Lama Kathy Dharma Blog: Face to Face with Stunning Beauty

The look on her face was nothing short of enchanting; she seemed to chase away all cares with that look of confidence and grace. Holding the vajra in her hand, she seemed to be indicating the nearness of compassion and truth; once one began looking at her, it was hard to look away.

But then I had to hand her over to the photographer, and our moment together was at an end.

It felt like that over and over again some weeks back, when a crew of merry volunteers from Columbus KTC crawled all over the home of Kim and Bill Miracle on the Far East Side, cataloguing, photographing and carefully weighing and measuring dozens of beautiful statues, paintings and art pieces donated to the center.

The fruits of their labors can be seen this week on the auction site eBay, where Columbus KTC has been holding its first-ever Charity Auction to benefit the Columbus KTC Rebuilding Fund.

The Charity Action ends late Thursday evening/early Friday morning (see eBay listings for exact time), and can be found here.

Here is how we came to have this wonderful event.

After our home in an old church building on Grubb Street in Franklinton was destroyed by fire in January 2016, gifts of all sorts flooded into Kim’s home. As the Director of the KTC, she heads up the effort to rebuild, and the gifts were seen as tokens of hope by people who knew we’d lost not quite half or our statues and virtually all of our sacred paintings in the fire. (In fact, just one little thangka scroll painting survived, because it had been taken off display and was stored rolled-up in the library. Auspiciously, it was a painting of Green Tara, the compassionate feminine bodhisattva who removes obstacles.)

As we looked at the bounty, we were touched, but unsure how to honor the gifts we had been given. Should we keep them? If so, where would we keep them? Should we display them? What was the best way to make use of the beautiful gifts?

As we were mulling over these questions, our spiritual guide Khenpo Karthar Rinpoche sent us a message: we didn’t need to worry about getting new statues for the shrine in our new building – he himself was going to provide us with all new statues and paintings for our shrine. It was such exciting news; we were overcome with joy.

This also gave us an answer as to what we could do with our gifts; we could turn them into steel frames and wallboard for our new building!

So we saved aside some pieces to use in our future library shrine, and prepared the rest for listing on eBay.

You can see the beautiful thangka of the wisdom Bodhisattva Prajnaparamita I described in my first paragraph (it’s Item 64 in the auction) as well as door curtains, malas, and other wonderful items that can beautify your shrine room and home. Some are blessed and consecrated, and will bring great blessing wherever they are displayed. And through purchasing them you will be supporting the floorboards and library shelves and kitchen appliances in a brand-new KTC.

Some items are just $5; others go much higher. But what is most important is that the circle of love started by the donors will be completed when the purchasers when they install them in their shrine rooms and homes.

The love being directed toward Columbus KTC since our tragedy has been astonishing; it has filled the halls of our temporary meeting space at Congregation Tifereth Israel and filled our hearts, as well. Because we believe in the power of karma and the power of our donors’ pure intentions, we know that all will be filled with merit and virtue in the days, weeks, months and years ahead. You are our family in the dharma, and we treasure you all!

HELP the KTC – join in and share the auction with interested family and friends this week by clicking here. Thank you and may all beings benefit.

Lama Kathy’s Dharma Blog: Sacred Spaces

In the afternoon sunlight, daisies sway in the breeze; nearby you can hear the tinkling of wind chimes.

It’s beautiful, and even a little bit magical. Somehow, you feel possibility in the air.

The scene played out at our “home” monastery, Karma Triyana Dharmachakra, during the holy month of Saka Dawa – the month commemorating the Buddha’s birth, enlightenment and death. During this month, grass is allowed to grow on the KTD grounds without being cut, as monks try to reduce the number of sentient beings killed (even accidentally) on monastery grounds during Saka Dawa.

This year, the days after Saka Dawa brought a special visitor to KTD – His Holiness the Gyalwang Karmapa, who made a low-key private visit to his monastery after his successful public visit to Canada. In a visit that lasted less than 48 hours, His Holiness toured the campus of KTD, went to visit the Karme Ling Three-Year Retreat Center (where he blessed retreatants including our own Jinpa, Adam Berner) and blessed the site of 8 reliquaries (stupas) set to be assembled on the KTD grounds.

As far as I can figure, that’s a three-fold blessing for our home monastery – the time (just after Saka Dawa), the person (His Holiness), and the holy objects (the Buddha statues, texts and reliquaries). A trifecta of goodness!

One might wonder what makes holy places holy, and capable of bestowing blessing. And, one might understandably ask, what is a blessing?

The way I’ve heard it, blessing occurs when we prayerfully turn toward the sacred. According to the teachings of the Buddha, each being possesses Buddha Nature – a mind that has the potential to awaken to enlightenment, or Buddhahood – and when we draw near to people and places that embody awakening, our own Buddha Nature resonates, much like a tuning fork resounds to the exact same note struck in its viscinity.

In other words, people who have practiced meditation and opened their minds to compassion for themselves and others have the potential to “pass along” an inspiration to others whose minds are open to it.

The Buddha himself said that whoever thought of him would experience his presence in front of them. When we think prayerfully of the Buddha, even if we open our eyes and cannot see his form, his blessing – his essence – is present in our hearts. For that moment, one could say we reflect the Buddha, we embody the Buddha, we share sacred space with the Buddha.

And being inspired by this, we may be able to embody the Buddha to others – to carry to others some small bit of his wisdom and compassion.

I was thinking of this on a recent Sunday, when a group of us traveled to the corner of West Rich and South Grubb streets in Franklinton for a whimsical photo opportunity that I felt could connect our community both to its future and its past.

In a warm breeze and bright sunlight, a group of about 20 of us piled into cars and drove from our temporary shrine room at Congregation Tifereth Israel on East Broad Street to our old property at Rich and Grubb streets, where we lined up on the empty embankment to smile for the camera and celebrate our community.

There we were, squinting into the sunlight, enjoying being together in our “old” home, and smiling for people of the future to show them we had been there – on the vacant lot that had once been our shrine building, and, with good fortune and hard work, will one day be our shrine building again.

It felt to me as though I had one foot in each time – past, and future – but what grounded me was the place, the place where we had heard so many teachings, offered so many prayers, sat in meditation so many times, and – yes – received so many blessings.

It was a strange request, I suppose, but I couldn’t help but feel we were making a promise to the place, a promise to the land and to the Franklinton neighborhood, that we would be back someday, and that they should hold our place open for us.

As I turned toward the parking lot to go to our Sangha Lunch, I noticed a neighbor across the street sitting on her porch, watching the unfolding scene. As others were waiting on me, I didn’t have time to go over and speak to her, but I tried to give her a positive assurance in the only way I knew how in that moment.

