Sometimes The Only Thing to Do is Pray
Christina Monson
CHRISTINA MONSON (1969–2023) was a Buddhist practitioner and teacher and Tibetan language translator and interpreter. She had over thirty years of study, translation, and practice experience in Buddhism beginning with an interest in Asian philosophy as an undergraduate student at Brown University. Later, she focused her studies on Tibetan Buddhism while completing a master’s degree at the University of Wisconsin–Madison. She journeyed to Nepal in 1989 where she met her root guru, Chatral Sangye Dorje Rinpoche, under whose guidance she studied and practiced in periods of intensive retreat for the next twenty-seven years. Chatral Rinpoche first introduced her to the person and treasure lineage of Sera Khandro Dewai Dorje and conferred empowerment, reading transmission, and practice instructions. She spent the last several years of her life translating Sera Khandro’s sheldam (instructions) into English as a Tsadra Foundation translator and scholar, along with teaching and practicing the Dharma.
Christina Monson
- A Dakini's Counsel$26.95- Paperback
By Sera Khandro
Translated by Christina Monson
Foreword by Dzongsar Jamyang Khyentse
Foreword by Sogan Tulku Pema Lodoe
GUIDES
Sometimes the Only Thing to Do is Pray: An Excerpt from A Dakini's Counsel
A Selection from Chapter 1
Excerpted from A Dakini's Counsel: Sera Khandro's Spiritual Advice and Dzogchen Instructions
By Sera Khandro
Translated by Christina Monson
About This Title
Sera Khandro Dewai Dorje was a modern Tibetan Buddhist teacher who single-pointedly pursued a life of Dharma while balancing family life and public teaching. This collection of her advice, prayers, dreams, prophecies, and treasures (terma) is both biographical and instructional. It comes from within the tradition of Dzogchen, replete with practices for resting in the nature of mind. This lineage forms the bedrock of Christina Monson’s own spiritual path, lending a deep intimacy to the translations, which serve as a window into Sera Khandro’s life, teachings, and rich inner experience.
$26.95 - Paperback
Prayer
Chapter 1, page 1-6
Sometimes the only thing to do is pray.
In the Buddhist tradition in general, to pray is to surrender to the infinite manifestative potency of interdependence: causes and conditions coming together such that anything and indeed everything is possible. In the Great Perfection tradition, prayer often carries a deeply devotional flavor, reflecting the special relationship between teacher and disciple at the core of its authentic transmission. Dewai Dorje’s unbounded devotion, love, and joy frequently burst forth through prayers. These sublime portals into her inner world reveal ways she worked with some of the most powerful emotions of her life and experienced their fullest transformative potential. Similarly, she grounded herself in times of bottomless pain, grief, and sorrow through expressions of heartfelt longing and aspiration. Her intimacy with the vast spectrum of human feeling shines through the numerous prayers she composed throughout her biographical writing and treasure revelations.
Chapter 1 welcomes us through prayer into Dewai Dorje’s sea of deep love as seen for and through the eyes and heart of her lama and consort, Drime Ozer. We are treated to a glimpse of their relationship through this first piece, “An Offering from the Vulture to the Cuckoo,” a poetic letter authored by Drime Ozer himself. While all other selected translations here were penned by Dewai Dorje, this unique prayer is a rare piece of his original writing. Little of the bulk of Drime Ozer’s treasure collection, unlike that of his father Dudjom Lingpa, appears to have survived the turmoil of post 1959 Tibet. However, some selections of his writing, ritual practice compositions, and profound instructions are included in Dewai Dorje’s Collected Works. A notable exception is his longest known existent work, an as-yet untranslated commentary on the meaning of his father’s seminal teaching Buddhahood without Meditation.
Drime Ozer’s letter to Dewai Dorje takes us into their multidimensional connection as he lauds her special qualities and prays for her longevity. Half prayer, half poem, the language overflows with reverence and love for her. The second half tells the tale of a white vulture and a cuckoo to intimate the connection between Drime Ozer and Dewai Dorje with metaphoric imagery. This unique love language, drawing from the natural world, is found elsewhere in Dewai Dorje’s writings. In the poem that directly follows this prayer, seemingly as a response to it, she tells the tale of a “blue lady cuckoo” who perfects Secret Mantra practice and concludes,
These secret words about secret conduct,
inspired by the white vulture [Drime Ozer],
naturally occurred from whatever arose.
She also refers to Drime Ozer as a “white vulture” in his biography.2 There she recounts a dream where Drime Ozer meets his father Dudjom Lingpa, who instructs him to unite with the magical emanation of Vajravarahi, Dakini Sukha Vajra (Dewai Dorje), to overcome negative circumstances in his life. Dudjom Linga predicts,
Hey, hey!
When the luminescence of the eastern sky
is welcomed by the roar of the southern turquoise dragon [Dewai Dorje]
and the triple-skilled white [vulture] soars in space,
if splendor and thunder come together,
they are sure to make harmony as one.
