Hi
I took the TSK 10 month program at the Nyingma Institute in 1982 and been a student of this vision ever since. TSK has definitely been a pivotal force in my life–both on a personal/spiritual level, and in my professional and intellectual endeavors. I am also a “Dharma student,” and see a rich interplay between TSK and Buddhist teachings/practice. I’ve done Kum Nye too. Lately, I have been learning and practicing various forms of Qigong and now Chen style Tai Chi.
I am a professor at San Francisco State University in the Department of Management/College of Business. I teach MBA students mostly, a course in the Management of Change. I am really not a mainstream business professor. I have contributed chapters to the Dimensions series in TSK, which are edited books by people in various fields that have worked with TSK in different ways.
I am excited about this online program and Jack’s new book that accompanies it, “When It Rains Does Space Get Wet?”
I look forward to sharing with everyone.
Ron Purser
About ronaldp
I took the TSK 10 month program at the Nyingma Institute in 1982 and been a student of this vision ever since. TSK has definitely been a pivotal force in my life–both on a personal/spiritual level, and in my professional and intellectual endeavors. I am also a “Dharma student,†and see a rich interplay between TSK and Buddhist teachings/practice. I’ve done Kum Nye too. Lately, I have been learning and practicing various forms of Qigong and now Chen style Tai Chi.
I am a professor at San Francisco State University in the Department of Management/College of Business. I teach MBA students mostly, a course in the Management of Change. I am really not a mainstream business professor. I have contributed chapters to the Dimensions series in TSK, which are edited books by people in various fields that have worked with TSK in different ways.
I am excited about this online program and Jack’s new book that accompanies it, “When It Rains Does Space Get Wet?â€
I look forward to sharing with everyone.
Ron Purser
Hi again, Ron–
I just realized that this is where I should have responded to your greeting a few days ago, rather than in a separate email.
Anyway, I am writing this to respond to your comments to Bruce, particularly the one in which you mention Ken Wilber’s statement to you in 1983 about TSK being “one of the most ‘clean’ spiritual paths he had ever come across.” Thank you for sharing that; it is a meaningful observation to me.
Ron S.