Lifestyle
  • Jan 22, 2026
    - by Sherab
  • 156

Why This Thimphu Gym Makes You Read Before You Lift

Step inside Bhutan’s Antifragile Temple in Thimphu, where ancient wisdom meets modern discipline to build stronger bodies, resilient minds, and deeply contributing citizens.

A sign at the entrance reads: please take your shoes off, like entering a temple. Stepping inside, you see a silhouette of a Buddha rendered in black and white river pebbles gathered from riverbeds in Thimphu, the capital city, where the temple is located. Within the Buddha's outline sits a single letter: A, for Antifragile Temple.

It's a fitting symbol for what Tshering Dorji, Bhutan's first Mr. Bhutan is attempting here: honoring ancient wisdom while forging something entirely new.

Inside, the space is sparse by design. White walls, handmade wooden furniture, silver accents, matte black trim. No posters, no calendars, no visual clutter among the lined gym equipment. Old tires have been ground into flooring. The minimalism is intentional, almost meditative. "I wanted as little visual clutter as possible," Tshering explains. "We are selling nothing here. When people come here, just two things: self-improvement and service."

In just two weeks since opening, over 50 members, whom they call students, have joined. Ninety percent range from age 11 to their forties, though 80 percent fall between 16 and 21.

The temple's name comes from a concept that doesn't quite exist in common language yet. Antifragile describes a person or thing that grows when exposed to adversity and challenges. Muscles tear during training and rebuild stronger.

But Tshering isn't just building bodies here. He's building minds capable of thriving under the weight of modern life.

A Mirror of Our World: Hell and Heaven

At the end of the room sits a giant 3D centerpiece artwork called 'Hell and Heaven.' The piece tells a story: an imaginary world where humanity is born with locked elbows. Two identical banquets unfold side by side.

On the left, people try desperately to feed themselves, food spilling and going to waste as they struggle in isolation. They are suffering, fighting, and miserable. On the right, the same people have discovered the only way to thrive: feeding one another. They are peaceful, satisfied, and joyful.

"This is basically our mission," Tshering says. "Creating deeply contributing citizens of the world."

It's also a metaphor for our times. We live in unprecedented abundance. Knowledge once locked in libraries is now freely available. Lifespans have stretched from 51 years in 1960 to 70 today. Wealth has tripled after adjusting for inflation. Yet diabetes, cancer, heart disease, depression, and anxiety continue rising.

"We are not three times happier," Tshering observes. "The trajectory we're on for more health, more scientific development is not the answer in terms of wellbeing."

The Antifragile Temple is his attempt at an antidote.

Three Pillars, One Path

Tshering's educational system rests on three pillars. The first is the body: exercise, nutrition, sleep, breathwork, flexibility, movement. The second is the mind: ten carefully selected books that members must read, understand, and most importantly, apply to their lives.

The book selection process took years. After reading hundreds of texts, Tshering distilled his findings into ten volumes ranked by a balance of accessibility and necessity. "These are for beginners who haven't been on their own self-improvement or spiritual journey," he says.

The process is rigorous. When students finish a book, they notify him. He sends them five or six questions testing comprehension, critical thinking, and planned application. If satisfied with their answers, they then discuss practical implementation of the book. Only then do they graduate to the next one.

In the temple's first two weeks, three students have already completed the first book.

The third pillar consists of talks: informal, practical sessions without bullet points or screens where he shares insights on health, happiness, human nature, psychology, environment, and lifespan.

What the Students Are Discovering

For the young members streaming through the doors, the revelations come quickly. Laxmi Prasad Dhakal, one of the students, articulates what many realize: "All the people may have realized it beforehand, but I realized that the temple is not referring to the place. It's referring to myself. Our body is embodying our soul and our mind. Our body is the temple, and we have to take care of it physically and mentally."

Eighteen-year-old Laxmi discovered something unexpected. "I'm new to the gym, so this has opened a new experience for me, like a new force," he says. "Never have I ever thought of exercise as a discipline. It has inculcated discipline within me."

The transformation goes beyond physical fitness. "When I exercise, I think of eating healthy, I think of staying healthy," Laxmi explains. "So overall, everything is going as a little effort, and I think very profoundly in my life, this is a very positive experience."

He grasps what makes this place different from typical gyms. "There's a quote: what exercise is to the body, reading is to the mind. In Antifragile Temple, we are polishing both our mind and body."

Donga Tempel Gyeltshen, another 18-year-old student, believes the Antifragile Temple offers a holistic approach to self-improvement by balancing physical and mental discipline. "It's not just about your body, but your mind," he explains. While gym exercises build physical fitness, the center's focus on reading ensures mental fortitude.

Strength That Is Shared

The membership fee is Nu 1,000 per month or 12,000 per year. For those who cannot afford the fee, there is an alternative: commit to reading all ten books within twelve months. If they are unable to complete the books, they are required to compensate with time, energy, or skill.

This is just the beginning. Tshering has a vision for expansion, both domestic and global. The domestic route will be fueled by lessons learned here, with plans to build Antifragile Temples in different dzongkhags across Bhutan. The global route is still taking shape.

The temple operates with just two staff members called guardians, since they guard the space and guide the students.

"The whole project rests on a simple belief: that humanity can thrive right here, right now, if only we learn how to share and distribute our abundance more equally."