The words of the cryptic prophecy continue but clearly refer to him and Dewai Dorje. As further evidence of their prophesized connection beyond the confines of time and space, Drime Ozer makes mention of her connection to his past lives. Some of these specific incarnations are also identified by Dewai Dorje in Drime Ozer’s biography where she lists, “At Yarlha Shampo, he was born as Pema Ledrel Tsal. At Dragdra Drogmoche, he was Longchen Dorje Ziji. At Tarpaling in Bumthang, Bhutan, he came as Pema Lingpa. At Yarlung, he was born as Urgyen Samten Lingpa.”
Such long-term connection stretching across lifetimes defies ordinary notions of relationship. It is a repeated theme between Dewai Dorje and Drime Ozer. The topic of Drime Ozer’s past incarnations comes up again in “The Ennobling Deeds of All Buddhas and Their Heirs.” There, his past lives as important treasure revealers are emphasized. The Nyingma tradition holds as a core tenet that the activities of realized beings include the revelation of treasures. Myriad in form and modality, treasures are encrypted wisdom teachings. The tradition identifies one hundred masters who are considered great treasure revealers, including five considered to be especially significant.3 Dewai Dorje’s list of Drime Ozer’s past lives name at least four with the treasure revealer name Lingpa: Pema Lingpa, Urgyen Samten Lingpa, Dodrul Lingpa, and Rok Dechen Lingpa.
Notable as well in the first prayer is the way Drime Ozer refers to Dewai Dorje using different names. He begins the homage by introducing the three kayas, dimensions of wisdom form. These are the dharmakaya, which is connected to mind’s empty essence, the sambhogakaya, which is connected to mind’s lucid and blissful nature, and the nirmanakaya, which is connected to mind’s compassionate capacity.4 Dakinis, wisdom manifesting through the feminine principle, are present in each dimension. In paying homage to Vajravarahi (Dorje Phagmo), Dewai Dorje’s principal tutelary deity, he is revering Dewai Dorje herself as a manifestation of mind’s empty and blissful unity. Her special connection with this deity is also further reflected in references to Khacho, the buddha field connected with Vajravarahi.
Dewai Dorje was a practitioner who had mastered the yogic teachings found in the inner tantric approach of anuyoga. These are powerful techniques for directly actualizing the potential of the body’s subtle network of energy channels, winds, and vital essences to enable realization of primordial wisdom. Relying upon both one’s own and another’s body, the anuyoga practitioner induces experiences of bliss to swiftly catalyze and deepen recognition of mind’s nature. As restrictions to the movement of wisdom winds through the body are lifted, the practitioner’s capacity to encounter the entirety of perceptual experience as teacher and teaching and as phenomena of purity is enhanced. In this context, “wind-mind” is a designation used to refer to the mobile aspect of consciousness, refined and rendered pliable through these practices.
Indeed, Drime Ozer himself was a master who had fully perfected the techniques of anuyoga as well. As such, he was a fully qualified consort for Dewai Dorje, her “heruka of great bliss,” as she too was for him. Heruka is a Sanskrit term indicating a wrathful, “blood-drinking” deity. As a tantric couple, Drime Ozer and Dewai Dorje practiced divine union as a yab yum (masculine and feminine) couple, using visualization of the wrathful deities Hayagriva and Vajravarahi and other techniques. Their special relationship thus involved being destined tantric partners for each other, as well as having a mutually reciprocal guru-disciple bond. Dewai Dorje’s love and devotion for Drime Ozer as her lama, consort, and treasure-revealing partner are paramount themes throughout her writing.
She celebrates his realization in “The Accomplished Secret Mantra Yogi.” Likening him to the primordial Buddha Samantabhadra and the Second Buddha Padmasambhava, the great Indian adept who helped the Tibetan king Trisong Deutsen overcome obstacles to the propagation of the Buddhadharma in Tibet in the eighth century, she lauds his exalted level of realization. To see “the truth of ultimate reality,” as he did, is to directly encounter the empty yet luminous nature of mind precisely as it is, within the context of the Great Perfection. This approach—which emphasizes such an encounter and the subsequent training of familiarity with it until stability is achieved—is the only way to untangle the web of dualistic thinking and its mistaken understanding of reality. It’s the only place where freedom from the confines of conceptual mind is found. This is what enabled Drime Ozer to “dance” with “wisdom’s illusions”: to be in the world of relative appearances but not be enslaved by them. This, of course, is made possible through realizing nothing that appears truly exists. Rather, according to Dzogchen, phenomenal existence is none other than a manifestation of the ground from which it arises: luminous, empty awareness. For Dewai Dorje, Drime Ozer’s realization of this fundamental truth made him a buddha, transcending even the limitation of necessarily appearing in a body made of flesh and blood.
