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This episode of Cool Conversations is a very special one because Kenton sits down with his close friend and Number One Sherpa, Dorjee Gyelzen. Dorjee grew up in Pangboche, Nepal which sits at 4,000m altitude. Life in the high Himalayas is challenging, but through hard work and commitment Dorjee has forged a career in mountaineering and Kenton rates him as one of the best! Dorjee has climbed Mount Everest 23 times and he has summited Ama Dablam (his favourite mountain) an astonishing 27 times. Listen now to hear about Dorjee's childhood and his journey into mountaineering, and to learn about his Buddhist faith and his deep love and sense of responsibility for his family.
Dorjee the Film Sherpa wanted to talk about Tobe Hooper's Lifeforce, vampires, aliens, and so much more! Join our Patreon if you can! Hey, why not call us on our hotline? (724) 246-4669!
On this episode, Isa Gucciardi, Ph.D. is our guest host, and she continues the conversation from our last episode with Geshe Pema Dorjee, picking up where Laura and Geshe-la left off. They discuss his life in India after escaping from Tibet. He recounts his adaptation to a new way of life – the difficulties as well as the joys. He describes his early encounter with the street children of Nepal who helped him when he needed it most and who inspire his humanitarian efforts to this day. His fascinating story includes his time as the head of the Children's Village in Dharamsala and his work to preserve the Bodong tradition of Tibet. He also discusses the many projects he has ongoing to help the poor and disenfranchised people of Nepal and northwestern India. His humor, sincerity, and kind spirit shine through in this at-times playful and engaging conversation with his longtime friend, Isa. Geshe Pema Dorjee has advanced degrees in Buddhist Philosophy and has played several important roles in helping establish and maintain the Tibetan community in exile, including his position as the Principal of the Tibetan Teachers Training Center. He was also the head of the Children's Village in Dharamsala, which is a school for displaced Tibetan children where he oversaw the care and education of over 16 thousand children. At the request of HH Dalai Lama, he now runs a monastery in India and is in charge of translating thousands of texts to help preserve the ancient Bodong tradition of Tibet. Additionally, he continues his tireless work in Nepal and northeast India of establishing schools, arranging medical care for the sick and injured, providing care for the elderly, creating orphanages, combating human trafficking, creating a safe house for street girls, introducing new agricultural techniques, and providing safe water, toilets, and smokeless cook-stoves to remote villages. To learn more about Geshe Pema Dorjee and his projects, visit buddhistcharity.org.
In this very special episode, Dorjee and Matt discuss a mulitude of topics including LP Brown's Maximum Justice (1998). Please support our Patreon, if you can! Hey, why not call us on our hotline? (724) 246-4669! Check out the other Compañeros Radio Network shows: Movie Melt Songs on Trial Get Soft with Dr Snuggles Ballbusters Movies About Girls Classic In Search of the Perfect Podcast Join the Companeros Cuties Club on Facebook
On this episode, Laura Chandler speaks with internationally recognized scholar, humanitarian, and teacher of Tibetan Buddhism, Geshe Pema Dorjee, about his time in Tibet, before the Chinese invasion, when Tibetans were a Nomadic culture still living close to the earth. His stories are heartwarming as well as heartbreaking as he recounts his trek as a young boy across the Himalayans with his family and the shock of the new life he found in India. Geshe Pema Dorjee has advanced degrees in Buddhist Philosophy and has played several important roles in helping establish and maintain the Tibetan community in exile, including his position as the Principal of the Tibetan Teachers Training Center. He was also the head of the Children's Village in Dharamsala, which is a school for displaced Tibetan children where he oversaw the care and education of over 16 thousand children. At the request of HH Dalai Lama, he now runs a monastery in India and is in charge of translating thousands of texts to help preserve the ancient Bodong tradition of Tibet. Additionally, he continues his tireless work in Nepal and northeast India of establishing schools, arranging medical care for the sick and injured, providing care for the elderly, creating orphanages, combating human trafficking, creating a safe house for street girls, introducing new agricultural techniques, and providing safe water, toilets, and smokeless cook-stoves to remote villages. To learn more about Geshe Pema Dorjee and his projects, visit buddhistcharity.org.
