Went yesterday to see Traleg Kyabgon Rinpoche at the new Kagyu Centre in Harris Park (see this earlier post.).
I will confess that in the days of the tiny centre mentioned in the previous blog post, I got off to a bad start with Traleg Rinpoche’s talks. I had seen him teach once many years ago in Hamburg, but that was short and long ago, and I couldn’t remember very much about it.
The format in the days of the tiny centre in Rozelle was to have a half-hour or so of shiné (silent meditation), a touch of “chanting” in English, and then about half an hour listening to an unedited recording of Traleg Rinpoche taken from some previous course. Now the thing is that TR has a somewhat hesitant – if that’s the word – way of talking, where he will often start a sentence two or three times before it is complete. At the time, 2006, I suspected that in the flesh this would not be a problem, and I can now confirm that from experience. I think it is because he thinks, and formulates his sentences, with a great deal of care; in the flesh feels as if it is within the bounds of the hesitations, ums, ers and corrections that we all make when we are speaking rather than reading off a page. However, at the time that the tapes were made he was also suffering from some kind of chest infection which multiplied the effect, and the final result was a recording that should never, without a great deal of editing, have been inflicted on the innocent public. The waiting for one false start or another to finally move through the sentence and make a statement became excruciating! It was therefore very pleasing to confirm that the tape was a very unfair representation of the reality.
So after a vacuum that persisted for some four or more years, there are now not none, not one, but two Karma Kagyu centres in Sydney. It will be interesting to see what kind of relationship develops between them. Anyway, here are some devotees relaxing after listening to the talk on mindfulness:
And here is evidence that some people were still not as mindful as they might have been:
