Monday, November 24, 2025

The Quiet Path to Creativity

 


11.21.2025


The Quiet Path to Creativity

 

I started practicing yoga more than 25 years ago. I learned that holding a difficult pose required not just physical strength, but a still mind and conscious breath. Over time, that conscious breath would become unconscious, softening into something natural and unforced, leaving me in a quiet, empty space where my meditation practice was born.

In meditation, for me, reaching this comfortable space is a time of spontaneous creativity. What I feel in my body comes to me as images, but it’s not like watching a movie. Images present themselves in a felt sense: a paper heart dissolving in water, pink flesh turning to bubble, a beautiful knot of rope sitting deep in my hip. I’ve always been a visual thinker, inclined toward weird, wonderful, and unexpected connections.

That’s been true since childhood. I have been drawing and painting since I was young. Recently, I came across a framed drawing of mine from the first grade. It was a cat with its paw on a mushroom, its face half turned away — a difficult perspective for a five year old. How did I do that? Where did that inspiration come from?

On my first ever silent retreat, I was delighted at how these images allowed me to feel and see my body in a new way. The images that popped into my mind became guides in my own healing, and the artwork that emerged from that period reinforced a profound shift in my life. I knew what I had to do, and my art helped me express it.

Now, each time I sit, I’m thrilled if an image presents itself. It can keep my art practice invigorated for a day, month, or even years. Sometimes it’s as simple as the inspiration to add a flash of orange to a painting of blue water. Other times it’s as involved as using a silicone brush to make thousands of tiny bubbles in and around floating bodies. This year, I have one of my paintings featured in our annual fundraising auction, inspired by floating in the ocean like seaweed.

Seeing my childhood drawing of the cat and mushroom reminded me that even at a young age, images arose in me before I fully understood them. I simply followed my creative impulse and drew what appeared. I’ve come to believe we all have this capacity to create.

In the three articles below, each writer explores creativity in their own world, and how it meets them. I encourage you to read them, and then find space to pick up a crayon, a pencil, or even a stick on a beach and move it across a surface, expressing whatever you’d like. What you create doesn’t have to mean anything to anyone but you. Trust your body and let go of your expectations, following the joy and healing doing so can bring.

—Sharon Kosen Davis, Account Representative, Lion’s Roar

Rima Fujita Has a Dream


Art for art’s sake was her goal, then art became her tool for a larger purpose. Nancy Hom profiles the renowned artist and philanthropist Rima Fujita.


After graduating from Parsons School of Design in New York City, the artist Rima Fujita was introduced to the most prestigious art dealers in the New York art world. This seeming good fortune came with a dark cloud. She was deceived, dealers stole her work, and she experienced sexual harassment. Even though she was making good money, she was miserable. She began to wonder, “Is this all my life will be?”

In the late 1990s, Fujita had a dream that would answer that question. A voice said to her, “You must help Tibet!”

“I’m not psychic, but I’ve always had a relationship to my dreams,” she tells me in an interview. “It was a commanding voice that you would not ignore.”

This dream changed the entire course of Fujita’s life — her art, her spirituality, her mission in the world.




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Pema Chödrön & k.d. lang talk Buddhism, creativity, and “gapaciousness”


The beloved Buddhist teacher and famed singer discuss Buddhism, creativity, and “the gap.”


k.d. lang: It’s the gap, because I think real creativity comes from getting the heck out of the way. Creativity is not about creating big conceptions and stirring the pot so much that you just gotta throw up on the canvas or write, write, write, write. I think it’s about being so bored and being so empty and being so… gapacious.


How to Unleash Your Creativity


Geshe Tenzin Wangyal tells us how to unleash powerful creative energy and turn every action into a work of art.


Creativity can be seen as a state of natural flow, one that spontaneously and effortlessly gives birth not only to manifest form, but to all experiences of body, energy, and mind. This state of flow, which has its roots in openness, occurs only in the absence of hope and fear. It is at once naturally joyful, peaceful, compassionate, expansive, and powerful.

When you know how to tap fully into this open, creative flow, its beneficial qualities can extend to any area of your life. You can paint more masterful paintings. Your music can have more depth of connection. Your writing can be more genuine and moving. You will be able to solve problems at work, resolve conflicts with loved ones, or even shift your thought patterns with more natural spontaneity.

Wednesday, November 19, 2025

Thich Nhat Hanh on How to Take a Mindful Walk; The Buddha and Socrates: An Interview with Stephen Batchelor; Join the Final Week of Our Annual Auction

 

11.18.2025


Tuesday, November 18, 2025

Free Webinar – My Meditation Journey with Dr. Amishi Jha

 

Can science teach us to stay focused and calm in a world built to distract us?

 

In today’s world of endless notifications and constant distractions, our attention is pulled in a thousand directions.  For Dr. Amishi Jha, a neuroscientist and author of the national bestseller Peak Mind, understanding how attention works has been both her life’s research and her personal path.

 

As the Director of Contemplative Neuroscience at the University of Miami, Dr. Jha has spent decades studying how mindfulness can strengthen attention and resilience — even under the most stressful conditions. Drawing on her groundbreaking research with elite athletes, military special forces, and medical professionals, she will share what science reveals about our most precious resource: attention.

