In love with the world : a monk's journey through the bardos of living and dying

by Rinpoche Yongey Mingyur

Other authorsHelen Tworkov (Author)
Paperback, 2019

Publication

Imprint: New York : Spiegel & Grau, 2019. Edition: First edition. Responsibility: Yongey Mingyur Rinpoche with Helen Tworkov. OCLC Number: 1065785697. Physical: Text : 1 volume : xvi, 267 pages ; 22 cm. Features: Includes glossary.

Call number

Biography / Mingy

Barcode

BK-08324

ISBN

9780525512530

CSS Library Notes

Description: In 2011, Mingyur Rinpoche was the respected thirty-six-year-old abbot of three monasteries, a world-renowned meditation teacher, the son of an esteemed meditation master, and a rising star within his generation of Tibetan masters. In Love with the World begins the night that, without telling anyone of his plan, he slips past the monastery gates alone for the first time in his life and sets forth on a wandering retreat, following the ancient practice of holy mendicants. He wanted to throw off his titles and privileges, give up the protections he had always known, and engage in an "ego-killing mission" in order to explore the deepest aspects of his own being and move beyond the grasping self. Yet he immediately discovers that his training has not prepared him to deal with the stench of the third-class train car to Varanasi, or the filthy people around him, or the screeching noise of the train. He has trouble taking off his monk's robes and pays for a cheap hostel rather than sleep on the streets. Soon he becomes deathly ill from food poisoning--and his journey begins in earnest. His lifelong training has prepared him for facing death, and he must now test the strength of his practice. The invaluable lessons he learns from this near-death experience--how we can transform our fear of dying into joyful living--are just what we need to navigate these challenging times. A profoundly moving, unusually candid account by a spiritual master -- from back cover

Table of Contents:
Prologue --
Part one: Adding wood to the fire. Who are you? --
Acknowledge the wave but stay with the ocean --
Born with a silver spoon --
Impermanence and death --
Letting wisdom arise --
What will you do in the bardo? --
Lessons from Milarepa --
Varanasi rail station --
Emptiness, not nothingness --
If you see something, say something --
A visit from panic, my old friend --
A day at the ghats --
Of sleep and dreams --
Learning to swim --
Memento mori --
Part two: Returning home. Where the Buddha died --
What is your happy dream? --
Coming through darkness --
A chance encounter --
Naked and clothed --
No picking, no choosing --
Working with pain --
The four rivers of natural suffering --
Recalling the bardos --
Giving everything away --
When death is good news --
Awareness never dies --
When the cup shatters --
In the bardo of becoming --
Epilogue.

FY2020 /

Physical description

xvi, 267 p.; 22 cm

Description

"In 2011, Mingyur Rinpoche was the respected thirty-six-year-old abbot of three monasteries, a world-renowned meditation teacher, the son of an esteemed meditation master, and a rising star within his generation of Tibetan masters. In Love with the World begins the night that, without telling anyone of his plan, he slips past the monastery gates alone for the first time in his life and sets forth on a wandering retreat, following the ancient practice of holy mendicants. He wanted to throw off his titles and privileges, give up the protections he had always known, and engage in an "ego-killing mission" in order to explore the deepest aspects of his own being and move beyond the grasping self. Yet he immediately discovers that his training has not prepared him to deal with the stench of the third-class train car to Varanasi, or the filthy people around him, or the screeching noise of the train. He has trouble taking off his monk's robes and pays for a cheap hostel rather than sleep on the streets. Soon he becomes deathly ill from food poisoning--and his journey begins in earnest. His lifelong training has prepared him for facing death, and he must now test the strength of his practice. The invaluable lessons he learns from this near-death experience--how we can transform our fear of dying into joyful living--are just what we need to navigate these challenging times. A profoundly moving, unusually candid account by a spiritual master"--… (more)

Language

Original language

English

User reviews

LibraryThing member over.the.edge
In Love With The World : A Monks Journey Through The Bardos of Living and Dying
by Yongey Mingyur Rinpoche
due 5-7-2019
Random House/Spiegel & Gran
5.0 / 5.0

Yongey Mingyur Rinpoche began studying Tibetan Buddhism and attending retreats to help learn how to deal with death. A bardo believes the
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stage between ´dying´ and ´rebirth´ is ´becoming´. Yongey felt it would help him come closer to the state of Pure Awareness. Yongey went on a retreat and became deathly ill with food poisoning. He was told he might die. Yongey was able to use his studies to practice his training with living with death.

This is beautifully written and presented in a way that is easy to understand and follow. The idea of perpetual awareness-staying open to the moment-not grasping for permanence....the idea that everything you ever wanted is here in your present moment of awareness really resonate with me. Its one of the reasons I began studying Buddhism years ago. When we attempt to equate productivity with success, to grasp on to life, make them solid and we begin to lose ourselves. The trick is to stay open and accepting to the present.

I loves this...its a great introduction to an awesome mindset.
Thanks to the publisher and author for this e-book ARC for review.
#netgalley #InLoveWithTheWorld
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LibraryThing member tmph
I know a good bit about Buddhism and have studied comparative religions for fifty years. In this book, I did enjoy many of the short stories and situations highlighting the often wonderful teachings of Buddhism. I pretty much liked Mingyur Rinpoche. I did not like at all the princeling nature of
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his worldview nor the Prince and the Pauper story of this book. I especially did not appreciate in the least the foolishness, the Christian Scientist/Jehovah's Witness-like rejection of not-all-that-modern medicine, the anti-intellectualism just to make a point, a point that highlights so much foolishness. Karma, really? Reincarnation, really? It's as easy to believe my virgin wife was fucked by a pigeon.
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Rating

½ (15 ratings; 3.7)
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