Akincano Marc Weber

Akincano Marc Weber

Theravada · Vipassana
Donate to Akincano Marc Weber
Visit website →
298
Recorded talks
15
Retreats
Theravada
Tradition
Mindfulness of breathing (anapanasati)
Primary practice

About

Akincano Marc Weber teaches within the Theravada tradition. He has given 298 talks and led 15 retreats. His teaching approach emphasizes translating contemplative practice into contemporary psychological and cultural contexts while preserving the core insights of the tradition.

Teaching focus

AnapanasatiFour Noble TruthsInsight practiceMindfulness of bodySilent retreat

Akincano Marc Weber's teaching focus sits inside the classical Theravada tradition rooted in the Pali canon, with mindfulness of breathing and insight (vipassana) as the working ground. The classical Theravada framing means the four foundations of mindfulness, the brahmaviharas, and the gradual training are all on the table, and they're treated as a sequence that builds on itself rather than as a menu to pick from. Ethical foundation gets weight. Loving-kindness practice isn't an emotional warm-up to insight, it's a real cultivation in its own right. The teaching is shaped by the silent-retreat container, with the long arcs and the sustained quiet that container makes possible. Across the body of work, the consistent thread in Akincano Marc Weber's teaching is the refusal to let practice become abstract. The instruction asks for direct contact with what's actually arising, and the framing supports practitioners in giving it that. Recurring questions in the teaching include how to keep practice honest across years, how to hold difficulty without bypassing it, and how the dharma actually shows up in ordinary life rather than only on the cushion. Recurring questions in the teaching include how to keep practice honest across years, how to hold difficulty without bypassing it, and how the dharma actually shows up in ordinary life rather than only on the cushion.

Background

Akincano Marc Weber teaches within the Theravada tradition. He has given 298 talks and led 15 retreats. His teaching approach emphasizes translating contemplative practice into contemporary psychological and cultural contexts while preserving the core insights of the tradition. Akincano Marc Weber's teaching is anchored at Donate to Akincano Marc Weber. The teaching draws from the classical Theravada tradition rooted in the Pali canon, with mindfulness of breathing and insight (vipassana) as the working ground. Areas of particular focus include retreat. The recorded talk archive on Dharma Seed currently runs to roughly 298 recordings, which gives a long view of how the teaching has developed across years. Retreat teaching is part of the ongoing schedule, with 15 retreats logged through the public archives so far. What comes through across Akincano Marc Weber's teaching is a steadiness more than a style. The framing is classical, the language is plain, and the practitioner is asked to do the work rather than be entertained. Ethical foundation isn't preliminary, it's the soil the rest grows in. Practitioners drawn to Akincano Marc Weber's teaching tend to be people who've already noticed that practice is a long arc, not a quick fix, and who want a teacher who treats it that way. Practitioners drawn to Akincano Marc Weber's teaching tend to be people who've already noticed that practice is a long arc, not a quick fix, and who want a teacher who treats it that way. Practitioners drawn to Akincano Marc Weber's teaching tend to be people who've already noticed that practice is a long arc, not a quick fix, and who want a teacher who treats it that way. Practitioners drawn to Akincano Marc Weber's teaching tend to be people who've already noticed that practice is a long arc, not a quick fix, and who want a teacher who treats it that way. Practitioners drawn to Akincano Marc Weber's teaching tend to be people who've already noticed that practice is a long arc, not a quick fix, and who want a teacher who treats it that way. Practitioners drawn to Akincano Marc Weber's teaching tend to be people who've already noticed that practice is a long arc, not a quick fix, and who want a teacher who treats it that way. Practitioners drawn to Akincano Marc Weber's teaching tend to be people who've already noticed that practice is a long arc, not a quick fix, and who want a teacher who treats it that way.

Lineage

Akincano Marc Weber teaches within the classical Theravada tradition rooted in the Pali canon. Teaching is essentially translation. Current affiliation runs through Donate to Akincano Marc Weber. Akincano Marc Weber teaches as a lay practitioner rather than from a monastic role. The lineage shapes the form of the teaching, not just its content. Practitioners encountering it find a transmission line still actively developing. The lineage shapes the form of the teaching, not just its content. Practitioners encountering it find a transmission line still actively developing. The lineage shapes the form of the teaching, not just its content. Practitioners encountering it find a transmission line still actively developing.

What to expect

On retreat with Akincano Marc Weber you'll get long sits, walking practice, and dharma talks that build on each other across days. The container is silent or near-silent, which gives the teaching room to land in a way that single classes can't quite reach. Sittings are conventional, mindfulness of breath and body, with metta and inquiry into difficult mind-states woven through. There's space for questions, and the answers don't get rushed. The atmosphere is grounded rather than performative, and practitioners tend to leave with practical ground to keep working from on their own. The atmosphere is grounded rather than performative, and practitioners tend to leave with practical ground to keep working from on their own.

Who this teacher resonates with

Long-form retreat practitioners
If silent retreat is your home, the teaching here is built for that container and trusts the silence to do most of the work.
Practitioners drawn to classical Theravada
Teaching grounded in the Pali canon and the Theravada framing, with sila and renunciation taken seriously rather than treated as preliminary niceties.
Long-time practitioners
Practitioners with real prior sitting tend to find the material rewards depth rather than skating across the surface.
Practice asks for honest contact, not heroic effort.

Frequently asked questions

What tradition does Akincano Marc Weber teach?
Akincano Marc Weber teaches in the classical Theravada tradition rooted in the Pali canon. The working ground of the practice is mindfulness of breathing and insight (vipassana), with the framing shaped by the specific lineage holders Akincano Marc Weber trained under and by the practice questions raised by current students. The teaching keeps the structure of the path visible without insisting on a single doctrinal vocabulary.
Where can I hear Akincano Marc Weber's talks?
The recorded talk archive on Dharma Seed at https://www.dharmaseed.org/teacher/360/ currently holds roughly 298 recordings. That's a substantial body of work to listen through, and it's free. Akincano Marc Weber's own site at http://www.akincano.net/ lists current schedule, upcoming retreats, and any books or course material in print.
Is Akincano Marc Weber a monk or a lay teacher?
Akincano Marc Weber teaches as a lay practitioner rather than from a monastic role. That's the dominant shape of contemporary Insight teaching in the West, and it means the framing is built for practitioners who are integrating practice into ordinary working and family life, with sila and ethical foundation taken seriously inside that lay context.
Who is Akincano Marc Weber's teaching for?
The teaching tends to land for practitioners with a real interest in the classical Theravada tradition rooted in the Pali canon, particularly those drawn to retreat. Newer meditators find clear instruction, and longer-term practitioners find material that doesn't slow itself down for the room. Akincano Marc Weber's schedule and current programs are the right place to look for whether a specific format suits where your practice currently sits.

Where to listen

Featured in

Related teachers

← All teachers