Review: Natural Brilliance, by Irini Rockwell

Review: Natural Brilliance, by Irini Rockwell


Review: Natural Brilliance, by Irini Rockwell

Posted: 12 May 2012 07:00 AM PDT



Natural Brilliance is a beautiful book. Its presentation, from the tastefully flowery cover to the layout of the pages is nicely done, with the tidy use of little boxes that contain useful information generously sprinkled through its pages. It looks a bit like a typical new age work, with its pastel shades and somewhat misty references to Buddhist. Nowadays, there are many such books about, or inspired by, Buddhist teachings. Many of these take the form of new agey feel-good works, uplifting if a little vague, and bearing only a smidgin of a resemblance to the teachings of the Buddha. But is Natural Brilliance such a work, or is there more to it than that? The answers, of course, are in the book itself, so we will first take a broad look at its claims and aims, and then delve a little deeper into its pages for a somewhat closer look.

The author of Natural Brilliance: A Buddhist System for Uncovering Your Strengths and Letting Them Shine is Irini Rockwell. She is a senior teacher in the lineage of the notorious Tibetan Buddhist teacher Chogyam Trungpa, and is the director of the Five Wisdoms Institute, an organization involved in promoting the system described in the book. Indeed, Natural Brilliance and the in! stitute that Rockwell directs seem intertwined, as if the one complements, or promotes, the other. Clearly, the author is committed to the subject of which she writes, and holds a belief that its claims are genuine. So, what exactly, are the claims of Natural Brilliance?

The book claims that it contains a system that leads to a self-understanding that involves a satisfying relationship to life. Rockwell states that she presents a 'Buddhist model' that helps the reader to identify her or his personality traits that comprise one's 'innate intelligence.' These five qualities are presence, clarity, richness, passion, and action; by cultivating them one can enhance relationships, work, and creativity. Moreover, ultimately, the system shows us the interconnectedness of everyone and everything. Some pretty big claims there!

It's worth noting here that from the Buddhist perspective, the claims of the book are in line with some of the objectives found in the major movements of traditional Buddhist found around the world today. For, although it can be claimed that nirvana or enlightenment is the true destination of the Buddhist path, there are plenty of teachings and practices centered around making us happier and more productive human beings. Natural Brilliance seems more focused on these latter aims, rather than a breakthrough into an experience of awakening to our true nature. And, these are worthwhile objectives, for whilst no Buddhist worth their salt would deny the ultimate importance of enlightenment, it ain't for everyone right now; some people are more focused on their personality and its relationships, and whilst this is the case, they will benefit from teachings and practices that make them happier and less harm! ful. So, does this book achieve this?

The question of the efficacy of the teachings and methods contained in the pages of Natural Brilliance is, in truth, impossible to answer unless one has read them thoroughly and put them into practice - neither of which this reviewer has done. What can be done is to present those teachings and explore them a little, before coming to a prediction on whether the claims made by Rockwell in the book are justified. So, rather than to continue to sum up her writings, it's time to quote a few passages from Natural Brilliance to allow the reader of this review to formulate their own opinions on its potential benefits.

