine www.shambhalasun.com. Has numerous articles by the Sakyong Mipham Rinpoche in its archives at www.shambhalasun.com/index.php...
    Downloads of the Sakyong's public talks www.sakyongmedia.com/product-c...
    Visit the Sakyong's web site at www.sakyong.com for daily text messages with the Sakyong's contemplation of the day.
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    Learn More About Meditation at shambhala.org/what-is-meditat...
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ความคิดเห็น • 32

  • @spartacus9189
    @spartacus9189 11 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    "Turning the Mind Into an Ally" is one of the best instructional books on meditation, it is easy to read, does not refer to any religion and is a description of meditation in a way that can really be practice.

  • @illiena
    @illiena 8 ปีที่แล้ว +13

    I have been depressed most of my adult life, and finally decided that I want to deal with the pain. This instruction is by far the best hands-on I have experienced so far. I want to make sure that my body is positioned correctly - I know how important dynamic balanced posture and breathing are for meditation. Thank you!

  • @Gypseygirls
    @Gypseygirls 5 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    I love his book
    Turning the mind into a Alley..!
    Must read ppl 💙

  • @maritedonoso
    @maritedonoso 7 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    Gracias por este video. Las instrucciones son claras y detalladas, un privilegio además recibirlas del propio Sakyog. Meditation have changed my life. I'm so grateful all of us can receive this instructions. Rinpoche give the instructions precisely and kind at the same time. Thanks for everyone that make this possible.

  • @jeffatwood9417
    @jeffatwood9417 ปีที่แล้ว

    Thank you for your clarity. Your points for attention are directed to exactly what people need to actually do the practice. I greatly appreciate your efforts.
    You begin by describing the internal process of sacredness. The word means “cut away” as in isolated from what is, therefore, considered mundane experience. In truth, it is all one experience, but the change of attitude you mention as you form your intentions is the process of making a sacred experience. It’s all a mental change of perspective, by which an attitude of idealized nobility may be cultivated in the sacred act of meditating. I, too, would enjoy a video detailing the 9 stages.
    Very well done. 🙏

  • @SakyongMiphamRinpoche
    @SakyongMiphamRinpoche  11 ปีที่แล้ว +6

    Closed captions (subtitles) are available on this video in English and Spanish.
    If captions are not visible when playing click the CC icon, below the video towards the right, to activate captions. Once the CC icon is red the captions are activated, click on it again to choose the language. You can click the mouse on the captions then + or - to change their size.
    Use the “Settings” option (above the language list) to change the color of the captions and their background.

  • @SassyRedheadChick
    @SassyRedheadChick 10 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    This is a great, detailed, explanation of meditation! I really appreciate this instruction and thank you so much for posting it!

  • @cristiaanamariesaint4458
    @cristiaanamariesaint4458 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Can you do a video explaining all 9 stages you go through in meditation please? ❤️

  • @smiley051
    @smiley051 12 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Thank you for this :).

  • @omardariowolf7627
    @omardariowolf7627 7 ปีที่แล้ว

    this is great

  • @paynemartinson
    @paynemartinson 9 ปีที่แล้ว

    when i watched other videos it seemed more religious then enlightened so i never got in to meditating cause it seem like it was something i would not be able to do but when i watched this one it seem for enlightening and calming hence the reason i liked it and added it to my favorites i thank you for sharing this cause it is difficult finding a proper video for something like this.

  • @lhamochoden5021
    @lhamochoden5021 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    ❤🌸🌸🌸♥️

  • @tkoll6268
    @tkoll6268 6 ปีที่แล้ว

    Thank you :)

  • @aljapeterka370
    @aljapeterka370 3 ปีที่แล้ว

    🙏🏻
    wow
    🧘🏻‍♀️
    🙂
    Loven
    Buddha
    🇸🇮

  • @tiagofreitas4918
    @tiagofreitas4918 6 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    This guy is cool.

  • @MadeInDade8732
    @MadeInDade8732 8 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    +Shana schwartz I am currently reading "Turning the mind into an ally" chapter 6 tells us that we should do something soothing like take a bath or talk to a friend, once we notice these negative emotions that are too large for our minds to acknowledge and kiss goodbye. my question how could I recognize when the emotions are too strong to the point where I have to stop and take a break?

