
What matters most is not so much what we know as who we become in the process of learning.
Dale. S. Wright
The Six Perfections: Buddhism & the Cultivation of Character
Dale S. Wright


What matters most is not so much what we know as who we become in the process of learning.
Dale. S. Wright
The Six Perfections: Buddhism & the Cultivation of Character
Dale S. Wright


Paying Attention
Mindfulness practice doesn’t mean we will not hurt anymore. It doesn’t mean we won’t have normal human reactions or that we will transcend our feelings. It does mean we will start to experience all our feelings more intensely because we are paying attention.
Openness to Experiences
By allowing ourselves to be open with loving awareness to all our experiences of life, we come into a different and empowered relationship with them. We learn to ride the waves of pleasure/pain, gain/loss and sickness/health with equanimity and compassion. When we don’t react unconsciously to suffering, we begin to have a choice in how we respond to it, and our lives become more manageable.
Mindfulness for a Happy Life
Robert Beatty


Having Goals, Finding Peace
Being fully present in the moment doesn’t mean we can’t have goals or strive to get somewhere in our lives. Ideally we want to be fully in the present moment, because the present moment is the only place that we can actually do anything – the only place where we can live. If we can’t find peace in the present moment, then we really can’t live anywhere comfortably or peacefully.
Becoming More Efficient
We come to the present moment not to get rid of our goals or strivings, but instead to work or act from a place of contentment, accepting that right now this is the current situation. If we are fully in the present moment, we can take the necessary actions to get to our goal, rather than getting lost in the hopes and fears of some future time. We become more efficient because we are fully engaged with where we are.
Your Life is Meditation
Mark Van Buren


Tools for a Restful Mind
The Restful Mind
Gyalwa Dokhampa


The Flow of Life
Life is like a flowing river. It gives the impression of being one continuous flow, but in fact, it is moving from one cause to another, one effect to another, one state of existence to another.
The river of one moment is not going to be the river of the next moment, and so it goes for our lives as well. We are continuously changing, as proved by the scientific fact that the cells in all living beings divide, die and form anew.
The Best Way to Catch a Snake
Karma Yeshe Rabgye