I veckans avsnitt av ”Så in i Själen” så har jag utländskt besök. Jag har bjudit in Lama Pema Dorjee. Pema Dorjee föddes i Tibet 1951 och flydde som barn över Himalaya till Nepal under 1950-talet. Han kom senare till exiltibetanernas Dharamsala i Indien där han så småningom blev rektor för den ”Tibetanska barnbyn” och var det under många år. Numera arbetar Pema Dorjee i nära samarbete med Dalai lama och är tilldelad den högsta titeln i det buddistiska utbildningssystemet. Han driver utbildnings- och välgörenhetsprojekt i både Nepal och Indien. Han reser också när han har möjlighet, och är en uppskattad föreläsare och kursledare, 2016 blev han hedersdoktor på Karlstads Universitet. Pema Dorjee har som flykting upplevt extrem fattigdom och personligt lidande. Hans arbete med utsatta, sjuka och fattiga präglas alltid av kärlek och empati. Han har till exempel byggt skolor och hem för föräldralösa gatubarn, hjälpt gamla och handikappade, och givit stipendier till utsatta flickor. Inom buddismen finns det tydliga riktlinjer för hur vi ska leva och verka här på jorden och hur vi som människor ska bemöta ondska och lidande. Vi ska bland annat samtala om hur vi ska bära oss åt för att finna mening och glädje i utmanande tider. Varmt välkomna till ett samtal i ”Så in i Själen” som den här veckan är på engelska.Producerat av Silverdrake Förlagwww.silverdrakeforlag.seRedaktör: Marcus Tigerdraakemarcus@silverdrakeforlag.seKlipp: Patrik Sundén Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Some news about the show and Dorjee and Matt talking T-Force and sex with Robots Please support our Patreon, if you can! Hey, why not call us on our hotline? (724) 246-4669! Check out the other Compañeros Radio Network shows: Movie Melt Songs on Trial Get Soft with Dr Snuggles Ballbusters Movies About Girls Classic In Search of the Perfect Podcast Join the Companeros Cuties Club on Facebook
Learn about the mystery of how Tibetan monks seem to keep meditating after death; and a woolly mammoth that walked VERY far. Thukdam Project scientists still stumped over how deceased Tibetan monks continue to meditate after death by Grant Currin Berman, R. (2021, August 5). The strange case of the dead-but-not-dead Tibetan monks. Big Think; Big Think. https://bigthink.com/surprising-science/thukdam-study Burke, D. (2021, July 28). Inside the First-Ever Scientific Study of Post-Mortem Meditation. Tricycle: The Buddhist Review. https://tricycle.org/trikedaily/thukdam-project/ Lott, D. T., Yeshi, T., Norchung, N., Dolma, S., Tsering, N., Jinpa, N., Woser, T., Dorjee, K., Desel, T., Fitch, D., Finley, A. J., Goldman, R., Bernal, A. M. O., Ragazzi, R., Aroor, K., Koger, J., Francis, A., Perlman, D. M., Wielgosz, J., & Bachhuber, D. R. W. (2021). No Detectable Electroencephalographic Activity After Clinical Declaration of Death Among Tibetan Buddhist Meditators in Apparent Tukdam, a Putative Postmortem Meditation State. Frontiers in Psychology, 11. https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2020.599190 Researchers found a Pleistocene era woolly mammoth that walked far enough to circle the Earth…twice by Cameron Duke Koumoundouros, T. (2021). An Ancient Woolly Mammoth Trekked So Far, It Could Have Circled The Globe Twice. ScienceAlert. https://www.sciencealert.com/researchers-decipher-the-travel-diary-written-within-a-17-000-year-old-mammoth-s-tusk Wooller, M. J., Bataille, C., Druckenmiller, P., Erickson, G. M., Groves, P., Haubenstock, N., Howe, T., Irrgeher, J., Mann, D., Moon, K., Potter, B. A., Prohaska, T., Rasic, J., Reuther, J., Shapiro, B., Spaleta, K. J., & Willis, A. D. (2021). Lifetime mobility of an Arctic woolly mammoth. Science, 373(6556), 806–808. https://doi.org/10.1126/science.abg1134 Follow Curiosity Daily on your favorite podcast app to learn something new every day withCody Gough andAshley Hamer. Still curious? Get exclusive science shows, nature documentaries, and more real-life entertainment on discovery+! Go to https://discoveryplus.com/curiosity to start your 7-day free trial. discovery+ is currently only available for US subscribers. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
