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Difference between revisions of "Shambhala: the sacred path of the warrior"

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''[[shambhala]]: the [[sacred]] [[path]] of the [[warrior]]'':  is the [[book]] and teachings upon which this glossary is based. It is a compilation of teachings and writings on the practice of [[Shambhala]] Warriorship and is the [[mind terma]], (uncovered teachings) of [[Chogyam Trungpa]], [[Rinpoche]]; the [[Dorje Dradul of Mukpo]].
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''[[shambhala]]: the [[sacred]] [[path]] of the [[warrior]]'':  is the [[book]] and teachings upon which this glossary is based. It is a compilation of teachings and writings on the practice of [[Shambhala]] [[Warriorship]] and is the [[mind terma]], (uncovered teachings) of [[Chogyam Trungpa]], [[Rinpoche]]; the [[Dorje Dradul of Mukpo]].
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This talk by [[Vajra Regent]] [[Ösel Tendzin]] is the first talk of a weekend seminar  held in {{Wiki|Vancouver}}, [[British Columbia]], in November of 1987.
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[[SHAMBHALA]]: THE SACRED [[PATH]] OF THE WARRIOR
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The [[Shambhala teachings]] were introduced in the [[West]] by the [[Vidyadhara]], [[Chögyam Trungpa Rinpoche]], the [[Eleventh Trungpa]] [[Tülku]], who fled [[Tibet]] during the [[Communist]] takeover in 1959. Shortly after that he came to the [[West]], and for the next several years he [[taught]] the [[traditional]] [[path]] of [[Buddhism]] in which he was trained. Beginning in 1975, he introduced a [[body]] of teachings which we now know as
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the [[wisdom]] of [[Shambhala]], which had never before been introduced in the [[West]], or for that {{Wiki|matter}}, [[taught]] in the English [[language]]. Prior to this time, these teachings had been known only to those [[initiated]] into the [[highest]] [[tantric tradition]] of [[Tibetan Buddhism]], known as the [[Kalachakra]]. [[Kalachakra]] means the [[wheel of time]], and it teaches the [[realization]] of the [[nature]] of [[existence]], that is to
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say, the [[nature]] of {{Wiki|past}}, {{Wiki|present}}, and {{Wiki|future}}. While the [[Shambhala teachings]] [[taught]] by [[Trungpa Rinpoche]] bear similarities to the [[Kalachakra]], they are not the same. The [[path]] of [[Shambhala]] is entirely separate and unique in that it {{Wiki|transcends}} [[dependence]] on any particular [[spiritual]] [[tradition]].
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According to the history, the {{Wiki|kingdom}} of [[Shambhala]] was said to [[exist]] somewhere [[north]] of the [[Himalayan]] range in the area between [[Russia]] and [[Tibet]]. It is said that this {{Wiki|kingdom}} can be found only by those who know the way, and to know the way one has to have a particular kind of [[wisdom]]. So in one way the history of [[Shambhala]] is a [[myth]], and in another way it is an actual [[reality]] in the [[form]]
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of a [[body]] of teachings. [[Shambhala]] is continually [[existent]], but it can only be [[perceived]] by those whose view is [[pure]]. It is further said that the {{Wiki|kingdom}} of [[Shambhala]] was founded on the {{Wiki|principles}} of [[harmony]] and [[warriorship]]. Everyone who lived there had a notion of their [[own]] [[basic goodness]], and acted with [[fearlessness]], [[intelligence]], and [[gentleness]]. The first [[ruler of Shambhala]], [[King]] [[Dawa Sangpo]], had heard of the [[Buddha Shakyamuni]] and his teachings and invited him to visit [[Shambhala]] to teach the [[dharma]]. The [[Buddha]] went to [[Shambhala]], and there in the {{Wiki|capital city}} of [[Kalapa]] he [[taught]] the [[Kalachakra]] [[Shambhala]]: The [[Sacred Path]] of the [[Warrior]]
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[[tantra]], which is how that particular [[teaching]] was transmitted to [[human beings]]. So because of the mutual [[appreciation]] of [[King]] [[Dawa Sangpo]] and the [[Buddha]], a meeting point occurred between the [[wisdom]] of [[Shambhala]] and the [[Buddhist teachings]].  In the same way that it happened historically, [[Trungpa Rinpoche]] touched two things together: his [[Buddhist]] {{Wiki|training}} and the [[wisdom]] of [[Shambhala]]. At
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first, when [[Trungpa Rinpoche]] introduced the [[Shambhala teachings]] to his students, it was very unsettling for us.
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For centuries, [[Buddhists]] have been [[teaching]] their [[doctrine]], which is very precise and orderly and follows a specific progression. The students who had become accustomed to the [[Buddhist teachings]] found the [[Shambhala teachings]] quite challenging. Because the
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[[Shambhala teachings]] have nothing to do with [[religion]] and in some way nothing to do with [[doctrine]], they are difficult to [[grasp]] in a [[Wikipedia:Convention (norm)|conventional]] way. When [[Trungpa Rinpoche]] introduced the [[Shambhala teachings]], they were like a sudden, brilliant flash of {{Wiki|light}}. They had nothing to do with the {{Wiki|past}}, and they did not project anything particular in the {{Wiki|future}}. They had to do with now. To begin
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with, we were amazed and shocked that a whole [[body of teaching]] like this could [[exist]], and that we had no [[knowledge]] of it. That [[shock]] was good for us, because we soon [[realized]] that we could not rest on our so-called [[knowledge]] or [[experience]], but we had to open our [[minds]] to the very basic, ordinary [[truth]] of [[Shambhala]].
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The [[Shambhala teachings]] could be called {{Wiki|secular}} [[dharma]]. [[Dharma]] is a [[Sanskrit]] [[word]] meaning [[teaching]], or way, or things as they are. The [[Shambhala teachings]] speak the [[language]] of ordinary [[life]], of things as they are in ordinary situations. These teachings are not meant to be used to transcend this [[life]] in order to reach some higher goal. They are meant to refine and {{Wiki|perfect}} this [[life]] so that everything in it, everything that we as [[human beings]] [[recognize]] as being part of our [[life]], becomes completely [[illuminated]], completely {{Wiki|perfect}}.
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[[Trungpa Rinpoche’s]] [[wisdom]] was vast. He had a [[gift]] of tuning into [[wisdom]] and expressing it in [[language]] accessible to everyone; and [[language]] is the key to [[understanding]] the [[Shambhala teachings]]. [[Language]] has to do with how we [[exist]] together in [[society]] as [[human beings]] and how we relate to each other and to the things around us—our [[parents]], to our governments, our clothing, our supermarket. All of that has to do with [[language]], or [[communication]]. 
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The [[Shambhala teachings]] speak in particular about sacredness. [[Sacred]] is a fantastic [[word]]; just saying it creates a certain {{Wiki|atmosphere}}. However, if sacredness is misunderstood, it is seen as a dream-like [[existence]] or angelic [[quality]]; or, negatively, merely some kind of hocus-pocus. [[Sacred]] in the [[Shambhala]] [[sense]] means that every [[moment]] of [[existence]] we [[experience]] [[Shambhala]]: The
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is in itself innately good, and that [[goodness]] cannot be compromised, manipulated, or distorted. Every single {{Wiki|atom}} of our [[existence]] is [[sacred]] because it is basically and [[primordially]] good. Good does not mean good as opposed to bad. Good means [[primordial]], before we even [[thought]] of it; you might say that good is prehistoric, or pre-thought.
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According to the [[Shambhala teachings]], that [[primordial]] [[quality]] of [[goodness]] is the [[essence]] of all [[experience]] and of all [[existence]] as we know it. This [[primordial goodness]] is the very basic stuff of [[existence]], and therefore its [[manifestation]] is [[sacred]]. What is [[sacred]] about your [[hair]]?
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What is [[sacred]] about your {{Wiki|teeth}}, your [[clothes]], or your apartment? What is [[sacred]] about your toothbrush, your comb? What is [[sacred]] about the [[birthday]] card your mother sent you?
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What is [[sacred]] about the [[endless]] talk on television? What is [[sacred]] about the collapse of the stock market? Sacredness has to do with living [[life]] as an expression, a [[manifestation]] of [[primordial goodness]]. 
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The [[quality]] of sacredness does not [[exist]] in any particular thing. If that were the case, we would try to keep [[sacred]] things on one
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side and everything else on the other. As a {{Wiki|rule}}, if we take a [[religious]] view, we think that the [[world]] is not that [[sacred]]. We think that sacredness refers to some other [[quality]], some other [[world]], or some other [[life]] that should be [[attained]]. Even the [[Buddhist teachings]] speak about [[rebirth]] and [[realms of existence]]; but the [[Shambhala teachings]] {{Wiki|emphasize}} this [[life]]. However, the {{Wiki|emphasis}} is not on taking this [[life]] to be so important that we lose our [[sense]] of [[humor]], but on [[understanding]] that everything that occurs in our life—in our [[body]], {{Wiki|speech}}, and [[mind]], in our relationships—is in its [[own]] [[nature]] [[sacred]]. 
