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By Rich Simon It seems astonishing that even just two or three decades ago, parents not only pretty much knew what was expected of them to turn their offspring into civilized adults, but they could actually count on society to back them up. Even more astounding, kids seemed to understand this, too. Even if they rebelled against, yelled about, or sullenly resented how “unfair” adults were, they seemed to acknowledge adult authority and realize that they would just have to wait until they turned 18 to get for themselves the keys to the kingdom of grown-up independence.
Tara Brach, Ph.D.
CE Credits: 5
Audio Only: MP3 Download: $49
Audio Only: CDs: $59 (+$5 Shipping)
Add 5 CE Credit Hours: $49

Buddhist awareness training cultivates two qualities that facilitate therapeutic healing and deep inner transformation: mindfulness and compassion. This course will explore how mindfulness--a clear and present-centered attention--allows the nonjudgmental recognition of habitual behaviors and unconscious experiences. It will also show how compassion naturally arises as we bring an embodied attention to suffering. Through discussion and guided meditation, we'll experience how these capacities of heart and mind can awaken us from a sense of deficiency to the beauty of our true nature. We'll also learn how to use meditation as a therapeutic strategy for addressing fear and shame, and how to assess the clinical situations in which using meditation techniques is appropriate. This course is recommended for clinicians who've had an introduction to meditation practice.
Tara Brach, Ph.D., through teaching, writing, and audiotapes, has made a significant contribution to the clinical use of Buddhist meditation to address difficult emotions. A meditation practitioner for more than 30 years, she's led workshops and Buddhist retreats throughout North America. Her book Radical Acceptance: Embracing Your Life with the Heart of a Buddha has received critical acclaim and popular success. She's a clinical psychologist and the founder and senior teacher of the Insight Meditation Community of Washington.
Session 1: Understanding Buddhist Psychology and Meditation • The cause of emotional suffering from perspective of Buddhist psychology • Role of meditation in emotional and spiritual transformation • Radical acceptance and mindfulness • Awareness of body and breath • Meditations: Concentration, mental noting, and developing embodied awareness
Session 2: Developing Compassion and Mindfulness • Understanding strategies for resisting difficult emotions • Mindfulness and dis-identifying from thoughts and stories • Developing self-compassion • Meditations: Mental noting, releasing the story, awakening compassion
Session 3: Transforming Shame and Fear • Understanding how emotions proliferate through reactivity • The two lenses of awareness • Strategies for using meditation for post-traumatic stress • Psychotropic medication and meditation • Meditations:
Discovering a safe refuge; developing mindfulness in face of fear and shame
Session 4: Meditation and Relationships • Identifying unconscious strategies that create an "unreal other" • Five intimacy-enhancing strategies • Recognizing vulnerability and inherent goodness • Bodhisattva Path Meditations: Forgiveness and compassion
Session 5: The Fruition of Radical Acceptance • Trusting ourselves • Facing impermanence and loss • Becoming "intimate with all things" in daily life • Meditations:
Establishing aspiration; wise reflection and inquiry; sacred pause and embodied presence

1. Describe Buddhist psychology's perspective on emotional suffering and healing
2. Describe the basic principles of Buddhist mindfulness meditation and classical practices of loving kindness, forgiveness, and compassion
3. Describe how to apply Buddhist mindfulness and heart meditations as therapeutic strategies for fear and shame
4. List 4 common clinical situations in which meditation would have therapeutic value.