The guest of this episode is cognitive scientist and author Dusana Dorjee. Dusana is senior lecturer at the University of York, where she leads the Well Minds Lab — furthermore, she has authored the two books Mind, Brain, and the Path to Happiness (2013) and Neuroscience and psychology of meditation in everyday life (2017). Among her many interesting publications, Dusana has published the article ‘Defining contemplative science' in Frontiers of Psychology in 2016. In that article, she investigates the basic mechanisms of contemplative practice and proposes a very interesting conceptualisation of the processes involved. The point of departure for the interview is exactly this particular article. The interview touches upon numerous interesting topics. The first part of the conversation mainly focuses upon Dusana's own journey into meditation research and the current state of this area of research. Hereafter, the conversation moves to discussing the main ideas in the above-mentioned article of Dusana — this involves aspects of metacognition, attention control, and emotional health. Next, the conversation moves to discussing different states of consciousness and so-called existential awareness. This involves considerations on deep meditative states and their importance for well-being. In the end, the interview closes with some perspectives on future meditation research and the training of metacognitive capacities in younger populations.Hope you enjoy the interview!Interviewer: Victor LangeProduction: Heine Volder
Awwww yeah! We've got an extra special extended episode for you guys on one of our favorite topics: Video games! Extra special thanks to Dorjee for recommending our brew this week!
A rockstar lineup of Synthetic asset builders and users - Kain from Synthetix, Clayton from UMA, Dorjee from Perlin and Charles from Genesis Block Hong Kong, hosted by Artur from Multi.io. They dive into where the synthetic assets market is at today, what its risks are and most importantly where they see it heading. Twitter Kain Warwick: https://twitter.com/kaiynne Twitter Synthetix: https://twitter.com/synthetix_io Website Synthetix: https://synthetix.io/ Twitter Charles Yang: https://twitter.com/_ycycy Website Genesis Block: https://genesisblockhk.com/ Twitter Clayton Roche: https://twitter.com/TokenArchitect Twitter UMA: https://twitter.com/UMAprotocol Website UMA: https://umaproject.org/
The creators of Perlin still hold the long-term vision of developing a revenue-generating distributed ledger system that closes the wealth gap. But until smartphones are powerful enough and broadband speeds are fast enough, the team has expanded its scope to include Wavelet, a DAG ledger that powers WebAssembly smart contracts. Kenta Iwasaki and Dorjee Sun are the cofounders of Perlin, a crypto project powering the future of trade with enterprise solutions built on top of the world’s fastest public ledger. Today, Kenta and Dorjee join us to share their ten-year plan to realize a decentralized cloud compute platform and explain how the network evolved to include smart contracts—with international trade applications. They introduce us to DAG architecture, describing how it leverages alternatives to the longest chain rule and discussing Wavelet’s unique snowball sampling solution for identifying the valid chain. Kenta weighs in on the main design flaw of Avalanche as a consensus mechanism and offers a high-level overview of how Wavelet achieves total ordering of transactions. He also walks us through the recent Wavelet benchmark, revealing the system’s impressive numbers in terms of transactions per second and time to finality. Listen in to understand the key considerations for smart contract developers building on Perlin and learn how its leaderless proof-of-stake governance model solves for the safety concerns associated with other modern proof-of-stake ledgers Follow Thomas on Twitter: https://twitter.com/tomscaria Follow Louis on Twitter: https://twitter.com/louAboudHogben Follow Perlin on Twitter: https://twitter.com/PerlinNetwork Follow Kenta on Twitter: https://twitter.com/xtwokei Follow Dorjee on Twitter: https://twitter.com/dorjeesun
On this episode, ICC discusses the Incoterms® rules with Dorjee Sun. Dorjee is the co-founder of Perlin, a blockchain technology company based in Singapore. Over the course of his career, Dorjee has founded several companies, including a carbon emissions trading company for which he received several accolades, and was recognised as a hero of the environment by Time Magazine. ICC spoke to Dorjee about the future of the Incoterms rules, as well as the potential benefits of blockchain technology for international trade.
