4.7 • 1.7K Ratings
🗓️ 13 December 2017
⏱️ 73 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
This conversation is with Sharon Salzberg on Being Present, Letting Go, and Having Faith
If you know her name, you know where this conversation will go: Mindfulness.
Sharon has played a crucial role in bringing mindfulness practices to the West and into mainstream culture. She first began teaching mindfulness in 1974.
(Note: be careful who teaches you about mindfulness — it’s a very, very “in” thing to talk about, and just like most skills in any field, the nuances that come with a deep commitment to understanding and living in alignment are imperative for anyone you’re going to trust in the process of progression.)
In 1971, in Bodh Gaya, India, Sharon attended her first meditation course. She spent the next three-and-a-half years engaged in intensive practice and study with highly respected teachers from India, Burma and Tibet.
In 1976, she established, together with Joseph Goldstein and Jack Kornfield, the Insight Meditation Society (IMS) in Massachusetts.
In this conversation you’ll hear depth. You’ll hear the sensitivities that come with a life commitment to the nuances.
We explore how Sharon discovered mindfulness and how it can serve as a toolbox for managing suffering.
When Sharon first encountered mindfulness, she was fascinated that there were actual mental tools available to anyone who wants to practice them.
Sharon’s definition of faith is not about dogma or adherence to dogma, but getting off the sidelines and moving right to the center of possibility, offering your heart to something even though you don’t know how it’s going to work out.
And that’s precisely what she did once she had her first taste of meditation.
For Sharon one of the most important things she learned is the ability to “let go.”
To come back to your intention, to come back to the now, without being disheartened, without blaming or hating yourself, for what occurred in the past.
It’s the eloquent returning to now that is the hallmark of world-class doers and thinkers. This is a skill. And mindfulness is one of the many skills that can accelerate the ability to stitch together moments of full engagement.
We also explore how practicing compassion doesn’t mean you can’t still compete and can still have a mindset that allows you to progress and achieve.
Sharon has great insight – for both the seasoned and those just getting into mindfulness/meditation world.
We are living in a highly digital world that is challenging our ancient brain in ways that we are not fully prepared. I hope this conversation stimulates you to step back and remember what matters most: time — and how we live “on-time” with our self, with others, with nature.
It’s through relationships that we become — and that depth only happens in the present moment.
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0:15.3 | I just chose an Asian philosophy course because it suited my schedule and lo and behold it was all there, you know, like the fact that if you were suffering, if you were frightened, if you were going through a lot, you actually weren't that different because life holds that potential for everybody and there's suffering in life this is a part of things and |
0:20.7 | then I heard in that class that there were things you can actually do. |
0:25.8 | There were tools, there were practical means to change your mind and be happier and feel more |
0:31.5 | all. And these were called meditation and I thought oh wow I need that. All right, welcome back or welcome to the Finding Mastery Podcast. I'm Michael Jervais. And the idea behind these conversations is to learn from people who are on the path of mastery. And it's been fun. It's been a blast to be able to do this with folks. And we want to understand their psychological framework, which is a rich understanding of how |
1:05.2 | they make sense of the world. |
1:07.7 | And we also want to understand what it is that they're searching for in their life. |
1:10.8 | What are they driven from? |
1:11.8 | What are they driven towards and how they organize their life efforts to grow, to get better, to better understand the nuances of their craft, whatever that might be. |
1:22.0 | Then we also want to better understand the mental skills they've used to build and refine their craft under varied conditions. |
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