Schedule
All of the materials for the course are organized into ten themes/modules on the course website.
Below is an outline of the course. You’ll find summaries of the core concepts and links to suggested media there.
Weekly Practices
My goal is to keep the work you have to do each week to, at most, 2 hours. Though the specific practices, journaling prompts, reflection assignments, and readings will vary, this is a rough outline of our weekly workload.
Journaling and Other Reflection Assignments (20 - 30 minutes)
Each week, you’ll reflect on the readings, class discussions, and - most importantly - your experiences with the contemplative practices for that week.Mindful Pauses (1 minute x 5 times/week)
Throughout the week, pause for one minute. Look away from your screen or book, and simply take note of what that moment is like. What are you thinking? What’s your general mood? Are you rushing into the next moment? Dwelling on a past experience? Feeling stressed? Joyful? Tired? What do you notice in your environment?Quickly jot down your observations.
Meditation + Rapid Logging (At least 5mins x 4 times/week = 20+ mins)
Each week we’ll add a new meditation practice. You should practice the new one at least once outside of class, and then feel free to mix and match any of the practices from previous weeks. You don’t need to do more than five minutes at a time, but I encourage you to try sitting longer. I will be holding 30-minutes Zoom sessions once a week to help support your practice.Contemplations + Reflections (20 - 30 minutes)
To complement our meditation practice, we’ll have specific contemplations and reflections each week. Because these may be very personal in nature, I will make submission for these optional. We’ll discuss these in class, but you can be as specific as is comfortable when reporting on your experiences and findings.Reading/Watching/Listening (15 - 30 minutes)
Most of the reading materials and other media are suggested, but not required. On the course website, I’ll provide summaries for the core ideas that week, which shouldn’t take more than 10 - 15 minutes. Beyond that, you can read, watch, or listen to anything that interests you. In other words, don’t feel like you have to consume all the suggested media.
Week 1: Introduction, Motivation, and Beginner's Mind
Core Ideas + Further Reading
- The laboratory of self-inquiry
- Socrates origin story and overcoming self-deception
- Forms of self-deception
- The dialectic of meditation and contemplation
- Beginner’s mind
In-Class Activities
- The I AM Exercise
- The Nine Dot Problem
- Six Anchors Meditation
- The Well Meditation
Home Practices
- Mindful Eating (optional challenge): Eat slowly and mindfully without any distractions (no phone, laptop, book, etc.). Bring your whole self to the meal.
- Novel observations of everyday experiences.
- Journal: Spend 15 - 20 minutes summarizing your experience with the practices listed above as well as any reflections on any of the readings and/or class discussions.
Week 2: Having Mode vs Being Mode
Core Ideas + Further Reading
- Erich Fromm on Having vs Being
- Maslow on Deficiency vs Being
- Healthy Authenticity Scale
In-Class Activities
- Revisiting the I AM exercise
- Reflection on B-Needs and D-Needs
- Developing a list or map of B-Love vs D-Love
- Discussion of having vs being in education and vocation
Home Practices
- Meditation: Anchor to Open Awareness Practice
- Listen to or read any of the suggested reading from this week.
- Field Notes on Having vs Being/B-Needs vs D-Needs: Throughout the week, during your mindful pauses, take note of whether you’re in having mode or being mode or whether you’re in the midst of satisfying a having need or deficiency need.
- Journal: Take 15 - 20 minutes to reflect on your meditation, your having/being or deficiency/being observations, as well as any reflections on any of the readings and/or class discussions.
Week 3: Knowledge
Core Ideas + Further Reading
- The Allegory of the Cave
- Beyond propositional knowledge
- Qualia + Consciousness
- Self-Knowledge
In-Class Activities
- Meditation on thoughts
- Koan practice
- Discussions
- Can we have a beginner’s mind about consciousness, the nature of mind, and self-knowledge?
- How do you experience your own thoughts? What qualities do they have independent of the contents of the thoughts themselves?
- What kind(s) of knowledge results form meditation/contemplation?
Home Practice
- Meditation on thoughts
- Koan practice
- Journal
- Reflect on knowledge that has changed or shaped you. This could be knowledge in any form or from any source - e.g, a book, a movie, a new skill, a conversation, a quote, a poem, etc.
- Based on the meditations we’ve done so far, how would you characterize the form(s) of knowledge that mediation affords?
