SMSPIRITUALITY—MEDIA
◉ Podcast · low-confidence enrichment

Mirabai Bush on Contemplative Practice in Daily Work

By Mirabai Bush with Krista Tippett · On Being with Krista Tippett

52mReleased 25 Oct 2018Meditation, Awareness
◉ Listen on Apple Podcasts

Mirabai Bush, co-founder of the Center for Contemplative Mind in Society and a longtime collaborator of Ram Dass, describes how contemplative practice migrates into secular workplaces — judges, soldiers, educators, technology companies — and what is preserved and what is altered when meditation crosses out of monastic settings. She helped design Google's Search Inside Yourself program.

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Co-creator of the Center for Contemplative Mind in Society. “There is a calming, quieting, centering practice that leads to insight in every tradition.” Contemplative practice and social change. Mindful emailing. Creative, relational, ritual, cyclical. Mirabai Bush works at an emerging 21st century intersection of industry, social healing, and diverse contemplative practices. Raised Catholic with Joan of Arc as her hero, she is one of the people who brought Buddhism to the West from India in the 1970s. She is called in to work with educators and judges, social activists and soldiers. She helped create Google’s popular employee program, Search Inside Yourself. Mirabai Bush’s life tells a fascinating narrative of our time: the rediscovery of contemplative practices, in many forms and from many traditions, in the secular thick of modern culture. Mirabai Bush co-founded the Center for Contemplative Mind in Society. She is the author of Contemplative Practices in Higher Education and has written two books with Ram Dass: Compassion in Action and Walking Each Other Home: Conversations on Loving and Dying. Find the transcript for this show at onbeing.org.

This theme across the index

Meditation, in other forms.

The same current this episode is working in, followed sideways through the catalogue — across formats, and the word itself.

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Keep following the thread.

One letter every Sunday — what we read this week, and one teaching worth your attention. No tracking.