
Lama Rod Owens: Challenging Identity through Vulnerability
On vulnerability, identity, and Buddhism in America

On vulnerability, identity, and Buddhism in America

Walking the Dharma in in modern America

Approaching Buddhism with right understanding

On skillful means in the Chinese Tiantai tradition

After two years of being unable to visit the Plum Village monastic community in southwest France for the Summer Opening Retreat, conditions were finally right

People in the United States seem to be having difficult conversations: about politics, about race, about the economy, and about the environment. For American Buddhists,

I was introduced to the Chan Meditation Center in New York in 1997, when I came to work as a volunteer for almost a month.

It was 1959. A young housewife was driving across America, from the open fields of the Midwest to the rugged Pacific Coast. Angie Boissevain and

The examples of Chögyam Trungpa and Sogyal Rinpoche

The Buddha said, “Contentment is the greatest wealth.” His statement holds a timeless truth that rings true today more than ever. We are living in

Buddhism has become an established part of the Western religious landscape, although as recently as the 20th century it was difficult for many people to imagine

In 1895, a British army officer published a book titled The Buddhism of Tibet: Or Lamaism, with Its Mystic Cults, Symbolism and Mythology, and in its