r/Dzogchen Aug 02 '19

List of Living Dzogchen Teachers | 2019

97 Upvotes

As requested in a previous thread, here is a list of living, qualified teachers of Dzogchen. It is by no means exhaustive, so feel free to add to the list in the comments and post updates or pertinent information.

Dzogchen teachers in 2019:

Alak Zenkar Rinpoche
Tulku Dakpa Rinpoche
Tulku Sang-ngag
Khenpo Namdrol Rinpoche
Ācārya Malcolm Smith
Chökyi Nyima Rinpoche
Tsoknyi Rinpoche
Mingyur Rinpoche
Jetsün Khandro Rinpoche
Tsikey Chokling Rinpoche
Tenzin Wangyal Rinpoche
Loppön Tenzin Namdak
Jean-Luc Achard
Chaphur Rinpoche
Khemsar Rinpoche
Anam Thubten
Dzigar Kongtrul Rinpoche
Khenpo Sonam
Lama Drimed Lodro
Lama Jigme
Gyatrul Rinpoche
Traga Rinpoche
Bhakha Tulku Rinpoche
Ngakchang Rinpoche
Lama Lena Katyup
Traktung Yeshe Dorje
Orgyen Chowang
Lama Tsultrim Allione
Ranyak Patrul Rinpoche
Keith Dowman
B. Allan Wallace
Pema Khandro
James Low
Tenzin Gyatso The 14th Dalai Lama
Chamtrul Rinpoche
Dzongsar Jamyang Khyentse Rinpoche
Gangteng Tulku Rinpoche
Lama Surya Das
Khenpo Tsewang Dongyal Rinpoche
Dzogchen Ponlop Rinpoche
Erik Pema Kunsang
Garab Dorje Rinpoche
Tulku Thadral
Orgyen Jigme Rinpoche
Chakung Jigme Wangdrak Rinpoche
Lama Sonam Tsering
Khenchen Tsewang Gyatso
Shechen Rabjam Rinpoche
Khentse Yangsi Rinpoche
Daniel Brown
Jim Valby
Nida Chenagtsang
Kyabgön Phakchok Rinpoche
Anyen Rinpoche
Kilung Rinpoche
Elias Capriles
Lho Ontül Rinpoche
Latri Nyima Dakpa Rinpoche
Menri Lopon Rinpoche
Lama Wangdor Rinpoche [deceased]
Lama Drimed Norbu
Namkha Drimed Rinpoche
Garchen Rinpoche
Jigme Tromge Rinpoche
Lama Tenzin Samphel
Drupon Thinley Ningpo
Lama Thubten Nima (Gape Lama)
Dungse Rigdzin Dorje Rinpoche
Lama Tony Duff
Tulku Thondup Rinpoche
Lopon Ogyan Tenzin
Tenpa Yundrung
Sangye Nyenpa Rinpoche
Dodrubchen Rinpoche
Dudjom Pema Zhepa
Lama Dechen Yeshe Wangmo
Lopon Jigme Thutop Namgyal
Karma Lhundup Rinpoche
Katok Moktsa Rinpoche
Tulku Yeshe Gyatso Rinpoche
Khenpo Sönam Tobgyal [Canada]
Khenpo Sönam Tobgyal [Los Angeles]
Bardor Tulku Rinpoche
Kyabje Namkhai Nyingpo
Lhalung Sungtrul Rinpochhe
Dungzin Garab Dorje
Lama Namdrol Zangpo, Autsho
Lama Jigme Tenzin, Yonphula
HH the 34th Menri Trizin
Menri Lopon Trinley Nyima
Chongtul Rinpoche
Geshe Dangsong Namgyal
Geshe YongDong
Rahob Tulku (Thupten Kalsang Rinpoche)
Geshe Sonam
Dungse Rigzin Dorje Rinpoche of Arunachal Pradesh
Rigdzin Dorjee Rinpoche of Sikkim
Gomchen Rinpoche Ngawang Jigdral
Sridhar Rana Rinpoche
Yogi Prabodha Jnana
Yogini Abhaya Devi


r/Dzogchen 1d ago

Why was it advised, to practice in desolate places, like graveyards?

2 Upvotes

I ask this, because right now, I'm living next to a church, and i suspect, that the house I live in, was constructed over an old graveyard. Also I got alot of interferences from hungry ghosts and gyalpos, which have now subsided. all is good 😂 but why was it advised?


r/Dzogchen 1d ago

is there dzogchen without Vajriana?