I made a motion like a person digging the earth with a shovel, and said, “Next year! Next year. We will be back next year.”

With the Buddha’s blessings, and everyone’s hard work …

Lama Kathy’s Blog – The Journey Home: The Next Phase

by Lama Kathy Wesley, Columbus KTC

Rebuilding a Dharma Center, in some ways, is like creating a Chorten, or Stupa – one of those beautiful Buddhist monuments you see in photos of Tibet, India, and parts of the United States.

The stupa – a square base topped with a vase and spire – is composed of geometric forms that represent the Buddha sitting in meditation. Inside, the stupa is stuffed full of dharma treasures – rolls of mantras, a full set of Buddhist scriptures, fragrant wood, and a packet of relics attached to a central wooden post, called a “life tree” that is itself inscribed with scriptures and mantras in gold.

The Three Jewels – the Buddha, his Teachings, and the Sangha – are represented in the stupa, and circumambulating it (walking around it in a clockwise direction) is said to nurture a virtuous mind state in the dharma pilgrim.

Well, the Columbus KTC building will be just like a stupa; it will contain a large image of the Buddha, a full set of Buddhist Dharma scriptures, and representations of the enlightened buddhas, bodhisattvas and masters who comprise the exalted Sangha. There will be a circumambulation path around it, and inside there will be a classroom, library, offices and a spacious meditation hall.

Khenpo Karthar Rinpoche, our founding lama, recently spoke at our “home” monastery, Karma Triyana Dharmachakra. He said he was confident about the future of the monastery and the Karme Ling Three-Year Retreat Center, but he was concerned about the Columbus KTC and wanted to see it rebuilt as soon as possible.

At 93, Khenpo Rinpoche has lived a full life – a little less than half of it in the United States. Rinpoche believes in the power and strength of Dharma in the United States, and is encouraging us to pull together to rebuild Columbus KTC.

Behind the scenes for the last few months, the KTC Board – Director Kim Miracle, Assistant Directors Tanya Schroeder (who left office in April) and Michelle Evans (who took office in April), Treasurer Steve Phallen, Secretary Justin Fitch, and Member At-Large Eric Weinberg – has been working on ushering our project into its next phase.

As you may recall, we’ve obtained provisional approval from the East Franklinton Review Board for zoning changes to build a new and larger building on our existing lot at Rich and Grubb Streets in Franklinton. We’ve also engaged a contractor, Centerpoint Construction, to work on the plans for building this amazing new building.

The design by Milwaukee architect (and dharma patron) Keith Spruce is being transferred this month to a local Columbus architectural firm, as an Ohio-licensed architect is needed to create plans for actual construction of the center.

Keith’s beautiful designs now will be developed and brought to realization. We can’t wait to share the “next generation” plans with you in a month or two!

Meanwhile, Khenpo Karthar Rinpoche has been busily designing the KTC shrine. He recently showed us the two-foot-tall images of the long-life Buddha Amitayus and a precious metal stupa that will flank our Buddha image, and the 18-inch statues of Marpa, Milarepa and Gampopa that will sit in front of our Buddha image.

As for the Buddha image itself, Rinpoche smiled and showed us the length of his forearm and said, “this is how tall the lotus flower underneath your Buddha statue will be.”

All I could think of was “WOW.” Days before, I’d been thinking that it would be wonderful to have a larger image of the Buddha for our shrine hall – an image that when you saw it would make you stop and catch your breath – and image that would touch your heart and uplift your mind. Don’t know what it will look like just yet, but it will be at least four feet tall J So that’s amazing, all by itself.

The Amitayus statue, stupa and guru statues are from Khenpo Karthar Rinpoche’s personal shrine at Karme Ling. He’s also donating his personal set of Buddhist scriptures to Columbus KTC. Khenpo Ugyen Tenzin of KTD is sponsoring a new set of cloth covers for the books, and when they’re “dressed and ready” we will bring them to Ohio to await their new home at a rebuilt Columbus KTC.

Lama Karma Drodhul, Khenpo Rinpoche’s nephew and chief attendant, has started a GoFundMe campaign among his own dharma students to help KTC. He’s calling it “Khenpo Rinpoche Single Wish” and he hopes it will inspire his students in Asia to help us with the rebuilding campaign.

Locally, KTC Capital Campaign honorary co-chairs Nanette Maciejunes of the Columbus Museum of Art and Stephen Hayes of Quest martial arts have held brainstorming meetings, and soon we will share with you the fundraising ideas they are “cooking up” for Columbus KTC.

And the KTC Rebuilding Campaign team has been working behind the scenes here in Central Ohio to secure leadership pledges for our campaign.

Our current goal is $1.3 million. To date, we have $848,000 to apply to the cost of the new building. This includes insurance money, received donations, and money pledged to the rebuilding effort. The leadership pledges-plus yours-will help us reach the $452,000 goal we still need. There is great merit in this project-and not just because you’ll be helping to accomplish Khenpo Karthar Rinpoche’s wish that the first center he founded in the United States be rebuilt.

Whether you’re building a stupa or a shrine building, the benefit and merit are the same; Khenpo Rinpoche says society in general is benefitted by seeing images of the Buddha and connecting with the scriptures and relics. So if you think about it, you will accumulate virtue for yourself and provide an opportunity for many others to cultivate virtue by supporting the Rebuilding of Columbus KTC.

You also can join us by reciting the Tashi Prayer for the Rebuilding of Columbus KTC. However you assist us, we thank you for your help and inspiration. May all beings benefit!

40th Anniversary Celebration and Rebuilding Campaign Kickoff Luncheon Is Sunday July 30!

When Khenpo Karthar Rinpoche came to Central Ohio in September 1977, he gave talks on Buddhism in Columbus and Newark, Ohio. A few months later he returned in November to help shepherd his new crew of students. Meanwhile, His Holiness 16th Karmapa sent us a letter granting us the name Karme Thegsum Chöling – a Tibetan variation of the name Karma Triyana Dharmachakra, meaning “place of the Buddha’s teachings of the three yanas.”

We’re so delighted that 40 years later, Columbus KTC is going strong – and is getting ready to kick off the fundraising campaign to build a beautiful new shrine building for our larger-than-ever congregation.

You’ll be hearing more about our 40th Anniversary Celebration in the coming weeks. Meanwhile, please save the date for our anniversary luncheon at Tifereth Israel – 11:30 a.m. Sunday July 30th.

