Archive for October, 2009

Life Journey……..

October 23, 2009
Source: Photo taken by Siew Kook, Sept 2009, Tibet journey

Source: Photo taken by Siew Kook, Sept 2009, Tibet journey

 
We are alike the traveler who is traveling alone this life journey.. ..Searching…Searching…..
 

 

Source:Photo taken by Siew Kook, Sept 2009, Tibet journey

Source:Photo taken by Siew Kook, Sept 2009, Tibet journey

 Along the path, we encounter up down, stagnancy..to obstruct our journey – alike the mountains ahead seems to block the journey…..

Source: Photo taken by Susan Loone, Seot 2009: Blue sky in Bangkok

Source: Photo taken by Susan Loone, Seot 2009: Blue sky in Bangkok

Infect, we cannot find the ending and starting of the path, there is nothing… no me, no mountains ,no path and starting/ending…like the clear sky……empty in essence….. yet, we still walk so hard in this path…..

Latest Photos of The First Holy Vajrayana Stupa in Malaysia : The great wish for World Peace stupa at Kong Chee Name Cave Temple , Ipoh.

October 20, 2009
The first holy Vajrayana Stupa  at Kong Chee Name Cave Temple (炽光岩洞) : Souce: Shenpen Lamo Ng, 17 October 2009

The main entrance of the Kong Chee Name Cave Temple (炽光岩洞) at Ipoh, Perak, Malaysia : Souce: Shenpen Lamo Ng, 17 October 2009

The First Holy Vajrayana Stupa in Malaysia : The great wish for World Peace stupa at Kong Chee Name Cave Temple, Ipoh.(Souce: Shenpen Lamo Ng, 17 October 2009)

The First Holy Vajrayana Stupa in Malaysia : The great wish for World Peace stupa at Kong Chee Name Cave Temple, Ipoh.(Souce: Shenpen Lamo Ng, 17 October 2009)

The side view of the first holy Vajrayana Stupa  at Kong Chee Name Cave Temple (炽光岩洞) : Souce: Shenpen Lamo Ng, 17 October 2009

The side view of the first holy Vajrayana Stupa at Kong Chee Name Cave Temple (炽光岩洞) : Souce: Shenpen Lamo Ng, 17 October 2009

The shrine inside the auspiciuos temple cave .Source: Photo taken by Shenpen Lamo Ng, 18 Oct 2009

The shrine inside the auspiciuos temple cave .Source: Photo taken by Shenpen Lamo Ng, 18 Oct 2009

The devoted vajrayana practitioners who conducted their  2 days retreat inside the Kong Chee Name Cave Temple (炽光岩洞). Source: Photo taken by Shenpen Lamo Ng, 18 Oct 2009

The devoted vajrayana practitioners who conducted their 2 days retreat inside the Kong Chee Name Cave Temple (炽光岩洞). Source: Photo taken by Shenpen Lamo Ng, 18 Oct 2009

The devoted vajrayana practitioners who conducted their  2 days retreat inside the Kong Chee Name Cave Temple (炽光岩洞). Source: Photo taken by Shenpen Lamo Ng, 18 Oct 2009

The devoted vajrayana practitioners who conducted their 2 days retreat inside the Kong Chee Name Cave Temple (炽光岩洞). Source: Photo taken by Shenpen Lamo Ng, 18 Oct 2009

 

After the posting of the last article on the 3 Sept 2009 about the brief history of the first holy Vajrayana Stupa and  Kong Chee Name Cave Temple (炽光岩洞)that is situated in Ipoh, Perak, Malaysia : (https://trinleychodron.wordpress.com/2009/09/03/the-first-holy-vajrayana-stupa-in-malaysia-the-great-wish-for-world-peace-stupa-at-kong-chee-name-cave-temple-ipoh/) It has attracted more vajrayana practitioners came to know about the history of Vajrayana Buddhism activities in Malaysia, the fist holy Vajrayana Stupa and also this auspicious temple cave .