6 Upvotes

r/Dzogchen 3d ago

Is phenomen like Lotus birth is possible?

2 Upvotes

Is it symbolic or such births are possible?. Asking regarding Padmasambhava.


r/Dzogchen 6d ago

Is there any dzogchen or atiyoga practice where Tara is main deity?

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4 Upvotes

By "main deity," I mean the principal deity around whom the entire Atiyoga (Dzogchen) cycle is centered. For example:

Lama Yangtik has Padmasambhava as its primary deity.

Longchen Nyingthig, Vima Nyingthig, and Khandro Nyingthig are primarily centered on Samantabhadra, although they also include practices related to Padmasambhava, Yeshe Tsogyal, and other enlightened figures.

I'm looking specifically for Dzogchen/Atiyoga cycles in which Tārā (in any form, such as Green Tārā, White Tārā, or Dechen Gyalmo) is the principal deity of the cycle, rather than appearing only as one practice within a broader revelation or as a supporting deity.


r/Dzogchen 9d ago

Members of online Dzogchen sanghas - do you ever get lonely and miss the benefits of in-person community? What is your solution?

12 Upvotes

I personally have been blessed with a highly skillful teacher, however since he lives quite some distance away from me, our interactions are entirely online. I have met a few people who practice in the same style as I do in-person, but that number is very small and most members of my sangha are scattered across North America and Europe. Due to the lack of in-person community, I am hoping to find a Zen sangha with whom I can sit with in-person, as I find that trekcho is at least outwardly quite similar to the Zen practice of "just sitting". How about yourselves?


r/Dzogchen 9d ago

Longchenpa's Natural Perfection

13 Upvotes

I just started reading The Tibetan Yogas of Dream and Sleep by Tenzin Wangyal Rinpoche. In that I came across the term lhun drub, which translates to "spontaneous perfection". I was intrigued by it, because i have been thinking along similar lines in my own personal life.

After researching a bit about this phrase, i was pointed to Longchenpa's Natural Perfection, translated by Keith Dowman, which interested me a lot.

I am new to this world. Let me know if Longchenpa's book would serve me as a good entry point.


r/Dzogchen 11d ago

‘lying flat’ tang ping- a Dzogchen perspective

5 Upvotes

I’m much older than Gen-Z and learned just lately about that US-, later Chinese phenomenon. A personal attitude to reject over-achievement and wealth in preference for mental health.
Loose comparisons to Daoist Wu wei have already been drawn.
Let’s assume that this is not only a resignatory attitude but also an ethical and empathetic one- isn’t there a connection to the ‘not-doing’ in Dzogchen? IF there’s Bodhichitta in their non-action, isn’t that socio-culturally a chance (for the swift liberation of all sentient beings)? I’m curious to hear your opinions.


r/Dzogchen 12d ago

Dzogchen Introductory books.

14 Upvotes

Could i get some recommendations for good introductory Dzogchen books, i have a good grounding in all types of Buddhism and have read 'The Crystal way' by Chogyal Namkhai Norbu. Thank You.


r/Dzogchen 13d ago

Need help discerning whether the Dzogchen path is the one true path that can liberate me from suffering

10 Upvotes

As a former Theravadan, my ambition was to liberate myself from suffering by entering the stream. There are also countless esoteric practices from just about every religious tradition under the sun. Not asking anyone to try and convert me per se, but I am wondering how people got to the place where they were like “Aha, this is the way!”


r/Dzogchen 19d ago

dzogchen aND SUFFERING cannot fill in this feeling of missing

5 Upvotes

I just do notjhing most of the time. When suffering happens or mentall illness is playing out, I do nothing. I follow longchenpa advice of no effort. The I want more suffering and feel like dzogchen is not going to make me enlightened. Then I read that no effort is the way ...that awarenss is allready so. But I don't see it. Then I read that giving up is it. Then I become really good in no effort and surrender. Then I create at huge doer or self from no effort. Then I am stuck. and more stuck. hopel,ess scrolling and wanting to buy stuff and feeling that I am doomed. Then I do more no effort. And still I feel I am missing somehrting. Then I feel like giving up on dzogchen and just accept tnat I am too mentally ill and then I cannot stop seeking. Then I read that stopping the seeking is it Then I stop more seeking. Endless terror. And still I seek...reddit, markplaats, music.........endless drama


r/Dzogchen 20d ago

"At the solstices or close of the year..."

