Essential Tibetan Buddhism PDF
Essential Tibetan Buddhism PDF
Essential Tibetan Buddhism PDF
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TIBETAN BUDDHISM
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ESSEN T I A L T IB ET A N B UDD H ISM
Essential Tibetan
Buddhism
R O B E R T A. F. T HU R M AN
CASTLE BOOKS
Grateful acknowledgment is made to the following for permission to
reprint previously published material:
Bantam for excerpts from The Tibetan Book of the Dead
by R. A. F. Thurman.
Library of Tibetan Works and Archives, which published earlier versions
of translations of "Three Principles of the Path" and "Transcendent
Insight" in Life and Teachings of Tsong Khapa by R. A. F. Thurman.
Princeton University Press, which published an earlier version of "Praise
for Relativity" in The Central Philosophy of Tibet
by R. A. F. Thurman.
Snow Lion Publications for the Nobel Prize lecture in A Policy o f
Kindness by H. H. Dalai Lama.
Wisdom Publications for an excerpt from The Door o f Liberation
by Geshe Wangyal.
ISBN 0-7858-0872-8
Introduction 1
Notes 29 I
To His Holiness the Dalai Lama of Tibet
To look for the essence of the Tibetan worldview, a popular Tibetan saying
is a good place to start: "There were three who were most kind to Tibet:
the Precious Guru (Padma Sambhava); the Lord Master (Atisha); and the
Precious Master (Tsong Khapa}. " The Tibetan titles that come before the
names of these three Guru Rimpochey, lowo ley, and ley Rimpochey, re
-
All Tibetans would agree that the kindness these three great men showed the
Land of Snows would never have been possible if the most important human
of our world-epoch had not first demonstrated the highest evolutionary perfec
tion accessible to humans, the mental and physical enlightenment of
Buddhahood. That human being was the prince Siddhartha of the Shakya na
tion in northern India, who became the unexcelled, perfectly fulfilled
Enlightened Lord under the tree of enlightenment in around 5 3 6 before the
common era. Once a Buddha, His name was Shakyamuni, the "Shakya Sage,"
considered to have become a form of life beyond the human or the divine, the
"Human-Lion" (Narasimha), or the "God Beyond Gods" (Devatideva). By
definition, no being can possibly be more kind to all other beings than a perfect
Buddha; such kindness is ultimately something superhuman.
Among the Buddha's many human and divine disciples, there were four
great celestial or angelic Bodhisattvas, "Enlightenment Heroes," who are
believed to have taken a special interest in Tibet and the Tibetans. These are
the female Bodhisattva Tara, Lady of Miraculous Activities, and the usually
male Bodhisattvas Lokeshvara, Lord of Compassion, Manjushri, Lord of
Introduction
Wisdom, and Vajrapani, Lord of Power. These Bodhisattvas are only in one
sense disciples of the Buddha; in another sense they are themselves already
perfect Buddhas. They became perfect Buddhas innumerable world-eons
before our universe and vowed to manifest as disciples of all Buddhas in all
world systems in order to mediate between those Buddhas and the human
populations of those worlds.
Among these, Lokeshvara and Tara are a kind of divine, or archangelic,
couple, a father and mother for Tibetans. He is the mythic Father of the
Nation, siring the first six Tibetans during a mythic life as a Bodhisattva
monkey in the prehistoric past. Later he reincarnates repeatedly as the em
peror, king, or lama (mentor) ruler of Tibet. She is the ever-present Mother
of the Nation, a fierce female who unites with the monkey to bring forth
the human children who start the race. Later she serves as empress, queen,
and defender of the ruler. She manifests numberless incarnations in every
walk of life to help Tibetans overcome their difficulties and meet the chal
lenge of making human life meaningful.
Lokeshvara incarnated as the thirty-third emperor, the first great
Dharma king of Tibet, Songzen Gambo (ca. 6n-69 8 C.E.). He unified the
land, built the first network of Buddhist shrines, had the Tibetan alphabet
and grammar created on the model of Sanskrit, and promulgated the foun
dational Buddhist law code of Tibet. Both of his chief empresses-Bhirkuti,
princess of Nepal, and Wencheng, princess of Great Tang-were incarna
tions of Tara.
Manjushri was a Buddha countless eons ago who vowed to incarnate in
every world a Buddha visited, to ask the hard questions about the profound
teaching of selflessness and voidness. His aim is to help people develop the
transcendent wisdom that is the sole cause of the ultimate freedom from
suffering that is enlightenment. He is a pervasive figure in Buddhist litera
ture, being a god of learning and a patron of literature as well as the arche
type of enlightened realization. He incarnated as the thirty-seventh Tibetan
emperor, Trisong Detsen (ca. 790-844 C.E.), who built the first monastery
in Tibet, inviting the Abbot Shantarakshita and the Adept Padma
Sambhava and commissioning the first great wave of translations of Indian
Buddhist texts. Later came the "three Manjushris" among teachers: the
great scholar, mystic, and first lama ruler of Tibet, the Sakya Pandita Kunga
Gyaltsen ( I I 8 2-12 5 1 ); the great Nyingma philosopher and mystic
Longchen Rabjampa ( I 3 08-I 3 63 ), and the greatest of Tibet's "Re
naissance men," scholar, mystic yogi, and social activist Tsong Khapa
Losang Drakpa ( I 3 5 7-14 I9).
Vajrapani, the "Thunderbolt Wielder, " is quite fierce in appearance and
represents the adamantine power of enlightenment to ward off evil and
6 • E S S E N T I A L T I B E T A N B U D DHI S M
bring about the good. He incarnated as the fortieth and last Buddhist
Tibetan emperor, Tri Relwajen (ca. 8 66-90r C.E.), who completed the early
dynasty's work of unification and cultural transformation. Later he reincar
nated as many rulers, ministers, and lamas.
From the time of Lord Atisha, Lokeshvara reincarnated as Dromtonpa
( ro04-r064 ), Atisha's main disciple, who founded Radreng Monastery.
During the time of Tsong Khapa, he incarnated as ley Gendun Drubpa
( r 39 r-r474), who later became known as the First Dalai Lama. The Dalai
Lamas became important spiritual leaders, first of the New Kadam or
Geluk Order and eventually, from the coronation of the Great Fifth
( r 617-r682) in r 642, of the entire nation.
Lokeshvara's continuous reincarnation as the Dalai Lama of the Land of
Snows sealed the Bodhisattva's covenant with the Tibetan people: He
would always serve them, reborn in many regions, in families of various
levels of society, skillfully preserving their realm as a special sanctum of the
Buddha Dharma, building a culture that maintained relatively ideal condi
tions for individuals to educate themselves in Dharma.
Today Tibet has been shattered almost beyond recognition, suffering
horrendously for the first time in its two-thousand-year history under the
oppressive domination of an outside invader and occupier. Tibetans within
and without Tibet still regard the Fourteenth Dalai Lama as their legitimate
leader, the current reincarnation of Lokeshvara, and they look with plead
ing glances to his Ganden Palace government in exile to represent their
plight to the world community.
Of course, Lokeshvara, Tara, Manjushri, and Vajrapani are believed to
manifest themselves in countless other ways at the same time, and the
Tibetan imagination is waiting for their activities to surface in a new era.
Lokeshvara manifests himself as other lamas who do not have such politi
cal responsibilities, lamas such as the Karmapa incarnations. Manjushri is
evident in the manifestations of the Sakya lamas and in many a great
scholar, artist, and spiritual teacher. Tara has numerous female incarna
tions, both formally recognized and informally active. Vajrapani is thought
to be exercising his indomitable protective power in some currently unfath
omable way. And there are innumerable other messianic figures.
The rich tapestry of the activities of these enlightened beings constitutes
the Tibetan sense of history itself. Tibetans live in a multidimensional uni
verse; they are quite aware that a single event appears quite differently to
different beings. Thus in history they posit an "ordinary perception" (thun
mong pai snang ba) and an "extraordinary perception" (thun mong ma yin
pai snang ba); or sometimes "outer," "inner," and "secret" levels of history.
These need not be contradictory. For example, on the ordinary or outer
Introduction 7
level, Siddhartha was a human prince who was too intelligent to accept an
unawakened mode of mechanical living, so he renounced his inherited
identity, strove mightily to understand his own innermost essence, and suc
ceeded in attaining complete awakening. At the same time, on an extraor
dinary or inner level, Shakyamuni had attained Buddhahood many eons
earlier and chose this time to incarnate as Siddhartha and manifest the
deeds of a Buddha-life in order to educate and liberate the beings of this
world.
In the case of the taming of Tibet, on the ordinary level, Songzen Gambo
built on the conquests of his ancestors and expanded the Tibetan Empire to
its maximum feasible size, spilling over a bit in all directions beyond the gi
gantic Tibetan plateau. He then began the process of transforming a war
rior empire into a peaceful civilization, importing an alphabet, traditions of
learning, and a nonviolent ethic, fashioning an appropriate law code, and
initiating peaceful relations with neighboring states through treaties sealed
with marriages. On the extraordinary level, Lokeshvara and his two Tara
consorts looked down into Tibet from their vantage in the South Indian
paradise called Potalaka and saw the time was right to bring Buddhism to
the Tibetans. A light-meteor streaked from his heart and landed in the
womb of the queen of Tibet; similar meteors went from the hearts of the
two Tara goddesses to the wombs of the queens of Nepal and Tang China.
Nine months later the prince Songzen was born in Tibet, as was Wencheng
in China and Bhirkuti in Nepal, the two princesses destined to become his
brides, who brought Buddha icons, books, and learned teachers in their
dowry trains. Tibetans believe that every event in the life of an individual
and of a nation is susceptible to such a multileveled analysis of meaning.
In a last, extremely poignant, example, on the ordinary level, in the last
forty-six years, Tibet has been invaded, occupied, and annexed by the
People's Republic of China. This Chinese communist government has made
a systematic effort to exterminate Tibetan religious belief and cultural iden
tity, resulting in the deaths of over a million Tibetans and the destruction of
all but 13 of Tibet's 6,267 significant monasteries. It has established large
colonies of Chinese settlers throughout Tibet, defended by up to half a mil
lion troops, whose presence and abuse of land, wildlife, and natural re
sources have badly damaged the fragile Himalayan ecosystem (the Tibetan
plateau has an average altitude of about fifteen thousand feet). How can
this be explained on the extraordinary level?
There are various theories. The most compelling one, if somewhat dra
matic, is that Vajrapani emanated himself as Mao Tse-tung and took upon
himself the heinous sin of destroying the Buddha Dharma's institutions,
along with many beings, for three main reasons: to prevent other, ordinarily
8 • E S S E NT I A L T I B ETAN B U D D H I S M
a kind of millennial time for the Tibetans, since their messiah returned reg
ularly and remained a tangible presence preserving the community. They
saw Tibet as a kind of holy land, a pure realm of the highest opportunity
for the individual's evolutionary fulfillment. At the same time they under
stood that this millennial moment itself would perish in a planetary holo
caust, only to be reborn one further time during a planetary time of fruition
in the age of Shambhala.
Tibetans thus believe that anyone who looks upon the color-particle
mandala of the Kalachakra Buddha with reverence and faith will be reborn
advantageously during the era of Shambhala. That is why they undertake
arduous pilgrimages and make intense efforts to attend performances of the
Kalachakra initiation ritual.
As a Buddha, one discovers the unity of one's awareness with the om
nipresent awareness of all beings and things. One actually experiences the
reality of absolute voidness, one's own and other beings' freedom from a
fixed individual and substantial self and all things' freedom from intrinsic
identity or objectivity. One integrates this experience of cosmic unity with
the realization of one's ability to manifest freely a responsive interactive
presence among other beings as a supple, open, happy, blissful, and power
ful Buddha person, or even multitude of persons. One lives this realization
as the happy relaxation of futile servitude to the illusion of being a fixed
subject in a real objective world, enjoying an infinitely fresh and boundless
continuum of loving and liberative relationships with others.
Buddha liberation is so happy and complete that it can effortlessly in
clude without distortion or separation the infinite realm of interconnected
beings and things. From there one has the experience of all beings as insep
arable from oneself; one feels the condition of others. One is sensitive to
the continual suffering that arises from their imprisonment within a rigid
self-image opposed to an apparently overwhelming objective and alien uni
verse. One's beatitude thus naturally reacts against the self-created suffer
ing of other beings. For them one manifests educational events that help
them see through their beginningless delusions and arrive at freedom by
coming to an understanding of their own deeper nature. This natural and
inexhaustible reaction energizes the Buddhist liberative arts and the teach
ings of the way of freedom through exact intuition of the nature of all
things.
The Teaching:
3.
The Buddhist Enlig htenment Movement
He knew that the only means for beings to gain freedom was their individ
ual understanding of their unique situation, He was forced to try to help
them come to such an understanding. Simple faith cannot produce such un
derstanding. Blind faith in implausible things blocks understanding, pre
venting the open experience of reality itself, and rational faith becomes
obsolete once understanding takes over. Buddha was thus compelled to cre
ate methods of education for beings, "education" in the true sense of elicit
ing in beings the understanding of which they are capable, without
indoctrinating or conditioning them. As the celebrated verse of Matercheta,
a well-known author of the third century C.E., says: "Buddhas do not wash
away sins with water, They do not heal suffering by laying on of hands, and
They do not transmit their understanding into others' minds; They intro
duce beings to freedom by educating them about reality."
According to this perspective, Shakyamuni had to face a monumental
task: He had to found an educational movement in a society that was orga
nized only for professional training and religious indoctrination. He re
jected the Vedas, the brahminical Scriptures of the day, not in order to
found an opposing religion but because He found religion itself to be of
limited value, even of negative value, in His enterprise of educating beings
for freedom. He lived in a world wherein a healthy secularity had begun to
develop only among the merchant classes of the cities, those who generated
the Indian traditions of "the good life"-namely, materialists, economists,
and political scientists.
Shakyamuni was brought up by His father to become a military general
and ruler of men, the first duty of a city-state monarch being military orga
nization and social discipline. Thus when His beatitude moved Him to offer
an educational process to His contemporaries and posterity, He began His
work in a skillfully organized manner. His organization was militant in a
way precisely opposite to the prevailing militancy of military organizations.
His enlightenment showed Him a new meaning and purpose for human
life. It should not be wasted on relatively unsatisfying egocentric pleasure,
on procreation, economic productivity, conquest, the amassing of riches,
fame, glory, or even on religious piety, purity, or sanctity. He found Himself
infinitely intertwined with the fates and feelings of infinite beings. He rec
ognized that human beings are biologically best suited to awaken, to dis
cover their own ultimate freedom and immortal beatitude. He had the
powerful interest of His infinite altruism in redirecting humans' investment
of their life-energies, shifting it from mundane preoccupations toward evo
lutionary and liberative ends.