 In result of it, there are another group of practitioners who  again visited the temple cave and conducted their own  two days retreat inside the cave with deep devotion and aspiration on the 17-18 October 2009. Puja, prayers and meditation session was conducted there. The group  members who came there with their  deep motivation & aspiration of  wishing all sentient beings are able being liberated from roots of sufferings and gain true happiness.  May the blessings of all high lama who had meditated & blessed there will  grant their blessings to these nobles wishes of the group.

Here are some photos were taken there and given by the group to me. May us rejoice with them.

May more people visit the cave and stupa making pure aspirations for all sentient beings!

 

Trinley Chodron

20 October 2009

Kuala Lumpur

Note: for the previous article that describe  the brief history of the first holy Vajrayana Stupa and  at Kong Chee Name Cave Temple (炽光岩洞):

The First Holy Vajrayana Stupa in Malaysia : The great wish for World Peace stupa at Kong Chee Name Cave Temple, Ipoh.

“The Mindful Leader” –by Michael Carroll ( leader rules by desires or wisdom?)

October 15, 2009

Source: Wulan Dari

We tend to fill people brain with ideologies, skills, most advance technique in order for

creating more leadership in this society.

yet, the wisdom of mindfulness and compassion is missing most time in us and those who we think are leaders or to be future leaders

That’s why we eventually realize they become corrupt mind/decay mind leaders, especially, after they are in power.

:-)…because of their ambitious, clinging to egos and desires clouded them-their minds.

So., most time we think we serve the noble cause, infect we serve our own desires and ego.

Right?

This book on the The Mindful Leader”- has raised this missing issue of the quality of leaders in our conventional practices.

————————————-

“The Mindful Leader”

by Michael Carroll

In The Mindful Leader, author Michael Carroll’s premise is that the best leaders aren’t those who take charge and make things happen. They’re the ones who are willing to be fully human and inspire the best in others. Sunada reviews this book that shows us how to pursue excellence at work and do so with decency, dignity, and authenticity.

Pick up a typical book on business leadership and what do you get? Advice on how to motivate others to do more, do it faster, and win in a zero-sum game. But on the first page of The Mindful Leader, it’s suggested that

we sit quietly and do nothing for a while.

Outrageous? Not at all!

Michael Carroll takes a decidedly unconventional, but thoroughly refreshing perspective on the subject. He explains as follows:.

“When we lead a career that is sharply focused on being more successful, more admired, or just more comfortable, we can deceive ourselves into neglecting the world around us. We end up managing our lives like projects rather than actually living them. Consequently, for mindful leaders, cultivating this ability to be at work and throughout our lives is not just a nice idea or an interesting thing to do. Rather, by learning to be at work we discover how to stop kidding ourselves and … to open respectfully and realistically to our workplace as it unfolds in the present moment.”

“When we lead a career that is sharply focused on being more successful, more admired … we end up managing our lives like projects rather than actually living them.”

If this strikes you as too soft and “touchy-feely” for the take-no-prisoners business world, I urge you to read on. He isn’t advocating becoming a nice, well-liked person who gets left behind in the cut-throat race to the finish. Carroll would argue that being a genuine human being and an effective leader are not contradictory. In fact, there’s a synergy between these two realms that’s greater than the sum of their parts.

In the introduction, Carroll talks about the concept of the bodhisattva- warrior. A bodhisattva is a highly advanced spiritual being whose sole purpose in life is to help others. A bodhisattva- warrior is a courageous figure who uses his power and ingenuity to overcome the forces of arrogance, aggression, and greed in the world. This book is in effect a training manual for modern-day bodhisattva- warriors. It’s not a job for sissies.

” …being a genuine human being and an effective leader are not contradictory … there’s a synergy between these two realms that’s greater than the sum of their parts.”

Michael Carroll has the background to know what he’s talking about. In his 25-year career, he held executive positions in major corporations like Shearson Lehman/American Express, Simon & Schuster, and Walt Disney. During that time, he also studied Tibetan Buddhism in the Shambala lineage, graduated from Buddhist seminary, and is now a senior teacher. Drawing on his training in these two worlds, he now consults to businesses on how to be respectfully in the moment while confidently pursuing one’s work objectives. (Note that I also wrote a review of his related previous book, Awake at Work.)The heart of the book lays out

the Ten Talents of the Mindful Leader:

• Simplicity

• Poise,

• Respect,

• Courage,

• Confidence,

• Enthusiasm,

• Patience,

• Awareness,

• Skillfulness, and

• Humility.