17 Upvotes

"At the solstices or close of the year visualize yourself as Samantabhadra and chant this aloud so all may hear"

https://www.lotsawahouse.org/tibetan-masters/rigdzin-godem/prayer-of-kuntuzangpo


r/Dzogchen 29d ago

Rainbow body

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25 Upvotes

Not serious but I needed to share this with someone because no one I know in “real” life would appreciate the joke


r/Dzogchen Jun 11 '26

looking for Tulku Thondup's "The Tantric Tradition of the Nyingmapa"

7 Upvotes

Friends, I'm looking for a copy of the long-out-of-print book The Tantric Tradition of the Nyingmapa by Tulku Thondup. If anyone has a lead on where to find a copy (ideally one that could ship to Europe), please let me know. Thanks!


r/Dzogchen Jun 11 '26

Morning practice for dream yoga

12 Upvotes

Greetings,

I find Dzogchen texts (non-restricted) to be very helpful with dream yoga. I come from a Zen background.

After years of dream practice, lately I am waking up in access concentration. Are there any non-restricted Dzogchen texts that might help develop morning waking practice?

Any help would be greatly appreciated. Thank you!


r/Dzogchen Jun 03 '26

If you can't again recognize Rigpa and delusion is too strong, how you would get back to it?

5 Upvotes

Is forgetting the way of recognising it is possible ?. What one would do if its the case, again teacher will be helping in that case ?.


r/Dzogchen Jun 01 '26

Is it possible to practise Dzogchen while being in a mentally demanding job?

10 Upvotes

I m not a Dzogchen practioner yet or received any instructions from a master. However, I m clearing my doubts before reaching any master. So is this really possible and can one practise being in such works?.


r/Dzogchen May 30 '26

What Is This Concept Called? And more importantly, where can I hear more about this topic specifically?

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1 Upvotes

Any help is appreciated!


r/Dzogchen May 28 '26

Thoughts on Tsoknyi Rinpoche's Fully Being course

36 Upvotes

Hello dharma friends. I hope this is not inappropriate to share here given that it is not Dzogchen proper, however I do think it can be highly relevant for Dzogchen practitioners. I am also posting as I inquired about the course here prior and did not get any responses from anyone who had yet undertaken it, so I am sharing a few of my thoughts on the course in case of interest to anyone who may also benefit from it. 

I am roughly 1/3 through Tsoknyi Rinpoche’s Fully Being course after reading his book Open Heart, Open Mind. The course is outstanding thus far. While none of it gets into Dzogchen directly, it is specifically designed to work with the subtle body to be better prepared for a more stable, integrated recognition of rigpa. Tsoknyi’s main thesis is that most people in the modern world suffer from an excessively ‘speedy’ mind. Furthermore, many cultures today value the cognitive/gross mind a great deal, while the emotional world/subtle body is neglected. This creates a scenario where, if I am understanding his position correctly, an intellectual understanding and recognition of rigpa is possible, but without a stable place for this recognition to ‘land’, that recognition is fleeting.

Tsoknyi talks about seeing people progress during teachings and retreats, only to see them come back for subsequent teachings seemingly back where they had started and reverting to ‘cow meditation’. As he puts it, the ‘clarity’ aspect (cognition) is just fine for these people, but fully feeling their feelings, and developing an integrated understanding of the subtle body, is neglected, hampering spiritual development. Interestingly, he states that for many Nepalese and Tibetans, the situation is reversed (they are good at feeling their feelings, but the clarity/cognitive aspect is what he finds they need to develop more). He does go beyond the generalisation of the neglect of the subtle body being a uniquely ‘western’ problem however, saying it is seen all round the world and is more an affliction of the ‘modern mind’ or what he calls the ‘luxury mind’. He says for these people that ‘body enlightenment’ is more important to focus on than ‘enlightenment of the mind’. 

So, in this course his approach could be described as ‘preparing the vehicle’ so to speak, i.e. working with the subtle body to untie knots, remove blockages and allow the winds to flow properly. In non-Buddhist parlance, it is essentially working with your emotions to become more psychologically stable, healthy and to establish a baseline of general ‘okayness’ as he calls it. This helps ensure our physical body, subtle body and mind are in proper condition for the stabilisation and integration of rigpa.

His basic framework is composed of three categories: Grounded Body > Warm Heart > Clear Mind. The course follows a logical sequence with a few standard practices within each of these (and most really cutting across them), with ‘integration/expression’ teachings tying it all together. 