Gather up your photos from KTC events and start jotting down your favorite memories. We look forward to hearing all about them in the coming weeks!

Lama Kathy’s Blog The Journey Home: Neighborhood Approval

Rebuilding the Columbus KTC has been a gradual process. First we gathered advice from our founder, Khenpo Karthar Rinpoche, then asked our sangha friends to help us choose the number of rooms and the size of the rooms in our re-imagined KTC building. Then we asked our architect, Keith Spruce of Milwaukee, to design a building based on this advice.

We reviewed the plans with the KTC sangha in early 2016, and got more advice and input.

The next step was to ask permission of the City of Columbus to put a larger building on our (now vacant) lot at Rich and Grubb streets.

For this, we received the assistance of Attorney Thomas Hart and Paralegal Lizabeth Russell, as well as help from Landscape Architect Rick Fay of OHM Engineering (great name, right?). They helped us review our plans with City of Columbus officials through meetings with the East Franklinton Review Board.

The East Franklinton Review Board is the chief zoning authority for our neighborhood, which is part of a larger redevelopment district located just west of Downtown.

City officials have long wished to see the rejuvenation of our neighborhood, which was the first neighborhood of the city of Columbus when the settlement was in its infancy in the late 18th Century. If we wanted to follow Khenpo Rinpoche’s advice to put a larger building on our lot, the EFRB was our destination.

We brought them our first plans in June of 2016; they offered advice and sent us back to the drawing board. After making changes to suit the zoning needs of the neighborhood, our team, led by Attorney Tom Hart and aided by drawings from Keith Spruce and Rick Fay, took the plans back to the EFRB in mid-December.

The project took another step forward at that meeting in December, when the EFRB gave us a conditional approval to construct the newer, larger center on Grubb and Rich streets!

Our design team still has to meet the EFRB’s conditions for final approval (which consist of adding extra exterior design elements and aligning ones we already have). We are working to bring those additional elements to the EFRB in early 2017.

But the good news is that we are approved to rebuild in Franklinton. May all beings benefit!

Meanwhile, Director Kim Miracle and the amazing KTC Board (Tanya Schroeder, Steve Phallen, Justin Fitch and Eric Weinberg) along with Building Committee volunteers, have interviewed possible contractors for our project, and a Capital Campaign Committee of KTC volunteers has met with our professional fundraising advisers from Mollard Consulting to develop a game plan for raising the money that will be needed to make the project a reality.

A lot of money will be needed to rebuild the KTC. We received about $500,000 in cash from the insurance company for the loss of our building and its contents; the insurance company has promised another $100,000 for code improvements if we rebuild a new structure.

That’s $600,000 to start with.

Add to that approximately $100,000 raised from the GoFundMe emergency fundraiser and the about $50,000 in donations from our home monastery KTD, Khenpo Karthar Rinpohe, various lamas and the Chinese community, and we have about $750,000 at our disposal.

Our architect has estimated the cost of the new building at around $1.4 million; that means we need to raise $650,000 to make the new center a reality.

That’s a lot of money for a small center like ours. We have about 60 members – some individuals, some families – and many have modest means. But we are going to look far and wide to find people – both in Columbus and around the world – who know the value of building a dharma center and how much merit there is in creating a home for the dharma.

We will need a lot of help and encouragement. The first construction bids have come in, and they’re a little higher than we anticipated.

We’re going to meet with contractors this week and next to see if we can trim some of the expenses, and begin to contact our donors and friends to see if they can help us make the building a reality.

These are tense times, but we have a lot of confidence that we can find ways – with the help of you and all of our dharma friends – to make our center a reality.

We’ve made great progress thus far. Khenpo Karthar Rinpoche and the Board are delighted to be moving into the next phase of the project. Khenpo Rinpoche is already thinking of ideas for the shrine (which he has promised to help “furnish” with statues and paintings), and Board members are working on such things as lists of appliances and furnishings that will be needed in the new building.

We are so thrilled to be at the juncture in the planning process, and invite you to continue reciting the Tashi Prayer.

or the OM MANI PEME HUNG or KARMAPA KHYENNO mantras to help make these dreams a reality.

May all beings benefit from the work being done for the dharma in Columbus; may the Columbus KTC come “home” again in the coming year!

Lama Kathy’s Dharma Blog: Learning Compassion “By Heart” – The 37 Practices of a Bodhisattva

Some years ago, a young dharma student asked the great master Khenpo Tsultrim Gyamtso, “Teacher, teach me about compassion.” And his wise answer was, “Read ‘The 37 Practices of a Bodhisattva’ 1000 times out loud.”

This was a stunning response, but it’s the way Khenpo Tsultrim would train his students. Reciting a text over and over firmly plants its meaning into one’s very being; it soaks into us like water into a fertile field, uprooting negative thoughts, words and actions and replacing them with positive thoughts, words, and actions.

As we read, day after day, new verses leap out at us with each reading. Yesterday, the verse about Anger jumped out at me; today it might be the verse about harsh speech. After a time, the text itself begins to teach us, serving the purpose of a teacher who will help us see what we need to learn in any given day.

Regular recitation also helps us learn the text “by heart” – an interesting term, as it compares memorization with internalization and integration. When we know a text “by heart” it has become a part of us, ready at any moment to bring us comfort, love, and wisdom.

You may not take the “1000 Recitations Challenge” issued by Khenpo Tsultrim, but if you agree to read The 37 Practices just 21 times, you will see a difference in your mind and life. Letting the truth in its verses wash over you is a method for accumulating virtue in a simple and effective way.

May your recitation practice bear fruit for you, for the benefit of all sentient beings!

The Journey Home: Rebuilding The Columbus KTC

When we set about to rebuild the Columbus KTC after the fire earlier this year, we knew we had a lot of work ahead of us. Rebuilding from the ground up requires lots of skill and knowledge; who knew we would need to learn about architecture, zoning, construction and fundraising? Our KTC Board, led by Kim Miracle, has had to become a quick study on all of these.

Our next update for the Sangha will be Monday Nov. 7 from 6:30 to 8 p.m. in the Lower Social Hall at Congregation Tifereth Israel. There will be a vegetarian meal and beverages, and the Board will bring everyone up to date on the activities of the last few weeks.

Most exciting will be updates about our fundraising work; a Capital Campaign team is being formed and we are identifying how we might raise the money needed for our new building. We’ll also have some revised building plans from our architect, reflecting changes requested by the City of Columbus during our meeting with officials over the summer.

