Author name: Christopher

Christopher Titmuss, a former Buddhist monk in Thailand and India, teaches Awakening and Insight Meditation around the world. He is the founder and director of the Dharma Facilitators Programme and the Living Dharma programme, an online mentor programme for Dharma practitioners. He gives retreats, participates in pilgrimages (yatras) and leads Dharma gatherings. Christopher has been teaching annual retreats in Bodh Gaya, India since 1975 and leads an annual Dharma Gathering in Sarnath since 1999. A senior Dharma teacher in the West, he is the author of numerous books including Light on Enlightenment, An Awakened Life and Transforming Our Terror. A campaigner for peace and other global issues, Christopher is a member of the international advisory council of the Buddhist Peace Fellowship. . Poet and writer, he is the co-founder of Gaia House, an international retreat centre in Devon, England. He lives in Totnes, Devon, England.

The Three Pollutions of the Global Mind. Violence. Part 2. A Critique

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The Three Pollutions of the Global Mind. Notes from Scripts. Bibliography. Websites

Notes from Scripts. General Bibliography.

Websites. Documentaries

The full transcripts, with Notes and Bibliography, of The  Three Pollutions of the Global Mind can be found here with also links to the scripts in Christopher Titmuss’s Dharma blog. …

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A RELIGION/PSYCHOLOGY FOR THE NEW MILLENNIUM. LOVE MUCH AND WANT LITTLE

A RELIGION/PSYCHOLOGY FOR THE NEW MILLENNIUM.

LOVE MUCH AND WANT LITTLE

 

  1. Develop mindfulness and meditation to open consciousness to go beyond mind’s conditioning and restricted perceptions.
  2. Enlighten and liberate our life. Realise the web of inter-connection and relationship of all forms of life with each other. Give protection to bio-diversity and a holistic view rather than a reductionist view as science often advocates. See science as a mixture of theories and facts.
  3. Use education to develop the heart as well as the mind. Explore the resources of ancient and contemporary spiritual traditions. Develop awareness and insights to end suffering and bring happiness and security for everyone.
  4. Commitment to Right Livelihood (through love for others and environment as much as oneself) rather than selfish pursuit of a career.
  5. Be mindful of ‘us and them’ without sacrificing the critique or polemic.
  6. Inquire into  the dualism of separation. Admit as a species, we cannot control our fate, nor are masters of our destiny, nor grasp onto belief in an omnipotentl Agent.
  7. Cultivate the sense of community and collective friendship instead of living in self-obsession and self-hate.
  8. Develop mindfulness and reflection about lifestyle, diet and worthwhile commitments. Develop constructive engagement and facilitation processes to resolve conflict whether personal, social or international.
  9. Prioritise wisdom over knowledge, compassion over cleverness, humility over arrogance. Take power away from centralised authority, such as politics, science and religion, and develop networks of wisdom. Seek the counsel of the wise.
  10. Replace competition with co-operation. Develop sharing of knowledge and goods and skilful use of resources instead of exploitation.
  11. Develop a vision of a sustainable world through respect for all species and protection of land, water and air. Acknowledge issues, events and things arise owing to causes and conditions.
  12. End the manufacture and dealing in arms and convert all such factories and laboratories for constructive use.    PS. Remember to reflect on what we are going to do with our free and precious life!

MAY ALL BEINGS LOVE MUCH AND WANT LITTLE

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