The Diamond Way Buddhism UK Blog would like to wish all our readers a very happy Christmas and a prosperous New Year.
Seasons Greetings and round-up of 2010
December 25th, 2010Naropa’s prophecy to Marpa
December 16th, 2010
During his third and final visit to India to meet Naropa, his teacher, Marpa asked Naropa to prophesise the way the Kagyu lineage would expand and flourish:
Although in this life, your family lineage will be interrupted, your dharma lineage will flow on like a wide river as long as the teachings of the Buddha remain. In the view of some impure ordinary men, you will appear to gratify yourself in this life with sense pleasures. Your desires will seem unchanging, like a carving in rock, so solid and so great. On the other hand, since you yourself have seen dharmata, samsara will be self-liberated, like a snake uncoiling. All the future students of the lineage will be like the children of lions and garudas, and each generation will be better than the last.
– Naropa (1016-1100)
From “The Rain of Wisdom” by the Nalanda Translation Committee (Shambhala, 1980)
Lama Ole Nydahl on Crazy Wisdom
December 7th, 2010The following text is an interview with Lama Ole Nydahl made by Artur Przybyslawski in the bus from Katowice to Warsaw on 15th of April 2003. It forms the introduction to the Polish edition of Divine Madman. The Sublime Life and Songs of Drukpa Kunley, “Szalony Jogin Drukpa Kunlej“. Enjoy!
17th Karmapa on Impermanence
November 29th, 2010These questions and answers were taken from H.H. 17th Karmapa‘s ‘Black Hat Lama’ MySpace blog:
Q: What is Buddhist meditation, and what are the benefits of it?
H.H. Karmapa: Buddhist meditation is a way to relate to death, but the term we use is known as impermanence. So it is possible to see the beauty of impermanence finally through meditation. Before meditation we have to focus on learning and contemplating on impermanence.
Q: How do you relate to death?
H.H. Karmapa: Often one relates to death mainly by fear, and also by hope. So the Buddhist approach is to approach it without the two.
Q: Are Buddhists afraid of death?
H.H. Karmapa: Sentient beings are not born as Buddhists, so due to that it becomes a very difficult question to answer. Read the rest of this entry »
Scientists glimpse universe before the Big Bang
November 25th, 2010A very interesting article recently appeared on the Physorg.com science news website which supports the Buddha’s observation that Samsara or “cyclic existence” is beginningless…
Scientists glimpse universe before the Big Bang
November 23, 2010 by Lisa Zyga
In general, asking what happened before the Big Bang is not really considered a science question. According to Big Bang theory, time did not even exist before this point roughly 13.7 billion years ago. But now, Oxford University physicist Roger Penrose and Vahe Gurzadyan from the Yerevan Physics Institute in Armenia have found an effect in the cosmic microwave background (CMB) that allows them to “see through” the Big Bang into what came before.
May the mandala of the Karmapa be fully established
November 24th, 2010“Although beyond samsara and nirvana, you accomplish the vast activities of the Buddhas of the three times. May the mandala of the Karmapa, who embodies the Three Roots, be fully established.” – Karma Pakshi Guru Yoga
New Diamond Way Buddhism UK website launched today
November 21st, 2010
Today we launched our new national website for Diamond Way Buddhism UK. The site has been updated with a more contemporary feel and offers some new content, as well as an events calendar and a new system of publicising upcoming activities in our centres.
On top of that, we have changed the domain to something more memorable than http://www.dwbuk.org/ – the new domain is http://www.buddhism.org.uk/.
We hope you enjoy the new layout!