Either in Tigers nest or one that looks almost identical is a back wall which is appears to be just the face of the mountain. However it is more subtle than that. Project through that apparent "wall" and you appear in another area with a court-yard type of atrium having a Buddha statue in the center. Project out of the whole complex (it will appear as if you are going through the mountain) and you will then appear in one of the mandala sections of Shambhala.
FWIW - It doesn't matter what you believe. Just go in with innocent attention and a mind that is unattached to any results and if you have just a modicum of subtle perception then you will start seeing that part of the mandala. Explore and enjoy. Of course for the veiled this is just psychophantic bovine 'scatology. Doesn't matter. Have a nice day. ~} :-) > --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, "yifuxero" <yifux...@...> wrote: > > thx, no...haven't seen that but I'll look into it. My first exposure to Tibetan Buddhism was the rerun of the Lost Horizon movie about Shangrila with Ronald Coleman (1937). > > Check this out: > http://www.tinyurl.com/2dd9hhf > > --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, Vaj vajradhatu@ wrote: > > > > > > On Sep 1, 2010, at 4:04 PM, yifuxero wrote: > > > > > Tiger's Nest Monastery > > > > > > > Have you seen the movie Words of My Perfect Teacher about Dzongsar Jamyang Khyentse Rinpoche? It often replays on TV. Great guru movie, with a scene where they visit (and hike up to) the Tiger's Nest. > > >