"When we get right down to it, what most of us really want more than anything - more than the newest smartphone, job promotion, or getaway vacation - is inner peace. The radical message of the Buddhist tradition comes down to this: the peace and fulfillment we are seeking are present in us right now. They have never really left us - and can never leave us." 
(Natural Brilliance, p.1)
"When we accommodate the parts of ourselves that we like the least and energies in others that feel threatening, we are allowing the full spectrum of human experience to display itself. One of the essential lessons of the five wisdom energies is that in embracing our confusion, we discover that our wisdom is right there. When we are familiar with the characteristics of each energy style, we immediately know where the sanity is and where the neurosis is! . We can align ourselves with the sanity, with the wisdom aspect. At that point we have discovered the best within us, our unique brand of brilliance. We discover we have great liberty to be who we are, and we can celebrate that."
(Ibid. pp.13-14)
"Bringing Out the Best of Who You Are
  • Recollect three times in your life when you felt the best of who you are.
  • What outer circumstances made that possible?
  • What qualities in you began to shine?"
(Ibid. p.14)
"We are affected by the energy around us whether we are aware of it or not. When we are unaware, energy has the upper hand and we feel tossed around by life's circumstances. When we are aware of the play of energy, we can ride it. With awareness, we can gauge our atmospheric condition in a given situation, sensing the energy of the moment, whether 'open' or 'closed.' We can begin to see that habitual patterns of closing take us out of the moment. We literally lose track of where we are."
(Ibid. p.70)
From the first of the extracts above, the link between the five energies system and Buddhist can be seen - albeit a somewhat tenuous one at first glance. Read! ing in-b etween the lines however, a slightly closer connection can be made, when noting references to "inner peace," "wisdom," and "awareness." That no more explicit Buddhist language and concepts are used much in the book can be taken two ways. In a positive light, the book can be seen to be communicating Buddhist teachings in modern English as a opposed to obscure Asian languages; a negative appraisal might conclude that in fact there's little genuine Buddhist in Natural Brilliance to begin with. 

The quotation above that is entitled "Bringing Out the Best of Who You Are" is included here for two reasons. The first is that is highlights a central theme of the book, which is the importance given to discovering and living from "who you are" - a loaded phrase if there ever was one in Buddhist thought. This isn't the unconditioned 'true nature' that Buddhist teaches lies at the heart of every sentient being, but more the essential ego or conditioned personality that each of us is conventionally said to possess. The second importance of this particular quote is that it is an example of the reflections that appear throughout the book. Here, Rockwell has assembled a useful collection of exercises that encourage her readers to explore their selves. A useful undertaking for sure.

The emphasis that Rockwell puts on awareness is certainly something she shares with Buddhists of whatever persuasion, including those of the Tibetan tradition from which she draws her primary influences for the five wisdom energies. In encouraging her readers to increase their levels of awareness she is doing them a great service, and with the many awareness-based exercises in Natural Brilliance she gives them the means to do so. For th! is alone , the book is worthy of some praise, as is the eloquent and clear manner in which the author communicates her message. Another laudable aspect to the book is the abundance of real-life examples that Rockwell has woven into its pages, which lend it a vibrancy that would otherwise be missing:

"Jane had a pattern of getting speeding tickets when driving home from visiting her family. We would often be in emotional turmoil and put her foot on the gas. Then one day she practiced simply paying attention to (being mindful of) the speedometer. This allowed her to relax. No speeding ticket."
(Ibid. p.86)
"Becoming single, I took up the tango. I joke that, living on the edge of mainstream society as I do, I have never made much money, which gives me great freedom to move from one thing to the next. Nothing to lose! At various times, my husband and son have said, 'Why don't you get a real job?' I simply cannot. I have been stubborn about sticking to my passions, which in turn allows me to give the world my best."
(Ibid. p.98)
"At the time my sister was put under the care of San Diego Hospice, Dr. Charles Lewis, a meditator, was on her team. He is the medical director of both the Inpatient Care Center and their Institute for Palliative Care. I was present at the intake interview. He radiated a calm presence and, from his questions,you felt that he was seeing a whole person. In the two hours he spent with her and later! in my c onversations with him, he was attentive to every nuance my sister displayed. He created a healing environment not only for my sister, but also her caregiver, Jenna, and myself."
(Ibid. p.174)

So, returning to the question posed at the top of this review, as to whether Natural Brilliance is just another wishy-washy new age book, or something more substantial, this reviewer has come to his conclusion: the latter. For, whilst the Buddhist elements in the book are more implicit than explicit, and many traditionalist Buddhists may find it not to their tastes at all, Natural Brilliance does have an integrity to it that is impressive, the motives of Irini Rockwell appearing to be wholly genuine. The actual details of the five wisdom energies themselves are too complicated to go into in this review, and are therefore left to those that choose to read the book itself and reflect upon them. But it is the conviction of this reviewer that if they do so, they will reap worthwhile rewards.