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In the [[Shambhala teachings]], sacredness is connected with the [[principle]] of [[warriorship]].
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Otherwise, [[goodness]], or sacredness, has no {{Wiki|teeth}} or claws. The [[truth]] is that [[basic goodness]] has {{Wiki|teeth}} and claws, but those {{Wiki|teeth}} and claws are not necessarily there to carve out survival, or to {{Wiki|protect}} [[goodness]] from [[evil]], or to frighten [[evil]], which is the enemy. The {{Wiki|teeth}} and claws of [[basic goodness]] simply express the fact that [[goodness]] is [[primordial]] and therefore [[manifests]] as total
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[[confidence]]. [[Primordial]] means having no particular origin, having no particular [[reason]] to be; it just is. So that particular kind of {{Wiki|teeth}} and claws are the mark of [[warriorship]]: of how to be without {{Wiki|fear}}, how to be, naturally and easily.
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Sacredness is the [[experience]] of hard and soft at the same time. Softness is the underbelly of [[experience]]. We’re always soft, all of us, always on the verge of collapse or [[extinction]].
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We are always on the brink of losing it, because we really don’t have a strategy. No {{Wiki|matter}} how much we educate ourselves in the ways of the [[world]] or how much we believe that our course is set, in the [[moment]], we have no strategy. We simply [[feel]] a softness and [[gentleness]] [[Shambhala]]: The [[Sacred Path]] of the [[Warrior]]
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that is always underneath our occasionally boisterous [[attitude]] about who we are. Everyone [[feels]] that. I have never met a [[person]], no {{Wiki|matter}} how hard-nosed and tough they may seem, who doesn’t express some tenderness and softness. However, because we think that we should be strong and conquer this [[world]], if we press that point, if we push that soft underbelly too much, it tightens up and
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stiffens, and the defenses begin to appear. The [[world]] and the [[life]] that we live are full of so many pitfalls, so many traps, so many ways of causing us to [[feel]] disappointed, to [[feel]] that we are not as good as we could be, not as strong as we should be, not as bright as we would like to be. We have to [[trust]] ourselves more than that so that our whole being, our whole [[life]] is not based on
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piling up credentials and descriptions of ourselves in order to face the [[world]]. Real strength does not depend on artificial analysis, artificial [[logic]], or any kind of [[psychological]] fortification. All of that will disappear in a [[moment]] when we are faced
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with a shocking situation, a radical change in our [[life]]. It can happen in the time it takes to snap our fingers–in a [[moment]] our notion of defending ourselves and being strong evaporates. However, we can learn to [[trust]] the [[goodness]] that is without defense and without strategy.
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The [[tradition]] of [[warriorship]] and the [[principle]] of intrinsic [[goodness]], values which have been talked about for thousands of years, are addressed in the [[Shambhala teachings]]. That is why the [[Shambhala teachings]] are timeless. The [[Shambhala teachings]] are like a wax museum coming to [[life]] in the [[sense]] that they are not presenting anything new. In [[reality]], there is no such thing as a totally new
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[[teaching]]. We are simply uncovering the [[language]] that teaches the [[gentleness]], [[dignity]], and grace which are common to all [[human beings]]. This [[language]] does not speak about a particular point when it all began, or about a [[moment]] when we reach our final destination. The [[Shambhala teachings]] speak to this very [[moment]], which we call nowness, and to the [[quality]] of our [[existence]] that is
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in tune with or synchronized with our {{Wiki|environment}}. When we are synchronized in our [[body]] and [[mind]], we become synchronized with each other. As our [[bodies]] move through [[space]], they move with a grace and [[gentleness]] that is almost like a dance—in fact, it is a [[dance]].
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When we speak to each other, when we work with each other, when we think about each other, it is an expression of [[dignity]], [[gentleness]], and [[fearlessness]], and out of that [[human]] [[society]] arises as all of our [[bodies]] moving through [[space]], creating a tremendous, harmonious [[dance]]. 
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Having studied and practiced these teachings myself, it seems to me that, apart from [[laziness]] and [[doubt]], there is no particular [[reason]] why we cannot wake up and realize that this very [[life]] is the ground of sacredness and the expression of [[dignity]], and that our relationships with others are the expression of [[confidence]]. It is necessary for us to take an entirely new [[Shambhala]]: The
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[[attitude]], or maybe an entirely old [[attitude]]. We always look for a spark of [[brilliance]] in our [[life]], and if one appears, we pursue it. However, because we have accustomed ourselves to living in a small way, we only pursue it for a little while, and then we find it more comfortable to retract, to become less than a [[warrior]]. Especially in this age, we have to make an [[effort]] to open our [[minds]], our hearts, and our [[bodies]] to the possibility, however remote it may seem, that there is a harmonious way of being and that we can accomplish such a thing. At the same time, we have to be careful not to create a self-styled [[fantasy]].
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That is why it is necessary to have [[discipline]]. In the way of [[Shambhala]], [[discipline]] is a means of connecting with our [[body]] and [[mind]] and {{Wiki|environment}}, and therefore it is very good and useful. [[Trungpa Rinpoche]] borrowed the [[discipline]] of [[meditation practice]] from the [[Buddhist tradition]], because that [[discipline]] {{Wiki|transcends}} any particular reference point.
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[[Meditation]] is the simple practice of sitting and being with ourselves. [[Meditation]] involves using what we have, and so does not create further stories and further [[confusion]]. We have a [[body]], and we can use that [[body]] in a very simple way by putting it in an
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ordinary place, a simple place, and allowing it to [[relax]] and be there, and for a time we can let go of the need to do anything. [[Meditation]] does not depend on an external [[deity]] or a [[visualized]] [[object]]; it doesn’t require anything other than being with ourselves. It is the simplest and most direct way to [[contact]] the [[primordial goodness]] which has no origin.
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In [[reality]], we don’t need any method in order to catch our [[own]] [[awareness]] or to know that we are good. However, these are very difficult times. We view the [[world]] as something that we possess or have dominion over, and we expect so much and complain so much.
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Therefore, it’s necessary to have a method that allows this mask to fall away. According to [[Trungpa Rinpoche]], and according to my [[own]] [[experience]], [[meditation]] is the best way of doing that, especially in the beginning. Then it becomes a {{Wiki|matter}} of allowing your [[own]] [[intelligence]] to come forward.
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This particular technique is sometimes accused of being [[Wikipedia:Nihilism|nihilistic]]. [[People]] have asked, “Why would you just sit and do nothing when the [[world]] needs our help so badly? Isn’t that a waste?” Perhaps for a while we could relieve the [[world]] of some of its [[burden]]. But when we practice the [[discipline]] of [[meditation]], we begin to see that there is no [[reason]] to be rushing to our [[death]]. Rather, there is
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a way to just be, a way to learn how to work with [[time and space]] and synchronize our [[body]] and [[mind]]. We have the [[intelligence]] to know how to do this, and that [[intelligence]] has no particular origin. It is simply there, all the time. It is basically what it is, which is good. 
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[[Discipline]] takes [[effort]]; it can’t merely be adopted as a [[philosophy]] of good {{Wiki|intentions}}, where we think, “I’m basically good; things are as they are; and I can just enjoy my [[life]].” We know from our [[experience]] that even with the best {{Wiki|intentions}} we can fall into {{Wiki|depression}} or degraded {{Wiki|behavior}}. The only really useful approach is to develop a [[discipline]] that undercuts those [[habitual patterns]].
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If we don’t have the [[discipline]] to do that, we can talk and talk about [[goodness]] and [[warriorship]] and it won’t make any difference. As soon as we encounter a situation that is not to our liking, or as soon as we lose [[energy]] and grow tired, we fall prey to degraded [[thinking]]. In a very short time we find ourselves involved in a series of [[thoughts]] which become another series of [[thoughts]]
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which become a series of [[actions]]. Very rapidly, those [[actions]] [[cause]] us to completely forget the [[spaciousness]] and [[openness]] of [[discipline]]. So the way to proceed is by practicing the [[discipline]] of putting ourselves in a situation that is not compromised by our usual [[activity]]. 