He built on the existing Indian tradition of ascetic, wandering truth
seekers (shramana ) and founded the monastic Community (Sangha). Alert
Introduction 13
to the tensions this would create with the warrior-kings, He proclaimed the
Community to be an "other world," a sacred realm, a spiritual society out
side ordinary society. He pledged the continuing obedience to the king's law
of anyone still within the king's realm of ordinary society. He asked only
for exemptions and special support for those who moved outside into the
extrasocial Community: exemptions from duties of productive labor, pro
creation, family, military service, and taxes, and special support in the form
of free time for self-development, free food for subsistence, free land for
temporary shelter, and free cloth for robes, all limited to the minimum nec
essary. He was alert also to the danger of threatening too strongly the reli
gious priesthood of the times, so He prohibited His mendicant monks and
nuns from performing priestly services. They were not allowed to perform
rites of birth, blessing, marriage, funerals, or divinations and were forbid
den to perform miracles or healings.
into the Magadhan and Mauryan empires. The monastic organization was
a kind of inversion of the military organization: a peace army rather than a
war army, a self-conquest tradition rather than an other-conquest tradition,
a science of inner liberation rather than a science of liberating the outer
world from the possession of others. If we understand this perspective, then
the later, millennia-long encounter between monasticism and militarism
throughout Asia, and especially in Tibet, emerges in an entirely new light.
In its role as universal educator, the Buddhist Sangha can be seen as a
powerful "taming," or civilizing, force in ancient India. It was the one
multinational institution, opposed to the conquest army and the trade em
pire, that could provide the individual some bulwark against the power of
the monarch and his state. It also was the engine of the inward-looking
bent of Indian science, which, in contrast to the sciences of Greece, Iran, or
China, found the inner world of the mind and its energies more important
than the outer world of natural elements and forces. The systematic effort
of monastic education to measure, understand, and control the mind for
the purpose of human betterment resulted in India's unique refinement of
various kinds of yoga, technologies for harnessing mind and body to
achieve happiness more effectively. Once we glimpse in this way how the
Buddhists created the main institution outside the state and developed the
curricula of taming, liberating, and empowering education, we can better
assess its key constitutive role in the formation of classical Indian civiliza
tion, its arts, philosophies, religions, state institutions, and social ethics.
This then changes the way we look at Buddhist institutions in relation to
social development in later societies where Buddhism became even more in
fluential.
cial gospel of universal love and compassion; then they attributed this new
Vehicle to the Buddha. This strategy kept Buddhism's head above the flood
of popular Hinduism for a while, so the story goes, somehow persuading
the people to continue to support the newly devalued monks. A few cen
turies further down the slope, popular magic and mysticism became more
irresistible, and so this universal, messianic Buddhism compromised even
further by developing an esoteric Adamantine or Apocalyptic Vehicle.
Buddhism now incorporated Vedic fire-sacrifice rituals, mantras, mandalas,
feasts, sexuality, breath control, and yoga, along with an even more imagi
natively lush deification of the Buddha, on top of the inclusion of women in
the ranks of religious virtuosi. After reaching this lowest level of popular
ization, so the account goes, nothing was left for Indian Buddhism but to
sink into the swamp of Hinduism, submerging its own identity forever and
disappearing from the land of its birth.
The main difficulty with such a rendering of Indian Buddhism's evolu
tion-the inexplicable mystery of it-is, if Buddhists kept needing to com
promise to compete with Hinduism for survival, why didn't they simply
forget the whole thing and become Hindus? They were all born Hindus.
Since the Buddha was apparently such a detriment, such a killjoy, why keep
bothering with him at all century after century?
Obviously there must have been something more satisfying about being
a Buddhist than developing elaborate ways to compete with Hindus.
The evidence in fact supports a view of Buddhism as a powerful social
movement with a definite educating and civilizing program. During its
fifteen-hundred-year sojourn in India, the Buddhist education movement
was a catalyst for liberation and progress. The three Vehicles (Monastic,
Messianic, and Apocalyptic Vehicles) so crucial to Tibetan Buddhism were
manifestations of a progressive development.
Its first five hundred years were primarily monastic, solidifying the ex
trasocial society of the Sangha and providing the educationally oriented
individual an asylum from economic, social, political, and religious de
mands. During its next five hundred years-with the addition of the
Messianic Vehicle-Indian Buddhism moved aggressively outward from a
solid monastic base in the economy, society, and culture (already changed
by five centuries of feedback from the thriving educational community) to
tackle the more violent aspects of society and to teach a social ethic of
love and compassion. Its last five hundred years were culminatively apoc
alyptic: Insisting on a more evolved level of behavior in developed society,
Buddhists entered the marginal areas of society among the lower castes,
tribals, and foreigners, such as the Tibetans. They used magical and
charismatic means to teach people who could not be approached within
16 • E S S E N T I A L T IB E T A N BU D D H I S M
VEHICLES OR STYLES
OF BUDDHISM IN INDIA
these would ultimately prove unsustainable by that dynasty, for more than
two centuries the new import was considered highly beneficial for both the
regime and the people.
Buddhism was accepted in Tibet only because they perceived it as deliv
ered by some sort of superior being, whom they learned to call a Buddha. It
arrived in Tibet full-blown, with its monastic education, universalistic so
cial ethic, and apocalyptic vision of reality. It had to confront and over
come an already developed priestcraft capable of addressing every aspect of
life and death-birth, marriage, economic ethics, magic, protection against
demons, and so forth. In the mid-seventh century, an emperor named
Songzen Gambo (a near contemporary of the Japanese culture-transformer
Prince Shotoku Taishi) began the attempt to transform the civilization from
feudal militarism to peaceful monasticism. In a systematic process of cul
ture building, he sent a team of scholars to India to learn Sanskrit, to create
a written language for Tibetan, and to begin to translate the vast Buddhist
literature. He married nine queens from neighboring countries, requesting
each to bring Buddhist artifacts and texts with her to Tibet. He built a sys
tem of imperial temples laid out in a geomantic grid, centering on the
Jokhang and Ramoche cathedrals in his new capital at Lhasa, thereby cre
ating a geometry of sacredness to contain the nation.
For the next two centuries, subsequent emperors continued his work,
defending Tibet internationally against Arab, Turkish, and Chinese powers,
sponsoring translations, holding conferences, building Buddhist institu
tions, and educating the people. Around the turn of the ninth century, the
Emperor Trisong Detsen, with the help of the magical intervention of the
Great Adept Padma Sambhava and the monastic knowledge of the Indian
Abbot Shantarakshita, built the first monastery at Samyey. He thus im
ported the Indian Buddhist university curriculum and began a sixty-year
process of collecting all useful knowledge then available. Mathematics, po
etry, medicine, the art of government, fine arts, and architecture-all these
branches of learning were cultivated, not only Buddhist philosophy and
psychology. Scholars were invited from Persia, India, the Turkish and
Mongolian silk-route states, and Tang China. Tibetans developed their ge
nius at comparison and combination, looking for the best understanding of
humanity and nature.
Padma Sambhava spent this time ranging around the country, imparting
to the most capable disciples the most advanced teachings, taking them on
long retreats, and even wrestling with and "taming" the tribal gods of
Tibet, gods of mountains, rivers, and sacred springs, gods of sky, and gods
of earth. He thus planted the seeds of the internal transformation of the
20 "* E S S E N T I A L T I B ETAN BUDDHISM
The second major phase of the spread of Buddhism began with the advent
of Atisha Dipamkara Shrijnana (982-1°54) in 1°42. Atisha's impact on
Tibet was profound: It was possible, as in the case of Padma Sambhava in
the early period, only because he was perceived as a superior being, as a
Buddha.
In the new climate of the eleventh century, Atisha was able to bring to
Tibet the living synthesis of mature Indian Buddhism, a Buddhism that had
fully integrated the Monastic, Messianic, and Apocalyptic Vehicles of prac
tice. Other Indian teachers visited Tibet around Atisha's time, but he alone
became known as jowo jey, "Lord Buddha Master, " meaning "a spiritual
master who is himself a Buddha. " (The other major figure in Tibet called
1owo is Jowo Rinpoche, the national icon of Lord Buddha, the sacred
statue of Shakyamuni Buddha that was installed by Songzen Gambo in the
Jokhang Cathedral in Lhasa.) This superlative honorific indicates the im
mensity of Atisha's importance. It is not just that he was a great pandit, not
just a " reformer" backed by the king of the west, not just a dean from
Nalanda Monastic University in India. He must have been seen by contem-
Introduction 2I
Atisha wrote the first book by an Indian master in Tibetan, the Lamp for
the Path of Enlightenment (also the first Tibetan Buddhist book translated
back into Sanskrit for the benefit of Indian Buddhists) . This book was ab
solutely seminal for the central genre of Tibet Buddhist writings, of which
there are examples from the literature of each of the orders, the "Path of
Enlightenment" genre.
Like all great Indian Buddhist masters of his era, Atisha was intensely
aware of the greatness of the Tantras as the keys to the transformation of
the universe into the buddhaverse and as the most high-tech and efficacious
arts of liberating beings. But that did not mean that all beings were capable
right away of leaping into Tantric perfections. There were different kinds of
beings, each needing a precise therapy for a precise condition. All could be
developed to the point where they could have the sublime good fortune to
encounter Tantra. So all teachings, for the individual and for this young,
frontier society of Tibet, were set within the context of the possibility and
opportunity of Tantra but with precise avenues of entry according to the
various levels of ability.
Some popular Tantric teachers in eleventh-century Tibet, enchanted
with the beauty of Tantric visions, tended to forget about the strictures of
secrecy and the careful prerequisites laid out in the Tantric texts. Less
comprehensive in pedagogical outlook than Atisha, they taught the highest
Tantras indiscriminately to everyone. Atisha saw that simple peasants and
illiterate warriors could be seriously misled if they heard some of the
shocking statements in the Tantric Scriptures (describing the unconscious
long before Freud and his id) that might seem to encourage seekers to kill
their parents, or even all beings, to eat human flesh, to couple with moth
ers and daughters or with all women or all men in order to achieve
Buddhahood!
Atisha, his disciple Drom, and their successors gave a body of teach
ings that addressed the everyday problems of taming the mind, dwelling
in a monastery, conquering an obsession with worldly concerns, cultivat
ing love and compassion for all beings, and attaining the wisdom of the
realization of selflessness. This intense concentration on the immediacy
of transcendence, the universality of love, and the liberation of wisdom
and insight provided the basis for the explosion of religious fervor and
accomplishment that led to the mushrooming of the monasticism of all
orders in Tibet from the eleventh through the fourteenth century. This
movement resulted in the transformation of not merely a few individuals
or only the monastic communities. It resulted in the transformation of
the entire society.
26 • E S S ENTIAL T I B ETAN BUDDHISM
It is said that when Atisha traveled through the southwest of Tibet, he had
visions of many Bodhisattvas, especially Manjushri, at a place where the
earth was yellow-gray (sa-skya ), visions of a great Dharma activity to come
there, conferring great benefit on all beings. The Khon family was the dom
inant nobility of the region, tracing their lineage back to Lui Wangpo, one
of the seven original Tibetan monks ordained by Shantarakshita at Samyey.
The spiritual traditions from those early days had been transmitted within
the family down through the generations, a part of the social legitimacy of
the family in the region surely being their possession of these ancient teach
ings, not to mention the positive qualities inculcated by those teachings.
In the middle of the eleventh century, the kings of Ngari Korsum, Yeshe
and Jangchub Oeu, uncle and nephew, were themselves ordained monas
tics, combining in their persons the functions of ruler and priest. Their ac
tivities set a new style of unifying the religious and the political, and their
popularity increased due to their sponsorship of Atisha and other masters.
These kings had acquired a new vision of the purpose of human life, a vi
sion that put the individual's self-cultivation at the center of the social sys
tem, a main priority for the society as a whole as well as for the individual
concerned. This caused them to rationalize all the social arrangements of
production, distribution, law and order, and ritual activities in terms of al
lowing the maximum number of individuals to devote themselves to educa
tional and spiritual development for the maximum time. The Buddhist
monastery was the already time-tested institution founded on such a ratio
nalization, having delivered in India maximum free time to a maximum
number of people over many centuries. Thus the kings built and sustained
more and more monasteries. The monastic model of Atisha's Kadam order
was typical, with Drom's main monastery, Redreng, founded earliest, be
tween 1 0 5 6 and 1064. It had the financial support of the noble Dam family
of that locality as well as of Atisha's far-flung network of admirers.
The Khon family followed the same model in founding the monastery
and order of Sakya in 107 3 . They incorporated as well the new style of
leadership, combining their social status as nobility in the region with the
spiritual abbacy of the monastery. The inspiration for their movement came
not from the political arena but from the spiritual. The Indian Buddhist
monk and Tantric Adept Virupa, having mastered his monastic studies
perfecting his self-control, extending his messianic commitment, and gain
ing deep insight into selflessness and voidness-entered the Tantric way of
acceleration of his physical and spiritual evolution toward Buddhahood.
Introduction 27
"Heart-Drop of the Dakinis. " He was a child prodigy, as were most of the
greatest mentor figures, having learned to read and write at five and having
received initiations at seven. He also memorized the Transcendent Wisdom
Sutra. He became a novice monk at Samyey monastery at twelve, where he
was educated in the rigorous Kadampa curriculum of Buddhist studies. His
family education was Nyingma and his academic education was Kadampa,
and he also studied Kagyu and Sakya teachings.
At twenty-seven he met his root mentor, Rigdzin Kumararaja ( 1 266-
1343 ), who taught him the key instructions in the Great Perfection Tantras
of the Nyingma tradition. Under this mentor, he moved out of the
monastery and adopted a contemplative style of life, intensely seeking med
itative realization of the many teachings he had learned. He experienced
many insights, visions, and realizations, remembering his former lives and
receiving further teachings directly from Buddhas and angels. At thirty-two
he began to give initiations and spiritual teachings to others.
He taught thousands of disciples during many years. He wrote extensive
treatises, traditionally numbered at over two hundred, though quite a num
ber have been lost. Longchen Rabjampa rebuilt temples, had mystic experi
ences, and had an enormous impact on future generations. He was one of
the Tibetan "Renaissance men" who accomplished so much that it is hard
to believe he lived only fifty-six years. His portraits present him with two
lotuses above his shoulders, with a sword of wisdom on the right and a vol
ume of the Transcendent Wisdom Sutra on the left, thus indicating his
membership in the group of "three Manjushris," along with Sakya Pandita
before him and Tsong Khapa after.
Longchenpa's main philosophical accomplishment was his synthesis of
the mystic traditions of the "discovered treasure " teachings received as rev
elations from the Dakini-angels and the canonical teachings of the three
Vehicles. His teachings of the basic path are no different from those of the
Kadampa and other orders, with the methods of mind cultivation, stages,
meditations, and insights. His use of the newly translated Tantras was also
wholehearted; he accepted the Ritual, Action, and Yoga Tantras as Vehicles
four, five, and six of his system of nine Vehicles. He divided the Unexcelled
Yoga Tantras into three kinds: Mahayoga Tantras, which emphasize the
creation stage; the Anuyoga Tantras, which emphasize the first two and a
half levels of the perfection stage; and the Atiyoga Tantras, which empha
size the highest teachings of the Great Perfection, the last two and a half
levels of the perfection stage.
