Insight dialogue

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Insight dialogue is an interpersonal meditation practice that brings together meditative awareness (e.g., mindfulness, concentration), the wisdom teachings of the Buddha, and dialogue to support insight into the nature, causes, and release of human suffering. Six meditation instructions, or guidelines, form the core of the practice.

Rationale[]

Engaging in mindful dialogue with one or more other people supported by instruction in the guidelines and by contemplations that encourage a direct and intimate inquiry into the human experience is the form of the practice. Insight dialogue is taught and practiced in a number of contexts—residential retreats, daylong workshops, community practice groups, and online (e.g., via Skype).

Insight dialogue has its roots in the Buddha's early teachings on the human experience (Pāli Canon) and the practice of Insight or Vipassanā meditation; however, people of all faiths and backgrounds can practice. Gregory Kramer and Terri O'Fallon co-created insight dialogue. Gregory Kramer, the Founder and Guiding Teacher of Metta Programs, continued developing the practice and has been teaching it worldwide since 1995.

Guidelines[]

Although designed to work together, the insight dialogue guidelines are typically taught individually, in sequence.

Pause[]

Temporal pause; stepping out of habitual thoughts and reactions into experience in the present moment; mindfulness.

Relax[]

Invitation to calm the body and mind; receiving whatever sensations, thoughts, and feelings are present; acceptance.

Open[]

Extension of mindfulness from internal to include the external; spaciousness; matures to include the relational moment; mutuality.

Attune to emergence[]

Entering the relational moment without an agenda; awareness of the impermanence of thoughts and feelings; allowing experience to unfold; "don't know" mind. This guideline was originally termed "Trust emergence".[1]

Listen deeply[]

Listening mindfully, with an awareness that is relaxed and open; ripens into unhindered receptivity to the unfolding words, emotions, and presence of another.

Speak the truth[]

Articulation of the truth of one's subjective experience with mindfulness; discernment of what to say amid the universe of possibilities; ripens into an acute sensitivity to the voice of the moment that "speaks through" the meditator.

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ In a January 2019 blog post, Gregory Kramer suggested the new wording "Attune to emergence": "New guideline wording: attune to emergence". gregorykramer.org. 19 January 2019. Retrieved 3 March 2019.

Sources[]

Further reading[]

External links[]

Retrieved from ""