One aspect of Kalachakra is to harmonize our external and internal environments. In this series of the Holistic Life Series for Land of Shambhala, we explore the ancient art forms of Feng Shui and Sache also known as geomancy as a way to cure, to enhance and to harmonize the external energies focusing on gathering then favorable conditions from one side and from the other vanishing the unfavorable ones.
We will illuminate how the geomancy is like a medicine of the human housing environment harmonizing the shapes, the materials, the colors, the elements and several kind of energies to bring favorable conditions and overcome difficult situations. The geomancy is not mysterious or magic but is part of the interdependent law of “Karma” based on causes and conditions. Using geomancy is a cause to create better harmony at a personal level or for a whole community. Join us for this exciting discussion and learn some practical tips to help harmonise your environment, opening the door to more favorable conditions to arise.
ABOUT DAVID MARTIN
I met the Buddhism in 2004 through the Gelugpa tradition and started studying in 2005 the main Buddhist texts, the meditations with the “Foundation for the Preservation of the Mahayana Tradition” (FPMT) during the five years Basic Program. During this period I met the Geomancy and received the complete transmission of the Chinese tradition “Feng Shui” from the Gelug Monk Jampa Ludrup who had been the Lama Zopa Rinpoche‘s intendant and later I received the transmissions of the Tibetan tradition “Sa Che” from Dr. Nida Chenagtsang, recognized Master of Sowa Rigpa in the Ngakpas and Yuthok
Nyingthig lineage.
Tibetan medicine may indeed derive from thousands of years of Tibetan and Buddhist tradition, yet its essence is timeless. Learn what makes this unbroken Buddhist healing system work with grace, ease, and power to effect lasting change.
Traditional Tibetan medicine, known as Sowa Rigpa is one of the most ancient sciences being used for thousands of years. On the one hand, it relies on indigenous Himalayan knowledge and on the other hand, it includes a systematic syncretism that allows it to interact with all other medical traditions, even with modern day science. As health affects us all, it’s good to have some understanding of how to preserve balance and how to manage a disorder when it arises, and to be able to restore good health. In this talk we speak with Katy Otero who is a practitioner of Traditional Tibetan Medicine who studies with Dr Nida Chenagtsang in Europe.