Episodes
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In this Wisdom Seat podcast episode, the focus is on co-founder Matt DiRodio as he prepares to embark on a 3 Year Retreat in the Tibetan Buddhist Kagyu lineage starting in August 2024. The episode features a detailed discussion from a recent Wisdom Seat community gathering, where Matt explains the history, structure, and personal motivations behind his retreat. Listeners gain insights into the retreat's practices and preparations. Matt's commitment to awakening and the support of his family and community are emphasized, providing a deep dive into the spiritual and practical aspects of this intensive retreat experience.
Support Matt directly in this retreat here: https://donorbox.org/matt-dirodio-3-year-retreat
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On April 9, 2024, Anam Thubten visited Philadelphia, PA to give a talk.
This event was put together by local students of Anam Thubten including Sunisa Manning, Ada Kase, and Geoff Matis. Anam Thubten was hosted by Germantown Friends Meeting to speak about nonviolence.
https://dharmata.org
The Wisdom Seat helped by providing audio equipment and running sound for the event. We were able to to provide, with Anam Thubten's permission, this recording of the talk.
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Episodes manquant?
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Welcome to another episode of The Wisdom Seat podcast. On today's episode, we are diving into the origins of The Wisdom Seat. I talk with Michael Carroll and Matt DiRodio, the two founders, about what brought them together, and what their original vision was. Then we'll hear about the encouragement and almost command from senior lineage holders to them that they must preserve the teachings of Trungpa Rinpoche. So, they began to invite and host teachers...and how an unintended community has begun growing.
Some notes mentioned in this episode:
Here are some links that could be included in the show notes for additional context on people, books, organizations and places mentioned:
Chögyam Trungpa Rinpoche:
https://www.chronicleproject.com/
Ringo Tulku:
https://bodhicharya.org/ringu-tulku/
The Wisdom Seat:
https://www.wisdomseat.org/
Profound Treasury Retreat Program: https://profoundtreasury.org/
Pendle Hill
https://pendlehill.org
Isgro Pastries
https://www.isgropastries.com/
Swarthmore College:
https://www.swarthmore.edu/
Corina Benner
https://www.corinabenner.com
David Nichtern
https://davidnichtern.com
Some books by Chögyam Trungpa:
Cutting Through Spiritual Materialism The Myth of Freedom Shambhala: The Sacred Path of the Warrior -
Podcast episode 13. Orchestrating Insight: A Discussion on Sharing Buddhist Teachings
Bill Moriarty and Michael Carroll discuss how to approach becoming a teacher, and what that even means.
Notes from this show:
The Vagrant and the poet
W. Blythe Miller, Phd.
https://sangha.live/teachers/lama-willa-miller-bio/
While Willa, in this article, does not speak to the “5 point Mahamudra practice” formulated by Gampopa, here is a section from the text depicting Gampopa’s conversation with Phagmo Drupa that set the foundation for the practice:
https://drukpa.org/our-forefathers/phagmo-drupa/
Gampopa said to Phagmo Drupa: …You go to mountainous areas and so on, congenial places where disenchantment can be produced and experience can develop. There you arouse the mind thinking, “For the purposes of sentient beings, I will attain Buddhahood”. You meditate on your body as the deity. You meditate on the guru over your crown. Then, not letting your mind be spoiled with thoughts, not altering this mind—because it is nothing whatsoever—in any way at all, set yourself in clarity which is pure, vividly present, clean-clear, wide-awake!
Later, Phagmo Drupa formalized this instruction into the 5 point Mahamudra – from another text:Phagmo Drupa said: First, meditate on enlightenment mind; Meditate on the yidam deity; Meditate on the holy guru; Meditate on Mahāmudrā; Afterwards, seal it with dedication
Jigme Phuntsok quote:
I came all the way from the Snow Land of Tibet to the US. I find myself now in a place that can be called the second land of Shambhala. In fact, the actual kingdom of Shambhala is one of the five great sacred places according to the Buddhist doctrines. These five sacred places are: 1) Bodh Gaya, the sacred place located at the center of this world where all buddhas of the three times will attain full awakening; 2) Mount Wutai, the Five-Peaked Mountain in China, the sacred place of the east where Lord Manjushri now dwells; 3) Mount Potala, the sacred place of the south where noble Avalokiteshvara actually resides; 4) Copper-Colored Mountain or Oddiyana, the sacred place of the west, the Land of Dakinis, where Guru Padmasambhava abides; and 5) Shambhala, the sacred place of the north.
https://khenposodargye.org/content/uploads/2023/12/A-Journey-to-the-West-1-English-20231223.pdf
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This is a special one. Anam Thubten recently came and led a retreat at The Wisdom Seat in Pennsylvania in September, 2023. He generously agreed to a 1:1 podcast interview with me after the retreat.
There was a sense of celebration throughout the weekend, and afterward Anam Thubten suggested we discuss joy in Buddhism.
Anam Thubten mentions the practice of Chod during our talk and so we want to provide you with some links.
Anam Thubten's organization: https://dharmata.org/
Anam Thubten's recent book that discussed Chod: https://www.shambhala.com/into-the-haunted-ground-9817.html
I hope you enjoy this discussion.
- Bill Moriarty from The Wisdom Seat
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Board member of The Wisdom Seat, and longtime practitioner Richard Driscoll tells his very personal story of becoming a Buddhist under the guidance of Venerable Khenchen Thrangu Rinpoche.
