fbpx
Wikipedia

Pointing-out instruction

The pointing-out instruction (Tibetan: ངོ་སྤྲོད་, Wylie: ngo sprod, THL: ngo trö) is an introduction to the nature of mind in the Tibetan Buddhist lineages of Mahāmudrā and Dzogchen. In these traditions, a lama gives the pointing-out instruction in such a way that the disciple successfully recognizes the nature of mind.

Terminology

In the Mahāmudrā tradition, pointing-out instruction (Tibetan: ངོ་སྤྲོད་ཀྱི་གདམས་པ་, Wylie: ngo sprod kyi gdams pa, THL: ngo-trö kyi dam-pa) is also referred to as "pointing out the nature of mind" (Tibetan: སེམས་ཀྱི་ངོ་སྤྲོད་, Wylie: sems kyi ngo sprod, THL: sem kyi ngo-trö), "pointing out transmission", or "introduction to the nature of mind".[1] In the Dzogchen tradition, the pointing out instructions are often called the “introduction to awareness” (Tibetan: རིག་པའི་ངོ་སྤྲོད་, Wylie: rig pa'i ngo sprod, THL: rik-pé ngo-trö)[citation needed] or "sems khrid," pronounced "sem tri".[2] Senior Shambhala Buddhist teacher Jeremy Hayward describes this as

[A] direct pointing out of the nature of mind, that is mind's simplicity and universality—all appearances arise within the mind and in that sense there is nothing other than mind, yet mind itself is emptiness, openness beyond concept.[1]

In the Mahāmudrā tradition, the mind pointed out is called "ordinary mind" (Wylie: tha mal gyi shes pa tamel gyi shépa, Sanskrit: *prākṛita-jñana).[3] As the Dzogchen Ponlop Rinpoche explains,

From the Mahamudra point of view, the nature of our mind is completely enlightened right from the beginning, and it is known as ordinary mind. In this context, 'ordinary' does not refer to mundane consciousness—a mind that is totally caught up in this world of Samsara. Ordinary mind refers to Mind that is not fabricated in any way. It is the natural or fundamental state of our mind, totally free from all conceptual elaborations. It is the best part of Mind. When we experience this ordinary Mind, we experience buddha Mind. It does not matter how our mind is manifesting. Whether our thoughts and emotions are positive, negative, or neutral—that mind, in its essence, is totally free from all dualistic fixations.[4]

In the Dzogchen tradition, knowledge of the basis pointed out is called rigpa (Wylie: rig pa, Sanskrit: *vidya).[citation needed]

Sometimes the pointing-out instruction is referred to as "the empowerment of vajra wisdom,"[5] "vajrayana transmission" or "esoteric transmission," although these terms can also be applied to formal abhiṣeka as well.

Mahāmudrā

As scholar David Jackson describes, the particular Kagyu tradition of pointing-out instruction outside the tantras was popularized, if not originated, by Gampopa.

One of the special Great Seal (phyag rgya chen po: mahāmudrā) teachings for which sGam-po-pa was best known was his so-called "introduction to the [nature of] Mind" (sems kyi ngo sprod), by which the disciple was led to confront and directly recognize the nature of his or her mind. sGam-po-pa is said to have given such Great Seal instructions sometimes not as secret Vajrayana precepts in connection with initiation and special yogic practices, but rather as a Sūtra-based Great Seal instruction, or even as a doctrine going beyond both Sūtra and Tantra. Later critics such as Sa-skya Paṇḍita (or Sa-paṇ, as he was known for short) maintained, however, that all true Great Seal instructions were Mantrayana teachings that necessitated full, formal Tantric initiation into a maṇḍala. These masters denied in general the existence of any Sūtra-based or non-Tantric Great Seal, and in particular they considered the existence of any Mahāyāna doctrine outside the classes of Pāramitāyāna and Mantrayāna to be impossible.[6]

Jackson reports that, according to a number of Kagyu historians, Gampopa put particular emphasis on pointing out the nature of Mind. Jackson writes

rJe sGam-po-pa had discovered within himself the treasure of innate wisdom, and for him it was also essential to try to convey it to others. And convey it he did, on a scale never before attempted within his lineage. To do so, he bent the traditional rules restricting how certain Vajrayana teachings could be transmitted. He did this out of compassion for his students, in order to establish them in what was most important: profound meditative practice and insight."[7]

