The paradox of awareness is very profound and yet very simple. It can't be described because it has no objective qualities and no limitation. Sometimes it comes naturally to the surface when we are fully in the present moment and no longer lost in thought or mental projections. Pure consciousness is neither high nor low, neither pleasant nor unpleasant, neither good nor bad. No matter where we are, no matter what we are doing, we always have an immediate access to that inner stillness. It can be experienced in an instant in all circumstances once we know how to pay attention to it. It is utterly peaceful and it is also insightful, so it sees through all illusions. Whenever there is a moment of being deluded, we can use that moment to practice settling in the very perfect sphere of the Buddha mind without trying to change anything. When we reside in that liberated mind, we find the very thing we have been seeking all along.
I have been a student of Anam Thubten since 2003. These are lucid essays on the nature of mind, awareness, and awakening from one of the foremost dzogchen teachers of our time. Anam Thubten teaches somewhere between prajnaparamita (= supreme wisdom) and direct awakening of dzogchen without ever really talking about either. He doesn't teach Buddhism directly but rather teaches the nature of the awakened mind that is always-already present in every living being. Beginners beware - this is not Buddhism 101 but is some of the most profound, esoteric, wisdom of Tibet ever shared by a teacher.
Anam has an ecumenical, almost Krishnamurti-like style and draws from many of the world's wisdom traditions such as Rumi, Hafez, Eckhart, and others. He can also be extremely funny and make fun of just about everything, most especially Buddhist earnestness and conceptions of enlightenment. If you're not ready to completely let go of trying to figure it out, you're not ready for Anam Thubten.
gribētos teikt, ka šī grāmata daudzas lietas "saliek pa vietām" - bet tā patiesība ir tikai viena - ... ziniet tās "bedres" mūsu prātā un sajūtās, - kurās starp to, kad nojaušam kas mēs esam - skrienam meklēt ārpusē - savā ķermenī, citos cilvēkos, notikumos un sabiedrības konstruktos aptirpinājumu "sev" un papildinājumu, lai būtu un kļūtu pilnīgi un atbilstīgi?! Patiesība ir tikai viena - pagriez fokusu atpakaļ uz sevi! TIKAI UZ SEVI. Viss svarīgais un nozīmīgais jau ir mums iekšpusē. Vajag tikai uz mikli apstāties, ieklausīties un sadzirdēt. Ieraudzīt un piedzīvot dzīvi. Ļauties.
3.5 stars⭐︎ This book was decent to listen to and was well narrated. However, it sometimes felt like I was listening to a spiritual podcast. I hoped this would be more on consciousness, a scientific sense of awareness, rather than mind and body in a spiritual way. However, I went in blind, and there was plenty to enjoy and learn, despite what I imagined I'll be reading.
Currently included with audiable a nice little self awareness audiobook into meditation, guidance of self perceptions, interpretations and self improvement to aid our growth in mindfulness reminding us of how everything is one without making external existences a lot of reference to Buddhism 🧘🏼♀️ 📚🙏🏼🎧 There is only love ❤️
This would be a good companion for those reading The Power of Now.
Here, the focus is on teachings about Buddhism ☸ but without going into it in detail. It gives you the techniques without the linage or history of Buddhism.
I enjoyed the reading and will probably read it again later. But it's a good reminder about staying in the present.
There is no difference between my life and your life. It is life; we cannot conquer or control life. Our perspective is such a small piece of the pie chart of existence.
It’s not your ocean versus my ocean — it’s the ocean!
There is a saying that goes something like, “When you’re ready, the teacher appears.” I stumbled upon Anam Thubten’s The Magic of Awareness when reading an interview of another teacher, whom I had just discovered, who listed this book as one of their favorite and often re-read books. On nothing more than that, I bought the audiobook and decided to give it a try.
It has broken me. I can no longer look at anything the same way, even so-called mundane things. I can’t say I’m awake, but I’m definitely not sleeping as soundly.
This is a must read for anyone who is in samsara and doesn’t want to remain here.
Good dharma. His first book is better Tibetan Buddhism, usually not my thing. But Thubten is clear, maybe even overly conversational. More than a bit repetitive. But perhaps a good place to start for anyone who wants out of the cycle of suffering.
A wonderfully written book that offers wisdom of awakening and awareness in a delightful, interesting way. Easy to understand, yet so deep and full of perspectives and uncomplicated explanations.