Learn more about Khenchen Thrangu Rinpoche's life here: https://rinpoche.com/
Visit us at: https://www.thewisdomseat.org/
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Tsunma Tenzin Dasel, born Lisa V. Blake, became a Tibetan Buddhist nun at mid-life after a career in education and social justice. Her interest in a spiritual life began early in her life through a love of the outdoors and questioning the suffering she witnessed around her. This led to a search for deeper meaning and purpose and formal study of meditation in the Buddhist tradition, culminating in enrolling in theological seminary and becoming ordained by His Holiness Dalai Lama as a Tibetan Buddhist nun in 2017.
She is spiritual director of Tashi Gatsel Ling in Maine and former attendant to Jetsunma Palmo Rinpoche, (author of four books, including Heroic Heart: A Commentary on the 37 Practices of a Bodhisattva). She is co-director of the Alliance of Non-Himalayan Nuns (ANHN). She travels widely leading meditation workshops and retreats in the US and internationally, where she is appreciated for her warmth, humbleness, and sense of humor.She gave this talk at our shrine room, Pawo Khandro Ling, in Pennsylvania in April, 2023.
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Phakchok Rinpoche
Pendle Hill, Wallingford, PA
We were pleased to host our first event for Phakchok Rinpoche in 2015.
Rinpoche gave a talk titled “Transforming Confusion into Wisdom: The Path of Buddhist Meditation in Everyday Life.”
https://www.thewisdomseat.org/post/phakchok-rinpoche
https://phakchokrinpoche.org/
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Bill Moriarty talks with Michael Carroll, Matt DiRodio, and Jacqui Merrell to ask: why would someone go on a meditation retreat? How do you choose one? Are they all different?
I hope this is of benefit for you.
Michael will be leading a 2 week retreat in July, 2023.
Check us out at The Wisdom Seat
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Bill Moriarty interviews Michael Carroll to discuss how he takes care of his home which is filled with art, objects, thangkas, family life, events... it's a lot.
For anyone lucky enough to visit Michael's home, you know it is very beautifully laid out and accommodating. He and his wife regularly host visiting Buddhist teachers, and community events, and they do so with tremendous effort.
Flower Arranging
https://www.lionsroar.com/unconditional-beauty-january-2013/Richard F. Lack
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Richard_F._LackThe Brandywine School
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brandywine_SchoolWoodrow Blagg
https://www.mutualart.com/Artist/Woodrow-Blagg/FF3FC3A3F898AF24Steve McCurry
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Steve_McCurryThe Wisdom Seat
https://www.thewisdomseat.org -
We were honored to host Dzigar Kongtrul Rinpoche in May of 2018 for a talk at Swarthmore College and a reception.
Rinpoche presented teachings from his new book: Training in Tenderness: Buddhist Teachings on Tsewa, the Radical Openness of Heart That Can Change the World.
Visit this post for more information and photos from this visit.
This podcast is entirely supported by donations from our community
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We were pleased to host Phakchok Rinpoche and Erric Solomon for several days in November, 2018. Visit this post for more information and photos from this visit.
Your donation helps directly support The Wisdom Seat Podcast
We presented a talk and book signing at the Philadelphia Ethical Society for their book, Radically Happy https://radicallyhappy.org/.
East meets West in this fresh, modern take on a timeless challenge: how to find contentment and meaning in life.
In Radically Happy, a meditating Silicon Valley entrepreneur teams up with a young, insightful, and traditionally educated Tibetan Rinpoche. Together they present a path to radical happiness—a sense of well-being that you can access anytime but especially when things are not so great. Using mindfulness techniques and accessible meditations, personal stories and scientific studies, you’ll get to know your own mind and experience how a slight shift in your perspective can create a radical shift in your life.
The Radically Happy program has been carefully developed over several years by Phakchok Rinpoche and Erric Solomon. They wrote a book which draws on their own personal experience both as happiness practitioners and teachers, Radically Happy will benefit anyone who is struggling to keep a balance in life between work and family, coping with the fast pace of daily life, managing a career and at the same time aspiring to flourish and grow: intellectually, emotionally and spiritually.
The activities of Phakchok Rinpoche: https://www.phakchokrinpoche.org
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Elizabeth Mattis Namgyel
Women, Wisdom and The Buddhist Path: The awakening of feminine energy in modern timesFeminine wisdom or prajnaparamita in Sanskrit is considered the very foundation of all the teachings and practice lineages of the Buddha. You might say that such feminine wisdom is the very heart of awakening, offering us insight into our mind, reality and our relationship to the world around us. But how can the prajnaparamita teachings help us engage the challenges of the modern world – especially during these times of rapid social change, technological innovation and cultural upheaval? During this teaching, Elizabeth Namgyel will present how the Buddhist path offers the opportunity to examine our lives gently and wisely and release the liberating insight of prajnaparamita.
This recording was made online on June 4 2020.
More information: https://www.thewisdomseat.org/post/elizabeth-mattis-namgyel
Elizabeth Mattis Namgyel's website
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Your donation helps directly support The Wisdom Seat Podcast
The Tibetan Buddhist Vajrayana path emphasizes devotion where the relationship between the student & the teacher grows throughout the entirety of the path cultivating compassion, wisdom and ultimately enlightenment. Yet, such devotion is well beyond blind faith or celebrity worship where the student and teacher share a deep appreciation of lineage and reality itself.
During this session, Ringu Tulku discusses how to cultivate a discerning attitude to avoid the potential pitfalls of devotion and how mindfulness-awareness meditation plays a central in expressing our intelligent heart.
This talk took place on October 5, 2019 at the Whittier Room at Swarthmore Quaker Meeting.
Visit this post for more information and photos of this visit.
https://bodhicharya.org/ringu-tulku/
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Michael Carroll & Bill Moriarty discuss regret, and Matt DiRodio adds some music.
Your donation helps directly support The Wisdom Seat Podcast
Visit us at thewisdomseat.org