Mandala Thangka
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Thanka Print (Acid Free Paper) Mandala of Green Tara $12.96 Seated on a lotus, Tara is surrounded by her twenty-one manifestations. Green Tara is ever ready to respond to the suffering of beings afflicted with emotional obscurations…. |
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Hidden World: Tibetan Sand Mandala $25.00 A group of Tibetan Buddhist Monks from the Drepung Gomang Monastery in South India builds a Sand Mandala at the Dreamcatcher gift shop in Skippack, Pennsylvania in this 30-minute documentary. They explain the purpose of the sand mandala’s construction and ritual dismantling. The intricate details of this beautiful piece of visual art’s construction are shown over the course of several days, conc… |
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Buddhas of the Celestial Gallery $45.84 In the tradition of Celestial Gallery and Goddesses of the Celestial Gallery, Romio Shrestha’s latest large-format art book gathers striking Tibetan-style mandala paintings featuring the Buddha. Each book is hand-bound and two-feet tall, with artwork from master painter Romio Shrestha and his team of artisan monks, who render postmodern interpretations of an age-old Tibetan artistic tradition. Mad… |
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Celestial Gallery $75.00 Opening the oversized pages of Celestial Gallery is akin to entering a grand museum. This impressive, high-quality production features White Tara, Green Tara, the Medicine Buddha, and many other celestials, while lending new meaning to the terms full-size and full-color. Four color printing with spot varnish throughout…. |
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Thanka Painting of the Tsang-Pa Tradition of Tibet In this book, the renowned Master Thangka Painter put down in writing his life story and the process through which he under went to become one of the established masters. The book is bilingual, Tibetan and English. Description and the scale of the Thangka’s are both explained in English as well as in English. The book contains many original collections of his Thangka in rich colours. The book … |
How to Meditate When Working
Learning how to meditate at work can make a big difference in your perception of your workplace, and even start to make it relaxing and, dare I say, enjoyable.
We all like to decorate our desks with things that remind us of home and family, holidays and happy memories. By all means do this, but keep part of your work space for contemplative materials that can help you practice your meditation techniques. Here are some suggestions:
To the right of your desk pin a postcard or drawing of something that you consider spiritually intriguing – a rose window, the Virgin Mary, a Tibetan thangka, a native American medicine wheel, a mandala or an Indian yantra. Choose a picture that strikes a chord with you – it may be simple or very elaborate, if you’re artistic, you might want to make your own drawing.
Straight ahead of you, pin a picture of a tranquil landscape in which you’d like to imagine yourself. Whenever you feel work oppressing you practice visualizing yourself in that landscape, with its particular weather, smells and sounds.
If you are a sensual type, something you can touch will be appealing. Bring a natural object such as a stone, a crystal, a piece of bark, a shell, a dried flower and keep it in your top drawer. Don’t leave it on your desk as you need to keep its associations undiluted.
Tranquil Tunes
An excellent aid to office meditation is your own private headset, though naturally this should not interfere with your work. Choose natural sounds or even white noise to block out the world around you. Or you could make a recording of yourself talking through a visualization.
Yantras
These are abstract geometrical mandalos in the Hindu tradition. They are used as a visual focus for meditators. The most well-known is the shri yantra which shows the meeting of the masculine and feminine force, represented respectively by upward- and down ward pointing triangles. Hindus may also use the image of a god or goddess as the departure point for meditation.
Intention and Attention
The best way to carry out any work, whether at home, at the office, or out and about – mundane or heavy weight – is with complete mindful ness – that is, with all the attention and concentration you can muster and a sense of living one hundred percent in the present. This involves working with ‘intention’. Then you will find the task of relaxing rewarding and even joyful. It will certainly be creative.
For some jobs, depending on your character, that’s easy, but all of us sometimes have to do things we dislike or would simply rather not tackle, and here’s the challenge for your new found meditative skills.
Learn To Meditate To Make Hard Work Easier
At the beginning of a particular task – the more onerous the better – tell yourself that you will give it your complete attention. If it’s something truly hideous, give yourself an achievable time limit, say, 20 minutes.
So, close your eyes for a moment, take a breath and tell yourself, ‘I am going to give my complete attention to doing the accounts (for example) for 20 minutes and then I’m allowed a break.’
You may have to do a lot of 20-minute chunks in order to complete the task, but you will find that you can go for longer and longer periods, until eventually you don’t have to give yourself an incentive.
Then do your job with complete mindfulness. Every time your mind strays from the task in front of you, bring it gently back, just as you would in meditation.
Think of your work as being rather like climbing a steep hill. You need to set an easy pace that won’t over-stretch you. If you concentrate on each step as you take it, making sure that it is the most perfect step, that your weight is beautifully distributed, that it is easy to manage, then suddenly you arrive at the crest of the hill.
Before you know it the task is done and you have an enormous sense of achievement. Perhaps it was even fun too.
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December 26th, 2009
Angie 
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