With Pema Khandro, Father Francis Tiso, Lama Lhanang Rinpoche, Chagdud Khadro, Shugen Roshi, Julie Rogers, Jim Tucker, M.D., Koshin Paley Ellison and Dr. William McGrath
Open Dates
Teachings on Death and Dying Facing realities of dying, death, and grief are central to our human experience. This program offers practical instructions for helping others in the process of dying and an overview of essential knowledge on death, bardo, and rebirth. This includes self-paced lectures on dying, loss, grief, and illness from Lamas and scholars of Buddhist Studies. Support the Buddhist Studies Institute by donating for these precious teachings. Your contribution, big and small, helps makes in-depth Buddhist training and education more accessible for all. May the teachings spread and flourish!
With Dr. Nicole Willock, Julie Regan, Ph.D., Pema Khandro, Lama Willa Miller, Amy Langenberg , Dr. Ann Gleig, Dr. Nida Chenagtsang, Lama Rod Owens, Dr. Jim Hopper, Dr. Elizabeth Call and Damchö Diana Finnegan
Open Dates
Join Pema Khandro and a group of esteemed Buddhist Studies scholars for an exploration of the history of Buddhist Sexualities from celibacy, to sacred sexuality in Buddhist Tantra and a simple approach to embodied integration with nature in Dzogchen. Support the Buddhist Studies Institute by donating for these precious teachings. Your contribution, big and small, helps makes in-depth Buddhist training and education more accessible for all. May the teachings spread and flourish!
This course on Buddhist Ethics goes through the Five Buddhist Precepts. The five precepts form the basis of a Buddhist way of life and the vows that Buddhists Seek to follow. The Five Precepts are a discipline of freedom, honor, and precision that cover the potent themes of life from the extraordinary perspective of non-duality. Support the Buddhist Studies Institute by donating for these precious teachings. Your contribution, big and small, helps makes in-depth Buddhist training and education more accessible for all. May the teachings spread and flourish!
With Holly Gayley, Judith Simmer-Brown, Sarah Jacoby, Amy Langenberg , Damchö Diana Finnegan, Venerable Karma Lekshe Tsomo and Pema Khandro
Open Dates
This is the missing history of women in Tantric Buddhism. This course addresses the fascinating story of nuns, mothers, teachers, consorts, prophets, and disciples. Taught by scholar-practitioners whose groundbreaking research on women and Buddhism has changed the way we think of Buddhist history. This course will address the history of women in Buddhism, the history of yoginis and dakinis in India and Tibet, the stories of important Buddhist women, Buddhist philosophy on gender, sex, and sexuality, and the role of the consort in historical Tibet, and contemporary manifestations and so much more. Support the Buddhist Studies Institute by donating for…
Join us for the 21 Taras. The twenty-one taras is a sublime chanting meditation and praise of the forms of the female Bodhisattva Tara, each one a contemplation of all the forms of compassion ranging from gentle to fierce. This event explores the outer, inner and secret meaning of the twenty-one taras. This will be a joyous fundraiser in honor of our beloved Pema Khandro Rinpoche’s birthday. Wednesday, December 4th 6 pm pt | 9 pm et
I remember in my interview with Myokei Caine-Barrett for a LionsRoar panel I was doing, I asked her what advice she would give to her younger self. She said, it would be, to “tell the whole truth of your life to someone.” I remembered being really surprised that she gave the same answer that I would give as well – which is fundamentally, above all, to cultivate deep, authentic, honest relationships as the core resource of a spiritual life.
It was one of the things that so many people learned during the pandemic is how much we need relationships and need community. In a Buddhist life it is like this too – we need connections, the feedback that relationships give us, and the opportunities for mutual care… community can take spiritual work to the next level. Whether online or in person, its the whole range of conversations, from small talk to deep sharing that generates a sense of connection and belonging that is such a core human need, so I would say too that if there is one advice I could give others for their spiritual path it is that, to prioritize friendship, community, and sangha.
There is something particularly special about the relationships formed in a Buddhist practice community. Through Buddhist meditation we share the experience of being deeply quiet together in a group, or chanting. That non-verbal experience, and somatic experience of calm and safety in a group is something our bodies and nervous systems need know.
I have noticed also that being in community is a way of resisting the echo-chamber that social media creates. In our community, because of its cross-cultural, multi-generational and international character – people who might not meet otherwise, communicate across timezones, engaging with such a wide array of fascinating people. It can be surprising and healing. We learn from each other and grow together on the deepest levels. Indeed, I have witnessed the sangha support each other through births, deaths, illnesses, disappointments, and triumphs, such friendships are precious resources, it is such a honor to experience how the sangha jewel can be a refuge indeed.
This is why I have trained meditation teachers all these years, to foster communities, communities based on care and contemplation, and this of course has been such a primary mission of the Buddhist Studies Institute, to hold a highly connected environment in which rigorous dharma study and practice can be engaged. I believe this is the best way to change the world, with thousands of meditation teachers in places I might never go, representing the tradition in the way only they can. Watching this come to fruition with the graduates of our program has been one of the great joys of my life, and I want to continue to support the meditation teachers that I have trained over the last two decades.
For this reason I am overjoyed to be beginning our Advanced Meditation Teacher Training course this weekend, an opportunity for the development of new Umdzes, the group practice leaders, and a way to support our ever growing community with new teachers and leaders. May we nurture and foster precious community together.