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We have to know how to continually spark ourselves. We can do that by {{Wiki|learning}} to appreciate the ordinariness of our [[experience]]. Whatever occurs in our [[experience]] doesn’t have to be made into something else. We can appreciate every aspect of [[experience]], whether we regard it as good or bad, [[happy]] or [[sad]]. But we have to tune our [[mind]] in a certain way: We have to be able to be very,
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very still, and be able to really appreciate. To appreciate, we can’t move fast. If we move fast and jump to conclusions, we miss the bigger picture. There is always more than we think, even though on the surface it may not seem that way. The only way to do that is to practice [[meditation]], to slow down long enough to see beyond our [[own]] opinion about who we are. Otherwise, it’s not easy to be friendly with ourselves.
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It is also important to practice a [[discipline]] that is not based on the promise of a result.
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However, to simply sit without the promise of a result makes most of us a little crazy because we’re so [[conditioned]] to [[thinking]] that whatever arises in our [[mind]] should be immediately followed by something else. If it’s eggs, it must be bacon. If it’s bacon, it must be toast. If it’s toast, it must be orange juice. If it’s orange juice, it must be what?
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Indigestion. We are so [[conditioned]] to the flow of [[habits]] that even the [[idea]] of a [[discipline]] with no promise is unnerving. If we have any [[confidence]] at all, if we have any [[sense]] of who we are, we should investigate what it’s like simply to be with ourselves, by ourselves, for a short period of time. That is [[meditation]]. When we begin to see that we don’t have to rush to our [[own]] [[death]], we
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can look at our [[life]] and appreciate it, appreciate our relatives, appreciate our friends and enemies, appreciate our {{Wiki|environment}}. [[Appreciation]] is the [[language]] of sacredness, and we begin to see, hear, {{Wiki|smell}}, {{Wiki|taste}}, and {{Wiki|touch}} sacredness. We [[Shambhala]]: The [[Sacred]]
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come {{Wiki|aware}} of every [[moment]] and every [[thought]], so {{Wiki|aware}} that we can [[feel]] the [[dance]] of our [[body]] moving through [[space]], and we become
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appreciative of others and of their [[pain]] and [[confusion]]. Then we begin to think that our [[life]] can be of [[benefit]] to others.
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These [[Shambhala teachings]] are meant to be useful right now. They are not meant to undo or rearrange the {{Wiki|past}}, and they are not meant for the {{Wiki|future}}. It is possible to lead such a [[life]], and in such a way that when we [[die]] we leave something behind which is
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good—not a monument nor an autobiography nor a shopping center, but a legacy that [[people]] can tune into and that can be felt in the {{Wiki|environment}} for a long time. That legacy is the [[lineage]] of [[warriorship]], the [[lineage]] of hard and soft at the same time, the [[lineage]] that appreciates everything as it is in its [[sacred]] [[quality]]. 
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The [[Dorje Dradül]], [[Trungpa Rinpoche]], introduced these [[Shambhala teachings]], and I worked closely with him to bring about the [[vehicle]] for these teachings, which is the [[Shambhala Training]] program. [[Shambhala Training]] is a program of stages that [[people]] like us can do. They are based on [[recognizing]] [[basic goodness]], which is [[primordial]] and unconditional; [[seeing]] the [[world]] as [[sacred]]; and stabilizing
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that [[vision]] through the [[path]] of the [[warrior]]. In the [[Shambhala tradition]], a [[warrior]] is not one who makes [[war]]; a [[Shambhala warrior]] is one who has the [[courage]] to be exactly who he or she is. That kind of [[warriorship]] is an [[ancient]] {{Wiki|ideal}}, not the product of some latest trend. The [[lineage]] of [[warriorship]] is like a very fine {{Wiki|silk}} thread passed continuously from generation to generation. It is very fine and very thin, but it’s very tough and doesn’t break.
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QUESTION:  Could you say a bit more about the actual [[connection]] between [[Shambhala]] and [[Buddhism]]? They seem to be presented as quite {{Wiki|distinct}}, and yet they both use the [[practice of meditation]].
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[[VAJRA]] REGENT:  [[Trungpa Rinpoche]] touched two things together: his [[Buddhist]] {{Wiki|training}} and the [[Shambhala teachings]]. In my [[experience]], if one follows the [[path]] of [[Shambhala]], it is entirely separate and not dependent on any {{Wiki|theology}}. The process of using [[meditation practice]], I think, is purely {{Wiki|practical}}, especially in the {{Wiki|present}} time.
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QUESTION:  [[Buddhism]] is a very old [[tradition]] with a track record of [[realized]] [[teachers]]. Who are the [[realized]] [[teachers]] in [[Shambhala]]?
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VR:  The qualities of [[gentleness]], [[confidence]], and [[fearlessness]] are common to all of us. We call those who have [[realized]] those qualities [[Shambhala]] [[warriors]].  [[Shambhala]]: The [[Sacred Path]] of the [[Warrior]]
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Q:  Could we say that those qualities are always {{Wiki|present}} and available, and [[Chögyam Trungpa]] has brought them forth in a [[body of teaching]]?
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VR:  That’s right. When the [[Shambhala teachings]] are authentically presented, more [[people]] can wake up to them. Over the centuries there have been {{Wiki|individuals}} who have exhibited the qualities of [[warriorship]] and so have been a [[delight]] to the [[world]], but their [[lives]], like all others, don’t last. Their particular [[star]] burns out and it’s gone, and [[people]] forget. We all forget. The point of these teachings is to bring out those qualities in everyone, not only in the great ones. We are the great ones. I think that’s the point: it’s not positive [[thinking]], which doesn’t go anywhere; it is positive being.
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QUESTION:  I think a [[warrior]] would put him or herself in {{Wiki|fearful}} situations in order to overcome them. Would you agree that one should not avoid something because it is {{Wiki|fearful}} or uncomfortable?
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VR:  We all spend a lot of time trying to make our [[life]] comfortable. Nevertheless, there are moments when it just doesn’t work. Then we panic and try to rely on something: an [[idea]], a [[spiritual]] [[tradition]], or a [[memory]] of what our grandfather or our {{Wiki|ancestors}} did; or we read a poem or hang a slogan on a wall; all of those things. That may be well and good, but when it comes right down to it, it’s simply you and your [[world]]. We don’t necessarily have to put ourselves in situations that are demanding; if we are open to them, they will be there. What is more important is not to continue trying to create further diversions in order to avoid [[reality]].
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Q:  Sometimes certain situations keep coming up, and each time they can be {{Wiki|fearful}} and a challenge. I have the [[feeling]] that if I faced them they wouldn’t keep coming back.
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VR:  We all know who we are and what scares us. However, we can’t use these teachings to make ourselves secure so that when that {{Wiki|fear}} comes up we know how to conquer it. It’s not a {{Wiki|matter}} of waiting for the monster to arise and confronting it, doing {{Wiki|battle}} with the enemy. We have to take a [[sacred]] view, [[knowing]] that whatever arises in our [[life]], whether it’s good or bad, whether it’s
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something we habitually avoid or habitually confront, there is no enemy as such. There is simply the [[experience]] of [[good and bad]], [[pleasure]] and [[pain]], [[happy]] and [[sad]]. If we’re honest, we can’t say we know precisely what will happen next. We never know what [[people]] are going to do or say or what kind of situation we’re going to find ourselves in. It might be shocking, or it might put us to asleep. Sometimes we’re disappointed, or a [[peaceful]] [[experience]] becomes aggressive and we’re faced with a further challenge. [[Warriorship]] is not about confronting what is uncomfortable, but about being in [[Shambhala]]: The [[Sacred Path]] of the [[Warrior]]
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the [[state]] of nowness. In that [[state]] of nowness, we take all [[experiences]] as our [[own]] meal, so to speak, as what we have to eat. We live on the very basic stuff of our [[existence]]. That is much more challenging. 
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QUESTION:  You spoke about [[illuminating]] what is good, and about good as opposed to bad, and you said that everything in [[life]] is [[sacred]] and therefore nothing is bad. Yet in this [[life]] there are things that are not as positive as they should be. 