  • @ukaffx
    @ukaffx 11 ปีที่แล้ว

    those videos are very old.. i saw this 4 yrs ago

  • @shana2712
    @shana2712 9 ปีที่แล้ว

    After I try sitting (breath) meditation and walking meditation, I feel irritable and angry afterwards. I learned to meditate over 1 week ago, and I've been doing it daily, but I need to take a break from it, due to the irritability and anger I feel afterwards. Today I took a day off of meditating, and I feel like things are settling down and I feel a little better.
    I was told to cut the time down, which I did a few days ago, but I still get negative feelings after I do meditation, so I am planning to take a break from it for a day or so. I wonder why I get these negative reactions from meditating. I want to meditate daily, but I also don't want to feel angry and irritable all day.

    • @nfcoard
      @nfcoard 9 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      shana schwartz I have three suggestions I think may help you: 1) Try meditating for just 10 minutes a day. Focus on the feeling of the breath where it feels most prominent for you - that could be the chest, nostrils or abdomen. Choose one of those and just focus on THE FEELING of the breath. So if you choose the chest then focus on how the rise and falling of your chest feels. If it is the nostrils then focus on how the breath feels as it passes through your nostrils.
      2) My second suggestion to you is that whenever you feel angry, irritable or any emotion that feels unpleasant for you I invite you to pay attention to that emotion and feel what it feels like without resisting it, disliking it or trying to push it away. Try to stay with the feeling of anger and irritability without getting involved in any thoughts that may arise about the feeling.
      If you notice at any time you are thinking angry or irritable thoughts, remove your attention from the thoughts and give your whole attention to just the feeling of anger/irritability and WHERE you FEEL it most strongly in THE BODY. If the feeling becomes overwhelming for you then imagine that you are breathing into the feeling, into the part of your body where you feel that feeling. But stay with the feeling. Give it your attention without starting to think about it. Just be with the feelings, let it them be as they are without wanting them to go away or thinking about them. Just as your whole attention can be on the feeling of the breath - the physical sensations of the breath - how the breath feels. Your whole attention can be on an emotion.
      3) Try loving kindness and self compassion meditations. Loving kindness should start with yourself and then extend to others. Same thing with compassion. Those are great antidotes to anger and irritability. All suggestions require just 10 minutes a day.

    • @Gangstawalk1
      @Gangstawalk1 7 ปีที่แล้ว

      nfcoard hello nfcoard i have a question where do i have to focus during Those spaces Between exhalation and inhalation ?? Thx

    • @nfcoard
      @nfcoard 7 ปีที่แล้ว

      olivier753 During the spaces/pauses between exhalation and inhalation just keep your attention on the part of the body you have chosen to focus on and notice the space/pause. Just as you notice the feeling of the chest rising and falling, notice also the brief pauses in movement at the end of inhalation and the end of exhalation. Same thing if you choose the abdomen. If it is the nostrils then notice the brief pause in the sensations in the nostrils. So notice both the physical sensations of the breathing and also notice the brief pauses in those sensations at the end of an inhalation or exhalation. So your attention basically just remains on that part of the body. If your mind wanders away, which it definitely will, just gently bring it back to the physical sensations of the breathing.

    • @Gangstawalk1
      @Gangstawalk1 7 ปีที่แล้ว

      nfcoard Thk you very much, so during thoses brief pauses if my mind wanders away i focus on on my nostrils the Same place i focus during breathing thats right ?? :/

    • @nfcoard
      @nfcoard 7 ปีที่แล้ว

      olivier753 If I understand you correctly, then yes - If your mind wanders away, when you become aware that it has wandered, then just gently bring your attention back to the nostrils. You can also choose to focus on the rising and falling sensation of the chest, or the rising and falling sensation of the abdomen. Any of those three is a good place to focus for the duration of the meditation.

  • @BuddhaBlurbs
    @BuddhaBlurbs 4 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Sakyong Pimp