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Sharing the Timeless Joy

From the VOCL Archives

Enjoy Tenzin Wangyal Rinpoche's timeless wisdom along with with beautiful photographs taken by Salvador Espinosa at Menri Monastery in India while visiting there with Tenzin Wangyal Rinpoche and son, Senghe, during Losar in February 2018, and from Serenity Ridge during that New Year's Sang celebration. Brief excerpts from Rinpoche's book Healing with Form, Energy and Light are interspersed in the article. Previously published in Voice of Clear Light, April 2018.

Menri View with Bird 4 x 2.65

AmazingView Menri Losar

In the dzogchen view, the goal is already present. Nothing has to be developed, only recognized. The fundamental practices of dzogchen are not aimed at developing anything, not even positive qualities. The practice is simply abiding in the nature of mind in which all qualities are already present and can spontaneously arise.

View from Menri Losar 2018

Dzogchen does not attempt to overcome problems or correct their causes, nor does it renounce problems or attempt to transform them. In the pure dzogchen view, there is no such thing as a problem. When a thought or feeling or sensation arises, it is left as it is. It does not cause a reaction. And if there is a reaction, it is not further engaged.

SR from skySerenity Ridge Retreat Center in Shipman, Virginia during New Year's Sang

TWR Salvadore Espinosa SengheSalvador Espinosa (photographer), Tenzin Wangyal Rinpoche and Rinpoche's son, Senghe

Dzogchen is the great knowledge of space and light. Space is the empty Great Mother from which all things arise as a luminous display, in which all things have their existence, and into which all things dissolve. The luminous display is the play of the five pure lights, the essence of the five elements. The manifestation is all things and all beings and all elements of experience. This is the basis of the dzogchen view.