Showing posts with label teaching. Show all posts
Showing posts with label teaching. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 6, 2026

Death Sutra; 'The Seventh Seal' (film)


The Seventh Seal (Swedish Det sjunde inseglet) is a 1957 Swedish historical fantasy film written and directed by Ingmar Bergman.
 
Set in Sweden [3, 4] during the Black Death, it tells of the journey of a medieval knight (Max von Sydow) and a game of chess he plays with [Marathe personification of Death (Bengt Ekerot), who has come to take his life.
The Seventh Seal, 1957
Bergman developed the film from his own play Wood Painting. The title refers to a passage from the Bible's Book of Revelation, used both at the very start of the film and again towards the end, beginning with the words "And when the Lamb had opened the seventh seal, there was silence in heaven about the space of half an hour" [5].
 
Here, the motif of silence refers to the "silence of God," which is a major theme of the film [6, 7]. The Seventh Seal is considered a classic in the history of cinema, as well as one of the greatest films of all time.

It established Bergman as a director, containing scenes which have become iconic through homages, critical analyses, and parodies. More

Death comes rolling at us. Are we ready?
The Simile of the Mountain, Pabbatūpama Sutta (SN 3.2)

Thus have I heard. At one time the Buddha was staying in Sāvatthī.

King Pasenadi of Kosala came and respectfully sat to one side. The Buddha said to him, “Great King, where are you coming from in the middle of the day?”

“Venerable sir, there are anointed warrior caste kings who are infatuated with authority and obsessed with craving for sensual delights. They have attained stability in the country, conquering and occupying a vast territory. Today I have been busy fulfilling the duties of such a king.”

“What do you think, Great King? Suppose a trustworthy and dependable man were to come from the east. He would approach and say, ‘Please, Great King, know this: I come from the east. There I saw a huge mountain that reached the clouds. And it was coming this way, crushing all creatures in its path. Therefore, Great King, do as you see fit!’
  • This extraordinary threat looms also in an Upanishadic passage: “Even if both the mountain ranges, the southern and the northern, were to rush at him determined to level him, they would not succeed in leveling him” (Kauṣītaki Upanishad 2.13, translation by Olivelle).
“Then suppose another trustworthy and dependable man were to come from the west… a third from the north… and a fourth from the south, approaching to say, ‘Great King, know this. I come from [that direction]. There I saw a huge mountain that reached the clouds. And it was coming this way, crushing all creatures in its path. Therefore, Great King, do as you see fit!’

“Should such a dire threat arise—with so grim a loss of human life when human rebirth is so preciously rare—what would you do?”

“Venerable sir, what could I do but practice the Dhamma (Buddha's Teachings), practice morality, doing skillful and profitable kamma (deeds, actions)?”

“I say, Great King, I announce: Old age and death are advancing upon you. Since old age and death are advancing upon you, what shall you do?”

“Venerable sir, what can I do but practice the Dhamma, practice morality, doing skillful and profitable kamma?

“Venerable sir, there are anointed warrior kings who are infatuated with authority and obsessed with craving for sensual delights. They have attained stability in the country, conquering and occupying a vast territory. Such kings engage in battles with elephants, cavalries, chariots, or infantries. But there is no place, no domain for such battles when old age and death are advancing.

“In this royal court there are ministers of wise counsel who are capable of dividing an approaching enemy by wise counsel. But there is no place, no domain for such diplomatic battles when old age and death are advancing.

“In this royal court there is abundant gold, both minted and unminted, stored above and below ground. Using this wealth we can bribe an approaching enemy.
  • Bhūmigata is explained as “underground” at Bu Pj 2:4.2.1 (there bhūmaṭṭha). | Vehāsaṭṭha is explained as “above ground” at Bu Pj 2:4.5.1. | Upalāpetuṁ (“bribe”) is a means by which Vassakāra suggests the Vajjis can be overcome (DN 16:1.5.8, AN 7.22:12.3).
“But there is no place, no domain for such monetary battles when old age and death are advancing.

