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You are here: Home / Consciousness / Joanna Macy on the relevance of the Shambhala Warrior Prophecy for our time

Joanna Macy on the relevance of the Shambhala Warrior Prophecy for our time

10 September 2017 4 Comments

Findhorn Fellow, Eco-philosopher and root teacher of The Work That Reconnects, Joanna Macy, shares the twelve centuries old Shambhala Warrior Prophecy from the Tibetan Buddhist tradition, which is said to come true in our time. She invites you to listen to it as if it were about you….

“There comes a time when all life on Earth is in danger. At that time great powers have arisen, barbarian powers, and although they waste their wealth in preparations to annihilate each other, they have much in common. Among the things these barbarians have in common are weapons of unfathomable devastation and death and technologies that lay wast to the world. And it is just at this point in our history, when the future of all beings seems to hang by the frailest of threads, that the kingdom of shambhala emerges. Now, you can’t go there because it is not a place. It exists in the hearts and minds of the shambhala warriors….

“Now the time is coming when great courage is required of the shambhala warriors: moral courage and physical courage, and that’s because they are going to go right into the heart of the barbarian powers to dismantle their weapons. They are going to go into the pits and citadels where the weapons are made and deployed. They are going to go into the corridors of power where the decisions are made, to dismantle the weapons in every sense of the word. The shambahla warriors know that these weapons can be dismantled because they are made by the human mind. They can be unmade by the human mind. The dangers that face us are not brought upon us by some satanic deity, or some evil extraterrestial force or some unchangeable preordained fate. They arise out of our relationships and habits, out of our priorities. They are made by the human mind; they can be unmade by the human mind.

“Now is the time the shambhala warriors go into training. They train in the use of two implements. One is compassion and the other is insight into the radical interdependence of all phenomena. You need both. You need the compassion because that provides the fuel to move you out where you need to be to do what you need to do. That means not being afraid of the suffering of your world. When you’re not afraid to be with that pain, then nothing can stop you. You can be and do what you’re meant to.

“But by itself that implement is very hot – it can burn you out. So you need that other tool – you need the insight into the radical interconnectivity at the heart of existence, the web of live, our deep ecology. When you have that, then you know that this is not a battle between good guys and bad guys. You know that the line between good and evil runs through the landscape of every human heart. And you know that we are so interwoven in the web of life that even the smallest act, with clear intention, has repercussions through the whole web beyond your capacity to see. But that’s a little cool; maybe even a little abstract. You need the heat of the compassion – the interplay between compassion and wisdom.”

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Comments

  1. Lorna Forsyth says

    16 September 2017 at 07:54

    I was very moved by your Vimeo and the gentleness of the sharing of the prophecy. I would like to ask ;How do we gain compassion? What does it look like so we know we recognise it in ourselves, please. Is it through mindfulness ? Action?
    I struggle with accepting /acting on the ‘little voice’ and wish to be that warrior of which you speakx
    Love and blessings
    Lorna

    Reply
    • Therese says

      8 October 2017 at 08:54

      Lorna, have a look at the work of Kristen Neff and Kelly McGonegil.

      Reply
    • Renata: says

      26 October 2017 at 01:03

      Compassion comes when you are able to open your heart. When you can feel what the other person goes through and also understand this other person and what is going on. That does not mean that you agree, but you are able to step into the shoes of the other person and feel what this person feels and why. At the same moment you understand the situation and all that is connected with it. It is only possible when you do not get emotionally lost in it and when you open your mind. That means when you are able to see the other person without your judgements, believes and your personal ego.
      When you experienced the death of a close person you can understand the sadness of an other one if that or a similar thing happens to this person as well. But compassion is more – not being lost yourself in these feelings but going beyond it and stepping outside without loosing the compassion for that other person. That is the difference between pity and compassion. Also if you close your heart you are not able to feel compassion, whatever similar experience you had yourself. It takes courage to open ones heart. And ones mind.
      Start may be with yourself: instead of self-pity try to develop compassion and find ways to change the situation in a good way. When we are able to love ourselves and treat ourselves well we can do that for others too. Often it is more difficult to apply that on oneself.

      Reply
  2. Therese says

    8 October 2017 at 08:56

    Lorna, have a look at the work of Kristen Neff and Kelly McGonegil. Also Margaret Wheatley and her book ‘So far from home’.

    Reply

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About the Findhorn New Story Hub

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

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