Mangala Shri Bhuti - The Link show

Mangala Shri Bhuti - The Link

Summary: At the heart of the Buddhist path is the individual practitioner who integrates the teachings with his or her own experience. Posting weekly since August of 2009, the Link Podcast features pithy teachings by Dzigar Kongtrul Rinpoche, Dungse Jampal Norbu, and Elizabeth Mattis Namgyel that illustrate the creativity and practicality that are the hallmarks of being a successful meditator. Talks by students of Dzigar Kongtrul Rinpoche offer an intimate window into the spiritual paths of Western students of Buddhism as they bring the teachings to life in their own unique and personal ways. Most talks in this podcast draw from a weekly Live broadcast on Sundays at 10 am Mountain Time.

Join Now to Subscribe to this Podcast
  • Visit Website
  • RSS
  • Artist: Dzigar Kongtrul Rinpoche, Dungse Jampal Norbu and students
  • Copyright: b & B) 2009 Mangala Shri Bhuti

Podcasts:

  Identity and Healthy Relationship with the World (Link #668) | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 1:11:16

Speaker: Dungse Jampal Norbu. Dungse-la reflects on identity and how to have a healthy relationship with the world as a Dharma practitioner. An understanding of the Four Noble Truths illuminates how sentient beings try to build a world that suits their preferences, and how this leads to suffering. The bodhisattva path provides a way beyond suffering based on reducing our neurotic attachment to self and developing a strong basis to navigate and fully engage the world in a healthy manner. This requires working with one's identity with the skillful means of the Dharma, especially in the midst of the identity crisis of modernity and all of its challenges. A tree needs strong roots and then branches out into the world and the elements.

  Let's Talk About Death (Link #667) | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 1:04:45

Speaker: Paddy McCarthy. Paddy reflects on how we can use the process of aging as an opportunity to meet the challenges of dying, training ourselves to pass with fearless confidence through illness, dissolution, and the bardos. Learning how to accept the process of aging teaches us how to die with clarity and openness. By doing so, we can increase the likelihood of attaining either enlightenment or an auspicious human rebirth that will enable us to continue on the spiritual path.

  Dissolving (Link #666) | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 1:04:43

Speaker: Bill Filter. Bill recounts the story of how he came to the Dharma and met Dzigar Kongtrul Rinpoche.

  Appreciation and Taking Refuge (Link #665) | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 1:58:20

Speaker: Dungse Jampal Norbu. Dungse-la, speaking from the 2023 Nyingma Summer Seminar, reminds us that the Buddha's first teaching in Sarnath was that there is suffering. The Buddha went into great detail about his investigation into how we suffer. Our suffering springs more from our own mind and attitude than from the our physical conditions, as evidenced by people in developing countries. Our neurotic self-attachment and the five destructive emotions spin the wheel of samsara. The Dharma teaches that the path to the cessation of suffering involves working with karmic cause and effect in an open-eyed manner, seeing the results of our negative and positive actions and steering our life toward a dharmic life using practices like the Noble Eightfold Path and the Four Immeasurables. Karma is not about fault or punishment, but simply about cause and effect, our action and Nature's reaction, the wonders of interdependent arising. As practitioners, we drip-feed samsara into our practice to develop a healthy relationship with the world and transform samsara. We take refuge in the Three Jewels as guide, path, and community as an act of appreciation and gratitude, as an alternative to the spiral of our negative habits. Dungse-la ends with an in-depth explanation of lenchak (karmic debt and codependence).

  Karma (Link #664) | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 58:11

Speaker: Dungse Jampal Norbu. Dungse-la, speaking from the Illustrious Moon children's program, explores karma or cause and effect. Each of our actions and the primary tone of our approach to life will eventually come back to us as karmic results. The effect will be related to the cause, so if we're angry a lot, the effect will be related to anger. Our intention matters and amplifies karmic results. Lojong mind training slogans like "don't be so predictable" remind us to be less habitually reactive to karmic results that appear in our life and respond in new ways that gradually shift our karma in a positive direction due to the workings of cause and effect.

  Reflections (Link #663) | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 1:01:14

Speaker: Gretchen Kahre-Holland. Gretchen reflects on two opportunities presented by the pandemic: to go into retreat, and to emerge with a fresh perspective on how to relate with our own minds and with others. Rinpoche once advised his students to "pray that your life falls apart---but not to put it back together in the same way"; more recently, he advised us to treat the pandemic as a retreat. As we emerge from this "retreat" and prepare to gather at NSS in person for the first time since 2019, we have an opportunity to apply Rinpoche's advice. As we put our lives back together, we can reflect on how we want to engage with our own minds and with the Sangha, using our experience and natural intelligence to cultivate an open, curious, and fresh approach. In this way, we can overcome the cycle of discontent, craving, and speed that characterizes modern life.

