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Dzongsar Jamyang Khyentse: What Makes You Not a Buddhist, Second Edition (AudiobookFormat, 2025, Shambhala Publications)

With a new preface, afterword, and updated material throughout, this iconoclastic and creative Tibetan meditation …

A Generous and Compassionate Wake-Up Call

This is probably the most generous attempt to transmit the essence of #Buddhism I've ever encountered. While the choice of framework and some of the references Dzongsar Jamyang Khyentse makes place him squarely within the #Tibetan tradition, this is a deeply #ecumenical work which reaches across all #Buddhist lineages and traditions. Will all traditions agree with everything he writes? Probably not, but it would be extremely difficult to be even more inclusive while also writing such a readable book.

What might make the book difficult for some is that he is quite direct about poking holes through a large swath of commonly cherished beliefs throughout. I experienced this as clever and illuminating as I would expect from a skilled skeptic debater, but I imagine that some might not appreciate this as a compassionate ripping-off of the band-aid or revealing pulling-out of the rug as I did.

Bonus points …

"It’s no longer unusual to meet -goers who regularly. Some do it in a specifically way, while others use practices to complement their Jewish lives.

Few institutions have played a greater role in spreading meditation among mainstream in than , the housed within Congregation in . This month, the in the is marking a milestone: 25 years of Jews sitting together in silence. (Though I’m a member of Beth Sholom, I’m a total newbie to the world of Makor Or.)

Makor Or was co-founded by and priest and the late Beth Sholom , who wrote books like “One God Clapping: The Spiritual Path of a Zen Rabbi” and …

Lama Rod Owens: Love and Rage (AudiobookFormat, 2021, North Atlantic Books)

In the face of systemic racism and state-sanctioned violence, how can we metabolize our anger …

Creative, Radical, Challenging

It's hard to know what to write about this one.

On the one hand, I experience much of Lama Rod's teaching in this book as brilliantly creative. The meditation instructions are well-systematized and I found the guidance helpful, especially for the #7homecomings, #tonglen, and #EarthTouching / #bhūmisparśa practices. I also deeply appreciated his acknowledgement of the issues present in the #Tibetan #Buddhist tradition and his way of relating to flawed teachers in a system vulnerable to abuse of power was valuable for me. The way he addresses #racism, #whitesupremacy, #queerphobia, #patriarchy and other forms of #discrimination or #opression reminded me favorably of Sebene Selassie's You Belong.

On the other, having now listened to it in its entirety, it seems like the book might have put together in a piecemeal sort of way. I get the impression that this might have …

@OutOnTheMoors
Ah yes. This can be seen from many perspectives, but I once heard one doctor ask "How can I reduce the number if microagressions I encounter?", to which another replied "Stop seeing so many microagressions". Very much from the or school, I think.

Roger Zelazny: Lord of Light (AudiobookFormat, 2025, W. F. Howes Ltd., Recorded Books)

The boundaries between gods and mortals blur in a futuristic world where ancient Hindu deities …

Intrigue at the Edge of the Mortal

Hands down the most striking thing about Lord of Light is how well Zelazny captured the tone of the source material and translated it into a form that works well within the context of a novel of speculative fiction. This is the first and only work of Zelazny's I have read thus far, so I might just be impressed by what qualifies for his usual style, but it feels much too intentional to me for it not to have been done on purpose. Despite the excellent voice and tonal execution which permeate the book, I had the sense that there was more of an effort to bend the source material to the story Zelazny wanted to tell rather than the story which the combination of the source material and the other ideas in the book might have been naturally most suited to tell. Maybe it's not a masterpiece, but it's …

just released their #2025

There are always a lot of good recommendations and they're not on the AFAIK, so here's the link: https://bodhi-college.org/recommended-summer-reading-from-the-faculty-2025/

July 6, 11am PT: "Meeting the Moment: Building Refuges in Response to State Violence"

Join Berkeley Buddhist Temple for an intergenerational conversation with movement elders as they hold space for practicing sangha by embodying refuge & standing in solidarity with the many communities under attack by state violence in the past, present, and future.

Register at:
Tinyurl.com/MeetingtheMoment4

Sleep? Maybe. Calming? Definitely. Excellent readings, wise insights of 25 classic stories. I'll be returning to this video again, I'm sure. Good listening any time, day/night. https://youtu.be/Rx-y-8DRqEA

Trans rights activist, feminist, retired firefighter, and Jodo Shinshu Buddhist Michele Kaemmerer has passed away at the age of 80. Michele was the first trans fire captain in the Los Angeles Fire Dept. She was a long-time, valued member of Senshin Buddhist Temple in South Central Los Angeles. Her marriage at the temple in 2000 publicly established that Jodo Shinshu affirms transpeople and their relationships.