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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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Letters of support

The Druk Sakyong Wangmo, Lady Diana Mukpo

Sakyong Mipham Rinpoche



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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

Two thoughts about devotion
from Acharya Richard John

Richard John, a student of the Vidyadhara since 1975, served as a kusung, resident director of Shambhala Training, and center director in Halifax. Richard was also among the first group of people to complete the three-year retreat at Gampo Abbey.

I was contemplating anecdotes of my personal experiences with the Vidyadhara, most being in the context of serving him as a kusung, and I realized that what I most would like to share at this time are two things I have learned about devotion to him as my root guru.

The first is from an experience I had with Ven. Thrangu Rinpoche at the beginning of the three year retreat in 1990. The retreat begins with three months of guru yoga practice, with sadhanas for Marpa, Milarepa and Gampopa. In true Kagyu fashion, we students are admonished to shed tears of devotion etc. to these lineage masters. Not quite feeling that way, I went to Thrangu Rinpoche with a kind of complaint. I told him that I had complete heartfelt devotion to my teacher, the Vidyadhara, but I didn't see how I could genuinely feel that way for these gentlemen whom I had never met. In reply, he chastised me gently, and in a way I understood to be applicable to many of us senior students. To paraphrase, he said that our concept of the Vidyadhara—and our devotion to him—were much too small. We need to understand that the Vidyadhara is the same as the Buddha, who is the same as Naropa, Marpa, Milarepa, Gampopa etc. We often become too fixated on him in his ordinary form as a marvelous and eccentric Tibetan teacher, and we also think that everything he did and taught was specifically for us, his fortunate western students. All of that is fine as a starting point, but we have to go beyond that. That feeling of our having a special and exclusive connection is exactly the mark of a mahasiddha-that's what mahasiddhas do.

That teaching from Thrangu Rinpoche has never left me. It challenges us to recognize the difference between a kind of limited chauvinistic devotion, which is very personal and circumstantial, and a much deeper devotion, which is big, lonely and limitless.

My other thought about devotion to the Vidyadhara has to do with Sakyong Mipham Rinpoche. In a talk to the acharyas, the Sakyong explained that he saw the progression of sakyongs as having a particular pattern, which I understand to be consistent with Lao Tsu's description of the progression of emperors. The sakyongs/emperors appear in pairs, with one being the "instigator" and the next being the "completer," and so on. That seems to me to apply accurately to the Druk Sakyong and Sakyong Mipham (with interesting implications for what may follow!) My thought about devotion here is a very simple and personal one: I experience my devotion to the Vidyadhara as being utterly and completely inseparable from devotion to the Sakyong. I have no doubt that supporting and following Sakyong Mipham Rinpoche is my root guru's wish and command.




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