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Jamyang Khyentse Wangpo and Tertön Sogyal

After Tertön Sogyal had spent over five years in retreat in Drikok, he went to Dzongsar to meet the greatest living master of the day, Jamyang Khyentse Wangpo. Their meeting was not by chance, as clearly found in many prophecy and predictions. During their first meeting, Jamyang Khyentse declared the young tertön  Read More 
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Announcing Book Launch dates

I am looking forward to going out on the road with Fearless in Tibet: The Life of the Mystic Tertön Sogyal which will take me to both coasts the first week. More dates will be announced but here is how it is lining up.

May 28, 7 pm Tibet House, New York City
May 29, 6 pm International Campaign for Tibet, Washington DC
June 2 Santa Barbara, Chaucer’s Bookstore, evening event
June 3 University of California, Graduate Seminar, Santa Barbara
June 5 San Diego, evening event, TBA
June 7 San Franciso, Orgyen Dorje Den, 6 pm
July 19 Washington DC, Politics & Prose, 1 pm

(more dates are being scheduled so check back or  Read More 
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Tertön Sogyal's grandson, Tromge Tulku Khacho Dechen Wangpo

This is the grandson of Tertön Sogyal, Tromge Tulku Khacho Dechen Wangpo, a great meditator who lives in eastern Tibet. I was honored to meet him a few times and to talk about Tertön Sogyal. I once told him that I wanted to write the biography of his grandfather, and asked for his blessing to do so. He gave me a white prayer bead from his rosary for the endeavor, which I put around my neck to bless my speech, and written word!  Read More 
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Nyala Pema Düddul and Tertön Sogyal first retreats

Tertön Sogyal's first teacher was the master Nyala Pema Düddul, who attained rainbow body in 1872. Pema Düddul is shown in this wall mural at Kalzang Temple, surrounded by his disciples, and above his head, the lineage gurus. Pema Düddul sent the young Tertön Sogyal into retreat under the yogi Lama Sonam Thaye. Theirs was a lineage not of ordained monks living in large monasteries but of lay tantric yogis, untethered by convention, who wandered from hermitage to cave, occasionally stopping in the towns across Tibet. Tertön Sogyal stayed for five years in his first retreat on the Tromthar plains, especially at the remote encampment of Drikok under Lama Sonam Thaye. As I write in “Fearless in Tibet,”  Read More 
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Khandro Pumo Trinely Chodren

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This is one of my favorite photos in "Fearless in Tibet: The Life of the Mystic Tertön Sogyal", which is of Tertön Sogyal's wife, Khandro Pumo Trinley Chodren, a humble and highly realized Dzogchen yogini.

The photo was taken on her stupa which is in Nyarong, eastern Tibet. Jamyang Khyentse Wangpo bestowed the name "Trinely Chodren" which was part of the name of one of his root gurus, Jetsun Trinley Chodren. Mindroling monastery writes, "Jamyang Khyentse Wangpo received the Nyingthig teachings of Dzogchen— the ripening empowerments, liberating instructions, entrusted advices and so forth—from Jetsün  Read More 
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Tertön Sogyal's birthhome in Shiwa village, eastern Tibet

Tertön was born in a small village in eastern Tibet in the region of Nyarong. This is the family who lives where the tertön was born. They are not blood relatives of Tertön Sogyal but know of him and have his portrait in the family room.
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Hermits, yogis and lamas in Nyarong

Many of the stories about Tertön Sogyal's childhood came from the hermits, lamas, and yogis from the Nyarong region in eastern Tibet. I am very grateful to all of these gritty hermits with whom I spent many days asking questions!
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Kalzang Temple in Nyarong

extract from "Fearless in Tibet: The Life of the Mystic Tertön Sogyal" about Kalzang Temple, which became the seat of Tertön Sogyal:

Nyala Pema Dündul frequented many hermitages and caves during his life-long wanderings, but it was this peak where he chose to spend nearly a decade in retreat in the Cave of Blazing Expanse of Great Bliss on the mountain’s southeast side. He sustained himself during those years on the water that dripped in his shallow cave and the herbs that grew by the entrance. Pema Dündul’s austerities mirrored those of the 11th-century Tibetan saint Milarepa. The last years of retreat in his cave, Pema Dündul perfected an alchemical practice whereby he ate only wild rhubarb flowers and berries, and eventually subsisted by sucking on pebbles to extract the life essence of the substances through yogic exercises, and mantra, earning him the nickname “The Rock Eater.”

One day in the Iron Monkey year (1860), soon after he had completed nine years of retreat, Pema Dündul was meditating under the cobalt sky near his home village of Khangtseg, which lies below Lhangdrak Peak. Pema Dündul rested his gaze in the space in front of the soaring peak, and soon the sky began to fill with shooting rainbows, one after another. Coils of light sprang Read More 
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Mark the calendar for Book launch events in New York and Washington DC May 28 & 29

Wednesday, May 28, 2014 7-9 pm New York, Tibet House, 22 West 15th Street, New York, NY 10011

Thursday, May 29, 2014 evening, Washington DC, International Campaign for Tibet,
1825 Jefferson Place NW, Washington, DC, 20036

Join author Matteo Pistono for a discussion and photo presentation of "Fearless in Tibet: The Life of the Mystic Tertön Sogyal" (Hay House 2014). Pistono will take you on a visual pilgrimage into the heart of Tibet, featuring stories and photographs from a decade of travels to sacred sites associated with the life of Tertön Sogyal. You will experience what devout pilgrims endure on their arduous outer journey to remote caves, holy mountains, ancient hermitages and Himalayan power places. Pistono will illuminate how the pilgrims’ inner journey creates a shift in their perception of the terrain as wilderness to conceiving of it as a sacred topography in which the mountains and rivers, streams and glaciers, the very pebbles upon which their boots fall, are woven into a blessed landscape.

About the book:
Nineteenth-century Tibetan mystic Tertön Sogyal was a visionary, whose mastery  Read More 
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