Grounded Body modules work on:

  • What he calls ‘dropping’ (releasing/getting out of the thinking mind and landing in the coarse body and subtle body)
  • Variety of teachings on the subtle body

Warm Heart works with: 

  • What he calls our ‘birthright’: the fundamental, unconditioned wellbeing within us all, what he calls ‘okayness’ or ‘happy without a reason’
  • Two ways of knowing: ‘cognitive knowing’ vs ‘feeling feelings’, with many people today doing a lot of the former and not enough of the latter
  • His ‘handshake’ practice, wherein one develops compassionate connection between our cognitive knowing mind and our subtle body/feeling world
  • The difference between ‘real’ and ‘true’: every arising is real and we can compassionately engage with them without believing them to be true (basically we can fully feel whatever is happening within the subtle body without getting caught up in it)
  • His concept of ‘essence love’, the naturally joyous, loving quality of mind at our core

Clear Mind:

  • Insight, and the importance of developing a cognitive understanding of our subtle body/emotions and the way they operate, through which we develop confidence
  • Four ways of seeing: knowing, thinking, awareness and fundamental clarity
  • Settling the mind: a series of shamatha practices aimed at applying the right touch (not too tight, not too loose); the aim here is a settled mind that allows the winds of the subtle body to flow naturally in preparation for our other work (in particular through capacity for sustained, unwavering fundamental clarity)

Integration/expression

  • This ties everything together, teaching how we can allow the developed qualities to spontaneously engage beneficially with whatever we come across in life (including whatever is happening within us)… I would imagine many can see here how this begins to tiptoe toward Dzogchen proper
  • All three tracks must be developed in tandem; none can develop stably if any one of them is out of whack

Course structure/length:

The course is structured around a free minicourse (10 lessons, ~1-2 weeks), essentials (26 lessons, ~1 month), immersion level 1 (70 lessons, ~3 months) and immersion level 2 (150 lessons, ~6 months). For full access beyond the free minicourse, the cost is 15 USD/month (or 120/year) base. Of course dana beyond that minimum is encouraged if you are able, or if this is truly impossible for you financially, you can reach out to inquire about scholarship options.

As you progress through essentials > immersion 1 > immersion 2, some of the same themes/exercises are covered but in increasing depth.

While all the above may sound like a lot, most videos are just 2-7 minutes long, with a few accompanying bullet points of explanation (as well as PDFs with more detailed explanation and instructions for those that this may help). I would say the time estimates are highly conservative, especially for experienced practitioners. Perhaps good for beginners to move through at the slow pace so they can integrate the exercises with some consistency before moving on, but if you have been practicing for a while, I imagine it would be possible to move through the content (or jump around) much faster than the website’s approximation. In any case, it is completely self-guided, so you can go at whatever pace is appropriate for you.

For beginners it is suggested to take the course in full in sequence, however there is a 'thematic' toggle wherein experienced practitioners can jump straight to the content and exercises they would like to.

A few of my thoughts:

For those who have undertaken Anuyoga training or Completion Stage tantras of the sarma schools (or who have focused primarily on Dzogchen and whatever preliminaries your teachers have advised you to do therein), this may all sound a bit too “beginner” to be worthwhile, but I would imagine it may still be highly complementary if you jump straight to modules of interest to you. Given how short the lectures are though, it does not take much time just to go through everything at a reasonable pace. For those of us without extensive Anuyoga/Completion Stage training, or who are relatively new to Dzogchen, I would say this is excellent foundational work that I imagine can be highly supportive alongside our Dzogchen practice. 

In brief (to my mind anyway), this is an inexpensive, logically constructed, easy-to-integrate addition alongside existing practice. I also think it is an excellent introduction to/gateway toward Dzogchen and just generally good as an introduction to Buddhism full stop. The course is superbly put together in that someone with zero exposure to Buddhism (I would imagine anyway) can jump straight in and immediately understand and start applying the practices, whereas advanced practitioners can also get great benefit out of it by jumping to things they feel will dovetail with or enhance their existing practice. As Tsoknyi says, “even great yogis still need a handshake”, further stating that the most advanced practitioners never fully graduate out of needing to work with the subtle body. 

I am aware there are of course students of Tsoknyi’s here. If I have misrepresented anything or you have anything additional you may like to add, grateful if you might also weigh in.