Week 4: The Conversational Nature of Reality
Core Ideas + Further Reading
- David Whyte’s Notion of the Conversational Nature of Reality
- Thich Nhat Hanh on Interbeing
In-Class Activities
- Mindful communication practice
- Interbeing Contemplation
- Social-interbeing Contemplation + Map
Home Practices
- Mindful Communication Growth Challenge: Do one of the two “growth challenges” from Scott Barry Kauffman’s Transcend.
- #4 Grow together, cultivate a secure rrelationship
- Social-Interbeing Contemplation: Expand on your social-interbeing map from class.
- Choose your own meditation: In addition to the mindful communication exercise, practice any meditation you like for at least five minutes two or more times this week.
- Journal: Reflect on your experiences with mindful communication and your social-interbeing map. Consider applying the frameworks of attachment theory and the key ideas form the longest running study on happiness.
Week 5: Values + Virtues
Core Ideas + Further Reading
- Aristotle’s Golden Mean
- The Four Immeasurable Abodes w/ near and far enemies
In-Class Activities
- Caring Moment Practice
- Lovingkindness practice
- Identifying core values
- Discussion: Forms of knowledge, wisdom, interbeing, and virtue
Home Practices
- Caring moment practice
- Lovingkindness practice
- Identifying core values: expand on your work in class
- Journal: Reflect on you core values and the compassion practices we did this week. For each of your core values, identify two or three ways that you enact (or hope to enact) those values in your life.
Week 6: Wonder + Awe
Core Ideas + Further Reading
- Peak experiences
- Beginner’s mind
- Hermann Hesse and Goethe on wonder
In-Class Activities
- Discussion of wonder, awe, and peak experiences
- Simple meditation on the breath
- Characterizing the conditions for wonder and awe to arise
Home Practices
- Wonder + awe log: Throughout the week, rapid log any moments in which you find yourself in a state of wonder or awe. What were the > conditions? How did it feel in your body? What emotions and thought came up (if any)?
- Forrest Bathing: Try to find time to spend in nature (to whatever extent this is possible for you this week). Keep your phone away, > and simply spend some undistracted time with nature. Take some field notes of you experience.
- Journal: How do you experience wonder and awe? What are some of the most awe-inspired moments in your life? What are the conditions for wonder and awe to arise? How do wonder/awe experiences relate to meditation/mindfulness for you?
Week 7: Resistance, Liberation, and Creativity
Core Ideas + Further Reading
- Steven Pressfield’s idea of resistance
- What is inner-freedom?
- Flow and wuwei
- The inner critic and internal family systems
In-Class Activities
- Free-writing
- Reflecting on personal forms of resistance
- Letting be meditation
Home Practices
- Free-writing/morning pages: Practice free writing or morning pages for 5 - 10 minutes at a time at least twice.
- Letting be meditation: practice for at least five minutes three or more times this week. Rapid log your experience right after each > time.
- Journal: Reflect on your experiences with free-writing and the letting be meditation.
Week 8: Purpose
Core Ideas + Further Reading
- Ikigai
- Goal hierarchy of personal strivings
- Motivational quality continuum
In-Class Activities
- Ikigai Activity
- Analyzing Ikigai Map through Having-Being Lens
- Self-Inquiry Practices
- Discussion: How do all of the previous themes fit into your conception of purpose in life?
Home Practices
- Ikigai: Complete and expand on ikigai activity from class
- Meditation: Inquiry practices
- Journal: Reflect on your ikigai diagram and analyze your map based on the having-being framework, your values assessment, and any other pervious activities.
Week 9: Meaning
Core Ideas + Further Reading
- The meaning crisis
- Meaning as mattering, purpose, and coherence
In-Class Activities
- Revisiting the well meditation
- Revisiting the I AM exercise
- Sketching out a personal ecology of practices
- Designing your personal meaning map (mattering + purpose + coherence)
Home Practices
- Meditation: Any meditation from the term, at least five minutes at a time, three or more times this week.
- Complete your meaning map
- Work on your sketch of a personal ecology of practices
- Journal: Reflect on which practices, ideas, and activities resonated the most for you.
Week 10: Closing Thoughts + Discussions
Core Ideas + Further Reading
- Whatever you bring to class
- Backwards-design
- Lifestyle- and value-based vocation planning
In-Class Activities
- One more meditation session together
- Sharing our personal ecologies of practice
- Backwards-design for lifestyle- and value-based vocation planning
Home Practices
- Meditation: Whatever you choose
- Journal: Reflect on what you learned about yourself this term and how it might shape your life going forward.
- Final Project: Complete your term-long work by sketching a plan for living a life that accords with your values, conception of meaning, ikigai map, social interbeing map, and anything else you found valuable this term.