“When old age and death are advancing, what can I do but practice the Teachings, practice morality, doing skillful and profitable deeds?”

“That is true, Great King, so true! When old age and death are advancing, what can one do but practice Dhamma, practice morality, doing skillful and profitable karma?”

That is what the Buddha said. Then the Awakened One, the Teacher, summarized in verse:

“Suppose there were vast mountains
of solid rock pressed against the sky
drawing in from all sides
crushing the four quarters.

So, too, old age and death
advance upon all living beings—
warriors, priests, peasants,
menials, corpse-workers, and scavengers.
They spare no one.
They crush all under them.

There is nowhere for an elephant to take a stand,
neither chariot nor infantry.
Mountains cannot be defeated
by diplomatic battles or wealth.

That is why an astute person,
seeing what is good for oneself,
being wise, would place confidence (faith)
in the Awakened One, the Dhamma, and the Saṅgha.

Whoever lives by the Teaching
[skillful in actions of] body, speech, and mind,
is praised in this life
and departs to rejoice in heaven(s).”

Wednesday, June 11, 2025

Epic Rap Battle Tour (live in Hollywood)


ERB TOUR 2025 WORLD TOUR

What is history? Who knows? Who has time to read? If only there were a way to learn about historical figures and events of significance through music and rap lyrics, like Hamilton, but with wit, humor, and bravado galore. If only. There are Epic Rap Battles on YouTube that concern themselves with history. Imagine seeing the battle LIVE.

Tickets on sale now. Thursday, June 12th, 2025: LIVE in West Hollywood, Los Angeles @ THE ROXY 9009 West Sunset Blvd., Los Angeles. erbofhistory.com

WORLD TOUR DATES
  • Thursday, June 19, CARDIFF @ CLWB IFOR BACH 11 Womanby Street, Cardiff
  • Saturday, June 21, LONDON @ DINGWALLS 11 Camden Lock Pl, London
  • Monday, June 23, PARIS @ POINT EPHEMERE 200 Quai de Valmy, Paris
  • Wednesday, June 25, ANTWERP @ KAVKA ZAPPA August Leyweg 6, Antwerp
  • Friday, June 27 EINDHOVEN @ EFFENAAR Poppodium Effenaar, Eindhoven
  • Sunday, June 29 COLOGNE @ MTC CLUB Zülpicher Str. 10, Cologne
  • Tuesday, July 1 BERLIN @ PRIVATCLUB Skalitzer Str. 85-86, Berlin
  • Thursday, July 3 HAMBURG @ LOGO Grindelallee 5, Hamburg
  • Saturday, July 5 AMSTERDAM @ BOOM CHICAGO Rozengracht 117, Amsterdam
  • ERBofHistory.com, 2025; Eds., Wisdom Quarterly

Monday, July 22, 2024

Van life, scuba dive, Mono Lake, fail, numb

(Azul Unlimited) From Indonesia to California's Mono Lake, it's a dive adventure in the Lake of Pain

Hi, I'm a failure
Female Alan Watts gets phiyosophical about failing and being good with it

why I prefer being a Failure
(Diana the Human) July 16, 2024: #consciousness #enlightenment #awakening #phylosophy. Every video has the purpose of helping people feel [unconditional] love and peace within themselves. ⭐️ Support me paypal.com/paypalme/Dianatheh... ✨ Book a session with me forms.gle/zgXXVUHHTcmnWmnP9 🕊️ Connect with me t.me/dianathehuman 💛 Thank you. I love you.