“Prayer of a Crazy, Carefree Lady” uncovers more subtle qualities of his meditative presence, while “The Ennobling Deeds of All Buddhas and Their Heirs” unfolds Dewai Dorje’s utter disbelief and joy at having him in her life, as well as her despair at not being with him. This prayer is dated to the Tibetan year of the Dog. This may refer to 1911, according to the Western calendar, a time of intense turmoil for Dewai Dorje as she struggled to find her way without family or support as an outsider in the communities of eastern Tibet, where she had newly arrived.
The remaining prayers in the chapter unfold other dimensions of Dewai Dorje’s life in early nineteenth-century Golok. “I Supplicate Pema Totreng Tsal” laments the hypocrisies of fake treasure revealers. Dewai Dorje lived within a world of Dharma communities shaped by beliefs about the continuity of spiritual teachings from Guru Padmasambhava and his Tibetan consort Yeshe Tsogyal in eighth-century Tibet up to her own time and place in early twentieth-century eastern Tibet. These treasures were hidden in the physical world as well as in the intangible domain of the minds of those who were destined to discover them, the treasure revealers. The various mechanisms of their revelation and dissemination made sacred the landscape of Dewai Dorje’s life.
Even so, against such a highly sacrosanct backdrop, deceit existed. The degeneration of pure Dharma teachings and traditions for its followers is one sign of what made that time “dark” for Dewai Dorje. While Buddhist cosmology stemming from Indian sources labels the current age one of dissolution when all things decline, Dewai Dorje identifies in this prayer specific negative characteristics of treasure revealers proximate to her in time and space. To ensure she remains free from such bad behavior, she concludes with an aspiration for the circumstances of her authentic Great Perfection practice to prevail.
Remaining selections include a refined overview of the view, meditation, and conduct of Dzogchen according to her personal experience and practice as well as a synthesized version of some of the most important moments of her life. Much of Dewai Dorje’s writing teaches through the way it reflects her own realization. Prayers blend with delicate expressions of insight and wisdom such as the final prayer to Yeshe Tsogyal. This, a supplication to Padmasambhava and Yeshe Tsogyal, presents the progressive unfolding of the visions of pure appearances induced through the Dzogchen practice of Togal. Dewai Dorje’s familiarity with the visions of Togal speaks to her stable recognition of awareness, as these appearances of purity both depend upon and enhance a practitioner’s authentic experience of it.
Sera Khandro (1892–1940) was one of the most prolific Tibetan female authors of the past several centuries. At the age of fifteen, she left her home in Lhasa for eastern Tibet, embarking on a lifetime devoted to her spiritual path—she became a spiritual master, a revealer of ancient hidden teachings, a mystic, a visionary, a writer, a mother, and a vagabond. Her written works and spiritual lineage have been preserved and are now cherished worldwide.
Christina Monson (1969–2023) was a Buddhist practitioner and teacher and Tibetan language translator and interpreter. She had over thirty years of study, translation, and practice experience in Buddhism beginning with an interest in Asian philosophy as an undergraduate student at Brown University. Later, she focused her studies on Tibetan Buddhism while completing a master’s degree at the University of Wisconsin–Madison. She journeyed to Nepal in 1989 where she met her root guru, Chatral Sangye Dorje Rinpoche, under whose guidance she studied and practiced in periods of intensive retreat for the next twenty-seven years. Chatral Rinpoche first introduced her to the person and treasure lineage of Sera Khandro Dewai Dorje and conferred empowerment, reading transmission, and practice instructions. She spent the last several years of her life translating Sera Khandro’s sheldam (instructions) into English as a Tsadra Foundation translator and scholar, along with teaching and practicing the Dharma.
Related Books on Sera Khandro
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Heart Advice: Pronouncements Before Passing
Heart Advice: Pronouncements Before Passing
A Selection from Chapter 8
Excerpted from A Dakini's Counsel: Sera Khandro's Spiritual Advice and Dzogchen Instructions
By Sera Khandro
Translated by Christina Monson
About This Title
Sera Khandro Dewai Dorje was a modern Tibetan Buddhist teacher who single-pointedly pursued a life of Dharma while balancing family life and public teaching. This collection of her advice, prayers, dreams, prophecies, and treasures (terma) is both biographical and instructional. It comes from within the tradition of Dzogchen, replete with practices for resting in the nature of mind. This lineage forms the bedrock of Christina Monson’s own spiritual path, lending a deep intimacy to the translations, which serve as a window into Sera Khandro’s life, teachings, and rich inner experience.
$26.95 - Paperback
Heart Advice
Chapter 8, page 341-350
For Buddhist practitioners, death is an extraordinary opportunity. For it is that moment, when consciousness separates from the confines of physical form, that luminosity dawns and blazes as never before. Those who can seize the moment, by recognizing what is, are liberated on the spot. For others, subsequent events present further portals for recognition as the phenomena of the bardo unfold. Given the potency of the death experience for awakening, the Tibetan tradition as a whole, and especially the Dzogchen tradition, offer a plethora of skillful supports for the dying.