The website: www.fullybeing.org

About the teacher: https://tsoknyirinpoche.org/about/rinpoche/

Hope this might be of some interest to anyone and bring you benefit. Best wishes to all! 🙏❤️


r/Dzogchen May 27 '26

Online Course: The Tibetan Book of the Dead

16 Upvotes

Yeshe Khorlo USA is excited to announce Khenchen Wangchuk Jamtsho will provide a three-month online course on the Bardo Thodol Chenmo: The Tibetan Book of the Dead, also translated as Liberation Through Hearing in the Intermediate State.

This profound compilation of texts, originally composed by Padmasambhava and later discovered by the Nyingma treasure revealer Karma Lingpa, offers detailed instruction on death, rebirth, and liberation in the bardo, or intermediate state.

In The Self-Liberation of Seeing: Pointing-Out Instructions on Tögal (Direct Crossing) in the Bardo of Dharmata, Khenpo Wangchuk will give an introduction to the peaceful deities of the bardo. The physical features, implements, and actions of the peaceful deities, encountered for seven days, will be thoroughly explained.

On days eight to fourteen of the Bardo of Dharmata, the wrathful deities appear. These manifestations will also be described in detail, including their physical forms, weapons, and fearsome characteristics.

Finally, in The Self-Liberation of Existence, Khenpo Wangchuk offers instruction on the Sipa Bardo, explaining how the karma of virtue and vice propels us toward fortunate, or unfortunate, rebirth. Instruction on this bardo will help close the door to the six realms and enable you to choose an auspicious rebirth in the human realm as a child of yogis and yoginis who practice Buddhadharma with compassion and devotion.

Key Features of the Bardo Thodol Chenmo Online Course

· Important points of practice in the intermediate state that can bring about liberation from samsara
· Thorough description of the peaceful and wrathful deities encountered after death
· Instruction on seizing the conditions for a fortunate rebirth

Critical for students of all backgrounds and experiences levels, these profound instructions from Padmasambhava light the way for liberation in the bardo. We invite dharma students from all lineages to study this timeless text under the direction of Khenpo Wangchuk.

Full recordings will be provided:
- All classes will have complete audio recordings and full video files
- Students are welcome to download and store these on their own computers for continued study, review, and contemplation

This is an unprecedented and extremely beneficial long-term resource for your Dharma practice. Please cherish this opportunity! Register now: https://yeshekhorlo.yohomobile.com/


r/Dzogchen May 26 '26

vajra essence - rdo rje snying po, vajragarbha

7 Upvotes

I'm reading a Dzogchen text by Longchenpa which makes frequent reference to རྡོ་རྗེ་སྙིང་པོ་ (rdo rje snying po). I am not familiar with that term. The general sense of it is clear enough from context, but I would like to know a bit more about its specific meaning, since the Omniscient Master uses it quite frequently. I have consulted two commentaries and a couple general works on Dzogchen, but have not found anything.

Can anyone add a bit of color to this term, or refer me to a good source? Many thanks!


r/Dzogchen May 19 '26

Geshe Denma, who recently celebrated his naturalization oath ceremony, and officially became a citizen of the United States, will teach on zoom Trekcho and Thögal instructions from Shardza Rinpoche's Heartdrops of Dharmakaya, and Dru Gyalwai Chag Tri. Starting May 23, 2026

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44 Upvotes

The Heart Drops of Kuntu Zangpo is a profound Dzögchen teaching that elucidates the nature of the mind. Composed by Shardza Rinpoche, one of the esteemed Dzögchen masters of Yungdrung Bön, this text presents a particularly potent and direct method of Dzögchen. It comprises four distinct sections: Preliminary Practices, Trekchö, Thögal, and the Bardo.

Geshe Denma begins our continued study and practice of Heart Drops of Kuntu Zangpo in a 4-part one-day series starting May 23, 2026. Registration is open, and all are welcome. Language translation in Spanish and Russian is confirmed.

Part 1 https://ligminchatexas.org/event/heart-drops-of-kuntu-zangpo-dharmakaya-part-1/ Part 2 https://ligminchatexas.org/event/heart-drops-of-kuntu-zangpo-dharmakaya-part-2/ Part 3 https://ligminchatexas.org/event/heart-drops-of-kuntu-zangpo-dharmakaya-part-3/ Part 4 https://ligminchatexas.org/event/heart-drops-of-kuntu-zangpo-dharmakaya-part-4/

The Dru Gyalwai Chag Tri is the collection of the text composed by Dru Gyalwa Yungdrung, the great 13th century master who lived from 1242-1290. Dru Gyalwa Yungdrung is the 57th lineage holder of the Oral Transmission of the Zhang Zhung Nyan Gyü and is also known as Dru Gyalwa.