 

In this 60-minute conversation, Dr. Jha will explain why our focus falters, how it can be trained, and how simple mindfulness practices can help you perform better under stress, stay present for what truly matters, and reclaim clarity in a chaotic world.

 

This event is open to everyone.

We also encourage you to invite friends, coworkers, or family members who might benefit. 

 

Learning every moment,
Tergar Meditation Community

Monday, November 17, 2025

The Beauty of Community

 


11.14.2025


The Beauty of Community

 

This year marks the 19th Annual Lion’s Roar Auction, our biggest fundraising event of the year. As an independent non-profit foundation, Lion’s Roar relies on the generosity of our readers and supporters to continue sharing Buddhist wisdom. Nowhere is that support more evident than in our auction, where donors and bidders come together to help our mission flourish.

This year’s auction holds special poignancy. In the spring, our beloved friend and colleague Cindy Littlefair passed away. For more than eighteen years, Cindy was the exuberant steward of the Lion’s Roar auction. Coincidentally, this will also be the final year we offer our generous donor Lorne Ridell’s sailing trip around the San Juan Islands — a faithful feature of the auction, like Cindy herself. At Lorne’s request, a portion of the trip’s winning bid will go toward a writing grant in Cindy’s honour.

As in life, as one season ends, new beginnings arise, and our auction has come around once again, launching our 19th year with over 120 donors and 280 auction items. There’s retreats across North America, France, Mexico, and Italy, handmade ceramics and fine art, and signed books and jewelry. This year we’re also introducing something new: a chance to engage directly with Buddhist teachers and mentors. You can bid to have your writing reviewed by Pamela Ayo Yetunde or Barry Boyce, explore dharma translation or the art of tea with trusted guides, receive executive coaching with Dr. Joe Parent or Dan Zigmond, or even learn the sacred forms of hula or Tai Chi from home. We’ve been blessed with an abundance of riches both old and new.

What’s been most inspiring for me as this year’s auction coordinator is meeting the donors — retreat centers, artists, teachers, and longtime friends — and seeing the bidders jump in with generosity and enthusiasm. Each of them contributes toward our ultimate purpose to benefit society. Cindy always ended each auction by personally connecting donors and winning bidders, which meant sending out hundreds of emails by hand. She never automated it, knowing that ultimately, the auction was about connection, and connection builds community.

This Weekend Reader’s pieces speak to the beauty of our community — their generosity, kindness, and good spiritual friendship.

—Pam Boyce, Digital Designer & Auction Coordinator

Generosity’s Perfection


Giving up, giving in, just plain giving—Sharon Salzberg says that’s the truly transformative experience.


If we practice joyful giving, we experience confidence. We grow in self-esteem, self-respect and well-being because we continually test our limits. Our attachments say, “I will give this much and no more,” or “I will give this article or object if I am appreciated enough for this act of giving.” In the practice of generosity, we learn to see through our attachments. We see they are transparent, that they have no solidity. They don’t need to hold us back, so we can go beyond them.

Therefore, the practice of generosity is about creating space. We see our limits and we extend them continuously, which creates an expansiveness and spaciousness of mind that’s deeply composed. This happiness, self-respect and spaciousness is the appropriate ground in which meditation practice can flourish. It is the ideal place from which to undertake deep investigation, because with this kind of inner happiness and spaciousness, we have the strength and flexibility to look at absolutely everything that arises in our experience.


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Spiritual Friendship Is the Path


Each one of us, says David Viafora, can be a kalyana mitra, or “spiritual friend.” Here’s how.


One day, Ananda and the Buddha were sitting alone on a hill together, overlooking the plains of the Ganges. Having served as the Buddha’s attendant for many years, Ananda often shared his reflections and insights with him. This afternoon, Ananda spoke. “Dear Respected Teacher,” Ananda said. “It seems to me that half of the spiritual life is good friendship, good companionship, good comradeship.” I imagine that Ananda said this with some level of confidence for praising the merits of spiritual friendship. But the Buddha quickly corrected him: “Not so, Ananda! Not so, Ananda!” Ouch! Probably Ananda wasn’t expecting such a stern rebuke. But the Buddha was offering a powerful teaching. He continued, “This is the entire spiritual life, Ananda, that is, good friendship, good companionship, good comradeship. When a monk has a good friend, a good companion, a good comrade, it is to be expected that he will develop and cultivate the noble eightfold path.”


Generosity Comes First


In any presentation of the paramitas, dana, or generosity, always comes first — Nikki Mirghafori explains why.


When I started on the path of Buddhist practice, I was mainly interested in meditation. To my novice ears, other teachings sounded less relevant or interesting. I vaguely remember hearing in a dharma talk that the Buddha had emphasized the practice of generosity for lay folks such as myself. In the trilogy of meritorious deeds (puñña), he first and foremost taught generosity, or dana, which in Pali connotes both the act of giving and what is given. Only after the practitioner appreciated this teaching did the Buddha proceed to teach ethics (sila) and mental cultivation (bhavana); it was the latter I was jumping into, head (not heart) first.