This integration of Sutra and Tantra methods shared by all the Tibetan
orders was the key cause of the development of Tibet's unique Buddhist
culture, which I call "protomillennial" or "apocalyptic, " which began to
Introduction 33
their teachings and taming disciplines because they fear hell or other horrid
evolutionary destinies. They are also egotistical, in fact grand individualists
for the most part, people of mountainous and solitary terrains. But when
they think "I, " what they identify, even without much analysis, is their
soul, not so much their body. For it is common lore that the subtle soul and
body are what get reborn, not the coarse body that the vultures wait hun
grily to eat. Therefore they have put the same kind of ingenuity into under
standing those inner processes as materialistic peoples have put into
understanding the environment.
9. Spiritual Renaissance
After Atisha's time and the founding of Radreng Monastery in 1062, for
the next three centuries Tibetans turned their interests more and more to
ward Buddhist education, and monasteries were built all over the country.
The vast work of translation was completed, and a voluminous indigenous
literature was developed. No new royal dynasty emerged to control the
whole country. Tibetan militarism was unable to return due to the power of
Buddhism and its ethic of nonviolence. Local noble families still ruled re
gional areas, but more and more they shared even their social and political
power with the rapidly developing monastic institutions. Important popu
lar figures emerged, such as Marpa and his famous disciple Milarepa.
During the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries, the Mongolian Empire
unified most of Eurasia, and Tibet also was a part of it. In reality Tibet was
very little changed, divided into thirteen main administrative regions, each
run by a combination of a local ruling family and a local monastic hierar
chy. The Sakya hierarchy was formally put in charge of all by Khubilai
Khan, but the Sakya hierarch was more of a spiritual figurehead than an ac
tive administrator. Toward the end of the fourteenth century, the Mongol
Empire fell apart, and the native Tibetan dynasty of Pagmodru asserted
control over Tibet.
Around 1400 a spiritual renaissance was ushered in by the life work of
Lama Jey Tsong Khapa ( 1 3 57-1 4 1 9 ), who came to be known as the
Precious Master. Tsong Khapa shared with Padma Sambhava and Atisha a
special recognition by Tibetans, seen as a child prodigy, a reincarnation of
Manjushri, from an early age. He is generally accepted as having attained
full enlightenment in 1 3 9 8 , at the end of an arduous six-year retreat. For
the last twenty-one years of his life after that, his popular impact increased
exponentially, and the example he lived, teachings he gave, books he wrote,
Introduction 35
temples he refurbished, and institutions he founded all set the tone for the
subsequent five hundred years of Tibetan civilization. While assisted in his
development by the pioneering work of his many predecessors, he consid
ered himself particularly inspired by Atisha to renew the movement the lat
ter had begun three and a half centuries earlier.
This renaissance was based on a new level of national dedication to
the practice of Buddhism and the realization of Buddhahood as the main
aim of Tibetan life. It was sealed by Tsong Khapa's founding the Great
Prayer Festival in Lhasa in 1409, commemorating an apocalyptic mo
ment in Shakyamuni's biography as known to the Tibetans, the two
weeks of miracles performed near the great Indian city of Shravasti to
ward the end of his teaching career. During these miracles, Shakyamuni
demonstrated to his whole civilization that the power of the compassion
released by enlightenment is greater than the power of gods and kings,
and he let it be known that enlightened beings could manifest whatever
any individual needs to further his or her evolution and understanding.
Tsong Khapa offered gold and bejeweled celestial ornaments to the Jowo
Rinpoche image of Shakyamuni Buddha enshrined in the Jokhang ca
thedral to symbolize the nation's recognition of the Buddha's eternal
presence, that the Buddha miracles are always accessible. The festival
celebrated the distinctively Tibetan Buddhist sense of the immediacy of
enlightened and compassionate beings. A tradition thus began for the
whole nation to come together for two weeks of prayer and celebration
every lunar new year. The keys of the city were turned over to the
monastic abbots, and all ordinary business was suspended. This festival
was a core event for all Tibet from 1409 until 1960, when the Chinese
occupation stopped it by force in Lhasa.
After the renaissance led by Tsong Khapa, the spiritual synthesis of
Tibetan Buddhism was complete. Tsong Khapa himself refused to reincar
nate in an official manner, giving the reason that he had established a curricu
lum in the philosophical and apocalyptic monasteries that should produce
plenty of Buddhas, and one of those should rightfully occupy the Ganden
throne of the head of the order. The following centuries saw the rippling out
ward of this spiritual synthesis in a gradual process of transformation of the
social, political, and physical landscape of Tibet. Monasteries were built on
an unprecedented scale, with three major monasteries constructed in the
Lhasa area alone, housing over twenty thousand monks (Lhasa's own lay
population was no more than thirty-five thousand). Many people become
intensely determined to devote their " infinitely precious human lives en
dowed with freedom and opportunity" to fulfill their evolutionary purpose
36 • E S S ENTIAL T I B ETAN B U D D H I S M
and attain the perfect freedom and happiness of enlightenment. The social
climate became more peaceful, as fewer individuals were available for the
armies of the aristocratic warlords.
Although Tibetan warlords shared the general preference of military
rulers for soldiers and productive housewives over monks and nuns, they
seemed at first to feel relatively unthreatened by this immense wave of
monasticism; in fact they joined in competition with one another to see
who could sponsor more monasteries.
One of Tsong Khapa's disciples, the master Gendun Drubpa ( 1 3 9 1-
1474 ), had attained great awakenings in his lifetime and had performed
great deeds, founding the huge Tashi Lhunpo Monastic University in south
ern Tibet and teaching hosts of disciples. After his death he turned up rein
carnated as the son of a yogin and yogini couple of central Tibet. When he
began to talk, he revealed he was the reincarnation of Gendun Drubpa and
expressed his wish to be reunited with his disciples at his home monastery
at Tashi Lhunpo. Named Gendun Gyatso ( 147 5-1 542), he spent long years
in retreat, gave great teachings, built more important monasteries, and
made daring inner voyages as an Adept or "psychonaut, " as I like to call
them. He remembered during his samadhis that he had been previously
born as Dromtonpa, the disciple of Atisha, remembering as well many
other former lives.
His next reincarnation was called Sonam Gyatso ( 1 543-1 5 8 8 ), who
continued the universal spiritual education program, the building of
monasteries, the taming of individuals, and his inner voyages as a psycho
naut. He was invited to the court of the Mongol king Altan Khan.
Somehow he tamed this formidable warlord, taught him it was better not
to throw prisoners of war into the Yellow River for sport, better not to sac
rifice captives or animals to the ancestors and the war gods, and, instead of
such fierce shamanism, to take refuge in the Three Jewels of Buddha,
Dharma, and Sangha and practice renunciation, compassion, and wisdom
to evolve to become a Buddha. Altan Khan was so impressed by his en
counter with a person he obviously perceived to be a superior being, a more
evolved life-form, that he gave him the name Dalai Lama, dalai a Mongol
word for "ocean. " Counting his two predecessors retroactively, Sonam
Gyatso became known as His Holiness the Third Dalai Lama.
Toward the end of Sonam Gyatso's life, the social situation in Tibet was
unstable due to the resistance of the Tibetan warlords, who began to fear
the ascendancy of the fully monasticized civilization coming from the
Tibetan renaissance of 1400. The fourth reincarnation was discovered
among the Mongols, in the family of Altan Khan, which led to closer rela
tions between the Mongols and the Tibetans.
Introduction 37
By the end of the sixteenth century, the warlord rulers of Tibet felt over
whelmed by the popular dedication to enlightenment education, monastic
vocations, and monastery building. A period of violent persecution of
monasteries ensued around the turn of the seventeenth century, with the fate
of the country in the balance. Even the Monlam Chenmo New Year Festival
in Lhasa was suspended by the southern Tibetan warlord for several years.
Basically, the secular forces of the militaristic, aristocratic warlords tried to
assert themselves to eclipse the rise of the monastery-centered, spiritual
lifestyle, in parallel with what was happening simultaneously in the
Reformation in northern Europe, at the end of the Ming Dynasty in China,
and with the consolidation of the shogunate in Japan. The monastic leaders
resisted this effort, and the warlords relentlessly tried to turn the different
orders against one another. The Dalai Lama, by now the beloved spiritual
leader of a huge population, called for help from the Mongolian warlord
Gushri Khan, who had become his disciple. The Mongolian swept into Tibet
and crushed the coalition of warlords that had resolved to reverse the
monasticization of the land. These warlords were disarmed, and a peace
was made that elevated the main monastic leader to head of the nation.
Tibetan interior modernity has adapted quite well to the rest of the world's
industrial modernity, where the encounter was not violently forced. The
Chinese communists, however, have attempted to impose on Tibetans their
Marxist materialism, communistic egalitarianism, and an industrial focus
on the productions of this life through an all-out assault on Tibetan
Buddhism. It has included the destruction of monastic institutions, monks
and nuns, Scriptures, outdoor monuments, Mani stones, prayer flags, per
sonal rosaries and prayer wheels, icons, paintings, photographs of the
Dalai Lama, even knowledge of the Tibetan language. Intensive communist
thought-reform sessions were held year in and year out for decades. The
Chinese have killed members of the upper classes, forced the redistribution
of whatever forms of wealth were not extracted for the economy of China,
imposed Chinese language education and indoctrination in Maoist writ
ings, and enlisted all able-bodied persons in labor brigades, work gangs,
production units, and so forth. All of these measures caused the deaths of
approximately 1 . 3 million people, destroyed all the architectural and
artistic treasures of the nation, and eradicated the intelligentsia entirely
except for a few people who survived the prison camps or who escaped
into exile.
Introduction 39
Tibetan interior modernity has adapted quite well to the rest of the world's
industrial modernity, where the encounter was not violently forced. The
Chinese communists, however, have attempted to impose on Tibetans their
Marxist materialism, communistic egalitarianism, and an industrial focus
on the productions of this life through an all-out assault on Tibetan
Buddhism. It has included the destruction of monastic institutions, monks
and nuns, Scriptures, outdoor monuments, Mani stones, prayer flags, per
sonal rosaries and prayer wheels, icons, paintings, photographs of the
Dalai Lama, even knowledge of the Tibetan language. Intensive communist
thought-reform sessions were held year in and year out for decades. The
Chinese have killed members of the upper classes, forced the redistribution
of whatever forms of wealth were not extracted for the economy of China,
imposed Chinese language education and indoctrination in Maoist writ
ings, and enlisted all able-bodied persons in labor brigades, work gangs,
production units, and so forth. All of these measures caused the deaths of
approximately 1 . 3 million people, destroyed all the architectural and
artistic treasures of the nation, and eradicated the intelligentsia entirely
except for a few people who survived the prison camps or who escaped
into exile.
Introduction 4I
These efforts have nonetheless been dismal failures. The minute the
Chinese occupation administration was distracted by the post-Mao distur
bances in the early 1980s, the Tibetans rose up as one and began to rebuild
monasteries, to become monks and nuns, to restore their previous social
order based on occupation and talent, to travel to India on pilgrimage, and
to receive initiations and teachings from the Dalai Lama and other teach
ers. The Chinese were astounded that such "primitive" thinking could have
survived their "revolutionary" onslaught; but they rather uneasily acqui
esced in the Tibetan choices because they hoped to make Tibet an attractive
tourist destination and so needed colorful monasteries and quaint monks
and ceremonies. By the late 1980s, the monks and especially nuns began to
make peaceful protests against Chinese occupation, and the government
cracked down on the monasteries with a heavy hand.
Meanwhile, in exile in India, Nepal, and Bhutan, as well as in North
America, Europe, and Australia, the Dalai Lama and about 1 50,000
Tibetan refugees have succeeded in keeping their unique civilization some
what alive. They have their own school system within the Indian education
system, so young Tibetans can learn Tibetan language, history, and some
basic religious teachings. They have also maintained a high rate of monas
ticism, with more than twenty thousand monks and nuns, about one sixth
of the population in exile. The curricula of the monasteries and nunneries
continue with very little alteration in the spiritual studies and practices,
though a modicum of modern, secular learning is added to orient the reli
gious in the contemporary world. Tibetan spiritual teachers have attracted
large followings in Europe, the Americas, Australia, Japan, Taiwan, and
Southeast Asia, and some have written spiritual best-sellers. The Dalai
Lama has received the Nobel Peace Prize and has met and is respected by
most of the world's major religious and secular leaders. The communist
Chinese regime has still refused to recognize him or his people's right to
self-determination, and it still succeeds in getting other governments to ig
nore the reality of Tibet as the price of trade relations with China.
Tibetans are a success story as refugee communities go, with little his
tory of violence, crime, or persisting poverty, and they take very easily to
the professions of the modern economy. The further chapter of the amazing
social experiment of Tibetan Buddhist civilization cannot yet be written, as
it involves the coming experience of the political freedom Tibet will in
evitably gain, as the restructuring of big-power, twentieth-century colonial
ism that began with the U.S.S.R. becomes global. Then we will see if a
society touched by living Buddhas, with a different popular sense of the
purpose and value of human life, with a determined spiritual orientation,
will adopt some elements of a materialistic modernity. Which elements will
42 • E S S ENTIAL TIB ETAN B U D D H I S M
it adopt, and which will it reject? Will Tibetans use computers to aid them
in their quest of evolutionary perfection in Buddhahood? Will they milita
rize, never again to taste the bitterness of conquest and occupation by an
outside power? Will they exploit and ruin their own environment? Will
they industrialize in an external manner? The world will get a chance to see
if a culture oriented to the possibility of becoming a perfect Buddha can
persist in a materially modern setting.
More than half a dozen important Tibetan Buddhist orders have existed,
and any given order has various levels and layers of doctrine, method, prac
tice, and result. In modern times there are said to be four main orders, the
Nyingma, the Sakya, the Kagyu, and the Geluk. The Geluk are by far the
most numerous; the Nyingma is second, the Kagyu third, and the Sakya the
smallest. Like the Benedictines, the Franciscans, the Dominicans, and so on
in the West, these orders have different histories, with emphasis on differ
ent texts and practices. They have held heated debates over points of doc
trine and interpretation over the centuries. But do they have essential
differences in philosophy and religious practice?
My answer is that they do not. I must avow that my personal back
ground is a long association with the majority order, even though I have re
ceived teachings and initiations from teachers of all four. It is the tendency
of a majority to emphasize its essential sameness with the corresponding
minority, while the minority tends to emphasize its distinctiveness. Still,
correcting for any bias these factors of personal history and general ten
dency might prompt, the essence of the way that all these orders present
Buddhism seems the same.
All consider Shakyamuni the main Buddha of this world-epoch. All
consider that a Buddha is a superhuman, superdivine being who has trans
formed from a human state to a perfect omniscience and a perfect evolu
tionary ability to manifest whatever compassion requires to interact with
whomsoever. All consider that many such Buddhas after Shakyamuni have
graced this planet and that many have lived in Tibet. They are credited with
having created Tibetan civilization. Many Tibetans have become Buddhas,
many still reincarnate life after life to continue to teach their disciples, and
many more will become Buddhas. They want to be Buddhas because that
for them is the pursuit of happiness. Buddhas are happier, more peaceful,
more beautiful, more powerful. They have achieved real freedom from in-
Introduction 43
One of the amazing things about Tibetan civilization is the vastness of its
literature. The current written form of its language was established in the
seventh century C.E., four hundred years before Chaucer and almost a thou
sand years before Shakespeare. Woodblock printing was begun in earnest
from the fourteenth century, a century before Gutenberg. Up to 2 0 percent
of the people were monastics, more than half of whom were educated and
literate. Thus a nation that probably never numbered more than ten mil
lion-nowadays six or seven million-has two different canons of Indian
texts translated from Sanskrit, numbering over three hundred volumes, each
volume of which would translate into a roughly two-thousand-page English
text. Radiating out from that canon are collected works in Tibetan of hun
dreds of eminent scholars, saints, and sages, some of which number in the
44 • E S S ENTIA L TIB ETAN BUDDHISM
by Panchen Lama I,
Losang Chokyi Gyaltsen
I N I T I A L S E L F - C R EAT I O N
Through the great bliss state,
I myself become the Mentor Deity!
