Saturday March 22nd, 2025
"Tibetan Buddhist Monk Geshe Lobzang
at the Energy Wave Center®"
Energy Wave Center®
120 Pleasant Hill Avenue North • Suite 330
Sebastopol, CA 95472
TALK 1:
10am-Noon "Mind Training with Geshe Lobzang"
TALK 2:
3-5pm "Teaching on the Immeasurables with Geshe Lobzang"
Please get tickets on the website
Energy Wave Center
$25
Geshe Lobsang Tsetan was born in 1966 in Zanskar, Ladakh, in the Himalayan Mountains. His father’s name was Tamdrin Wangyal and his mother’s name was Sonam Dolma. Geshe had nine siblings. At the age of seven, he became a monk at Karcha Monastery where he studied Tibetan language and grammar, memorization, and primary education under the guidance of his paternal great-uncle Lama Soname Tesring and Tashi Rigzin (both ex-abbots).
In 1980, he went to south India to study at the famous Drepung Gomang Monastery and completed sixteen grades. He studied classic classes in Logic and Philosophical Theory. In1988, Geshe received the Monk Vow from His Holiness The 14th Dalai Lama. He studied Perfection (the Paramitas), The Middle Way School Treasure of Knowledge, and Monastic Discipline. In 2000, he received the title of Geshe Lharampa after successfully completing the Gelug examination. Geshe Lobsang Tseten was awarded the degree of Geshe Lharampa, the equivalent of a Ph.D, at the renowned monastic center of Gredern in South India. In 2001 for one year, he attended the Gyuto Tantric College studying Vajrayana. He also learned Empowerment Reading, Transmission, and Interaction Education.
Since 2002, he has been promoting compassion, love, and wisdom in communities throughout the United States, Europe, Japan, Australia, Russia, and Serbia. In 2012, Geshe established the Girls' School of Dorje Dzong. In 2019, Geshe Lobsang started the Nalanda Institute of Knowledge in the Karcha Monastery where meditation practice and the Buddhist psychology of loving-kindness and compassion are taught.
*Dana - The first thing the Buddha often taught to lay followers was the practice of Dana or generosity. The teachings of the Dharma are considered priceless – beyond material value – and thus have been offered in exchange for modest support since the time of the Buddha. Monks and nuns offer spiritual and religious guidance to the lay community, who in turn offer material support in the way of food, medicine, shelter and funding. When we give in this fashion from the heart we feel a natural sense of joy, connection, and belonging.
Please give generously! Help preserve Tibetan Culture and bring exquisite events to our communities.
Previous Event
Special Thanks to:
The Sebastopol Friends of Tibetan Culture is a group of volunteers with a mission to share the cultural and spiritual heritage of Tibet with our local community.
Our purpose is to enrich our community by providing a direct experience of Tibetan culture and spirituality.
Our goal is to make these events available and financially accessible to every member of our community.