Boise resident Ang Dorjee Sherpa grew up in Nepal in the valleys at the foot of Mt. Everest. By 12, he was working as a porter, trained by his father, an Everest climber himself. Ang Dorjee has just returned to Idaho following his 20th summit and he joins Idaho Matters to talk about the dangers of climbing the world's tallest mountain and the drive to do it.
In this episode, guest host Isa Gucciardi, interviews the venerable Tibetan Buddhist monk and teacher, Geshe Pema Dorjee. Geshe Pema Dorjee is a tireless advocate of the poor and disenfranchised in Nepal and India, especially children. He has dedicated his life to helping stop human trafficking and travels the world to raise funds for his many altruistic projects and often brings those funds to remote villages, which sometimes requires days of walking to the final destination. Geshe Pema Dorje was the Director of the Tibetan Children’s Village School in Dharamsala for many years and has helped thousands of displaced children gain an education and find their way. In 1995, he became the first Principal of the College for Higher Tibetan Studies and in 2001, His Holiness the Dalai Lama asked him to revive and promote the Bodong tradition of Tibet, and he became the founder and Director of the Bodong Research and Publication Center. In the first segment Isa talks to Geshe Pema Dorjee about his work with the children of Tibet and his latest projects. And in the second segment, taken from a previously recorded talk, Geshela describes what it was like being a young child escaping from Tibet with his family in the 1950s, and arriving in Nepal with nothing. To learn more about Geshela and his many worthy projects, visit buddhistcharity.org. To learn more about author and teacher Isa Gucciardi, visit isagucciardi.org.
Robert is joined by returning guest Pema Dorjee who discusses his inspiration to become a monk as well as his experience working with the Dalai Lama. He explores the crisis in his homeland of Tibet and how the western world can help.A production of LIU Public Radio. Visit us at WCWP.org
Tenzin and Matthew discuss his youth in The Kingdom of Bhutan, his immigration to the US and his local restaurants; Himalaya and Cafe Himalaya.
In Larung Gar, im tibetischen Hochland, ist die größte Schule des tibetischen Buddhismus weltweit. Geschätzt 50.000 Nonnen und Mönche lernen an diesem Ort im westlichen Sichuan buddhistische Weisheiten. Einer von ihnen ist Dorjee.
Salut, salut ! Premier épisode de la première série consacrée à des invités qui veulent changer le monde à leur échelle, et qui globalement recherchent du sens dans leurs vies. Des entrepreneurs sociaux et solidaires mais pas que ! Mon premier invité Cyril Bruyelle , créateur du projet « 20 Questions to the World » en est ainsi un exemple : Fils d’un directeur commercial et d’une mère au foyer, le parcours de Cyril est on ne peut plus classique. Il grandit paisiblement à Chantilly puis, bon élève, rentre en classes préparatoires aux écoles de commerce dans le Nord. Il intègre finalement l’ESCP Europe. Après avoir bien profité de la vie étudiante, vient alors le moment de faire des choix décisifs pour le futur. Et patatraaaas ! Les incertitudes sur le futur commencent. Qu’est-ce que j’ai envie de faire plus tard ? Faut-il que je suive la trajectoire classique du diplômé d’école de commerce : finance comme mon frère ? ou conseil en stratégie ? Mais en même temps je veux voir le monde, faire des rencontres. Et ne pas oublier : je veux faire quelque chose qui a du sens. Voilà alors les hésitations de Cyril, si typiques de la génération Y ! Après avoir eu son diplôme, Cyril se lance finalement dans l’aventure entrepreneuriale avec Robin Food, une start-up qui lutte contre le gaspillage alimentaire. Ca n’accroche alors plus avec ses associés. Cyril se tourne vers le