Meanwhile, the Columbus KTC is still on the prayer list at our “home” monastery at Karma Triyana Dharmachakra in Woodstock, NY, where I’ll be next week with Khenpo Karthar Rinpoche and all the lamas doing a special long-life puja that will hopefully transfer some powerful blessings to our sangha and community. Khenpo Rinpoche’s nephew Lodro Nyima Rinpoche from Thrangu Monastery in China has arrived at KTD accompanied by the monastery’s Vajra (Ritual) Master, Offerings Master and chief Umdze (chant leader), who will instruct us on this special long-life practice, which dates back to the 18th Century.

If you think of us during your busy days, please send up some mantras (such as the Chenrezig mantra OM MANI PEME HUNG, the Tara mantra OM TARE TU TARE TU RE SO HA or others) or recite the Tashi prayer and dedicate it to your hard-working board: Director Kim Miracle, Assistant Director Tanya Schroeder, Treasurer Steve Phallen, Secretary Justin Fitch, and Member-at-large Eric Weinberg. We appreciate your thoughts and prayers!

Taking Joy Where You Find It: Lama Kathy’s Dharma Blog

With the stresses and pressures of modern life, joy can seem hard to find. Personal finance troubles, hassles at work (or the search for gainful employment), and interpersonal difficulties can consume our waking thoughts and energy all by themselves – to say nothing of the feelings that can wash over us when we read about warfare, crime, and politics both around the world and here at home.
In this midst of all this, joy seems to be a distant dream at best – or, at worst, an unrealistic fantasy.
Knowing where to invest our energy in a world in which everything seems to cry out for it can be bewildering. Some folks get glued to the headlines on the web or on television, thinking that their attention will somehow make the news take a turn for the better, instead of the worse.
The Buddha’s teachings give us a way through this modern gauntlet of stressors. Meditation gives us a small measure of control over our attention; the simple discipline of placing one’s attention on the breath, and then gently noticing when our attention drifts – and re-placing that attention on the breath for a fresh start – can empower us in a simple but profound way.
Knowing that we have the potential to move our attention consciously from one topic to another can help us step in and interrupt a train of thought (or worry, or whatever) before it carries us too far down the tracks of mental affliction. We can stop the train through this recognition, and then hold it in place with our breath – shifting our attention to the breath in moments of stress and pressure, just breathing through it and allowing it to begin to dissipate.
And once we’ve started interrupting thoughts, we can also begin to replace them with other thoughts – more worthwhile thoughts such as the Four Immeasurable Meditations:
May all beings be happy and have the causes of happiness,
May all beings be free from suffering and the causes of suffering,
May all beings have that great joy that is freedom from suffering.
May all beings dwell in great equanimity, free from attachment and aversion.
Being able to stop the flow of negative mental afflictions opens up the possibility to change our thoughts, and it’s from those changed thoughts that the joy in life can begin peeking through.
In his Second Noble Truth, the Buddha said that the cause of suffering is “clinging and fixation” – to people, to things, to ideas – but most especially self-fixation and self-clinging. Furthermore, the Buddha reminded us that everything we think, say, and do under the influence of this self-fixation produces internal pain and suffering that can lead us to think badly of, and harm, others.
Quiet sitting meditation, therefore, can help us open the door for joy. But there’s another step that will bring joy closer to us; we’ll discuss that in next week’s blog post.
Meanwhile, look for opportunities to stop your train of self-fixation this week; find a moment to breathe, and imagine you are opening that door to joy. More next week!

The Journey Home: We Did It! First Goal Reached. Now…

Gratitude is overflowing at Columbus KTC, as we’ve reached our first goal – completing our $108,000 emergency fundraiser.
In seven months we raised $114,000 – enough to cover most of the losses that weren’t covered by insurance. It’s a good feeling to know that folks saw our need and stepped up – we can’t thank you enough.
Now we’re working toward the next goal – a “nest egg” of cash to lay the foundation for our new home.
The effort kicked off in grand style at the annual 10-Day Teaching program at our “home” monastery, Karma Triyana Dharmacharka.
Every year, about 80-100 people attend this teaching, given by our beloved founder Khenpo Karthar Rinpoche. And every year, KTD uses the occasion to raise money for worthy causes.
Most years, the cause is KTD Monastery itself; in past years, the 10-Day Teaching students helped pay down the construction loans for KTD’s new Residence Wing, and last year raised funds to help pay for repairs and renovations for the main temple (called “Gompa” in Tibetan) at KTD.
But this year, KTD President Khenpo Karma Tenkyong said that as KTD is experiencing financial stability and Monastery renovation is under way, it is time to help the KTCs, and the Columbus KTC was a prime candidate.
So this year’s silent auction, raffle, and pledge drive was all for the Columbus KTC. People from all over donated items for the effort, and KTC brought its popular “Keep Calm” T-shirts and “Columbus KTC” lotus carry-all bags to offer in exchange for donations.
At week’s end, $10,000 has been raised for Columbus KTC! And Khenpo Karthar Rinpoche stunned us when he gave us the entire proceeds from his end-of-teaching offering – more than $3,000!
So we are off to a running start with our Capital Campaign. More information will be coming on this in the next few weeks. Stay tuned.

Journey Home: Neighborhood and City Approval Process

We’re in the process of asking the City of Columbus to allow the Columbus KTC to rebuild on its Grubb Street property. It’s a complex process involving many steps – two Neighborhood Zoning Review Board approvals and two City of Columbus Building and Zoning approvals.
Our first two “concept” reviews (with the East Franklinton Review Board – our Neighborhood zoning commission – and with City of Columbus Building and Zoning officials) went well, and now we are working with our attorney, architect and engineer toward creating plans for final review meetings this fall. If the Neighborhood and City approve, we move on to the next phase – interviewing contractors and starting our Capital Campaign to raise funds for the actual construction.
At this point, we don’t quite know how much the final building cost will be, but you can be sure that you’ll be hearing more about this in the weeks to come.
In the meantime, thank you for helping us get to this first goal.
Creating sacred spaces and sacred objects for this generation and the generation to come is a worthy endeavor; your donations – past and future – will produce a ripple effect that will bring more teachings of awakening to Columbus. Thank you – and may all beings benefit!

Offering Everything in Sight: Lama Kathy’s Dharma Blog

c7c4930c-daef-437e-a381-82f7b276ba63

On my way to the Kagyu Monlam prayer festival in Wappingers Falls NY this week, I was treated to a parade of natural beauty.

Yes, there are traffic jams on I-80 through Pennsylvania and New York, but there’s also the Laurel Highlands in western Pennsylvania (where I routed myself to enjoy the breath-taking sights of mountains and mist along I-99) and the foothills of the Allegheny Mountains, covered in midsummer’s deep green.