From my luminous body
Light-rays shine all around,
Massively blessing beings and things,
Making the universe pure and fabulous,
Perfection in its every quality!
REFU GE
I and all space full of mother beings
From now until enlightenment
Take refuge in the Mentor and the Three Jewels!
NAMO G URU BHYOH
NAMO B U D D HAYA
NAMO DHARM AYA
NAMO SANGHAYA
For the sake of all mother beings, in this very life I will very swiftly real
ize the exaltation of the primal Buddha Mentor Deity; I will free all
mother beings from suffering and install them in the great bliss Buddha
state. For that purpose I will undertake the profound path of Mentor
Deity Yoga !
(3X)
O FF E R I N G S
OM AH HUM
Primal wisdom in reality appears as inner offering and individual offer
ings and works to create the distinctive bliss-void wisdom in the fields
of the six senses, outer, inner, and secret clouds of offerings totally fill-
The Quintessence: The Mentor Worship 49
ing earth, sky, and all of space with inconceivable visions and sacred
substances.
In the middle of all-good offering clouds
arranged in the vast heavens of bliss-void indivisible,
in the crown of a miraculous wish-granting gem tree,
radiantly beautiful with leaves, flowers, and fruits,
on a sparkling jewel lion-throne,
on cushions of spreading lotus, sun, and moon,
sits my thrice-kind Root Mentor,
the actuality of all Buddhas!
His form is of a fulfilled mendicant,
with one face, two arms, smiling radiantly,
right hand in the Dharma-teaching gesture,
left hand flat in meditation, holding a bowl of elixir.
He wears the three robes glowing saffron color,
head beautiful with the yellow scholar's hat.
At his heart sits the omnipresent Lord Vajradhara,
with one face, two arms, sapphire blue in color,
holding vajra and bell, embracing Lady Vajradhatvishvari,
both ecstatic in the play of bliss and void.
Resplendent with many-faceted jewel ornaments,
draped with divinely wrought silken clothes.
Adorned with the signs and marks, shining like the sun,
surrounded by halos of five-colored rainbows,
my Mentor sits in the vajra posture.
His five aggregates are really the five Bliss Lords,
his four elements the four Ladies, his sense-media, nerves,
muscles, and joints really the live Bodhisattvas,
his body hairs the twenty-one thousand arhats,
his limbs the Lords of Ferocity.
His light-rays are protectors and fierce spirits,
and the world gods lie beneath his feet.
Around him sit in rows an ocean of live and ancestral Mentors,
archetype deities, and divine mandala hosts,
Buddhas, Bodhisattvas, angels,
and defenders of the Dharma.
Each of their three doors of body speech and mind
is marked by the three vajras, OM AH H U M ,
50 • E S S ENTI A L T I B ETAN B U D D H I S M
SUMMO NING
o source of success, happiness, and goodness,
all-time live and ancestral Mentors, archetypes, Three Jewels,
along with heroes, angels, protectors, and defenders,
out of compassion, come hither and stay here!
Though all things are really free of coming and going,
you accord with the natures of various disciples
and perform appropriate miracles of love and wisdom;
Holy Savior with your retinue, please come here now!
OM G URU B U D D H A B O D H I S ATTVADHARMAPALASAPARIVARA
EHYEH II
JAH HUM BAM H O H
S A L U TAT I O N S
Mentor like a gem embodied, diamond bolt,
Live compassion from the great bliss element
You bestow in the fraction of a second
The supreme exaltation of the three bodies
I bow to the lotus of your foot!
Primal wisdom of all Victors of the buddhaverses,
Supreme artist to create whatever tames each being,
Performer in the dance of upholding the monastic form,
I bow to the feet of the Holy Savior!
Eradicating all evil along with instincts,
Treasure of a measureless jewel mass of good,
Sole door to the source of all joy and benefit-
I bow to the feet of the Holy Mentor!
Teacher of humans and gods, reality of all Buddhas,
Origin of the eighty-four thousand holy teachings,
The Quintessence: The Mentor Worship 5I
OFFERINGS
To the Holy Mentor Savior with his retinue,
I offer an ocean of various offering clouds;
From well-arranged, bright, broad, jewel vessels
Four streams of purifying nectars flow.
Earth and sky are filled with graceful goddesses,
With beautiful flowers, garlands, and showering petals,
Delicious incense smoke adorns the heavens
With summer rainclouds of sapphire blue.
Masses of lamps lit by suns, moons, and radiant gems
Shine ecstatic light-rays to illumine the billion worlds;
Boundless oceans of fragrant waters swirl around,
Scented with camphor, sandalwood, and saffron.
Himalayas of human and divine food heap up,
Wholesome food and drink with a hundred savors;
The three realms resound with sweet melodies
From infinite specific varieties of music.
The outer and inner sensual goddesses
Pervade all quarters and present the glorious beauty
Of form and color, sounds, scents, tastes, and textures.
M A N D ALA O F F E R I N G
These hundred trillion four-continent, planet-mountain worlds,
With the seven major and seven minor jewel ornaments,
Perfect realms of beings and things that create great joy,
Great treasures of delight enjoyed by gods and humans-
o Savior, mercy treasure, supreme field of offering,
My heart full of faith, I offer it all to you!
52 • E S S ENTIAL TIB ETAN B U D D H I S M
CONFESSION
From beginningless time, whatever sinful acts
I did, had done, or rejoiced at others' doing,
The Quintessence: The Mentor Worship 53
P RAY E R S
Source of excellence, vast ocean of justice,
Endowed with many jewels of spiritual learning,
Saffron-robed, living Shakyamuni Lord,
Patriarch, Discipline-holder,
I pray to you!
Possessor of the ten excellent qualities,
Worthy to teach the path of the blissful lords,
Dharma master, Regent of all victors
Universal Vehicle Spiritual Guide,
I pray to you!
Your body, speech, and mind well controlled,
You are a genius, tolerant and honest.
Without pretense or deception,
You know mantras and Tantras.
Having the ten outer and ten inner abilities,
54 • E S S E N T I A L T I B ET A N BUDDHISM
S O L E M N P RAY E R
You are Mentor!
You are Archetype Deity!
You are Angel and Protector!
From now until enlightenment,
I seek no other Savior!
With compassion's iron hook
Please look after me,
In this life, the between, and future lives!
Save me from the terrors
Of both life and liberation!
Bestow on me all powers!
Be my eternal friend!
Defend me from attack!
I N I T I AT I O N AND B L E S S I N G
By the power of thus praying three times,
The vital points of the Mentor's body, speech, and mind
Emit white, red, and blue elixir light-rays,
First one by one and then all together,
Which dissolve into my own three vital points,
Purify the four blocks, and grant the four initiations.
I attain the Four Bodies, and a duplicate of the Mentor
Melts in delight and blesses me completely.
U S I N G T H E B L E S S I N G S I N T H E PAT H
By the power of offering, respecting, and praying
To the Holy Mentor, supreme field of benefit,
Bless me, Savior, root of help and happiness,
That you can happily look after me!
This liberty and opportunity found just this once,
Understanding how hard to get and how quickly lost,
Bless me not to waste it in the pointless business of this life,
But to take its essence and make it count!
56 • E S S ENTIAL TIB ETAN BUDDHISM
fellow bull. He told the Yama-demon Alang that he would pull the load
alone. Alang was so angry with this moment of compassion, he killed him
with his trident, and the Bodhisattva was born at once in the Thirty-three
heaven.
Then he began to accumulate merit during three incalculable eons. He
served seventy-five thousand Buddhas during the first incalculable eon,
from Mahashakyamuni to Rashtrapala, seventy-six thousand in the second
incalculable, from Bhadrakara to Indradhvaja, and seventy-seven thousand
in the third incalculable eon, from Dipamkara to Kashyapa.
This way of describing the three incalculable eons of gathering the stores
of merit and wisdom is in terms of general Buddhism. The Mahayana
Sutras describe this in another way. Long ago the Teacher, when he was in
the learner's path, served and honored Buddhas as countless as grains of
sand in the river Ganges. He consummated his deeds of development, and
purification, and manifested the Beatific Body with its five certainties in the
Akanishta heaven world called "Flower Ornament Essence." Without ever
leaving that body, he accomplished beings' aims by manifesting emanations
according to the faculties of each disciple in worlds throughout space.
Then, as the time approached when, as the fruition of his ancient spiritual
conceptions and vows, he was to manifest a Supreme Emanation Body in
this Saha universe, our compassionate Teacher incarnated as the Brahmin
boy Anuttara during the time of the Buddha Kashyapa. He became a monk
in the company of that Lord Victor and received the prophecy from him;
"You, Brahmin boy Anuttara, after my Nirvana, when human beings in
this Saha world live only a hundred years, will become a Realized Lord, a
Saint, a Perfected Buddha, Wise and Ethical, Blissful, World-knowing,
Unexcelled Human-Taming Charioteer, Teacher of Humans and Gods, a
Buddha called Shakyamuni. After turning the Dharma wheel until you are
eighty, your teaching will last a long time after your Nirvana. " This
prophecy became well known all over the world. After the Brahmin boy
Anuttara died, he went to Tushita, manifesting as the divine, last-life
Bodhisattva Shvetaketu. The Bodhisattva Shvetaketu dwelt in the Tushita
heaven, living happily in thirty-two thousand mansions endowed with mil
lions of perfections and divine ornaments, listening to the eighty-four thou
sand varieties of music and song. From that music, empowered by his own
merits and the blessings of the Buddhas, emerged the message "You have a
magnificent mass of merits, infinite consciousness, understanding, intelli
gence. Your wisdom is luminous, your power is matchless, your magic
power is extensive. You must remember the prophecy of Dipamkara.
Supreme Eminence, by the glory of your merit, the Tushita Palace is very
beautiful, but since you have the heart of compassion, descend to raise the
64 • E S S ENTIA L TIB ETAN B U D D H I S M
golden banner in the world." The music exhorted him again and again to
visit our world of Jambudvipa.
The Bodhisattva went out of the great mansion and entered into the
palace Dharmottana and sat on the lion throne Sudharma. He taught the
Dharma extensively to the Bodhisattva Maitreya, the god-king Samtushita,
and the whole assembly of Bodhisattvas. Then, wishing to manifest the
Buddha deeds on earth, he performed the five searches; for the time, the
place, the lineage, the bone, and the woman able to serve as mother.
As for the search of time, he remembered the prophecies of all previous
Buddhas and renewed his resolve to descend to earth to help the beings in
this dark age of the hundred-year life span.
As for the search of country, a Buddha's visit to earth is only for the sake
of disciples, and humans and gods are the main disciples. If he manifested a
Supreme Emanation in heaven, humans could not attend him. Teaching the
gods has only slight benefit, since they are distracted by desires and it is
hard for them to generate transcendent renunciation, so they are not fit for
individual liberation vows. And the gods can go to earth to hear the
Dharma. So the deed of manifesting a Supreme Emanation Body is only
done among humans. Among humans, Jambudvipa humans are poor,
short-lived, but often very intelligent. It is easy for them to feel intense re
nunciation, and it is possible for evolutionary impetus accumulated early in
life to ripen later in the same life. Thus, intending to teach the teaching of
both Sutra and Tantra here in Jambudvipa, the Bodhisattva Shvetaketu de
cided to manifest the Buddha deeds here.
As for the search of lineage, Buddhas can perform the Buddha deeds by
incarnating either in the royal class or the priest class, but they always pick
the one that is highest in status at the time, and in this world the royal caste
has been highest since the beginning. At that, he saw that the Shakya King
Shuddhodhana had the most taintless royal lineage. As for the search of the
clan: He saw that the families of both Shuddhodhana and Mayadevi were
flawless for seven generations, and so decided to be born as their son. As
for the search of the mother, Mayadevi had already vowed to give birth to
Buddhas many lives previously. So he decided to be conceived in her womb.
Having concluded the five searches, he went to the Sudharma throne
and gave 1 0 8 teachings to the assembled gods and Bodhisattvas. He
crowned Maitreya as his successor and then proclaimed his intention to
manifest supreme Buddhahood on earth.
Then the Bodhisattva, in full sight of all the gods, entered into a multi
storied pagoda produced as a miniature jewel womb, a glorious mansion of
bliss, duplicate of the Ucchadhvaja Teaching Palace. This jewel pagoda was
circumambulated by all the gods and Bodhisattvas and began to shake and
Seeing the Buddha 65
vibrate. Then the Bodhisattva emitted the countless ninefold light-rays such
as "bliss ornament, " dispelling all gloom from the billion-world galaxy and
overwhelming suns and moons with its luminosity, eradicating the suffering
of the lower states in a second, insulating all beings against their addic
tions, and accomplishing all activities such as manifesting the appropriate
visions to whomsoever needed taming.
Then a light specially designed for his mother emitted from all his
pores, a light called "illumination born of the element of all mothers' ex
cellence." Mayadevi, then taking her monthly purification retreat, felt this
light enter her body, giving her great bliss, distinguishing her body as out
standing from the bodies of all beings, her womb becoming vast as space
yet not expanding beyond the size of a human body. In her right side ap
peared a lovely pagoda made of serpentine sandalwood called "Jewel
Array of the Bodhisattva Sphere," square, four pillared, adorned with
upper stories, of the size to accommodate a six-month-old child. Within it
was a second pagoda, and within that a third, each not touching the other,
indestructibly solid and firm yet pleasant to the touch, with a supreme blue
color, like an abode of the desire-realm gods. A half-ounce of its substance
was so precious the entire billion-world galaxy filled with jewels could not
equal its value. Its environs were filled with flowers surpassing the flowers
of the gods, redolent with the five sense-attractions. Within the third
pagoda was a round throne fitting for a six-month-old child, with a child's
robe upon it made of an exquisite fabric, whose light made Brahma's robe
seem dull. Indra strove to enhance the luster of the mother and make the
womb pure.
Then the Bodhisattva Shvetaketu, with his inconceivable divine retinue
and offerings, gradually descended from Tushita, and, appearing as a
young snow-white elephant with six tusks, entered the mother's right side
in the first watch after midnight. He assumed the appearance of a six
month-old child, wearing the robe and seated cross-legged on the throne in
the pagoda in the mother's right side, accompanied by a retinue of Bodhi
sattvas as numerous as atoms in ten universes, each dwelling within sandal
wood pagodas all around him.
