related projects

Lord Mukpo Legacy & Studies: The teachings and legacy of Chögyam Trungpa.

Western Mountain Cinema: Documentary films by Bill Scheffel.

I Ching Sudies & Consultaions: Classes and individual consultations offered by Bill Scheffel.

Ibn Arabi Studies: Intersections between the great 13th Century Sufi saint & the drala principle.

Travel Writing: Travel without guidebooks & the origin of the Western Mountain.

Cambodia: Writings, reflections, visions.


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A dharma heir of Shunryu Suzuki-roshi, Jakusho Kwong-roshi, who once went by the name Bill Kwong, founded Sonoma Mountain Zen Center in 1973. Along the way, this founding required considerable tenacity and courage, it occurred through a stream of accidents, challenges, a bout with testicular cancer and, no doubt, the obdurate blessings of Dogen and the other Soto Zen forerunners. Kwong-roshi’s wife Shinko (who once went by the name Laura) has also been an essential part of this founding, a project done often on pennies, a large organic garden and a hard-working though joyful discipline. Roshi and Shinko raised a family of four boys in a house adjacent to the Zen Center.  Equally impressive, they have simply stayed put, running the Zen Center decade after decade with a handful of residents, keeping the kitchen stocked, the garden growing, the library open and, of course, practicing in the zendo, beginning each day with 5:00 A.M. service and zazen.

It is well known that Zen includes this kind of hard work. Giving attention to our mundane and necessary tasks of daily life (with humor!) is an expression of love, an invoking of drala, as well as the way of Dogen, the founder of Soto Zen, who outlined rules not only for the zendo but for the bath house and kitchen. The fulfillment of Dogen’s transcendent common-sense advice can be seen at Sonoma Mountain even when all the machinery is idle. If the kitchen is empty that also means it is clean, since dishes are never left to be washed the next day, and every meal-taker - including Roshi and Shinko - together wash, dry and put away what was used until every bowl is stacked, every drain board spotless.

Bodhidharma

In this ten-minute video, Roshi talks with great feeling about Chögyam Trungpa Rinpoche, citing in particular Trungpa’s “support.” Those of us who were fortunate enough to meet Chögyam Trungpa knew that support. On the one hand, Trungpa was so unwilling (unable!) to give validation to our faltering, blustering and embarrassed grasping at a self that in meeting him one often felt one was talking to a cave. On the other hand, a three-sentence conversation with Chögyam Trungpa could become a provision for the rest of one’s life. In that moment you knew he knew you, trusted you, believed in you (even though you might not).

This is the kind of support Berthold Brecht wrote of in his poem about the “good people”:

All their solutions still contain problems.
At dangerous moments on sinking ships
Suddenly we see their eyes full on us.
Though they do not entirely approve of us as we are
They are in agreement with us none the less.

Kwong-roshi is fond of citing the path of the Zen master, “One continuous mistake” (another form of solutions still containing problems). Kwong-roshi was perhaps offered a larger life-boat than the rest of us; after all, he was chosen to be a dharma-heir - that is a privilege and a motivator! Suzuki-roshi must have seen in Bill Kwong someone who wasn’t interested in wasting his life. So he tossed him that life boat-mill stone. Chögyam Trungpa appeared many times in Kwong-roshi’s like to tell him, so to speak, “You can carry it, you can float.” At seventy-two, Kwong-roshi is someone to meet if you would like to see this kind of genuineness, humor and courage at work.

ZenCenkitchen

 

 

 

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Kunga Dawa, or Richard Arthure at the time, met Chögyam Trungpa Rinpoche in 1966. Kunga was married, pursuing a career as an actor and had just been introduced to his first experience with LSD. In this twenty-one minute video, Kunga described the intricate, accidental and uncanny path of search and discovery that ultimately led him to Chögyam Trunpa . At that time, Chögyam Trungpa was a relatively anonymous young Tibetan studying at Oxford and living in a basement apartment with two of his compatriots who, though essentially penniless he nevertheless felt he would soon be "founding a center."

In the journey from hallucinogenic drug, to reading Allen Watts or the Tibetan Book of the Dead and to seeking out a guru, this story is both a document of the spiritual search, circa 1960s, and the meeting of mind between teacher and student. Now living in Boulder, Colorado, Kunga remains a dedicated practitioner of meditation and of the Buddhist path he was introduced to forty-four years ago. Kunga's daily practice is one of remembering, moment to moment and as much as he can, Chögyam Trungpa - which is the same nowness-memory as recognizing ones nature of mind, ones suchness, our essential and unchanging awake.

CTRinsky

Origina photo of CTR by unknown photographer. Photo-collage by William Karnet.

 

LORD MUKPO LEGACY  & STUDIES

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Photo by Cynthia McAdams

I became a student of Chögyam Trungpa Rinpoche in 1976. Later in his life, Chögyam Trungpa would occasionally use his family name of Mukpo - his name before he was recognized and enthroned as a tulku - and would sometimes be introduced as "Lord Mukpo"; this is the name I prefer to use for him because it most evokes his presence in my heart.

Spiritual discipline touches us in unique and ultimately very personal ways. The teachings of Lord Mukpo were vast, touched on every aspect of human experience and were ever evolving. They left a collective legacy but also one unique to each individual who studied with him. The imprint and potential of his gifts live inside each of us, his students, almost like a personal terma that can be revealed if we remain faithful to him, to ourselves and to the exertion needed to discover it. For his students, every year the realization of what he gave us only grows more immense. Perhaps every day – a hundred times a day! - we ask ourselves what we can do to continue his legacy and repay his love.

The purpose of Lord Mukpo Legacy & Studies is to document and contribute this unfolding legacy, particularly through the stories, vision (and visions) and work of those he touched and continues to touch, including those who never met Lord Mukpo during his lifetime (because his living presence or energy very much still occurs in people's lives - not only through reading his books or hearing his student's teach, but also through dreams or through his intangible presence).

When I speak of Lord Mukpo's students, I mean anyone who is touched by his teachings, life and presence. The legacy of any great teacher or human being is not confined to those who knew him or her, and is in no way proprietary. I invite anyone to share in and to potentially contribute to this project. - Bill Scheffel

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LORD MUKPO LEGACY CINEMA I CHING IBN ARABI TRAVEL CAMBODIA

Peter Orlovsky discussing the naming of Howl and reading his poem, Snail Poem.