Inner & Outer Nonviolence

Recorded at Insight Meditation Satsang

Online,

May 28, 2024

DESCRIPTION

Non-harming, or nonviolence, is at the heart of the Buddhist path. One way we might understand the instructions is that awakening and liberation from suffering is the natural consequence of becoming profoundly devoted to non-harming and protecting oneself from further states of distress.

Restraining our impulses when they might lead to harm for ourselves or others is what keeping the precepts is about. And then learning to orient the mind/heart toward wholesome states continues that process, restraining and unlearning the patterns of cognition that perpetuate anxiety, fear, and delusion.

If the inner process begins with material renunciation and then develops naturally into cognitive repatterning, the outer process has exactly the same trajectory. Regulation and legislation support material renunciation on the part of powerful social entities, and then the deep work of cultural repair is the cognitive repatterning.

Cultures shift slowly, just as our own minds take a long time to learn new patterns. Unlearning war as a reaction to tribal threat is like unlearning hatred as a reaction to fear. Because fear is a very deep root system for us, more surface level work on reactivity, restraint, and restoration of empathy has to happen first. The uprooting of fear is very nearly the same thing as liberation. Again, I think the same pattern will be apparent in the geopolitical and social spheres.

The Buddha beautifully intuited the connection between inner and outer practice, recognizing that renouncing violence gives others freedom from fear, and that this is a precondition for the practitioner themself realizing the absolute freedom from fear that is the fruit of the path.

SEAN OAKES
Sean Feit Oakes, PhD (he/they, queer, Puerto Rican & English, living on Pomo ancestral land in Northern California), teaches Buddhism and somatic practice focusing on the integration of meditation, trauma resolution, and social justice. He received Insight Meditation teaching authorization from Jack Kornfield, and wrote his dissertation on extraordinary states in Buddhist meditation and experimental dance. Sean holds certifications in Somatic Experiencing (SEP, assistant), and Yoga (E-RYT 500, YACEP), and teaches at Spirit Rock Meditation Center, East Bay Meditation Center, Insight Timer, and elsewhere.

LINKS
Website: seanfeitoakes.com
Community Page: In It To End It
YouTube channel: In It To End It
Spirit Rock: spiritrock.org/teachers/sean-oakes
Insight Timer: insighttimer.com/seanoakes

GIVING
All of Dr. Oakes’ independent teaching is offered on the model of Gift Economy, in the Buddhist tradition of dāna, inspired giving. Support of our teaching and community is gratefully received. Thank you for your generosity.

Donate:
seanfeitoakes.com/gift-economy

Blessings on your path.

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