It is a natural inclination for those sensing into their own deaths, whether imminent or not, to want to say what is most important before the opportunity to do so is gone. To fully internalize the truth of death leads to speaking the truth, however and whatever that may entail for an individual. In this context, the tradition of final testaments (zhal chems), teachings and advice offered as the most essential by masters to disciples, enriches Tibetan Buddhism as a whole and especially the world of shaldam. Dewai Dorje’s writings contain several such selections, two of which conclude this final chapter.
“Heart Advice, A Final Testament,” written for Drime Ozer, covers with deeply felt earnestness crucial instructions on practicing most aspects of the path. Combining spiritual and practical advice, Dewai Dorje holds nothing back in telling her beloved exactly what she thinks he should and shouldn’t do. The intimacy between them is revealed in the moving and genuine pronouncements of what she sees would be dangerous for him. This degree of comfort and familiarity speaks to a relationship between heart Dharma friends, stripped of the formalities that otherwise could color communication between individuals of differing status within the tradition. Dewai Dorje taught Drime Ozer as an equal in a relationship of loving mutuality.
The final piece, “A Beggar Lady’s Final Testament,” combines the highest Dzogchen instructions with foundational Dharma advice. Written for monastics, it synthesizes Dewai Dorje’s indispensable counsel. For those who need something concise and easy to implement, this can be taken everywhere. It is as relevant for Dharma practitioners today as it was for her community one hundred years ago.
While neither of these final testaments is dated, Dewai Dorje might have written them at any time over her decades of life in eastern Tibet. From its language, the first likely was written before the passing of Drime Ozer in 1924. It’s not unusual for teachings labeled as final testaments to be composed well before a master’s actual passing. Genuine practitioners are steeped with the truth of impermanence and know that death can arrive at any moment. The urgency therefore to say what is most crucial is always upon them. What would be possible if such were the case for all of us?
Heart Advice, A Final Testament
How wondrous!
Superb Heir of All Victorious Buddhas,
gone before, present now, and still to come,
Secret Consort throughout All Lifetimes,
Great Hero—please, hear me.I have little freedom,
since my past accumulation of merit and wisdom was weak.
I have fallen under the control of others,
and as I am forced to wander in faraway places,
my despair never lifts.I have no desire to leave you, dearest partner,
equal to my heart, eyes, and very life.
But when negativity forces us apart for a little bit,
please, listen to this heart advice,
a final testament of what I am thinking.Transmitting the mani mantra to the Great Compassionate One,
or teaching sentient beings in the presence of Buddha—
this is not what I am doing.
Since our hearts are harmoniously intertwined
and we have great love and pure samaya between us,
I am just telling you what I think,
without hiding or changing anything.Visualize your father and lama,
the actual buddha of triple time,
Dudjom Dorje Drolo Tsal [Dudjom Lingpa]
constantly upon your crown.
Since he’s unrivaled among hundreds of lamas,
you don’t need to rely on others,
as there is the danger of breaking samaya.Yidam deities, empty in their appearing, arise as the lama
and are perfected as an expanse of self-arisen supports and supported manifestations.
You don’t need development practice that fixates on these appearances.
This brings the danger of falling into perpetual reification.Mantra’s speech is the language of the unborn, emptiness.
Breathing in and out is the wheel of mantra.
You don’t need to count mantra recitation conceptually.
You risk breaking its continuity with pointless chatter.Self-arisen mind, beyond causes and conditions,
is spontaneously present as an exalted state of primordial perfection.
You don’t need to use antidotes of accepting and rejecting.
These carry the danger of obscuring the twofold radiance of wisdom.Present in and of itself and uncompounded,
the dynamic energy of space and awareness
appears as kayas and orbs of five-colored light.
This is the actualization of the natural radiance of the four visions and six lamps.
You don’t need to rely upon mere relative interdependencies.
These bring the danger of temporary visual experiences of light rays.In the illusory displays of dakinis, mind’s magical manifestations,
connate primordial wisdom arises as the dakinis’ creative power.
You don’t need to hold these as separate and distinct.
Doing so risks inviting unwanted punishment.The miraculous display of the haughty protectors’ wrath
steals the life force of any enemy that is visualized.
Killing for meat and beating drums is pointless.
Misunderstanding the messengers risks harming yourself.Wrathful, supreme method, the body of the vajra king
penetrates the bhaga of the queen of unchanging space.
You don’t need beautiful human seductresses.
They bring the danger of losing the potency
of your channels, winds, and vital essences.Supreme accomplishment is evidenced by the power to reveal profound treasures,
which are to be held as precious as life itself without any disrespect.
You don’t need to compose teachings using the conventional language of intellectuals.
Doing so risks profound teachings falling into the hands of transgressors.Upon the face of the clear mirror of self-arisen phenomenal existence,
the symbolic writing of the mother-dakinis appears in images.
