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SPIRITUAL: Special Class

12:00 pm Saturday, November 19, 2022

 

Geske Gelek has kindly accepted our request to lead us through the visualizations in the Vajrayogini sadhana.  

This special opportunity is open only to students who have taken the full Vajrayogini initiation. 

Approximately 12:00 noon on Saturday November 19, immediately following Khensur Rinpoche's teaching on the Eight Verses of Thought Transformation.

This session will be offered both in person and online via Zoom and YouTube live stream.

Download a copy of the Vajrayogini sadhana here.

IMPORTANT NOTE: 

While this session will begin immediately following the teaching on the Eight Verses of Thought Transformation, we do not have an exact start time.  We hope that students who received the full Vajrayogini initiation are able to join this special session Geshe-la has generously offered to provide for us.  Thank you for your patience and flexibility.

Lamp for the Path to Enlightenment

Lama Atisha's A Lamp for the Path to Enlightenment is an essential text in the lamrim tradition. In this text, Atisha Dipamkara Shrijnana distilled Shakyamuni Buddha's 84,000 teachings into a cohesive, step-by-step method to achieve enlightenment.
In these Wednesday evening teachings, Khensur Rinpoche will teach on this precious text, the root of the lamrim teachings.

Repeats every week every Saturday until Sat Jun 11 2022 except Sat May 28 2022.
10:00 am Saturday, May 14, 2022

Buddhist Mind Science: Activating Your Potential

Module 1 - Cultivating Lasting Happiness: What Buddhism and Science Have to Say About It

 

This course focuses on an exploration of what leads to dissatisfaction and suffering, and what contributes to happiness for oneself and others. Participants will be introduced to the fundamentals of meditation and mind training, especially in the areas of establishing a meaningful direction in life, balancing the mind with equanimity and a caring attitude, and nurturing warmheartedness and wisdom drawn from the Buddhist tradition. This is complemented by references to current scientific understanding on our nervous system, values, subjective well-being, neuroplasticity and altruism.

This four-part course takes place online only (via Zoom) from 10am to noon on Saturdays: May 14, 21, June 4, 11, 2022.

Sorry, registration is closed for this course. 

Syllabus for Buddhist Mind Science, Module 1

This short course is a part of a new FPMT pilot series, "Buddhist Mind Science: Activating Your Potential", that focuses on meditation and the mind to provide insight and practical techniques on meditation, the mechanisms of suffering and happiness, finding mental balance, and how to discover and develop our potential for compassion and wisdom. The presentation is in harmony with a comparative modern scientific perspective.

We depend on your support

In keeping with our tradition, Kadampa Center does not charge a fee to attend any Dharma teachings, so that financial resources will never be an obstacle to hearing the Dharma. We rely on the generosity of students to be able to offer these courses, inclulding making an offering to the teachers who will lead each module. 

Your support for the course opens access to the Dharma for others, and enables Kadampa Center to make a generous offering to each module's teacher.

Support Buddhist Mind Science

 

Instructors for this module: 

 

Marina Brucet Vinyals holds a BA and a MA in Biochemistry and a PhD in Molecular Biology in Immunology from the University of Barcelona, where she also performed postdoctoral studies. After this, she decided to change research in the laboratory for research of the mind and its possibilities. To this aim, she completed a six-year full-time study program Masters Program of Advanced Buddhist Studies of Sutra and Tantra at Lama Tzong Khapa Institute, Italy. She studied with great Tibetan lamas such as His Holiness the Dalai Lama, Lama Zopa Rinpoche, Lama Jampa Monlam and Khensur Jampa Tegchok, amongst others, and has completed a one-year individual meditation retreat, among others. Presently, she combines continual development and meditation retreats with teaching meditation and Buddhist philosophy, at both general and specialized levels, with an approach that always takes into account the context and circumstances of Western life. She mainly teaches at Tushita Meditation Center Spain and other FPMT centers, and collaborates with SEE Learning (Emory University) in Spain.

