So this text “ཕྱག་ཆེན་གའུ་མ།” “phyag chen ga’u ma”, this is the text as you see “ཕྱག་ཆེན་གའུ་མ།” “phyag chen ga’u ma”. So we are going to focus into a calm abiding […]... read more →
Taranatha was the one who revived many of the teachings of the Shangpa lineage, such as “The Niguma Yogas”. Because many texts were about to be lost. So he put […]... read more →
Khungpo Naldjor, you know, he went to India; of course, he met Sukhasiddhi and Niguma and received lot of teachings. Niguma, she gave “The five jewels of Niguma”: (1) we […]... read more →
Today’s topic is “ཕྱག་ཆེན་གའུ་མ།”, (phyag chen ga’u ma). So first of all, before I explain and translate the very sentence. I would like to let you know that this is […]... read more →
A Quintessential Drop of Spiritual Advice Based on the Kindness of My Genuine Lama in Conjunction With My Own Experience... read more →
།རང་བབས་རྣམ་གསུམ། The Three Facets of Natural Repose །དང་པོ་ལ་ཞི་གནས་གྱི་ཁྲིད་དང་། ལྷག་མཐོང་གི་ཁྲིད་གཉིས། This section has two parts, instructions in the meditations of 1. Tranquility 2. Insight 1. Tranquility Meditation 2. Insight Meditation […]... read more →
།ཕྱག་ཆེན་གའུ་མའམ་རང་བབས་རྣམ་གསུམ་ཞེས་བྱ་བའི་ཁྲིད་ཡིག་བཞུགས་སོ། ། ཏཱ་ར་ནཱ་ཐ། Instructions for Great Seal of the Amulet Box or The Three Facets of Natural Repose by Taranata ན་མོ་གུ་རུ་ཝེ། Namo Guru-vé! །ཕྱག་རྒྱ་ཆེན་པོ་གའུ་མའམ་རང་བབས་རྣམ་གསུམ་ཞེས་བྱ་བ། ཡེ་ཤེས་མཁའ་འགྲོ་ནི་གུ་མའི་གདམས་ངག་འདི་ལ། ཁྲིད་ཀྱི་སྔོན་འགྲོ་དལ་འབྱོར་རྙེད་དཀའ། མི་རྟག་པ། སྡུག་བསྔལ་སོགས་སྤྱི་དང་མཐུན། […]... read more →
“Amulet Mahamudra” is the name given to the Shangpa lineage’s Mahamudra tradition. The name comes from Kyungpo Naljor, who brought the teachings of Niguma and Sukhasiddhi from India to Tibet in the 12th century. He valued these Mahamudra teachings so highly that he constantly carried them in a sandalwood amulet box around his neck.... read more →
On Friday March 11th, Rinpoche will give teachings from Niguma’s Amulet Mahamudra, with time to discuss the teachings, allowing Rinpoche to get to know the sangha. This is a clear […]... read more →
“Amulet Mahamudra” is the name given to the Shangpa lineage’s Mahamudra tradition. The name comes from Kyungpo Naljor, who brought the teachings of Niguma and Sukhasiddhi from India to Tibet in the 12th century. He valued these Mahamudra teachings so highly that he constantly carried them in a sandalwood amulet box around his neck.... read more →