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Parrots and Rhinoceroses, a community talk from April 1973


Some moments in Vancouver,
by Ben Hines


Celebrating the Return
in Colorado,
by Gary Allen


No Turning Back, a community talk from February 1973


Khyentse Yangsi Rinpoche in Ward,
A blog from Joanna Bolek


Khyentse Yangsi Rinpoche arrives in Colorado and wakes to a double rainbow at Phuntsok Choling


Children's blessing in Boulder [Video: 5:34]


Speedy road trip to kindness, a blog from Helen Bonzi with photos by Ron Stubbert


Setting lobsters free,
by Helen Bonzi


Khyentse Yangsi Rinpoche visits SMC
A blog from Greg Smith


Brillant Moon and Long Life, by Bill Karelis


Khyentse Yangsi Rinpoche in Boulder:
Posts from Roland Cohen and Nina Rolle


Khyentse Yangsi Rinpoche in Vermont,
posts from Katie Yates, Colin Stubbert, and Carolyn Gimian


Devotion: Part Three [Video: 11:35]


Cool Boredom, a community talk from 1973


Khyentse Yangsi Rinpoche in NYC:
New blog entry from Barbara Stewart


Khyentse Yangsi Rinpoche in Vermont,
A blog and photos of the sacred relics


Visiting Casa Werma
by Gary Hubiak


A post from Simon Luna's sisters on the anniversary of his passing


Introducing Jetsun Drukmo


Dilgo Khyentse Rinpoche's North America Tour


Devotion: Part Two [Video: 13:52]


Sakyong installs 58 shastris at Shambhala Mountain Center


Slide show: Khyentse Yangsi Rinpoche in Croatia


Listen to Richard Reoch on CBC Radio discussing "A Royal Birth at the IWK Health Centre"


Trust Run Wild, a community talk from 1972


Slide show: Khyentse Yangsi Rinpoche in Bhutan


Devotion: Part One, Lama Ugyen Shenpen's Home Video of the Lineage [Video: 14:28]


Opening of Thrangu Monastery Canada


Essential CTR Class Two: Meditation Instruction [Audio: 51:32]


Stories from the 1970s [Audio: 20:02]


Phase Two, a community talk from 1972


The Essential CTR, for young adults
Class One: Introduction


Commentary on Mindfulness/Awareness Talk Two
by Robert Walker


Khyentse Yangsi Rinpoche in France


KCL's 40th Anniversary: Former directors tell their stories


Work, a community talk from 1972


Stories of the 16th Karmapa


Lineage and Devotion in the Shambhala World
by Peter Volz


Mindfulness & Awareness: Talk Three

Photo by Michael Wood


John Sennhauser on Khyentse Rinpoche and the Yangsi's upcoming visit (video)


A Dowsing Lesson
By Olive Colón


Recollections of Peter Orlovsky
By Tal Varon


Midsummer's Day 2010

Photos by Hudson Shotwell


Cynicism & Warmth,
a community talk by Chogyam Trungpa

Photo by Michael Wood


Disappointment,
a talk from September 1972


The Road to Surmang, 1987-2010,
a blog by Lee Weingrad


Mary Newton on the Celebration in Bhutan


Dear Vajra Dog


Talk Seven:
Study and Sitting


Father Death Slide Show,
A tribute to Peter Orlovsky


Kunga Dawa,
On the Sadhana of Mahamudra (Video)


Ani Pema Chodron on Dilgo Khyentse Rinpoche (Video)


KCL 40th
anniversary blog

by Tom Bell


Update from Gesar Fund


An interview with
Kanjuro Shibata Sensei


Karme Choling turns 40


Glimpses of
Tail of the Tiger
,
an interview with Jonathan Eric


Yeshe Fuchs is Julia's guest on Dispatches


Brilliant Moon: Glimpses of Dilgo Khyentse Rinpoche - TRAILER


James Yensan
,
a video interview
by Bill Scheffel


Cathryn Stein on Dispatches


Richard Arthure
a Bill Scheffel video


Karmapa at KTD


Shechen Kongtrül


Trungpa Rinpoche's Techniques of Mindfulness Seminar: Talk Two


Jyekundo slide show


Finding Your Buffalo, By Dzogchen Ponlop Rinpoche


Shechen Rabjam Rinpoche: Vision for the 2010 Centennial


Myth of Freedom and the Cosmic Joke, a commentary by Ani Pema Chodron: Part Three


Brief Encounters by Christine Keyser, Hildy Maze, and Joel Wachbrit


A Talk by Trungpa Rinpoche on Milarepa and the Origins of the Kagyu Lineage
(audio: 34 minutes)


Slide show of Trungpa Rinpoche's photographs,
With Andy and Wendy Karr


Jakusho Kwong-roshi on Chogyam Trungpa, Video by Bill Scheffel


Offerings to Chogyam Trungpa: Please post poems, comments, and tributes


Joshua Zim's letter to Trungpa Rinpoche


The Scorpion Seal
(April 1 Edition)


Contemplating the Parinirvana of the Vidyadhara, by Carolyn Gimian


Myth of Freedom and the Cosmic Joke, a commentary by Ani Pema Chodron


Dilgo Khyentse Yangsi Rinpoche on Shambhala and Trungpa Rinpoche


Andy Karr on Dispatches


Trungpa Rinpoche's Training the Mind Seminar: Talk Six


Josh Silberstein and Lodro Rinzler: a community meeting in Halifax


On Shambhala and the Samaya Connection


Martin Janowitz on Dispatches


Trungpa Rinpoche's Training the Mind Seminar: Talk Four


Celebration underway in Kathmandu


Touch and Go: Part Two

Part two of Trungpa Rinpoche's epic escape from Tibet


Famous last words

Trungpa Rinpoche's community talk before leaving for retreat in 1977


Eve Rosenthal on Dispatches


Cheerful Shambhala Day!


