Gone, Gone Beyond:

The Mantra of Awakening

A Heart Sutra Oral Transmission featuring video teaching from Mingyur Rinpoche
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Gone, Gone Beyond:

The Mantra of Awakening

A Heart Sutra Oral Transmission featuring video teaching from Mingyur Rinpoche
IN PARTNERSHIP WITH

June 29

Sunday

10:00–11:30

AM EDT

Online

Event Overview

Join Tergar Institute and Vajrayana Online for a special event centered on one of the most profound texts in the Buddhist tradition — the Heart Sutra. This session includes an oral transmission (lung) of the Heart Sutra and offers both experiential and scholarly approaches to its central teaching: emptiness.
This unique gathering will feature a 15-minute video teaching by Mingyur Rinpoche, followed by:
  • Oral transmission and teaching on the Heart Sutra by Khenpo Gyurme, Abbot of Tergar Osel Ling Monastery (teaching in Tibetan with English translation)
  • Commentary by Justin Kelley, PhD, International Faculty at Tergar Institute
  • Guided meditation by Tsunma Kunsang Palmo, Contemplative Faculty of Tergar Institute
Whether you are new to Buddhist teachings or a long-time practitioner, this event is an opportunity to deepen your connection to the Heart Sutra and explore how the insight of emptiness can open the path to awakening.

About the Heart Sutra

The Heart Sutra is among the most important texts in Mahayana Buddhism. Often memorized, recited, and meditated upon, the Heart Sutra distills the teachings of prajñāpāramitā, or the perfection of wisdom, into a short and powerful form.
Its famous mantra — “Gate gate pāragate pārasaṃgate bodhi svāhā” — often translated as “Gone, gone, gone beyond, gone completely beyond, awakening, so be it” — is a powerful invocation to transcend conceptual limitations and awaken to the true nature of reality.
More than a philosophical text, the Heart Sutra is a guide to transforming how we perceive and engage with reality. Its teachings on emptiness challenge habitual ways of thinking and open the door to liberation and boundless compassion.
The Teaching of Emptiness (Śūnyatā)
At the core of the Heart Sutra is the teaching of emptiness — that all phenomena, including self, are devoid of inherent, stagnant and unified existence. Understanding emptiness is not a purely intellectual exercise — it is an experiential realization that frees us from grasping, fear, and ignorance. 
In this event, through teaching, commentary, and meditation, we will explore emptiness not merely as a negation, but as a space of possibility and liberation.

What Is an Oral Transmission?

An oral transmission (lung in Tibetan) is the living, spoken sharing of a text from teacher to student — an essential part of Buddhist tradition. Receiving a lung formally connects one to the unbroken lineage of transmission dating back to the Buddha. It is seen not just as a ritual, but as a way to deepen the blessing and efficacy of practice and study.
During this event, Khenpo Gyurme will offer the oral transmission of the Heart Sutra. Participants will have the opportunity to receive this transmission as part of the session, with translation and guidance provided.

Meet the Speakers

Overview

Mingyur Rinpoche

In his approach to teaching meditation, Mingyur Rinpoche integrates traditional Buddhist practice and philosophy with the current scientific understanding of the mind and mental health — making the practice of meditation relevant and accessible to students around the world.
Mingyur Rinpoche is a world-renowned meditation teacher with personal experience of anxiety and panic attacks, which he suffered throughout his childhood and into his teenage years, when he learned to transform his panic through meditation. Born in Nepal in 1975, Mingyur Rinpoche began to study meditation as a young boy with his father, Tulku Urgyen Rinpoche, himself a well-respected Buddhist teacher. As a child he became interested in contemporary science through conversations with scientists who were visiting his father, and as he grew older he began to collaborate with neuroscientists and psychologists, including Richard Davidson and Antoine Lutz at the University of Wisconsin, on research projects that study the effects of meditation on the brain and the mind.
Mingyur Rinpoche’s first book, The Joy of Living: Unlocking the Secret and Science of Happiness, was on the New York Times bestseller list and has been translated into over twenty languages. His second book, Joyful Wisdom: Embracing Change and Finding Freedom, explores how difficult emotions and challenging life situations can be used as stepping stones to discover joy and freedom. In his most recent book, In Love with the World, Mingyur Rinpoche shares how his meditation practice sustained him when he left his monastery to wander through India and the powerfully transformative insights he gained from the near-death experience he had at the beginning of his journey. Mingyur Rinpoche recently appeared in the Netflix series The Mind, Explained, in an episode about the benefits of mindfulness.
As the head of the Tergar Meditation Community, Mingyur Rinpoche supports groups of students in more than thirty countries, leading workshops around the world for new and returning students every year.
Overview