Practice these, the dakinis’ oral instructions, precisely as they should be.
You don’t need to seek divination about the chaotic appearances of delusion.
That brings the danger of being deceived by evil spirits.Through powerful and persistent prayers, genuine Dharma holders,
endowed with spiritual wealth yet humble in appearance,
will come to your door.
View them wisely, protect them,
and give them ripening and liberating instructions.
You don’t need to live according to others’ ethics.
Doing so puts you in danger
of wrong intentions, obstacles, and negative circumstances.The spread and supervision of profound Dharma teachings
are controlled by the dakinis of ultimate reality.
You don’t need to cater to the wishes of ordinary humans.
That carries the danger of mistaking the timing of Dharma teachings.When the father’s riches are mined by the son,
empty awareness, the best wisdom-dakini partner,
is taken as the siddhi beyond method and wisdom.
You don’t need human ladies as consorts.
This risks entanglement with one who isn’t your destined partner.The sole heart son Natsok Rangdrol
will rely on only you as refuge, now and in the future.
Protect him lovingly, and kindly give him the profound teachings.
You don’t need to go to Gangri Tokar.4
There’s the danger of getting sick and dying.When you instruct students in both worldly and spiritual matters,
some cannot be tamed by gentleness and need wrath,
and some cannot be tamed by wrath and need gentleness.
Care for all beings with fearless conduct.
You don’t need to hope, fear, or pretend anything.
Pandering to others risks giving them control of your mind.For transgressors untamed by either wrath or gentleness,
incite the powerful display of the haughty protectors as opponents
who will wipe them out until nothing, not even their names, remain.
You don’t need to talk idly with transgressors.
Doing so risks getting lost in their wildness.Food taken and clothing worn
are the wheel of the two accumulations,
enjoyments to be invested as ornaments.
Don yourself with nice clothing and enjoy special foods!
You don’t need to eat and dress like a beggar.
Doing so risks offending the wisdom deities in your body’s mandala.When enacting great deeds for the teachings of the Buddha and beings,
if you stay in retreat, you will accomplish benefit for self and other.
You don’t need to run around on horseback doing village rituals.
Doing so risks being affected by obscurations of ripened karma.Trust only yourself.
You don’t need the competition and conflict of friends and enemies.
Sweet talkers with hearts of black smoke
bring the danger of losing your freedom to others.Without feeling discouraged by all these faults,
focus on serving the Buddha’s teachings and sentient beings.
The word death is just a bubble.
Your own perception will dawn as a buddha field,
present in and of itself.
Sera Khandro (1892–1940) was one of the most prolific Tibetan female authors of the past several centuries. At the age of fifteen, she left her home in Lhasa for eastern Tibet, embarking on a lifetime devoted to her spiritual path—she became a spiritual master, a revealer of ancient hidden teachings, a mystic, a visionary, a writer, a mother, and a vagabond. Her written works and spiritual lineage have been preserved and are now cherished worldwide.
Christina Monson (1969–2023) was a Buddhist practitioner and teacher and Tibetan language translator and interpreter. She had over thirty years of study, translation, and practice experience in Buddhism beginning with an interest in Asian philosophy as an undergraduate student at Brown University. Later, she focused her studies on Tibetan Buddhism while completing a master’s degree at the University of Wisconsin–Madison. She journeyed to Nepal in 1989 where she met her root guru, Chatral Sangye Dorje Rinpoche, under whose guidance she studied and practiced in periods of intensive retreat for the next twenty-seven years. Chatral Rinpoche first introduced her to the person and treasure lineage of Sera Khandro Dewai Dorje and conferred empowerment, reading transmission, and practice instructions. She spent the last several years of her life translating Sera Khandro’s sheldam (instructions) into English as a Tsadra Foundation translator and scholar, along with teaching and practicing the Dharma.
Related Books on Sera Khandro
$34.95 - Paperback
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Today, contemporary Buddhism is largely shaped by a number of women who play vital roles from translation to teaching, to holding highly influential seats in Buddhist sanghas around the world. We are happy to publish a wide range of Buddhist authors from diverse traditions. This guide is certainly not complete in the sense of presenting each and every example of women in Buddhism today, but hopefully it will give readers a place to begin learning from and celebrating the many women who make Buddhism possible today.
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Available 05/21/2024
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A Dakini's Counsel
Sera Khandro's Spiritual Advice and Dzogchen Instructions
By Sera Khandro
Translated by Christina Monson
Sera Khandro Dewai Dorje was a modern Tibetan Buddhist teacher who single-pointedly pursued a life of Dharma while balancing family life and public teaching. This collection of her advice, prayers, dreams, prophecies, and treasures (terma) is both biographical and instructional. It comes from within the tradition of Dzogchen, replete with practices for resting in the nature of mind. This lineage forms the bedrock of Christina Monson’s own spiritual path, lending a deep intimacy to the translations, which serve as a window into Sera Khandro’s life, teachings, and rich inner experience.
