Seeing Through: Towards a Buddhist Sociology

[Editor’s note; I was supposed to be taking a break from Buddhism this summer. Well, that resolve lasted all of a week. But I’ve been working on my dissertation, and came across pieces that gave me an opening for introducing a series that I have wanted to write for many months: seeing through as a sociological application of shunyata.] Seeing… Read More Seeing Through: Towards a Buddhist Sociology

Replacing Addiction with Compassion

Starting Friday, June 12, Tommy Rosen hosts Recovery 2.0 Move Beyond Addiction Conference,  Tommy brings new voices and practices to the work of recovery from addiction. What he says is very much what Gelek Rinpoche says below: the opposite of a life of addiction is not just “abstinence” per se, but compassion and connection to a community of people. Recovery… Read More Replacing Addiction with Compassion

Beauty of the Chai Stand

Reblogged from https://www.pacsafe.com/blog/beauty-of-the-chai-stand/ Please visit Pacsafe for great stories and products for travel. Posted by Bryan Schatz+ on March 9, 2012 at 7:00 am [kshishtof]/[iStock]/Thinkstock Some people go to India for spiritual rejuvenation. They go there to meditate and do yoga and generally get all blissed out, viewing the country as a pure place to put the mind… Read More Beauty of the Chai Stand

Distillations from Stephen Jenkins’ “Circle of Compassion”

by Shaun Bartone I read through Stephen Jenkins’ Ph.D. dissertation, “The Circle of Compassion: An Interpretive Study of Karuna in Indian Buddhist Literature.” It was his thesis for a Ph.D. in Religion from Harvard University. Dr. Jenkins is Chair of the Dept. of Religion at Humboldt State University in California. His dissertation is available online… Read More Distillations from Stephen Jenkins’ “Circle of Compassion”