353: Inner Peace, Global Peace  with Stephen Fulder

353: Inner Peace, Global Peace with Stephen Fulder

I signed up for my first 12-day meditation retreat in 2001, and then I dropped out two weeks before the start date. I never drop out of anything. Eighteen months later, I signed up again. This time, I was ready.

It was exactly as you might suspect: a room full of people sitting on cushions—not speaking, not moving—for days at a time. There were no chanting nor prayers, no incense nor gurus. It wasn't that kind of place. The instructional aspect of the course could easily be summarized in three words: sit, observe, accept.

Within 15 minutes of my arrival, I realized I'd entered a special kind of hell also known as my own head. I sat, and sat, and sat, and sat some more.

On the fourth day, someone sneezed in the meditation hall, and I nearly had a heart attack. By the seventh day, I was convinced I could see through my eyelids. The room remained unchanged for the past week, so for all intents and purposes, I really could see through my eyelids. Open or closed, everything was the same.

The guy next to me stank of mold and armpits. The person in front of me would groan and convulse in discomfort every 15 minutes. At least, I thought, he was suffering more than me. By the end of day eight, I'd re-lived every single unfinished conversation of my life, from the big ones to the most mundane encounters you could imagine. My own mental archives embarrassed me. They were (and are) so petty. On day 12, when we could finally speak again, I had nothing to say. I was hungry and horny; exhausted and thoughtful.

This was my introduction to meditation, and while I wish I could say it was smooth sailing since then, I find it more and more challenging every year; and oddly, the more I struggle, the more benefits I experience. There seems to be an inverse relationship between struggle in meditation and my happiness.

My guest on this week's show is a meditator, teacher, author, and speaker. I'm a novice, he's a pro. I think you'll learn a lot from our discussion.

Listen & Learn:

  • How spirituality is about a personal practice of inner transformation
  • Why mindfulness means to "remember to wake up" or experience the self in the present moment
  • How Jewish culture of suffering, knowledge, and self-inquiry resonates with Buddhist teachings
  • Why suffering is an inevitable part of life
  • Weapons of peace

Links & Resources:

ABOUT OUR GUEST

Stephen Fulder, Ph.D., is a spiritual teacher, author, and founder of the Israel Insight Society (Tovana). He has been teaching Buddhist teachings and meditation practice to thousands of people over the last 20 years. He has 40 years of Vipassana/Mindfulness meditation and dharma practice and Buddhist studies.

Nutritional Tip of the Week:

  • Carbonated Water

Got Questions?

Like the Show?

Jaksot(668)

634: How to Become Hyperefficient with Dr. Mithu Storoni

634: How to Become Hyperefficient with Dr. Mithu Storoni

The way we work has changed more in the past four years than it has in the past 20. An estimated 43 percent of Americans are now working at least partially from home, artificial intelligence is making...

21 Elo 202445min

633: How to Thrive in Menopause with Dr. Liz Lyster

633: How to Thrive in Menopause with Dr. Liz Lyster

Despite the obvious fact that every woman will experience menopause, support and education on the topic remains embarrassingly sparse. Worse still, misinterpreted studies have left many fearful of hor...

14 Elo 202440min

632: Regenerative Medicine for Your Joints with Professor Paul Lee

632: Regenerative Medicine for Your Joints with Professor Paul Lee

The joint pain market is fraught with wild claims, fringe treatments, and scary interventions. At the same time, whether you've got hip, knee, or back pain, there are some truly remarkable mainstream ...

7 Elo 202434min

631: Mental Health in Later Life with Dr. Helen Lavretsky

631: Mental Health in Later Life with Dr. Helen Lavretsky

According to the WHO at least 14 percent of people over 60 have a mental health disorder with depression and anxiety at the top of the list. Loneliness, isolation, chronic pain, and diminished health ...

31 Heinä 202432min

630: Reversing Insulin Resistance with Dr. Morgan Nolte

630: Reversing Insulin Resistance with Dr. Morgan Nolte

In middle age and beyond, your metabolism changes. It's easier to gain weight - particularly around your midsection - and it's very hard to lose it. The same foods that kept you lean when young sudden...

24 Heinä 202440min

629: Living with IBS & Crohn's Disease with Dane Johnson

629: Living with IBS & Crohn's Disease with Dane Johnson

Digestive health issues can make every day a challenge, put strain on personal relationships, and even become life threatening if advanced and untreated. My guest on this week's podcast suffered from ...

17 Heinä 202443min

628: Finding Love in Middle Age with Evan Marc Katz

628: Finding Love in Middle Age with Evan Marc Katz

No one wants to die alone, and yet according to Pew Research, 29% of people aged 50 to 64 are single. That number jumps to 36% for those over 65. Dating is a minefield at any age, but how do you start...

10 Heinä 202444min

627: Learning to Grieve with Christina Rasmussen

627: Learning to Grieve with Christina Rasmussen

If you're lucky enough to live a long life, you'll inevitably be challenged by loss - the loss of family, friends, potentially even your spouse. Despite the obvious inevitability of loss, most people ...

3 Heinä 202448min

Suosittua kategoriassa Koulutus

rss-murhan-anatomia
voi-hyvin-meditaatiot-2
psykopodiaa-podcast
rss-narsisti
rss-liian-kuuma-peruna
adhd-podi
rss-rahamania
rss-niinku-asia-on
kesken
psykologia
rss-tietoinen-yhteys-podcast-2
rss-valo-minussa-2
leikitaanko-laakaria
puhutaan-koiraa
rss-duodecim-lehti
rahapuhetta
rss-psykalab
rss-hereilla
rss-kohti-tasapainoista-ja-lempeaa-elamaa
rss-rahataito-podcast