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Upaya Zen Center's Dharma Podcast
Joan Halifax | Zen Buddhist Teacher Upaya Abbot
50 episodes
3 days ago
The Upaya Dharma Podcast features Wednesday evening Dharma Talks and recordings from Upaya's diverse array of programs. Our podcasts exemplify Upaya’s focus on socially engaged Buddhism, including prison work, end-of-life care, serving the homeless, training in socially engaged practices, peace & nonviolence, compassionate care training, and delivering healthcare in the Himalayas.
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Buddhism
Education,
Religion & Spirituality,
Society & Culture,
Philosophy
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All content for Upaya Zen Center's Dharma Podcast is the property of Joan Halifax | Zen Buddhist Teacher Upaya Abbot and is served directly from their servers with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
The Upaya Dharma Podcast features Wednesday evening Dharma Talks and recordings from Upaya's diverse array of programs. Our podcasts exemplify Upaya’s focus on socially engaged Buddhism, including prison work, end-of-life care, serving the homeless, training in socially engaged practices, peace & nonviolence, compassionate care training, and delivering healthcare in the Himalayas.
Show more...
Buddhism
Education,
Religion & Spirituality,
Society & Culture,
Philosophy
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Sutra and Suture Have the Same Root
Upaya Zen Center's Dharma Podcast
47 minutes 11 seconds
4 days ago
Sutra and Suture Have the Same Root
In this Wednesday Night Dharma Talk, Rebecca Solnit explores empathy as an act of imagination—the capacity to feel beyond the boundaries of one’s own body. She begins with Roshi Joan’s distinction between empathy as “feeling into another” and compassion as  “[empathy] accompanied by the aspiration to take action.” Rebecca considers how our inner capacities to both care and act shape our public lives and notes from surgeon Paul Brand’s work with leprosy patients, “it’s hard to care for what you can’t feel.” This turns into a broader inquiry about what we allow ourselves to feel or what we may avoid feeling. The shared roots of sutra and suture—“to sew together”—anchor her critique of the Ideology of Isolation and frame her call for relational responsibility. Citing Bell Hooks’ insight that “the first violence patriarchy commits is against men,” Solnit argues that disconnection is culturally produced. She closes with a mention of the community safety patrols in North Carolina, where neighbors gather nightly to protect immigrants: a living example of what feeling-for and acting-with can look like.
Upaya Zen Center's Dharma Podcast
The Upaya Dharma Podcast features Wednesday evening Dharma Talks and recordings from Upaya's diverse array of programs. Our podcasts exemplify Upaya’s focus on socially engaged Buddhism, including prison work, end-of-life care, serving the homeless, training in socially engaged practices, peace & nonviolence, compassionate care training, and delivering healthcare in the Himalayas.