I picked up The Magic of Awareness expecting a practical, grounded guide to mindfulness, something that actually helps you do awareness in real life, not just talk about it. What I got was a mix of genuinely useful teachings and a lot of repetitious, vaguely packaged Buddhist-tinged philosophy that doesn’t always land hard when you actually try to apply it.
The parts of the book that stick are the clear explanations of how awareness functions: how attention arises, how habitual patterns loop, and why simply noticing is more powerful than trying to fix yourself. There are moments where Thubten’s voice feels direct and uncluttered, giving you a genuine sense of how awareness loosens the grip of automatic reactions. That’s rare in spiritual/self-help books, and it’s the book’s strongest contribution.
But the book repeatedly leans on familiar Buddhist ideas without sharpening them into tools you can reliably use. Several chapters feel like variations on the same theme: “Notice your experience. Don’t judge it. Stay present.” That’s valid, but after 100 pages of essentially that message with different metaphors, it begins to feel like a cycle of reassurance rather than instruction. For a reader who already does basic mindfulness practice, this can feel shallow.
In short: The Magic of Awareness is helpful but not groundbreaking. It has moments of real insight and some genuinely useful guidance on the nature of awareness itself. But it also leans too much on repetition, soft tone, and high-level framing that doesn’t always translate into practical, step-by-step support.
can we surrender to this present moment? can we surrender to life that is already unfolding right now? can we open our heart and instead of waiting and postponing, immediately, in this very moment, surrender all of our ideas of what life should be? can we surrender the concept of "my life" with total trust that life, this mysterious and uncontrollable flow, this force, this existence, is indeed divine? in that moment, my life and your life dissolve. there is no separation between us and the rest of the world, there are no more boundaries and limitations. then there is only love. there is only joy. this is the true sacred outlook.
its so wonderful! i can just choose to believe this 🥺 so how come it feels like i am not worthy?
After going straight into this book after “Fear” by Tich Nath Hahn I was a bit overwhelmed. Hanh simplifies and slows down your thoughts with less ideological rhetoric. Thubten doesn’t go overboard but it took a couple chapters to relax into the pace of the writing. Being new to Buddhism I am still grasping the teachings and this read elaborated on some nuances that are important and I may go back and reread portions to help in my understandings. The chapter “Glimpsing the Truth” was compelling. The mind creates suffering, but the mind also has to rid the mind of suffering. The mind creates the self and also has to maintain or rid the self. Therein lies the keys. My interpretation is then that the Buddhist practice is the path to freeing the self. Something to ponder going forward.
I may have been inclined to give this book 4 stars, but I found, unlike most other reviewers, the narration to be robotic and rather off-putting. The content of the book itself fluctuates between profound insight and surprising informality of prose, which is endearing and makes the subject matter more accessible and relatable. Disciples of Sam Harris will likely notice and appreciate many of his ideas and approaches to meditation echoed here.
After reading in Buddhism for over twenty years, this is one of the best, in my estimation. One reason is the simple, direct way the author presents the applicability of Buddhism to Westerners, to anyone. I listened to this audio format, and recommend it in written format. If someone asked, "I'm interested in Buddhism, what book would you recommend?" This is it.
Profound...I can finally (fleetingly) grasp some of the concepts. Love the analogies such as this constant searching for and study of "enlightenment" or the meaning life is like going to a restaurant and only reading the menu and expecting to be satiated. I'm actually listening to it again...immediately.
Although there is some redundancy in this, there are also some pearls of wisdom. What is life and what is spirituality? This book brought home the fact that often what we actively seek, we never find (or attain). Doing the same thing over and over, such as praying, going to church, etc, may feel good to us, but it will probably never help us attain nirvana.
He encourages us to embrace real life rather than the one that exists in our head and is actually nothing more than an accumulation of stories from the past and anticipated, unfulfilled fantasies. Real life, he says, is much more rich and interesting, and it is unfolding right now, here in the present moment. He challenges us to embrace and enjoy it fully.
If you are already a student of Buddhist philosophy the paths here are well worn. However, as a student knows words and their many meanings are key to understanding the Buddha’s teachings. Thubten has so many eloquent and well-crafted anecdotes and reflections that give many common terms new light with a better prism.
I wanted to like this book more than I did. I understand what the author is trying to point out and I know I am in alignment with the underlying truths, but his means of proving his points alienated me.