Wondering what a Dharma Center is or what the difference is between the groups that meet here? Get your questions answered, tour our space, and receive basic mediation instruction on the first Tuesday of every month. All welcome!

Wondering what a Dharma Center is or what the difference is between the groups that meet here? Get your questions answered, tour our space, and receive basic mediation instruction on the first Tuesday of every month. All welcome!

Pamela Weiss joins the Bozeman Insight Community on Thursday, March 21 for an evening on Zen master Dogen’s teaching: the Genjo Koan. Dogen writes “To study Buddhism is to study the self. To study the self is to forget the self.” What does this mean for our everyday lives? Everyone welcome to join for this discussion on the path to liberation. No registration necessary.

The Insight Community’s Series on Dependent Origination, taught by Suzanne Colón, was to begin on Thursday, March 14th but will run April 4 – May 2 instead. Thanks for your patience and understanding.
Thanks, and May you be well!

Pamela Weiss returns to Bozeman for a weekend retreat on Finding Refuge.
The word refuge comes from the Latin, re-fuge, which means to fly back, to return, to come home. So much of our suffering comes from “lookin’ for love in all the wrong places…” We imagine we will find love, safety, refuge out there somewhere. But Buddhist practice teaches us that true refuge is always and already right here. Right where we are, just as we are.
This is not an invitation to apathy or passivity. It is a call to do the difficult, deeply satisfying work of transforming our tangles (reactive habits and patterns) into clear, compassionate action. This is what it means to be a Bodhisattva, a person dedicated to alleviating suffering—ours, others’, the worlds’—and to walk the Bodhisattva Path. It is exactly what our wide, aching world needs now.
Over the course of this weekend, we will focus on the theme of Finding True Refuge, and explore how to untangle our personal and collective tangles within our beautiful, aching world.
Thursday, March 21, 7-8:30 PM: Pamela Weiss will join Bozeman Insight Community to discuss the Genjo Koan (No registration necessary)
Friday, March 22, 7-9 PM: Teachings on Refuge (There is an option for registering only for Friday night)
Saturday, March 23: 9 AM – 4 PM: The Three Jewels
Sunday, March 24: 9 AM – Noon: Closing Thoughts and Full Moon ceremony
Celebrate the spring equinox with members of MindSpace on Tuesday, March 19. We will gather for an evening of meditation and celebrating the turning of the winter into spring. All welcome! No registration necessary!

Designed for meditators with some experience, this class, taught by Suzanne Colón, will begin with the teachings on the Five Aggregates and build up to an understanding of the chain of Dependent Origination – the Buddha’s map for what’s going on in human experience, how we get caught and why we suffer. The series is designed to be sequential but anyone is welcome to attend sporadically or singly as their schedule and interests allow. No registration necessary.

Our second SoundGate offering for the month features Kathleen Karlsen! Kathleen is a mantra practitioner, kirtan leader, composer, and artist focused on the transformative power of the arts. CD). She has three levels of training from the Kirtan Leadership Institute and has led regular kirtans, mantra events, and workshops for the last six years.
Chants will be provided for those who would like to chant in unison — this is an evening where your voice is welcome! No registration necessary. Donations welcome; any funds collected will be split evenly with the guest artist.
More about Kathleen can be found on her website.

This month’s Mindful Creativity class is on Mindful Flower Arranging. Join Erin Strickland on Sunday, March 10 from 1-2:30 PM for a workshop on flower care and maintenance. Learn some simple floral design basics and how to practice mindfulness through the experience of flower arranging. Flowers provided. Please bring shears if you have them and a vase if you want to take your arrangement home. Space is limited; please register here.

Newcomer orientation is your chance to get a BDC tour and receive basic meditation instruction without committing to attending a whole meeting! The orientation happens on the first Tuesday of every month at 5PM. No registration necessary, in person only.

This Dharma Thought is offered by Steve Allison-Bunnell, an ordained lay member of the Plum Village Order of Interbeing and the practice leader of the Joining Rivers Sangha at the Bozeman Dharma Center. This article was originally published in the Bozeman Daily Chronicle on February 10, 2024.
The old cliché, “travel is broadening,” really is true. Long before I knew anything about Buddhist practice, I remember looking at a phone on my first trip to England and thinking, “Wow, there’s more than one way to design a telephone!” But travel only broadens you if you let it. After returning from a European tour, a family friend pronounced, “Those Italians, they’re different.” I had noticed a difference and been intrigued by the possibilities. This friend had seen differences and entrenched his own preferences even more strongly.
Mindfulness is nothing more than noticing things and being aware of our reactions to them. We practice mindfulness first with meditation, since it is often easier to be aware of our own breath and body, and then by extending our awareness to the world around us. The trick to being present, whether traveling to an exotic place or driving to work, is to hold that awareness softly and without reflexive judgement. The Buddha taught that when we can see the world as it is, rather than how we want it to be, our sense of dissatisfaction (“suffering” in classic Buddhist parlance) diminishes.
Travel is the perfect opportunity to cultivate “Beginner’s Mind” — seeing the world in every moment as if for the first time, filled with wonder and delight, and free from preconceptions. Alternatively, if we cling to our habitual expectations, travel will almost certainly violate them and we might as well not have left home.
I recently got the gift to practice awareness and surrender to the moment during a natural history tour to the Caribbean with my son’s school. Literally each second of every day was an invitation to be present and truly see where we were, from coral reefs to tropical rain forests. No two underwater formations were identical, and every tree in the jungle seemed unique. The curiosity and openness of our fellow travelers helped sustain that presence. Knowing that the weather could quickly change our itinerary, we had to be flexible in what we expected. I was grateful that my established practice of mindfulness helped me not worry about what would happen next.
The trick when we come home after reveling in the freedom and novelty of travel is to maintain that expansive attitude even in our familiar surroundings and routines. It’s so easy to fall back into our habitual reactions and stories. And it’s also so easy to think we have to “get away from it all” to be engaged and happy again. The Venerable Thich Nhat Hanh taught that the essence of mindfulness is to be confident that we always have enough to be happy in the present moment. With that in view, we don’t need an exotic trip to see the world afresh.
