This one-day retreat is the first of three retreats on the Three Characteristics of Existence offered in Fall, 2025 by Matthew Hepburn. Participants may attend one, two, or all three retreats.
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.
How do the three “characteristics”—more directly translated as the three perceptions—fit into the Buddha’s teachings on suffering and the end of suffering? Impermanence (anicca, in Pali), suffering (dukkha, in Pali), and non-self (anatta, in Pali) - while words are imperfect, these are the words the Buddha chose to name what can change in our present-moment perception. Changing our present-moment perception allows our present moment experience to be liberated by nature itself. It can become utterly natural for us to be in harmony with what is right here.
Suffering, struggle, and stress are caused by misunderstanding life here in this present moment. When we replace areas of misunderstanding with understanding right here and now, we can feel, perceive, know, and respond in harmony with what is here.
But how do we develop understanding, and what exactly is understood? As it turns out, for greater understanding we need to develop our attention (go figure!). That is why mindfulness is the means for liberation.
The Buddha suggested that when we pay attention mindfully, and when the conditions are ripe, we can relax into presence with the three characteristics of existence: impermanence, where we had mistakenly perceived permanence; unsatisfactoriness, where we had mistakenly perceived lasting satisfaction (or the potential for it); and the experience of ourselves as more than any separating, fixed, and limited ideas of who we are.
In this day-long meditation retreat, we will come together to nurture our understanding and perception of the first of these three characteristic perceptions: impermanence. We will practice feeling life moment-to-moment with the recognition that not only what is known is impermanent, but that knowing itself is impermanent, just as all experiencing can be felt here and now as liberatingly impermanent.
The schedule for the day will include periods of sitting and walking meditation, a break for lunch, guided instructions offered by the teacher, and time for Q&A.
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.