Meditators relax! An esteemed modern Tibetan Buddhist teacher presents a system of meditation instructions he devised especially for those affected by the too-fast-paced Western world (i.e., most all of us)�to help them relax, as a way of deepening their meditation practice.
In the late 1990s, shortly after arriving in the United States, it became clear to Dza Kilung Rinpoche that his Western students were unable to progress in meditation as well as his students had back in Asia�and he realized that was because the pace of Western life made it difficult for them to relax. The Relaxed Mind contains instructions for the seven-phase meditation practice Dza Kilung Rinpoche developed for Westerners. It's very traditional but adapted to help those of us who live in a culture of distraction. The method is a way for tense meditators to relax and deepen their practice�but it's also an excellent meditation manual for any beginner.
H.E. Dza Kilung Tulku Jigme Rinpoche was born in 1970 and is head of Kilung Monastery in the Dzachuka District of Kham, Tibet, which he has been working to reestablish as a center of learning and practice since he was a teenager. He has been teaching in the West since 1998 and regularly accepts invitations to teach in Boston, Beijing, Denmark, Singapore, Malaysia, Taiwan, Brazil, and Argentina. His home in the West is on Whidbey Island near Seattle, Washington, and he divides his time among Washington, his community in Tibet, and his students worldwide.
Nature of Mind
Relaxed Mind: A Seven-Step
Method For Deepening Meditation Practice
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Foreword
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vii
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Editor's Preface
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ix
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Introduction
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xvii
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PART ONE
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1
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1. FIRST MEDITATION: Basic Sitting Meditation
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3
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2. SECOND MEDITATION: Calm Abiding Meditation
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22
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3. THIRD MEDITATION: Refined Basic Sitting
Meditation
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38
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4. FOURTH MEDITATION: Insight Meditation
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50
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REFLECTION I: A Deeper Look into
Topics Covered So Far
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65
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PART TWO
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79
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5. FIFTH MEDITATION: Open
Heart-Mind Meditation
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81
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6. SIXTH MEDITATION: Pure Mind
Meditation
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91
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7. SEVENTH MEDITATION:
Nonconceptual Meditation
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105
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REFLECTION
II: An Overview of the Traditional Practices of Mahayana,
Vajrayana, and Dzogchen
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123
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An
Afterword
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132
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Suggested
Reading
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136
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Glossary
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140
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Acknowledgments
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146
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About
the Author
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147
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