  • Azul; Diana; Em Beihold ("Numb Little Bug"); Ananda (Dharma Buddhist Meditation), Crystal Q., Seven (eds.), Wisdom Quarterly

Thursday, March 2, 2023

A female Christianity: Gospel of Mary Mag'


Gnosticism: The Gospel of Mary Magdalene - Salvation through Self-Knowledge of the Soul and Mind
(ESOTERICA) Oct. 7, 2022. The (Gnostic?) Gospel of Mary provides a glimpse into a radically alternative form of ancient Christianity.
This is one where inner spiritual knowledge is the key to salvation, where women and men have equal standing based on their understanding of the message of the [Messiah/Maitreya] Savior figure, and one where the soul must rise above the demonic gatekeepers of the physical cosmos rather than to believe in credal [creed] formulas or even the salvific power of the death and resurrection of Jesus, the Anointed One.

In this lost Gospel, Mary Magdalene is the true inheritor of the spiritual Gospel of Christ rather than Peter, who attacks her solely based on her gender, despite her profound relationship with the Savior and her understanding of his secret teachings.

Subscribe. Consider supporting Esoterica by becoming a monthly Patron (patreon.com/esotericachannel) or making a one-time donation (paypal.me/esotericachannel). Thanks. All support is profoundly appreciated!

Recommended readings
  • Meyer - The Nag Hammadi Scriptures - 978-0061626005
  • King - The Gospel of Mary of Magdala: Jesus and the First Woman Apostle - 978-0944344583
  • Tuckett - The Gospel of Mary - 978-0199212132
  • De Boer - The Gospel of Mary: Listening to the Beloved Disciple - 978-0567082640
  • Brock - Mary Magdalene, The First Apostle - 978-0674009660

Thursday, October 20, 2022

Alan Watts: What is Reality, what is Emptiness?


Alan Watts: "Reality" is not what we think (Is this a simulation?)
(T&H - Inspiration & Motivation) Alan Watts, the greatest Western translator of Eastern philosophy, gives different ways of looking at our world -- the way it really is as distinct from our commonplace distortions -- in one of his great lectures on reality versus maya (illusion). #simulation #reality #maya

Saturday, September 3, 2022

Dalai Lama teaching youth, Summer '22


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(Dalai Lama) First piece of advice given on April 11, 2022. Day 1 of the 14th Dalai Lama's two-day Tibetan Buddhist teaching on Tsongkhapa's "In Praise of Dependent Origination" and "Foundation of All Excellent Qualities" for Tibetan youth took place on June 1, 2022, at the Main Tibetan Temple in Dharamsala, Himachal Pradesh, India. Tibet's spiritual leader also confers the 1,000-Armed Avalokiteshvara Empowerment.

Thursday, November 28, 2019

No Thanks, No Giving: Nat'l Day of Mourning

AJ+; Olivia B. Waxman (time.com, 11/21/19); Xochitl, Crystal Q. (eds.), Wisdom Quarterly
(AJ+) Thanksgiving is actually a National Day of Mourning: Native Americans in New England have been hosting an annual protest in Plymouth, Massachusetts since 1970. When was the "first Thanksgiving"? According to demonstrators, it was in 1637, when Gov. John Winthrop hosted a dinner to celebrate the return of soldiers who had massacred 700 Native Americans. These demonstrations are intended to highlight the myth that natives and pilgrims lived together peacefully and that "Indians" gave up their God-given land willingly for some trivial consumer goods the way European invaders claim.
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“I was teaching a lot of misconceptions.” We used to indoctrinate American kids about the “First Thanksgiving”
Lies My Teacher Told Me
On a recent Saturday morning in Washington, D.C., about two dozen secondary-and-elementary-school teachers experienced a role reversal.

This time, it was their turn to take a quiz: answer “true” or “false” for 14 statements about the famous meal known as the “First Thanksgiving.”

Did the people many of us know as pilgrims call themselves Separatists? Did the famous meal last three days? True and true, they shouted loudly in unison. Were the pilgrims originally heading for New Jersey? False.

But some of the other statements drew long pauses, or the soft murmurs of people nervous about saying the wrong thing in front of a group. Renée Gokey, Teacher Services Coordinator at the National Museum of the American Indian and a member of the Eastern Shawnee Tribe of Oklahoma, waited patiently for them to respond.

