Buddhist scholar, author, activist and Findhorn Fellow, Joanna Macy, tells the story of the coming of the Kingdom of Shambhala as related to her by Choegyal Rinpoche. The story of the human heart and the interplay between compassion and wisdom.
Change the Story, Change the World
Buddhist scholar, author, activist and Findhorn Fellow, Joanna Macy, tells the story of the coming of the Kingdom of Shambhala as related to her by Choegyal Rinpoche. The story of the human heart and the interplay between compassion and wisdom.
The Findhorn Foundation’s New Story Hub is a resource centre for anyone engaged in the cocreation of a new evolutionary paradigm. We invite you to participate and to help us accelerate our collective understanding of what might be, what is emerging and what must change, both in us and in the human story. read more
You need to have Choegyal Rinpoche talk to you about Trungpa Rinpoche and the Shambhala terma.
Trungpa Rinpoche wrote Shambhala: The Sacred Path of the Warrior to describe the way of the “Pawo’, One Who is Brave. Bear in mind that calling oneself a Shambhala Warrior does not qualify oneself as brave, in the sense he describes. Being authorised to teach on the Shambhala teachings or hold authority within the organisation does not qualify oneself as brave, in the sense he describes. It is all training. There is no refuge from samsara but the insight arising from meditation, the fruit of which is compassion.