
Traveling in Bardo with Ann Tashi Slater
19 snips
Sep 10, 2025 Ann Tashi Slater, a Tokyo-based writer and contributing editor for Tricycle, dives deep into Tibetan Buddhist concepts of bardo and impermanence. She shares her transformative journey through illness, linking it to the teachings on transitional states. Slater discusses how paying attention can shape our reality and the lessons from the Tibetan Book of the Dead that foster acceptance of life’s fleeting nature. Through personal anecdotes, she emphasizes the beauty of embracing change and the importance of connection and growth amid life's uncertainties.
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Avalanche Saved By Faith And Action
- Ann tells how her great-grandfather survived an avalanche by praying and waving prayer beads until rescuers saw him.
- She uses the story to show that accepting reality and then acting saved his life.
Death Awareness Sharpens Life
- Awareness of death sharpens how we live and prevents us from postponing what matters.
- Traditions like sky burial act as practical reminders that life is brief and should not be wasted.
Empty Spaces Invite New Perspectives
- Liminal spaces like caves or the Japanese concept of ma create emptiness that invites fresh insight and creativity.
- Both voluntary retreats and involuntary bardos (illness) can yield new perspectives if we remain open.