On the night when the Bodhisattva entered his mother's womb, a great
udumvara flower born of the merit of feeding holy persons in previous lives
covered the ocean and great earth, reaching up to the Brahma heaven. All
the nurture of the billion-world galaxy congealed in the form of a drop of
nectar on that flower. It was seen only by Brahma, who collected it in a sap
phire vessel and offered it. The Bodhisattva drank it and his body flourished;
no other living being could have digested it. Light-rays like a mass of flames
shone from his body in the womb, extending for five leagues around.
66 ,.. E S S E NT I A L T I B ET A N B U D D H I S M
As the Mother reported: "To hear the Dharma from the Bodhisattva, the
four great kings and the giant lords come in the morning, and the
Bodhisattva teaches them, raising the finger of his right hand. They sit in
seats and hear the Dharma. Then he sends them away when they are satis
fied. Likewise in midday the gods Indra and company come. In the after
noon Brahma comes and offers the drop of nectar. In the first watch of the
evening the Bodhisattva host attends, and light-rays emit from his body to
create lion thrones for them, and he gestures and makes the great symbols
of the Dharma."
Thus for ten months he dwelt in the womb like that, developing and lib
erating countless disciples, innumerable Bodhisattvas, Brahma and Indra
and the Four World Guards and so on, and the dragons and the giants and
so on. As the time approached for the birth, the following thirty-two signs
emerged in the gardens of King Shuddhodhana: Everything blossomed,
eight jewel trees grew spontaneously, twenty thousand treasure troves
opened of their own accord, jewel sprouts grew in the house, delicious
scented oils and perfumes oozed forth, and young lions from the Himalayas
surrounded the palace without harming anyone. Five hundred young white
elephants came down and touched the king's foot with their trunks. Divine
children came and played in the laps of the wives of the king and chased
away any evil spirits. Dragon princesses carrying offerings appeared half
bodied in the sky. Ten thousand full vases surrounded Kapilavastu. Divine
princesses carried vessels of scented water on their heads. Ten thousand
goddesses appeared carrying umbrellas, banners, drums, and horns. Winds
did not blow and raise the dust. Water did not agitate or flow. Sun, moon,
and stars stood still. Jewel nets festooned Shuddhodhana's palace. Fire
would not burn. Upper stories, parapets, and porticoes were hung with
jewels and wishing gems. Treasuries were filled with jewels and precious
brocades and their doors burst open. There was no hooting of owls. Sweet
sounds sounded. Beings' actions ceased. All directions were equal. Cross
roads and marketplaces were adorned with cool flowers. Pregnant women
delivered themselves easily.
Mayadevi wished to go to the Lumbini Garden, and King Shuddho
dhana and King Viprabuddha cleaned the garden, adorned it, and filled it
with offerings. A great light filled the garden, illuminating all the earth.
Jeweled flowers bloomed, and their petals radiated sounds "Is he born ? "
Then King Shuddhodhana commanded his subjects to clean all the paths
from the palace to Lumbini, moisten them with scented waters, adorn them
with various flowers, make offerings with inconceivable music and songs,
array innumerable jewel chariots, and set tens of thousands of warriors as
guardians. Having adorned all the chariots with jewels, he escorted Queen
Seeing the Buddha 67
Mayadevi. She entered the jeweled chariot and was drawn by the Four
Guardian Kings. As they went, the king of gods Indra cleaned the road be
fore her. Brahma fanned her from the side. Innumerable gods gazed un
blinking at the Bodhisattva sitting in the pagoda in the womb and bowed
and prayed.
Mayadevi arrived at Lumbini and descended from the chariot. She
strolled from grove to grove, gazing at tree after tree. The ground was even,
the green grass soft and pleasant. There was a luminous jewel tree relied on
by the ancient queen Lumbini, worshiped by the pure-realm deities, its root,
trunk, branches, and leaves adorned by jewels, blooming with human and
divine flowers, with the scent of supreme incense, festooned with divine
multicolored cloths, a royal tree called Plaksha. Mayadevi held on to a jewel
tree branch with her right hand, and as she stretched and looked upward,
from her right side he was born, emerging suddenly like a golden sacrificial
post with a light like a million suns. Then the whole sky filled with divine of
ferings, and Brahma and Indra held him wound in a divine silken cloth. The
dragon kings Nanda and Upananda offered him nectars. Countless gods
and goddesses washed him, holding vases full of scented waters.
Then he said, " Look at me! " and placed his feet on the ground and
walked seven steps in each direction. "I am the best in this world! " He
emitted his great lion's roar. When the Bodhisattva was born from Maya
devi's right side, his body's light was more bright than a thousand suns ris
ing at one time. It illuminated all universes at once, even penetrating
underground depths. Any being touched by that light felt filled with happi
ness; emotional addictions and sufferings suddenly ceased. The sandal
wood pagoda in which the Bodhisattva had lived in the womb was carried
away by Brahma and set up in the Brahma deity heaven as a holy shrine. At
that time all flowers bloomed, fruits ripened. Flowers rained down from
heaven. The three lower states were ceased. The earth moved six ways.
At the second the Bodhisattva was born, sons were born to the four
great kings in the four great cities. In Shravasti, Brahmadatta had a son, il
luminating the whole country like a mirror, so his name was Prasenajit. In
Rajagrha, a son was born to Mahapadma like a rising sun, so he was called
Bimbisara. In Kaushambi, Senashataka had a son also like a sun rising over
the world, so he was called Udayi. In Ujjain, King Ananta had a son who
seemed to illuminate the world like a lamp, so he was called Pradyota. Each
of them was proud of his son's excellent qualities.
At the same time in Kapilavastu, many other princes, princesses, com
moner boys and girls, warriors, brahmins, and merchants were born. Foals,
baby elephants, and calves were born by the thousands. There were many
miraculous happenings.
68 • E S S E N T I A L T I B ET A N B U D D H I S M
Since the birth of his son accomplished all his wishes, King Shuddho
dhana named him Siddhartha, "Accomplisher of Aims. " Father and
mother asked the augurers for the fate of their son and were told that if he
stayed in the home he would become a world-conquering monarch and if
he donned the robes of a monk and went from home to homelessness he
would become a transcendent lord, a saint, a truly perfect Buddha. They
stayed seven days in Lumbini. Since the light from his birth had gone out all
over the world, the Himalayan sage called Asita and his clairvoyant com
panions saw it and heard the gods rejoicing and proclaiming how soon
there would be a perfect Buddha in the world. They decided to go pay
homage to the Bodhisattva.
The Bodhisattva was escorted back to Kapilavastu. According to the
local religious custom, when a child is born, one must take him to pay
homage to the local and world deities. The king took the prince to the tem
ple in a jeweled elephant chariot. The proud Shakya warriors were unable
to bear the majestic radiance of the Bodhisattva and bowed low. So he was
called Shakyamuni, "Sage of the Shakyas. "
When the Bodhisattva was about to enter the temple, the idol of the
tribal deity Shakyavardhana came to life and escorted him in, touching the
child's feet with his head. When the right foot of the Bodhisattva was
placed on the threshold, the idols of Chandra, Surya, Indra, Vishnu,
Maheshvara, Brahma and so on arose from their shrines and bowed to the
Bodhisattva's feet. The earth shook. When Shuddhodhana saw this, he gave
him the name Devatideva, "God of Gods," since the gods had touched his
feet.
Then the rishi Asita with his retinue came to look upon the face of the
Bodhisattva. Shuddhodhana honored them and let them see the prince. The
rishis saw the thirty-two signs and eighty marks on the prince's body and
felt intense faith. They knew by clairvoyance that it would take thirty-five
years for the prince to turn the wheel of Dharma. They realized they would
not be alive that long and taste the elixir of the Dharma; they felt deep sor
row and wept. Shuddhodhana asked them if they saw some evil portents.
They replied, "No evil portents; the prince will certainly become a Buddha
and turn the wheel of Dharma. We are weeping since we know we will die
and will miss his teaching; so we feel our loss. " The rishis made earnest
prayers over the Bodhisattva and then returned to their abode.
When Siddhartha reached seven, they tried to adorn him, but ornaments
lost their lustre on his lustrous body. He was educated in letters, mathemat
ics, archery, jumping, wrestling. In each case, he knew inconceivably more
than his teachers and used the opportunity to teach them, his mates, and
thousands of attending gods new lessons in these arts, especially as con-
Seeing the Buddha 69
The Bodhisattva cut off his long princely hair and flung it into the sky,
where it was borne aloft by Indra. He thought his expensive silk robe un
suitable for a renunciant and wished for a mendicant's orange robe; so
Indra brought him a monk's robe. He felt he should get still further away
from his homeland, so he crossed the Ganga and entered the kingdom of
Magadha. Thus the Teacher threw away the glories of a world conqueror
like so much spittle, giving up his ornaments and clothing, renounced the
world and became a mendicant, vowing, "This is what disciples must do! "
So later those who seek the stages of the path of enlightenment should
think over this example of the teacher again and again.
Joining the ascetic wanderers, the Bodhisattva was so intense in his aus
terities, making four times the efforts of others, the other shramanas called
him Mahashramana, the " Great Wanderer. " When 5huddhodhana heard
that the Bodhisattva had no servants, he sent five hundred attendants to
take care of him. The Bodhisattva sent them back but kept five young brah
mins, led by his old companion Kaundinya, to join him in his austerities.
Then the Bodhisattva set himself with his companions to practice the
most severe austerities on the bank of the river Nairanjana, living on one
grain of rice a day and sitting cross-legged in samadhi for six years. By
those six years of ascetic discipline, he developed billions of gods and hu
mans for entry into the three Vehicles, all the while being surrounded by
the worship, prayers, and offerings of all classes of beings, from gods to
serpents. Those gods and humans with a propensity for the magnificent vi
sion of evolution saw the Bodhisattva as residing in a jewel tower, living in
bliss, teaching the Dharma all the time to develop gods and humans. But
beings in general agreed that they saw him engaged in the terrible ordeals
of ascetic practice, thereby earning the respect of and evolving toward
enlightenment four million two hundred thousand fanatically religious
ascetics.
The Bodhisattva thought to himself, " One cannot attain Buddhahood
through austerities alone. I should rely on a middle way between the two
extremes and I should attain Buddhahood now. " The limitless Buddhas
also urged him again and again to leave his austerities and manifest the
deed of attaining Buddhahood beneath the tree of enlightenment. So he
quit his ascetic ordeals and let himself breathe more freely, partaking of or
dinary food. He washed in the Nairanjana river, then wore a clean cloth.
He went to beg alms food from the two village maidens, 5ujata and
Balarama, who had ancient vows to assist him in this way. On the four
teenth day of the spring month of Vaishakha, the two maidens took the
essence of milk of a thousand cows and offered it in a golden urn, and the
Bodhisattva drank it completely that evening. His body immediately was
Seeing the Buddha 71
restored to its former health and radiance; the thirty-two major marks and
eighty minor signs of enlightenment appeared on it, along with exquisite
halos of light-rays. All kinds of beings, from gods to serpents, brought their
own best food to nourish him, and, using his magical power to make them
invisible to each other, the Bodhisattva consumed all of their offerings. In
this way, they all felt they participated in his enlightenment, and all of them
developed their own aspiration for evolutionary fulfillment.
The Bodhisattva thought about where he should perform the deed of
final enlightenment, and all the deities and beings of all kinds showed him
the Vajrasana under the Bodhi tree across the Nairanjana to the west where
all Buddhas have always gone for the final achievement of Buddhahood.
The gods cleaned his path and flowers rained from the heavens. The World
Guardians hung golden nets, and Indra made the victory tower adorned
with nets. The Yama gods brought sapphire nets, and the Tushita gods
brought pearl nets, and the Nirmanarati gods brought rose-apple gold bell
nets, and the Vashavarti gods brought nets of divine jewels. There were
jewel thrones, jewel nets, jewel towers, incense powders, jeweled staircases,
jewel cloths draped in the trees, and so on, along with hosts of worshiping
gods and goddesses, as well as innumerable other kinds of beings reverently
in attendance. Brahma, the king of gods, told them all to revere the
Bodhisattva with all their hearts, as he was going to fulfill his ancient vow.
The whole world was filled with divine golden lotuses and jewel substances
and fragrances, as if it was a heavenly paradise, like a hundred thousand
pure buddhaverses revealed in this world.
In the evening, as the sun sank lower in the sky, the Bodhisattva went to
the tree of awakening, which had been adorned by the four goddesses of
the tree. From the soles of his feet shone light-rays which terminated the
lower states of existence, cooling the sufferings and addictions of beings
and making them happy, revealing to them all the lands of the Buddhas.
Whenever a great being went to the enlightenment tree, the whole great
earth resonated like a brass gong being struck. When the Bodhisattva went
there, he remembered that previous Buddhas had sat upon a grass mat, and
he wished for one from the gods of the pure abodes. Indra read his
thoughts and emanated himself as the grass-seller Svasti and gave a load of
kusha grass to the Bodhisattva, excellent grass, blue as a peacock's throat,
rightward curving, fragrant, soft to touch. "By this grass may you attain
the path of former Buddhas, enlightenment, the deathless! Please accept it,
o ocean of virtues; may I also finally become a Buddha! "
Then the Bodhisattva circumambulated the enlightenment tree seven
times and bowed to it, to follow the example of previous Victors. He then
placed the grass blades in a circle, their tips pointed inward, arranging
72 ,.. E S S E N T I A L T I B ET A N BUDDHISM
them evenly. He sat down on the grass mat, l?alanced his body in cross
legged posture, and focused his awareness. He faced the east and vowed,
"Until I truly attain the end of the contamination of all kinds of sufferings,
even though my life will end, I will not move from this posture."
Innumerable Bodhisattvas gathered from the buddhaverses of the ten di
rections and manifested various magical displays; creating flower palaces,
radiating thousands of colors from their bodies, radiating sunlike rays,
shaking the earth, carrying four oceans on their heads and sprinkling the
ground with fragrant waters, offering jewel-offering trees, flying in the sky,
dissolving their bodies and turning into garlands filling the universe, pro
nouncing millions of discourses from the pores of their bodies, making
their bodies huge, bringing trees with Bodhisattva bodies emerging halfway
from each leaf, bringing axial mountains, stimulating masses of water with
their feet, making great sounds like great drum rolls filling a billion uni
verses.
Then the great devil Mara began to marshal his armies and obstruct the
Bodhisattva to distract him from enlightenment by raining down weapons
upon him. The Bodhisattva, seeing all things as like magic illusions, had no
fear of those devil armies. To tame them, he showed his magic power by ap
pearing to swallow all their hosts within his mouth, causing them to flee in
terror. But they remembered themselves and turned again against him,
flinging various weapons, which only turned into a flower canopy and
palace. They sent fierce flames fanned by their poison breath, which only
turned into a hundred-petaled lotus of pure light. The Bodhisattva rubbed
his head with his right hand and the devils saw a great flaming sword in his
hand and ran away to the southern direction. Again they overcame their
fright and threw even more powerful missiles, which only turned into gar
lands that decorated the Bodhi tree.
Seeing the powers of the Bodhisattva, the devil Mara was stirred by jeal
ousy and hate and addressed him thus: "You, why do you sit at the circle of
enlightenment? " The Bodhisattva replied, "In order to attain the unex
celled intuitive wisdom ! " Mara said: "Hey, royal prince! Get up! Manage
your kingdom! What makes you think you have the merit to achieve liber
ation ! " Then he threw his mighty discus, which only turned into a giant
flower; and the mountain thrown by his soldiers became a flower pond.
