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Dhamma-Vinaya Patipadā Podcast

Podcast von Bhante Joe

Englisch

Geschichte & Religion

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Mehr Dhamma-Vinaya Patipadā Podcast

Dhamma talks, meditation and discussions with Bhante Joe

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Episode The Power of Asking Wise Questions in Buddhist Practice | Bhante Joe Cover

The Power of Asking Wise Questions in Buddhist Practice | Bhante Joe

In this Dhamma talk, Bhante Joe reflects on the role of wise questioning in Buddhist practice, beginning with the Buddha’s final invitation to the monks to ask questions before his passing. He explains how a central question—what leads to true happiness?—sets the framework of the path and keeps practitioners from being distracted by side experiences, views, or theories. Drawing on the Buddha’s fourfold analysis of questions, he discusses categorical teachings such as the precepts, analytical questions in meditation, the need for cross-questioning and reframing, and the value of putting aside questions that do not lead to liberation. He also points to the balance between careful investigation and intuitive discernment, showing how sincere questioning can open hidden avenues of progress and guide the heart toward deathless happiness. Tune in with fellow practitioners for dhammavinayapatipada online events and community practice! BI-WEEKLY MEDITATION via ZOOM *North America — 1st Sunday and middle Sunday of the month: 7-8:30pm *Australia — 1st and middle Monday of the month: 7-8:30pm https://dhammavinayapatipada.com/monthly-meditation-meetings/ LUMA CALENDAR *Subscribe for updates on special events https://luma.com/dhammavinayapatipada?k=c MORNING AND EVENING PUJAS ~4:30am to 5:45am ~6:30pm to 7:45pm https://dhammavinayapatipada.com/monthly-meditation-meetings/ Find out more... Linktree https://linktr.ee/dhamma.vinaya.patipada Website www.dhammavinayapatipada.com Welcome! TIMESTAMPS 00:00:00 — Honouring the Triple Gem & the Buddha’s Final Teaching 00:00:22 — Why Questions Matter in Buddhist Practice 00:00:45 — The Central Question: What Leads to True Happiness? 00:01:01 — Staying on the Path Without Wandering 00:01:45 — Visions, Energy, and Side Experiences in Meditation 00:02:26 — The Buddha’s Four Types of Questions 00:02:52 — When Dhamma Questions Become Theories About the World 00:03:49 — Are We Looking for Ultimate Reality or the End of Suffering? 00:04:05 — Categorical Questions and the Five Precepts 00:05:12 — Why White Lies Still Obstruct the Path 00:05:42 — No Breaking the Precepts: Black-and-White Teachings 00:06:03 — Analytical Questions and Complex Teachings 00:06:39 — Meditation Topics Depend on Temperament 00:07:17 — Cross-Questioning and Reframing the Whole Problem 00:07:28 — The Two-Horned Question to the Buddha 00:08:27 — The Baby and the Stone: Compassionate Speech 00:09:18 — When Our Practice Requires Reframing 00:09:53 — Asking: What If the Opposite Is True? 00:10:06 — Throwing the Baby Out with the Bathwater 00:11:36 — Assuming There Is a Solution to Every Practice Problem 00:12:11 — Analytical Thinking and Intuitive Discernment 00:12:59 — Asking the Heart Which Way to Go 00:13:37 — How Questions Help Avoid Practice Problems 00:14:01 — Escaping Tunnel Vision in Practice 00:14:18 — Unifying Intellect and Intuition 00:14:38 — The Buddha’s Final Actions as Teachings 00:15:01 — All Conditioned Things Are Impermanent 00:15:12 — Questions That Lead Toward Deathless Happiness

Gestern - 15 min
Episode How to Practice When You’re Sick: Buddhist Teachings on Illness, Pain, and Freedom | Bhante Joe Cover

How to Practice When You’re Sick: Buddhist Teachings on Illness, Pain, and Freedom | Bhante Joe

