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The greatest gift is the
gift of the teachings
 
Ajahn Sucitto's Dharma Talks
Ajahn Sucitto
As a monk, I bring a strong commitment, along with the renunciate flavor, to the classic Buddhist teachings. I play with ideas, with humor and a current way of expressing the teachings, but I don't dilute them.
2018-01-28 Evening - Opening talk - The foundation retreat - cultivation of Dhamma 45:47
Laying the groundwork for retreat, yogis are encouraged to stay in touch with qualities of mindfulness, persistence and right energy. Such steady practice fortifies the citta, rather than the thinking mind, as the source of stability in an inherently unstable world. 30:35 Guided Meditation: Guidance for getting grounded, establishing safety in the space around, making the space you’re sitting in your refuge.
Bandar Utama Buddhist Society :  Meditation Retreat with Luang Por Sucitto
2018-01-28 Morning Public Talk - Q&A 36:12
1. Can a stream enterer lose contact with the Dhamma? 2. (1:47) Can non-Buddhists become stream enterers? 3. (12:12) Should we observe defilements or cultivate wisdom to get rid of them? 4. (21:17) Should we as lay people work to get rid of mental dukkha? 5. (26:04) What is the difference between causes and conditions? 6. (29:09) How do we know “what’s needed now”?
Bandar Utama Buddhist Society :  Meditation Retreat with Luang Por Sucitto
2018-01-28 Morning Public Talk - Careful attention arrests dukkha 43:59
The world pulls us out with the promise of security in external things, but there’s only one place suffering stops. It’s in the release of mental activations. Using careful attention, yoniso manasikāra, we meet the causes and conditions of dukkha by noticing how we’re being affected by the world. This is how we can be free from the world while living in the world.
Bandar Utama Buddhist Society :  Meditation Retreat with Luang Por Sucitto
2017-12-31 Closing Ceremony - Parting Words and Sharing of Merit 15:14
After retreat we return to a world of duties and responsibilities. Don’t forget your duty to the Buddha who gave us Dhamma, the way out of suffering. Integrate your life in terms of the 8-fold path. Give particular attention to speech. Pause and consider, place something carefully with a mind of goodwill for someone else to hear.
Phu Tara Faa :  December 2017 Retreat
2017-12-31 Closing Ceremony - Asking Forgiveness 7:46
Phu Tara Faa :  December 2017 Retreat
2017-12-31 Morning Chanting (English) 11:15
Phu Tara Faa :  December 2017 Retreat
2017-12-30 Evening Talk - Taking the Practice Home 33:28
As retreat comes to an end, consider the cooperative boundaries that allow Dhamma to flourish. Establish reasonable boundaries related to behavior, moral integrity, restraint. Remember that bhāvanā is more than meditation, cultivate throughout the day. Restore the source of energy, know its boundaries.
Phu Tara Faa :  December 2017 Retreat
2017-12-30 Morning - Wisdom Covers It All 47:43
Wisdom makes life more manageable, more fun. We can find how we’re generating stress by knowing feeling: “all dhammas converge on feeling.” Trace activations to their roots, identify the feeling, widen to the place where it isn’t. There is a wider domain to feeling, an end to experiencing feeling, both pleasant and unpleasant.
Phu Tara Faa :  December 2017 Retreat
2017-12-29 Evening Talk: Wisdom of release 17:15
The 10 Fold Path has to do with the development of release. Sometimes we don’t want things to arise, but they can’t be released otherwise. This is a piece of your kamma, the piece that has to be known, felt, opened to and carefully handled. Then it can dissolve.
Phu Tara Faa :  December 2017 Retreat
2017-12-29 Morning - Respect Brings Warmth 48:16
Respect means allowing things to be as they are. We developing respect towards others in community and towards ourselves, our body. Practice by tuning into the subjective sense. This heart intention is naturally holistic, inclusive.
Phu Tara Faa :  December 2017 Retreat

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