Title & Author : Natural Brilliance, by Irini Rockwell
Publisher        : Shambhala Publications
Page Count    : 208
Price               : $ 18:95
ISBN               : 9781590309322
Web Link        : Natural Brillance at Shambhala
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On Meditation (English)

Acharn Tippakorn, abbot of Buddhist monastery and meditation centre 'Ban Sawang Jai', Pak Chong, Korat, Thailand, explains the purpose of meditation. A Dhamma talk shot in 2003. www.yourfilminasia.de

Video Rating: 4 / 5




This posting includes an audio/video/photo media file: Download Now

Recovered

Posted: 12 May 2012 03:00 AM PDT

Old_and_new1.jpg
In a car park, Calw Black Forest. Calw is the birthplace of Hermann Hesse.

Since my last entry I have traveled! (Southern Germany to North West England, with an over night stop in The Netherlands). AND A dead hard drive brought back to life. (Who said the professionals know everything!) A couple of days rest and recovery. Several loads of laundry. Several hours trying to fathom knitting pattern instructions....(photo of garment to follow.)

Yes, I am recovered enough to sit and type this. I am inspired by the comment asking if my return to England meant I stopped writing posts! No, the posts must go on. Ideally I like to write every day and if not that every other day.

" . . . it is not for me to pass judgment on those prisoners who put their own people above everyone else. Who can throw a stone at a man who favors his friends under circumstances when, sooner or later, it is a question of life or death? No man should judge unless he asks himself in absolute honesty whether in a similar situation he might not have done the same." p. 68.

Victor Frankl - Man's Search For Meaning.

A moment to ponder I think.

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From the May 2012 Shambhala Sun magazine: “Blindsided”

Posted: 11 May 2012 08:00 PM PDT

After being diagnosed with an eye disorder that could leave her sightless, comedic performer and playwright Elaine Smookler felt terror. But then a moment with a stranger helped her to embrace the change — and keep striving for laughs.

She writes: "Like it or not, I needed to make friends with my anxiety. I began to relax a bit with my oh-so-groundless situation and put the kibosh on the idea that there was anything precious about my disability. Having a sense of humor helped. I started to refer to myself as "El Blindo" and told people I was hard of seeing. To my relief, I noticed that when I was easy with the reality of my newfound difficulties, other people breathed easier around me as well." Read the rest of her story here.

"Blindsided" appears in the special section "Embrace Change" in the May 2012 Shambhala Sun magazine. Click here to browse the issue online.

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Shambhala Publications acquires Snow Lion

Posted: 11 May 2012 01:00 PM PDT

From Top Left: Snow Lion President Jeff Cox, Shambhala Publications President Nikko Odiseos From Bottom Left: Snow Lion Co-founder Sidney Piburn, Shambhala Editor and owner Ivan Bercholz, Shambhala Executive Vice-President and owner Sara Bercholz

Shambhala Publications has announced that, as of May 10th, dedicated Tibetan Buddhist publisher Snow Lion Publications is "a part of the Shambhala Publications family." This will add some 300 titles, including many by the Dalai Lama, to the Shambhala catalog. The acquisition was announced via posts at the websites of both Shambhala and Snow Lion.

According to Shambhala, the move will allow the Boston-based publisher to "offer the widest selection of Tibetan Buddhist books from a single publisher," and was "in some ways more like a marriage than a business deal, since [Snow Lion had] been our esteemed colleagues in Buddhist publishing for well over twenty years." Shambhala was launched in 1969 with the publication of Chögyam Trungpa's Meditation in Action, and has since grown to become the largest publisher of Buddhist books, as well those of other spiritual traditions, and other types of material published under Shambhala-owned imprints.

Shambhala publisher Julie Saidenberg has told Publishers Weekly that Shambhala will "retain the Snow Lion name as an imprint and at least three Snow Lion editors will move to Shambhala." Certain services from the Ithaca, New York-based Snow Lion, like their weekly Dalai Lama and Dharma e-mail quotes, will resume soon without current subscribers needing to do anything.