There’s also the rivers – the nightly Susquehanna and the Hudson, among others. Add in a mix of sun, clouds and rain, and it’s a perfect trip for offerings.

Yes, you heard right. Offerings.

Anyone who travels with me will tell you that when we sail over the highway bridges, I recite mantras and greet local water spirits and complement them on their beautiful homes, and thank mountain guardians for being patrons of dharma and protecting all in their shadows.

It’s eccentric, I suppose, but I come by it honestly. Years ago, Khenpo Karthar Rinpoche, while walking with a few of us through Blendon Woods Metro Park in Columbus, shared that in his homeland of Tibet, nomads didn’t have a lot of money, but still were able to make vast offerings to the Buddhas and Bodhisattvas through the use of their imaginations.

“They didn’t have silver or gold or jewels, but they could offer the white snow mountains, that sparkled like diamonds,” he said. And they would offer whatever natural beauty they found within their sight. By doing so, he said, they cultivated a mind of virtue, and strengthened their connection to enlightened beings and, by extension, their own enlightenment.

From that day onward, I sought to incorporate this practice into my everyday life. Without specific advice, everything became fair game: meals set before me, the wealth in glowing cities seen from the air, the happiness of children on the playground, the beauty in spring flowers and summer rains.

At first, I thought this sort of “present moment” practice was just “a Tibetan thing,” as I noticed that Tibetans – particularly those raised in nomad families – seemed keenly aware of their world in ways we miss. But the more I practiced it, the more I realized that nationality didn’t matter – it was all a matter of intention, and skill.

This sort of practice takes two skills: pure intention, and mindfulness.

Mindfulness, cultivated through basic meditation (shamatha), brings us into familiarity with our moment-to-moment thoughts, feelings, sensations, and experiences. And pure intention – such as the pure intention to honor the Buddhas and Bodhisattvas, or to benefit sentient beings through the practice of love and compassion and bodhicitta – is the best possible “idle thought” we could put into our minds at any moment.

Through mindfulness, we can be aware of our thoughts and can make the conscious choice about what to do with our thoughts – where to invest our energy, our intentions, and so on – in order to “steer” our minds in a positive (i.e., more awakened) direction.

The need for this in daily life is easy to see. So busy are we these days – with our families, jobs, and many responsibilities – that few of us know anything else that’s going on around us. We may know what the season is because of the weather, but we don’t know what phase the moon is in, or what the sky looks like after dark.

Meditation cultivates awareness of the world – the entire world – and with this awareness, a chance to expand our vision beyond the visible horizon opens up.

Offering everything in sight (and beyond it) to the Buddhas and Bodhisattvas matches our imagination to the size of mind itself, and gives us a glimpse of the limitless mind that we call “Buddha Nature.” It also impels us to let go in the most intimate sense of everything we would normally grasp, making daily sense experiences the foundation for transcendent awareness.

So when the afternoon sun lights up a field of flowers, the moon hangs full in a cloudy sky, or the night gives you a scattering of stars, practice this simple combination of pure intention and mindfulness, and bring the awakened ones into your field of experience. And while you’re at it, dedicate the goodness to Khenpo Karthar Rinpoche, who first taught us this practice, for his long life, good health, and ever-expanding dharma activity!

The Journey Home: This Week’s Highlights

By now many of you will have seen the drawings of the proposed new KTC shrine building that were shared during our June 21 Sangha Meeting. The drawings were made by Keith Spruce of Milwaukee, who is working on the Karmapa 16 Center near Chicago, and were based on the surveys about building size and rooms and such that the KTC Board conducted in February. The plans reflect the requests of the community, with some room for future growth.

Keith visited us June 21 and attended our first East Franklinton Review Board meeting. He also showed the plans and answered questions during the June 21 Sangha Meeting. Next week, he will be back in Columbus for an important review of the plans with the City of Columbus’ Building and Zoning Department.

Once those reviews are done, we go back to the EFRB for a final review – and, we hope, an approval – that will take us to the next step, which is meeting with contractors to see if we can get the best work for the best price. Meanwhile, the Board also will be working on a “Capital Campaign” – an organized method of raising the money that will be needed to build the structure Keith designed.

As of now, our biggest need is prayers – so if you could recite the Tashi Prayer each day with the intention that all obstacles to the KTC’s “journey home” be removed and purified, and that we find all the workers, volunteers, helpers, and money we need to bring our sangha home – that would be appreciated!!!

Welcoming Those Not Yet Here: Lama Kathy’s Dharma Blog

There’s a pile of malas – Buddhist prayers beads – on the Shrine at KTC’s temporary home at Tifeteth Israel.

When people come to the KTC for chanting practices such as our Tuesday night Chenrezig compassion meditation, they sometimes have forgotten their malas – or, if they are new to practice, they don’t have malas at all.

The pile of malas are for loaning – visitors borrow them, say mantras with them, and then put them back on the shrine for the next person.

The two light blue malas in this pile – made of simple glass/china beads, knotted on thick cord – are welcome “survivors” of our January temple fire. They are heirlooms of our past, and tell an important story about our future.

The blue glass bead malas were made by Herb Walum, a retired mathematics professor from The Ohio State University, who first started coming to KTC around 1980. He was keenly interested in Buddhism and meditation, but his main love was Chenrezig practice and mantra. OM MANI PEME HUNG – the mantra of Chenrezig – was his favorite practice, and he visited KTC weekly to chant with us.

Eventually, he took up the practice of Tong-len Compassion Meditation and the Mahamudra Ngondro (which he finished after several years). But he never lost his affection for Chenrezig practice, and made the malas as “loaners” for people who came to puja without a mala. He made and gave away many more of these; they were a trademark of sorts for his enthusiasm for the mantra.

Herb later retired from teaching and sold his house on Milton in the north end of Columbus, riding his motorcycle West to his home state of Washington, where he built a small retirement home as a base of operations for his retirement “project” – completing as many million recitations of OM MANI PEME HUNG as he could.

Herb passed away several years ago, but his malas are a gift that goes on giving at KTC, and serve as a reminder for our welcoming spirit.

Welcoming new people – and teaching them Meditation and Introduction to Buddhism classes for free – is part of what makes Columbus KTC unique. We remember what it’s like to be new to dharma – to come into an unfamiliar place and feel a bit anxious about how we will “fit in” – and we want people to feel comfortable and welcome in our home.

We keep these programs going every week, rain or shine, whether there’s one student or 30 students – to show the heart of dharma is about generosity, patience, and compassion. Our philosophy is that there is no such thing as a silly question, and all inquiry helps lead us closer to the truth.