Uprooted near Wrigley Field (apmreports.org)
The teachers at this Nov. 9 workshop on “Rethinking Thanksgiving in Your Classroom” were there to learn a better way to teach the Thanksgiving story to their students. But first they had some studying to do.

When Gokey explained that early days of thanks celebrated the burning of a [Native American] Pequot village in 1637, and the killing of Wampanoag leader Massasoit’s son, attendees gasped audibly.

“I look back now and realize I was teaching a lot of misconceptions,” Tonia Parker, a second-grade teacher at Island Creek Elementary School in Alexandria, Virginia, told TIME.

It can sometimes seem that the way kids are taught about Thanksgiving, a staple of American education for about 150 years, is stuck in the past; an elementary school in Mississippi, for example, drew backlash for a Nov. 15 tweet that included photos of kids dressed up as “Native Americans,” with feather headbands and vests made of shopping bags.

But the approximately 25 teachers at that Washington workshop were part of a larger movement to change the way the story is taught. More

Saturday, May 6, 2017

The Buddha's "Path of Freedom"

Crystal Quintero, Amber Larson, Seth Auberon (eds.), Wisdom Quarterly, Wikipedia edit
The Path of Freedom (Vimuttimagga) is a Buddhist practice manual attributed to the enlightened Buddhist monk Ven. Upatissa, circa 1st or 2nd century (Vimuttimagga and Visuddhimagga: A Comparative Study by P.V. Bapat, 1937).

It was translated into Chinese by Ven. Sanghapala in the sixth century as the Jietuo dao lun (解脫道論). The original text (possibly in Pali or a Buddhist Hybrid Sanskrit) is no longer extant. But the Chinese version of the book has survived.

It was probably written in India and then later brought to Buddhist Sri Lanka. According to Ven. Analayo, some doctrines of The Path of Freedom seem to be associated with those attributed to the Abhayagiri Monastery by Dhammapāla, according to Ven. Analayo in The Treatise on the Path to Liberation (解脫道論) and The Path of Purification.

CONTENTS
Gal Viharaya 02.jpg
The path of freedom is self-purification.
The Path of Freedom recommends various meditation practices such as mindfulness of in-and-out breathing, disc meditation, and recollection of the virtues of the Buddha. Its chapters are (based on the translation by Ehara, Soma Thera, and Kheminda):
  1. Introductory Discourse (referencing the three trainings and ultimate freedom)*
  2. On Distinguishing Virtue
  3. On Austerities
  4. On Distinguishing Concentration
  5. On Approaching a Good Friend
  6. The Distinguishing of Behavior
  7. The Distinguishing of the Subjects of Meditation
  8. Entrance into the Subject of Meditation
  9. The Five Forms of Higher Knowledge
  10. On Distinguishing Wisdom
  11. The Five Methods (aggregates, sense organs, elements, conditioned arising, Truth)
  12. On Discerning Truth(s)
  • *The first chapter's introductory stanza in Pali is: Sīlaṃ samādhi paññā ca, vimutti ca anuttarā; Anubuddhā ime dhammā, gotamena yasassinā. This verse can be found in both the Greater Final Passing into Nirvana Sutra (DN 16) and the Anubuddha Sutra (AN 4.1). Sister Vajira and Francis Story (1998) translate this verse as: "Virtue, concentration, wisdom, and emancipation unsurpassed -- These are the principles realized by [the Buddha] Gotama the renowned."
English translation: The Path Of Freedom (Vimuttimagga) of Arahant Upatissa translated from the Chinese by Rev. N. R. M. Ehara, Soma Thera, Kheminda Thera (Buddhist Publication Society, Kandy, Ceylon). More
 
One book or two books?
The Path of Freedom (Vimuttimagga), which serves as a meditation manual, is broadly considered a great and important work.
 