The Bodhisattva said: " Evil one! You, by means of one extraordinary offer
ing, attained the lordship of the desire realm. I made many different a hun
dred thousand ten million trillion extraordinary offerings during three
incalculable eons, underwent ordeals of total letting go for the sake of be
ings, and thereby I attain the unexcelled intuition of reality-there is no
hope that I will not attain that unexcelled intuition. " Then Mara replied,
Seeing the Buddha 73
shouting in a loud voice, "Well then, you are my witness of having attained
desire-realm lordship by a single act of offering! But who is your witness of
having performed offerings for three incalculable eons in order to attain the
unexcelled intuition? " The Bodhisattva was unafraid, with his mind of
great compassion, and gently rubbed his whole body with his right hand
adorned with wheel and svastika, manifesting all Buddhas of all worlds;
then he touched the great earth in the good luck gesture, saying, "This
earth is my witness! This earth is the abode of all beings, it has no partial
ity, being equal toward the moving and the unmoving. This is my witness
that I do not lie! You must accept this as my witness! " As soon as he had
touched the earth with his right hand, the great earth quaked in six ways
and the eighteen great signs occurred.
Then the earth goddess Prithivi, with her host of attendants, emerged
from the earth from the navel up, beautiful with her ornaments, bowed in
the direction of the Bodhisattva, joined her hands in reverence, and said,
"Yes! It is so, 0 holy being! It is as you say! I have directly beheld it! It is
like that! I along with the gods am your witness! " And she addressed the
devil, "Evil one, it is as the divine Transcendent Lord has spoken! " And
then she instantly disappeared.
In that way Mara was overwhelmed and silenced, and he inclined his
crown and stood still. At that time the other devils heard the sound made
by the Bodhisattva's hand striking on the ground as a sound of conquest, of
roaring, of terrifying danger. Millions of those devils heard a command
from the sky "Take refuge in this one ! " They flung themselves down on
their faces and cried out, "We request refuge with this holy person! " Mara
the evil one with his armies was afraid and wanted to escape but was un
able to move. The Bodhisattva radiated light and gave him refuge from his
terror. At that time, in the devil's retinue a hundred million eight thousand
demons and a hundred thousand million trillion ninety-six thousand ani
mals conceived the spirit of enlightenment. Eighty-four thousand gods with
previous practice attained the tolerance of birthlessness. The great earth
quaked in six ways. The Lord's body radiated light, which flooded the
world with great illumination, eradicated the agonies of the three hellish
states, terminated the bondages, and rendered all beings free of harm from
cruelty, pride, and hate.
Then as the Lord was about to attain unexcelled enlightenment,
Vajrapani entered his heart and praised him with the 108 names, and the
Lord gave his approval to Vajrapani.
Then the gods wanted to throw flowers, but the more experienced gods
told them to wait for a sign. Then the ten-direction Buddhas shouted their
approval of the perfect Buddhahood of the Transcendent Lord. The
74 • E S S E N T I A L T I B ET A N BUDDHISM
Bodhisattvas created a giant jewel umbrella that covered this whole uni
verse with a great net of light-rays. They bowed to Lord Shakyamuni and
offered it to him in the proper manner. Then the Lord, staying cross-legged,
rose up into the sky seven palm-tree heights and a great shout arose: "The
path is broken. Suffering is terminated. The taints are dried up. " Then all
the gods scattered flowers.
The various gods all brought various kinds of offerings and adorned the
entire circle of enlightenment. The Bodhisattvas in the sky all made offer
ings and sang praises. And the Lord himself proclaimed, "Merits have
ripened, happiness is given, all sufferings are dispelled. The wishes of all
meritorious humans are fulfilled. The devil is conquered, and enlighten
ment is quickly reached. Sorrow is extinguished, attained is the cool reality
of peace. "
Such a manifestation of the deed of awakening is a deed of the Supreme
Emanation Body for the sake of disciples. This very teacher has been stated
to have already attained enlightenment countless eons earlier. Thus the
above manner of attaining Buddhahood is that taught in terms of ordinary
reality.
The way of enlightenment in terms of the Mantric path is as follows: On
the eighth day of the Vaishakha month, he left his evolutionary body on the
bank of the Nairanjana and went with his mental body into the Akanishta
heaven. Then, according to the Yoga Tantra version, he entered the great
mandala of the diamond realm and manifested the deed of awakening
through the door of the five enlightenments. According to the Unexcelled
Yoga Tantra version, he entered the mandala of the Esoteric Communion
and received from Bodhichittavajra the initiation characterized by the great
natural intuitive wisdom, purifying even the subtlest dualism and arising in
the Union Body. In the Yamantaka Tantra, it is said he conquered the devil
by arising in the bodies of the red-and-black Yamantakas. In short, there
are infinite inconceivable accounts of his attainment of enlightenment
taught in the esoteric Tantras.
Thus, in his thirty-fifth year in the predawn of the fifteenth day of the
Vaishakha month of the male wood horse year called Jaya, he manifested
the deed of perfectly accomplished Buddhahood. He spent the first seven
days at the enlightenment tree. He traveled far and wide throughout the
billion-world galaxy in the second week. He spent the third week looking at
the enlightenment tree without blinking. He spent the fourth week wander
ing east and west in the four continents surrounded by the four oceans. He
spent the fifth week in the dragon Muchilinda's kingdom. He spent the sixth
week at the Nyagrodha tree and ripened many naked ascetics for enlighten
ment. He spent the seventh week in the serpentine sandalwood grove enter-
Seeing the Buddha 75
the Bodhi tree asked the Lord, "Where will you turn the wheel of
Dharma? " The Teacher replied that Varanasi is the holy place of former
sages, where many thousands of millions of sacrifices had been held, and
therefore it is the place to turn the wheel of Dharma.
Then the Lord went to the land of Kashi, the city of Varanasi, accepting
alms, staying at the deer park in Rishipatana. The five companions saw him
coming from afar. "The greedy ascetic Gautama who has lost his renuncia
tion is coming over here. Let's not speak to him, nor rise up for him, nor
salute him nor offer him a seat!" Though they made such a plan to humili
ate him, Kaundinya did not agree to it in his heart. The moment the Lord
arrived at the abode of the five at the bank of the waterfall, his glory and
energy overwhelmed them and they began to tremble on their seats. They
all gave up their plan and rose from their seats. "Venerable Gautama, how
good you have come! Please sit down on this seat we prepared! "
Then the Lord sat on the seat and the five eagerly addressed him, calling
him by name and clan name and "venerable." The Lord spoke, "You
should not address a Transcendent Lord in such a manner. You will suffer
for a long time if you do." They then responded crudely, "But Gautama, by
your former regime and ascetic disciplines you did not attain the unexcelled
goal of the religious path. Then have you been able to attain your goal by
this new code of conduct? " He spoke, "A renunciant should not rely on
two extremes. Which two? The inferior code of bad persons who persist in
the destructive regime of indulgence in desires, and the striving for self
mortification-these two damage the noble path. You should not rely on
these two extremisms, should open your eyes and wisdom to the middle
path, and you will achieve peace, superknowledge, perfect enlightenment,
and Nirvana. What is the middle way? It is the noble eightfold path."
Then the Lord remembered that this very place of Rishipatana was
where he was to turn the wheel of Dharma, in that place where former vic
tors had turned the wheel of Dharma seated on a thousand seven-jewel
thrones. And Brahma erected his lion throne, which was forty-two thou
sand leagues high. Likewise, other Brahmas and Indra and a hundred mil
lion Bodhisattvas also erected similar thrones. The gods of earth and
heaven magically set up a vast arena for turning the wheel of Dharma,
adorned, beautiful, magnificent, with pools seven hundred leagues in
breadth. There were umbreilas and pavilions in the sky and the desire
realm gods offered eight thousand thrones, asking him to sit there and turn
the wheel of Dharma.
Then the Lord, to venerate the ancient victors, circumambulated three
of the thrones, and fearless as a lion sat cross-legged on the fourth throne.
Seeing the Buddha 77
Brahma, Indra, and the Bodhisattvas all turned to him sitting on the lion
throne. The five mendicants, having bowed to the Lord, also sat in a disci
plined manner. At that time the Lord's body shone forth light-rays termi
nating the suffering of the six kinds of beings. The eighteen great omens
occurred. The Saha world became level, all beings became loving. That
light exhorted, "The Victor practiced for a hundred thousand eons. Who
wants to hear his Dharma, for the long-term sure result, come here to hear
the Dharma." Then gods, dragons, ogres, fairies, titans, garudas, eagle
men, kinnaras, and great serpents, all these eight species understood and
gathered round. Countless ten-directions Bodhisattvas also came there; this
entire billion-world galaxy was pervaded by beings not leaving empty even
the space of a hair-tip.
Then the ten-directions Bodhisattvas and the Brahma and Indra of this
Saha world and other powerful beings bowed to the Lord's feet and asked
him to turn the wheel of Dharma in order to heal many beings. Brahma in
particular said, "For these beings oppressed by the hundred sicknesses of
the mass of addictions, 0 Victorious Doctor, please turn the holy wheel and
make them free. Share the seven treasures, 0 Leader, please turn the wheel!
Fulfill your intent, destroy the plague, please turn the supreme wheel! " And
he offered to the Lord the thousand-spoked wheel made of rose-apple gold
shining with a thousand light-rays, used by the ancient Victors, while he re
quested him to turn the wheel of Dharma.
Then the sky full of Bodhisattvas, the eighty thousand main deities, the
dragons, ogres, fairies, snakes, kinnaras, great serpents, Kaundinya and his
four companions, and the whole assembly gathered to hear the Dharma,
without a single sound. They all sat silently looking only at the Victor. Then
the Lord, in the later part of the night, turned the wheel of Dharma, pro
mulgating the twelvefold repetition of the middle path abandoning the two
extremes, including the names of the four truths, the choices they involve,
their recognition, abandonment, realization, and meditation, and the eight
fold path that follows. And from that melodious speech, all the various dis
ciples heard the words they needed to hear to be tamed, receiving the
teachings of all three Vehicles according to their inclinations. The venerable
Kaundinya and Jvalatejas and so on, all the eighty thousand gods, devel
oped the taintless eye of Dharma.
Then the Lord spoke again to Kaundinya. "Do you fully understand this
Dharma?" He replied, "The Lord has fully bestowed it." Then the venera
ble Kaundinya became known as "Full-understanding Kaundinya," and
the Three Jewels were established in this world. And the gods again said,
"Friends! The Lord at Varanasi has turned, repeating three times in twelve
78 • E S S E N T I A L T I B ET A N BUDDHISM
modes, the Dharma wheel, endowed with a truth that no one has ever
turned thus appropriately in this world. The gods are increased thereby,
and the titans are decreased."
Then the Lord twice again taught the four truths to the five ascetics, and
Full-understanding Kaundinya's mind was liberated from contamination,
free of grasping, and he became a perfect saint. Then in the world there was
another saint, the Lord being the first. The other four ascetics also saw the
truth. Then the fivefold group just realized intuitive wisdom, and their
marks and symbols as fanatics disappeared. Their hair flew off, they in
stantly possessed the three Dharma robes and the begging bowl, and they
became fully graduated mendicants. And the Lord praised them, saying,
"This Full-understanding Kaundinya is the supreme of those holding the
standards of renunciants." Then the Lord taught the other four extensively,
that form was not self, about suffering and impermanence, and the other
four also realized sainthood; there were then five saints in the world and
the Lord was the sixth.
Having thus been taught, four thousand million gods and eighty-four
thousand humans saw the truth. Thereby a hundred million beings con
ceived the spirit of enlightenment.
Thus the Teacher attained perfect enlightenment and yet still made it
hard to get him to teach the Dharma, making it necessary to request him
again and again. When he began to teach the Dharma, he did not teach first
about profound voidness and so forth but taught the precepts of discipline,
such as keeping the roundness of the Dharma robe, the abstention from af
ternoon food, and the need not to lapse into extremisms about food and
clothing, then teaching the four noble truths. Then among the four truths,
he taught the truth of suffering. From among its four aspects, he first taught •
this contaminated body. In this way the disciple can diminish attachment to
this life and create ambition for the future life, and then lose attachment to
the whole life-cycle and create firm aspiration aiming for liberation. When
such an intention has been created, then the root of the life-cycle, the truth
of origin, is introduced. In this way, by understanding the way to lead grad
ually to the higher paths, one will know how to turn even the biography of
the teacher into a practice.
Gradually the Teacher taught the limitless other discourses included in
the first wheel of Dharma in other places and at other times. Having at
tained perfect enlightenment, the Teacher took care of the first five disciples
such as Kaundinya, the second five such as Yashas, the five hundred that
came along with Shariputra and Maudgalyayana in Rajagrha, and count
less great beings such as Mahakashyapa. His fame spread throughout the
whole country.
When King Shuddhodhana heard about it, he was delighted. He wanted
to meet the Buddha, sending messengers again and again to invite him to
Kapilavastu. Then the Lord saw the need to tame countless Shakyas such as
his father Shuddhodhana, his foster mother Prajapati, and so on. So during
the rains one year he told a messenger, "Tell the king I will come, but the
Transcendent Lord and the Community of mendicants will stay not in the
royal palace but in the academy of holy persons of the city. "
The Lord said to Maudgalyayana, "Tell the mendicants that the Lord
will go to Kapilavastu to meet his father; whoever among them wishes to
witness the father-son meeting should take up their Dharma robe." Then
the Lord traveled to the bank of the waterfall Rohika, nearby Kapilavastu,
along with a great community of twelve hundred fifty mendicants. When
King Shuddhodhana heard he had arrived, he had well-adorned seats set up
in broad and open spaces. He had the crossroads, streets, and squares of
Kapilavastu cleaned and sprinkled with sandalwood water, setting up
bowls of sweet incense, festooned with many silken streamers. He ordered
the Shakyas, "Let your best carriages be prepared. Why? Because today we
will have an audience with the Lord Buddha." "Yes, God! " they said and
prepared their best vehicles. Then the king adorned the way between the
city and the banyan grove as a royal way, spreading fresh sand, adorning it
with flowers, draping it with streamers, staffing it with dancers, singers,
musicians, and drummers. The king mounted his chariot and departed with
great royal glory and power, attended by eighty thousand Shakya princes.
Some of the Shakyas were mounted on blue chariots drawn by blue horses,
with blue ornaments and nets of bells, blue-robed attendants, blue para
sols, swords, coiffures, jeweled yak-tail whisks, and boots, with blue robes,
ornamented greeting scarves, with charioteers with blue reins and whips,
80 .. E S S E N T I A L T I B ET A N BUDDHISM
with blue banners and blue ornamented cohorts; others had all their equip
ment in yellow, others in red, others pure white, and others multicolored.
