Click Banner For More Info See All Sponsors

So Long and Thanks for All the Fish!

This site is now closed permanently to new posts.
We recommend you use the new Townsy Cafe!

Click anywhere but the link to dismiss overlay!

Results 1 to 1 of 1

  • Share this thread on:
  • Follow: No Email   
  • Thread Tools
  1. TopTop #1
    silkworm's Avatar
    silkworm
     

    Rick Hanson, Ph.D., author, Buddha Brain recommends . . .

    Rick is a very generous neuro-psychologist who speaks around the country and has written at least two books: Buddha Brain and Just One Thought JOT. Lots of free inspiring info on his website, too. He offered the following on the JOT email I get regularly and I felt it merited sharing with you-Namaste, Gena.
    And as my JOT this week, I'd like to give back with Just Twelve Things that are pretty wonderful, some of which could also use some generosity. Twelve times warm wishes to you, Rick
    * * *

    1. Compassion and Joy from Christian and Buddhist Perspectives is a four-hour workshop taught by James Baraz and Andy Dreitcer in the San Francisco Bay Area on January 13, 2013. This is a benefit for the Wellspring Institute that I founded, which freely offers practical methods at the intersection of psychology, neuroscience, and contemplative practice. It publishes the Wise Brain Bulletin, provides the tools at WiseBrain.org, hosts the Skillful Means Wiki of tools for psychological and spiritual growth - a fantastic ressource! - and sponsors research. If you can't come to the workshop itself, you can tell others about it in the Bay Area, and still support Wellspring if you want through a tax-deductible contribution through the Donate button.


    2. I'm honored to be on the advisory board of the Greater Good Science Center - a world-class resource for mindfulness, compassion, empathy, parenting, and positive psychology. They offer a free newsletter and a phenomenal website chock-full of useful articles, videos, podcasts, quizzes - with a unique combination of academic prowess, heart, and service. As a non-profit organization, they rely on the help of their volunteers and donors. You can offer support by becoming a member, or gifting a membership to someone close to you. Our world faces many challenges, and the GGSC can help you find more good in it and in yourself.


    3. Tom Bowlin has been writing poems for many years, scribbling them down on everything from notepads to napkins, and he's published a collection of them - titled "Us" - in an e-book available for both Kindle and Nook. Tom's poetry is short but not always sweet. It comes raw from his own gritty life and cuts right to the bone - yet is still often funny, heart-opening, and inspiring. I love it!


    4. Spirit Rock Meditation Center. Check out the workshops and retreats from this peaceful, welcoming, world-renowned center.

    5. James Baraz has created Awakening Joy, a five-month course starting this January to develop your natural capacity for happiness and well-being. Over 10,000 people have taken it worldwide, and it's been featured in O Magazine. It's available both live in the San Francisco Bay Area and on the internet. The course is grounded in modern science and ancient wisdom, and it's not fluff. It very honestly faces the hard parts of life while also exploring the healing, refueling, and awakening powers of joy. It's unique and frankly not to be missed.

    6. Deconstructing Yourself is a wonderful blog started by author (Ego) and meditation teacher, Michael Taft, and now with additional writers. It's lively, edgy, brilliant, no-bull, practical, fun, direct, and straight from a deep heart. I love this site and wish there were 50 more like it. But there's only one, and this is it.


    7. The Mind and Life Institute is the legendary non-profit that brought together world-class scientists and contemplative practitioners such as the Dalai Lama. Now 25 years old, it is seeding a whole generation of researchers and practitioners, and I consider it to be one of the major forces for good in the world today.


    8. Community Partners International provides concrete community benefits in Burma - for the child with malaria, for the mother needing emergency obstetric care, and for the father injured by a land mine.

    9. Pariyatti provides valuable and inspirational resources related to the teachings of the Buddha. I get a daily quotation, and they also offer other free resources.


    10. I am a trustee of Saybrook University, which offers graduate degree programs for residential or online learning. At the center of the long tradition of humanistic psychology, Saybrook has great faculty, and financial aid is available.

    11. Buddha's Brain: The Practical Neuroscience of Happiness, Love, and Wisdom covers how to use modern science, informed by ancient contemplative wisdom, to change your own brain for more joy, more fulfilling relationships, and more inner peace. OK, I wrote this one, but would put it on the list even if I hadn't!

    12. And for a bonus, check out these multiple extra offerings. Animal Odd Couples is a deeply endearing PBS film about animal cross-species friendships; see the trailer for The Fear Project, a book that's both thrilling and hopeful about our primal emotion; here is some old school Moody Blues with incredible harmonies; see 500 years of women portrayed in Western art; and enjoy one of the most weirdly impressive athletic performances I've ever seen.
    | Login or Register (free) to reply publicly or privately   Email

  2. Gratitude expressed by:

Similar Threads

  1. Buddha program on PBS
    By justme in forum WaccoTalk
    Replies: 3
    Last Post: 04-09-2010, 05:46 AM

Bookmarks