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    Everyday Buddhism 22 - Release Your Cows

    enJanuary 26, 2019
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    About this Episode

    In a listener-requested podcast I relate how the story of releasing cows from Thich Nhat Hanh’s book No Mud, No Lotus: The Art of Transforming Suffering, helped me find freedom from suffering over a series of minor personal losses and disappointments...and freedom FROM the losses themselves.

    We each have "cows" we're grasping onto. According to Thich Nhat Hanh, our biggest "cows" are our narrow ideas of happiness. We suffer because of grasping to those ideas. Every one of us has cows to be released.

    We continue to suffer until we are able to release the very ideas themselves. Join me as I tell me story about finding freedom from the suffering of loss—and from the losses themselves—by digging my lotus roots into the mud of life, to become relaxed and tender, instead of rigid.

     
     

    Recent Episodes from Everyday Buddhism: Making Everyday Better

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    *Special Everyday Buddhism Substack / Words From My Teachers podcast subscription promo code:
    Redeem by 3/31/2024 for 20% subscription for 1 year!
     
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    Become a patron to support this podcast and get special member benefits, including a membership community and virtual sangha:
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    Everyday Buddhism 102 - Encore of The Boundless Heart of Bodhicitta

    In the spirit of the holiday season, I am re-releasing a popular episode from 2019: The Boundless Heart - Bodhicitta. It is my wish that we all try to practice being a Bodhisattva during this holiday season … Starting with me! ;)

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    If this podcast has helped you understand Buddhism or help in your everyday life, consider making a one-time donation here:
     
    Subscribe to my premium Substack feed and podcast, Words From My Teachers:
    Subscribe to "Words From My Teachers"
     
    Support the podcast through the affiliate link to buy the book, Everyday Buddhism: Real-Life Buddhist Teachings & Practices for Real Change: Buy the book, Everyday Buddhism

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    For more about Bright Dawn Center of Oneness Buddhism: Bright Dawn.org

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    Subscribe to Words From My Teachers Premium Podcast

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    For more about Bright Dawn Center of Oneness Buddhism: Bright Dawn.org

    Everyday Buddhism 99 - Introducing Words From My Teachers

    Everyday Buddhism 99 - Introducing Words From My Teachers

    Introducing Words From My Teachers, a premium, weekly Everyday Buddhism podcast. Words From My Teachers features readings from the books written by and about my teachers from the Bright Dawn Center of Oneness Buddhism and the Kubose Dharma Legacy … Rev. Gyomay Kubose, Rev. Koyo Kubose, and Haya Akegarasu.

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    Stay tuned for the first 2 episodes that will be offered as public podcast episodes … then make sure to sign up to receive them weekly by subscribing to my Everyday Buddhism Substack premium content.

    Subscribe to Words From My Teachers Premium Podcast

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    Everyday Buddhism 98 - The Wonder of Small Things with James Crews

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    https://www.patreon.com/EverydayBuddhism
     
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    Support the podcast through the affiliate link to buy the book, Everyday Buddhism: Real-Life Buddhist Teachings & Practices for Real Change: Buy the book, Everyday Buddhism

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    Everyday Buddhism 96 - Householder Koans with Roshi Eve Myonen Marko

    Everyday Buddhism 96 - Householder Koans with Roshi Eve Myonen Marko

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    Roshi Eve Marko is a Founding Teacher of the Zen Peacemaker Order, with her late husband, the renowned Roshi Bernie Glassman. She is also the resident teacher at the Green River Zen Center in Massachusetts. Roshi has trained spiritually-based social activists and peacemakers in the US, Europe, and the Middle East, and has been a Spiritholder at retreats bearing witness to genocide at Auschwitz-Birkenau, Rwanda, and the Black Hills in South Dakota. Before that she worked at the Greyston Mandala, which provides housing, child care, jobs, and AIDS-related medical services in Yonkers, New York.

    Koans have always been a favorite practice of mine but I had drifted away from them off and on … and off for the last few years until this book. If you've listened to earlier episodes of this podcast, then you may have heard my back-to-back episodes about Zen Koans.

    This is unlike any book about koans I've ever read. It drills deep into your "hiding places" … doing what koans do perfectly: They stop you in your tracks, as they mess with your conceptual thinking, and shake your false trust in the stability of what we think we know. Being drawn into questions, without the comfortable ground of "knowing" offers a practice that can help us pause in our everyday rush to stress and anxiousness caused by trying to be somewhere other than where we are at this moment.

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    So, don't miss this one! One of my favorite Buddhist subjects and one of the best books I've read in a very long time.


     
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    If this podcast has helped you understand Buddhism or help in your everyday life, consider making a one-time donation here:
     
    Support the podcast through the affiliate link to buy the book, Everyday Buddhism: Real-Life Buddhist Teachings & Practices for Real Change: Buy the book, Everyday Buddhism
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