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:

  It's Such a Nuisance to be Attached (Link #608) | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 56:48

Speaker: Dzigar Kongtrul Rinpoche. This is a re-broadcast of a LINK talk originally given by Dzigar Kongtrul Rinpoche on November 6, 2011 at Phuntsok Choling in Ward, Colorado. A life of meaning and true connection has to come from living a full life. Attachment does not allow that. Attachment is not the same as appreciation. When you are attached to life, life becomes a burden and can wear you down. You spend time trying to fix things rather than embracing life and what life may bring. Life and karma are not fixable. It takes more wisdom than attachment to fix the problems in life.

  Buddhist Anger Management (Link #607) | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 51:18

Speaker: Paul Greene. Paul reviews the Buddhist perspective on anger and identifies a variety of skillful means to work with it. Although Western culture sometimes seems to accept anger as appropriate and inevitable, Buddhism recognizes it as a poison that threatens our well-being and impedes our path to enlightenment. We can work with anger by recalling the egolessness of the self, the enlightened Buddha nature of all beings, the causes and conditions that give rise to situations, the negative karmic results of aggression, and the positive karmic results of allowing negative karmic seeds to ripen. From the perspective of the Mahayana path, the bodhisattva intention to benefit beings is dependent on our ability to overcome aggression.

  All the Mother Sentient Beings Equal to Space (Link #606) | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 45:24

Speaker: Gretchen Kahre-Holland. Gretchen offers an appreciation of the tremendous power of prayer to heal and transform, and guides listeners through a session of tonglen practice dedicated to our mothers. Over the years, Rinpoche has provided us with prayers to respond to difficult situations like the death of George Floyd, the fires in Colorado, and the war in Ukraine. One particular form of prayer, the tonglen practice of giving and taking, is essential to attaining enlightenment. On this Mother's Day Gretchen reminds us that, over the course of our countless lifetimes, all sentient beings have been our mothers. Soliciting specific prayers from listeners, she leads a guided tonglen practice devoted to benefiting our all our mothers.

  To Be Determined (Link #605) | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 1:16:56

Speaker: Dungse Jampal Norbu. Dungse-la reflects on working with our emotions and neuroses by examining our determination to practice the Dharma. Where are we investing our freedom? Are we making time for practice and retreat? Are we working with our habits? Are we accumulating merit?

  Some Thoughts on the Four Thoughts that Turn One's Mind to the Dharma (Link #604) | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 50:22

Speaker: Stanton Dossett. Stanton conveys the importance of deeply contemplating the four thoughts that turn the mind to the Dharma: precious human birth, impermanence, karma, and samsara. Appreciating our precious human birth and its impermanence inspires us to make the most of our opportunity to practice the Dharma. Grasping the power of karma to shape our future lives focuses our attention on engaging in right action. Being aware of the unnecessary suffering samsaric beings experience, lifetime after lifetime, opens our hearts and cultivates bodhicitta, the "mind set on enlightenment."

  Preparation for Death (Link #603) | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 1:14:33

Speaker: Bob Reid. Bob explores the importance of cultivating a positive attitude to death and a clear vision for our rebirth. Dying will be easier if we have confidence in our genuine, warm-hearted connection to the Three Jewels. Beings passing through the bardos will encounter four opportunities to influence their rebirth. Generally, only advanced practitioners are prepared to seize the first two opportunities, which offer the possibility to attain enlightenment. But less advanced practitioners may seize the third and fourth opportunities: to take rebirth either in the Pure Lands or in the human realm. Pure Land traditions, which are practiced by the majority of Buddhists, are also woven into Tibetan Buddhism and play a significant role in the ngondro and tsok practices of the MSB Sangha. We can cultivate the intention to be reborn in the pure lands or in the human realm through prayer, aspiration, and dedicating our merit.

  Kindness As Practice and Medicine (Link #602) | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 46:57

Speaker: Anya Hunter. Anya emphasizes the importance of cultivating kindness and taming our minds. To be kind to ourselves we have to challenge conditioned beliefs such as perfectionism and self-aggression; to extend kindness to others, we have to widen our perspective and care to include all beings. To attain these qualities, we need to heighten our awareness and discipline our minds through practices like the four immeasurables, tonglen, and shamatha.