Christina Monson (1969–2023) was a Buddhist practitioner and teacher and Tibetan language translator and interpreter. She had over thirty years of study, translation, and practice experience in Buddhism beginning with an interest in Asian philosophy as an undergraduate student at Brown University.
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By Brooke Schedneck
An illuminating introduction to the contemporary world of Theravada Buddhism and its rich culture and practices in modern mainland Southeast Asia.
Theravada translates as “the way of the Elders,” indicating that this Buddhist tradition considers itself to be the most authoritative and pure. Tracing all the way back to the time of the Buddha, Theravada Buddhism is distinguished by canonical literature preserved in the Pali language, beliefs, and practices—and this literature is often specialized and academic in tone. By contrast, this book will serve as a foundational and accessible resource on Theravada Buddhism and the contemporary, lived world of its enduring tradition.
$24.95 - Paperback
Inseparable Across Lifetimes
Translated by Holly Gayley
An inspiring and intimate tale set against the turmoil of recent Tibetan history, Inseparable across Lifetimes offers for the first time the translations of love letters between two modern Buddhist visionaries. The letters are poetic, affectionate, and prophetic, articulating a hopeful vision of renewal that drew on their past lives together and led to their twenty-year partnership. This couple played a significant role in restoring Buddhism in the region of Golok once China’s revolutionary fervor gave way to reform. Holly Gayley, who was given their correspondence by Namtrul Rinpoche himself, has translated their lives and letters in order to share their remarkable story with the world.
$24.95 - Paperback
Holly Gayley, Associate Professor of Buddhist Studies, is a scholar and translator of contemporary Buddhist literature in Tibet. She is author of Love Letters from Golok: A Tantric Couple in Modern Tibet, co-editor of A Gathering of Brilliant Moons: Practice Advice from the Rime Masters of Tibet, and translator of Inseparable Across Lifetimes: The Lives and Love Letters of Namtrul Rinpoche and Khandro Tāre Lhamo.
Black and Buddhist
What Buddhism Can Teach Us about Race, Resilience, Transformation, and Freedom
Edited by Cheryl A. Giles and Pamela Ayo Yetunde
Leading African American Buddhist teachers offer lessons on racism, resilience, spiritual freedom, and the possibility of a truly representative American Buddhism.
What does it mean to be Black and Buddhist? In this powerful collection of writings, African American teachers from all the major Buddhist traditions tell their stories of how race and Buddhist practice have intersected in their lives. The resulting explorations display not only the promise of Buddhist teachings to empower those facing racial discrimination but also the way that Black Buddhist voices are enriching the Dharma for all practitioners. As the first anthology comprised solely of writings by African-descended Buddhist practitioners, this book is an important contribution to the development of the Dharma in the West.
With contributions by Acharya Gaylon Ferguson, Cheryl A. Giles, Gyōzan Royce Andrew Johnson, Ruth King, Kamilah Majied, Lama Rod Owens, Lama Dawa Tarchin Phillips, Sebene Selassie, and Pamela Ayo Yetunde.
$19.95 - Paperback
Red Tara
The Female Buddha of Power and Magnetism
By Rachael Stevens
Tara is one of the most celebrated goddesses in the Buddhist world, representing enlightened activity in the form of the divine feminine. She protects, nurtures, and helps practitioners on the path to enlightenment. Manifesting in many forms and in many colors to help beings, Tara’s red form represents her powers of magnetization, subjugation, and the transformation of desire into enlightened activity. She is considered to be particularly powerful in times of plague and disharmony.
This comprehensive overview focuses on the origins, forms, and practices of Tara, providing the reader with insightful information and inspirations relating to the goddess. Its second part focuses on Red Tara, a powerful and liberating form of Tara that is particularly important to connect with in a time of crisis. These chapters cover various forms of Red Tara found throughout the Tibetan Buddhist world, the particular qualities she represents, and how through prayers and meditation we can embody her principles and truly benefit beings.
$29.95 - Paperback
Dakini's Warm Breath
The Feminine Principle in Tibetan Buddhism
by Judith Simmer-Brown
The primary emblem of the feminine in Tibetan Buddhism is the dakini, or "sky-dancer," a semi-wrathful spirit-woman who manifests in visions, dreams, and meditation experiences. Western scholars and interpreters of the dakini, influenced by Jungian psychology and feminist goddess theology, have shaped a contemporary critique of Tibetan Buddhism in which the dakini is seen as a psychological "shadow," a feminine savior, or an objectified product of patriarchal fantasy. According to Judith Simmer-Brown—who writes from the point of view of an experienced practitioner of Tibetan Buddhism—such interpretations are inadequate.