Providing this safe place for inquiry and meditation is what we do; it’s who we are. Even as nomads, in the shelter of Tifereth Israel, we provide this service.

In essence, our intro classrooms and our classes and even Herb’s malas are all a welcome for people who are not yet here – a continuous light on the shoreline for navigation in troubled waters.

We’ve just finished staffing our booth at the Community Festival in Goodale Park this past weekend. For more than 20 years we’ve handed out incense and sold prayer flags at the festival, telling people about our programs and inviting them to join us. We always see an uptick in new people coming to KTC in the weeks after Comfest – they will be trickling in by the ones, twos, and threes over the next few weeks, bringing fresh enthusiasm to our classes and fresh energy to our meditations.

If you see a new person in the next week, think of your first visit to KTC and reach out a hand, or say “hello.” Herb will be smiling, and so will all the Buddhas and Bodhisattvas, as their “family” grows.

The Journey Home: This Week’s Highlights

KTD to Lend a Hand

The weekend before last, KTC Director Kim, Secretary Justin and Lama Kathy traveled to our “home” monastery at Karma Triyana Dharmachakra in Woodstock NY to meet with Khenpo Karthar Rinpoche and President Khenpo Karma Tenkyong to offer an update on KTC rebuilding plans and hear suggestions from KTD for fundraising activities.

The crew received blessings from Rinpoche, and ideas from Khenpo Tenkyong as well as KTD volunteer Jeanette DeFries and Trustee Sandy Hu.

We’ll share more of the ideas in the coming weeks, but the short summary is that KTD plans to help KTC with fundraising at the national level in the next few months. Watch this column for more ideas from our “home” monastery!

East Franklinton Review Board

KTC’s research into whether a new, larger building could be constructed on the Grubb Street property entered a new phase last week, when KTC submitted its first design drawings to the East Franklinton Review Board.

The EFRB meeting (on Tuesday June 21) was the first of three City of Columbus reviews needed to determine whether a larger shrine building can be constructed on the KTC property. The EFRB looks at designs and sees whether a building will fit into a neighborhood, as well as looking at general zoning requirements, such as firewall setbacks and property line setbacks, parking, etc.

Last week’s review (an introductory meeting called a “concept review” in city planner parlance) was led by our attorney Tom Hart and Keith Spruce, our architect. These two volunteers have offered to shepherd us through the process toward seeing if we could, indeed, build on our old property.

Last Tuesday’s meeting went smoothly, and there were no immediate objections from EFRB members to the KTC design. However, more review will be necessary before a final approval can be sought. Keep those Tashi prayers flowing for our “new home!”

KTC Columbus Sangha Meeting

A joyful reunion with KTC friends took place the evening of Tuesday June 21. About 50 people attended in the Lower Social Hall of Congregation Tifereth Israel on East Broad Street.

After welcoming and and introduction from KTC Director Kim Miracle, meeting facilitator Jeanne Weinberg led a circle process that allowed for small group discussion on how sangha members are feeling in the wake of the fire, and what they need from their KTC. After small groups reported in, Director Kim described the work being done by the KTC Board to research the three options for a new KTC Home: buying an existing building and remodeling it, building on the current Grubb Street lot, or building on a new lot.

After reviewing the difficulty the Board has had finding suitable properties in our price range, Director Kim reviewed the plans drawn for a new-build option by Milwaukee Architect Keith Spruce. The plans are for a two-level building oriented toward Rich Street and featuring an upper level shrine room seating 120 people as well as lower-level classrooms and a community room.

At the conclusion of the meeting, a show of hands by participants indicated approval of pursuing the new-build option. Plans now will be refined and reviewed with various City of Columbus boards (see above).

The circle-process meeting, a first for KTC, was warmly received, and many say they look forward to use of this format in the future. Many thanks are in order for Jeanne Weinberg’s expert assistance, as well as the tireless work being done by the KTC Board to facilitate our sangha’s journey to a new home. May their merit grow and flourish for the benefit of all beings!

Lights along the Way: Lama Kathy’s Dharma Blog

Top Image: Khenpo Tsultrim Gyamtso (center, rear) with Khenpo Karthar Rinpoche (right, rear) and Lama Norlha (left, rear) and the Women’s Retreat class from the First Karme Ling Retreat. Lama Kathy is at the far left.

The ever-warming Spring has brought us blue skies, fluffy white clouds and a growing sense of hope that something new is coming – and not just the dandelion weeds from under the ground.

Twenty years ago this week, the doors of the Three-Year Retreat Center at Karme Ling opened and a group of us – weak-kneed, hesitant, weary but happy – came stumbling out of our three years of isolation and into a new world.

Things seemed to move faster – highway speeds increased, folks seemed to be talking much more quickly, and my husband Mike spent the trip home telling me about this curious thing called the Internet – it was all a bit much to take in.

Retreat photos 5

Lama Kathy at the “graduation” ceremony on May 25, 1996. Behind me to my right (viewer’s left) is Peigwang, who became Lama Lodro Lhamo; on my left, (viewer’s right) Cathy Lhamo Jackson.

The “graduation” ceremony had been so moving – we’d spent hours chanting the Gyalwa Gyamtso Red Chenrezig puja at our home monastery, Karma Triyana Dharmachakra – and it felt wonderful to be in the presence of my husband and all of my dharma friends.

Khenpo Karthar Rinpoche, our retreat master, had spent the previous three years pouring his heart and wisdom and knowledge into us – as much as our samsarically affected minds could absorb – and he made it clear to us that now was the time for us to “give back” in gratitude for what we had received.

“Traditionally in Tibet when someone finishes the Three-Year Retreat they are given the title of ‘lama,’” he said. “Now, what does this mean? This means from now until you die, you have one function, and one function only: to connect everyone you meet with the Dharma.”

After giving us this weighty charge, Rinpoche softened and encouraged us. “But be natural,” he advised. Don’t put on airs or act special. Just be yourself, and share what you know to the best of your ability. And if someone asks you a question you cannot answer, there’s no shame in saying, “I don’t know.”

All of these thoughts were tumbling round in my head on the drive home to Ohio from Karme Ling. I was thrilled at the possibility of being at last able to help others. But I also wondered – was I up to the task?

But in the end, I decided all would be well – not because of me, or anything I knew, but because of Khenpo Rinpoche.

I’d known Rinpoche since September 1977, when we met as part of an interview I planned to write for my local newspaper about this unusual person – a Tibetan Buddhist lama – who was visiting my small town to give a talk.

