Norman Pieniak has practiced meditation and Buddhism with Tergar since 2012, initially joining the Berlin practice group. He met Mingyur Rinpoche in 2016 following Rinpoche's return from wandering retreat. Since 2017, Pieniak has served on the board of Tergar Germany, contributing organizational and strategic work. Beginning in 2022, he has facilitated Joy of Living workshops. Based in Berne since 2023, he supports the local Tergar community there. Pieniak works professionally as a business developer in electric mobility.
At the center of Pieniak's teaching is the Joy of Living curriculum, Mingyur Rinpoche's three-stage path that begins with calm-abiding (shamatha) and works gradually toward the recognition of awareness itself. The first stage works with the breath, sense perceptions, thoughts, and emotions as supports for attention. Students learn to stabilize the mind without forcing it, using what Mingyur Rinpoche calls the panic button method: come back, again, without self-criticism. The second stage opens up awareness practice, where the field of attention widens beyond any single object. The third stage works directly with the nature of mind, the non-conceptual openness that the Karma Kagyu and Nyingma traditions point at with the words mahamudra and dzogchen. Pieniak teaches all of this in a register Western practitioners can use. Sessions tend to be short and warm, with a lot of room for questions. There's an emphasis on taking practice off the cushion: noticing awareness in conversation, in walking, in moments of emotional reactivity. Tergar's broader framing is that meditation is not a separate activity reserved for retreat. It's a way of being with experience that gets steadier with repetition. Pieniak's sessions live inside that framing. Expect grounded, practical instruction with a clear line back to the lineage, rather than improvised or eclectic methods stitched together from multiple traditions.
Norman Pieniak teaches inside the Tergar Meditation Community, the global sangha gathered around Yongey Mingyur Rinpoche. The biographical details on file come from Tergar's instructor page and reflect only what Pieniak has chosen to share publicly there. Norman has been practicing meditation and Buddhism with Tergar since 2012, joining the Berlin practice group that year. He met Mingyur Rinpoche in 2016 after Rinpoche's return from wandering retreat. Since 2017, he has served on the board of Tergar Germany, lending his strategic and organizational skills. In 2022, he facilitated a Joy of Living workshop for the first time and has continued to do so ever since. Now based in Berne (since 2023), he also supports the local Tergar community there. Professionally, Norman works as a business developer in electric mobility. 2025© Tergar International.The Tergar logo is a registered service mark of Tergar International. Tergar MandalaTergar AsiaTergar Communities WorldwideCareersVolunteering Return & Refund PolicyPrivacy PolicyTerms & ConditionsCode of ConductContact Tergar Within Tergar, that history places Pieniak in a community whose teaching is structured around Mingyur Rinpoche's Joy of Living curriculum and the deeper practice paths that follow it: awareness practice, the meeting with awareness, and the open, non-conceptual recognition the Tibetan traditions describe as rigpa. Pieniak teaches in that idiom, with the language and pacing that Tergar has refined for Western lay practitioners over the past two decades. For people new to Tibetan Buddhism, the Tergar entry point is unusually gentle. There's no requirement to take refuge, no demand for prostrations or visualizations on day one, and no assumption that students arrive with a background in dharma. The work begins with learning to recognize what's already there: the natural openness and clarity of mind that gets briefly glimpsed and then quickly buried under planning, worry, and the next thing on the list. Pieniak's teaching role inside that container is part guide, part friend on the path. Tergar organizes its teachers into groups of guides, instructors, and meditation facilitators trained directly by Mingyur Rinpoche and senior students, and Pieniak sits within that structure. The community's online platform, Tergar Online, houses the practice paths, supporting talks, and weekly group sittings that members of the global sangha use to keep the practice alive between in-person retreats. Many of Pieniak's students will encounter Pieniak through that platform first and only meet in person later, at a regional retreat or program.
Pieniak teaches under the auspices of the Tergar Meditation Community, founded by Yongey Mingyur Rinpoche and rooted in the Karma Kagyu and Nyingma lineages of Tibetan Buddhism. Mingyur Rinpoche is the son of the late Tulku Urgyen Rinpoche, a major Dzogchen master of the twentieth century, and the brother of Tsoknyi Rinpoche and Mingyur Rinpoche's other Dharma siblings. Tergar's lineage transmission flows through that family line and the wider Karma Kagyu monastic tradition. Pieniak teaches as a lay practitioner trained inside the Tergar instructor pathway. Outside formal teaching, Pieniak participates in the global sangha that Tergar has built across in-person centers, regional groups, and the Tergar Online platform.
In a session with Pieniak you can expect short, guided practice periods drawn from Mingyur Rinpoche's Joy of Living instructions, plenty of room for questions, and a friendly, non-dogmatic tone. Newcomers won't be asked to take refuge or to commit to anything beyond showing up. Longer programs follow the Joy of Living workbook through its three stages. There's chanting and dedication of merit at the start and end of formal sessions, in keeping with Tibetan custom, but the framing stays accessible. Pieniak tends to point students back to their own direct experience rather than asking them to take anything on faith. Practice on and off the cushion gets equal weight.