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VR:  Everything is [[sacred]] does not mean that nothing is bad; there are definitely things that are degraded. At the same time, the notions of pro and con are deceptions. On the one hand, we’re constantly battling between right and wrong, [[good and bad]]. On the other hand, we can adopt an {{Wiki|idealistic}} [[philosophy]] so that we don’t have to {{Wiki|battle}}. Neither of those is accurate. The [[reality]] is
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that what becomes degraded and what becomes uplifted is simply the difference between falling asleep and being awake. Falling asleep means falling asleep to our [[dignity]]; being awake means being awake to our [[dignity]]. Every [[moment]] is separate and {{Wiki|distinct}}, and we can approach every [[moment]] with a fresh [[mind]]. Why don’t we know that?
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It’s not that difficult. No one needs a [[morality]] lesson to know what that is. In fact, from the [[Shambhala]] point of view, [[dogs]] and cats know that. We’re stuck with a [[world]] so chock-full of [[ideas]] that they make the whole {{Wiki|environment}} kind of thick. Because we have lost {{Wiki|touch}} with our [[own]] [[warrior]] [[quality]], we produce more and more [[ideas]], more and more things, more and more cluttering of [[space]], and then there is nowhere to go except pro and con or some silly [[universalism]], neither of which works. The remedy is the slogan of [[Shambhala Training]], “Living in the Challenge,” which means that every [[moment]] is fresh and new, without any particular reference, and we can look at it with a [[mind]] of total [[appreciation]] for what it is.
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QUESTION:  I’m [[interested]] in how the [[Shambhala teachings]] apply to {{Wiki|social}} activism.
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VR:  {{Wiki|Social}} [[action]], meaning the [[principle]] of [[enlightened society]], is the real [[fruition]] of [[Shambhala Training]] and the goal of the [[Shambhala teachings]] altogether. [[Enlightened society]] is based on [[natural hierarchy]], which means that there is a natural way to be in the [[world]].
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That [[understanding]] makes [[society]] much more workable. What we have now is totally confused. What should one be? Who or what is there to emulate? There isn’t much in the way of role models, individually or collectively. In the [[West]], we are familiar with the {{Wiki|political}} [[philosophy]] of {{Wiki|democracy}}, the {{Wiki|rule}} of the [[people]]. Democratic {{Wiki|social}} [[action]] is based on the notion that [[people]] are {{Wiki|equal}} in [[intelligence]], and when you [[trust]] in the [[intelligence]] of the [[people]], the [[action]] will be [[enlightened]]. We are also familiar with [[communist]] [[philosophy]],
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which believes that the collective [[consciousness]] is the measure of {{Wiki|social}} [[action]], so one should rely on collective rather than {{Wiki|individual}} [[intelligence]]. We’ve also seen {{Wiki|monarchy}}, in which the view is that one trusts or relies on the [[intelligence]] in the relationship between the [[ruler]] and the [[subjects]].
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[[Shambhala Training]] is more aligned with the notion of {{Wiki|monarchy}}, not in the [[sense]] of the [[divine]] right of [[kings]], but in the [[sense]] of a [[connection]] [[between heaven and earth]] through the [[principle]] of man, the [[Shambhala warrior]]. The {{Wiki|principles}} of [[heaven]], [[earth]], and man are [[ancient]] [[ideas]] that transcend [[relative]] {{Wiki|political}} [[philosophies]]. [[Earth]] is solidness and all that is below, anchored in the [[earth]]. [[Heaven]] is the sky, [[openness]], and all that is above—the higher {{Wiki|principles}}. Man is the [[connection]] between the two. In this case, man
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includes the [[warrior]] [[ruler]], the [[warrior]] [[subjects]], and everyone who aspires to be a [[warrior]]. The [[realized]] [[Shambhala warrior]] connects [[heaven]] and [[earth]], and therefore [[manifests]] [[harmony]] in [[body]] and [[mind]].  Some [[people]] say that this is the most [[enlightened]] time; but according to the [[Shambhala tradition]], this is the waning time, when things become darker. These days, the [[world]] is not that decent.
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That is one of the [[reasons]] why these teachings have come about. There have been many types of [[teaching]] in the world—religious, [[philosophical]], psychological—mostly aimed at [[awakening]] [[people]] to their [[own]] [[basic goodness]]. When those teachings are based on [[conditioned]] [[logic]] or a momentary [[dream]], they are unable to create an {{Wiki|atmosphere}} in which [[people]] can wake up to their basic [[nature]]. 
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However, it is possible to effect a change that will in turn affect the {{Wiki|future}}. We have to go beyond our [[own]] personal [[happiness]],
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which is annoying; no one wants to do that. “I would like to have something that works now. If it works now, then I’m [[interested]]. I’ll sign up.” We’ve had so much of that nonsense. At this point we should know that none of that works. We can’t prolong a comfortable [[life]] by taking special supplements or reading special [[books]] or mumbling special [[prayers]] or anything like that. It takes more than that. It takes one hundred percent [[dedication]] to moment-to-moment [[awareness]]. That’s why the [[Shambhala teachings]] came about here, and why [[Trungpa Rinpoche]] introduced them. It’s precisely because we’re at a point in the history of this particular {{Wiki|planet}} where those [[warriors]] are missing. Those [[people]] who demonstrate what is good and solid in the [[world]], what is brilliant and [[compassionate]] in the [[world]], are not with us right now. That means we have to do it ourselves.
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Q:  Do you see this as laying the groundwork for that to emerge?  [[Shambhala]]: The [[Sacred Path]] of the [[Warrior]]
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VR:  I think that’s the point. However, I don’t expect that because of the [[Shambhala teachings]], the [[world]] is going to change dramatically in the next few years. We have to take a broader view and look at a much longer time frame. At the same time, if we don’t act now, then that view becomes indistinct, and we can’t see it properly.
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QUESTION:  You said that we should live in the [[moment]] without reference. I assume you mean that our inner [[goodness]] would make us decide to live [[moment]] to [[moment]] in the right way. When making a better [[world]] or [[society]], do we not need reference points from the {{Wiki|past}} by which to [[judge]] our [[actions]]?
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VR:  Yes, we do. Those reference points from the {{Wiki|past}} are extremely important, not to store up as [[memories]], but to understand in terms of the {{Wiki|present}} [[moment]]. We confuse reference to the {{Wiki|past}} with the adoration of [[memories]]. Obviously, the {{Wiki|past}} is gone, and we can’t bring it back. On the other hand, the {{Wiki|past}} has a cumulative effect on our {{Wiki|present}} [[awareness]]. If [[people]] hadn’t worked so hard
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to make this building, we wouldn’t be sitting in it and talking about these things. Someone in the {{Wiki|past}} made all of the systems we use– heating, traffic lights, flush [[toilets]]. [[People]] worked hard to figure out how to do all of those things. We should venerate the [[effort]] of those who wanted to make [[life]] better for the [[people]] who came after them. That is a good reference point, because that’s what [[life]] is made of.
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QUESTION:  The [[Shambhala teachings]] as well as [[Buddhism]] talk about the notion of [[enlightenment]]. Are those different [[ideas]] or are they the same?
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VR:  I think that any [[state of being]] that is [[primordially]] good and without made-up nonsense is basically the same. That applies to any endeavor, anything that is purely what it is. It’s so good and so direct, and it is what it is. When you come into [[contact]] with it, it opens up your [[perception]], whether it’s a [[person]] or a thing or a time. Today, the [[rain]] broke and the clouds opened up, and we could see the [[mountains]]. Here it is! It is so good and real, just as it is. We don’t have to be [[enlightened]] to appreciate that.
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Thank you for your [[patience]] and [[generosity]] in coming here and listening to this talk and engaging in this [[discussion]]. I am working continually to {{Wiki|perfect}} my [[understanding]] of these teachings, and tonight I have been sharing with you the journey of my [[teacher]], my journey, and the journey of all those who have practiced the [[path]] of [[warriorship]]. I {{Wiki|hope}} that what we have discussed has shed some {{Wiki|light}} on the [[intelligence]] that we all possess and that it can be useful to you. I wish you great [[success]] in your [[life]]. I {{Wiki|hope}} you will strive to exhibit those [[Shambhala]]: The [[Sacred Path]] of the [[Warrior]]
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qualities of [[warriorship]] that are so worthwhile and so needed in this [[world]]. I have great [[faith]] that all of you can do so. Thank you very much.
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[http://www.glossary.shambhala.org/ www.glossary.shambhala.org]
 