Reached for comment, Shambhala Publications President Nikko Odiseos told us:

"Shambhala and Snow Lion have always had a very positive, collaborative relationship, and this really accelerated in the last year and a half as of Sidney Piburn, Snow Lion's cofounder, and Jeff Cox, the president worked with Ivan and Sara Bercholz and me on a few challenges we face in our little corner of the publishing world which, is changing so quickly.

"Many of us here at Shambhala read a lot — and I mean A LOT — of Snow Lion books. So we were big fans to begin with.  The ground was ready.

"The basic driver for this was that Sidney and Jeff wanted to be sure that Snow Lion's mission, making important books from the vast Tibetan Buddhist tradition available, continue and flourish and not be dependent on them personally.  And thus,  Snow Lion is now part of the Shambhala family.

"Snow Lion's editorial team is now part of Shambhala as well, and Sidney will be helping us out too — he is a gem and the whole Tibetan Buddhist world is really indebted to him as well as the entire Snow Lion team for their dedication and incredible work for over thirty years."

The following is from a letter about the acquisition posted by Snow Lion co-founder Sidney Piburn, President Jeff Cox, and editor Christi Cox:

"Thirty years ago His Holiness the Dalai Lama gave the founders of Snow Lion a mission: to publish books from all the traditions of Tibet. It was most important, he told us, to be non-sectarian in our approach. More specifically, he suggested that we publish translations of classic texts and monastic textbooks from each of the four main lineages of Tibetan Buddhist, commentaries by eminent lamas past and present of their respective lineages, and works by Western practitioners and scholars skilled at bridging the cultures. In addition, he suggested we publish books for those newly interested in Buddhist, books for serious students and scholars, as well as materials for advanced practitioners.

"As we've gotten older we've been working to ensure that our important mission continue into the future. We feel very pleased that we were able to connect with Nikko Odiseos and Sara and Ivan Bercholz, the new generation so capably running Shambhala Publications. All of them are serious practitioners of Tibetan Buddhist, and they share our interest in preserving the full range of this invaluable tradition.

"So we are very pleased that Snow Lion is joining Shambhala Pubs and we have great confidence in its continuous bright future! It has a good home and we are looking forward to the great work still to come!"

The Shambhala website now includes the Snow Lion titles and has been updated both in design and in functionality, so that visitors can searchable by tradition and practice. Shambhala states that they "will no longer carry merchandise and practice items other than books and audio," which had been a significant part of the Snow Lion catalog. In their statement, however, they do list several recommended distributors of such items. Shambhala Publications books are themselves distributed by Random House, and Snow Lion's titles will be similarly available later this year.

Read More @ Source




Video surfaces showing Jogye monks engaged in high-stakes poker

Posted: 11 May 2012 12:00 PM PDT

Screenshot

A video (below) has surfaced showing eight senior South Korean Jogye Order monks engaging in high-stakes poker, with some one billion won (approx. $ 875,300) being gambled. While it is still unclear where the funds came from, one news item suggests that the money might have been charitable donations. Ven. Seongho, a Jogye monk speaking to Reuters, said, "Basically, Buddhist rules say don't steal. Look at what they did, they abused money from Buddhists for gambling."

Six of the eight monks have offered to resign because of the video, and the order has launched in internal investigation to determine how to discipline the monks. The Jogye order is also looking into whoever hid the camera in the luxury hotel room where the monks gambled, as filming the monks without their knowledge may be illegal under South Korean law.

The group of monks was comprised of "two spiritual leaders, high-ranking monks and also abbots from branch temples," according to the Korea Herald. They were staying at the hotel while they attended a memorial service for a fellow monk.

The news has caused a commotion in South Korea, leading some in the media to speculate about a potential power split within the order. With a reported 10 million followers comprising about a fifth of the country's population, the Jogye Order is the largest Buddhist group in Korea.

