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Coming September 2010

Elizabeth Mattis-Namgyel, The Power of an Open Question


In this four-part video retreat, Elizabeth Mattis-Namgyel explores the topic she examines in her new book, The Power of an Open Question. Elizabeth is haunted and inspired by the challenges that arise for Buddhist practitioners. She is particularly focused on the Buddhist teachings on emptiness and how to bring them to life directly. Become a Tricycle Community Sustaining Member.
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    Elizabeth Mattis-Namgyel: Power of an Open Question

    Coming September 2010

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Become a Tricycle Community Sustaining Member now and get Elizabeth Mattis-Namgyel’s new book, The Power of an Open Question, plus free e-books from Elizabeth Mattis-Namgyel and Pema Chödrön. Current Sustaining Members also eligible. You get:

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Trikeworthy

Vol. 20, No. 1

in this issue

  • By Anne Cushman
    A couple of years ago, about a month before my first novel was due to be published—and several months into an intensive meditation training program for yoga teachers that I was co-directing at Spirit Rock Meditation Center—I had two startlingly vivid dreams.
  • By Sam Hamill
    A previously unpublished poem
  • By Martine Batchelor
    We have to be careful not to think that meditation is about getting rid of thoughts. On the contrary, I would say that meditation helps us to creatively engage with our thoughts and not fixate on them. When people say they cannot concentrate, I say, “No, no, no! You are concentrating—too much on any one thought!”
  • By Wendy Johnson
    Now in mid-June the 2010 summer harvest begins to ripen in a flood tide of Dragon Tongue beans, golden beets, and sweet basil, while 3,000 miles to the east on the Gulf of Mexico the Deepwater Horizon oil spill continues to worsen.
  • By Rita M. Gross
    I am convinced that an accurate, nonsectarian study of Buddhist history can be of great benefit to dharma practitioners. As a scholar and practitioner, I have for many years worked to bring the findings of historical scholarship into dharma centers in Zen, Vipassana, and Tibetan lineages.

web features

  • Over the past few years, Tricycle has featured a number of articles about Jodo Shinshu, or Shin Buddhism, which developed from the insight of Shinran (1173-1263), a Japanese monk that Rev. Dr. Alfred Bloom calls a "towering figure" in Buddhism. Read the articles below to get a sense of Shinran and his teachings, and the modern practice of Jodo Shinshu.
  • The idea of sunyata (Pali sunnata) or emptiness has been variously understood—and misunderstood—for centuries.

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tricycle blog

The way we know things depends upon the mind, nothing more. Most of us have moments of deep contentment when we don’t feel a need to alter, express, run from, or invest some special meaning in our experience in any way. Deep contentment shows us that, at least momentarily, our habit of cherishing and protecting [...]
In the first of four talks for her Tricycle Retreat, Elizabeth says that standing on a street corner in Manhattan, she sees as many people in a moment as she might see in six months at home in Colorado. Well, lucky New Yorkers, she’s heading back your way! tricycle is proud to be the media [...]
Kenneth Folk offers this five-minute journey to enlightenment: How to Get Enlightened What would I say if I had just five minutes to give comprehensive instructions for awakening? You are unenlightened to the extent that you are embedded in your experience. You think that your experience is you. You must dis-embed. Do that by taking each aspect of [...]
Sweetcake Enso is putting on a traveling art exhibition. There’s a list of confirmed venue on the website. And Here’s the press release, with a cool piece by one of the participating artists, Max Gimblett. The first call for submissions ended September 1: In American culture Zen is often represented by the Enso, a calligraphic circle, [...]
At the end of July, hundreds of Indonesian Buddhists protested against a local branch of the French-owned chain restaurant Buddha Bar. The Anti-Buddha Bar Forum (FABB) organized the protest. As blogged about previously here, those demonstrations turned ugly. Well, despite FABB criticism from other Buddhist organizations, FABB efforts paid off: this week a district court [...]
The purpose of practice is to habituate ourselves to openness. This means we need to understand reactive mind. How do we experience the difference between reacting and staying open? At what point do we decide to go with the habitual tendencies of exaggeration and denial or try something new? Where is the fork in the road? [...]

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