The Psychology Of Buddhist Tantra

by Rob Preece

Paperback, 2006

Status

Available

Call number

294.3

Publication

Snow Lion (2006), Edition: 1, 276 pages

Description

"This book masterfully clarifies the nature of tantric practice. In contrast to the approaches of conventional religion, tantra does not attempt to soothe the turmoil of existence with consoling promises of heaven and salvation. The tantric practitioner chooses to confront the bewildering and chaotic forces of fear, aggression, desire, and pride, and to work with them in such a way that they are channeled into creative expression, loving relationships, and wisely engaged forms of life. In order to make the processes of tantra psychologically intelligible for a contemporary reader, Rob Preece makes judicious use of the work of modern psychotherapy, forging a compelling link between a Western tradition that hearkens back to the alchemical traditions of our own past and the comparably alchemical strategies of Tibetan Buddhist tantric practices. In keeping with the pragmatic and therapeutic aims of both psychotherapy and Buddhist meditation, The Psychology of Buddhist Tantranever loses sight of the central importance of applying these ideas to the concrete realities of day-to-day life. By illuminating the richly symbolic language of tantra through the intermediate language of p… (more)

User reviews

LibraryThing member bordercollie
Profound analysis of dharma practice from the point of view of Jung's psychotherapy; inspiring and moving explanations of deities and wrathful deities and the effects of internalizing them. The mandala is the self and its boundaries. Worthy of deep study.

Language

Original language

English

Physical description

9.12 inches

ISBN

1559392630 / 9781559392631

UPC

787721951865
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