There is evidence that this practice derived from (unacknowledged) Chan influence, a controversial issue in Tibet. As scholar Matthew Kapstein writes, the

... much contested doctrine sometimes called the 'mahamudra of the sutra tradition' (mdo-lugs phyag-chen) [...] was said to bring about direct insight into the ultimate nature of Mind, owing to the impact of an 'introduction' (ngo-sprod; see chapter 10) conferred by one's teacher, without the disciple's having first traversed the entire sequence of tantric initiation and yogic practice [...] [Gampopa and other Kagyüpa teachers] certainly wished to avoid suggesting that what they were teaching was a rehashing of the Chinese Chan doctrine, which after all had been condemned in the Kadampa tradition of the eleventh-century teacher Potowa (1027 or 1031–1105), a tradition with which Gampopa was himself closely affiliated.
This ploy, however, was not fully successful. Sakya Paṇḍita (1182–1251), for one, recognized very clearly that the Kagyüpa teaching drew some of its inspiration from such sources, and so he castigated its 'sutra tradition of the mahamudra' as what he termed, with apparent derision, 'Chinese Great Perfection' (Rgya-nag rdzogs-chen)."[8]

The mahāmudrā tradition also includes a "fourfold pointing-out instructions" (pointing out the nature of Mind on the basis of appearances) presented by Karmapa Wangchuk Dorje in his three texts on mahāmudrā.

Dzogchen

In Dzogchen tradition, pointing-out instruction (Tibetan: ངོ་སྤྲོད་ཀྱི་གདམས་པ་, Wylie: ngo sprod kyi gdams pa, THL: ngo-trö kyi dam-pa) is also referred to as "pointing out the nature of mind" (Tibetan: སེམས་ཀྱི་ངོ་སྤྲོད་, Wylie: sems kyi ngo sprod, THL: sem kyi ngo-trö), "pointing out transmission", or "introduction to the nature of mind".[1] The pointing-out instruction (ngo sprod) is an introduction to the nature of mind. A lama gives the pointing-out instruction in such a way that the disciple successfully recognizes the nature of mind.[citation needed]

Efficacy

According to Dzogchen master Tulku Urgyen Rinpoche, "Once one has received the pointing-out instruction there is the chance of either recognizing it or not."[9]

Bruce Newman, a long-time student of Tulku Urgyen's son, Chökyi Nyima Rinpoche, describes the possible responses of the student to the pointing out instruction:

So at this point one of two things may have happened: You've had some experience that you think or hope is the experience, or you haven't. If you haven't, you can report, "Rinpoche, I've been trying to meditate on what you said when you said, 'Mind is empty.' But nothing has happened. I don't understand—I have no idea what you're talking about! Can you give me one word of advice on how to proceed?" Then you take that advice and start all over. A word of caution: he may not answer you straight away. He might say that you have to do some other practice, such as the preliminary practices, to clear away obstacles to your understanding. Complete these practices to his satisfaction then report back for further clarification and instruction, for however long it takes. At this point you'll know that your practice is proceeding in the right direction.

If you had some experience, report back for confirmation. Don't assume you've understood. There are countless ways to get it wrong, and if you do, it will make the rest of your practice wobbly, since it will based on a wrong view. It would be like building a house on a rotten foundation.

When you report back, you can say, "Rinpoche, in your teaching you said that Mind was empty. Since then I've been trying to meditate on your words and I've had the following experience..." It's very difficult to put these kinds of experiences into words, but please try; it's really worth the effort. Study helps here—it provides you with the vocabulary to explain yourself. So you might ask, "Is this really it?" He might ask you several questions, often to discern whether you're talking about a real experience or mostly mixing it up with what you've read or heard. If he says "no," "not quite," etc., then you go back to the beginning. If it's a definite "yes," then ask for further clarification, some instruction on how to proceed. Even if you have recognized and your teacher has unequivocally confirmed your recognition, there's still much more to learn. First are the techniques for repeating and stabilizing the recognition. (This is, of course, many lifetimes of work!) Second, there will be doubts, and you'll have experiences you're not sure how to categorize. "Was that last experience really rigpa? Perhaps it wasn't empty enough." This can go on for a long time. The doubting and questioning can start to become problematic after a while, but it's very necessary in the beginning to make sure you have it right.[10]

According to Orgyen Tobgyal Rinpoche, few contemporary disciples are capable of recognition, even when receiving pointing out instructions from superior masters:

Once I witnessed Tulku Urgyen Rinpoche give the pointing out instruction to a gathering of more than one thousand people in Taiwan. He still gave the real thing nakedly and directly, leaving nothing out. This must exemplify what they call the 'expression of compassionate capacity,' for he rose to the occasion out of the power of his realization. He said, 'The oral instruction is like a candle: you can see while you hold it, and when you give it away you have no more light. But since all of you have taken the trouble to come here, expecting to hear me speak, I feel that I cannot refuse giving you the pointing-out instruction.' Then he gave the instruction in coming face to face with your own nature. Even if the great Khyentse, Kongtrül or Longchenpa were doing so, it wouldn't surpass his instruction. Yet I later met only a few there who truly recognized their own nature. Even among Rinpoche's Western students there were some very close disciples who definitely should have recognized their buddha nature. They probably had some vague glimpse of recognition; yet they use empty words, and ignore the consequences of their actions. I have yet to meet one who has fully realized his teachings.[11]

The Dzogchen Ponlop Rinpoche characterizes recognition as follows:

Receiving pointing-out instructions is similar to watching a movie preview. Unless we see the preview, we have no idea what the movie will be about. So a preview is an excellent way to be introduced to what a particular movie might be like. We might see the preview and then decide to skip the film—that is up to us. No one is going to force us to sit through the whole movie.

Similarly, we get a preview of the Mahamudra experience when we receive the pointing-out instructions from our guru. They give us a glimpse or flash experience of Mahamudra. They give us a sense of direction and motivate us to go further; however, it is up to us to extend our exploration so that we eventually come to a genuine realization of Mahamudra. Without this flash experience, we would have no way to be exposed to the nature of Mind so directly, so nakedly. That flash is a transmission of the lineage, a wonderful blessing through which we are introduced to the deeper experience and realization of the Mahamudra path. This shows how necessary it is to rely on the lineage transmission and to be connected to a genuine lineage master. Without the pure and genuine lineage, without a qualified lineage master, we would have no way to experience such a preview, such a flash experience.[4]

Secrecy

This conspicuous aspect of Vajrayana Buddhism is esoteric. In this context esoteric means that the transmission of certain accelerating factors only occurs directly from teacher to student during an initiation and cannot be simply learned from a book. The term adhisthana (literally "blessing") refers to the spiritual energy that is received in the mindstream of the aspirant when successful transmission takes place.

Many techniques are also commonly said to be secret, but some Vajrayana teachers have responded that the secrecy itself is not important but only a side-effect of the reality that the techniques have no validity outside the teacher-student lineage. As these techniques are said to be highly effective, when not practiced properly, the practitioner can be harmed physically and mentally. In order to avoid these kind of dangers, the practice is kept secret.[citation needed]

According to the Dalai Lama in The Gelug/Kagyü Tradition of Mahamudra:

The Kagyu system refers to those who manifest clear light mind by relying on the methods for penetrating vital points of the external and internal body as those who progress through graded stages of methods. Such practitioners manifest clear light mind by progressing through stages. Those with sharp faculties, however, may be practitioners for whom everything happens at once. The Nyingma tradition of dzogchen also distinguishes between these two types of practitioners. Those who manifest rigpa, pure awareness, by training through stages involving various practices with the energy-winds, tummo, and so forth are those who progress through graded stages, while those for whom everything happens at once achieve the same by relying solely on meditation on a nonconceptual state of mental consciousness without the practices of the energy channels and energy-winds.

According to one Kagyu text, the method of practice of those for whom everything happens at once is powerful medicine. But it is deadly poison for those who progress through graded stages. In other words, the method of practice of meditating solely on the nonconceptual state of the mind is suited only for those of sharpest faculties. For those who are not of their level, such practice brings only harm, no benefit. For them the medicine acts like a poison.