In this Dhamma talk, Bhante Joe reflects on practicing with illness and how Buddhist training can help the mind remain steady when the body is sick, painful, or uncertain. Drawing from personal experience in Europe, meditation retreats, and Thai Forest teachings, he explains how sickness can become a place of practice rather than only a problem to escape. The talk explores surrendering around pain, preparing the mind through meditation and good deeds, recollecting the devas, balancing realistic uncertainty with a positive path toward healing, and using illness as “Dhamma medicine.” Bhante Joe also points to deeper contemplations on the body, food, death, dispassion, and Nibbāna—the deathless peace beyond the instability of bodily experience. Tune in with fellow practitioners for dhammavinayapatipada online events and community practice! BI-WEEKLY MEDITATION via ZOOM *North America — 1st Sunday and middle Sunday of the month: 7-8:30pm *Australia — 1st and middle Monday of the month: 7-8:30pm https://dhammavinayapatipada.com/monthly-meditation-meetings/ LUMA CALENDAR *Subscribe for updates on special events https://luma.com/dhammavinayapatipada?k=c Find out more... Linktree https://linktr.ee/dhamma.vinaya.patipada Website www.dhammavinayapatipada.com Welcome! TIMESTAMPS 00:00:00 — Warm Greetings from Europe & Practicing With Illness 00:00:25 — Why Sickness Comes With Having a Human Body 00:00:53 — How Illness Can Overcome the Mind 00:01:23 — Feeling Trapped in the Body During Pain 00:01:35 — First Meditation Retreat: Learning to Sit Through Pain 00:02:17 — Surrendering to Pain Instead of Fighting It 00:03:05 — Why Trying to Escape Pain Can Make It Worse 00:03:34 — When Giving Up Becomes Letting Go 00:03:59 — Training Before Illness: Meditation as Preparation 00:04:38 — Building a Steady Practice Before Sickness Comes 00:05:00 — Good Deeds as Support for Sickness and Death 00:05:17 — A Near-Death Memory and What the Mind Grasps For 00:06:34 — Why Good Deeds Feel Like Solid Ground 00:07:00 — Fever in Italy and Recollection of Past Merit 00:08:28 — Sickness, Death, and Having the Bags Packed 00:09:44 — Recollection of the Devas as a Rare Meditation 00:10:18 — Rational and Intuitive Faculties in Buddhist Practice 00:11:02 — The Inner Compass: Where Would the Mind Go? 00:12:38 — The Best Destination for Continuing Toward Nibbāna 00:13:16 — Do Devas Practice the Dhamma? 00:14:25 — Why Sickness Holds Less Threat After Preparation 00:15:00 — Practical Ways to Deal With Sickness 00:15:10 — Holding Uncertainty While Looking for Healing 00:16:15 — Finding the Right Medicine and Searching for Solutions 00:17:27 — The Medicine of Dhamma Practice 00:17:51 — Turning Illness Into a Small Self-Retreat 00:18:18 — Practicing Through Flu on Retreat 00:19:11 — The Healing Power of Not Giving Up 00:19:49 — Contemplation During Illness 00:20:24 — Sickness as a Chance to See the Truth of Suffering 00:20:36 — Loathsomeness of the Body, Food, and Mindfulness of Death 00:21:02 — Attachment to the Body as the Root of Illness-Pain 00:21:34 — Letting Go of the Body and Becoming Free from Lust and Hatred 00:22:05 — When Sickness Reveals the Pain of Having a Body 00:23:03 — Seeing the Hidden Suffering Built Into Food and Form 00:23:31 — Developing Dispassion at the Root 00:24:06 — Inclining the Mind Toward Nibbāna 00:24:34 — The Deathless Element Beyond Pain 00:25:07 — Using Saṃsāra as Fuel for Liberation 00:25:34 — Meditation as Preparing for Death 00:26:01 — Pain Is Not the Mind 00:26:19 — Using Pain to Understand and Overcome Pain 00:26:45 — The Five Khandhas and Reaching Toward Something Higher 00:26:52 — The Buddha’s Tools for Practicing With Sickness

