The most practical, everyday way of working to increase kindness in this world, is to work with the opposites of loving kindness, with our own habitual patterns and disturbing emotions. We can also resolve to be fearless, to leap into actions that contribute to the greater good, actions that very directly help ourselves and others. The practice of loving kindness involves a certain sense of risk. Great compassion involves great risk. You have to leap.

When you make good money on a stock, you may earn big money in a short time with only a small investment. But to earn that big money, you had to make an investment involving great risk. If you prefer to make a low-risk investment, you can do that too, but the gain will be small. In the same way, if you want to develop great loving kindness, you have to be fearless to take that risk…

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Karmapa

KC16’s 44th Annual Parinirvāṇa Anniversary of His Holiness the 16th Karmapa, Rangjung Rigpe Dorje

Our friends at Karmapa Center 16 warmly commemorate the parinirvāṇa of His Holiness the 16th Gyalwang Karmapa, Rangjung Rigpe Dorje, each year on November 5th.

This year, the 44th Anniversary will be marked with a Guru Yoga Teaching Retreat and Amitābha Practice. It is a precious occasion to connect with the wisdom of guru yoga, reflect on the inspiring life and boundless compassion of the 16th Karmapa, and discover how these qualities can illuminate and guide our own lives.

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The images shows the title and subtitle of a new article in the series: Interconnection: How To Connect the Disconnect. It is called: They are not the enemy
Articles

They Are Not the Enemy

Ben Mikolaj challenges us to face contempt with compassion: “Loving kindness has no exceptions. Even those who terrify, disgust, or enrage us are beings who feel pain and long for happiness. Even those who actively oppose empathy are worthy of it.”

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Awakening

Not Even a Middle – Path of Study Course Online (Mahayana 303) – Starting October 14, 2025

The Buddha used his curiosity and persistence to explore the nature of reality. He discovered that genuine wisdom lies in the middle way—avoiding the extremes of nihilism and eternalism. What does this “middle way” mean for us today?

Hosted by Nalandabodhi Seattle, Dianne Eberlein and Jay Sacks will offer a 9-class course introducing key perspectives from the Mahayana tradition.

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