Sanghadhara reflects on Buddha Day through the Buddha’s resolve to sit on the vajrasana beneath the Bodhi tree until he broke through conditioned existence and awoke. The talk explores vajrasana as the “diamond throne,” drawing on an audio excerpt from Sangharakshita to unfold its meaning as the central point of the cosmos: the spiritual axis where the Buddha awakens, and where the symbolism of the vajra, the tree of life, and the Bodhi tree all meet. From there, the talk evokes Buddhist cosmology, the six elements, and the emergence of life and consciousness as part of a vast evolutionary movement that culminates in the possibility of awakening.
The second half of the talk reflects on what this awakening reveals about selfhood, individuality, and reality itself. Sanghadhara describes the human journey as one of necessary individuation that can harden into self-centredness, and contrasts this with the Buddha’s insight into relationality, flow, and non-separateness. In this reading, metta is not presented as sentiment but as the awakened response to reality’s intrinsically relational nature, while Mara becomes a symbol not simply of death but of fixation, contraction, and resistance to growth. The talk closes by presenting the Buddha’s enlightenment as the opening of a door to the deathless: a revolution of consciousness that makes freedom, love, and truthful relationship possible.