Hans Burghardt holds a BA and a MA in Biochemistry and Molecular Biology and a PhD from the University of Barcelona, where he spent seven years doing research. Since 2002, he meditates and is a student of great Buddhist masters including His Holiness the Dalai Lama, Kyabje Lama Zopa Rinpoche, Kirti Tsenshab Rinpoche, Lama Jampa Monlam, Khensur Jampa Tegchok amongst others. He has completed the Masters Program of Advanced Buddhist Studies of Sutra and Tantra at Istituto Lama Tzong Khapa (Italy) and has completed a one-year individual meditation retreat. He currently teaches meditation and Buddhism at Tushita Meditation Center Spain and other FPMT centers, and is co-founder and coordinator of the Initiative for an Emotional, Ethical, and Social Education, that promotes the establishment of Emory University's SEE Learning in Spain.

 
 

This program is offered jointly by:

 

Location at Kadampa Center: 
Gompa
11:00 am Saturday, February 26, 2022

Celebrate with our own Geshe Palden Sangpo on the launch of his new book, Opening the Door to Happiness: A Commentary on the Thirty-Seven Practices of a Bodhisattva

More than a year in the making, this insightful book explores the profound practice of training in the altruistic attitude.

Geshe Sangpo's intention for writing this book is to benefit all who read it. He freely offers this book as a teaching and will make no monetary gain from its release. Through the generosity of many kind benefactors, copies of Opening the Door to Happiness: A Commentary on the Thirty-Seven Practices of a Bodhisattva will be freely given away at the center while supplies last.  

Please join us Saturday, February 26, for these very special events

Sorry, registration to attend the ceremony in person is full. All are welcome to attend online, and to come afterward to receive a free copy of the book for Geshe Sangpo to sign. We expect the book signing to begin at approximately 11:30 am. 

Book Launch Ceremony begins at 11 am

Register Here for Zoom Attendance

YouTube: Watch the Livestream Here

Book Signing begins approximately 11:30 am

After the presentation, Geshe Sangpo will be available to sign books. All are welcome to come to the book signing. We ask that you observe social distancing and wear a mask when approaching the book signing table. 

If you are unable to attend the book launch, we will have copies of the book at the Center for people to pick up while supplies last. The Center is open on Sunday mornings from 10 am until noon, before and after the Sunday teachings.

 

Location at Kadampa Center: 
Gompa

Creative Mindfulness

Mindfulness is a term used commonly now in our culture, but what makes something an authentic mindfulness practice? Venerable Thubten Chöying (Sarah Brooks) explores how to practice mindfulness both as meditation and in everyday activities.
7:00 pm Thursday, August 19, 2021

   

 

Mindfulness is a term used commonly now in our culture, but what makes something an authentic mindfulness practice?

Join American Buddhist nun Venerable Thubten Chöying (Sarah Brooks) to explore how to practice mindfulness both as meditation and in everyday activities. An avid photographer, Ven. Chöying will describe how she integrates mindfulness with creative endeavors, and especially how to incorporate a compassionate motivation.

 

This public talk is suitable for everyone, with or without prior experience of meditation or Buddhism.

This event is available on Zoom and YouTubePlease register here to access the Zoom session.

Venerable Thubten Chöying/Sarah Brooks found her first Dharma home at Kadampa Center in the mid-1990s. She continued to be involved in FPMT for many years, studying and offering service at centers and projects in the United States and New Zealand. She has been a Foundation Service Seminar trainer and helped pilot the teacher training seminar. After ordaining as a Getsul in January 2020 at Kopan Monastery in Nepal, she moved to Khachoe Ghakyil Ling (Kopan’s) Nunnery, where she took in-person and online classes in the Basic Program, Tibetan language, and debate logic.

Location at Kadampa Center: 
Gompa
5:30 pm Sunday, August 15, 2021

  The recent rise in attacks on Asian Americans has sparked fear and tremendous anger in our communities. These attacks have also renewed Asian Americans’ search for our social, cultural, and political identities. While many Asian Americans identify as Buddhist, some lack access to Buddhist teachings and opportunities for individual and collective practice. We offer this program to create a space for Asian American Buddhists to explore Buddhism's unique, effective, and powerful approach to issues such as racial discrimination and violence: we will not fight hatred with hatred.