[http://www.glossary.shambhala.org/ www.glossary.shambhala.org]
 
[[Category:Shambhala]]
 
[[Category:Shambhala]]

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shambhala: the sacred path of the warrior: is the book and teachings upon which this glossary is based. It is a compilation of teachings and writings on the practice of Shambhala Warriorship and is the mind terma, (uncovered teachings) of Chogyam Trungpa, Rinpoche; the Dorje Dradul of Mukpo.


This talk by Vajra Regent Ösel Tendzin is the first talk of a weekend seminar held in Vancouver, British Columbia, in November of 1987.


SHAMBHALA: THE SACRED PATH OF THE WARRIOR


The Shambhala teachings were introduced in the West by the Vidyadhara, Chögyam Trungpa Rinpoche, the Eleventh Trungpa Tülku, who fled Tibet during the Communist takeover in 1959. Shortly after that he came to the West, and for the next several years he taught the traditional path of Buddhism in which he was trained. Beginning in 1975, he introduced a body of teachings which we now know as

the wisdom of Shambhala, which had never before been introduced in the West, or for that matter, taught in the English language. Prior to this time, these teachings had been known only to those initiated into the highest tantric tradition of Tibetan Buddhism, known as the Kalachakra. Kalachakra means the wheel of time, and it teaches the realization of the nature of existence, that is to

say, the nature of past, present, and future. While the Shambhala teachings taught by Trungpa Rinpoche bear similarities to the Kalachakra, they are not the same. The path of Shambhala is entirely separate and unique in that it transcends dependence on any particular spiritual tradition.

