Home Events Wednesday Evening Online Teaching & Discussion (YouTube & Zoom)

Wednesday Evening Online Teaching & Discussion (YouTube & Zoom)

YouTube (6 – 6:45)
Tune in with fellow practitioners every Wednesday evening at 6:00 pm PT for a monastic teaching and Q&A.

YouTube Livestream

Zoom (6:45 – 7:30)
Join Ajahn Nisabho or Ajahn Kovilo each Wednesday from 6:45 – 7:30 pm, after the weekly YouTube Livestream Q&A, for the chance to discuss Dhamma, practice, and other questions in a more intimate setting. Join as an active participant or just tune in to listen. We hope to see you!

https://us02web.zoom.us/j/81404374852?pwd=Mm00T0p6cnBDOCthZ0xPckRjTkU1UT09
Meeting ID: 814 0437 4852, Passcode: 018605
Zoom Link

Date

Nov 27 2024

Time

6:00 pm - 7:30 pm

Local Time

  • Timezone: America/New_York
  • Date: Nov 27 2024
  • Time: 9:00 pm - 10:30 pm
YouTube

Location

YouTube
Zoom

Location 2

Zoom
Category

Speakers

  • Ajahn Kovilo
    Ajahn Kovilo

    Ajahn Kovilo is an Ohio-born monk who, having been introduced to meditation through the Goenka tradition, first entered the monastery in 2006. After receiving full ordination from Ajahn Pasanno and Ajahn Amaro at Abhayagiri Monastery in California in 2010, he spent the next decade training at monasteries in the Ajahn Chah tradition in America and Thailand. In 2020, after a year practicing at a Pa Auk Sayadaw monastery, Ajahn Kovilo enrolled at the Dharma Realm Buddhist University (DRBU) to study Pali and to better understand Mahāyāna practices. Having graduated from DRBU in 2024, Ajahn Kovilo has now joined the Clear Mountain community in person.

  • Ajahn Nisabho
    Ajahn Nisabho

    After finishing college in 2012, Ajahn Nisabho left his native Washington to go forth as a Buddhist monk in Thailand. He received full ordination the following spring under Ajahn Anan, a senior disciple of renowned meditation master, Ajahn Chah, and spent the following years training in forest monasteries throughout Thailand, Australia, and the US. While staying with some of the lineage’s most respected teachers, he grew to believe the Thai Forest Tradition’s balance of communal life with solitary forest dwelling, careful adherence to the monastic precepts, and focus on meditation represented a faithful embodiment of the original Buddhist path. Moreover, his time with contemporary masters such as Ajahn Anan, Ajahn Pasanno, and Ajahn Jayasaro, convinced him that such a path could yield great fruit in the heart even amidst the complexities of modern life.

    In 2020, after nearly eight years in robes, Ajahn Nisabho returned to the Northwest hoping to help establish a refuge of Dhamma and practice near Seattle.