Lesson 1
What Is Sati? Establishing Mindfulness Again And Again
Mindfulness is not something that stays with us automatically. It is something we intentionally establish, lose, and gently re-establish throughout the day. In this opening lesson, you'll explore what the Pāli word sati really means and why remembering to return is at the heart of mindfulness practice. The guided meditation invites you to experience this process directly, using the body as an anchor for awareness.
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Lesson 2
Where Mindfulness Is Established: The Four Foundations
The Four Foundations of Mindfulness provide a practical framework for understanding experience from moment to moment. In this lesson, you'll explore the Four Foundations of Mindfulness: body, feeling tone, mind, and patterns. Rather than thinking of them as separate practices, you'll discover how they work together as four ways of understanding the same moment of experience. This framework will guide the rest of the course, helping you recognize experience with increasing clarity in both meditation and daily life.
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Lesson 3
Mindfulness Of Breathing: The Breath As An Anchor
The breath is one of the most accessible anchors for mindfulness, but it is not something we need to control or improve. In this lesson, you'll explore how mindfulness of breathing differs from breathwork, learning to use the breath as a way of knowing the body more directly rather than trying to create a particular state. The guided meditation invites you to experience the breath as a steady place to return, again and again.
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Lesson 4
Mindfulness In Motion: Posture, Movement, And Daily Life Awareness
Mindfulness doesn't end when formal meditation is over. In this lesson, you'll explore how posture, movement, and everyday activities can become opportunities to cultivate awareness throughout the day. By noticing the body in motion and the intentions that often arise before action, you'll discover how mindfulness can become part of the way you live, not just something you practice while sitting. The guided meditation invites you to bring this same awareness into movement with curiosity and ease.
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Lesson 5
Anatomy And Mindfulness: Meeting The Body More Honestly
Our bodies are deeply personal, but they are more than appearance, identity, or image. In this lesson, you'll explore how contemplating the body's anatomy can help loosen habits of comparison, attachment, and self-judgment without rejecting or devaluing the body. By seeing the body as a collection of living parts and changing processes, you'll begin to relate to it with greater honesty, care, and freedom. The guided meditation offers an opportunity to experience this shift directly.
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Lesson 6
Elements Of The Body: Meeting Experience As Changing Qualities
The body is more than a solid object we carry through life. In this lesson, you'll explore the body as a changing field of direct experience through qualities such as solidity, flow, temperature, and movement. By learning to notice these qualities as they arise and change, you'll begin to relate to the body with greater curiosity and less identification, preparing the way for deeper insight into impermanence. The guided meditation invites you to experience these changing qualities for yourself.
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Lesson 7
Death, Impermanence, And The Fragility Of Life
Contemplating death is not about turning away from life. It is about seeing more clearly the preciousness and impermanence of our existence. In this lesson, you'll explore how reflecting on the body's fragility naturally follows the previous practices of mindfulness of the body, inviting greater appreciation, honesty, and care for this moment of life. The guided meditation offers a gentle and grounded way to explore this ancient practice with compassion and openness.
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Lesson 8
Feeling Tone: Pleasant, Unpleasant, And Neutral
Every experience begins to "land" before it becomes an emotion, reaction, or story. In this lesson, you'll explore feeling tone, the immediate sense of experience as pleasant, unpleasant, or neutral, and discover how this subtle layer shapes our responses to the world around us. Building on the foundation of mindfulness of the body, the guided meditation helps you recognize these early movements of experience with greater clarity and curiosity.
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Lesson 9
The Second Arrow: What The Mind Adds To Experience
Pain and difficulty are part of being human, but much of our suffering comes from the layers the mind adds afterward. In this lesson, you'll explore the difference between the unavoidable challenges of life and the reactions, judgments, and stories that can follow them. Building on the practice of recognizing feeling tone, the guided meditation helps you notice these patterns with greater kindness and awareness, creating space for wiser responses instead of automatic reactions.
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Lesson 10
Knowing The Mind: What Kind Of Mind Is Here?
Our thoughts and emotions can feel so immediate that we easily mistake them for who we are. In this lesson, you'll explore mindfulness of the mind by learning to recognize different states of mind with curiosity rather than identification. As you discover that a mind state is something you can know rather than something you have to become, the guided meditation helps cultivate greater spaciousness, clarity, and freedom in your experience.
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Lesson 11
The Five Hindrances: What Pulls The Mind Off Center?
The hindrances are not signs that your practice is failing. They are recurring patterns that every human mind experiences. In this lesson, you'll explore the five hindrances of wanting, resistance, dullness, restlessness, and doubt, learning to recognize them with curiosity rather than judgment. The guided meditation invites you to observe these patterns as they arise, creating the foundation for responding with greater balance instead of reacting automatically.
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Lesson 12
The Seven Awakening Factors: Qualities That Help The Mind Wake Up
The awakening factors are not achievements or special states to attain. They are supportive qualities that help the mind become clearer, steadier, and more balanced over time. In this lesson, you'll explore the seven awakening factors as practical guides for recognizing and cultivating what supports mindfulness in everyday life. The guided meditation invites you to notice which of these qualities are already present and which may gently be encouraged.
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Lesson 13
Finding Balance: Working With Hindrances And Awakening Factors Together
Mindfulness is not about applying the same response to every situation. It is about recognizing what the mind needs in this moment. In this lesson, you'll bring together the hindrances and awakening factors, exploring how they work as a dynamic balancing system rather than two separate lists. The guided meditation helps you recognize what is pulling the mind off balance and what qualities may gently support greater steadiness, clarity, and ease.
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Lesson 14
Dwelling Independently Without Clinging: The Heart Of Satipaṭṭhāna Practice
The practices you've explored throughout this course all point toward one central invitation: relating to experience without needing to cling to it or push it away. In this lesson, you'll discover how "dwelling independently without clinging" is not an abstract idea, but a practical way of meeting life with greater freedom, wisdom, and care. The guided meditation invites you to explore what it feels like to know experience without turning it into your identity or something you must control.
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Lesson 15
The CARE Framework: Bringing Mindfulness Into Daily Life
The Four Foundations of Mindfulness are not meant to stay on the meditation cushion. In this final lesson, you'll bring the entire course together through the CARE framework, a simple way of remembering how to meet everyday experience with mindfulness, clarity, and balance. Rather than adding something new, CARE helps you carry the practices you've already explored into conversations, challenges, relationships, and ordinary moments of daily life. The guided meditation offers a gentle integration of the whole journey, inviting you to return to these practices again and again.
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