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?

Episoder(668)

674: Final Episode

674: Final Episode

After nearly 700 episodes, this is the final episode of Age Less / Live More. What started as a way to answer yoga students' questions gradually evolved into an international exploration of healthspan...

28 Mai 20252min

673: Body-Mind Trauma with Dr. Aoife O'Donovan

673: Body-Mind Trauma with Dr. Aoife O'Donovan

Is it the chicken or the egg? Did your chemical imbalance lead to weight gain, or did weight changes trigger a hormonal shift? Did depression cause neurotransmitter imbalances, or did the imbalance sp...

21 Mai 202541min

672: How to Personalize Your Healthspan Journey with Rachele Pojednic

672: How to Personalize Your Healthspan Journey with Rachele Pojednic

When you search online for ways to live a healthy life, you're bombarded by charismatic speakers, some with medical degrees or PhDs, promising miracle cures. From cancer treatments to fat-burning morn...

14 Mai 202545min

671: How to Love Someone with Mental Illness with Dr. Michelle D. Sherman

671: How to Love Someone with Mental Illness with Dr. Michelle D. Sherman

Have you ever struggled to support a close friend or family member dealing with a mental health condition? How do you know when you're truly helping rather than enabling? When should you push, simply ...

7 Mai 202541min

670: Managing Chronic Pain with Dr. Mel Pohl

670: Managing Chronic Pain with Dr. Mel Pohl

Chronic pain affects as many as 1 in 5 people worldwide and can lead to a huge reduction in quality of life, drug addiction, and very desperate outcomes. Today's guest helps people use tools like mind...

30 Apr 202534min

669: Constipation Nation with Dr. Carmen Fong

669: Constipation Nation with Dr. Carmen Fong

On any given day, up to one in three people experience GI tract troubles—whether it's gas, bloating, indigestion, or constipation. These issues are not only common but complex to understand. This week...

23 Apr 202542min

668: Endurance Lessons from an Anthropologist with Dr. Michael Crawley

668: Endurance Lessons from an Anthropologist with Dr. Michael Crawley

In endurance sports, certain countries consistently dominate the podium. While many theories attempt to explain this, the most overlooked—and perhaps the most relevant—is culture. The influence of you...

16 Apr 202541min

667: Longevity & Your Face with Dr. Cory S. Goldberg

667: Longevity & Your Face with Dr. Cory S. Goldberg

Aging is deeply personal—there's no right or wrong way to do it. Some people embrace every new anti-aging intervention, while others prefer to let nature take its course. But what does science say abo...

9 Apr 202538min

Populært innen Fakta

mikkels-paskenotter
fastlegen
dine-penger-pengeradet
relasjonspodden-med-dora-thorhallsdottir-kjersti-idem
foreldreradet
treningspodden
rss-strid-de-norske-borgerkrigene
jakt-og-fiskepodden
hverdagspsyken
sinnsyn
rss-kull
rss-bisarr-historie
rss-kunsten-a-leve
fryktlos
level-up-med-anniken-binz
gravid-uke-for-uke
hagespiren-podcast
tomprat-med-gunnar-tjomlid
uroskolen
rss-impressions-2