According to the history, the kingdom of Shambhala was said to exist somewhere north of the Himalayan range in the area between Russia and Tibet. It is said that this kingdom can be found only by those who know the way, and to know the way one has to have a particular kind of wisdom. So in one way the history of Shambhala is a myth, and in another way it is an actual reality in the form

of a body of teachings. Shambhala is continually existent, but it can only be perceived by those whose view is pure. It is further said that the kingdom of Shambhala was founded on the principles of harmony and warriorship. Everyone who lived there had a notion of their own basic goodness, and acted with fearlessness, intelligence, and gentleness. The first ruler of Shambhala, King Dawa Sangpo, had heard of the Buddha Shakyamuni and his teachings and invited him to visit Shambhala to teach the dharma. The Buddha went to Shambhala, and there in the capital city of Kalapa he taught the Kalachakra Shambhala: The Sacred Path of the Warrior


tantra, which is how that particular teaching was transmitted to human beings. So because of the mutual appreciation of King Dawa Sangpo and the Buddha, a meeting point occurred between the wisdom of Shambhala and the Buddhist teachings. In the same way that it happened historically, Trungpa Rinpoche touched two things together: his Buddhist training and the wisdom of Shambhala. At

first, when Trungpa Rinpoche introduced the Shambhala teachings to his students, it was very unsettling for us. For centuries, Buddhists have been teaching their doctrine, which is very precise and orderly and follows a specific progression. The students who had become accustomed to the Buddhist teachings found the Shambhala teachings quite challenging. Because the

Shambhala teachings have nothing to do with religion and in some way nothing to do with doctrine, they are difficult to grasp in a conventional way. When Trungpa Rinpoche introduced the Shambhala teachings, they were like a sudden, brilliant flash of light. They had nothing to do with the past, and they did not project anything particular in the future. They had to do with now. To begin

with, we were amazed and shocked that a whole body of teaching like this could exist, and that we had no knowledge of it. That shock was good for us, because we soon realized that we could not rest on our so-called knowledge or experience, but we had to open our minds to the very basic, ordinary truth of Shambhala.

The Shambhala teachings could be called secular dharma. Dharma is a Sanskrit word meaning teaching, or way, or things as they are. The Shambhala teachings speak the language of ordinary life, of things as they are in ordinary situations. These teachings are not meant to be used to transcend this life in order to reach some higher goal. They are meant to refine and perfect this life so that everything in it, everything that we as human beings recognize as being part of our life, becomes completely illuminated, completely perfect.

Trungpa Rinpoche’s wisdom was vast. He had a gift of tuning into wisdom and expressing it in language accessible to everyone; and language is the key to understanding the Shambhala teachings. Language has to do with how we exist together in society as human beings and how we relate to each other and to the things around us—our parents, to our governments, our clothing, our supermarket. All of that has to do with language, or communication.

The Shambhala teachings speak in particular about sacredness. Sacred is a fantastic word; just saying it creates a certain atmosphere. However, if sacredness is misunderstood, it is seen as a dream-like existence or angelic quality; or, negatively, merely some kind of hocus-pocus. Sacred in the Shambhala sense means that every moment of existence we experience Shambhala: The

is in itself innately good, and that goodness cannot be compromised, manipulated, or distorted. Every single atom of our existence is sacred because it is basically and primordially good. Good does not mean good as opposed to bad. Good means primordial, before we even thought of it; you might say that good is prehistoric, or pre-thought. According to the Shambhala teachings, that primordial quality of goodness is the essence of all experience and of all existence as we know it. This primordial goodness is the very basic stuff of existence, and therefore its manifestation is sacred. What is sacred about your hair?

What is sacred about your teeth, your clothes, or your apartment? What is sacred about your toothbrush, your comb? What is sacred about the birthday card your mother sent you?

What is sacred about the endless talk on television? What is sacred about the collapse of the stock market? Sacredness has to do with living life as an expression, a manifestation of primordial goodness. The quality of sacredness does not exist in any particular thing. If that were the case, we would try to keep sacred things on one

side and everything else on the other. As a rule, if we take a religious view, we think that the world is not that sacred. We think that sacredness refers to some other quality, some other world, or some other life that should be attained. Even the Buddhist teachings speak about rebirth and realms of existence; but the Shambhala teachings emphasize this life. However, the emphasis is not on taking this life to be so important that we lose our sense of humor, but on understanding that everything that occurs in our life—in our body, speech, and mind, in our relationships—is in its own nature sacred.


In the Shambhala teachings, sacredness is connected with the principle of warriorship.


Otherwise, goodness, or sacredness, has no teeth or claws. The truth is that basic goodness has teeth and claws, but those teeth and claws are not necessarily there to carve out survival, or to protect goodness from evil, or to frighten evil, which is the enemy. The teeth and claws of basic goodness simply express the fact that goodness is primordial and therefore manifests as total

confidence. Primordial means having no particular origin, having no particular reason to be; it just is. So that particular kind of teeth and claws are the mark of warriorship: of how to be without fear, how to be, naturally and easily. Sacredness is the experience of hard and soft at the same time. Softness is the underbelly of experience. We’re always soft, all of us, always on the verge of collapse or extinction.

We are always on the brink of losing it, because we really don’t have a strategy. No matter how much we educate ourselves in the ways of the world or how much we believe that our course is set, in the moment, we have no strategy. We simply feel a softness and gentleness Shambhala: The Sacred Path of the Warrior


that is always underneath our occasionally boisterous attitude about who we are. Everyone feels that. I have never met a person, no matter how hard-nosed and tough they may seem, who doesn’t express some tenderness and softness. However, because we think that we should be strong and conquer this world, if we press that point, if we push that soft underbelly too much, it tightens up and

stiffens, and the defenses begin to appear. The world and the life that we live are full of so many pitfalls, so many traps, so many ways of causing us to feel disappointed, to feel that we are not as good as we could be, not as strong as we should be, not as bright as we would like to be. We have to trust ourselves more than that so that our whole being, our whole life is not based on

piling up credentials and descriptions of ourselves in order to face the world. Real strength does not depend on artificial analysis, artificial logic, or any kind of psychological fortification. All of that will disappear in a moment when we are faced

with a shocking situation, a radical change in our life. It can happen in the time it takes to snap our fingers–in a moment our notion of defending ourselves and being strong evaporates. However, we can learn to trust the goodness that is without defense and without strategy.


The tradition of warriorship and the principle of intrinsic goodness, values which have been talked about for thousands of years, are addressed in the Shambhala teachings. That is why the Shambhala teachings are timeless. The Shambhala teachings are like a wax museum coming to life in the sense that they are not presenting anything new. In reality, there is no such thing as a totally new

teaching. We are simply uncovering the language that teaches the gentleness, dignity, and grace which are common to all human beings. This language does not speak about a particular point when it all began, or about a moment when we reach our final destination. The Shambhala teachings speak to this very moment, which we call nowness, and to the quality of our existence that is

in tune with or synchronized with our environment. When we are synchronized in our body and mind, we become synchronized with each other. As our bodies move through space, they move with a grace and gentleness that is almost like a dance—in fact, it is a dance.

When we speak to each other, when we work with each other, when we think about each other, it is an expression of dignity, gentleness, and fearlessness, and out of that human society arises as all of our bodies moving through space, creating a tremendous, harmonious dance.

Having studied and practiced these teachings myself, it seems to me that, apart from laziness and doubt, there is no particular reason why we cannot wake up and realize that this very life is the ground of sacredness and the expression of dignity, and that our relationships with others are the expression of confidence. It is necessary for us to take an entirely new Shambhala: The


attitude, or maybe an entirely old attitude. We always look for a spark of brilliance in our life, and if one appears, we pursue it. However, because we have accustomed ourselves to living in a small way, we only pursue it for a little while, and then we find it more comfortable to retract, to become less than a warrior. Especially in this age, we have to make an effort to open our minds, our hearts, and our bodies to the possibility, however remote it may seem, that there is a harmonious way of being and that we can accomplish such a thing. At the same time, we have to be careful not to create a self-styled fantasy.

