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M**E
From the director of the Heart Center Karma Thegsum Choling Dharma Center
This is a different sort of book by Mingyur Rinpoche than he has written before. I have met Mingyur Rinpoche and seen him a number of times, both in person at an interview at our monastery (KTD Monastery) in upstate New York, and here and there. I remember standing with Mingjur Rinpoche in Toronto as a fierce storm, perhaps a small tornado, passed just about half a block away. My wife and I stood in a small bookstore with doors open to the outside where it poured rain and fierce winds howeled, with Mingyur Rinpoche, Thrangu Rinpoche, Lama Namse Rinpoche, and my own teacher Khenpo Karthar Rinpoche, while the storm raged around us. I experienced Mingyur rinpoche “up close and personal.”I had always been attracted to Mingjur Rinpoche. He seemed ultra-sensitive, very bright, kind, and open, and (from my point of view as an elder) young. I have read some of his teachings and listened to some You-Tube videos of his teachings. And I had identified enough with him enough to add him personally to my daily prayers as I recite the Precious Garland of all the key teachers of the Kagyu Lineage each day in succession. One of our retreat lamas had pointed out to me that Mingyur Rinpoches did not exactly belong in that list. I understand, but I always add him anyway. Why?Because I have learned from his teachings in a very direct, grab my gut, manner. Most of these teachings were from before he went on his three-year wandering retreat documented in this book, but the teachings after he returned were even more inspiring. He turned up the volume. I feared for his life when I heard of his journey and felt sadness that he would not be around to hear about or see for some time. Yet I understood. I had seen up close how very sensitive he was and how he almost clung to those rinpoches that were around him during that storm. Here, thought I, was another type of rinpoche, a type I had never experienced.I am a experienced close-up photographer and one of the mythical photography terms is what is called micro-contrast. Some say it does not exist and others, like me, feel it is imperative. Micro-contrast is variably described, but one such definition by Yannick Khong is “Micro-contrast is the ability of the lens to communicate the richness and vibrancy of the inter-tonal shifts between the brighter to darker part of a very same color onto the sensor. A lens with a great micro-contrast has much richer colors and tone transitions compared to a weaker one. “My point here is the Yongey Mingyur Rinpoches new book “In Love with the World,” IMO, is an example of verbal micro-contrast. It’s almost recursive in that its paragraphs seem to fold in on each other, causing the reader to slow way down until one is almost static, almost non-dual. I tried my best to skim over this volume, to get an idea of its scope and merit and found myself unable to do so. You have to actually read it and it is filled with micro-tonality. The book is just as sensitive and subtle as Mingyur Rinpoche himself appeared when I first met him.And, as a Mahamudra student and practitioner of some 30 years, this book is absolutely filled with short comments and insights that are self-insightful and cut to the quick. I would go so far as to say that this is not even a book as you and I know it. It’s a time bomb or like making pickles: the book works on you and changes you.Of course, the story of a wandering monk is wonderful, but to me that is not what interested me most. It is this, as mentioned, recursive writing style, that by its very language transforms your mind as you read it. At least, that is how I have received it. At first, it seemed so involved and ingrown that I didn’t have time to read it and then, as I sampled any part, it did. I found the time (or it created the time I needed) and then it changed me. In other words, if you can stand to slow yourself down enough to read it, the book is self-instructing. It’s not a book, but a teaching.
A**N
Interesting book about Tibetan Buddhism
In this book Yongey Mingyur Rinpoche talks a lot about breaking free from the conceptual mind and talks about the bardos of dying and becoming. He has a lot of good insights and there is a lot to be learned from his book. I will probably read the book again because it has some good teachings.One irony, is that although Yongey Mingyur Rinpoche talks so much about letting go, his description of a near-death experience proves that he is EXTREMELY attached to the Tibetan Buddhist concepts of the bardos and reincarnation, which are clearly just invented ideas, with no valid empirical proof. His proof consists of a very meaningful mind state, which was a hallucination while under severe physical duress. I don't doubt that he had a very meaningful revelation, but I think he has misinterpreted what it implies about reality.
A**R
One the most interesting books about Buddhism I have read so far
I have delved into Buddhism years ago and did my vows with Yongey Mingyur Rinpoche (online, unfortunately never met in person). This book is an exiting description of his pilgrimage, leaving the "luxury" of a monetary behind during his years of wandering. I would read this book over and over again. The way he writes and talks about his experiences is a teaching for us all.
R**K
Best book of Rinpoche yet!
This is my favorite book by Rinpoche!!! It's so well written. It's full of wisdom but also woven into the realistic details of his retreat journey's beginning. So it's so much easier to understand and relate to my daily life. He details his struggles, his thoughts, his feelings and experiences. He also told his memories, reflected the lessons and walked us through his reasoning to how he understood the wisdom. That's tremendously helpful to see his train of thoughts.This is definitely his best book yet!! Packed full of wisdom and yet easy for lay people to understand and apply to their ordinary lives.
B**T
Lovely journey
This is a wonderful mix of Tibetan Buddhist philosophy and a monks coming of age. I enjoyed his description of enlightenment. Very inspiring!
K**R
Book was in fantastic shape
I liked how quickly I received this book. And am anticipating sharing the book with a friend to get some feedback.
P**.
An Inner Travelogue of the Bardo Experience
I am reading this as I am going through my own bardo experience, my 40 days/years in the desert when it seems everything i have imagined I am is being stripped away so that I may see everything as it is without the "me" filter. This book has been an incredible guide as I am going deeper with my own journey. In the first chapters as he begins his journey and describes his experience on his first train... that one experience has offered me a profound and tangible way to be with whatever (beautiful, terrifying, etc.) is coming up in the moment... in a way that nothing else in my 40 plus years of meditation and study/practice has done. Quite illuminating. I will be reading and rereading this gem. Thank you for this incredible gift.
D**D
In Love with the Monk
In a spiritual way, of course!I was not familiar with Rinpoche's teachings and am not a Buddhist in the Tibetan tradition either, so this book was for me like one giant Dhamma talk. I struggled with the bardo stuff because we (Theravadans) don't go there, but learned a lot and the way he applies the concept to this life has actually been very helpful to my practice.He was on retreat for four years--I think this book covers about the first four weeks of it--but I gather that there's no sequel coming to tell us about the rest of his time on the road. Which is a shame. I would totally read that.This is like reading the canon: You should probably consider reading it straight through the first time, not highlighting or taking notes, then immediately start again at the beginning and really study it this time. It's what I wish I had done.You'll be hooked on the first page. I plan to avail myself of his teachings on line in future.
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