The Book of Space
The Tibetan Book of the Dead is based on the fundamental principle of birth and death recurring constantly in this life. One could refer to
The Tibetan Book of the Dead is based on the fundamental principle of birth and death recurring constantly in this life. One could refer to
If you can afford to be what you are, then that automatically means you could receive others as your guests. Because the ground your guests
Really, you can afford to be what you are! You may think that you’re alone and nobody’s with you. But that in itself is not
You don’t have to delay yourself between thinking and doing things. Rather, you need the fundamental understanding that, to start with, what you’re doing is
If we are really honest with ourselves, if we allow space for ourselves, we automatically will know that the subtlety of self-hypocrisy is always there,
On the path of dharma, a person may be convinced that they have gained something which they actually haven’t gained. And if you talk to
Becoming a warrior means that we can look directly at ourselves, see the nature of our cowardly mind, and step out of it. We can
Warriorship is innate in human beings. Therefore, the way to become a warrior– or the warrior’s path — is to see who and what we
In Tibetan culture, the principle of warriorship stands on its own. By warriorship here, we are not particularly talking about the skills necessary to wage
We have created a world that is bittersweet. Things are amusing but, at the same time, not so amusing. Sometimes things seem terribly funny but,
The CTR Quote of the Week is coming to you from the Chogyam Trungpa Institute at Naropa University. The compiler of the quotes and the moderator of the list is Carolyn Gimian.
All material is used by permission of Diana J. Mukpo.
Photo of Chogyam Trungpa by James Gritz.
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