  Taking Refuge in the Open (Link #662) | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 51:06

Speaker: Jonathan Hulbert. Jonathan contemplates how taking refuge in the Three Jewels requires faith, trust, and devotion. Taking refuge in the Buddha, the Dharma, and the Sangha is an ongoing process to free ourselves from the suffering that arises from the dualistic belief in a self that is real and separate. In general, taking refuge implies seeking shelter or protection from danger. Paradoxically, however, in the context of the Dharma, this protection can be attained only by choosing to be "in the open".

  Our Brave Hearts (Link #661) | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 1:02:48

Speaker: Robin Correll. Robin reflects on how cultivating the five strengths helps us develop a brave heart that allows us to meet challenging circumstances with confidence, openness, curiosity, and courage. The five strengths identified by the Dharma are determination, familiarization, seeds of virtue, reproach (remorse, exposure), and aspiration. We can develop these strengths through the consistent practice of mindfulness, self-reflection, prayer, and contemplation.

  Baggage Handling (Link #660) | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 1:13:36

Speaker: Dungse Jampal Norbu. Dungse-la explores how the practice of bodhicitta (awakened mind) includes investigating one's own egoic reactions in daily life. Holding onto our history with self-importance results in emotional baggage that leads to habitual reactions in the present that cause suffering. Our emotional baggage is not who we are; it is not intrinsically existent. We can transform it as it surfaces through self-reflection using lojong mind training teachings like "transform obstacles into the path of awakening". Using the four immeasurables to meditate on our "enemies" and objects of hurt or heartbreak can change our relationship with them, turning them into a source of inspiration. Waking up includes letting go of the dream.

  Don't Let the Hidden Boss Interfere with Your Own Growth (Link #659) | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 1:07:41

Speaker: Dzigar Kongtrul Rinpoche. In a previously recorded LINK talk given on June 13, 2004 at Osel Ling in Crestone, Colorado, Rinpoche gives commentary on the text, "Vast As The Heavens, Deep As The Sea: Verses in Praise of Bodhicitta".

  The Wisdom of Confession and the Shenpa of Guilt (Link #658) | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 58:28

Speaker: Jen Kern. Jen reflects on how we can liberate ourselves from shenpa--the raw, uncomfortable energy of self-clinging---by engaging fully and deeply in the practice of confession. The Lojong teachings encourage us to work on our strongest reactions first. To do so, we have to recognize and reflect on our shenpa, resolve to overcome it, and confess it in the presence of the Three Jewels. Although we might resist confessing because we fear the shame and guilt that may accompany it, we can overcome this fear by recognizing that shenpa, too, is impermanent; it is merely the expression of ego itself. We do not have to be critical of our emotions. Acknowledging this frees us to confess deeply and without self-aggression, cleansing our hearts and allowing bodhicitta to increase.

  Reflections on Grief, Living and Dying (Link #657) | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 50:20

Speaker: Moni Banerjee-Lauritzen. Moni speaks movingly on how deeply she was affected by the death of her parents this year and how she drew from the wisdom of the Dharma to work with her grief and loss. Her understanding of grief deepened, and she sought wisdom from all three yanas for support: from the Hinayana, teachings on the selflessness of the person; from the Mahayana, teachings on emptiness, dependent origination, and bodhicitta; and from the Vajrayana, teachings on welcoming all experience as an opportunity to progress on the path.

  Be Nettle (Link #656) | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 1:06:34

Speaker: Ashveen Bucktowar. Ashveen speaks of the qualities that make service possible and beneficial. Service is altruistic activity that, if approached with the right attitude, can remedy self-cherishing. Whether it is done on behalf of our own vows, the sangha, the lineage, the Dharma, or all sentient beings, it is most beneficial when approached with clarity about our intentions and motivations, devotion and commitment to the vision, and measured expectations. Service invites us to be introspective, to stretch ourselves, to appreciate the blessings of the protectors and the lineage, and to cultivate community. The nettle plant serves as a symbol of all these qualities.

  Stepping Out of Vagueness (Link #655) | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 57:05

Speaker: Natasha Carter. Natasha explores how progressing as practitioners depends on how effectively we work with the ego. Clinging to the ego as real is the root of all suffering; liberation from samsara arises from learning to recognize that this clinging is dependently-originated and that the ego is illusory. To counteract the universal tendency to cater to the habitual self-cherishing mind of ego, the Dharma offers many remedies: analytical meditation, vigilant introspection, humor, vision, and the aspiration to free all beings from samsara.

  Being Present to the Present of the Present in the Present (Link #654) | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 1:04:05

Speaker: Bela Hatvany. Bela reflects on how his spiritual journey has unfolded over the course of his long life, nourished by books, by his experiences as an entrepreneur and philanthropist, by his spiritual friends, and by his meditation practice. He expresses reverence and gratitude for the "present" of being present in the present moment, for the systems of trust that humanity has built to support our world, for the opportunities to serve others, and for the teachings that have enabled him to refine his ability to distinguish the states of mind that arise in his awareness.

Comments

Login or signup comment.