Read More @ Source




Shambhala Publications acquires Snow Lion

Posted: 11 May 2012 11:00 AM PDT

From Top Left: Snow Lion President Jeff Cox, Shambhala Publications President Nikko Odiseos From Bottom Left: Snow Lion Co-founder Sidney Piburn, Shambhala Editor and owner Ivan Bercholz, Shambhala Executive Vice-President and owner Sara Bercholz

Shambhala Publications has announced that, as of May 10th, dedicated Tibetan Buddhist publisher Snow Lion Publications is "a part of the Shambhala Publications family." This will add some 300 titles, including many by the Dalai Lama, to the Shambhala catalog. The acquisition was announced via posts at the websites of both Shambhala and Snow Lion.

According to Shambhala, the move will allow the publisher to "offer the widest selection of Tibetan Buddhist books from a single publisher," and was "in some ways more like a marriage than a business deal, since [Snow Lion had] been our esteemed colleagues in Buddhist publishing for well over twenty years." Shambhala was launched in 1969 with the publication of Chögyam Trungpa's Meditation in Action, and has since grown to become the largest publisher of Buddhist books, as well those of other spiritual traditions, and other types of material published under Shambhala-owned imprints.

Shambhala publisher Julie Saidenberg has told Publishers Weekly that Shambhala will "retain the Snow Lion name as an imprint and at least three Snow Lion editors will move to Shambhala." Certain Snow Lion services, like their weekly Dalai Lama and Dharma e-mail quotes, will resume soon without current subscribers needing to do anything.

Reached for comment, Shambhala Publications President Nikko Odiseos told us:

"Shambhala and Snow Lion have always had a very positive, collaborative relationship, and this really accelerated in the last year and a half as of Sidney Piburn, Snow Lion's cofounder, and Jeff Cox, the president worked with Ivan and Sara Bercholz and me on a few challenges we face in our little corner of the publishing world which, is changing so quickly.

"Many of us here at Shambhala read a lot — and I mean A LOT — of Snow Lion books. So we were big fans to begin with.  The ground was ready.

"The basic driver for this was that Sidney and Jeff wanted to be sure that Snow Lion's mission, making important books from the vast Tibetan Buddhist tradition available, continue and flourish and not be dependent on them personally.  And thus,  Snow Lion is now part of the Shambhala family.

"Snow Lion's editorial team is now part of Shambhala as well, and Sidney will be helping us out too — he is a gem and the whole Tibetan Buddhist world is really indebted to him as well as the entire Snow Lion team for their dedication and incredible work for over thirty years."

The following is from a letter about the acquisition posted by Snow Lion co-founder Sidney Piburn, President Jeff Cox, and editor Christi Cox:

"Thirty years ago His Holiness the Dalai Lama gave the founders of Snow Lion a mission: to publish books from all the traditions of Tibet. It was most important, he told us, to be non-sectarian in our approach. More specifically, he suggested that we publish translations of classic texts and monastic textbooks from each of the four main lineages of Tibetan Meditation, commentaries by eminent lamas past and present of their respective lineages, and works by Western practitioners and scholars skilled at bridging the cultures. In addition, he suggested we publish books for those newly interested in Meditation, books for serious students and scholars, as well as materials for advanced practitioners.

"As we've gotten older we've been working to ensure that our important mission continue into the future. We feel very pleased that we were able to connect with Nikko Odiseos and Sara and Ivan Bercholz, the new generation so capably running Shambhala Publications. All of them are serious practitioners of Tibetan Meditation, and they share our interest in preserving the full range of this invaluable tradition.

"So we are very pleased that Snow Lion is joining Shambhala Pubs and we have great confidence in its continuous bright future! It has a good home and we are looking forward to the great work still to come!

The Shambhala website now includes the Snow Lion titles and has been updated both in design and in functionality, so that visitors can searchable by tradition and practice. Shambhala states that they "will no longer carry merchandise and practice items other than books and audio," which had been a significant part of the Snow Lion catalog. In their statement, however, they do list several recommended distributors of such items. Shambhala Publications books are themselves distributed by Random House, and Snow Lion's titles will be similarly available later this year.

Read More @ Source




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