Seeing King Shuddhodhana thus attended like a crescent moon emerge
from the city, the Lord, attended by the twelve hundred fifty mendicants
such as the First Five, Yashas, Mahakashyapa, Gaya Kashyapa, Shariputra,
and Mahamaudgalyayana and so forth, intentionally gathered the most
powerful gods, such as the four great kings, Vemachitra of the titans, and
all the gods of the desire and form realms. The Lord knew how great was
the pride of Shuddhodhana and knew that the Shakyas would not respect
him if he touched the ground of Kapilavastu. So he rose up in the air the
height of seven palm trees and performed miracles of radiating fire and
light in all directions and releasing streams of water from his body. All the
mendicant saints rose up six palm trees' height in the air, ranging them
selves around to greet the king. Then the god Brahma appeared on the
Lord's right, a bit larger than human size, and the god Indra on the left, and
around them were the four kinds of desire-realm gods holding up royal
parasols and fanning him with cooling yak-tail fans. The four great kings
stood in the east and west with hands cupped together in reverence. The
gods filled the sky with jewel towers, making offerings with flowers and in- .
cense powders, offering heavenly music and songs, with a fine gentle spray
of incense rain descending from the clouds.
Seeing such a host of mendicants and such miraculous displays, the fa
ther king did not recognize the Lord; he became confused, and asked his at
tendant, Kalodayin, "Among the many orange-robed mendicants, where is
the prince? " Then Kalodayin pointed out the Lord to the king, saying,
"This one is the Lord, 0 King of Men, behold him!" Then, by the power of ·
the Lord, those gods and humans could see each other; and the king saw
the Lord, the gods who were making offerings to the Lord, and the sky full
of divine jeweled towers, and he was greatly amazed. "When he was a •
youth, I said he would be a lord of the Dharma. And that is what this is. I
only have a human following, but the Lord, he has a following of both gods
and humans! " The Shakyas all came out of the city and gathered together,
wondering, "Will the father pay homage to the son or the son pay homage
to the father? " Then the great king Shuddhodhana bared one shoulder of
his priceless robe, placed his right knee on the ground, and paid homage to
the foot of the Lord with his jeweled coif and diadem, and said: " 0 thou of
vast intelligence, I bow thrice to your universal feet! When you were born,
the earth quaked, and the shadow of the rose-apple tree did not leave your
body. " But when the father had thus revered the son, the Shakyas felt
suspicious, wondering, "How can this be? What does it mean?" King
Seeing the Buddha 81
Shuddhodhana addressed them: "Wise ones, i t is not the young prince that
1 salute; 1 have bowed three times to this Lord of gods and humans."
Then the Lord withdrew his magical manifestation, and, in the midst of
the community of mendicants, sat on a lion throne adorned with various di
vine fabrics by the desire-realm gods. The desire gods held a divine canopy
above him. Then King Shuddhodhana's voice felt choked, his heart felt
heavy, and his eyes filled with tears, as he spoke: "When you dwelt in the
spacious mansion in your father's palace, why did you go alone into the
wilderness filled with dangers? " The Lord spoke: "Lord of men! Freeing
themselves from the bonds of the household, the sages live happily in the ten
abodes of the noble ones." Along these lines, father and son had a lengthy
conversation. Finally the king was happy, and he bowed again to the Lord,
fully recognizing him as a blissful Buddha. Then the king thought: "My son
has attained such excellence! It is my great fortune! " Then the Lord gave an
appropriate teaching there in the banyan garden, and seventy-seven thou
sand Shakya princes saw the truth. The next day he taught at the Brahma
garden, and seventy-six thousand Shakyas saw the truth.
The Shakya Amrtodhana had a six-year-old son named Ananda who
had been predicted to become an attendant of the Lord; so the father
wanted to keep him away from the Lord by all means possible. But the
Lord thought, "I should go to Kapilavastu for the sake of Ananda." When
Amrtodhana hid Ananda in his room, the Lord opened the door with mag
ical power, and Ananda came out, picked up a yak-tail fan and came to fan
the Lord. When the Lord left, Ananda followed in his footsteps, and no one
could turn him back. Amrtodhana realized the prophesied time had come,
so he sent Ananda on an elephant to the banyan garden. When he reached
there, the Lord had Dashabala Kashyapa confer the renunciation vows.
From that time Ananda fulfilled the prophecy by happily serving the Lord.
The next day the Lord taught the Dharma at the Rohatika garden, and
Amrtodhana and seventy-five thousand Shakyas attained the fruit. But
Devadatta did not respect the Lord and slandered him.
King Shuddhodhana invited the Lord to the midday meal; having of
fered the meal, the king took the sacrificial vase and formally offered the
Nyagrodha garden. The Lord dedicated the merit of the gift and went there
to spend the summer rains retreat, with the king and the Shakya people vis
iting him often to listen to the Dharma. At that time, King Shuddhodhana
experienced strong mental swings between extreme depression and intense
delight, and so did not attain the fruit. Then the Lord, to rid the king of the
gleeful mood when he thought "My son is the only one with the greatest
magical powers! " sent Maudgalyayana to visit him. When he asked the
82 • E S S EN T i A L T I B ETAN BUDDHiSM
saint, "Do other disciples have great powers? " Maudgalyayana replied,
"There are many others with great magical powers. " Then the king was
free of his exulting mind, realizing that others besides his son had great
magical powers. Next, to free the king from his depression, which had
arisen when he had thought that the gods, humans, and titans used to make
offerings to the Lord but now only the humans were doing it, the Lord
taught the Dharma to the host of gods. Indra, knowing the problem, told
Vishvakarma to build a pagoda of four jewel substances in the Nyagrodha
garden with various thrones in it. The four great kings sat in the four door
ways. The Buddha was invited there, and the desire and form gods, the
dragons, the ogres, the fairies, the titans, the bird-men, the kinnaras all
gathered around, along with the Great Disciples. Outside sixty thousand
spirits gathered. At that time the Lord sat on the throne adorned with vari
ous jewels and taught the Discourse called The Demonstration of Real
ity: The Bodhisattva Samadhi of the Meeting of Father and Son.
Maudgalyayana brought King Shuddhodhana out of Kapilavastu to the
divine pagoda. When Maudgalyayana entered and began to bring
Shuddhodhana with him through the eastern door, he was stopped by King
Rashtrapala, who said, "Don't go in." "Why not?" "The Lord is explain
ing the Dharma to the divine audience. Humans are not allowed in." "Who
may your honor be?" " Great King! I am Rashtrapala." Then King
Shuddhodhana went into the south, west, and north doors and had similar
encounters with the other three great kings. Then King Shuddhodhana was
free of his depression and felt an ambition: "Hey! I would like to see the
Lord teaching that pure audience of gods." Then the Lord had the intuition
that King Shuddhodhana would die of frustration if he could not see the
Buddha teaching, and so he magically made the jewel palace transparent,
and the king could see the Buddha's body without obstruction. Seeing it, he
felt joy and reverence and bowed to the Lord's two feet and sat down to
one side. Then the Lord made a sign to the titan king Vemachitra to make
offerings. Then Vemachitra mounted his seven-jewel chariot and put many
titan women in the jewel chariots drawn by jewel horses, carrying various
offerings, erecting jewel palaces in offering, praising and offering to the
Lord with intense reverence. Likewise the titan king Bali and Rahu and so
on and the bird king Supaksha also worshiped. Then the dragon princesses
offered jewel umbrellas, and the dragon kings Nanda and Upananda filled
garlands with red pearls and purified everything with blazing and dripping
fire and water from various wish-granting gems within the seven-jewel
mansions. Then the serpent spirits and the host of the four great kings of- .
fered jewel canopies and the fairies offered pools filled with lotuses upon
the earth-guarding pillar deities. And the kinnara king offered a seven-jewel
Seeing the Buddha 83
house adorned with jewel umbrellas, and Indra offered a jewel mansion.
All the gods made offerings and sang praises, and the Lord smiled.
Then King Shuddhodhana was totally enveloped with love for his son,
and so the Lord taught the Father-Son Meeting Sutra, the samadhi to tame
that attachment. King Shuddhodhana attained the fruit of stream-entry in
the Mahayana, finally attaining the tolerance of the uncreated along with
the seventy thousand Shakyas. The Lord smiled, and when Ashvathama
asked the reason, he predicted the enlightenments of Shuddhodhana and
the Shakyas and told Shariputra to promulgate the Sutra.
If you can reflect properly about this story of what happened when fa
ther and son met, you can understand the need not to be attached to your
relatives and dear ones of this life when you try to practice a pure Dharma.
If you really want to help your relatives, dear ones, and friends, you will
transcend the home and enter homelessness, abandoning concern for great
ness in this life and even the perfect successes of the life-cycle. Abiding in
pure ethical conduct, you must apply yourself to practice the path in soli
tary places, and you will feel a firm certitude about the keys of the prepara
tions, practices, and applications of the stages of the path to enlightenment.
Then the Lord reached the age of forty-one in the iron male mouse year
and spent the rains retreat in the Thirty-three heaven. The Lord wished to
take care of his mother, Mayadevi, who had taken rebirth in the Thirty
three heaven and also wished to develop the roots of virtue of innumerable
deities there. Sitting before the Sudharma palace, the mantra of Ush
nishasitatapattra emerged from his crown-dome. He then went to the gods'
pleasure park together with Brahma and Indra and the eight classes of gods
and also Mahamati and the other many Bodhisattvas. At that moment
light-rays radiated, and all the tormented beings from the three wretched
states were liberated from their sufferings and set upon jewels in the pres
ence of the Lord, where they began to sing his praises.
Then the Lord sat upon a flat stone like a white blanket, under the divine
tree Kalpadruma, spending the rains retreat with eight thousand saints such
as Shariputra, Mahakashyapa, Mahakatyayana, Puma, Potala, Ashvatama,
Kapina, Mahodara, and Subhuti, and also Ananda. Many Bodhisattvas also
gathered, and the great mother Mayadevi was immensely delighted. For the
Bodhisattvas to live comfortably she taught the spell of Shankara.
At that time, the Lord was dwelling only with tenth-stage Bodhisattvas.
Maitreya requested the teaching to alleviate the sufferings of the humans of
Jambudvipa. The Lord touched his foot to the ground, emanating a magi
cal fierce deity, who subdued the evil beings, and then he taught the Achala
Tantra. A god became aware that he would die and be born as a pig and
began to beat his breast in terror. The Lord went there and told him to go
84 ,.. E S S E N T I A L T I B ET A N BUDDHISM
for refuge to the Three Jewels. When he did so, he was reborn instead as the
son of a merchant in Vaishali, given the name Prajna.
While the Lord was staying in the Thirty-three heaven, Mahamaud
galyayana remained on earth to tend the teaching. When any ordinary per
son was wondering where the Lord was staying, King Bimbisara and King
Prasenajit and the four assemblies would ask Mahamaudgalyayana, who
was spending the rains retreat in Shravasti. "Where is the Lord staying? "
"He is staying in the heavens." Then they were happy. They returned to him
again after the three months of the rains retreat and said, "Now it has been
a long time since we saw the Lord, please invite the Lord to return with our
word of request." Maudgalyayana went to the heaven in an instant and
made the request of the four assemblies to the Lord. Then the Lord, know
ing that humans could not climb to the heavens and that the gods could de
scend to Jambudvipa, acknowledged their request and sent Maudgalyayana
back to say that he would descend in seven days to the city of Sankhasya.
Maudgalyayana went back in an instant and informed the humans and then
returned to the Thirty-three. Aniruddha told King Udayana about it, who
was very happy and had the city cleaned, set out offerings everywhere, and
made that whole place into a divine pleasure garden.
Then on the twenty-second day of the middle autumn month, the Lord
set out for the earth, and Indra commanded Vishvakarma to magically cre
ate three stairways. On the central sapphire staircase, Shakyamuni de
scended with his attendants. On the right one of gold, Brahma with the
form-realm gods descended, fanning the Lord with jeweled yak-tail fans.
On the left one made of crystal, Indra with the desire gods came carrying
royal umbrellas. The Lord came half the way down by foot, to create merit
for Vishvakarma, and half the way by magic, in order to prevent loss of
faith in people. Once below the altitude of twelve leagues, the gods could
not bear to descend due to the rising human smell, so he caused a sandal
wood smell to spread everywhere. Since if human men could see divine
women or if human women could see divine men, they would die, he magi
cally caused men to see all the gods as male and women to see them all as
female. And so he entered the city of Sankhasya and sat down on a lion
throne erected by Indra.
When the Lord was fifty-seven, in the male fire dragon year, he per
formed the great miracles in Shravasti. Now since the Teacher had attained
perfect Buddhahood, he had developed and liberated countless gods and
humans. All the nine great kings of the Jambudvipa continent made offer
ings to the Teacher along with his Community of great disciples. The six re
ligious teachers such as Pur ana were disturbed by jealousy and wished to
rival the Teacher. The evil Mara also stirred up their minds, intensifying
Seeing the Buddha 85
their competitiveness. The six teachers went to King Bimbisara. " 0 king!
We and Gautama are said to be wise, so it is right for us to hold a contest of
miracles. " The king said, "You all are being foolish. How can you compete
with the Buddha's great miraculous power?" The six teachers replied, "In
seven days we will compete in miracles, and you will see." The king said, "I
will prepare this contest, though I fear you will be shamed." The king then
communicated with the Lord, who said, "I myself know the time. " Then
the king prepared the place for the miracle competition; but on the seventh
day, the Lord left for Vaishali with his Community.
The six teachers rejoiced and became arrogant: "Gautama's miracles
were not on our level! You didn't believe in us, but he fled when he had to
compete! " Then they and King Bimbisara all followed the Buddha to
Vaishali. The people of Vaishali welcomed the Lord. The six teachers set up
a miracle competition again after seven days. The Lord was requested and
again said, "I myself know the time." But on the sixth day he departed for
Kosambi and King Udayana.
Again they followed and requested a competition, and this time the Lord
left for Anga of King Shunchidala. There again they followed, requested the
competition, and the Buddha left for Champa and King Indravarma. Again
they followed, and this time the Lord went to King Brahmadatta's Vara
nasi. Again they followed, and this time the Buddha went to Kapilavastu of
the Shakyas. All this time the six teachers were becoming more and more
arrogant and urged King Bimbisara again and again to make the Lord com
pete with them in miracles. The king said to them, "If you repeat this again
three more times, I will banish you and send you away." They then
thought, "This king is the partisan of Gautama. But King Prasenajit is said
to be completely impartial. So let's ask him to make it happen," and they
followed the Lord to Shravasti, where he was staying in the Jetavana
Monastery. At that time, King Bimbisara had five hundred horsemen and
an assembly of four hundred and ten thousand followers, the Licchavis had
five hundred horsemen and seventy thousand followers, Udrayana had
eighty-one thousand followers, Shunchidala had fifty thousand followers,
Indravarma had sixty thousand, Brahmadatta had eight hundred thousand,
and the Shakyas had nine million followers. The whole forest of Shravasti
was filled with this great multitude.
Then the six teachers spoke to Prasenajit. "The ascetic Gautama has
made appointments with us for miracle competitions; whenever the time
comes, he flees. Now, a great audience has assembled in your country. You,
King, are like the earth, without partiality; it is fitting for you to be the
judge. If Gautama wins, we will become his disciples; if we win, we will
rule." The king said, "Why do such lowly persons as you, who know next
86 ,.. E S S E N T I A L T I B ET A N B U D D H I S M
quart vase, with aromatic breezes, emitting the sound of the Dharma, more
brilliant than sunlight. Beginning with this, for a whole fortnight, each day
the vast multitude beheld astounding miracles, became faithful and atten
tive to the Dharma, and were individually established on the three paths.
