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Summary of Thomas Shor's A Step Away from Paradise
Summary of Thomas Shor's A Step Away from Paradise
Summary of Thomas Shor's A Step Away from Paradise
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Summary of Thomas Shor's A Step Away from Paradise

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#1 My friend Tinley was a master painter of thangkas, the Tibetan religious scroll paintings depicting the tantric deities and various Buddhas in their myriad forms. He was crushing a blue semi-precious stone acquired from Tibet to match a patch of sky he was fixing on an antique thangka belonging to Sikkim’s royal family.

#2 The author met with Tinley, who was forty when I met him, and lived with his wife and son on the top floor of a building called the Light of Sikkim in Gangtok. He painted, had painting apprentices, and ran a small cyber café.

#3 Dorje Wangmo was 36 when she met the lama who had all the signs. His name was Tulshuk Lingpa. She and her husband gave away their house and fields, sold enough to cover the cost of the journey, and gave away the rest. They didn’t need the money.

#4 When they got to Tashiding, the lama had already left with his hundreds of followers to open the way. They set off immediately, north to Mount Kanchenjunga. They stopped at Yoksum, the last village on the way, and bought enough food for the long journey.

LanguageEnglish
PublisherIRB Media
Release dateJul 13, 2022
ISBN9798822546479
Summary of Thomas Shor's A Step Away from Paradise
Author

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    Summary of Thomas Shor's A Step Away from Paradise - IRB Media

    Insights on Thomas Shor's A Step Away from Paradise

    Contents

    Insights from Chapter 1

    Insights from Chapter 2

    Insights from Chapter 3

    Insights from Chapter 4

    Insights from Chapter 5

    Insights from Chapter 6

    Insights from Chapter 7

    Insights from Chapter 8

    Insights from Chapter 9

    Insights from Chapter 10

    Insights from Chapter 11

    Insights from Chapter 12

    Insights from Chapter 13

    Insights from Chapter 14

    Insights from Chapter 15

    Insights from Chapter 16

    Insights from Chapter 17

    Insights from Chapter 18

    Insights from Chapter 19

    Insights from Chapter 20

    Insights from Chapter 21

    Insights from Chapter 1

    #1

    My friend Tinley was a master painter of thangkas, the Tibetan religious scroll paintings depicting the tantric deities and various Buddhas in their myriad forms. He was crushing a blue semi-precious stone acquired from Tibet to match a patch of sky he was fixing on an antique thangka belonging to Sikkim’s royal family.

    #2

    The author met with Tinley, who was forty when I met him, and lived with his wife and son on the top floor of a building called the Light of Sikkim in Gangtok. He painted, had painting apprentices, and ran a small cyber café.

    #3

    Dorje Wangmo was 36 when she met the lama who had all the signs. His name was Tulshuk Lingpa. She and her husband gave away their house and fields, sold enough to cover the cost of the journey, and gave away the rest. They didn’t need the money.

    #4

    When they got to Tashiding, the lama had already left with his hundreds of followers to open the way. They set off immediately, north to Mount Kanchenjunga. They stopped at Yoksum, the last village on the way, and bought enough food for the long journey.

    #5

    The story of Dorje Wangmo is a great example of how the local people in the area were able to help the band of intruders. They found a cave that could accommodate all of them, and spent two days there eating dry tsampa and melted snow.

    Insights from Chapter 2

    #1

    I met with Dorje Wangmo, the woman who had left her home country of Bhutan and never returned. She was willing to give up everything to go to the beyul. She told me of two people who had gone with Tulshuk Lingpa on his journey

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