It is similar to Buddhaghosa's The Path of Purification (Visuddhimagga), but it is less analytical and more practical in its treatment of the traditional Buddhist meditation objects.
  • [Both books are believed to have been written by Buddhaghosa, with Freedom being an earlier draft of the more compendious final product Purification.]
Both are commentaries, not from the Pali canon, but very relevant to it, particularly to the section of the Pali canon called the "Higher Teachings" (Abhidhamma), which contains the higher or ultimate teachings and more abstract philosophical treatises of the Buddha.
 
There is considerable variance between traditions as to who is given credit for this great work, although it is widely held that it was written centuries after the time of the Buddha.

Monday, September 19, 2016

How to meditate Zen (Master Dogen)

Ven. Eihei Dogen's Fukanzazengi (1227), Soto Zen Text Project, Stanford University (translation); Jeff Albrizze (PasaDharma.org), Dhr. Seven, Wisdom Quarterly
Carrying firewood: First the ecstasy then the laundry...but someone forgot the ecstasy.
"Learn to take the backward step that turns the light and shines it inward." - Dogen
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Universally Recommended Zazen Instructions
This pivotal Zen text, which was written in 1227 by Eihei Dogen, the Japanese monk who brought Zen from China to Japan, was one of the first pieces he wrote when he returned.

It opens with an introduction that answers the question that led him to go to China in the first place: 

If we are originally endowed with the Buddha nature [the potential for enlightenment], why is it been necessary for us to seek enlightenment or even to engage in spiritual practice?
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The Way is originally perfect and all-pervading. How could it be contingent on practice and realization? The true vehicle is self-sufficient. What need is there for special effort?

Indeed, the whole body is free from dust. Who could believe in a means to brush it clean? It is never apart from this very place; what is the use of traveling around to practice?
 
Stare until the heart-mind settles.
Yet, if there is a hairsbreadth deviation, it is like the gap between heaven and earth [lofty space and firm ground]. If the least like or dislike arises, the mind [heart] is lost in confusion.

Suppose you are confident in your understanding and rich in enlightenment, gaining the wisdom that knows at a glance, attaining the Way and clarifying the mind, arousing an aspiration to reach for the heavens.

You are playing in the entrance way, but you are still are short of the vital path of emancipation.
 
Start sitting with a group; it's easier.
Consider the Buddha: although he was wise at birth, the traces of his six years of upright sitting can yet be seen. As for Bodhidharma [who brought Buddhism to China from South India], although he had received the mind-seal, his nine years of facing a wall is celebrated still. If even the ancient sages were like this, how can we today dispense with wholehearted practice?

Therefore, put aside the intellectual practice of investigating words and chasing phrases, and learn to take the backward step that turns the light and shines it inward. Body and mind of themselves will drop away, and your original face will manifest. If you want to realize such, get to work on such right now.

Roshi Jeff Albrizze
For practicing Zen, a quiet room is suitable. Eat and drink moderately [not so much as to become dull and drowsy, not so little as to be restless and hungry]. Put aside all involvements and suspend all affairs.

Do not think "good" or "bad." Do not judge true or false. Give up the operations of mind, intellect, and consciousness; stop measuring with thoughts, ideas, and views. Have no designs on becoming a Buddha. How could that be limited to sitting or lying down?

At your sitting place, spread out a thick mat and  put a cushion on it. Sit... More
  • Want to teach Buddhist meditation in LA? Contact us.

Friday, June 3, 2016

When the Buddha was a famous fighter

Dhr. Seven, Amber Larson (OPINION), Ashley Wells (ed.), Wisdom Quarterly; acidcow.com
Heroes of traditional Indian wrestling, known as kushti (acidcow.com)
That's making my back worse, Bodhisattva! You win! (dannyghitis.photoshelter.com)
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Traditional India (kushtiwrestling)
The Buddha was in some ways still Siddhartha Gautama. That is to say, although he was changed irreversibly by the purification of knowing-and-seeing things as they truly are, on the outside the Buddha was still Siddhartha.