$39.95 - Paperback
The Art of Listening
A Guide to the Early Teachings of Buddhism
by Sarah Shaw
The Dīghanikāya or Long Discourses of the Buddha is one of the four major collections of teachings from the early period of Buddhism. Its thirty-four suttas (in Sanskrit, sutras) demonstrate remarkable breadth in both content and style, forming a comprehensive collection. The Art of Listening gives an introduction to the Dīghanikāya and demonstrates the historical, cultural, and spiritual insights that emerge when we view the Buddhist suttas as oral literature.
Each sutta of the Dīghanikāya is a paced, rhythmic composition that evolved and passed intergenerationally through chanting. For hundreds of years, these timeless teachings were never written down. Examining twelve suttas of the Dīghanikāya, scholar Sarah Shaw combines a literary approach and a personal one, based on her experiences carefully studying, hearing, and chanting the texts. At once sophisticated and companionable, The Art of Listening will introduce you to the diversity and beauty of the early Buddhist suttas.
$18.95 - Paperback
Women in Tibetan Buddhism
$21.95 - Paperback
Khandro Rinpoche - Born in India in 1967, Khandro Rinpoche is the daughter of Tibetan meditation master His Holiness Mindrolling Trichen and is herself a renowned teacher in the Kagyu and Nyingma lineages of Tibetan Buddhism. She is the head of a Tibetan Buddhist nunnery in India and divides her time between teaching in the West, running the nunnery, and supporting charity projects for Tibetan refugees in India.
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$29.95 - Paperback
Note: This is a restricted text.
See the complete series:
Women in the Zen Tradition
"By being keen observers of our planet, we are more connected to the world around us and in a better position to prevent harm and improve the health of the earth."
—Stephanie Kaza, Mindfully Green
Joanna Macy, PhD, teacher and author, is a scholar of Buddhism, systems thinking, and deep ecology. As the root teacher of the Work That Reconnects, Macy has created a groundbreaking framework for personal and social change that brings a new way of seeing the world as our larger body. Her many books include World as Lover, World as Self; Widening Circles, A Memoir; Active Hope: How to Face the Mess We’re in without Going Crazy; and Coming Back to Life: The Updated Guide to the Work That Reconnects.
$27.95 - Paperback
Stephanie Kaza is Professor Emerita of Environmental Studies at the University of Vermont. A leading voice in Buddhism and ecology, her most recent book is Green Buddhism: Practice and Compassionate Action in Uncertain Times.
$18.95 - Paperback
Joan Halifax, PhD, is a Zen priest and anthropologist who has served on the faculty of Columbia University and the University of Miami School of Medicine. For the past thirty years she has worked with dying people and has lectured on the subject of death and dying at Harvard Divinity School, Harvard Medical School, Georgetown Medical School, and many other academic institutions. In 1990, she founded Upaya Zen Center, a Buddhist study and social action center in Santa Fe, New Mexico. In 1994, she founded the Project on Being with Dying, which has trained hundreds of healthcare professionals in the contemplative care of dying people.
$27.95 - MixedMedia
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Women in the Insight and Theravada Tradition
$18.95 - Paperback
Sharon Salzberg is one of America's leading spiritual teachers and authors. A practitioner of Buddhist meditation for over thirty years, she is a co-founder of the Barre Center for Buddhist Studies and the Insight Meditation Society, and she directs meditation retreats throughout the United States and abroad.
$16.95 - Paperback
$16.95 - Paperback
Additional Resources on Women in Buddhism
Sera Khandro: A Reader’s Guide
Sera Khandro (1892 - 1940), also known as Kunzang Dekyong Wagmo, was one of the great masters of the early 20th century and the English speaking world is fortunate now that both her story and her writings have been emerging more and more over the past few years. Her story is at once fascinating, heartbreaking, and ultimately uplifting. Tulku Thondup Rinpoche, in his remarkable Incarnation: The History and Mysticism of the Tulku Tradition of Tibet gives a superb overview: "This...
This series of blog posts are meant to be resources guides to complement the biographies of the great masters and scholars on the Treasury of Lives site. Mandarava Mandarava Mandarava was one of the great 8th century adepts and was one of the main consorts of Guru Rinpoche. As such a central figure at the time of Guru Rinpoche, she is a focus of many works. A wonderful complete biography was published by our friends at Wisdom Publications as The...
On Translation: Sarah Harding and Larry MermelsteinIn our second On Translation video series cosponsored with the Tsadra Foundation, we are pleased to share this recording of Sarah Harding (Naropa University and the Tsadra Foundation) & Larry Mermelstein (Nalanda Translation Committee). This session is for any student, practitioner, or translator of Tibetan Buddhism and is an opportunity to enter the world of translators of the Buddhadharma with two of the most experienced Tibetan translators. Most people encounter the Buddhist teachings through translations of texts, so like...
The Passing of Christina Monson
The Passing of Christina Monson
We are deeply saddened to share the news that Christina Monson—teacher, translator, and disciple of Chatral Rinpoche among others—passed away November 19, 2023.
Christina's book, A Dakini's Counsel: Sera Khandro's Spiritual Advice and Dzogchen Instructions will be released May 21, 2024. We knew she had little time left after her cancer diagnosis earlier this year. We had hoped she could hold the book in her hand, but she knew it was in a good place.
All of us at Shambhala Publications have our palms together to Christina for her ceaseless contributions to the Dharma generally, the Nyingma tradition, the Dudjom and Sera Khandro lineages specifically.
In the foreword to the A Dakini's Counsel, Dzongsar Khyentse Rinpoche wrote,
In addition to receiving teachings, abhishekas, and guidance from many great Mahasandhi masters—for example, Tulku Urgyen Rinpoche—Christina Monson also received decades of teachings from Kyabje Chatral Rinpoche. Therefore, I do not think of her as yet another mildly curious Dharma student but as a seeker after the truth who has been blessed and strongly influenced by many great masters, Chatral Rinpoche in particular. As such, I have no doubt that Christina made many good aspirations as she translated Sera Khandro’s words, and, as a result, now that this great lady’s words are being made available in English, there is far less chance of the meaning getting lost in translation. For this reason, my aspiration for this translation is that it will be widely read. May those who read this book not only come to know Sera Khandro and her teachings but may the reach of her buddha activities extend to infinity.
There have been an outpouring of appreciation for Christina as she was a mentor, friend, and dharma sister to so many.
Sogan Rinpoche (Sogan Tulku Pema Lodoe) composed "A Panacea for the Heart: An Incitement to Virtue Through Reflection on Impermanence" upon learning of Christina's passing. It includes the following verse:
And when my Dharma siblings who I wished to remain here with me inseparably
Are led away without hope of intervening, by the Lord of Death himself, I feel sad
But sadness and grief don’t help; let us rouse strength of heart
And spurn ourselves to practice virtue and dedicate it with aspirations.
You can download the full prayer here.
Chhoje Rinpoche in Denver wrote,
"She was a great practitioner during her lifetime and she was an example of how to be a Vajrayana student. She kept her samaya and bodhicitta mind throughout her life excellently. She was so kind and her teachings were immensely beneficial to the members of the Padmasambhava Meditation Center and many other sanghas. I am very grateful for everything she has done.
I have no doubt that Christina is in a very good place and I personally witnessed a rainbow around the sun on the day that she passed. I am personally sponsoring many practices for her.
I would request that everyone do prayers for her. Please recite Vajrasattava, Chenrezig, Guru Yoga and whatever practice you do and dedicate it to Christina's full enlightenment."
"It’s hard to write this but important. As we were receiving the Kudong of Wangdu Rinpoche at Tara Mandala November 19, 2023, the great Yogini and Translator Sangye Gyalmo, Christina Monson integrated her consciousness into the Dharmakaya and passed from this world. I last met her in July and we spent ten days together. I really wanted her to live, she had so much more to give and to translate. I wanted her to come out from the role of translator and teach and she would have, but sadly for us this was not to be in this life… but let us pray for her rapid rebirth. A great Yogini has departed from this world and she should be honored as such. One of the last things she said to me as she was dying was
'Your personal practice is all that matters in the end.'
She remained in tugdam 3 days in Oakland and left a trail of rainbows.
Her book “A Dakini’s Counsel” will come out next spring and she sent me the manuscript to write an endorsement, which I happily did. Here is a fragment from it, it is a poem from her consort Drimé Ozer about Sera Khandro. I pulled it spontaneously from the manuscript and I think it applies to Christina as well.
From "An Offering from the Vulture to the Cuckoo" by Drime Ozer:
Reflecting on all your noble qualities deepens my faith.
Seemingly I’m lost, an ordinary person
controlled by the five poisons.7
But the manifestative potency of your great bliss wisdom
automatically connects my body, speech, and mind to their vajra essences
and introduces me to undistracted luminosity,
my true dharmakaya nature.
Extraordinary is your great kindness,
Noble Lady, my Wish-Fulfilling Jewel.The ultimate expanse
is definitely devoid of characteristics to fixate upon.
Yet, from the perspective of disciples who are training,
teacher and retinue seemingly appear.The fundamental nature of reality
is but a single indivisible sphere.
Yet, those with impure perception
see it as distinct from confusion.In essence, awareness transcends fears
about birth and death,
but for those who cleave to permanence,
dying and becoming seemingly appear.Most certainly you have mastery
over the phenomena of samsara and nirvana,
yet you continuously practice
the two stages of development and completion.
Related Books
By Christina's sister Elizabeth:
Books Related to Sera Khandro
Books Related to Chatral Rinpoche
$39.95 - Hardcover
By: Heidi L. Nevin & J. Jakob Leschly & Khenpo Ngawang Pelzang & Khenpo Ngawang Palzang
Christina Monson on the Naturalness of Illness, Dakini Guidance, and Chatral Rinpoche
Christina also translated many privately published translations, as well as contributed to Lotsawa House. which includes ten of her translations of Sera Khandro and Chatral Rinpoche.