This program will be hosted both in-person and online (hybrid). This is the registration page to join Matthew Hepburn online, via Zoom. (Register here if you prefer to attend in person.) Registrants will receive the link to join the program in the Order Confirmation email. This program will not be recorded. Times are ET.
Liberation of Mind. The Divine Abiding. The Antidote to Fear. These are just a few of the ways the Buddha described the sensibility and contemplative practice of good will, also known as metta, or loving-kindness.
Many practitioners have been taught to cultivate metta through gathering the mind around a handful of repeated phrases that express the sensibility of benevolence and good will. This is a practice that was first recorded 1000 years after the death of the Buddha. Today, contemporary practitioners and scholars have become interested in other ways to cultivate this practice based on the teachings attributed to him during his life. One such practice is that of ‘radiating’ metta in all directions. Many practitioners find this approach is one that results in a uniquely somatic and powerfully grounded experience of this divine abiding.
In this workshop we’ll come together to explore and experience practices that encourage a potent and non-verbal development of one of the most emphasized cultivations of the heart in all of the Buddha’s teachings.
This program is appropriate for both beginners and experienced practitioners alike. Everyone is welcome.
Full and partial scholarships are available. Please submit your requests to office@cambridgeinsight.org at least 72 hours prior to the start of the program.
Closed Captions (CC) for CIMC Programs are generated through Zoom.