Harvey
Aronson is a psychotherapist and teacher of Buddhist psychology. He is the
founding co-director of Dawn Mountain: Tibetan Temple, Research Institute,
and Community Center in Houston, Texas. The center’s mission is to preserve
and present authentic traditional Buddhist practice while investigating ways
of making it practicable to modern Westerners. He is the author of Buddhist
Practice on Western Ground, the writing of which was supported by a grant
from the Ford Foundation program on Religious Pluralism in the United States
(1999-2001).
Aronson has studied and practiced Buddhism since 1964. In 1971–1972 he
practiced meditation and studied with Buddhist teachers from the Theravadin
and Tibetan Gelukba and Nyingma traditions in India. This laid the
groundwork for his 1975 doctoral dissertation in Buddhist Studies from the
University of Wisconsin, Madison, which was published as Love and Sympathy
in Theravada Buddhism (Motilal Banarsidass, 1980, now in its fourth
printing). From 1974–1982 Aronson taught Buddhist psychology and philosophy
and Sanskrit and Pali languages at the University of Virginia. During this
period he also studied and became fluent in Tibetan, and served as
translator for Tibetan teachers during retreats.
Aronson pursued professional psychotherapeutic training at the Boston
University School of Social Work from 1982 to 1984. He earned a Masters in
Social Work, focusing on psychodynamic and self-psychology, family therapy,
chemical dependency, and group therapy. From 1986–87, he worked with
children cancer patients and their families at the Ronald McDonald House at
Stanford Children’s Hospital, and from 1987—89 with abused children and
their families at Eastfield Ming Quong Residential Treatment Center.
In 1989 Aronson moved to Houston, Texas. He served as stint
supervisor and teacher of therapists-in-training at the Family Service
Center. From 1992 to the present he has maintained a private practice, using
an integrative model of psychotherapy that spans both brief
solution-oriented therapy and longer-term psychodynamic work.
In 1995 Aronson and Dr. Anne Klein, also a meditation teacher, co-founded
Dawn Mountain, in Houston. They meet with students twice a month for
Buddhist practice and sponsor Tibetan lamas a few times a year for intensive
teachings. Aronson has accompanied Tibetan teachers as a translator on
recent tours throughout the United States. For the last five years he has
dedicated one to two months a year to further study and/or intensive
meditation practice.
Friday, February 22, 2008 at 12:00 PM at The Rothko Chapel
RSVP