HomeStories briefbriefReader's CommentsFunding

What's new?

The Gradual Path of Raising Buddhist Children:
A Conversation with Thinley Norbu Rinpoche From the Vajradhatu Sun, 1992

Inner Chronicles:
Face-to-face
in Halifax

Work Sex Money: Seminar Three,
Talk Three: Klesha activity
[Audio 46:28]

Ocean of Dharma: A Shambhala Sun feature on Chögyam Trungpa by Barry Boyce

Tribute to Arbie Thalacker

Chronicles Highlights 2011

Chronicles Holiday Sampler

Dzongsar Jamyang Khyentse on the passing of his father, Thinley Norbu Rinpoche

SMR joins Dilgo Khyentse Rinpoche and Rabjam Rinpoche [Video 11:35]
Vintage Chronicles from 2009

Tribute to Thinley Norbu Rinpoche

Work Sex Money: Seminar Three,
Talk Two: Practice
[Audio 59:27]

Qualities
by Tom Pinson

Vintage Chronicles from 2004

The Open Way:
This is the talk CTR gave at Zen Center,
May 27, 1971 [Audio 1:48:46]


Rinpoche and Roshi, told by Henry Schaeffer,
WITH TRANSCRIPT

Traleg Kyabgon Rinpoche on Distinguishing Ordinary Consciousness from Wisdom

At the
Redneck Bar

Vintage Chronicles from 2004

Tribute to Fabrice Champion

Work Sex Money: Seminar Three,
Talk One: Materialism
[Audio 1:11:46]

Crazy Wisdom, a review by Victress Hitchcock

Tribute to Michal Friedman

Work Sex Money, Seminar One,
Talk 3: Money [Audio 1:31:20]

Radio interview with Chogyam Trungpa in 1971;
featuring 17 year-old Jason Gavras calling in with a question
[Audio 1:08:18]
Vintage Chronicles Radio from 2008

Mingyur Rinpoche: The essence of meditation

Work Sex Money, Seminar One,
Talk 2: Work [Audio 1:30:40]

Julia Sagebien talks with Thrangu Rinpoche about fulfilling the aspirations of the Vidyadhara
[Audio 13:11]

Gold Lake Oil, by Tom Bell
Vintage Chronicles from 2006

Work Sex Money, Seminar One,
Talk 1: Sex
[Audio 1:35:51]

THE BIG NO
Vintage Chronicles from 2009

Thrangu Rinpoche talks about Trungpa Rinpoche and his students [Audio 48:54]

In appreciation of the Very Venerable 9th Khenchen Thrangu Rinpoche

Teaching Stories: Never Give Up, told by Jim Lowrey
[Audio 30:16]

Memorial to Mary Smith, by Lee Weingrad

Conversation with Elizabeth Mattis-Namgyel: Part Three

Khyentse Foundation: Ten Years of Giving

What Made Him Tick: a Review of Crazy Wisdom by Suzanne Duarte

Teaching Stories:
No Man's Land by Robert Merchasin
[Audio 18:56]

Tribute to Mary Smith

Teaching Stories:
Burn Self Deception
[Audio 8:42]



newsBiographyBibliographyChronologyContact UsLinks

Pilgrimage

By Carolyn Rose Gimian

What Is a Pilgrimage?

February 13, 2010

Tomorrow is the Tibetan New Year. Tashi Deleg! It is also the day our family sets off on a trip to India and Nepal for three weeks. We have been telling people and each other that this is a form of pilgrimage for us. As I’m going over lists of gifts, medicines, and clothing, and writing requests for interviews with Buddhist teachers, it occurs to me to check the meaning of the word “pilgrim.” An editor surrounded by reference books, of course, I look on the Internet, where the Free Merriam-Webster Dictionary tells me that a pilgrim is: one who journeys in foreign lands, or a wayfarer, or one who travels to a shrine or holy place as a devotee. The dictionary also reminds me that capitalized, a Pilgrim is one of the English colonists settling at Plymouth in 1620.

From this, I see that sometimes a pilgrim is one who is leaving home forever – as in the case of the colonists in New England. This sets me to thinking about Chogyam Trungpa, Rinpoche, and all of the Tibetans who left their homes never to return. Here I am intimidated by going to India for three weeks – my journey is inconsequential by this standard. (One never knows, of course, if we’ll be coming home, but we do have a return ticket.)

Then I remember that the Shambhala Archives contains small snapshots taken by Trungpa Rinpoche of holy places he visited in India in the early 60s. I remember seeing his photo of the Mahabodhi Temple in Bodhgaya and a photograph of him and the late Khamtrul Rinpoche standing next to a monument, which I suspect is one of the many pillars of Ashoka containing edicts of proper human conduct. I hope to see some of the same sites.

What do I mean when I refer to this trip as a pilgrimage? I think that’s my meditation for the journey. Fundamentally, it means that I aspire to have some kind of sacred outlook as I travel through India and Nepal. Let’s start with that! I expect that this seemingly simple aspiration will be challenged over and over again. I aspire to take my teacher’s journey as an example and an inspiration on this trip. Let’s see what happens as we get underway.

Please send comments to

Comments

Pilgrimages can happen at any point in one’s life but it seem so meaningful for it to take place in the middle or later in life after having accumulated so much experience, practice and appreciation of the Three Jewels. How poignant to be able to physically and spiritually connect with so much that is intimately familiar. It reminds me of the first time seeing the sign for Tower Road in Halifax, another sort of Pilgrimage. I am so happy for Carolyn. -Marguerite Stanciu,Indianapolis