Khenpo Gyurme

Khenpo Gyurme was born in Tibet and at the age of twelve took refuge with Mingyur Rinpoche. At the age of twenty, he received full ordination from Tai Situ Rinpoche. Khenpo-la enrolled in the monastic college at Sherab Ling Monastery in northern India for twelve years. During this time, he studied the inner sciences of Buddhist metaphysics, Tibetan grammar and spelling, and astrology. Upon completion he received the title of Lopon and taught for two years at Sherab Ling. In 2010, Khenpo-la received the title of Khenpo, or doctor of Buddhist philosophy, and joined Mingyur Rinpoche in Nepal, serving as the first abbot of the monastic college at Osel Ling.
Khenpo Gyurme has received many profound teachings and key instructions from Tai Situ Rinpoche and Mingyur Rinpoche. These include the Great Five Treasuries by Jamgon Kongtrul Lodro Thaye, commentaries on Mahamudra, empowerments of the tantras in Marpa’s tradition, and the empowerment of Dorje Drolö from Mingyur Rinpoche’s Yongey tradition.
Overview

Justin Kelley, PhD

Raised on a farm in rural Massachusetts, Justin Kelley spent ten years living in and around Tibetan refugee communities in India and Nepal, studying Tibetan language, Buddhist philosophy, and meditative practices. In 2021, he completed his PhD from Rice University’s Department of Religion where he studied with Dr. Anne C. Klein, professor of Religious Studies. His general interests include meditative and philosophical systems in Indian and Tibetan Buddhism, phenomenology, contemplative studies, and learning theory.
Justin’s research focuses on different types of personal transformation, how we cultivate these transformations, and what is born from them. His dissertation specifically focused on Longchen Rabjam’s ontology of purity within the context of the Great Completeness. It is part of a larger project that aims to explicate a genealogy of purity within Buddhist history at large.
In addition to Buddhist theory and practice, Justin is also deeply interested in the learning process and pedagogy. His teaching philosophy is grounded in a transformative approach to learning and pedagogies that are engaged and applied. Regardless of setting or subject, Justin aims to create inclusive and empathetic learning experiences — both in-person and in the digital sphere — that recognize the entirety of human experience.
While at Rice University, Justin taught multiple courses sponsored by the Khyentse Foundation focusing on Tibetan language, culture, and religion. He also served as an advisor to and lecturer for Rice University’s Boniuk Institute of Religious Tolerance, emphasizing the enhancement of religious literacy in secondary schools.
Overview

Tsunma Kunsang Palmo

Tsunma Kunsang Palmo, originally from England, traveled and worked around the world as an art teacher in international schools for over a decade. In 2005, on a trip to Nepal, she encountered Lama Zopa Rinpoche, a Tibet Buddhist monk, and was so inspired by his teachings that she chose to stay in Asia and live a life immersed in the buddhadharma. 
Soon after she traveled to North India where she met Jetsunma Tenzin Palmo, whose twelve-year retreat in a cave high in the Himalayas described in the book Cave in the Snow brought international attention to the role of women in Buddhism. She served as Tenzin Palmo’s assistant for several years in her nunnery, dedicated to helping women of the Himalayan region to achieve spiritual excellence. 
She took ordination in 2010 and went on to complete a traditional Tibetan three-year meditation retreat at Sherabling Monastery in North India, under the guidance of her teacher Yongey Mingyur Rinpoche. 
Continuing to take teachings from Mingyur Rinpoche, Kunsang serves as a meditation and dharma teacher for Tergar’s Joy of Living and Vajrayana Online courses and Tergar retreats. She also mentors the Tergar practice groups in Kathmandu, India, and Bhutan.
In 2021 she was invited to teach in Ringu Tulku’s Bodhicharya centers in the Caribbean and divides her time between sharing what she has learned through her years of study and practice in Antigua, Trinidad, and the Cayman Islands and Kathmandu, India, and Bhutan.

Register for Free

Sunday, June 29, 2025
10:00–11:30 AM EDT
Online

Please note that the reading transmission can only be received during the live session, so no recording will be made.
  This event is free of charge and open to all
Already a member? Log in!

Add to Calendar

Sunday, June 29, 2025
10:00–11:30 AM EDT
Online

Please note that the reading transmission can only be received during the live session, so no recording will be made.
  This event is free of charge and open to all
We recommend adding this event to your calendar to ensure you don’t miss it.
The Zoom link will be added also. We hope to see you there!

About Tergar Institute

Tergar Institute offers rigorous programs in Vajrayana Buddhism, inspired by the scholar-yogi tradition of the Kagyu lineage. Based in Kathmandu and guided by Yongey Mingyur Rinpoche, the Institute integrates deep study, contemplative practice, and community life through small cohort learning with direct teachings from Rinpoche, his senior Khenpos, and leading Buddhist thinkers.
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