I think that Hayward has discovered a way to incorporate the  TSK vision within a mindfulness-of-breath practice that expresses appreciation for our embodiment in space.  He has developed a fresh use of language that combines the TSK vision with a wide field of the concerns and interests that people are likely to bring to it:
Nourishing_Presence.mp3
About Michael Gray
I first started studying TSK in the mid 1980's and have since attended a number of retreats and workshops at the Nyingma Institute, in both TSK and Buddhist themes. I participated in the life-changing Human Development Training Program in 1991, and upon returning to Albuquerque co-founded an organization, Friends in Time (with a friend who has Lou Gehrig's Disease), which continues to serve people with similiar disabilities. I contributed an essay to "A New Way of Being"--the last one in the book--in which I describe how learning to honor who I have been has broadened and deepened my openness to present experience. I live in New Mexico with my wife and two sons.
Enjoying this Hayward. Will continue to work with it. Appreciate the calm guiding voice and tone.