38 episodes

The Buddhism for Beginners Podcast is brought to you by Kunzang Palyul Choling (KPC). KPC was founded by Jetsunma Ahkon Norbu Lhamo Rinpoche to uphold the Palyul lineage within the Nyingma tradition of Vajrayana Buddhism. KPC is a hub of compassionate activity with a mission to inspire people to improve the world and end suffering for the benefit of all beings. The Buddhism for Beginners podcast draws from a wealth of teachings by Jetsunma and other great masters from around the world. Gain insight and guidance into how you can apply foundational Buddhist principles and meditation techniques to use in your everyday life. For more teachings, meditations, and resources visit out online virtual temple at Tara.org.

Buddhism for Beginners Kunzang Palyul Choling - Jetsunma Ahkon Lhamo

    • Religion & Spirituality

The Buddhism for Beginners Podcast is brought to you by Kunzang Palyul Choling (KPC). KPC was founded by Jetsunma Ahkon Norbu Lhamo Rinpoche to uphold the Palyul lineage within the Nyingma tradition of Vajrayana Buddhism. KPC is a hub of compassionate activity with a mission to inspire people to improve the world and end suffering for the benefit of all beings. The Buddhism for Beginners podcast draws from a wealth of teachings by Jetsunma and other great masters from around the world. Gain insight and guidance into how you can apply foundational Buddhist principles and meditation techniques to use in your everyday life. For more teachings, meditations, and resources visit out online virtual temple at Tara.org.

    Experience Holidays with a Calm Mind

    Experience Holidays with a Calm Mind

    Jetsunma Ahkon Lhamo gave this teaching Christmas eve 1995. In it she describes the hope and fear that is magnified during the holiday season, using it as a way to understand the habits of our minds. During the holiday season our minds become even more unstable than usual, according to Jetsunma. Our hopes and fears increase. "The more we grasp outwardly and try to secure what we want...the less happy we will be." Jetsunma discusses a compassionate way of life as a way to true and lasting happiness.
    Support the Show.
    For more resources, teachings and practices, visit www.tara.org

    • 1 hr 9 min
    Marrying Your Spiritual Life with Western Culture

    Marrying Your Spiritual Life with Western Culture

    Our spiritual life can be a precious living truth inside of us if we develop a deep and ultimate connection with our spiritual path. Jetsunma explains to us that this is not easy to do because our society is materialistic and removed from the natural current of life.
    Support the Show.
    For more resources, teachings and practices, visit www.tara.org

    • 1 hr 13 min
    Compassion Stops the Suffering

    Compassion Stops the Suffering

    Jetsunma takes us to a deeper understanding of the interdependence of the practices of Refuge and Bodhicitta. Leading us through the mental equations that will result in the cessation of suffering, she points out, "The cessation of suffering does not come about when everything external gets alright." The answer to the question, "How in the world am I going to fix this?" is: you’re not...in the world. We have to move beyond the realm of cyclic existence to get the answer. In a less than perfect world we decide to reach for something perfect that we can’t see yet. Only then can we bring comfort to others.
    Support the Show.
    For more resources, teachings and practices, visit www.tara.org

    • 1 hr 5 min
    Live a Sacred Life

    Live a Sacred Life

    The ideas of competition and materialism are taught to us as virtues during our childhood. Collecting things and going somewhere are pivotal ways of viewing our life’s progress. Jetsunma steers us away from these misconceptions: "Every moment is something that you have a sacred relationship with, because you move into the awareness that there is nothing that you can do that is separate from your own nature." We must realize that we are not doing anything or anybody a favor by living a spiritual life. We are simply expressing that which is true.
    Support the Show.
    For more resources, teachings and practices, visit www.tara.org

    • 1 hr 12 min
    What do the Five Senses Really Tell You?

    What do the Five Senses Really Tell You?

    The five senses are about distinction - the idea of self-nature being inherently real. They are extensions of our ego. Why is the understanding of our own true nature so difficult for human beings? Jetsunma answers, "Because we are practicing the mantra of separation constantly, on five different levels at once!" Ngündro, a preliminary foundational Buddhist practice, is the support for all other practices that follow. It is designed to pry our minds loose from the conceptualization, delusion and over-intellectualization that our five senses have been reporting to us for aeons.
    Support the Show.
    For more resources, teachings and practices, visit www.tara.org

    • 59 min
    Go Beyond Safety to Love

    Go Beyond Safety to Love

    We are taught to never truly surrender our heart, to never risk in order to experience great passion, to always keep something aside for ourselves. Our quest for safety leads us to compartmentalize our experiences and keep everything in a neat, controlled place. Jetsunma calls us to give rise to the phenomenal flame of compassion as the only thing that will truly keep us safe. If our feeling of safety comes from having control over our experiences, we are the least safe of all.
    Support the Show.
    For more resources, teachings and practices, visit www.tara.org

    • 53 min

Top Podcasts In Religion & Spirituality

BibleProject
BibleProject Podcast
Tara Brach
Tara Brach
Omar Suleiman
Muslim Central
The Surprising Rebirth Of Belief In God
Justin Brierley
The Bible in a Year (with Fr. Mike Schmitz)
Ascension
Joel Osteen Podcast
Joel Osteen, SiriusXM

You Might Also Like

Learn Buddhism with Alan Peto
Alan Peto
Buddhist Boot Camp Podcast
Timber Hawkeye
The Way Out Is In
Plum Village
Secular Buddhism
Noah Rasheta
Thich Nhat Hanh Dharma Talks
Kenley Neufeld
The Ezra Klein Show
New York Times Opinion