Welcome

  • Wendy Chozom June 2020
    Wendy Chozom

    Over the past twenty years I have engaged with dharma practice and teachings which have profoundly changed my view of the world, of my self, and the relationship to what I took to be as completely separate from me, as truly ‘other’.

    This new relationship is not really new but is pre-existing, a given, the astonishing ignored truth of us all without exception.

    Usually we look at the world through eyes which are clouded by conditioned beliefs… so to have the opportunity to look through a pair of eyes which are clear, is a rare and liberating privilege.

    I borrowed those of James Low who has been offering this unclouded view for many decades, teaching dzogchen around the world. Back in 2010 he gave me encouragement to teach ‘as much as you can’. I took this to mean ‘teach a lot’ but it could equally well have meant ‘teach as much as you are able to, just now’…which is rather different!!

    But either way I have learned that it’s through engaging with the process that learning takes place… and that as we apply these teachings in our everyday lives our own eyes open wider. Freedom and the complexities and constraints of life are not in opposition and an on-going freshness is the flowering of the freedom of our natural condition.

    If you are interested in dzogchen, the great completion teachings, then I invite you to explore the vast array of teachings on the web-site simplybeing.co.uk with which this site is linked. 

    The  ‘Macclesfield Talks’ are a set of teachings which James has given, either annually or twice a year since 2003 in Macclesfield, England and form part of this…

    They offer an exposition of the dzogchen view, indicating and explaining the depth and breadth of dharma teachings to us…we who did not have a traditional background or scholarship…in a way with which we could readily engage.
    These talks cover many different approaches within dharma teachings; James explains both how they relate to each other, to us, and their application in everyday life.

    For quick reference here is an Index to all the audios and videos currently available in the series.

    You can also access them via ‘Macclesfield Talks’  for further details, including which talks have been transcribed and translated…                

    You will surely find your own unique way into engagement with the dharma but I recommend them most highly.
    For me they provided an education in the truest sense of the word; a ladder and springboard …

    Here is another link to follow if you would like –  Audio recordings of the Dhammapada – James Low’s translation and commentary…comprising the first section of the book Finding Freedom.
    Some may wonder how this ‘hinayana’ teaching fits with the view of dzogchen … If so I invite you to listen to James’ translation, with his introduction and commentary on this text … which forms the first part of the book … and discover for yourself how wisdom shines through every facet of the jewel : )

    Other James Low book recordings are being added under the audio/video tab.

    If queries arise as you engage with this material you are welcome to get in touch and we can explore… or you can contact James via the simplybeing.co.uk website.

    You’d also be very welcome to join a little online group for practice and study, which I facilitate… just use ‘Contact me’ in the header to get in touch.


  • “What’s wrong with doing what you want?!”

    This was the question put to me recently by a young adult. In the way it was phrased it wasn’t really a question… more a statement implying that everybody knows that it’s good to do what you want. That to be able to do what you want is the freedom worth striving for, and if the…

    Read more…: “What’s wrong with doing what you want?!”
  • Buddhism and Psychotherapy

    Apologies to those of you who have clicked on the link to this talk only to find that it has already taken place –I’d removed the link to the invitation to the weekend…but not to the Friday’s talk which was on this topic. However the talk was recorded and it is now available under audios…

    Read more…: Buddhism and Psychotherapy
  • Killing the right one…

    I can remember James saying, relating a conversation with someone very troubled,’ Oh sister (or brother)… you are wanting to kill the wrong one!’ This was his unspoken response to someone who was so angry that they wanted to kill someone – the someone they saw as the creator of their suffering.  Linked with this is the…

    Read more…: Killing the right one…
  • Medicine, meditation and mindfulness

    It’s maybe a bit personal – the story and the opinions – it feels a little strange to write, but perhaps this reflection will be helpful or encouraging to someone reading it. When I was a child my main experience of trouble with health was mouth–ulcers ( lucky me). In my late teens I added migraines (treated…

    Read more…: Medicine, meditation and mindfulness
  • Cutting through the karmic knots… (2)

    So it seems that, as human beings, our sense of self is formed through identifying with a mass of little ‘thought knots’, of energetic kinks twists and shapings. One little thought, ‘i’, links out to many other thoughts about ‘me’.  By giving these thoughts our attention as being particular to – and definitional of – ourselvelves they…

    Read more…: Cutting through the karmic knots… (2)

EVENTS

04Jan2026

Simply sitting Sundays

Meditation practice day… devised in collaboration with James Low

From 9.45 for 10.00am start London time until 4.05 pm

Find out more…


SIMPLY BEING

Dzogchen and Buddhist Teachings of James Low


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