The profound change is called a "change of lineage" (gotrabhu). The enlightened -- from stream enterers to arhats -- are no longer like ordinary worldlings caught in endless wandering in samsara, the Wheel of Life and Death. They are either liberated or destined for complete liberation in no more than seven lives.

How was the Buddha still Siddhartha? So long as the Buddha carried on rather than relinquishing all for final nirvana, karma was still operating producing its exponential results of past actions of thoughts, words, and deeds.

In a past life, the Buddha explained, he had been a fighter, boxer, or wrestler demonstrating his strength and skill. Unfortunately, on one occasion, he (the Bodhisatta, the Buddha-to-be, the being striving for enlightenment over countless lives) lifted his opponent and threw him down on the mat in the ring. This act broke the opponent's back.
 
Ah, you're breaking my back! Your wrestling is too rough! (muslimmartialarts.com)
  • Kushti, or traditional Indian wrestling, is not just a sport but an ancient subculture. Wrestlers live and train together under strict rules. They may not drink, smoke, or have sex. Their life must be pure. Kushti wrestlers live in gyms called akhara with strict diets (acidcow.com).
That deed would long haunt the Bodhisatta, so much so that in his final birth, now as the Buddha teaching monastics late into the night, bringing them to realization of the path then handing monks and novices over to Ven. Sariputra who brought them to stream entry. Ven. Sariputra, the chief male disciple foremost in wisdom, then handed monks and novices over to Ven. Maha Moggallana, chief male disciple foremost in psychic powers, who brought them to full enlightenment (arhatship).
  • Wisdom Quarterly Editors: One suspects that the Buddha took the same care in teaching the nuns because he designated two counterpart "chief female disciples," Ven. Khema (foremost in wisdom) and Ven. Uppalavana (foremost in psychic powers). In this way females could receive effect8ve training to achieve the heights of liberating-insight the same as male monastics.
India's kushi wrestlers still compete in age old-contests (Reuters/ibtimes.com)
In a pit on bare dirt, traditional Indian wrestling gets brutal (acidcow.com).
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This arduous work of speaking and teaching late into the night was made almost impossible by back pains, which forced the Buddha to lay down to rest it. He would hand over the job of teaching to a disciple such as Ven. Sariputra.

It was that karma, possibly detailed in a Jataka Tale or merely alluded to when explaining the necessity of attending to his back, that ripened and created a burden many would think the Buddha had risen above. It was, indeed, possible for the Buddha to use meditative absorptions (jhanas) to tolerate all manner of physical pain and even to extend life. Nevertheless, fighting had very terrible consequences.

Soldiers, butchers, actors, comedians, and others should beware of the danger of karma bearing results in the future for occupations we think innocent and admirable. Most of us would like to be famous, revered, esteemed, and long remembered for some trivial fame in this life.
Did the Buddha still suffer?
So the question may come up, Could the Buddha (not Prince Siddhartha but the Awakened One who had undergone the life-changing experience of enlightenment) suffer and feel pain? Wasn't that all done away with at enlightenment when he glimpsed (directly experienced) nirvana?

The short answer is that seeing, touching, directly experiencing nirvana, while it leads to stream entry and the first stage of enlightenment, it does not end suffering. Reaching the various stages, which can go quite quickly with practice, and even getting to the final stage of full enlightenment (arhatship) still does not end pain. There is pain so long as there is a body. Psychological suffering is optional, so suffering has been done away with. But one definition of dukkha is "pain" (dukkhata).

That still exists until final nirvana -- or parinirvana -- which is not death but often gets called passing away. It is not death because what being was there ever to die? Only suffering (dukkha) came into being, only it passes away. It is not a person because those things by which we conceived or measured a person (the Five Aggregates) are no longer incessantly arising and passing away. One is free of rebirth and all disappointment.

