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Home Retreat Essentials

Home Retreat differs in great magnitude from most regular home meditation practice. Many very sincere yogis are able to meditate just once or twice a day because one’s focus is primarily geared towards managing the necessities of daily life. Over time, meditation practice becomes a second-tier priority and one’s habits, preferences and desires increasingly go unobserved, further reconditioning and deepening the blindness of those same habits and patterns.
During Home Retreat the yogi switches those priorities for a prescribed amount of time making the meditation practice the priority and everyday life the practice field. The focus changes from allowing normal habits and patterns of daily life to overcome the intention towards attention, and instead switching the intention into making meditation and reflective living the priority. This switch in focus offers increased opportunities to de-condition and reorient the mind/heart from the habit and pattern of forgetting, which naturally creeps into one’s mind and converts the same daily life conditions into a proactive, wholesome effort.
From Lincoln Pk
Continuous attention to our meditative goals will support the householding yogi’s momentum towards success. Continuous attention leads to patterns of longer periods of attention, and conversely, periods of non-attention lead to more periods of inattention.

Investigation: (dhamma-vicaya): 1. Investigation (intention). The Noble Eightfold Path, Bhikkhu Bodhi. Chapter Three. 2. ‘The Way of Mindfulness,’ Soma Thera. Chapter: The Factors of Enlightenment. 3. Investigation is one of the 4 Roads to Power and one of the 4 Predominants of Truth: dhamma-vicaya, is one the 7 Factors of Enlightenment. Buddhist Dictionary, Nyanatiloka.

Concentration (samādhi): lit: ‘the (mental) state of being firmly fixed, is the fixing of the mind on a single object. Buddhist Dictionary, Nyanatiloka. 2. The Noble Eightfold Path, Bhikkhu Bodhi. Chapter Eight. Right Concentration (sammā-samādhi).

Effort/Right Effort: (sammā-vāyāma): 1. (Pali: sammappadhāna; is an integral part of the Buddhist path to Enlightenment. Built on the insightful recognition of the arising and non-arising of various mental qualities over time and of our ability to mindfully intervene in these ephemeral qualities, the Four Right Exertions encourage the relinquishment of harmful mental qualities and the nurturing of beneficial mental qualities. 2. SN 45.8 Maggasaṃyutta; Connected Discourses on the Path. 3. The Noble Eightfold Path: Way to the End of Suffering.’ ‘Sammā-vāyāma,’ Chapter Four. Bhikkhu Bodhi.

Patience (kanti): 1. Forbearance is one of the 10 Perfections (pārami). Buddhist Dictionary. Nyanatiloka. 2. Patience is more than forbearance. Patience is a state of mind that allows forgiveness and empathy to arise. It is a state of equipoise in the face of either pleasant or unpleasant. allan cooper. 3. ‘Patience is mentioned immediately after energy in the list of paramis. (a) because patience is perfected by energy, as it is said: “The energetic man, by arousing his energy, overcomes the suffering imposed by beings and formations.” ‘The Treatise on the Paramis’, Acaiya Dhammapala.

Wholesome(ness) (kusala): 1. And what is the wholesome? Abstention from the destruction of life is wholesome; abstention from taking what is not given is wholesome; abstention from sexual misconduct is wholesome; abstention from false speech is wholesome; abstention from divisive speech is wholesome; abstention from harsh speech is wholesome; abstention from idle chatter is wholesome… and what is the root of the wholesome? Non-greed is a root of the wholesome; non-hatred is a root of the wholesome; non-delusion is a root of the wholesome. — from MN9, translated by Bhikkhu Bodhi. 2. Wholesomeness is the binding agent for all spiritual growth. Meditative wisdom cannot be realized without it being rooted in wholesomeness. Alan Cooper.

The Noble Eightfold Path 1. (Pali: ariyo aṭṭhaṅgiko maggo) is an early summary of the path of Buddhist practices leading to liberation from samsara, the painful cycle of rebirth. The Eightfold Path consists of eight practices: right view, right resolve, right speech, right conduct, right livelihood, right effort, right mindfulness, and right concentration. The Noble Eightfold Path is one of the principal teachings of Theravada Buddhism, taught to lead to Arhatship. In the Theravada tradition, this path is also summarized as sila (morality), samadhi (meditation) and panna (insight). Wikipedia.  2. The core teachings of Buddhist philosophy and the ‘how to’ foundation for all Buddhist meditative practices. allan cooper. 3. Please consult: The Noble Eightfold Path; Way to the End of Suffering, Bhikkhu Bodhi.

Abbreviations in footnotes: AN: Aṅguttara Nikāya, DN: Dingha Nikāya, MN: Majjhima Nikāya, SN: Saṃyutta Nikāya

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