Kaydrub Norzang-gyatso, in A Lamp for Clarifying Mahamudra to Establish the Single Intention of the Kagyu and Gelug Traditions, has explained that those for whom everything happens at once are persons who have trained extensively through stages either in previous lives or earlier in this life. As a result, meditation on the nonconceptual state of the mind, without need to rely on any further meditation on penetrating vital points of the vajra-body, alone causes clear light mind to manifest so that everything happens at once. Such meditation does this by acting as a circumstance for triggering the ripening of potentials built up from previous practice with energy-winds and so forth, so that they automatically enter, abide and dissolve in the central energy-channel. If a practitioner has not built up these potentials, then no matter how intensively he or she may focus in a nonconceptual state of mind, this person is unable to manifest clear light mind or pure awareness. They lack sufficient causes.[12]

See also

References

Citations

Works cited

  • Anon (2005). "Biographies: Pramodavajra, Regent of the Divine". Dharma Fellowship of His Holiness the Gwayala Karmapa. Retrieved 2007-11-15.
  • Dalai Lama; Berzin, Alexander (1997). The Gelug/Kagyü Tradition of Mahamudra. Ithaca: Snow Lion.
  • Dzogchen Ponlop Rinpoche (2003). Wild Awakening: The Heart of Mahamudra and Dzogchen. Shambhala. ISBN 1-59030-096-3.
  • Dzogchen Ponlop Rinpoche (Fall 2009). "Pointing Out Ordinary Mind". Buddhadharma: The Practitioner's Quarterly.
  • Germano, David F. (Winter 1994). "Architecture and Absence in the Secret Tantric History of rDzogs Chen". The Journal of the International Association of Buddhist Studies. 17 (2): 203–335.
  • Hayward, Jeremy (2008). Warrior-King of Shambhala: Remembering Chögyam Trungpa. ISBN 0-86171-546-2.
  • Jackson, David (1994). Enlightenment By A Single: Means Tibetan Controversies on the "Self-Sufficient White Remedy" (dkar po chig thub). Vienna: Verlag der Osterreichischen Akademie der Wissenschaffen. ISBN 3-7001-2162-8.
  • Kapstein, Matthew T. (2000). The Tibetan Assimilation of Buddhism: Conversion, Contestation, and Memory. Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-513122-3.
  • Newman, Bruce (2004). A Beginner's Guide To Tibetan Buddhism. Snow Lion Publications. ISBN 1559392118.
  • Trungpa, Chögyam (2008). Cutting Through Spiritual Materialism. Shambhala Publications. ISBN 978-1-59030-639-0.
  • Urgyen Rinpoche, Tulku (1985). . Rangjung.com. Translated by Erik Pema Kunsang. Rangjung Yeshe Translations & Publications. Archived from the original on 2012-09-09.
  • Urgyen Rinpoche, Tulku (1996). "Essays and interviews by ten lamas surrounding the passing of a great master". ABuddhistLibrary.com.