Pilgrimage, a blog by Carolyn Rose Gimian


On the Mamos, the Dharmapala Principle and Mahakali Vetali, By Dorje Loppon Lodro Dorje


Mark Nowakowski on dons, mamos, and the don days
(audio: 15 minutes)


Interview with
Khandro Rinpoche:
Part Two


Fifty years ago,
January 24, 1960:
Chogyam Trungpa arrives in India

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The Chronicles is honored to present this inspiring article by the Dzogchen Ponlop Rinpoche. Rinpoche was born in Rumtek in 1965, where he was trained in the Kagyu and Nyingma traditions by His Holiness the 16th Karmapa, His Holiness Dilgo Khyentse Rinpoche, Khenpo Tsultrim Gyamtso, and others. Today Rinpoche is well known as one of the foremost Nyingma and Kagyu scholars of his generation, and as a prominent and well respected dharma teacher and guide. His realms of activity include: Nitartha Institute, Nalandabodhi, and the Kamalashila Institute. Rinpoche is the author of Penetrating Wisdom, and Wild Awakening. His latest book is Rebel Buddha (Shambhala Publications) forthcoming in November 2010. For more information please visit Rinpoche on Facebook and Twitter.

Finding Your Buffalo

By Dzogchen Ponlop Rinpoche

There is a story about a farmer who owns a buffalo. Not knowing that the buffalo is in its stable, the farmer goes off to search for it, thinking it has strayed from home. Starting off on his search, he sees many different buffalo footprints outside his yard. The footprints of buffalo are everywhere! The farmer then thinks, "Which way did my buffalo go?" He decides to follow one set of tracks and they lead him up into the high mountains, but he doesn't find his buffalo there. Then he follows another set of footprints that lead way down to the ocean. However, when he reaches the ocean, he still doesn't find his buffalo. His buffalo is not in the mountains or at the beach. Why? Because it is back home in the stable in his yard.

Like the farmer, we search for happiness and peace of mind outside ourselves. We search for freedom from our troubles high up in the mountains, at pristine, beautiful beaches, and in the serenity of retreat settings. In all of these places, there are footprints everywhere, signs of like-minded seekers searching for happiness and a more enlightened existence. In the end, you might find traces of the contentment and illumination they realized. What you will not find, however, is the one thing you are looking for -- your own happiness, peace of mind, and enlightened nature. You may find someone else's version of it, but it is not the same as finding your own.

No matter how much you may admire and long for the happiness and freedom of mind you perceive in someone else, whether it's a great spiritual master, a bestselling self-help guru, or a true, modern-day hero or heroine, finding your own wakefulness, your own enlightenment within, is much different. It is like finding your own buffalo. Your buffalo recognizes you and you recognize your buffalo. The moment you meet your own buffalo is a very emotional and joyful moment.

In order to make our own discoveries, we have to start right here where we are. We have to search inwardly rather than outwardly. From the Buddhist point of view, ultimate happiness -- the state of freedom, or enlightenment -- is within our minds and has been from beginningless time. Like our buffalo comfortably resting in its stable, ultimate happiness has never left us, although we have developed the idea that it has left home. We think it is somewhere outside and we have to find it. With so many footprints leading in different directions, so many possibilities for where it could be, we may start to imagine things. We could think that it was stolen by a neighbor and is gone forever. We start to have all kinds of misconceptions and mistaken beliefs.

From the Buddhist point of view, there is nothing within our ordinary life that we need to reject or leave behind, and the state of enlightenment is not a place we go to from here. It is not a place that is found outside of where we are right now. If you wanted to find a perfect get-away from all your stress and unhappiness, where and how far would you go? To the other side of the world, to the International Space Station, or just the nearest bar? Your body would be somewhere else, but still, you would be taking your stressed, unhappy mind with you. What we are actually trying to leave behind is the mind's confusion, which keeps us from being happy. It is how our minds function when we are in those mountains, at the beach, at work or at home, that determines whether we are happy or unhappy, awake in our life or sleeping through it.

According to the Buddha, the actual point of all our efforts on the spiritual path is simply to return to the state of complete wakefulness, which is the true nature of our minds. Our minds are brilliantly clear and aware naturally, but that brilliant wakefulness is hidden from our view by clouds of confusion. These clouds are caused primarily by the turbulence of our thoughts and emotions. There is so much commotion going on in our minds that our view of who we are and what the world is like is distorted.

If that's the case, then how can we recognize the wakeful nature of our minds? The Buddha taught many methods of meditation, which bring stability, peace, and clarity to our agitated minds. Through the practice of meditation, we begin to relax; we feel like we're waking up and coming to our senses. It's a very ordinary, but profound, experience that deepens over time and transforms our view of life. When we start to work with our mind in meditation, there's a sense of effort, but as we go along, it becomes more effortless. A good example of this is a bird taking off from the ground. When the bird wants to fly, it first has to run a little bit and then push down against the ground, so it can leap up into the space of the sky.

So long as we are looking outside of ourselves, there is no place to go, no end of the road, where we will one day find perfect happiness. Ultimately, the awake and peaceful mind that we are looking for is with us right now, in this very moment. We don't have to pack our bags or follow someone else's trail to discover the true nature of our mind -- the buddha within us. That buddha is always within our reach.

Do you see it? Where are you looking for your buffalo?

© 2010 Dzogchen Ponlop Rinpoche