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Glossary›Insight Dialogue

Glossary

Insight Dialogue

An interpersonal meditation practice that brings mindfulness, Buddhist wisdom teachings, and contemplative dialogue together to cultivate insight within relationships.

What is Insight Dialogue?

Insight Dialogue is an interpersonal co-meditation practice, where speaking and listening are introduced as meditative practices to facilitate mindfulness through and within the relational field. It brings together meditative awareness (e.g., mindfulness, concentration), the wisdom teachings of the Buddha, and dialogue to support insight into the nature, causes, and release of human suffering. Unlike traditional silent meditation practiced in solitude, Insight Dialogue unfolds between two or more people engaged in structured contemplative exchange, guided by six meditation instructions.

The practice aims to develop mindfulness and other meditative qualities (such as investigation, tranquility, and concentration) in the midst of interpersonal interaction, and to generate insight through meditative dialogue. Insight Dialogue is based in the wisdom teachings of the Buddha and has the same purposes and traditional roots as silent meditation: developing mindfulness, compassion and liberating insight.

Origins & Lineage

Insight Dialogue was developed by Gregory Kramer and described in his book Insight Dialogue. Kramer is the Founding Teacher of the Insight Dialogue Community, has been teaching insight meditation since 1980, and developed the practice of Insight Dialogue, teaching it since 1995, offering retreats in North America, Asia, Europe, and Australia. He has studied with esteemed teachers, including Anagarika Dhammadina, Ven. Balangoda Ananda Maitreya Mahanayaka Thero, Achan Sobin Namto, and Ven. Punnaji Maha Thero.

Gregory recalls coming up with the name “Insight Dialogue” on the way to teach a retreat in the fall of 1994, and the first ever Insight Dialogue retreat was offered at Yokayo Ranch in Ukiah, California. At that first retreat, Kramer introduced some guidelines that he and collaborator Terri O’Fallon had been playing with, but they were very general like “commit to the process” and “share parallel thinking”—nothing like the Insight Dialogue known today, not even the pause. The practice initially focused on paying attention to what’s emergent in what David Bohm called shared consciousness, combining open group dialogue with mindfulness meditation. From that retreat grew an online practice group that for 2 years afterwards was the only form that Insight Dialogue had.

In his book, Kramer explicitly posits Insight Dialogue as a Buddhist Dharma practice, namely an interpersonal form of insight meditation or vipassana, with the discourse on the four foundations of mindfulness, the Satipatthana Sutta, as its central teaching. Gregory Kramer is a Vipassana teacher who, over years, went on several extended silent retreats, and found that it could be challenging to maintain compassionate awareness when he was back with his wife and family, leading him to explore relational meditation practice as a way to include his whole life.

How It’s Practiced

The scaffolding for Insight Dialogue is provided by six meditation instructions: Pause; Relax; Open; Attune to Emergence; Listen Deeply; Speak the Truth. Each guideline calls forth different qualities: Pause calls forth mindfulness; Relax, tranquility and acceptance; Open, relational availability and spaciousness; Trust Emergence, flexibility and letting go; Listen Deeply, receptivity and attunement; and Speak the Truth, integrity and care. (Note: In a January 2019 blog post, Gregory Kramer suggested the new wording “Attune to emergence” for the fourth guideline, which the Insight Dialogue Community website was using by late 2024.)

After a period of silent sitting meditation, people are invited into pairs or larger groups to develop mindfulness and tranquility together, reflecting on present moment experience with guidance from a topic such as change, kindness, death, or doubt. Those practicing meditate in dyads (or groups), using these guidelines to support meditation in dialogue, and the meditators are provided with a contemplation topic or question designed to help them explore fundamental aspects of being human and being in relationship.

Contemplation topics range from direct noting of sensory experience (e.g., pleasant and unpleasant sensations in the body) to more content-rich teachings such as the three characteristics (suffering, impermanence, and not-self) or the “divine abodes” of lovingkindness, compassion, sympathetic joy and equanimity—explored not in the abstract, but in present moment experience.

Insight Dialogue Today

Insight Dialogue is taught and practiced in a variety of contexts—residential retreats, daylong workshops, community practice groups, and online via videoconference. Practice groups have formed globally, and the Insight Dialogue Community serves as an international hub for teachers and practitioners. Gregory Kramer has authored multiple books including Insight Dialogue: The Interpersonal Path to Freedom (Shambhala), Meditating Together, Speaking from Silence, Dharma Contemplation, and A Whole Life Path. Seekers can find retreats led by authorized teachers, attend online introductory programs, or join peer-led practice groups.

Although Insight Dialogue is grounded in the Buddha’s early teachings (Pāli Canon) and the practice of Insight or Vipassanā meditation, people of all faiths and backgrounds are welcome and find benefit in the practice.

Common Misconceptions

Insight Dialogue is not a communication workshop—it’s not teaching language techniques or communication patterns, but rather a direct experience of being embodied in one’s own life and then connecting with another human being from a place of being centered and quiet. Insight Dialogue is not a form of psychotherapy nor is it a technique intended to improve communication or relationship skills; these benefits arise naturally on the path towards human maturity and awakening—fundamentally, Insight Dialogue is a meditation practice aimed at freeing the heart-mind.

While the practice unfolds in conversation, it differs fundamentally from therapeutic dyads, facilitated dialogue processes, or conflict-resolution frameworks. The aim is not better relationships per se, but liberation—the same goal as solitary vipassana practice. Insights may improve relational dynamics, but this is a byproduct rather than the primary intention.

How to Begin

Prospective practitioners should first establish a foundation in basic mindfulness or silent meditation. You can learn more about Insight Dialogue and find classes, retreats, and practice groups through Insight Dialogue Community website at insightdialogue.org. Gregory Kramer’s book Insight Dialogue: The Interpersonal Path to Freedom (Shambhala, 2007) offers a comprehensive introduction to the practice, its philosophical underpinnings in the Four Noble Truths, and detailed guidance on each of the six guidelines.

Many practitioners begin by attending an introductory workshop or multi-day retreat, where teachers provide instruction, model the practice, and offer support as meditators navigate the unfamiliar terrain of interpersonal meditation. Individuals interested in starting a peer-led practice group following participation in an Insight Dialogue retreat or the online Introduction to Insight Dialogue program can request a copy of the Insight Dialogue Peer Group Practice Leaders Handbook.

Related terms

vipassanamindfulnessbuddhist meditationfour noble truthssanghacontemplative practice
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