Dakini Power: Twelve Extraordinary Women Shaping the Transmission of Tibetan Buddhism in the West

by Michaela Haas

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Many of us dream of exchanging our day-to-day responsibilities for a heartfelt life full of purpose, but few of us ever get around to doing something about it. The women featured in Dakini Powerandmdash;contemporary teachers of Tibetan Buddhism, both Westerners and Asians, who teach in the Westandmdash;are the exception.

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3 reviews
I recently enjoyed reading Diane Munkpo's Dragon Thunder about her life as the wife of Chogyam Trungpa and the early days of Naropa, and yet I finished it wanting more. Around the same time we previewed a video of teachings of Elizabeth Mattis-Namgyel and I thought "Wow, what an amazing women teacher, and how beautifully clear are her teachings, how did she slip past unknown to us?"

After seeing her, I still had no idea she was married to Dzigar Kongtrul Rinpoche, nor that she was one of twelve women practitioner/teachers featured in Dakini Power.

In Dakini Power some of these women are well know, some less, some monastics, some married, some married to their teachers, all are interviewed about their life, practices and teachings, and
show more each interview has a lovely honesty and depth.

An engaging and fruitful read. Highly recommended.
show less
I never understood the attention focused on Tibetan Buddhism. After reading this I want to learn more about China and Tibet. The nuns and teachers featured are fascinating. I learned so much from them, not just from their bio's but how they handle life circumstances and present the dharma. I would tell anyone if they are female and considering teaching the dharma, read this book.
Note: their is a undelying current that runs through this book. Almost everyone that is featured in the book has met Chogyam Trungpa. He was one of the earliest Tibetan buddhist teachers. He also loved women. The those who married Tibetan teachers have met his wife Diana Mukpo. She is a support to those women. Info about her relationship with Chogyam can be show more found in her book: Dragon Thunder: My Life with Chogyam Trungpa. show less
In diesem Buch porträtiert Michaela Haas 12 Frauen, die im Buddhismus einen hohen Rang inne haben oder hatten. Viele der Frauen begannen ihr Leben als ganz "normale Westler" und begegneten dem Buddhismus erst im Erwachsenenalter. Viele der Frauen sind Nonnen oder Gefährtinnen/Ehefrauen von ranghohen Buddhisten. Das Buch war gut zu lesen und unterhaltsam. Als am Buddhismus interessierte, aber nicht sehr bewanderte Leserin sind mir die Frauen fremd geblieben. Es hat sich mir nicht erschlossen, was es bedeutet, wenn diese Frauen als "verwirklicht" bezeichnet wurden oder Ermächtigungen und Übertragungen gaben. Es ist für mich absolut nachvollziehbar, dass die Meditationspraxis positive Wirkung auf den Meditierenden hat. Aber der Nutzen show more einer Jahre währenden Meditation bzw. eines jahrelanges Retreats in Berghöhlen unter widrigsten Umständen erschließt sich mir nicht. Durch das ganze Buch zieht sich auch immer wieder der Hinweis darauf, dass einige hoch angesehene männliche Führungspersönlichkeiten des Buddhismus arge Schwierigkeiten mit ihrem ausschweifenden Sexleben und auch Alkoholismus hatten. Trotzdem schmälerte dieses "Fehlverhalten" aber keineswegs ihr Ansehen bei den Buddhisten. Vor diesem Hintergrund hat mich das Buch nicht inspiriert. Ganz im Gegenteil erinnert es mich fatal an die Institution "Kirche" der Christen. Der reine Glaube mag einem Menschen zusagen oder nicht, die Institution dahinter sollte man mit großer Vorsicht und einer gehörigen Portion Skepsis betrachten. show less

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Michaela Haas, PhD, PhD, has a history with posttraumatic growth. From watching her grandfather build a successful, fulfilled life despite his severe childhood affliction with polio to interviewing torture victims and Holocaust survivors, she wondered how some people emerged from their pain wiser for the experience. Inspired by these encounters, show more the reporter, television host, author, scholar, and twenty-year student of meditation began to see common threads that help the healing. By connecting pioneering research to ancient Buddhist wisdom, she gives the reader a mind-body-spirit context for growth. Visit MichaelaHaas.com for more information. show less

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Genres
Nonfiction, Religion & Spirituality, Biography & Memoir, Sexuality and Gender Studies, Philosophy, General Nonfiction
DDC/MDS
294.3ReligionOther religionsDharmic religionsBuddhism
LCC
BQ850 .H33Philosophy, Psychology and ReligionBuddhismBuddhismBiographyCollective
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English, German
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ISBNs
5
ASINs
4