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Tribute to Jim Morris


Offerings
,
April Fourth, 2008


Exploring the teachings of Chögyam Trungpa
,
by James Gimian


Chögyam the Translator


Remembering Dorje Chokyi Lewis


Images and words from Losar/Shambhala Day 2008


Shambhala Day Address,
1984: Year of the Wood Rat


Stories from Kham


Open pages

Red Pine's Heart Sutra


Dharma art with CTR,

a slideshow with Jack Niland


Such Thunderstorm
,
a calligraphy
by Barbara Bash

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Tributes

The tributes below were posted between April 4 and May 26, 2007 to commemorate the 20th anniversary of Trungpa Rinpoche's parinirvana.


Sangha tribute blog

Tribute from

posted

Dilgo Khyentse

May 26

Jetsun Kushok

May 26

Yongey Mingyur

May 26

Traleg Kyabgon

May 26

James Gimian

May 26

Martin Janowitz

May 26

Robin Kornman

May 26

Denault Blouin

May 25

Susan Edwards -audio

May 24

Walker Blaine

May 23

Vajra Regent

May 22

Dzogchen Ponlop

May 21

Diana Torbert

May 20

Greg Smith

May 19

Tessa Pybus

May 18

Reggie Ray

May 17

Joshua Zim

May 16

Ashoka Mukpo

May 15

Tenzin Wangyal

May 14

Bill Douglas

May 13

Peter Volz

May 12

Ani Pema Chödrön

May 11

Shenpen Hookham

May 9

Tsoknyi Rinpoche

May 8

Barry Boyce

May 7

Tulku Thondup

May 6

Steve Gorn

May 5

HH Dalai Lama

May 4

Sam Bercholz

May 3

Wendy Friedman

May 2

Jakusho Kwong Roshi

May 1

Fabrice Midal

April 30

B Bash/S Gorn

April 29

Sherab Chodzin Kohn

April 28

Chokyi Nyima

April 27

Joan Halifax Roshi

April 26

A Waldman/D Rome

April 25

Clarke Warren

April 24

Kanjuro Shibata

April 23

CTR Talk, 1975

April 22

Jigme Phuntsok

April 21

Tom Coburn

April 20

Tania Leontov

April 19

Leonard Hortick

April 18

Richard John

April 17

Anne Burchardi

April 16

Bardor Tulku

April 15

Jerry Granelli

April 14

Michael Chender

April 13

Douglas Penick

April 12

Carolyn Gimian

April 11

Ato Rinpoche

April 10

Eido Roshi

April 9

Gina Stick

April 8

Rigdzin Shikpo

April 7

Gesar Mukpo

April 6

Francesca Fremantle

April 5

CTR Talk, 1979

April 4

Sakyong Mipham

April 4

Lady Diana Mukpo

April 4

Thrangu Rinpoche

April 4

Dzongsar Khyentse

April 4

Khenpo Rinpoche

April 4

Richard Reoch

April 4

Susan Edwards

April 4

Peter Lieberson

April 4

Francesca Fremantle

To think of Trungpa Rinpoche it is not just to remember an extraordinary man, but to be drawn into the depth and vastness of his mind, to glimpse a state of being, completely liberated and beyond concepts.

Although he left his body twenty years ago, his presence among us has never ceased. Rather, his influence on those he touched and continues to touch grows ever stronger as time goes by. It may be that we are only just beginning to see the immensity of his qualities and the power of his enlightened activity in the world.

I do not know how to express my gratitude for the good fortune of having met Trungpa Rinpoche and been close to him for a while. At that time I believed I was totally devoted to him and to the dharma; I had no idea how much I was really entangled in the emotions of samsara, so I could not understand why my practice did not go well and why I seemed unable to fulfill his wishes. Perhaps time and distance were needed to ripen the seeds he had planted. Although I must have disappointed him, through his compassion he never let me go, and now the reality of his presence in my life is more vivid than ever before. Yet I know this is nothing compared to the oneness with the mind of the guru that is made possible by genuine devotion, which he experienced for his own guru and for Guru Rinpoche.

There are so many ways in which he was special: his warmth and kindness, his complete engagement with his students, his curiosity and openness, his rare gift of communication. But looking back at his life, it seems to me that his most exceptional quality was his willingness to do anything whatever in order to convey the essential truth of dharma. He taught a lesson that very few others are willing to teach by their own example: that there is no one to protect. He cut through self-preservation in all its forms. He risked his health and his reputation, sometimes he went to outrageous extremes, to demonstrate that all appearance is a play. In doing this he showed us how to let go of absolutely everything, all concerns about oneself, all clinging to conventions, all concepts of good and bad. Just as he had wished to do, he lived his life as a bodhisattva, for whom every thought, word and action is the display of skilful means to lead sentient beings to awakening.

Hunting his prey
With fearless compassion
Undying wakefulness
Chögyam the tiger
Still roams in his forest.

Francesca Fremantle, April 1st 2007.




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