15. Juni 2026 - 27 min
Episode A Path Beyond Knowing | Bhante Joe Cover

A Path Beyond Knowing | Bhante Joe

In this Dhamma talk, Bhante Joe explores dependent origination, or paṭicca samuppāda, as a practical teaching for understanding how suffering is built and how it can be taken apart. Rather than treating dependent origination as an abstract theory about everything that happens, this talk focuses on the links of contact, feeling, craving, clinging, becoming, kamma, and consciousness. Bhante explains how craving acts like a seamstress, stitching together experiences into a sense of self and a world we take to be solid. Drawing on the Buddha’s teachings, Thai Forest practice, and examples from meditation, this talk looks at how awareness can bring safety and steadiness, while also pointing beyond the fascination with consciousness itself toward the unborn, unformed, and uncreated: the end of suffering. Tune in with fellow practitioners for dhammavinayapatipada online events and community practice! BI-WEEKLY MEDITATION via ZOOM *North America — 1st Sunday and middle Sunday of the month: 7-8:30pm *Australia — 1st and middle Monday of the month: 7-8:30pm https://dhammavinayapatipada.com/monthly-meditation-meetings/ LUMA CALENDAR *Subscribe for updates on special events https://luma.com/dhammavinayapatipada?k=c Find out more... Linktree https://linktr.ee/dhamma.vinaya.patipada Website www.dhammavinayapatipada.com Welcome! TIMESTAMPS 00:00:00 — Opening Chanting 00:00:24 — The Buddha’s Complete Teachings 00:02:52 — Kamma as the Field, Consciousness as the Seed 00:04:49 — Contact, Feeling, Craving, and Clinging 00:08:41 — The Seamstress of Craving 00:12:14 — Cutting the Flow at Contact 00:13:16 — The Robe as a Picture of Constructed Reality 00:15:04 — Becoming and the Momentum of Kamma 00:17:55 — The Body as the Field of Experience 00:21:02 — Consciousness Watered by Craving 00:22:26 — Practicing with Awareness and Contact 00:25:05 — Is Awareness the Ultimate Reality? 00:27:25 — The Thai Forest Path of Cutting Desire 00:29:24 — The Beauty and Instability of Consciousness 00:31:17 — Beyond Consciousness and the Unborn 00:33:16 — Taking Reality Apart Through Dependent Origination 00:35:02 — Q&A: Contact, Feeling, and Right Effort 00:38:51 — Inclination Before Contact and Feedback Loops

10. Juni 2026 - 40 min
Episode The Link in Dependent Origination We Keep Ignoring | Bhante Joe Cover

The Link in Dependent Origination We Keep Ignoring | Bhante Joe

In this Dhamma talk, Bhante Joe explores the Buddha’s teaching on contact, feeling, craving, and suffering through the image of craving as “the seamstress.” Drawing from the Pārāyana Sutta, dependent co-arising, and the simile of the flayed cow, this talk explains how suffering often begins before obvious painful feelings arise. Rather than only trying to manage anxiety, anger, sadness, or desire after they have already become overwhelming, the Buddha points us further upstream to contact itself: the meeting of eye and forms, ear and sounds, body and sensations, mind and thoughts. By contemplating contact as a danger, practitioners learn how dispassion can cut the chain of suffering at its source and open the way toward a happiness beyond the instability of the world. Tune in with fellow practitioners for dhammavinayapatipada online events and community practice! BI-WEEKLY MEDITATION via ZOOM *North America — 1st Sunday and middle Sunday of the month: 7-8:30pm *Australia — 1st and middle Monday of the month: 7-8:30pm https://dhammavinayapatipada.com/monthly-meditation-meetings/ LUMA CALENDAR *Subscribe for updates on special events https://luma.com/dhammavinayapatipada?k=c Find out more... Linktree https://linktr.ee/dhamma.vinaya.patipada Website www.dhammavinayapatipada.com Welcome! TIMESTAMPS 00:00:00 — The Buddha’s Teaching on the Further Shore 00:00:47 — Contact, Origination, Cessation, and the Seamstress 00:01:23 — Looking for the Real Cause of Suffering 00:01:46 — Throwing Stones at the Tiger, Not the Dog 00:02:52 — Why Contact Comes Before Feeling 00:03:45 — The Desire for Sense Contact 00:04:26 — The Butterfly Effect of Suffering 00:05:04 — Cutting the Stream at Its Source 00:06:15 — Pleasant Practice and Painful Practice 00:07:02 — Seeing Danger in What We Cherish 00:08:34 — Contemplating Contact as a Frame of Reference 00:09:35 — The Simile of the Flayed Cow 00:10:35 — Breaking the Chain of Dependent Co-Arising 00:11:06 — Craving as the Seamstress 00:12:11 — Stop Protecting the Cause of Suffering 00:12:53 — Transcending the Seamstress and Finding Safety