In the interview, I’d pressed Rinpoche, who spoke softly through a translator, about what I’d heard about Buddhist women in Southeast Asia, who were not given the same opportunities as men.

“The Buddha taught the equality of men and women,” he’d responded. “Anything you see that is other than that is the result of culture – not religion.”

I’d been impressed not just by this answer, but by his entire demeanor. He was both gentle and strong – a kindness with a core of confidence in something greater than himself. I knew instantly that I wanted to learn whatever he knew, and practice as much as I could of what he taught.

My years of studying with him were mostly attending his teachings and watching his demeanor with me and others – he was always patient, always compassionate, always understanding of the differences of others. The way he held a teacup – mindfully, each movement gentle and graceful – spoke volumes about the value of a stable and contemplative mind.

And now, even with an uncertain future in front of me – this “lama thing,” as my husband called it – I knew I could count on him to guide me through. No matter what, Rinpoche would be there for me, protecting me, guiding me. Answering questions I couldn’t answer; giving advice on how to teach, how to talk, how to be; I knew he would provide for me everything I needed, and that if I could just follow whatever he said, all would be well.

As my husband turned down our street, I instantly noticed something was different. It was an average Memorial Day, with people outdoors enjoying the sunshine and their yards – but every one of their front porch-lights was on.

“They’re doing it for you,” my husband said gently. “One of the neighbors sent around a message the other day. They wanted everyone to put on their lights, because they wanted to welcome you home.”

In the 20 years since that day, I still remember the tears that came to my eyes. That somebody cared about me, that someone saw me and knew me and wanted to demonstrate to me that most human of values – generous caring.

It was something I would see time and again over the years – when I came to Columbus KTC to teach, the dharma friends there welcomed me and cared for me and were patient with me and helped me become a teacher. Their honest questions and their unwavering support made it possible for me to stumble along and learn how to be that lama that Khenpo Rinpoche spoke of – the one whose sole function was to connect everyone she met with the dharma.

In the end, it all came down to those lights. Those porch lights, those people, those KTC sangha members, my husband, my family, my friends, and my guru.  They loved me; they reassured me. They guided me. They lifted me up.

No matter what – whether I succeeded or failed or something in-between – I would never be alone. Like Khenpo Rinpoche, they would be my lights along the way.

THE JOURNEY HOME: This Week’s Highlights

Work on the new home for Columbus KTC brought our KTC leadership into dialogue with Khenpo Karthar Rinpoche this week.

After reading the document I’d prepared entitled “Khenpo Karthar Rinpoche’s Advice to Columbus KTC,” Board members had further questions for Rinpoche.

Last Monday, the Board met with Lama Karma Drodhul, Khenpo Rinpoche’s nephew and main attendant to receive Khenpo Rinpoche’s latest advice. It had been a difficult day for Lama Karma; his mother, Tselha, had just passed away in Tibet a few hours before. But Lama Karma insisted on keeping his telephone appointment with the KTC Columbus Board, and shared Khenpo Rinpoche’s advice.

Rinpoche had been told that there were several options in front of our sangha – to build, or to buy and remodel a building – and the Board had asked for any preferences Rinpoche himself might have.

Rinpoche made it clear that his top priority was maintaining harmony in the sangha.

“This is a very critical, difficult time for KTC members, directors, and board. Rinpoche would like to say thank you for standing there [to support the KTC] and doing your best. He would like to express his gratitude to everybody.

“Rinpoche emphasized maintaining a harmonious connection/relationship with each other. This is the key for accomplishing [a new center] without obstacle, whether you build, or buy, or whatever.  Rinpoche knows you are already doing this [maintaining harmony]; please continue to do so.”

Khenpo Rinpoche also said that although it might be difficult to get a new place, the group should shoulder the difficulty together.

“We never want to kind of have an easy way out. Sometimes when we are desperate, we may want to do something quickly. But we have to think about the long-term benefit.”

Lama Karma said Rinpoche had suggested rebuilding on the Grubb Street property “because you already have the land, the property. If you have to purchase another land, it can be costly. [Rinpoche] was encouraging rebuilding there because it seemed like a public place, a decent place, where you can have people and parking.”

However, Rinpoche also said, “Your center is yours; it is for you,” and said that if everyone agrees that buying and remodeling an existing building is better, that would be fine, as well.

“Find something stable that will last a long time. If everyone agrees it’s something that everybody likes, it’s okay.”

Rinpoche mentioned the difficulty that another center had in buying a building that required extensive renovations, and cautioned the Board to choose property carefully.

Finally, Rinpoche said that once the sangha has chosen its method of recreating the center (buying or building) that he and the leadership at KTD Monastery would both help us raise money to make our new home a reality. And he reiterated his promise to provide statues and thangka paintings for the center.

Rinpoche had more to say, but in the interest of time and space, we’ll stop here. However, we’re editing the “Khenpo Karthar Rinpoche’s Advice to Columbus KTC” document, and will post it on our KTC Columbus website later this week.

Meanwhile, it’s important to say a big THANK YOU to our amazing Board – Director Kim Miracle, Assistant Director Tanya Schroeder, Treasurer Steve Phallen, Secretary Justin Fitch, and At-Large Member Eric Weinberg – for writing to Rinpoche and being such marvelous leaders for us in our journey home!

Saving Mother Sentient Beings: Lama Kathy’s Blog

This past week’s observance of Mother’s Day delights me in a very Buddhist way; not having had children myself, I feel nonetheless like a parent, filling with happiness when I see “my kids” – our dharma brothers and sisters – attending pujas, helping others, going on retreats, and so forth.

As a buddy of mine observed on Mother’s Day, Buddhists have a special connection with the holiday – according to the Buddha’s teachings, every being has been our Mother, in one or another of our countless lifetimes. Therefore, he reasons, we should all be wishing each other – male, female, elder, child – a “Happy Mother Sentient Beings Day!”

On Mother’s Day, I flew to San Francisco for a special “family reunion” – a visit to our dharma family, both those out West and those farther East. The occasion was the first visit to the United States in 17 years by His Eminence Tai Situ Rinpoche, one of the “Heart Sons” (or “Yab Say” in Tibetan) of His Holiness the 16th Gyalwang Karmapa.

His Eminence Tai Situ Rinpoche, who has given teachings to His Holiness the 17th Karmapa in India, traveled to the United States to help dedicate a temple and give teachings to students new and old. Seeing him for the first time since my last visit to him – for a Mahamudra course in India in April 2010 – gave me great joy, and reminded me of something Khenpo Karthar Rinpoche once told me: “if you see a teacher as the Buddha, you receive the blessing of the Buddha; if you see your teacher as a bodhisattva, you receive the blessing of a bodhisattva; and if you see your teacher as an ordinary person, you receive the blessing of an ordinary person.”

