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
There is a dakini story related to the life of Naropa, a famous master of Tibetan Buddhism. He had been a learned scholar until he had a surprising encounter with a strange looking dakini. She told him, you understand the words, but you don’t understand the meaning. In other words, his understanding was merely intellectual and he was missing the crucial point. In the story she has a gloriously non-normative body, deformed, and crooked in all these places, and also visibly aged. Her very body was revealing something of the messy, somatic, wrinkly nature of life. After this he practiced Chakrasamvara meditation which led him to the visions of where to find his teacher. That was the beginning of an epic journey of awakening that has been told and retold for hundreds of years.
That profound search for meaning speaks to a tender human experience – the realization that there is more than what we know, to yearn to know it and sometimes to rip open our lives to go find it.
Everyone’s journey in the dharma is different. We all come to Vajrayana Buddhism for a variety of reasons, but the longing to know more, to see further, to know the genuine meaning of what we are and what reality is – that is what so many of us all have in common with Naropa. We don’t want to know just the words, we want to know the meaning.
But to know the meaning takes time, it takes practice. It is more than just a peak experience once a year or once every few years when we go on retreat. To actualize this part of self that loves to learn and grow requires something ongoing and deep.
When I was first teaching I struggled with how to meet this need, because I teach householders, and householders can only take short periods out of their life to go on retreats. How would we study the epic works of Vajrayana or proceed through the entire sequence of esoteric contemplative practices in just a few days? And then a few of us started meeting online. I have a handful of students who met with me for a decade online, every week. And thats when I started to see. We would gather for retreats with a large group and those students, the ones who had been studying with me weekly online, had a practice that was light years beyond those who didn’t. Their understanding of the principles, the practices, the obstacles to practice – it was unmatched. They went deeper in retreat. They had insights into the ground of being because they had been primed for practice. And the strangest most wonderful thing was that, we knew eachother so very well. I felt close to them and them to me because we had dialogued week after week about the dharma, I knew their questions and doubts, and they even knew mine. I started to see what was possible through online training. And that is when we started going into the longer, more epic studies like that of Finding Rest and Ease. We were able to take our time, because from home, they could make the time for a couple hours a week. The profound results of online practice and study speak for themselves. Anyone who doubts it should meet my sangha, a group of new and advanced practitioners, but who, on a regular basis pursue the genuine meaning.
As we step into 2024, our leadership team has seen the potential of what we can do online. We are in the midst of a complete technology revamp, to make it even more accessible and supportive to our dharma friends everywhere. We want to invest in a future where our team can come to your living room, where I can continue to meet with you one and one, and where you can interact with your fascinating and brilliant dharma friends. I invite you to help me make this possible by supporting our fundraising effort with a donation this year, to celebrate the embrace of Buddhism and technology and to enable the continual unfolding of this benevolent, generative effort that we have made.
Our goal this year is to raise $50,000 to revamp our online platform to fulfill this potential at the next level. We can’t do that without your donations! We are a grassroots organization and all of our funding is based on individual donations. I hope you will remember us in your end of year giving and of course, if you cannot, then we also enjoy the continual support of good will and prayers, the positive energy that has kept us going for all these years! So please feel free to give however you can. I look forward to a new year of programs and to meeting each other again and again.
To make a donation, you can click the donate button below or mail your check to the address listed below. No amount is too small or too large. Every gift counts and makes a difference.