Chapter 1 of “Then and Now: A Commentary on The Jewel Ornament of Liberation”
[…] Tibetan tradition: what are called the Dakpo Kagyu, Dakpo after this Gampopa. And there are several lines of transmission some of which are extant today, like the Karma Kagyu and the Drukpa Kagyu and so forth. So, here we have a highly trained scholastic who also has developed yogic abilities in isolated practice in […]
Chapter 1 of “Four Immeasurables”
[…] Now, that’s a very brief description of what happens in this kind of practice. If you want to read more about it, read section ten in the karma chapter, chapter five in here. I go into it in some detail. Accepting the results Ken: And now we come to the fourth effort, accepting the […]
Chapter 1 of “Chö: Cutting Through the Thickets of Thinking”
[…] starts on page 31, . This is a prayer that was written by a teacher, oh, I think in the sixteenth or seventeenth century, generally known as Karma Chagmé, who was a very prolific writer, a great devotee of Amitabha and Chenrezig, and this is a prayer he wrote. It’s actually a little prayer […]
Chapter 1 of “Mind Training in Seven Points”
[…] down to Trin-le Shingta was a Drukpa Kagyu lineage holder; Tsewang Norbu was a Nyingmapa lineage holder; Situ Tenpa Nyinje was the Tenth Situ Rinpoche who’s the Karma Kagyu lineage holder and so forth, down to Lodrö Tayé who is the author of this text. And this was another person whose texts we studied […]