17. Mai 2026 - 13 min
Episode The Momentum of Practice: Building Calm and Clarity | Bhante Joe Cover

The Momentum of Practice: Building Calm and Clarity | Bhante Joe

In this Dhamma talk, Bhante Joe reflects on the momentum that develops through steady Buddhist meditation practice. Drawing on stories from Korean Zen, the image of learning to ride a bicycle, and teachings from the Pāli Canon, he explains how returning again and again to the present moment gradually weakens mental proliferation, anxiety, anger, and distraction. The talk explores samatha and vipassanā not simply as separate techniques, but as qualities of mind that support one another: calm makes the mind clearer, and clarity allows us to see what should be cultivated and what should be abandoned. Through practical examples, Bhante Joe describes how mindfulness of the body and breath can simplify the mind, build inner stability, and change the habits that shape our character and destiny. This teaching is especially useful for meditators looking to understand how effort, present-moment awareness, and repeated wholesome actions can lead toward greater peace and release. Tune in with fellow practitioners for dhammavinayapatipada online events and community practice! BI-WEEKLY MEDITATION via ZOOM *North America — 1st Sunday and middle Sunday of the month: 7-8:30pm *Australia — 1st and middle Monday of the month: 7-8:30pm https://dhammavinayapatipada.com/monthly-meditation-meetings/ LUMA CALENDAR *Subscribe for updates on special events https://luma.com/dhammavinayapatipada?k=c Find out more... Linktree https://linktr.ee/dhamma.vinaya.patipada Website www.dhammavinayapatipada.com Welcome! TIMESTAMPS 00:00:00 — From Korean Zen to Theravāda Practice 00:01:17 — Kusan Sunim and the Momentum of Meditation 00:03:02 — A Retreat in Sri Lanka and the Power of Returning 00:03:40 — Learning to Ride the Bike of Practice 00:04:40 — Samatha and Vipassanā as Qualities of Mind 00:05:30 — Papañca and the Mind’s Habit of Proliferation 00:08:11 — Grounding Attention in the Body and Breath 00:09:24 — Building Momentum One Return at a Time 00:11:58 — Sīla, Samādhi, Paññā, and Release 00:13:01 — The Bubble of Future Fantasies 00:14:10 — Seeing the Layers of Craving in the Mind 00:15:17 — The Clear Bowl of Water and Mental Clarity 00:17:00 — Samatha Strengthens Wisdom 00:17:48 — The Radiant Mind and the Darkening of Kilesa 00:18:42 — Meditation and Everyday Triggers 00:20:23 — Not Feeding the Buttons of Identity 00:21:01 — The Bliss That Comes from Spiritual Practice 00:22:24 — Knowing the Direction and Actually Pedaling 00:24:00 — Training the Mind to Listen 00:25:33 — Concentration, Discernment, and Changing One’s Habits 00:26:50 — Momentum That Transforms One’s Life 00:27:20 — Actions, Habits, Character, and Destiny 00:28:05 — Practice That Leads Toward Happiness and Release

7. Mai 2026 - 28 min
Super gut, sehr abwechslungsreich Podimo kann man nur weiterempfehlen
Super gut, sehr abwechslungsreich Podimo kann man nur weiterempfehlen
Ich liebe Podcasts, Hörbücher u. -spiele, Dokus usw. Hier habe ich genügend Auswahl. Macht 👍 weiter so

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