Naropa Magazine

Photo of artwork by Jessie Thomas.

In Naropa Institute’s inspiring opening convocation in June of 1974, Chogyam Trungpa Rinpoche called for “relighting the pilot light” of American higher education. Those of us present who were to become Naropa’s founding year-round faculty members had no idea how that might occur, but Rinpoche had tremendous faith that we could figure it out. He guided aspects of Naropa’s curriculum, approach, and vision, but left the implementation up to us. We knew that meditation practice was a key, as it had shaped our own artistic, psychological and academic journeys in such important ways. But when it came to designing courses and teaching our students, we were unsure exactly how to do things differently.

About the Cover Art

Our 50th anniversary theme, “Spark the Mind.Ignite the Heart. Illuminate the World,” echoes Trungpa Rinpoche’s proclamation at Naropa’s opening convocation: “When East meets West, sparks will fly.” The magazine cover, featuring the largest original artwork of Trungpa Rinpoche called “Smoke Dragon,” also embodies this blazing potential. In the Tibetan calendar, 2024 is the year of the wood dragon, which represents strength, vitality, and new beginnings; this cover art aligns with these themes, invoking the incandescent flame that is the complete mandala of Naropa’s lineages. May it burn brightly for future generations.

The “Smoke Dragon” painting was a gift to the Chogyam Trungpa Institute in 2019 by Trungpa’s wife, Diana Mukpo. It has been permanently installed at the Nalanda Campus.

By Lisa Birman

Illuminating Injustice

“Injustice is my greatest illuminator,” says educator, biodynamic farmer, and artist, Tai Amri Spann-Ryan (BA Writing & Literature, ’05). “Injustice is my greatest illuminator,” says educator, biodynamic farmer, and artist, Tai Amri Spann-Ryan (BA Writing & Literature, ’05). “The war on the poor, the war in Palestine and Israel. The war against those who are gender nonconforming....”
By Lisa Birman

Healing Through Presence

Marissa Grasmick works in private practice as a transpersonal somatic psychedelic therapist, yoga and meditation teacher, and breath work guide.
By Lisa Birman

Exploring Multitudes Through Mindfulness

“As a therapist, my work encompasses all of the worlds that comprise a person: outside and inside the individual, and the multitude of dynamics in between,” says Marie Janiszewski (MA Clinical Mental Health Counseling, 2023).
By Lisa Birman

Liberation Through Buddhadharma

Joshua Braillier (MDiv, 2016) took quite a leap when he left a premier law school for Naropa’s Buddhist divinity program. “I’ve come to think of the student loan burden from law school and Naropa as my life’s equivalent of Milarepa building Marpa’s towers...."
By Lisa Birman

Curiosity & Compassion

As executive clinical director and founder of NYC–based Embodied Mind Mental Health, Daniel Cook (MA Transpersonal Counseling Psychology, 2011) draws on his Naropa education in both his personal and professional life.
By Judith Simmer-Brown, PhD

"Relighting the Pilot Light"

Could first-person inquiry be the spark that relights the pilot light of higher education in America that Rinpoche spoke of 50 years ago?
By Cassandra Smith

Psychedelic Integration & Healing for the Future

In the early 1970s, psychedelic use encompassed a spectrum of motivations beyond mere recreation, including cultural, philosophical, exploratory, and sacramental purposes.
By Ramon S Parish

“Everything We Do Is Supposed to Be Art”

Naropa is an art school founded by radicals. Few represented the radical tradition of Naropa like Amiri Imamu Baraka.
By Amelia Hall, DPhil

Naropa University: Sacred Landscape, Living Treasure

As a professor of Buddhist Studies at Naropa, I have the permission and expectation to be outrageous. As Naropa is approaching its 50th anniversary, I am taking the opportunity to engage in some disruptive, outer-inner-cosmic academic reflection on my experiences and the history of this institution.
By Larry Welsh

Taijiquan, A Path of Awakening

My Taijiquan teachers Jane and Bataan Faigao came from New York City to Naropa in 1975 to teach Professor Zheng Manqing’s Yang Style Short Form of Taijiquan.
By Ben Williams, PhD

Interview with Anne Waldman

There was for me with the idea of creating a poetics school the idea of performance, memorization, song, all the oral traditions—the sounding of the text. And also in spiritual traditions—you hear it first, it’s delivered orally by the teacher.
By Andrew Schelling

Snapshot Memory: The Jack Kerouac School in the 1990s

A year after I arrived at Naropa’s Jack Kerouac School, Hakim Bey published Temporary Autonomous Zone. The book had two subtitles, “Ontological Anarchy” and “Poetic Terrorism.”
By Jordan Quaglia, PhD

Naropa's Recent Contributions to Contemplative Science

Since the earliest days of contemplative science, insights from ancient wisdom traditions have been significantly informing investigations on mindfulness.
By Ben Williams, PhD

A Countercultural Institute: Ram Dass & Allen Ginsberg

The American counterculture provided an radical experiments in communal life, gatherings in an interpenetrating network of creative, messy, processes.
By Kendall Higgins

Emergence of Beloved Community

At the core of Naropa is the belief that we must transform ourselves in order to transform the world, and MCIC serves as the institutional guardian of this heart.
By Jessie Thomas

