Lion's Roar

The Best of Who We Are

NOBODY HOLDS ONE as the Dalai Lama does. He can hold you inwardly, as when a six-year-old boy comes up to His Holiness in a crowded hotel lobby, white scarf extended, and the leader of the Tibetans brings all his attention and presence—not just full-bodied, but whole-hearted—to the child.

He can hold you verbally, because even in English, in a 50,000-seat auditorium, the Dalai Lama rises to a passion and intensity—when he’s speaking about his concern for the environment, the gap between rich and poor, the need for harmony between religions—that refuses to let you go.

He can hold you in memory too. Even the most jaded journalists I know recall how shaking his hand, or seeing him at their high school, somehow reoriented their lives.

And literally. Whenever His Holiness puts his arms around me, I feel held, protected—blessed—as by nobody else I’ve met.

WHEN I THINK years I’ve known His Holiness, I see him waving un-self-consciously to a friend in a tiny room in Manhattan where he’s holding a press conference in 1984, at a time when few Westerners knew what a Dalai Lama was. I see him roaring with laughter and pulling the arm of his heart’s companion, Archbishop Desmond Tutu, as they talk together about how to transform society by never assuming any outcome is final.

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Lion's Roar

Lion's Roar4 min read
Good Food
What drew you to Buddhist practice? Daily sitting practice helped me feel more connected to something greater than myself. In 2005, I spent a week at Deer Park, Thich Nhat Hanh’s monastery in Escondido, California. The woman who is now my wife and I
Lion's Roar5 min read
Hands Of Compassion
IN THE FAMILY OF CARE and concern, sympathy, empathy, and compassion are kin. Like relatives, these virtues may grow alongside each other, offering their unique perspectives on and responses to the human condition. While the three attributes are conn
Lion's Roar8 min read
Honoring the Form
FOR DECADES pilgrims from around the world have flocked to Lake View Cemetery on Capitol Hill in Seattle. Tens of thousands arrive every year to pay their respects to Bruce Lee, an international celebrity from Hong Kong, whom Time magazine listed as

Related Books & Audiobooks