conseil en stratégie, mais ça ne colle pas non plus avec sa personnalité. Après une désillusion dans l’industrie musicale, la situation devient enfin claire pour Cyril : quand était-il le plus heureux ? Lorsqu’il a entrepris. Avec l’envie de rencontrer les humains qui peuplent la Terre, de voir le monde de ses propres yeux et de faire quelque chose qui a du sens, Cyril décide finalement de créer « 20 Questions to the World ». Le but est d’interroger le maximum de gens, de classes sociales différentes, de cultures différentes avec une liste de 20 questions. Si vous deviez écrire un livre sur le monde actuel, quel en serait le titre ? Quelle est la plus belle chose que vous ayez jamais vu de votre vie. Voilà quelques-unes de ses questions ! C’est donc dans un esprit d’ouverture aux autres et de bienveillance que Cyril a parcouru le monde avec ses questions et sa caméra. Cyril vient de rentrer de son tour du monde et vient ici discuter avec nous de son parcours. Voilà les références évoquées ainsi que les infos de Cyril ! - Voilà le lien vers son site : https://www.20questionstotheworld.com - Pour en savoir un peu plus sur la polarisation politique, l’effet bulle filtrante qu’a entraîné l’algorithme de recommandation de Facebook: https://www.lejdd.fr/politique/lalgorithme-de-facebook-a-lepreuve-de-la-presidentielle-3446585 - Pour en savoir un peu plus sur la campagne américaine en particulier (article en anglais) : https://mobile.nytimes.com/2016/08/28/magazine/inside-facebooks-totally-insane-unintentionally-gigantic-hyperpartisan-political-media-machine.html - Voilà le lien de la vidéo de Dorjee : https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RvyMfBhOk-U - On parle à un moment de Sebastião Salgado : voilà un portrait de lui : http://www.telerama.fr/scenes/sebastiao-salgado-dans-mes-photos-j-essaie-de-montrer-que-la-planete-forme-un-tout,102716.php Le film est Le Sel de la Terre de Wim Wenders et Juliano Ribeiro Salgado - Le projet de JR, Face2Face : voilà le lien du site de JR sur le projet : http://www.jr-art.net/fr/projets/face-2-face
Excited to catch-up with Two Space co-founder and social entrepreneur, Tashi Dorjee! Indirectly, my connection with Tashi is actually the reason Hot & Delicious: Rocks The Planet! is now a weekly show on Bondi Beach Radio. Tashi and I met at the Two Space co-working space for start-ups and entrepreneurs at the Kings Cross Hotel a few weeks back and I just had to get him on the show to tell his story. Partnering with Optus and Amazon, TwoSpace connects underutilised spaces with a community of entrepreneurs, creating unique spaces that help businesses start, connect and grow. We also chat about his work with Carbon Conservation, a business dedicated to conserving the rainforests of Indonesia and current protects 1 million hectares of rainforest and the introduction of Himalayan Chai into the Australian market back in the day by his grandmother, which went on to be adopted by Gloria Jeans and more. Vast-ranging and fascinating chats and I just love meeting new people whom I feel like I’ve known for years. Tashi is a good one and Two Space is coming to Bondi Beach, so download this show to find out more! Let’s get into it! Connect with Tashi Dorjee (co-founder of Two Space) online: https://twospace.com.au/ https://twitter.com/twospace_club https://www.facebook.com/twospace.club https://www.instagram.com/twospace.club/ Hit Hot & Delicious: Rocks The Planet up on social media here: Twitter https://twitter.com/hotndelicious Instagram https://www.instagram.com/hotndelicious/ Facebook https://www.facebook.com/HotnDelicious Hot & Delicious YouTube - Ballistyx Snowboard Show, interviews & more. https://www.youtube.com/user/HotnDeliciousRecords 'Hot & Delicious: Rocks The Planet’ entertainment, travel, photography & lifestyle blog: http://hotndelicious.com/ For social media, photography & influencer business enquiries contact: info@hotndelicious.com Stream Hot & Delicious: Rocks The Planet! LIVE on Bondi Beach Radio. Australia: Tuesdays 9am AEST, USA: Mondays 2pm PDT/5pm ET. https://bondibeachradio.com.au/shows/hot-delicious-rocks-planet/ Download Hot & Delicious: Rocks The Planet show episodes right here on iTunes: https://itunes.apple.com/au/podcast/hot-delicious-rocks-planet/id923799010?mt=2
