Events
The Buddhism & Ecology Summit: Touching The Earth
A Zen Buddhist learns to embrace her insomnia.
By Noelle OxenhandlerLife is so full, so touching, wondrous, sad, curious, and bittersweet, that it’s almost unbearable at times. As human beings we need to ask, Do we have to turn away from this fullness? Can we enjoy the limitless realm of possibility? Can we live life as an open question?
TeachingsMagazine | Dharma Talk
Timeless teachings. Modern methods.
Learn to write from the place in which spiritual work happens, first by cultivating an attitude of open heartedness, curiosity, wonder, and fearlessness, then by creating work expressing those qualities.
With Sallie TisdaleJoin us April 17-21 for Tricycle’s second annual Buddhism and Ecology Summit, a weeklong series of conversations with Buddhist teachers, writers, environmental activists and psychologists on transforming eco-anxiety into awakened action. We’ll offer perspectives and practices for working with difficult emotions and creating pathways to meaningful action.
Video teachings with contemporary Buddhist teachers
Laura Burges discusses "The Eight Awarenesses of the Awakened Being" as realizations that are available to us all.
Buddhist films and discussion for the Tricycle community
Twenty-five-year-old Burmese punk musician Kyaw Kyaw is on a mission. He and his band, The Rebel Riot, travel Myanmar playing music and organizing demonstrations to raise awareness about the persecution of the country’s ethnic minorities. The band’s unique blend of ideals—one part Buddhist compassion, two parts punk rock rebellion—fuels their quest for equality and freedom for all in contemporary Myanmar.
Conversations with contemporary Buddhist leaders & thinkers
In this episode of Tricycle Talks, Gaylon Ferguson uses the Zen oxherding pictures to illustrate the stages of the spiritual journey.
With Gaylon Ferguson