That is why it is necessary to have discipline. In the way of Shambhala, discipline is a means of connecting with our body and mind and environment, and therefore it is very good and useful. Trungpa Rinpoche borrowed the discipline of meditation practice from the Buddhist tradition, because that discipline transcends any particular reference point.

Meditation is the simple practice of sitting and being with ourselves. Meditation involves using what we have, and so does not create further stories and further confusion. We have a body, and we can use that body in a very simple way by putting it in an

ordinary place, a simple place, and allowing it to relax and be there, and for a time we can let go of the need to do anything. Meditation does not depend on an external deity or a visualized object; it doesn’t require anything other than being with ourselves. It is the simplest and most direct way to contact the primordial goodness which has no origin.

In reality, we don’t need any method in order to catch our own awareness or to know that we are good. However, these are very difficult times. We view the world as something that we possess or have dominion over, and we expect so much and complain so much. Therefore, it’s necessary to have a method that allows this mask to fall away. According to Trungpa Rinpoche, and according to my own experience, meditation is the best way of doing that, especially in the beginning. Then it becomes a matter of allowing your own intelligence to come forward.

This particular technique is sometimes accused of being nihilistic. People have asked, “Why would you just sit and do nothing when the world needs our help so badly? Isn’t that a waste?” Perhaps for a while we could relieve the world of some of its burden. But when we practice the discipline of meditation, we begin to see that there is no reason to be rushing to our death. Rather, there is

a way to just be, a way to learn how to work with time and space and synchronize our body and mind. We have the intelligence to know how to do this, and that intelligence has no particular origin. It is simply there, all the time. It is basically what it is, which is good.

Discipline takes effort; it can’t merely be adopted as a philosophy of good intentions, where we think, “I’m basically good; things are as they are; and I can just enjoy my life.” We know from our experience that even with the best intentions we can fall into depression or degraded behavior. The only really useful approach is to develop a discipline that undercuts those habitual patterns.

If we don’t have the discipline to do that, we can talk and talk about goodness and warriorship and it won’t make any difference. As soon as we encounter a situation that is not to our liking, or as soon as we lose energy and grow tired, we fall prey to degraded thinking. In a very short time we find ourselves involved in a series of thoughts which become another series of thoughts

which become a series of actions. Very rapidly, those actions cause us to completely forget the spaciousness and openness of discipline. So the way to proceed is by practicing the discipline of putting ourselves in a situation that is not compromised by our usual activity.

We have to know how to continually spark ourselves. We can do that by learning to appreciate the ordinariness of our experience. Whatever occurs in our experience doesn’t have to be made into something else. We can appreciate every aspect of experience, whether we regard it as good or bad, happy or sad. But we have to tune our mind in a certain way: We have to be able to be very,

very still, and be able to really appreciate. To appreciate, we can’t move fast. If we move fast and jump to conclusions, we miss the bigger picture. There is always more than we think, even though on the surface it may not seem that way. The only way to do that is to practice meditation, to slow down long enough to see beyond our own opinion about who we are. Otherwise, it’s not easy to be friendly with ourselves.

It is also important to practice a discipline that is not based on the promise of a result. However, to simply sit without the promise of a result makes most of us a little crazy because we’re so conditioned to thinking that whatever arises in our mind should be immediately followed by something else. If it’s eggs, it must be bacon. If it’s bacon, it must be toast. If it’s toast, it must be orange juice. If it’s orange juice, it must be what?

Indigestion. We are so conditioned to the flow of habits that even the idea of a discipline with no promise is unnerving. If we have any confidence at all, if we have any sense of who we are, we should investigate what it’s like simply to be with ourselves, by ourselves, for a short period of time. That is meditation. When we begin to see that we don’t have to rush to our own death, we

can look at our life and appreciate it, appreciate our relatives, appreciate our friends and enemies, appreciate our environment. Appreciation is the language of sacredness, and we begin to see, hear, smell, taste, and touch sacredness. We Shambhala: The Sacred come aware of every moment and every thought, so aware that we can feel the dance of our body moving through space, and we become

appreciative of others and of their pain and confusion. Then we begin to think that our life can be of benefit to others. These Shambhala teachings are meant to be useful right now. They are not meant to undo or rearrange the past, and they are not meant for the future. It is possible to lead such a life, and in such a way that when we die we leave something behind which is


good—not a monument nor an autobiography nor a shopping center, but a legacy that people can tune into and that can be felt in the environment for a long time. That legacy is the lineage of warriorship, the lineage of hard and soft at the same time, the lineage that appreciates everything as it is in its sacred quality.

The Dorje Dradül, Trungpa Rinpoche, introduced these Shambhala teachings, and I worked closely with him to bring about the vehicle for these teachings, which is the Shambhala Training program. Shambhala Training is a program of stages that people like us can do. They are based on recognizing basic goodness, which is primordial and unconditional; seeing the world as sacred; and stabilizing

that vision through the path of the warrior. In the Shambhala tradition, a warrior is not one who makes war; a Shambhala warrior is one who has the courage to be exactly who he or she is. That kind of warriorship is an ancient ideal, not the product of some latest trend. The lineage of warriorship is like a very fine silk thread passed continuously from generation to generation. It is very fine and very thin, but it’s very tough and doesn’t break.


QUESTION: Could you say a bit more about the actual connection between Shambhala and Buddhism? They seem to be presented as quite distinct, and yet they both use the practice of meditation.


VAJRA REGENT: Trungpa Rinpoche touched two things together: his Buddhist training and the Shambhala teachings. In my experience, if one follows the path of Shambhala, it is entirely separate and not dependent on any theology. The process of using meditation practice, I think, is purely practical, especially in the present time.


QUESTION: Buddhism is a very old tradition with a track record of realized teachers. Who are the realized teachers in Shambhala?

VR: The qualities of gentleness, confidence, and fearlessness are common to all of us. We call those who have realized those qualities Shambhala warriors. Shambhala: The Sacred Path of the Warrior


Q: Could we say that those qualities are always present and available, and Chögyam Trungpa has brought them forth in a body of teaching?

VR: That’s right. When the Shambhala teachings are authentically presented, more people can wake up to them. Over the centuries there have been individuals who have exhibited the qualities of warriorship and so have been a delight to the world, but their lives, like all others, don’t last. Their particular star burns out and it’s gone, and people forget. We all forget. The point of these teachings is to bring out those qualities in everyone, not only in the great ones. We are the great ones. I think that’s the point: it’s not positive thinking, which doesn’t go anywhere; it is positive being.


QUESTION: I think a warrior would put him or herself in fearful situations in order to overcome them. Would you agree that one should not avoid something because it is fearful or uncomfortable?


VR: We all spend a lot of time trying to make our life comfortable. Nevertheless, there are moments when it just doesn’t work. Then we panic and try to rely on something: an idea, a spiritual tradition, or a memory of what our grandfather or our ancestors did; or we read a poem or hang a slogan on a wall; all of those things. That may be well and good, but when it comes right down to it, it’s simply you and your world. We don’t necessarily have to put ourselves in situations that are demanding; if we are open to them, they will be there. What is more important is not to continue trying to create further diversions in order to avoid reality.


