Dharma night is suitable for those who would like to learn more about Buddhism. It is also a popular night for regular friends to drop in and practice together. If you are a beginner but can't get to/or have just started one of our meditation classes, you are still welcome to come and join in.
The program for the evening is a talk on some aspect of Buddhism, tea break, then group meditation to end the evening.
The Four Mind Turning Reflections
Our attitude toward our life and what we think about it, determines what interest we may have in a spiritual path and our ability to commit ourselves to it. If we take our lives for granted; disregard our mortality; ignore the repercussions of our actions; and think we can make ourselves permanently happy or secure by manipulating the world, it will be very difficult to follow a spiritual path.
The purpose of the ’Four Mind-Turning Reflections’ or the ‘Four Reminders’ is to help establish the kind of psychological climate in which we will be motivated to enter a path of spiritual practice. The subjects of the four reflections which we will be exploring over the course of these talks are:
These might be called ‘the facts of life’ in the Buddhist perspective. They are wake-up calls, jolts to our complacency, articulations of the troubling voice of reality as it speaks through our immediate experience. As we go through them, we are saying to ourselves, ‘Remember, reflect, wake up to the truth.’
Being human: Curse or blessing?
What makes our time on this earth a “rare and precious human life of leisure and opportunity”? Is it our upbringing, our attitudes, our behavior or our beliefs? Vajrajyoti explores the promise made by the first mind turning reflection and asks if we’re up to its challenge.
Koha/dana
Before attending, please read our current Covid Guidelines. This is part of how we practice together.
Vajrajyoti has been actively involved in the Auckland Buddhist Centre since 2000 when she moved to Auckland from a women's retreat centre in Wales. …