  Time For Courage (Link #601) | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 1:39:01

Speaker: Dungse Jampal Norbu. Dungse-la offers his contemplations on bodhicitta and compassion as the universally profound, true source of courage. He describes courage as the flip side of fear, pointing to the source of fear as grasping, rejection and ignorance. Because of these three habitual tendencies, it takes a great deal of compassion, steeped in bodhicitta, to be truly courageous.

  Longing: A Saving Grace (Link #600) | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 49:04

Speaker: Natasha Carter. Natasha meditates on how the longing to be free of suffering is at the heart of Dharma. It is important to understand this longing from a Dharmic point of view. Desensitizing ourselves to suffering will only render us immune to the Dharma; trying to escape it by pursuing worldly concerns will not work, either. The aim of genuine Dharma practice is to cultivate our capacity to cherish and care for all beings; to do so we have to remain open to suffering, surrendering to what is. Instead of trying to satisfy our longing we should view it as a source of inspiration and devotion, and as a sign of our connection to others. The yearning to free ourselves and all beings from suffering is the essence of "mugu" devotion.

  Lovingkindness is the Essence of Your Path (Link #599) | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 1:01:45

Speaker: Dzigar Kongtrul Rinpoche. This is a re-broadcast of a Shedra talk given to the sangha on September 16, 2012 at Phuntsok Choling in Ward, Colorado.

  Being With Old Age and Death (Link #598) | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 49:50

Speaker: Sybil Boutilier. Sybil reflects on the importance of meeting old age and death with wisdom and confidence. In our ignorance, we have imprisoned ourselves in a net of self-cherishing. To navigate old age and death with less fear and suffering, we need to cultivate bodhicitta, acknowledge our regrets, and forgive ourselves and others. Preparing for death in this way enables us to create the conditions that make it possible to have a good rebirth.

  Thoughts from Retreat (Link #597) | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 1:37:51

Speaker: Dungse Jampal Norbu. Dungse-la shares thoughts from his current retreat. Retreat is not vacation. The point is to face everything that arises in our mind. If we look closely, we see that in moments of fear and anxiety, we often default to the sense of self and the five afflictive emotions resulting in our acting with attachment and aggression. Moving beyond this worry, "what about me?" to asking "how can I benefit others?" opens up so many more options to us.

  Sadhana of Allowing (Link #596) | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 56:55

Speaker: Tomas Downey. Tomas relates how the practice of "allowing" enriched his Dharma practice. One way to connect to the Dharma and to progress on the path is to "fake it till you make it." While some people find this approach useful, Tomas discovered he benefited more from focusing on how loving kindness, compassion, and joy are already part of his nature. Instead of making an effort to arouse these qualities, he shifted his perspective and used an approach that simply allowed them arise naturally from his own experiences. He describes how warmth, peace, joy, awareness and awakeness arise naturally if we allow them to. He also notes that this perspective of allowing, which emphasizes our enlightened nature, is also a helpful way to approach Vajrayana practices that may initially appear strange or foreign.

  Four Dharmas of Gampopa (Link #595) | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 1:25:37

Speaker: Dzigar Kongtrul Rinpoche. Re-broadcast of LINK talk originally given on November 1, 2015 to the sangha at Longchen Jigme Samten Ling Retreat Center in Crestone, Colorado. Rinpoche provides detailed commentary on Gampopa' s " Four Blessed Lines" prayer.

  Don't Forget the Magic (Link #594) | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 1:02:48

Speaker: Greg Moloney. Greg reminds us to keep our minds poised to recognize the magic that surrounds us and that provides inspiration, guidance, and support along the path. He identifies three categories of magic: the outer magic of the natural world and relative experience, the inner magic we discover through working with our minds, and the secret magic of the sacred world of the lineage masters, dakinis, and devas.

Comments

Login or signup comment.