Q: Sometimes certain situations keep coming up, and each time they can be fearful and a challenge. I have the feeling that if I faced them they wouldn’t keep coming back.


VR: We all know who we are and what scares us. However, we can’t use these teachings to make ourselves secure so that when that fear comes up we know how to conquer it. It’s not a matter of waiting for the monster to arise and confronting it, doing battle with the enemy. We have to take a sacred view, knowing that whatever arises in our life, whether it’s good or bad, whether it’s

something we habitually avoid or habitually confront, there is no enemy as such. There is simply the experience of good and bad, pleasure and pain, happy and sad. If we’re honest, we can’t say we know precisely what will happen next. We never know what people are going to do or say or what kind of situation we’re going to find ourselves in. It might be shocking, or it might put us to asleep. Sometimes we’re disappointed, or a peaceful experience becomes aggressive and we’re faced with a further challenge. Warriorship is not about confronting what is uncomfortable, but about being in Shambhala: The Sacred Path of the Warrior

the state of nowness. In that state of nowness, we take all experiences as our own meal, so to speak, as what we have to eat. We live on the very basic stuff of our existence. That is much more challenging. QUESTION: You spoke about illuminating what is good, and about good as opposed to bad, and you said that everything in life is sacred and therefore nothing is bad. Yet in this life there are things that are not as positive as they should be.

VR: Everything is sacred does not mean that nothing is bad; there are definitely things that are degraded. At the same time, the notions of pro and con are deceptions. On the one hand, we’re constantly battling between right and wrong, good and bad. On the other hand, we can adopt an idealistic philosophy so that we don’t have to battle. Neither of those is accurate. The reality is

that what becomes degraded and what becomes uplifted is simply the difference between falling asleep and being awake. Falling asleep means falling asleep to our dignity; being awake means being awake to our dignity. Every moment is separate and distinct, and we can approach every moment with a fresh mind. Why don’t we know that?

It’s not that difficult. No one needs a morality lesson to know what that is. In fact, from the Shambhala point of view, dogs and cats know that. We’re stuck with a world so chock-full of ideas that they make the whole environment kind of thick. Because we have lost touch with our own warrior quality, we produce more and more ideas, more and more things, more and more cluttering of space, and then there is nowhere to go except pro and con or some silly universalism, neither of which works. The remedy is the slogan of Shambhala Training, “Living in the Challenge,” which means that every moment is fresh and new, without any particular reference, and we can look at it with a mind of total appreciation for what it is.


QUESTION: I’m interested in how the Shambhala teachings apply to social activism.


VR: Social action, meaning the principle of enlightened society, is the real fruition of Shambhala Training and the goal of the Shambhala teachings altogether. Enlightened society is based on natural hierarchy, which means that there is a natural way to be in the world.

That understanding makes society much more workable. What we have now is totally confused. What should one be? Who or what is there to emulate? There isn’t much in the way of role models, individually or collectively. In the West, we are familiar with the political philosophy of democracy, the rule of the people. Democratic social action is based on the notion that people are equal in intelligence, and when you trust in the intelligence of the people, the action will be enlightened. We are also familiar with communist philosophy,

which believes that the collective consciousness is the measure of social action, so one should rely on collective rather than individual intelligence. We’ve also seen monarchy, in which the view is that one trusts or relies on the intelligence in the relationship between the ruler and the subjects.

Shambhala Training is more aligned with the notion of monarchy, not in the sense of the divine right of kings, but in the sense of a connection between heaven and earth through the principle of man, the Shambhala warrior. The principles of heaven, earth, and man are ancient ideas that transcend relative political philosophies. Earth is solidness and all that is below, anchored in the earth. Heaven is the sky, openness, and all that is above—the higher principles. Man is the connection between the two. In this case, man

includes the warrior ruler, the warrior subjects, and everyone who aspires to be a warrior. The realized Shambhala warrior connects heaven and earth, and therefore manifests harmony in body and mind. Some people say that this is the most enlightened time; but according to the Shambhala tradition, this is the waning time, when things become darker. These days, the world is not that decent.

That is one of the reasons why these teachings have come about. There have been many types of teaching in the world—religious, philosophical, psychological—mostly aimed at awakening people to their own basic goodness. When those teachings are based on conditioned logic or a momentary dream, they are unable to create an atmosphere in which people can wake up to their basic nature. However, it is possible to effect a change that will in turn affect the future. We have to go beyond our own personal happiness,

which is annoying; no one wants to do that. “I would like to have something that works now. If it works now, then I’m interested. I’ll sign up.” We’ve had so much of that nonsense. At this point we should know that none of that works. We can’t prolong a comfortable life by taking special supplements or reading special books or mumbling special prayers or anything like that. It takes more than that. It takes one hundred percent dedication to moment-to-moment awareness. That’s why the Shambhala teachings came about here, and why Trungpa Rinpoche introduced them. It’s precisely because we’re at a point in the history of this particular planet where those warriors are missing. Those people who demonstrate what is good and solid in the world, what is brilliant and compassionate in the world, are not with us right now. That means we have to do it ourselves.


Q: Do you see this as laying the groundwork for that to emerge? Shambhala: The Sacred Path of the Warrior


VR: I think that’s the point. However, I don’t expect that because of the Shambhala teachings, the world is going to change dramatically in the next few years. We have to take a broader view and look at a much longer time frame. At the same time, if we don’t act now, then that view becomes indistinct, and we can’t see it properly.


QUESTION: You said that we should live in the moment without reference. I assume you mean that our inner goodness would make us decide to live moment to moment in the right way. When making a better world or society, do we not need reference points from the past by which to judge our actions?


VR: Yes, we do. Those reference points from the past are extremely important, not to store up as memories, but to understand in terms of the present moment. We confuse reference to the past with the adoration of memories. Obviously, the past is gone, and we can’t bring it back. On the other hand, the past has a cumulative effect on our present awareness. If people hadn’t worked so hard

to make this building, we wouldn’t be sitting in it and talking about these things. Someone in the past made all of the systems we use– heating, traffic lights, flush toilets. People worked hard to figure out how to do all of those things. We should venerate the effort of those who wanted to make life better for the people who came after them. That is a good reference point, because that’s what life is made of.


QUESTION: The Shambhala teachings as well as Buddhism talk about the notion of enlightenment. Are those different ideas or are they the same?


VR: I think that any state of being that is primordially good and without made-up nonsense is basically the same. That applies to any endeavor, anything that is purely what it is. It’s so good and so direct, and it is what it is. When you come into contact with it, it opens up your perception, whether it’s a person or a thing or a time. Today, the rain broke and the clouds opened up, and we could see the mountains. Here it is! It is so good and real, just as it is. We don’t have to be enlightened to appreciate that.


Thank you for your patience and generosity in coming here and listening to this talk and engaging in this discussion. I am working continually to perfect my understanding of these teachings, and tonight I have been sharing with you the journey of my teacher, my journey, and the journey of all those who have practiced the path of warriorship. I hope that what we have discussed has shed some light on the intelligence that we all possess and that it can be useful to you. I wish you great success in your life. I hope you will strive to exhibit those Shambhala: The Sacred Path of the Warrior

qualities of warriorship that are so worthwhile and so needed in this world. I have great faith that all of you can do so. Thank you very much.





Source


www.glossary.shambhala.org