In this talk, we explore the way in which opening to the presence of love within our own being opens our minds to our inherent wholeness and empowers us to act fearlessly in the world from a place of inner strength and compassion.
In this session, we explore the idea of naturalness and joyful presence in the Dzogchen tradition, including the implications of the translation of the word "yoga" in Tibetan as "merging with the natural state."
In this teaching, we explore the constructed nature of the self and identify the fundamental duality holding conditioned existence together: the subject and the object.
By dissolving the self-concepts that arise in our minds, we release into an experience of unconditioned freedom, which is not held together or created by anything or anyone.
Meditation is on the search for the self within and beyond the body and mind.
In this teaching, we explore the question of how we can live in an enlightened way amidst the movements and challenges of the outer world. To answer this question, we look into the Buddhist meaning of "non-abiding nirvana," the union of awareness (or emptiness) and appearances, the analogy of a dream and a moon in water to describe the illusory nature of reality, and the way the Buddha returned to the world after his awakening to guide beings on the path to freedom and enlightenment.
For the meditation, the practice of mindfulness of the body is introduced as a basis for the cultivation of lucid awareness in meditation and daily life.
In this teaching, we practice settling the body, breath, and mind in their natural states as an introduction to mindful awareness. We then explore the foundations of the bodhisattva practice in the original insights of the Buddha beneath the Bodhi Tree.