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My Home In Ghana Is Called,

My Home In Ghana Is Called, "Shambala"

· Friday, July 25th 2008 at 9:59AM · 2080 views
I am an African American retired college professor who lives in Accra, Ghana. I try to live in the community and get to know people in the community. I enrolled in the Trinity Theological Seminary to aspire for a Certificate In Ministry. I was 70 years old then and was the oldest student in the seminary. Well, never mind, it has been a "blast" of an experience.

Let me tell you more about the Shambala experience. Some spell it "Shambhala".
It is the Shambhala view that every human being has a fundamental nature of goodness, warmth and intelligence. This nature can be cultivated through meditation, following ancient principles, and it can be further developed in daily life, so that it radiates out to family, friends, community and society.

In the course of our lives, this goodness, warmth and intelligence can easily become covered over by doubt, fear and egotism. We tend to fall into a kind of sleep or stupor, believing in the conditioning we have as the ultimate truth, and coming under the sway of fear. The journey of becoming fully human means seeing through fear and egotism, and waking up to our natural intelligence. It takes kindness—to ourselves and others—and courage, to wake up in this world.

MeditatorThe journey of awakening is known as the path of the warrior, as it requires the simple bravery to look directly at one’s own mind and heart. The essential tool for doing this is mindfulness meditation. As we continue on the Shambhala path, we learn many other practices, to help us break through the ancient crust of ego and awaken to the joy of fully living in this world. Awakening and opening, we discover the world to be naturally sacred—pure and full of beauty. We begin to see clearly the goodness and wisdom of others, and to feel compassion to help them in myriad ways.

Shambhala vision is rooted in the contemplative teachings of Buddhism, yet is a fresh expression of the spiritual journey for our time; it is available to practitioners of any tradition. Our lineage draws on the wisdom of the Kagyu and Nyingma schools of Tibetan Buddhism as inherited by founder of Shambhala, Chögyam Trungpa, and his son and spiritual heir, Sakyong Mipham. In the mid-1970s Chögyam Trungpa began to introduce teachings on Shambhala vision, based on his encounter with the Western world, and on the specific wisdom imparted from the Buddha to King Dawa Sangpo, the first sovereign of the legendary kingdom of Shambhala. This tradition teaches how to live in the secular world with courage and compassion

I realize that my home is not reall "Shambala". I just want to practice the principles of Shambala there. People who come there say they feel peace, love, knowledge, harmony and beauty there.

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Comments (1)

Joan Lyons Saturday, August 16th 2008 at 6:14PM

Dr. Gordon,
This is such a conincidence as soon as I saw you lived in Ghana I realized I know your sister from another web site and i just ordered her book. She shared photos of Ghana and your home and since I had visited Ghana twice it was wonderful to hear.

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