Tenzin Wangyal Rinpoche, a lama in the B n tradition of Tibet, presently resides in Charlottesville, Virginia. He is the founder and director of Ligmincha Institute, an organization dedicated to the study and practice of the teachings of the B n tradition. He was born in Amritsar, India, after his parents fled the Chinese invasion of Tibet and received training from both Buddhist and B n teachers, attaining the degree of Geshe, the highest academic degree of traditional Tibetan culture. He has been in the United States since 1991 and has taught widely in Europe and America.
In clear and lucid language, Tenzin Wangyal Rinpoche offers an amazingly rich array of traditional practices which, when practiced with a skilled teacher, can powerfully transform body, speech, and mind. --Jack Kornfield, author of A Path with Heart Traditional as well as innovative this book--a complement to his other work and also outstanding on its own--opens to supremely important narratives descriptions and exercises to introduce us most deeply to our own bodies. --Anne Carolyn Klein Rice, author of Heart Essence of the Vast Expanse: a Story of Transmission. Rinpoche does a great service in making these ancient and powerful teachings available to all of us.This insightful and practical book is an invaluable resource. --Sharon Salzburg author of Real Happiness With integrity and deep fidelity to these pinnacle teachings, Tenzin Wangyal shows us in very practical ways how we can touch our own depths and unlock the peace, confidence, warmth, and joy that lie within us all just beneath the surface. --Reginald Ray, author of Touching Enlightenment Tenzin Wangyal Rinpoche's latest book Tibetan Yogas of Body Speech and Mind (Snow Lion 2011) gives readers practical exercises from the Tibetan Boen tradition for working with and transforming what he calls pain body, pain speech, and pain mind. Treating each of these distinct domains of the individual as a whole the author introduces practices of physical movement for the body healing sounds and mantra for the speech and visualizations and breathing techniques for the mind. This is done with a delicate balance of Boen Dzogchen technical terms such as the body of light and nine pranas juxtaposed with the author's anecdotes and analogies. For instance Tenzin Wangyal writes how Micky Rourke's character Randy The Ram in the film The Wrestler exemplifies someone characterized by the pain body. The book contains numerous instructive photos, tables, and figures. --Buddhadharma Boen Master Tenzin Wangyal Rinpoche's Tibetan Yogas of Body Speech and Mind shows readers a variety of teachings and practices related to these three doors to enlightenment. Among highlights are: Dzogchen practices to achieve the body of light, mantras that provide healing through sounds, and energy practices to enhance clarity of mind. Some of the most compelling reading is provided by his discussion of sound. A chapter on speech includes teachings that range from the readily accessible... Whether, physically, energetically, or psychologically, we experience ourselves mainly through our pain, Rinpoche writes.And because it is so familiar it becomes an important door through which we discover our bigger self--and through this discovery release our pain. --Tricycle