pointing, instruction, this, article, about, specific, form, empowerment, tibetan, buddhism, more, general, overview, empowerment, esoteric, transmission, this, article, contains, many, overly, lengthy, quotations, encyclopedic, entry, please, help, improve, a. This article is about a specific form of empowerment in Tibetan Buddhism For a more general overview of empowerment see Esoteric transmission This article contains too many or overly lengthy quotations for an encyclopedic entry Please help improve the article by presenting facts as a neutrally worded summary with appropriate citations Consider transferring direct quotations to Wikiquote or for entire works to Wikisource September 2021 The pointing out instruction Tibetan ང ས ད Wylie ngo sprod THL ngo tro is an introduction to the nature of mind in the Tibetan Buddhist lineages of Mahamudra and Dzogchen In these traditions a lama gives the pointing out instruction in such a way that the disciple successfully recognizes the nature of mind Contents 1 Terminology 2 Mahamudra 3 Dzogchen 4 Efficacy 5 Secrecy 6 See also 7 References 7 1 Citations 7 2 Works citedTerminology EditIn the Mahamudra tradition pointing out instruction Tibetan ང ས ད ཀ གདམས པ Wylie ngo sprod kyi gdams pa THL ngo tro kyi dam pa is also referred to as pointing out the nature of mind Tibetan ས མས ཀ ང ས ད Wylie sems kyi ngo sprod THL sem kyi ngo tro pointing out transmission or introduction to the nature of mind 1 In the Dzogchen tradition the pointing out instructions are often called the introduction to awareness Tibetan ར ག པའ ང ས ད Wylie rig pa i ngo sprod THL rik pe ngo tro citation needed or sems khrid pronounced sem tri 2 Senior Shambhala Buddhist teacher Jeremy Hayward describes this as A direct pointing out of the nature of mind that is mind s simplicity and universality all appearances arise within the mind and in that sense there is nothing other than mind yet mind itself is emptiness openness beyond concept 1 In the Mahamudra tradition the mind pointed out is called ordinary mind Wylie tha mal gyi shes pa tamel gyi shepa Sanskrit prakṛita jnana 3 As the Dzogchen Ponlop Rinpoche explains From the Mahamudra point of view the nature of our mind is completely enlightened right from the beginning and it is known as ordinary mind In this context ordinary does not refer to mundane consciousness a mind that is totally caught up in this world of Samsara Ordinary mind refers to Mind that is not fabricated in any way It is the natural or fundamental state of our mind totally free from all conceptual elaborations It is the best part of Mind When we experience this ordinary Mind we experience buddha Mind It does not matter how our mind is manifesting Whether our thoughts and emotions are positive negative or neutral that mind in its essence is totally free from all dualistic fixations 4 In the Dzogchen tradition knowledge of the basis pointed out is called rigpa Wylie rig pa Sanskrit vidya citation needed Sometimes the pointing out instruction is referred to as the empowerment of vajra wisdom 5 vajrayana transmission or esoteric transmission although these terms can also be applied to formal abhiṣeka as well Mahamudra EditAs scholar David Jackson describes the particular Kagyu tradition of pointing out instruction outside the tantras was popularized if not originated by Gampopa One of the special Great Seal phyag rgya chen po mahamudra teachings for which sGam po pa was best known was his so called introduction to the nature of Mind sems kyi ngo sprod by which the disciple was led to confront and directly recognize the nature of his or her mind sGam po pa is said to have given such Great Seal instructions sometimes not as secret Vajrayana precepts in connection with initiation and special yogic practices but rather as a Sutra based Great Seal instruction or even as a doctrine going beyond both Sutra and Tantra Later critics such as Sa skya Paṇḍita or Sa paṇ as he was known for short maintained however that all true Great Seal instructions were Mantrayana teachings that necessitated full formal Tantric initiation into a maṇḍala These masters denied in general the existence of any Sutra based or non Tantric Great Seal and in particular they considered the existence of any Mahayana doctrine outside the classes of Paramitayana and Mantrayana to be impossible 6 Jackson reports that according to a number of Kagyu historians Gampopa put particular emphasis on pointing out the nature of Mind Jackson writes rJe sGam po pa had discovered within himself the treasure of innate wisdom and for him it was also essential to try to convey it to others And convey it he did on a scale never before attempted within his lineage To do so he bent the traditional rules restricting how certain Vajrayana teachings could be transmitted He did this out of compassion for his students in order to establish them in what was most important profound meditative practice and insight 7 There is evidence that this practice derived from unacknowledged Chan influence a controversial issue in Tibet As scholar Matthew Kapstein writes the much contested doctrine sometimes called the mahamudra of the sutra tradition mdo lugs phyag chen was said to bring about direct insight into the ultimate nature of Mind owing to the impact of an introduction ngo sprod see chapter 10 conferred by one s teacher without the disciple s having first traversed the entire sequence of tantric initiation and yogic practice Gampopa and other Kagyupa teachers certainly wished to avoid suggesting that what they were teaching was a rehashing of the Chinese Chan doctrine which after all had been condemned in the Kadampa tradition of the eleventh century teacher Potowa 1027 or 1031 1105 a tradition with which Gampopa was himself closely affiliated This ploy however was not fully successful Sakya Paṇḍita 1182 1251 for one recognized