He discusses each talent by introducing a common business challenge, and then shows how mindfulness naturally expresses a quality perfectly suited to countering the situation. He discusses how to cultivate this quality through meditation or conscious reflection, and how to bring it out into our work world.

” he shows how we can heal “toxic” workplaces, cultivate courage in the face of risky situations, pursue long-term goals without sacrificing what’s here and now, and lead with wisdom and grace instead of ambition and power.”

One chapter at a time, he shows how we can heal “toxic” workplaces, cultivate courage in the face of risky situations, pursue long-term goals without sacrificing what’s here and now, and lead with wisdom and grace instead of ambition and power. Every chapter is filled with real world anecdotes and parables from the Buddhist tradition that bring his points colorfully to life.

It’s the section that follows, Bringing Our Full Being to Work, that I appreciated the most. Here, Carroll draws out a higher level of integrative skills that I think are the mark of a true leader. It’s where all the previous ten talents meld into a holistic vision of masterful leadership. These skills are Synchronizing, Engaging the Whole, Inspiring Health and Well-being, and Authenticity.

I particularly enjoyed his story of a capsized ferry disaster in ancient China, which is an illustration of Engaging the Whole. I’ll let the story speak for itself.

“… all the villagers dropped what they were doing and raced down to the ferry … except for the blacksmith. … He ran in the opposite direction. People stopped and grumbled, ‘Now we know who to depend on when things go wrong. Look at that cowardly blacksmith scurrying away when he is most needed.’

As people rushed to the capsized ferry, they struggled valiantly to save those in the water, but they were too late. Those who had fallen into the river had been pulled downstream by the strong current, and the villagers could see people struggling in the rapids as they were swept out of sight and around the bend. No one could see the blacksmith, however, just past the curve of the river extending a bamboo pole to those in need, pulling them to shore one by one.

” Leadership isn’t something that only CEOs do. Each and every one of us can be a leader in whatever we do – whether we’re teaching children, designing software, or driving taxis.”

Unlike the well-intentioned villagers, the blacksmith ‘engaged the whole’: his behaviors were as much an expression of the circumstances as they were a reaction to them. He knew that ‘results’ – saving the drowning passengers – were inherently defined by the river, terrain, and timing, not by his personal need to help. Going downstream rather than rushing in panic to the scene of the disaster was a choice that followed the contours of his world: because he was synchronized, he was skillfully in tune with the facts, and his presence was, in many respects, an expression of the situation’s intelligence.”

Let me mention a couple things you WON’T find in this book. First, it doesn’t teach you how to meditate. There is a section on meditation and reflection, but it’s clear the intent is to provide just enough guidance to engage with the reflection exercises. It won’t help you start a full-fledged meditation practice, which is really beyond the scope of this book. You’re better off using the chapter as a reference and seeking instruction elsewhere.

Second, you’ve probably figured out by now that this book isn’t about management methods and competencies. You won’t find anything that you can bring to your office on Monday and get cracking on. What it does is invite you to pause and reflect. It gives you lots of food for thought about what it means to be more fully and authentically human. And it encourages us to cultivate the basic attitudes and mental skills that form the ground upon which great leaders naturally emerge.

There’s one other important point from the book I’d like to emphasize. Although the subject is leadership in a business context, I think the principles can apply to anyone. Leadership isn’t something that only CEOs do. Each and every one of us can be a leader in whatever we do – whether we’re teaching children, designing software, or driving taxis.

As Carroll says:

“… all human beings instinctively want to offer their best to others and in turn inspire others to do the same, and this can be done by anyone, anywhere, anytime.”

In that regard, I hope this book is read by a much wider audience than just business people. If everyone followed these principles and engaged with the world in this way, our planet would be a very different place indeed.