Thank you for your patience! I’m finally getting around to updating DharmaStack — and it’s worth the wait. There are some great newsletters in this batch!
As of March 6, 2025, the DharmaStack directory has been updated to include these newsletters and authors:
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With the addition of these publications, there are now lots of Buddhist-inspired newsletters listed on DharmaStack. More than I can count! Seriously, around 70.
Please note: For now, submissions to be listed in this directory are being paused. Stay tuned for future developments.
Bodhi svaha!
Highlights from DharmaStack Authors
To be honest, I can no longer keep up with all the good things that DharmaStack authors are putting out. These are just a small sample of the writings and offerings that have caught my eye recently. I hope you’ll dive deep into the DharmaStack directory and find some more gems.
- is putting out some wonderful multimedia offerings on her , including a podcast series and Introduction to Socially Engaged Buddhism, and the Engaged Dharma Book Club.
- , aka , continues to publish consistently excellent essays on his Substack. One that I found especially moving was “Learning to Die, so that We May Live.”
- of is offering an online Moonlit Sit on Friday, March 14. The timely topic is The Clarity Inside Anger
”We’ll tend to anger with compassionate space: giving anger our attention, seeing what it’s made of, and practicing the kind of presence that turns reactivity into clarity.” Read Tasha’s great piece on anger and find out how to register for the sit on this page. - just published a new book: Happy Relationships: 25 Buddhist Practices to Transform Your Connection with Your Partners, Family, and Friends. Kimberly is also writing and speaking this month on the theme of Cultivating Your Superpowers on her Substack.
I just love
’s Substack, , and her series, “Ways of Seeing.” Sal is a seasoned Zen practitioner and an artist, and her intention with “Ways of Seeing” is to “expand our possibilities for engaging with works of art and deepening attention to everything around us.” Check out “Ways of Seeing: Spectacle,” in which she explores our current situation — “government-by-spectacle” — as a crisis of attention.- is rocking it over at , with dharma medicine to meet the moment of the times we’re living through. One of my recent favorites: “Our Joy Will Be Their Downfall: Queer pleasures, spiritual poetry, and the end of fascism.”
Let us know your favorite essays and creations from DharmaStack authors by leaving a comment below!
*** DharmaStack is a labor of love curated by . ***
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This is spectacular. I study Vedic scriptural sources and I’m a Hindu but I LOVE Buddhism and consider myself a Vajrayani as well. Keep doing what you’re doing!
Thank you so much for the shoutout dear Maia, it's very much appreciated. I will share with my own community to help extend the reach of it too. Bowing.