very clearly that the Kagyupa teaching drew some of its inspiration from such sources and so he castigated its sutra tradition of the mahamudra as what he termed with apparent derision Chinese Great Perfection Rgya nag rdzogs chen 8 The mahamudra tradition also includes a fourfold pointing out instructions pointing out the nature of Mind on the basis of appearances presented by Karmapa Wangchuk Dorje in his three texts on mahamudra Dzogchen EditMain article Dzogchen In Dzogchen tradition pointing out instruction Tibetan ང ས ད ཀ གདམས པ Wylie ngo sprod kyi gdams pa THL ngo tro kyi dam pa is also referred to as pointing out the nature of mind Tibetan ས མས ཀ ང ས ད Wylie sems kyi ngo sprod THL sem kyi ngo tro pointing out transmission or introduction to the nature of mind 1 The pointing out instruction ngo sprod is an introduction to the nature of mind A lama gives the pointing out instruction in such a way that the disciple successfully recognizes the nature of mind citation needed Efficacy EditAccording to Dzogchen master Tulku Urgyen Rinpoche Once one has received the pointing out instruction there is the chance of either recognizing it or not 9 Bruce Newman a long time student of Tulku Urgyen s son Chokyi Nyima Rinpoche describes the possible responses of the student to the pointing out instruction So at this point one of two things may have happened You ve had some experience that you think or hope is the experience or you haven t If you haven t you can report Rinpoche I ve been trying to meditate on what you said when you said Mind is empty But nothing has happened I don t understand I have no idea what you re talking about Can you give me one word of advice on how to proceed Then you take that advice and start all over A word of caution he may not answer you straight away He might say that you have to do some other practice such as the preliminary practices to clear away obstacles to your understanding Complete these practices to his satisfaction then report back for further clarification and instruction for however long it takes At this point you ll know that your practice is proceeding in the right direction If you had some experience report back for confirmation Don t assume you ve understood There are countless ways to get it wrong and if you do it will make the rest of your practice wobbly since it will based on a wrong view It would be like building a house on a rotten foundation When you report back you can say Rinpoche in your teaching you said that Mind was empty Since then I ve been trying to meditate on your words and I ve had the following experience It s very difficult to put these kinds of experiences into words but please try it s really worth the effort Study helps here it provides you with the vocabulary to explain yourself So you might ask Is this really it He might ask you several questions often to discern whether you re talking about a real experience or mostly mixing it up with what you ve read or heard If he says no not quite etc then you go back to the beginning If it s a definite yes then ask for further clarification some instruction on how to proceed Even if you have recognized and your teacher has unequivocally confirmed your recognition there s still much more to learn First are the techniques for repeating and stabilizing the recognition This is of course many lifetimes of work Second there will be doubts and you ll have experiences you re not sure how to categorize Was that last experience really rigpa Perhaps it wasn t empty enough This can go on for a long time The doubting and questioning can start to become problematic after a while but it s very necessary in the beginning to make sure you have it right 10 According to Orgyen Tobgyal Rinpoche few contemporary disciples are capable of recognition even when receiving pointing out instructions from superior masters Once I witnessed Tulku Urgyen Rinpoche give the pointing out instruction to a gathering of more than one thousand people in Taiwan He still gave the real thing nakedly and directly leaving nothing out This must exemplify what they call the expression of compassionate capacity for he rose to the occasion out of the power of his realization He said The oral instruction is like a candle you can see while you hold it and when you give it away you have no more light But since all of you have taken the trouble to come here expecting to hear me speak I feel that I cannot refuse giving you the pointing out instruction Then he gave the instruction in coming face to face with your own nature Even if the great Khyentse Kongtrul or Longchenpa were doing so it wouldn t surpass his instruction Yet I later met only a few there who truly recognized their own nature Even among Rinpoche s Western students there were some very close disciples who definitely should have recognized their buddha nature They probably had some vague glimpse of recognition yet they use empty words and ignore the consequences of their actions I have yet to meet one who has fully realized his teachings 11 The Dzogchen Ponlop Rinpoche characterizes recognition as follows Receiving pointing out instructions is similar to watching a movie preview Unless we see the preview we have no idea what the movie will be about So a preview is an excellent way to be introduced to what a particular movie might be like We might see the preview and then decide to skip the film that is up to us No one is going to force us to sit through the whole movie Similarly we get a preview of the Mahamudra experience when we receive the pointing out instructions from our guru They give us a glimpse or flash experience of Mahamudra They give us a sense of direction and motivate us to go further however it is up to us to extend our exploration so that we eventually come to a genuine realization of Mahamudra Without this flash experience we would have no