But to say anymore of nirvana necessarily leads to wrong views or the holding of views about it. It is incomprehensible by words and concepts. It is not like our present experience, and it is not the opposite of it. The Buddha described it with similes, but by using negative terms (such as not this and not that), people frequently misconstrue it as nothingness or either of the twin wrong views called eternalism and annihilationism, which logics dictates, "If it's not one, it has to be the other" when, in fact, they are both wrong. Here the matter is explained in more detail: buddhism.stackexchange.com/questions/10793

Tuesday, June 26, 2012

Science: It's a girl thing! (comedy video)

Wisdom Quarterly; (EU video)
What might a sexist commercial about men look like if society wanted less science out of us and more self-defeating behavior like alcohol and pornography addiction?
   
The following public service announcement (PSA) was published by the science commission of the European Union. It is part of a campaign designed to attract more females to a career in science. The commission says the inadvertently sexist video has to "speak their language to get their attention."
   
They add that it was intended to be "fun, catchy" and strike a chord with young people. "I would encourage everyone to have a look at the wider campaign and the many videos already online of female researchers talking about their jobs and lives," the commission added.


(Seattle P.I.) A European Union PSA was supposed to encourage girls to consider a career in the sciences. Instead, it turned out to be a big embarrassment, with critics (and pretty much everyone) saying it’s sexist and insulting... peppered with the words “lipstick,” “stiletto,” and “gawking dude.” More

Thursday, January 26, 2012

Bjork to teach science in New York (video)

Wisdom Quarterly


Avant garde Icelandic bhumi-devi Bjork, 46, is getting ready to teach high school science at the New York Hall of Science. Her course will mix interactive exhibits and music workshops as they relate to her latest release "Biophilia" (love of biotic life), which now has a number of associated Apple iPad apps everyone can access.


They say she's a crazy cat lover, but she's really a scientist.
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Tuesday, November 29, 2011

"Tizzy" the Traveling Priestess (video)

"Travelling-Priestess" Tiziana Stupia (travelblog.org)
() In the footsteps of Alexander the Great: adventurer Michael Wood embarks on a 2000-mile journey from Greece to India with Afghan guerrillas to the Kalasha.

I am a Sicilian-German woman who lived in the UK for 15 years. I left England in 2007 for an overland trip (mainly by train) to northern Asia that has taken me far from Leamington Spa.



I traveled through [Christian and Pagan] Germany, the Czech Republic, Poland, Russia, [to Buddhist] Siberia, Mongolia, China, Tibet, Nepal, and [Muslim] Pakistan, where I celebrated the Winter Solstice festival with the [Pagan European] Kalash tribe in the Hindu Kush mountains.
I then spent five months in north India, studying yoga, meeting mystics, learning ancient [Brahminical] fire ceremonies, and working as an English teacher.

I never really settled again after that and have been living in different places in Europe.


In the autumn of 2010, I crossed the Atlantic Ocean by cargo ship from Germany to Charleston, South Carolina.

I then made my way through the USA by train to New Mexico, where I lived for nine months to study at The Ayurvedic Institute.

I have just completed another big trip and crossed the Pacific Ocean by cargo ship from Savannah, USA to Sydney, Australia. I currently live in Queensland.


It is my dream to travel the whole world without flying, to appreciate the journey and not just the destination. I am an Ayurvedic consultant, yoga teacher, writer, and priestess.



So my focus on these trips is usually on the ancient rituals and customs of the indigenous tribes and current population of the countries I visit. I spend much time connecting with sacred sites and energies of the land.
More
Hidden India has many Buddhist treasures
Recognized by UNESCO as a world heritage site, the 1,000-year-old Tabo Buddhist monastery, situated in northern India's Spiti Valley by the Spiti River, sits at an altitude of 13,000 feet. It is located in the Himalayan state of Himachal Pradesh, India. It is full of treasures like 1,000-year-old wall paintings on its walls drawn in the same style as the Ajanta and Ellora caves. They are preserved by the cold, high mountain air with little rainfall.