In this onlinemeeting, a panel of Asian American speakers will explore topics such as:

·       What might be some Buddhist approaches to raising awareness about discrimination against Asian Americans?

·       How can the Dharma support Asian Americans, including the Millenials and Gen Z, in dealing with the difficult emotions arising from anti-Asian bias and discrimination?

·       How can the Dharma support young Asian Americans and provide opportunities to explore and apply Buddhism in ways that are relevant to them?

·       How can we as Buddhists address social justice issues through meditation, practice, collective action, and the programs we offer at our centers? 

    Access the meeting via Zoom here.

This event is for all people who are interested in exploring these questions together.  Our speakers will all be people of Asian descent who are connected with the practice of Tibetan Buddhism in particular.  There is a long history of discrimination against people of Asian descent in the U.S., and we recognize that this history and how it impacts our members and communities in the Tibetan Buddhist traditions have rarely been discussed in public events.  We hope that this event will serve as a beginning of increased, open discussions in the service of compassion, healing and inclusivity.  In addition to four brief presentations by our speakers, there will also be time for questions and comments. 

 

Our Speakers:

  

Venerable Losang Tendrol 

The daughter of Chinese immigrants, Ani Losang Tendrol was the only Asian American at the private school she attended from the first to the twelfth grade. The feeling of being marginalized eventually led her to Buddhism, and she took getsul ordination in 2008. She has served as Spiritual Program Coordinator for Guhyasamaja Center and has taught Discovering Buddhism and other classes at Guhyasamaja Center and at Do Ngak Kunphen Ling in Connecticut.

 

Emily Hsu

Emily has been leading Dharma classes since 2006, after graduating from the seven-year Masters Program of Buddhist Sutra and Tantra and completing a ten month solitary retreat. She served as the resident teacher for Ocean of Compassion Buddhist Center until 2016, and since then has been splitting her time between teaching in various Dharma centers and doing meditation retreats.

 

Tenzin Woden

Tenzin Woden is one of the co-founders of Online Tibetan Education (OTE) which began in 2011 as an initiative to promote and preserve the Tibetan Buddhism, language and culture amongst Tibetan youth in the diasporic community. She strives to be an active members of her community in order to stay rooted to her Tibetan identity in the western world. She's also passionate about the environment which she pursues in her day time career as an environmental engineer. 

 

sujatha baliga

sujatha baliga’s work is characterized by an equal dedication to crime survivors and people who’ve caused harm. A former victim advocate and public defender, speaks publicly and inside prisons about her own experiences as a survivor of child sexual abuse and her path to forgiveness. Her personal and research interests include the forgiveness of seemingly unforgivable acts, survivor-led movements, restorative justice’s potential impact on racial disparities in our legal systems, and Buddhist approaches to conflict transformation. She’s a member of the Gyuto Foundation in Richmond, CA, where she leads meditation on Monday nights. She was named a 2019 MacArthur Fellow. 

 

Moderator:Jennifer Kim

Jennifer grew up in a Korean-American household and identified as an agnostic before discovering Buddhism in 2007. Since then, she has studied and served at various Buddhist centers, including serving as Director and President at Shantideva Center in New York City. During college, she also co-led Columbia University's work with the New York Asian Women's Center, to support children from homes of domestic violence. Jennifer is passionate about helping people from all races, faiths, and walks of life uncover their potential for happiness, and she appreciates the potential of the Buddha's teachings to overcome racism by overcoming ignorance. In addition to her ongoing volunteer work for Shantideva Center, Jennifer works for Potential Project, a global consulting and leadership development firm that helps companies create a better world by developing mindfulness, selflessness and compassion.

