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Showing results for "Boulder"

From Chamonix to Chenrezig and <i>Thangkas</i> to Mountain Landscapes – The Story of Neljorma Tendron
Exploring creativity and the teachings as a Serti silk painter and Tibetan language teacher
Uploaded 27 Nov 2017
My Grandmother’s Greenhouse and Other Portals to Wonder
Nourishing the light of awe and enchantment
Uploaded 2 Sep 2016
Visions from the Zen Mind: Zen Paintings and Calligraphy at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art
Zen themes and calligraphy from a range of Japanese artists
Uploaded 8 Jul 2016
The Lion Hut of Empty Cloud
A tribute to a respected master
Uploaded 17 Jun 2016
The Wisdom of No Escape: Growing up in the Remote Kingdom of Shambhala*
Hasta Colman recalls her childhood adventures growing up in a Buddhist community in Nova Scotia, and the teachings of Chögyam Trungpa Rinpoche.
Uploaded 21 Dec 2015
Dharma Art as a Way of Being
The transformative impact of Dharma on living and on art
Uploaded 18 Dec 2015
A Reluctant Buddhist: How it Took Me Eight Years to Start Practicing in This Life, Part II
The second part of Sally’s spiritual journey
Uploaded 13 Nov 2015
A Reluctant Buddhist: How it Took Me Eight Years to Start Practicing in This Life
Sally Ember recounts her long path to Buddhism
Uploaded 4 Sep 2015
Educating Buddhist Children in America
Giving American children a Buddhist education
Uploaded 26 Jun 2015
Zen and the Art of Dry Landscape Gardens
One of the most visited sites in Kyoto, by Japanese tourists as well as by foreigners, is the temple Ryoan-ji in the northwestern part of the city. Its dry garden is the most famous and probably the f
Uploaded 12 Jun 2015
Becoming a Buddhist in America
At 9,000 feet in the Sangre de Cristo Mountains, surrounded by long-haired hippies chanting, praying, singing, smoking marijuana, ringing bells, and waving vajras, I was born. Although my parents were
Uploaded 5 Jun 2015
Sunbeam, Stone, Water, Wood: A Travelogue of Bongamsa Temple
A Buddhist wonder in the mountains of South Korea
Uploaded 27 Mar 2015
Why Haiku Holds the Flavor of Zen
Furu ike ya kawazu tobikomu mizu no oto   The old pond a frog jumps in kerplunk    Matsuo Basho’s (1644–94) haiku—that mind-altering frog vanishing into an ancient pond—has become so deeply sc
Uploaded 7 Nov 2014
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