We are The Bottomless Truth with CD and Juice...The funniest podcast you've never heard of!! NOW ON YOUTUBE!! - www.youtube.com/watch?v=IRLdg6QYofM Today we have Atlanta rapper Dodad @dodadgotbars who comes to discuss all things hip hop. We talk his top 5 rappers, old school versus new school hip hop, RDM (Rap Dance Music), and the his most embarrassing story. Mixologist Kay and Dorjee' from BAM Bartenders in Atlanta @drinksby_bam is whipping up their signaturedrinks and shots. HIT THAT HEART AND LEAVE 5 STARS!! TELL A FRIEND!! audibletrial.com/bottomlesstruth Where to Listen: thebottomlesstruth.com iTunes - goo.gl/HWZuoO Google Play - goo.gl/sSBUbb Sound Cloud - goo.gl/HQT3nf Stitcher - goo.gl/MvdMxJ Contact Us: Email - thebottomlesstruth@gmail.com @BottomlessTruth - goo.gl/d2EXJ0 @TheTruthByCD - goo.gl/Gw8FU6 @JuiceWitDaTruth - goo.gl/HHCA0x
Tashi delek, this is Dorjee, Tashi delek this is Phillipa. Talk Tibetan Podcast 13. Today we'll look at putting together some of the vocabulary we have learnt so far. Dadon will be greeting Dorjee and speaking with him. Dorjee and Dadon will speak at normal speed first and then more slowly. Dadon Ngatoe delek Dorjee la Dorjee Ngatoe delek Dadon la Dadon Khe-rang ku-sug De po Yin Pay
Tashi delek, this is Phillipa. Talk Tibetan Podcast 16. Today we’ll put together some of the vocabulary we have learnt so far. Dorjee will be greeting the Tibetan language teacher Dadron. Dorjee and Dadron will have a short conversation first with the English phrase and then the phrase spoken in Tibetan. After this they will repeat the conversation only in Tibetan. Dorjee: Good evening, (
Tashi delek, this is Dorjee. Tashi delek, this is Phillipa. Talk Tibetan Podcast 15. Today we'll look at putting together some of the vocabulary we have learnt so far. Phillipa: Good evening Dorjee: . Dorjee: Gongtoe delek Dorjee: -la. Phillipa: We have 8 students who want to learn Tibetan language. Dorjee: Gen-la, ngatso Bho-kay jangdhoe yo pay lobtruk gey yo. Phillipa: Oh! very good,
TALK TIBETAN Podcast 14 Tashi delek, this is Dorjee, Tashi delek this is Dadron. Tashi delek this is Phillipa. Talk Tibetan Podcast 14. Today we'll look at talking to a new Tibetan – Karma's arrival to Australia. Dorjee Greetings Tashi Delek Dadron My name is Karma. Ngey ming la Karma yin I am newly arrived here. Nga dhey sarpa lep tsar tse yin. Dorjee Oh, Where is your birth place? Ah lay,
Tashi delek, this is Dorjee, Tashi delek this is Phillipa. Talk Tibetan Podcast 10. Today we’ll look greetings, transport and asking someone’s address. Phillipa Good morning Dorjee Dorjee Good morning Phillipa. Ngatoe delek Phillipa la Ngatoe delek Phillipa la Ngatoe delek Phillipa la Phillipa How are you Dorjee? Dorjee How are you? Listen and repeat Khe-rang ku-sug De po Yin Pay
Tashi delek, this is Dorjee, Tashi delek this is Phillipa. Talk Tibetan Podcast 8. Today we’ll look greeting and asking someone to have tea. Phillipa Good morning Dorjee Dorjee Good morning Phillipa. Ngatoe delek Phillipa la Phillipa How are you Dorjee? Dorjee How are you? Listen and repeat Khe-rang ku-sug De po Yin Pay Khe-rang ku-sug De po Yin Pay Khe-rang ku-sug De po Yin Pay Or if
