Compassion in Buddhist Practice - Tashi Tsering
Compassion in Buddhist Practice: Compassion is the basis of all the good human qualities, particularly moral ethics. Although we all have the ability to show compassion to ourselves and others, still these can be enhanced through practising it again and again not only in religious places but in everyday life. Geshe Tashi Tsering was born in Tibet 1958. He studied Buddhism at Sera-Mey Monastic University in India for 18 years and was awarded the Lharampa Geshe degree (the equivalent of a doctorate in divinity). Since 1994 he has been the teacher at the Jamyang Buddhist Centre in London and he also leads Buddhist classes in other centres in the UK and in other countries. He created the Foundation of Buddhist Thought, a two year Buddhist studies course, which runs online and on campus.

Introduction to Yogacara and The Transformation of Mind

Serme Khenrinpoche Geshe Tashi Tsering | Life at Sera Mey Monastic University

The Science of Compassion: Origins, Measures, and Interventions - Thupten Jinpa, PhD

Thupten Jinpa, A Fearless Heart: Why Compassion is the Key to Greater Wellbeing

Supporting Resilience and Mental Health in the Age of AI by Dzongsar Khyentse Rinpoche

Why We Get Compassion All Wrong | Matthieu Ricard

The Nature and Practice of Compassion

Buddhism and The Art of Imagining (Stephen Batchelor)

Emptiness the Womb of Compassion, Robert Thurman

Meeting Green Tara

His Holiness the Dalai Lama at the Dalai Lama Centre for Compassion, Oxford

Compassion in Action: Buddhism and the Environment

Hermits1

Jetsunma Tenzin Palmo's “The Four Immeasurables” / D1-P1

Jetsunma Tenzin Palmo: Atisha's Verses on Training the Mind (1 of 4)

In search of Zong Rinpoche 1/4

Conversations on Compassion: Thupten Jinpa, PhD

The Intersection of Shamanism & Buddhism

Khandro Rinpoche ~ Compassion versus Competition

