Month: December 2022

  • Release Your Anger; Practices of a Bodhisattva #33

    We're told in 12-Step meetings that anger is a dubious luxury for "normal" people. Yet it continues to arise and cause problems no matter how long we're sober. How can we deal with the root our anger as Buddhists in recovery to find compassion, peace and ease?

  • Episode 075: How to Give the Gift of Presence; Practices of a Bodhisattva #32

    The 12-Step Buddhist Podcast - Episode 075 Give the Gift of Being Presence what is the best thing that we can gift each other? we discuss the mahayana *(greater) path of dharma, as it applies to recovery from addictions, at any stage. to overcome the root of our addiction, we utilize brain science, trauma psychology and buddhist practice. in this episode, we will learn and do a practice that considers how to offer something extraordinary.

  • Episode 074: Being Present w/Loss and Grief; Practices of a Bodhisattva #31

    The 12-Step Buddhist Podcast - Episode 074 Being present with loss and grief. while loss is universal, the experience of grief is individual. it cannot be compared to previous experiences, or those of other people. once we own our own process, grief and loss become part of the path. easier said than done, but this is the path of bodhisattvas, yogis and Buddhists in recovery.

  • Episode 073: ***25 YEARS SOBER***, When the Present is the Past

    The 12-Step Buddhist Podcast - Episode 073 “The essence of trauma is that it is overwhelming, unbelievable, and unbearable. Each patient demands that we suspend our sense of what is normal and accept that we are dealing with a dual reality: the reality of a relatively secure and predictable present that lives side by side with a ruinous, ever-present past.” (Van der Kolk, 2014, p. 195)

  • Episode 072: Insight Into What?

    The 12-Step Buddhist Podcast - Episode 072 So called insight meditation practices are perhaps the most widely diffused in the west, in terms of what people think of as buddhism. today we'll expand our view and understand something of value when it comes to the nature and meaning of the next level of dharma teaching as it pertains to concentration, insight into our recovery and ourselves as compassion seeking addicts in recovery.