Tashi delek, this is Dorjee, Tashi delek this is Phillipa. Talk Tibetan Podcast 12. Today we'll look shopping. Phillipa: Good morning Dorjee: Dorjee: Good morning Phillipa:. Ngatoe delek Phillipa: la Phillipa: How are you Dorjee:? Dorjee: How are you? Khe-rang ku-sug De po Yin Pay Dorjee: I am well. La depo yin Phillipa: Would you like coffee? Dorjee: Would you like coffee? Soe cha
Tashi delek, this is Dorjee, Tashi delek this is Phillipa. Talk Tibetan Podcast 11. Today we’ll look numbers and family members. Phillipa Good morning Dorjee Dorjee Good morning Phillipa. Ngatoe delek Phillipa la Phillipa How are you Dorjee? Dorjee How are you? Khe-rang ku-sug De po Yin Pay Dorjee I am well. La depo yin Phillipa Can you teach me how to count in tens? Dorjee Numbers 10
Learn Tibetan in easy steps. Tashi delek. This is Dorjee. Tashi delek this is Phillipa. Tibetan podcast 1 - introductions and greetings Dorjee: Today we’re going to practise some basic Tibetan introductions and greetings. Dorjee: First I will start with hello, I’m Dorjee . Listen to me and then practise Tashi delek, nga Dorjee yin Tashi delek, nga Dorjee yin Tashi delek, nga Dorjee yin
Learn Tibetan in easy steps. Dorjee: Tashi delek. This is Dorjee. Tshamgma la, Tashi delek. Phillipa: Tashi delek this is Phillipa. Talk Tibetan No 3 – Time, food and weather. Dorjee: Are you well, Phillipa la? Khe-rang ku-sug De po Yin Pay, Phillipa la Phillipa: La Yin tho che na. How about you, Dorjee are you happy? Dorjee: I am happy Nga kyi po Doog Nga kyi po Doog Nga kyi po
Learn Tibetan in easy steps. Dorjee: Tashi delek. This is Dorjee. Tshamgma la, Tashi delek. Phillipa: Tashi delek this is Phillipa. Talk Tibetan No 4 – Family members and months of the year. Dorjee: Are you well, Phillipa la? Khe-rang ku-sug De po Yin Pay, Phillipa la Phillipa: La Yin, tho che na. How about you, Dorjee are you happy? Dorjee: I am happy Nga kyi po Doog Phillipa
Tashi delek, this is Dorjee, Tashi delek this is Phillipa. Talk Tibetan Podcast 7. Today we’ll look at greetings. Phillipa Good morning Dorjee Dorjee Good morning Phillipa. Listen and repeat Ngatoe delek Phillipa la Ngatoe delek Phillipa la Ngatoe delek Phillipa la Phillipa What’s another way to say good day Dorjee la? Dorjee Good day Nyimo delek Nyimo delek Nyimo delek Phillipa
Learn Tibetan in easy steps. Dorjee: Tashi delek. This is Dorjee. Tshamgma la, Tashi delek. Phillipa: Tashi delek this is Phillipa. Talk Tibetan number 2 – Introductions, food, numbers and days of the week. Dorjee: Are you well, Phillipa la? Khe-rang ku-sug De po Yin Pay, Phillipa la Phillipa: La yin, Tho che na Phillipa: How do I say I am happy? Dorjee: I am happy. Listen and
Today’s episode is an excerpt from a lecture by Tibetan monk Geshe Pema Dorjee.
Paying people to not cut down forests? Sounds like an odd business model, but it is one that is gaining ground as governments, companies and advocates try to address reducing global greenhouse gas emissions. Right now, eighteen percent of global carbon dioxide emissions come from cutting, burning and degrading the world’s forests, especially in the tropics – making protection of our forests a crucial part of our strategies to mitigate climate change. Just last month, the Voluntary Carbon Standard approved its first methodology to quantify the benefits of reducing emissions from deforestation and degradation – known as REDD in the carbon market world. In this episode, we are joined by Dorjee Sun, CEO of Carbon Conservation, a forest carbon financing and management company, to talk about the work his company is doing to protect forests and help get these carbon reduction markets out of the woods. [Music: Delicate Steve, "The Ballad of Speck and Pebble" from Wondervisions (Smallboypants, 2009); Clap Your Hands Say Yeah, "Details of the War" from Clap Your Hands Say Yeah (Clap Your Hands Say Yeah, 2005)]
6/20/10 SUNDAY HOUR TWO (9:30-10 PM Eastern) Tenzin (Tendor) Dorjee - Deputy Director Students for a Free Tibet www.studentsforafreetibet.org