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Shambhala In James Horton's Book 'Lost Horizon'

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Ascension to Shangri La High in the Tibetan Mountains, down a near perpendicular face, rested a sub-tropical valley out of place among the frozen ranges that surrounded it. This valley, which James Horton describes in his fantastic book ‘Lost Horizon’, is where the Lamasery of Shangri-La resided (HortonCh3-4). One of the oldest and most popular practices of Buddhism, a multi-national belief system dating back millenniums ago, is the Kalachakra. The Kalachakra speaks of a mystical place called Shambhala, and it was the stories of Shambhala on which James Horton based his fictitious book ‘Lost Horizon’. The legends of Shambhala tell of how the knowledge of the east and west are stored in Shambhala until humans are brought to the brink of destruction. Similarly, Shangri-La had many aspect of western culture, despite its isolation from the world. Through …show more content…

The path to Shambhala is not just a physical journey, but also a journey of introspection, for this is why few Shambhala yogi masters have achieved ascension to Shambhala. To reach one’s inter-Shambhala, one must acknowledge the existence of the surface conscious, the subconscious, and the superconscious. In the scientific era we live in, we have been told to believe the surface conscious is the only time we are awake, and the latter are an unconscious states, yet Buddhists believe the three are all awaken states of existence. According to Edwin Bernbraum,”… we can read the guidebooks to Shambhala as instructions for taking an inner journey from the familiar world of the surface consciousness through the wilds of the subconsciouness to the hidden sanctuary of the superconsciousness” (Bernbraum 207). The wilds Bernbraum talk about are the repressed emotion, fear, and desire of our surface consciousness. Most people cannot get past this part of their subconsciousness, for these thoughts are a painful

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