 

    Co-Sponsoring Centers for this Event:

Guhyasamaja Center in Fairfax, Virginia

Do Ngak Kunphen Ling (DNKL), Redding, Connecticut

International Mahayana Institute (IMI), FPMT's international organization of ordained sangha

Jefferson Tibetan Society, Charlottesville, Virginia

Kadampa Center, Raleigh, North Carolina

Land of Medicine Buddha in Soquel, California

Mahayana Sutra & Tantra Center in Fairfax, Virginia

Namdrol Ling Study Group, Miami, Florida

Namgyal Ling, Gainesville, Virginia

Shantideva Center in Brooklyn, New York

Sravasti Abbey, Newport, Washington

Tara Buddhist Center in Nashville, Tennessee

Thubten Kung Ling, Deerfield Beach, Florida

Thubten Norbu Ling in Santa Fe, New Mexico

Tse Chen Ling in San Francisco, California

Vajrapani Institute, Boulder Creek, California

 

Location at Kadampa Center: 
Gompa
11:00 am Saturday, May 1, 2021

Postponed from last week because of rain.

 

We all need purification and merit, and circumambulating sacred objects is a simple and powerful way to do this. 

 

Kadampa Center is blessed to have not only a stupa, but a gompa filled with statues, thangkas and holy texts, as well as a garden Buddha statue – all powerful objects for circumambulation!

Geshe Sangpo will lead us in prayer followed by seven circumambulations of these sacred items on our grounds – stupa, building and garden Buddha. Then we will gather again for dedication.

During the Covid pandemic, we ask that everyone wear a mask and observe safe social distancing.

Location at Kadampa Center: 
Outside - Stupa Area
Repeats every week every Thursday until Sat Jun 26 2021.
7:00 pm Thursday, May 6, 2021

 

Discussion and debate are among the best tools for understanding and integrating the Dharma so that it is truly part of our minds.

On these Thursday nights, we will meet in the gompa to watch teachings online from qualified teachers, and then discuss what we've heard.

Upcoming session (June 10 - July 8):  Shantideva's Guide to the Bodhisattva's Way of Life  Teachings by His Holiness the Dalai Lama, New Delhi, India, March 19-21, 2010 

We will divide this three-day teaching by His Holiness into five video and discussion sessions.

Please register here.

Because of the pandemic, this program limited to no more than 20 people; registration is required and limited to 20 participants.

Please keep in mind that this is an in-person event - unlike online events, each registration reserves one of a limited number of seats and precludes another person attending. 

Students are required to wear masks while inside the Center.

This event will take place at the Center; there will be no online option.   This group is led by long-time member Jack Shannon.

 

Current session (May 6 - June 3):  Dealing with Destructive Emotions - Teachings  by Geshe Lhakdor  Registration for this session is full.

Our mind plays a very crucial role in all our experiences, whether painful or pleasant. In these teachings with Geshe Lhakdor-la we will learn about how we can work with and relate to our emotions, thus helping us to decrease the harmful and disturbing emotions which prevent our mind from experiencing peace and happiness.

This teaching is based on Shantideva’s Boddhisattvacharyavatara (4th chapter) 

Geshe Lhakdor is a Tibetan Buddhist scholar who has co-authored and co-translated several books on Tibetan Buddhism. He was also an English translator for His Holiness the Dalai Lama. He is a Director of the Library of Tibetan Works and Archives in Dharamshala, India. 

 

 

 

Location at Kadampa Center: 
Gompa
Repeats every month on April, May, June, July, August, September, October, November, December on the fourth Saturday until Sat Dec 23 2023.
10:00 am Saturday, April 22, 2023

CIRCUMAMBULATION PRACTICE 

We all need purification and merit. Circumambulating sacred objects is a simple, yet powerful, way to do this!

Join us on the 4th Saturday of the month beginning in the gompa at 10:00 am. 

Offered onsite, in person only.

Kadampa Center is blessed to have not only a stupa, but a gompa filled with statues, thangkas and holy texts – all powerful objects for circumambulation!

On each fourth Saturaday of the month, we will begin in the gompa with Geshe Sangpo leading us in prayers.  After which, we'll head outside where Geshe Sangpo will lead us in circumambulations of these sacred items.  Lastly, we will gather again inside the gompa for dedication prayers.

Volunteer!  If you can, please come 30 minutes early to help set up and/or plan to stay a few minutes after to help clean up.  Thank you!

Location at Kadampa Center: 
Gompa

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