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In this grounded and intimate conversation, Devon Hase reflects on Dharma not as abstraction, but as lived responsibility—something enacted through relationship, ritual, and daily attention.
Rather than positioning practice as something separate from ordinary life, Devon speaks to the ways discipline, devotion, and meaning emerge through showing up consistently: for community, for grief, for inner listening, and for the world as it is. The conversation explores how ritual functions as a technology of care, how practice matures over time, and why remembering why we practice is as important as how.
This episode invites listeners into a quieter understanding of Dharma—one rooted in embodiment, humility, and participation—where practice becomes less about self-improvement and more about belonging to something larger than oneself.
By Tergar Institute5
1818 ratings
In this grounded and intimate conversation, Devon Hase reflects on Dharma not as abstraction, but as lived responsibility—something enacted through relationship, ritual, and daily attention.
Rather than positioning practice as something separate from ordinary life, Devon speaks to the ways discipline, devotion, and meaning emerge through showing up consistently: for community, for grief, for inner listening, and for the world as it is. The conversation explores how ritual functions as a technology of care, how practice matures over time, and why remembering why we practice is as important as how.
This episode invites listeners into a quieter understanding of Dharma—one rooted in embodiment, humility, and participation—where practice becomes less about self-improvement and more about belonging to something larger than oneself.

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