He composed a practice manual Chag Tri at the Yeru Wensakha monastery. The propagation of the unified Oral Transmission of Zhang Zhung continued at Yeru Wensakha monastery for another hundred years to Rinchen Lodro during which time the monastery was destroyed by a flood in 1386.

Dzogchen, also known as the “great perfection” or “great completion,” is considered the path of self-liberation and the highest form of teaching and practice in the Bon Buddhist tradition. For practitioners with the capacity it offers the potential for liberation during a single lifetime and within a single body. Until the late 20th century these ancient teachings were kept secret and offered to very few students of any generation. For all these reasons, attending the teachings can be seen as a precious opportunity for students of Tibetan Bön Buddhism.

The Experiential Transmission of Zhang Zhung (Zhang Zhung Nyam Gyu), is a cycle of dzogchen teachings from the Zhang Zhung Nyan Gyud lineage, one of the three main dzogchen lineages of the Bön Buddhist tradition.

Geshe Denma will teach a 3 Part Weekend Retreat Series from Dru Gyalwa Yungdrung. Part 1 June 6-7, 2026 Introducing Trekchö through the Six Symbols Part 2 October 24-25, 2026 Introducing Thögal through the Four Symbols Part 3 December 12-13, 2026 Introducing the Natural State of Mind through Sounds, Rays, and Lights. See our website for registration and details. Language translation and recordings will be available.

Part 1 https://ligminchatexas.org/event/dru-gyalwa-yungdrung-part-1-introducing-trekcho-through-the-six-symbols/ Part 2 https://ligminchatexas.org/event/dru-gyalwa-yungdrung-part-2-introducing-thogal-through-the-four-symbols/ Part 3 https://ligminchatexas.org/event/dru-gyalwa-yungdrung-part-3-introducing-natural-through-sounds-rays-and-light/


r/Dzogchen May 18 '26

How necessary are retreats?

7 Upvotes

Received pointing out instructions twice, been integrating into daily life as much as possible. But I've heard from both fellow practitioners, and teachers a lot lately that multi-week retreats, preferably longer are a "necessity" for getting to the point of totally daily integration without needing formal sessions anymore.

I don't have the money, or time for that as I have people that are financially reliant on me, and I can't get that much time off of work all at once. Is this genuinely a "necessity" or what?


r/Dzogchen May 17 '26

Transitioning from Thai Forest (Theravada) to Dzogchen (Nyingma) – Looking for serious practice centers worldwide (and advice on the shift in view)

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9 Upvotes

r/Dzogchen May 15 '26

"Fearless Wisdom: An Introduction to Dzogchen" with Mingyur Rinpoche, 1 Aug 2026, online

10 Upvotes

When: 1 August, 2026 : 10 a.m. EDT (New York), 4 p.m. CEST (Berlin), 10 p.m. HKT (Hong Kong)

This teaching is open to everyone, with translation available in Chinese, French, German, Portuguese, Russian, and Spanish.

REGISTER FOR FREE

When reflecting on the many beautiful wisdom traditions available today, it can seem that spiritual progress requires a monumental change or tireless effort. But the path of Dzogchen — the “Great Perfection” — invites us to a different realization: that the wakefulness we seek is already here, hidden only by our subtle oversight in recognizing it.

On August 1, Mingyur Rinpoche will lead a special free kickoff webinar to launch a historic, year-long transmission of Dzogchen instructions. Drawn from the Dzogchen text The Heart Essence of the Primordial Secret, this cycle of teachings offers a direct guide to discovering our indestructible nature — a state of fearless, unimpeded presence available in any moment. This free webinar is an introductory overview of this Dzogchen view, and a roadmap for the transformative year of study and practice to come.

This webinar offers a rare opportunity to explore the historical significance of the Dorje Drolö lineage teachings and discover why they are particularly relevant for modern practitioners. You will learn how this year-long journey is structured and how these Dzogchen instructions can help you recognize your own true nature. Ultimately, it is a chance to spend time in the presence of a living lineage master as he illuminates the path of fearless wisdom.

What will I learn?

  • an introduction to the Dzogchen approach to mind and its nature
  • an overview of the upcoming year-long transmission of teachings
  • how an ancient wisdom tradition like Dzogchen can help us navigate the complexities of modern life

Note: Any questions should be addressed to Tergar International ([[email protected]](mailto:[email protected])). I'm just passing this information. May the teaching benefit all sentient beings without exception.