For very occasional dharma reflections & announcements, join my mailing list

IRC.jpg

We conceal it from ourselves in vain – we must always love something.

- Blaise Pascal

 

Public Events


Buddhist Psychology Training

Online with Spirit Rock | January 2025 through May 2025 | Registration open

New Weekly Group

Wednesdays with Matthew | IMC YouTube, 7:30pm - 8:15pm PT

Get Out the Vote

Letter Writing to Swing States with Oren Jay Sofer (I’ll regularly attend or host) | Details sent via email after you add your name

In-Person Retreats

Retreat in Winston-Salem NC | Jan 28-31

Ethics and Love in Interpersonal Life | April 16-20 | Big Bear Retreat Center in Collaboration with Insight Retreat Center | Dana-based | With 6 online weekly follow-up sessions

Online Option for Ethics and Love in Interpersonal Life | April 16-20 | Dana-based | With 6 online weekly follow-up sessions


Daylong Retreats

Daylong Retreat | Insight Meditation Center | December 14 - 9am - 4:00pm PT

 

Matthew Brensilver, MSW, PhD

teaches retreats at the Insight Retreat Center, Spirit Rock and other Buddhist centers.

He was previously program director for Mindful Schools and for more than a decade, was a core teacher at Against the Stream Buddhist Meditation Society. Matthew worked as a clinical social worker, serving severely and persistently mentally ill adults and adolescents. He subsequently earned a PhD from the Dworak-Peck School of Social Work at USC where he was a Provost’s Fellow. His dissertation examined the mechanisms of risk and resilience in maltreated adolescents in a large, longitudinal study in South Los Angeles.

Before committing to teach meditation full-time, he spent years doing research on addiction pharmacotherapy at the UCLA Center for Behavioral and Addiction Medicine. Each summer, he lectures at UCLA’s Mindful Awareness Research Center on the intersections between mindfulness, science and psychotherapy. He serves on the Board of Directors at Spirit Rock.

Matthew is the co-author of two books about meditation during adolescence and continues to be interested in the unfolding dialogue between Buddhism and science. He is grateful for many teachers, most especially Shinzen Young, Michele McDonald, Ajahn Sucitto and Gil Fronsdal. Matthew loves the dharma, and other stuff too.

J-Tree.jpeg
Late night teen retreat.jpeg