<b>An exultant song of realization by one of Tibet’s greatest yogis, explained and elaborated upon by a beloved contemporary Tibetan teacher.</b><BR><BR>Jetsun Rinpoche Dragpa Gyaltsen (1147–1216)—revered as one of Tibet’s greatest yogis and one of the founding figures of the Sakya school of Tibetan Buddhism—composed his <I>Great Song of Experience</I> as a way to distill and communicate the essence of the Buddhist path to enlightenment. Shimmering with double meanings, seeming tautologies, and ribald references, Dragpa Gyalsten’s verses resound with insights thrown out like bolts of lightning: “When mind itself is comprehended, that is Buddha; do not seek elsewhere for the Buddha!” <BR><BR> Beloved teacher Lama Migmar Tseten’s newly updated translation of Dragpa Gyeltsen’s <I>Great Song</I> brings these verses to life with a clarity and immediacy that belies the underlying challenge that these verses pose to our ordinary ways