Meditation for All: The 37 Practices of a Bodhisattva

Please join KC16 on Sundays for a new Meditation for All series on The 37 Practices of a Bodhisattva.

Beginning November 17, our resident teacher, Acharya Lhakpa Tshering, will start teaching on The Thirty-Seven Practices of a Bodhisattva during our Sunday Meditation for All program.

A life worth exploring

This text is written by the great master Ngülchu Thogme Zangpo and, as Dzogchen Ponlop Rinpoche writes in A Guide to the Thirty-Seven Practices of a Bodhisattva (a commentary by Dzatrul Ngawang Tenzin Norbu, translated by Christopher Stagg):

The Thirty-Seven Practices of a Bodhisattva presents an alternative way of thinking, of relating to the outer and inner worlds of everyday living. It is a refreshing, revolutionary, and radical approach to a life that is worth exploring.
— Dzogchen Ponlop Rinpoche, foreword

book cover for A Guide to the 37 Practices of a Bodhisattva

Practices for everyday life

As usual, everyone is welcome, and no prior experience is needed. Acharya Lhakpa will start each session with a guided meditation, and then offer commentary on this precious text and how to put the teachings into practice in our daily lives.

Please join us onsite at KC16 or online!

Traveling the path of compassion

For online access, please register here for the Zoom link. From November 17 onwards, our sessions will begin at 10:30 am and finish around 11:30 am Central Standard Time (Chicago, US). Can’t join us live or would like to review a session? Please know that we’ll share recordings that you can view or review for 21 days on a dedicated resource page.

We are looking forward to practicing and traveling the path of compassion together under the guidance of Acharya Lhakpa-la and the blessings of the lineage of the Karmapas

Karmapa Khyenno!

Registration

Making an offering or donation is optional and is not required to register for our Meditation for All: 37 Practices of a Bodhisattva. You can join for free by selecting a ‘free ticket’. If you would like, you can make a donation to support our Stūpa Project or make a teaching offering for Acharya Lhakpa, KC16’s resident teacher, of any amount. After selecting a ‘free ticket’ or making an offering below, the Zoom link and other practical information will be delivered in a confirmation email.

Reading 37 Practices in Tibetan: KC16’s Tibetan Language Class

While Acharya Lhakpa starts teaching on The Thirty-Seven Practices of a Bodhisattva during our Sunday Meditation for All, we will also start studying this precious text, written by the great master Ngülchu Thogme Zangpo, in KC16’s Tibetan Language Class, in the original Tibetan. We will study literary Tibetan, grammar, and also the art of translating during this online class.

Meditation for All – Every Sunday, Online and Onsite

Since October of last year, our resident teacher, Acharya Lhakpa Tshering, has offered guided meditation and short dharma teachings every Sunday at Karmapa Center 16, and friends in the area have been able to join us onsite.

As everyone is welcome, and no prior experience is needed, Acharya calls the Sunday sessions Meditation for All

We are delighted to announce that beginning January 14, 2024, Acharya’s teaching and the opportunity to practice together, will be offered online, so that Meditation for All will, indeed, be available to all! 

Please join us onsite or online! 

For online access, please register here for the Zoom link. The sessions begin at 10 am and finish at 11:30 am Central Standard Time. Please be sure to log onto Zoom a few minutes before we start. Below, you can find a few other guidelines that will help all of us practice together in the most beneficial way possible.

KC16’s resident teacher – Acharya Lhakpa Tshering. Photo Credit: Gloria Sherab Drolma

We aspire to follow in the footsteps of His Holiness the 16th Gyalwang Karmapa by offering Meditation for All to everyone and practicing together as he once expressed: 

“I will always exert myself in dharmic recitation, proclamations, and readings. In mind, I will not flutter back and forth like a young bird on a branch. Not getting absorbed in discursive thoughts of good and bad, I will meditate, cultivating forbearance and relying on my own perceptions, not those of others. I will reflect on how best to benefit the teachings and beings.” 


Karmapa Khyenno!