By Joseph Goldstein — 2019
We may call it different names—peace, or awakening, or enlightenment, even love—but what most of us are looking for is happiness: deep, abiding fulfillment and completion. The problem is that we’re looking for it in the wrong place.
Read on tricycle.org
CLEAR ALL
One of the most popular Buddhist teachers in the San Francisco Bay Area these days is not a Tibetan lama or a traditional Zen master but an unconventional, an American-born lay teacher named Adyashanti.
When people allow themselves to connect with what their spiritual life is about for them—what their deep questions are, what their deep yearning is—then they have all the vitality they need
Some Afro-Diasporan traditions like Palo Mayombe require certain things to be done with the body after death.
Psychology and Buddhism: what they share, how they differ, and do we need both?
What is the Buddhist equivalent of the Bible? What is the Dalai Lama's favourite book? Buddhist scholar Donald Lopez picks the best books on Buddhism.
Matt Kahn is a spiritual teacher and highly attuned empathic healer.
Based on Taoist Meditation practice, Shiva Rea's inner smile meditation is an opportunity smile at yourself and embrace your happiness.
In our practice the most important thing is to realize that we have buddhanature. Intellectually we may know this, but it is rather difficult to accept.
Hyla Cass shares the words of William Walsh, a nutritional medicine expert.
Joanna Macy discusses politics, the media, activism, and the importance of waking up.