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Special Event: The Third Hindrance
AJAHN TIRADHAMMO

  Dealing with Dullness: overcoming sloth and torpor
6:30-8:30 pm @ Rojana Center, Asoke
Monday 21st January


Overview:

Monday 21st January – this talk is the 3rd in a series of talks on each of the 5 Hindrances (a classic Buddhist teaching). Each hindrance is presented separately so you do not need to have been to the previous 2 talks. 

Ajahn Tiradhammo is one of the most senior of the Western Buddhist Monks, having ordained in NE Thailand over 40 years ago. We guarantee he is an engaging public speaker!

  • 6:30-7:00pm gather, refreshments
  • 7-8:00 dharma talk on the third hindrance
  • 8-8:30 Questions

 

This event is free of charge (donations are welcome though)
It is in English only
No need to book in advance, as there is plenty of room (come early for a good seat though)

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About the Topic:

DEALING WITH DULLNESS

OVERCOMING SLOTH AND TORPOR IN MEDITATION AND LIFE

click the image to link to the ebooks

 

 

     The five hindrances are a key meditation teaching directly from the Buddha himself. They hinder good concentration, and are a key model for understanding the meditative mind. 

     Ajahn Tiradhammo put his 40 years expereince into a super book on this topic, released a couple of years ago. You can download it for free in various e-formats via the image to the left.

     The third of the hindrances is sloth and torpor, compared to water that is choked with weeds.

     We already hosted a talk with Ajahn Tridahammo on the first two of the hindrances, sense desire, and aversion; and it will go on YouTube when it has been edited. Each of the five talks in this series is a standalone topic, so you won’t need to have attended previously to keep up. You can download the whole book right now though (see left). It’s been a few years since the book was written, so this Monday there will be a slightly new and fresh take on it.

 

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About Ajahn Tiradhammo:

Ajahn Tiradhammo is one of the most senior monks in the tradition of Ajahn Chah. He became interested in Dhamma in his student years while travelling through Sri Lanka. 

Coming to Thailand and meditating at Wat Umong, he took ordination at Wat Meung Man in Chiang Mai 
with Venerable Tong in 1974.

In 1975 he moved to study with Ajahn Cha at Wat Pa Pong and Wat Pa Nanachat. He went on several 
tudong journeys through the northeast of Thailand and the mountains of Chiang Mai, visiting many famous 
forest meditation masters.

Venerable Tiradhammo was invited to England in 1982 to help with developments there. He spent two years 
at Chithurst Monastery, and three years in charge of Harnham Vihara in Northumberland. In 1988 he helped 
establish Dhammapala Monastery near Bern, Switzerland and also later at its new location in the Bernese 
Alpine village of Kandersteg where he was the senior monk until 2005. In July 2005 he assumed the position 
of senior monk at Bodhinyanarama, Wellington, NZ where he remained as abbot for six and a half years. 
He is currently of no fixed abode and travels widely. His visits to many monasteries and other locations can 
be followed on his blog. http://tiradhammo.blogspot.com.au/ 

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Getting there:

Please follow the map. It is VERY precise. It is easy to find: there are only one or two turns depending on which direction you are coming from. It is an 11 minute walk from Asoke BTS and even closer to Sukhumvit MRT

Go down Sukhumvit 23 to the first four way intersection. Turn right, and then turn right again at the end of the road.

Or just ask the motorcycles inside Sukhumvit 23 – they know the way. Tell them ‘Rojana’  

Rojana-map-version-3

Or if you need more definite pointers:Rojana-arrows

A few tips:

  • Don’t ask locals or taxi drivers the way – they will not know the Rojana Centre, and will send you somewhere else instead. They will all know Sukhumvit 23, so go there and find your own way.
  • Follow the map – plenty of landmarks are shown and it it extremely precise!
  • In Thai the centre is known as Rojanatam 
  • Quite a few other foreigners will be heading there at the same time.

 

Here is the Google Map link, if you prefer this method

Here are the GPS coordinates if you prefer : 13.739356, 100.564748


The little Bangkok Sangha:

Video Channel for the group is here

facebook group is here

Meetup Group is here