Thich Nhat Hanh answers questions during a retreat in Plum Village (May, 2014).
07:56 min
CLEAR ALL
Dr. Fred Luskin is director of the Stanford Forgiveness Project. He tells Bay Area Focus host Michelle Griego how he is helping people discover the power of healing though forgiveness and sound.
Fred Luskin explains why gratitude and compassion help people look beyond themselves to enable forgiveness.
Fred Luskin discusses how forgiveness is a choice in every case of loss, and that if forgiveness is chosen, openness will allow you to view life more positively.
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This video series is a dialogue between Dr. Fred Luskin, who holds a PhD in Counseling and Health Psychology from Stanford University, where he served as director of the Stanford Forgiveness Project, and Rev. Lyndon Harris, a chaplain at St. Pauls Chapel in lower Manhattan, next to Ground Zero.
“I wrote this book not sure I could follow the road to character, but I wanted at least to know what the road looks like and how other people have trodden it.
On one awful night in 1995, Ples Felix's 14-year-old grandson murdered Azim Khamisa's son in a gang initiation fueled by drugs, alcohol and a false sense of belonging.
Oprah knows one thing for sure about anger: If you allow the past to define your present, you'll never get to live the life you were meant to live.
In this video Sadhguru has given an insight on forgiveness and how it hurt us more than the other person.
After 25 years and more than 30,000 guests, it was one man's definition of forgiveness that changed Oprah's life. Watch Oprah's aha! moment and listen to her reflect on what it truly means to forgive.
What is forgiveness? Is it different from compassion? Is it different from the Buddhist concept of Bodhicitta? In this live question Q&A Eckhart illuminates the nature of forgiveness, reminding us of the realm wherein it becomes unnecessary.