The Legacy of Joanna Macy

The legacy of Joanna Macy is hard to go unnoticed. This interview with Joanna Macy and alumnx David DeVine shows a brief window into her impact at Naropa.
By Netanel Miles-Yépez, DD

The Yogi School: Bringing the World's Wisdom Traditions to Naropa

From its inaugural summer session in 1974, the Naropa Institute stressed experiential engagement over dispassionate observation, introducing students to the idea of the scholar-practitioner in all disciplines.
By Carole Clements

Being Sex: A Contemplative Take on "Doing It"

Contemplative education is both trick and treat. So is sexuality, and needs to be further unpacked—in context and in its complexity, especially at Naropa.
By Lisa Birman

Building a Home at Naropa

As a graduate student in Religious Studies, Anthony Gallucci (MA Religious Studies, 2020) made a huge impact both academically and in the wider community of Naropa and Boulder.
By Mark Miller

This is the Beginning of Time

The chant went on for hours, led by vibraphonist Karl Berger: “This is the beginning of time. This is the end of time. This is the beginning of time. This is the end of time….” Jazz drummer Jerry Granelli taught that silence (not sound) is the ground of music.
By Steven Taylor, PhD

Re-Wired for Time

It’s synchronicitous that Mark Miller called his piece “This is the Beginning of Time,” because it applies to my experience studying music at Naropa in the summer of ‘79. That four-week program changed my understanding of time.

Chuck Lief

Naropa University President

Letter from the President

In the early summer of 1974, my wife Judy and I packed up our old VW micro-bus and left the residential therapeutic community in Connecticut that several students of Trungpa Rinpoche founded and decamped for Boulder. Judy was going to start work as an early staff member of Naropa Institute, and I was entering law school and serving on the Naropa governing board. In the best tradition of multi-tasking, Judy served as part of the maintenance crew, installing fire extinguishers and delivering telephone books (a dated concept),and as a meditation instructor supporting Trungpa Rinpoche, Ram Dass, and the rest of the pioneering faculty. I engaged in board work, catering meals for the staff working 18-hour days, and answering the many calls for action when the expected few hundred attendees grew to close to 2,000, either in the room or inhabiting the borderlands. Read more.

Letter from the Editors

As a tribute to Naropa University’s 50th anniversary, we are delighted to present this commemorative edition of Naropa Magazine highlighting formative moments and passages in the history of our institution.

What kind of language can capture the zeitgeist underway on the eve of Naropa’s inception? Anne Waldman’s mosaic of impressions offers a synoptic view:

“It was 1974, the summer before the last American troops left Vietnam. The country was weary of the war. Visible protest had gone on for years.There was palpable burnout, exhaustion, and nihilism operating on many levels. The promise of the sixties, which once seemed so close, appeared out of reach. The House Judiciary Committee adopted three articles of impeachment charging President Richard Nixon.  Read more.

Cassie Smith giving the graduation speech

Cassandra
Smith

Director of Marketing & Communications

Ben Williams Head shot for magazine

Ben
Williams

Core Assistant Professor of Hinduism

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Academics

Contemplative education brings together the best of Western scholarship and Eastern world wisdom traditions. Therefore, your pursuit of wisdom at Naropa means learning both about academic subjects and about your own place in the world. This innovative approach places Naropa on the cutting edge of the newest and most effective methods of teaching and learning.  

Admissions & Aid

If you’re seeking an education that resonates with both personal fulfillment and global impact, Naropa could be your top choice. At Naropa, you will experience a comprehensive curriculum that integrates the best of Eastern and Western educational approaches. Explore how Naropa can fuel your journey of intellectual and spiritual development.

Life at Naropa

Through its incredibly vibrant and welcoming community,  “Naropa offers a home for those who aren’t willing to conform to convention—the mystic, the healer, the prophet, the rebel, the artist, the revolutionary, the oddball—those who are incredible contributors to the evolution of society and of our planet.”—Core Associate Professor Zvi Ish-Shalom

The Naropa Difference

How is Naropa different from other universities? At Naropa, a liberal arts education balances rigorous academics with powerful interpersonal skills and self-awareness to educate the whole person. Naropa’s contemplative approach is inspired by Buddhist philosophy and the conviction that we can build a diverse, contemplative, enlightened society when we have transformed education to affirm the basic goodness of every person. 

About Naropa

Located in Boulder, Colorado, Naropa University is a Buddhist-inspired, nonsectarian liberal arts university that is recognized as the birthplace of the mindfulness movement. Naropa offers undergraduate and graduate degree programs that emphasize professional and personal growth, intellectual development, and cultivating compassion. 

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Naropa Campuses Closed on Friday, March 15, 2024

Due to adverse weather conditions, all Naropa campuses will be closed Friday, March 15, 2024.  All classes that require a physical presence on campus will be canceled. All online and low-residency programs are to meet as scheduled.

Based on the current weather forecast, the Healing with the Ancestors Talk & Breeze of Simplicity program scheduled for Friday evening, Saturday, and Sunday will be held as planned.

Staff that do not work remotely or are scheduled to work on campus, can work remotely. Staff that routinely work remotely are expected to continue to do so.

As a reminder, notifications will be sent by e-mail and the LiveSafe app.  

Regardless of Naropa University’s decision, if you ever believe the weather conditions are unsafe, please contact your supervisor and professors.  Naropa University trusts you to make thoughtful and wise decisions based on the conditions and situation in which you find yourself in.