4.8 • 1.4K Ratings
🗓️ 13 May 2025
⏱️ 54 minutes
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In this time of global uncertainty, Jack Kornfield and Trudy Goodman call us to rise with fierce compassion and become Bodhisattvas of the Great Turning.
Join Jack's Free New Course, Stand Up For Compassion: A Free Course and Resource for Navigating Uncertain Times.
“You become the imaginal cells in these times. Things fall apart, but in you is the understanding that compassion is big enough to hold all of this, that the heart is big enough to hold all this, that the Dharma is big enough to shine through empires, changes, crisis, and beauty. That’s what we have—the Bodhisattva can carry on liberating beings from suffering, however long it takes.” – Jack Kornfield
In this episode, Jack and Trudy mindfully explore:
“Tears feel endless, bottomless, when they don’t have a chance to fall. When they get to fall, they fall and fall, but they stop because tears too are impermanent, they cannot fall forever. It’s really like this with all the intense emotions we are afraid will flood and drown us in some way.” – Trudy Goodman
"What we're experiencing, Joanna Macy calls, The Great Turning. It's the breakdown of the exploitive late-stage capitalist model where we get as much as we can, and the harbinger of the possibility of interdependence. When it breaks down, that turning says, ‘We will use this time to turn this world into something better, to care for one another. The possibility starts with us." – Jack Kornfield
This episode was originally recorded for the InsightLA Sunday livestream on April 20, 2025.
Photo via Wirestock
About Jack Kornfield:
Jack Kornfield trained as a Buddhist monk in the monasteries of Thailand, India, and Burma, studying as a monk under the Buddhist master Ven. Ajahn Chah, as well as the Ven. Mahasi Sayadaw. He has taught meditation internationally since 1974 and is one of the key teachers to introduce Buddhist mindfulness practice to the West. Jack co-founded the Insight Meditation Society in Barre, Massachusetts, with fellow meditation teachers Sharon Salzberg and Joseph Goldstein and the Spirit Rock Center in Woodacre, California. His books have been translated into 20 languages and sold more than a million copies.
Jack is currently offering a wonderful array of transformational online courses diving into crucial topics like Mindfulness Meditation Fundamentals, Walking the Eightfold Path, Opening the Heart of Forgiveness, Living Beautifully, Transforming Your Life Through Powerful Stories, and so much more. Sign up for an All Access Pass to explore Jack’s entire course library. If you would like a year's worth of online meetups with Jack and fellow community, join The Year of Awakening: A Monthly Journey with Jack Kornfield.
Stay up to date with Jack and his stream of fresh dharma offerings by visiting JackKornfield.com and signing up for his email teachings.
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0:00.0 | What we now call mindfulness is rooted in a convergence of ancient disciplines, traditions refined and practiced for centuries before reaching modern Western audiences. |
0:11.0 | On Tuesday, May 27th, joined Krishna Das, one of the most well-known voices of Bhakti chanting in the West, and Buddhist teacher David N Nichtern for a free online conversation about |
0:21.7 | these spiritual paths, their shared roots, and how they continue to inform contemporary practice. |
0:27.4 | We'll also discuss the upcoming Dharma Moon mindfulness meditation teacher training program, |
0:32.2 | offering an overview of the training, a chance to meet the teachers, ask questions, |
0:36.3 | and see if the Dharma Moon meditation |
0:38.1 | teacher training might be right for you. Visit Dharmamoon.com slash heart. That's |
0:42.8 | Dharmamoon.com slash heart. For more information and to reserve your spot for the free online event |
0:47.9 | with David Nikturn and Krishna Das. |
1:01.3 | You become the imaginal cells in these times. |
1:11.8 | Things fall apart, but in you is the understanding that compassion is big enough to hold all this. |
1:16.7 | That the heart is big enough to hold all this. |
1:24.7 | That the Dharma is big enough to shine the way through empires and changes and crises and beauty. |
1:26.9 | That that's what we have. |
1:28.3 | That the Bodhisattva can carry on |
1:32.3 | liberating beings from suffering, |
1:38.3 | however long it takes. |
1:50.0 | What we're experiencing, Joanna Macy calls the Great Turning. |
2:03.2 | It's the breakdown of the exploitative, late-stage capitalist model, where we all try to get as much as we can, and ends up becoming the harbinger of the possibility of interdependence. |
2:11.3 | And when it breaks down, that great turning says, we will use this time to turn this world into something better and to truly care for one another. The possibility starts with us. |
2:20.5 | Says Jack Cornfield, |
2:22.4 | and Heart Wisdom, episode 289, |
... |
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