
Upaya: The Secret Sauce of the Dharma
“This mind now is the dharma we have been looking for. Practicing the dharma means working with present appearances. Working with this mind now.”

“This mind now is the dharma we have been looking for. Practicing the dharma means working with present appearances. Working with this mind now.”

The responsibility of bodhisattvas may feel daunting and great courage is needed to engage in this practice, but why not give it a chance?Mitra Karl Brunnhölzl together with Karunika Stephanie Johnston offered rich and inspiring teachings that spoke directly to our paths.

What is the quality of your mind, right now? That was the question Acharya Lama Tenpa Gyaltsen posed at the beginning of a weekend teaching on the topic of Mahāmudrā and Bodhicitta at Milarepa’s Yak Horn, our center in Hong Kong.

“All there is, really, is the present moment. The past and future are both things that our thoughts can play with, but it is important to not get stuck in ideas of the past or the future. We need to focus on simply doing one thing right now.”

A contemplation on the power of art and creativity, and even language itself, to express and signify what is essential and unnameable.