Teachers are important touchstones for us as we navigate the twists and turns of the spiritual path; they are inspirations, guides and guardians, who show us how to avoid the pitfalls of our own confusion while applying the dharma “remedies” to our mental afflictions. The great masters show us what enlightenment looks like; others act as tutors, giving us instructions for approaching the great masters so we can receive their blessings to transform our lives.

The Tibetan word “lama” points to this. “La” means “unsurpassable,” and “ma” means “mother.” So the lama is the unsurpassable parent for sentient beings wandering in samsara.

What I felt seeing Tai Situ Rinpoche was great joy – and I felt great devotion, wanting to aspire to the qualities of enlightenment he displayed in his deep kindness and his constant presence with all those he met.

Was there a blessing? I rather think so; the following day, as I walked among the trees of a beautiful San Francisco park, I saw three things – an elderly person being pushed in a wheelchair by a doting caregiver; a young child crying from exhaustion and frustration; and three teenage girls wearing makeup and short skirts walking arm-in-arm. I saw in these three things a clear dharma message. I saw the happiness of the older person, unable to walk and being pushed by another; I saw the visible suffering of the child, unable to plan her own day, forced to walk past the point of exhaustion by adults; and the not-so-visible suffering of the teenagers, trying on personas to impress one another, fearful of failing to “fit in” and be popular.

This might not seem like much of a blessing, but what followed it did. What followed each of these sights was a sudden rush of the wish to benefit them – a wish to help them be free of their suffering. This little moment of bodhisattva motivation – just a spark – was surely a gift from the lama. And a perfect Mother’s Day gift, it was.

In a larger sense, we all are mothers; we’re all giving birth to something – an idea, a life; or a baby Buddha, perhaps?

KTC In The News: Midday Meditations Downtown!

A few weeks ago, when I saw Khenpo Karthar Rinpoche, he told me to work through my fears of approaching other people and telling them about Columbus KTC’s fire and its immediate needs. “Meet new people,” he said.

I understood his message, but the method eluded me. How would I meet more people?

From that question arose the idea of Midday Meditation downtown.

Eric Weinberg, KTC Meditation Instructor extraordinaire, spoke with his friend Richard Burnett of the Trinity Episcopal Church downtown, and “Midday Meditation Wednesday” was born.

We meet 12:15 p.m. to 1:15 p.m. each Wednesday in the Third Floor Urban Spirit Center at Trinity Episcopal Church at the corner of Broad and Third Streets. Enter the church on the Broad Street side and take the elevator up to the third floor.

The Columbus Dispatch visited our first session May 4, attended by a whopping three people – one of whom was me. Read their coverage of the event here.

This past Wednesday’s class grew exponentially – 7 people attended! And more are planned. The program will continue through the end of June; if it continues beyond that, we will let you know. Meanwhile, if you’re downtown some Wednesday, stop in – either Eric or I will be there.

SAKA DAWA THIS WEEK!

Nurturing a virtuous mind “flavors” our experience of the world; doing meditation, mantras, prayers and service to others gives us a new view of the world – the view of the bodhisattva.

This coming Saturday May 21 is Saka Dawa, the observance of the Buddha’s Birth, Enlightenment, and Paranirvana. It’s said that the blessing of the Buddha is on this day, such that any virtuous action done in concert with the Buddha’s intention for enlightenment will be multiplied millions of times.

Due to the Jewish Sabbath, there will not be the usual Sacred Day Retreat at the KTC rooms this coming Saturday, but we will have a prayer observance during class on Sunday May 22.

Write yourself a reminder for this Saturday, and make extra offerings on your shrine or say extra prayers and mantras – to nurture your “baby Buddha” toward awakening!

THE JOURNEY HOME: This Week’s Highlights

The “Many Meetings Retreat”

As the KTC Board – Director Kim, Assistant Director Tanya, Treasurer Steve, Secretary Justin and Member-at-large Eric – gathered on the phone this past Thursday to talk with architect Keith Spruce about the many details of designing a possible KTC center, I reminded them of all the merit they were accumulating, even by sitting in a meeting.

“You’re on the ‘many meetings retreat,'” I said. “And your virtue is growing with every minute.”

That’s a good thing to think about when in the middle of a meeting about building materials and methods that sometimes flies over your head!

But if you think about it, it’s true. It’s said that creating a space for the practice and study of dharma creates virtue not just for you, but for all the beings who will see it and touch it and even remember it in the future.

A Gift that Keeps On Giving

When I was in San Francisco, I met Sharon Mumby, a friend from the old days at our home monastery Karma Triyana Dharmachakra. She said that years back, Three-Year-Retreatants had to build their own retreat cabins, but felt at least a little delight in the task, because their efforts would shelter retreatants and their practice for generations to come.

I wasn’t part of the crew that built the Karme Ling Three-Year Retreat center where I did my retreat, but I did contribute money to its construction; since then, six classes of retreatants have gone through its doors, and another will go in this fall. May all beings benefit from work such as this, which populates our world with virtuous thoughts!

Prayers from His Eminence

This week I also was able to pass along a letter from Director Kim and the Board to His Eminence Tai Situ Rinpoche, reminding him of his visit to the Columbus KTC in the 1990s, asking for his prayers for our rebuilding, and inviting him to come back when we have a new home. It’s great to have His Eminence’s prayers and we hope to see him in Columbus again!

You can find lots of photos of His Eminence’s visit to San Francisco on Facebook, but also a few links here.

And It’s No Surprise …

… that when I was seated at an empowerment with His Eminence Tai Situ Rinpoche in San Francisco, I had a chance to speak briefly with a lovely western lama sitting next to me.

Turns out it was Lama Pema Clark of the Kalu Rinpoche center Kagyu Sukha Choling in Ashland, OR. Lama Pema had not heard about the Columbus KTC fire, but took one of the fundraising flyers (I just happened to have with me ☺ ) and said her center had just raised more than $1 million to build a new temple in their city. She was enthusiastic about sharing her sangha’s experience – raising money in a city of just 20,000 people, few of whom were Buddhist – and said she’d be willing to put her Board and our KTC Board together to talk about their experiences.

Just another example of the blessings that appear whenever the great masters come to town!

Dear Dharma Friends, have a wonderful week – and see you Sunday at KTC!

Yours in dharma,
Lama Kathy