way to be exposed to the nature of Mind so directly so nakedly That flash is a transmission of the lineage a wonderful blessing through which we are introduced to the deeper experience and realization of the Mahamudra path This shows how necessary it is to rely on the lineage transmission and to be connected to a genuine lineage master Without the pure and genuine lineage without a qualified lineage master we would have no way to experience such a preview such a flash experience 4 Secrecy EditThis conspicuous aspect of Vajrayana Buddhism is esoteric In this context esoteric means that the transmission of certain accelerating factors only occurs directly from teacher to student during an initiation and cannot be simply learned from a book The term adhisthana literally blessing refers to the spiritual energy that is received in the mindstream of the aspirant when successful transmission takes place Many techniques are also commonly said to be secret but some Vajrayana teachers have responded that the secrecy itself is not important but only a side effect of the reality that the techniques have no validity outside the teacher student lineage As these techniques are said to be highly effective when not practiced properly the practitioner can be harmed physically and mentally In order to avoid these kind of dangers the practice is kept secret citation needed According to the Dalai Lama in The Gelug Kagyu Tradition of Mahamudra The Kagyu system refers to those who manifest clear light mind by relying on the methods for penetrating vital points of the external and internal body as those who progress through graded stages of methods Such practitioners manifest clear light mind by progressing through stages Those with sharp faculties however may be practitioners for whom everything happens at once The Nyingma tradition of dzogchen also distinguishes between these two types of practitioners Those who manifest rigpa pure awareness by training through stages involving various practices with the energy winds tummo and so forth are those who progress through graded stages while those for whom everything happens at once achieve the same by relying solely on meditation on a nonconceptual state of mental consciousness without the practices of the energy channels and energy winds According to one Kagyu text the method of practice of those for whom everything happens at once is powerful medicine But it is deadly poison for those who progress through graded stages In other words the method of practice of meditating solely on the nonconceptual state of the mind is suited only for those of sharpest faculties For those who are not of their level such practice brings only harm no benefit For them the medicine acts like a poison Kaydrub Norzang gyatso in A Lamp for Clarifying Mahamudra to Establish the Single Intention of the Kagyu and Gelug Traditions has explained that those for whom everything happens at once are persons who have trained extensively through stages either in previous lives or earlier in this life As a result meditation on the nonconceptual state of the mind without need to rely on any further meditation on penetrating vital points of the vajra body alone causes clear light mind to manifest so that everything happens at once Such meditation does this by acting as a circumstance for triggering the ripening of potentials built up from previous practice with energy winds and so forth so that they automatically enter abide and dissolve in the central energy channel If a practitioner has not built up these potentials then no matter how intensively he or she may focus in a nonconceptual state of mind this person is unable to manifest clear light mind or pure awareness They lack sufficient causes 12 See also EditEsoteric transmission SubitismReferences EditCitations Edit a b c Hayward 2008 p 106 Germano 1994 p 228 Trungpa 2008 p 68 a b Dzogchen Ponlop Rinpoche 2009 Dzogchen Ponlop Rinpoche 2003 p 34 Jackson 1994 p page needed Jackson 1994 p 14 Kapstein 2000 p 77 Urgyen Rinpoche 1985 Newman 2004 p page needed Urgyen Rinpoche 1996 Dalai Lama amp Berzin 1997 p page needed Works cited Edit Anon 2005 Biographies Pramodavajra Regent of the Divine Dharma Fellowship of His Holiness the Gwayala Karmapa Retrieved 2007 11 15 Dalai Lama Berzin Alexander 1997 The Gelug Kagyu Tradition of Mahamudra Ithaca Snow Lion Dzogchen Ponlop Rinpoche 2003 Wild Awakening The Heart of Mahamudra and Dzogchen Shambhala ISBN 1 59030 096 3 Dzogchen Ponlop Rinpoche Fall 2009 Pointing Out Ordinary Mind Buddhadharma The Practitioner s Quarterly Germano David F Winter 1994 Architecture and Absence in the Secret Tantric History of rDzogs Chen The Journal of the International Association of Buddhist Studies 17 2 203 335 Hayward Jeremy 2008 Warrior King of Shambhala Remembering Chogyam Trungpa ISBN 0 86171 546 2 Jackson David 1994 Enlightenment By A Single Means Tibetan Controversies on the Self Sufficient White Remedy dkar po chig thub Vienna Verlag der Osterreichischen Akademie der Wissenschaffen ISBN 3 7001 2162 8 Kapstein Matthew T 2000 The Tibetan Assimilation of Buddhism Conversion Contestation and Memory Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 513122 3 Newman Bruce 2004 A Beginner s Guide To Tibetan Buddhism Snow Lion Publications ISBN 1559392118 Trungpa Chogyam 2008 Cutting Through Spiritual Materialism Shambhala Publications ISBN 978 1 59030 639 0 Urgyen Rinpoche Tulku 1985 Interview for Vajradhatu Sun 1985 Rangjung com Translated by Erik Pema Kunsang Rangjung Yeshe Translations amp Publications Archived from the original on 2012 09 09 Urgyen Rinpoche Tulku 1996 Essays and interviews by ten lamas surrounding the passing of a great master ABuddhistLibrary com Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Pointing out instruction amp oldid 1132954152, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.