On the second day, King Udrayana made offerings, and two jewel
mountains shining with rainbow colors appeared on the Lord's right and
left sides, the right one upholding various flowering trees producing deli
cious fruits that satisfied many people. On the left-hand mountain sweet
grass grew which satisfied the grazing animals. On the third day, King
Shunchidala made offerings, and when the Lord threw the water used to
rinse his mouth on the earth, it made a two-hundred-league jewel pond
adorned with the seven precious gems filled with lotuses of many colors,
which radiated light-rays that filled earth and sky and amazed and de
lighted the entire assembly. On the fourth day, when King Indravarma
made offerings, the Lord created eight great canals on each of the four sides
of that jewel pond, from which water tumbled into the pond, emitting the
sounds of the Dharma. On the fifth day, when King Brahmadatta made of
ferings, the Lord emitted from his smile a dazzling golden light which illu
minated the entire billion-world universe, filling the bodies and minds of all
beings it touched with intense bliss, relieving them of the three sufferings
and the five obstructions.
On the sixth day, when the Licchavis made offerings, the Lord made it
possible for each member of all assemblies to read the thoughts of each
other member and to know the good and bad evolutionary actions of the
other; and all were delighted and praised the Lord. On the seventh day,
when the Shakyas made offerings, each member of the assembly saw him
self or herself as a world emperor, with the seven precious ornaments and
the thousand sons, receiving the homage of the princes and ministers, and
all felt great joy.
On the eighth day Indra invited the Lord, and when he placed his right
foot within the sweet-scented mansion, the earth quaked and the five hun
dred Rishis whom the six teachers had asked to help them thought it was
the sign to come. When they arrived, the Lord emitted a ray from his body,
and they saw the Lord become as beautiful as the sun; they felt great faith,
and they all attained sainthood. The Lord returned again to the great mira
cle stadium with the five hundred saints and sat on the lion throne erected
by Indra in the midst of the vast multitude.
Then the Lord made himself invisible on his throne and performed the
four actions in the four directions, going, standing, sitting, and lying down,
emitting various light-rays. Flames roared from the lower part of his body,
88 • E S S ENTIAL T I B ETAN BUDDHISM
and water streamed from the upper part, and vice versa. Then the Lord
touched the earth with his hand and the dragons offered a chariot-wheel
size lotus with a thousand golden petals and diamond anthers that sprouted
up from the ground, and the Lord sat in the calyx of the lotus. Then many
lotuses just like it sprouted forth, and many emanated Buddhas sat in them,
filling the world up to the Akanishta heaven. Some of those Buddhas blazed
with flames, some became luminous, some streamed with rain, some emit
ted lightning, some prophesied beings' omniscience, some asked questions,
some answered them, some walked, some ate, some stood, some sat, some
lay down. Even all the children could see these Buddhas without obstruc
tion, and thus all were blessed. All the kings and their retinues from all the
countries, and the many hundreds of thousands of humans and gods beheld
the miracle without blinking and bowed to it unceasingly. They were de
lighted and scattered flowers and incense powders. And the emanated
Buddhas uttered many verses of teaching. The Lord said, "0 mendicants,
the great miracle will disappear, don't cling to its sign," and he disappeared.
King Prasenajit said to the six teachers, "Hey! The Lord has shown the
great miracle. Your turn has come-now you show something! " Then
Purana Kassapa was silent and elbowed Makkhali Gosala, who did the
same to Sanjaya Belatthiputta, who did the same to Ajita Kesakambala,
who did the same to Pakhuda Kaccayana, who did the same to Nigantha
Nataputta, who did the same once again to Purana. The king repeated his
request three times, and still they were speechless and elbowed each other
and became paralyzed and discouraged and hung their heads and were
speechless, their minds withdrawn and bodies shaken. Then the Lord
touched his lion throne and a great bellow like a bull's sounded, and five
great ogres emerged and destroyed the thrones of the six teachers. And
Vajrapani, holding a vajra with fires blazing from its tip, brandished it over
the heads of the six teachers, emitting a red wind and a fierce rain, and the
six teachers were terrified and fled. But their followers, ninety thousand
strong, felt faith in the Buddha, renounced the home life, and attained
sainthood. Then the Lord emitted light-rays from his eighty thousand pores
and manifested a Buddha on a lotus on the tip of each ray. Each Buddha sat
and taught them the Dharma.
On the ninth day, when Brahma made offerings, the Lord made his body
tall enough to reach the Brahma heaven, illuminating heaven and earth
with light-rays, and taught the Dharma. On the tenth day, the four great
kings made offerings, and light-rays blazed from the body that reached
up to the summit of existence. On the eleventh day, the householder
Anathapindada made offerings, and the Buddha became invisible on his
throne, emitted rainbow light-rays, and taught the Dharma. On the twelfth
Seeing the Buddha 89
day, when the householder Chitra made offerings, the Lord entered the
trance of love and radiated golden light-rays that enfolded whomever they
touched into the abode of universal love. On the thirteenth day, King
Shunchidala made offerings, and two light-rays emerged from the navel of
the teacher seated on the lion throne, extended seven arm spans into space
on either side, and created giant lotuses on the tip of each, with an em
anated Buddha seated on each. From their navels two light-rays were emit
ted with lotuses and Buddhas on their tips and so forth until the entire
billion-world universe was filled with emanated Buddhas. On the four
teenth day, when King Udrayana made offerings and scattered flowers, the
flowers were transformed into twelve hundred fifty jewel chariots of blaz
ing gold, tall enough to reach the Brahma heavens, adorned with precious
wishing gems, with an emanated Buddha seated in each, radiating a light
that enabled all to see the entire billion-world galactic universe.
On the fifteenth day, when King Bimbisara made offerings, each dish
had food of a hundred tastes, satisfying the entire multitude. The Lord
touched the earth with his hand, and the assembly saw all the beings in the
eighteen hells suffering various miseries, burned by blazing flames and so
on, crying, "How we suffer these terrible torments! " All were terrified and
felt intense compassion. The hell beings themselves could see the Buddha.
Rays of light like liquid gold flowed from his five fingertips, and that golden
light touched the bodies of the hell beings and relieved their suffering. The
instant they heard the Dharma, they passed away from there and were re
born in a higher state.
Thus when the Teacher had performed such great miracles in Shravasti,
the faithful humans and gods erected there a Great Miracle Monument,
square, with four stages, with niches on each side.
Subsequently the Lord turned the wheel of Dharma infinitely in various
lands of gods and humans. On the Vulture Heap Mountain, to a countless
assembly of Bodhisattvas from the heavenly pure lands, of disciples, gods,
and dragons and so on, he taught the precious Transcendent Wisdom
Sutras. That was called the central teaching, the signless Dharma wheel.
Then in other countries he taught the King of Trances Sutra, the Buddha
Garland Sutra, the Jewel Heap Sutra and so on, immeasurable Sutras of the
central teaching. Thereafter he taught the final teaching Sutras such as the
Elucidation of the Intention, in Vaishali and so on.
On another level, he taught the Dharma wheel of mantra at the very
same time. While he was teaching the Transcendent Wisdom Sutra on the
Vulture Heap Mountain, in other embodiments he taught infinite Unex
celled Yoga Tantras such as the Wheel of Time at the Glorious Dhanya
kataka Monument. Likewise he taught infinite teachings of the four
90 .. E S S ENTiAL TIB ETAN B U D D H I S M
charioteer, brought the rainbow bow of the gods and presented it to the
chief minister. The minister gave it to the barbarian king, but the latter
could not even lift it. Then the magical king took the bow and tapped it
with his little finger, which literally petrified King Kapina, making him un
able to move. Then when the Lord as a magic king bent the bow, the earth
quaked. He shot one arrow and it pierced in succession seven great iron
drums, splitting into five arrows, from whose tips countless light-rays emit
ted, each of them with a world emperor on its tip. Those light-rays accom
plished the aims of beings, and they sounded verses of praise and teaching.
Then the pride of power of King Kapina was quieted, and he thought,
" Ema! What is this? " The Lord then taught him the Dharma and he saw
the truth. Then the Lord reverted to his usual form, and King Kapina,
along with his eighteen thousand ministers, renounced the home life and at
tained sainthood; he was called the Venerable Mahakapina.
In this case, who in his right mind would say, " King Kapina was tamed
by a world emperor, not by the Lord ! "
Further, many Unexcelled Yoga Tantras often say, "stated by the Lord
Shakyamuni." It is well known in the Kalachakra Tantra. Further, the
Manjushri Namasamgiti, well known as the root of many Unexcelled Yoga
Tantras, states: "Thereupon the Lord Shakyamuni saw all the great clans of
secret mantra, the three clans, the secret mantra clan, the mantra-holding
clan. The mundane and the transcendent clan, the great clan that illuminates
the world, the supreme clan of the Great Seal, seeing the great crown-dome
clan, the Lord of the Word made this verse. Having the six kings of secret
mantra, nonduality emerged and he stated this qualified by nonproduction. "
And also, there is the colophon, "The true expression of the ultimate names
of the Holy Manjushri, spoken by Lord Shakyamuni, is completed. "
Further, as for the Samvaratantra being taught b y Shakyamuni, the
Dakarnava Tantra clearly says, "This was stated by the Shakya Lion in this
time of contention."
Therefore, those who wish from their hearts to practice the stages of the
path of enlightenment should not entrust their minds to any false tales of
foolish people and must develop a certitude from the depths of their being
that the compassionate Teacher Shakyamuni taught everything from the
root of the path, the way of reliance on the spiritual friend, up to the at
tainment of communion, the ultimate fruit of the culminating path of
mantra. Having understood that there is no instruction beyond the teach
ings of the Victor, they should place their trust in the actual teaching of the
Buddha as the supreme of personal instructions.
Thus, the compassionate Teacher, King of the Shakyas, limitlessly taught
Seeing the Buddha 93
the Three Baskets and Four Tantra Divisions, according to the vow of
Samantabhadra, "In god language, the languages of dragons and ogres, ser
pent and human languages, according to all the sounds of all beings, I will
teach the Dharma in every language. " He taught according to the lan
guages of all beings such as gods and dragons, a single statement of his
being understood by each being in their own language. And so infinite
teachings emerged according to the faculties and inclinations of each being.
Infinite teachings ceaselessly emerged from each pore of his body, and all of
the teachings of the Buddha could only have been taught by him. We only
summarize this infinite profusion of teachings according to the antidotes
needed by the individual disciple's addictions, as "eighty-four thousand
groups of teachings. "
Thus that compassionate Teacher turned measureless wheels of Dharma
of Individual and Universal Vehicles, developing and liberating countless
humans and gods. The Teacher spoke to his followers: "The fourfold com
munity should read the twelve branches of Scripture that confer benefit and
happiness. Apply yourselves to the individual liberation practice. The el
ders should support the younger with equipment. The younger should not
summon the elder by name. To the faithful, you should show the Teacher's
birth, Buddhahood, Dharma teaching, and Nirvana. 0 mendicants, if you
have any doubts about the three jewels and the four truths, you should ask
about them." And the Lord took off his upper robe. "Mendicants! It is rare
to see a Transcendent Lord! Behold the body of the Transcendent Lord ! "
The mendicants were silent for a moment. "All created things have the na
ture of destruction. This is the last statement of the Transcendent Lord . "
Then, next to a pair of Sala trees, he placed his head to the north to show
that "in the future, in the northern Land of Snows, my complete teaching
will vastly spread, " during the male iron dragon year, which was his eighty
first year, on the full moon day of the month of Vaishakha. Though in ulti
mate reality there was no interruption of his Form Body manifestations and
miraculous activities, in order to give incentive to those disciples still hold
ing on to permanence, to instruct them that Transcendent Lords are very
rare and hard to meet, by the power of previous spiritual conceptions and
vows, he manifested the way of ultimate Nirvana. Though the Victor him
self attained Nirvana, by the power of his ancient spiritual conception and
solemn vows he blessed the teaching to remain for five thousand years, and
he increased profusely his heritage and relics, blessing the whole of
Jambudvipa to be filled with monuments.
Those who have the essential concern to practice the stages of the path
of enlightenment must understand that all the Victor's teachings of Sutra
94 .. E S S E N TIAL T I B ETAN BUDDHISM
and Mantra are exclusively methods for their own attainment of enlighten
ment, thinking, "That compassionate Teacher taught this Dharma for the
sake of liberating me personally from the suffering of the hellish states
and the life-cycle in general and to establish me in the exaltation of
Buddhahood. " They should make effort to remember the Teacher's excel
lence, kindness, and compassion, and worship and invoke him with faith
and reverence. At the start of the Teacher's teaching of the Dharma, he
taught the group of five the four aspects of the noble truth of suffering, be
ginning with impermanence. At the end, with his statement about how all
created things have the nature of destruction, again he taught imperma
nence. If intelligent people know how to examine this fact, they can under
stand this as a great key for energizing their practice of the path to
enlightenment.
At the beginning, thinking over the fact that one will not live long, being
perishable by nature, energizes the urgency of entering the Dharma. At the
medium level, thinking over the process of impermanence leads one to lose
appetite by knowing the unreliability of even the successes of the life-cycle,
which energizes one's meditation of the path. At the level of the great being,
thinking over impermanence, how all beings have been careening from life
to life unceasingly, helps one cultivate the spirit of enlightenment through
the seven causal precepts, such as mother recognition, and helps one to
practice the Bodhisattva deeds. Even when one contemplates the view of
the central way, it proceeds according to the saying "from impermanence,
suffering, from suffering, he taught selflessness." First one meditates imper
manence and eliminates the mentality habituated to the permanent, unique,
independent self. Then one can engage in meditating the central view free
of the extremist fabrications. Then, having cultivated character by means
of the ordinary path, when one enters the Mantric path, remembering im
permanence energizes one with the urgency of needing to learn the Tantric
Vehicle.
One should understand the biography of the Teacher in this way, bring
ing its message into one's practice of the path.
C H A P T ER 3
S O LEMN P R AY E R
You are Mentor!
You are Archetype Deity!
You are Angel and Protector!
From now until enlightenment,
I seek no other Savior!
With compassion's iron hook
Please look after me,
In this life, the between, and future lives!
Save me from the terrors
Of both life and liberation!
Bestow on me all powers!
Be my eternal friend!
Defend me from attack!
I N I TIATI O N AND B L E S S I N G
By the power of thus praying three times,
The vital points of the Mentor's body, speech, and mind
Emit white, red, and blue elixir light-rays,
First one by one and then all together,
Which dissolve into my own three vital points,
Purify the four blocks, and grant the four initiations.
I attain the Four Bodies, and a duplicate of the Mentor
Melts in delight and blesses me completely.
by Padma Sambhava
OM - AV KAA AAH !
To the unborn, nondeveloping Truth Body Mentor,
In the palace of the perfect, all-pervading Realm of Truth,
With reverent devotion, ardently I pray!
Naturally free without abandoning misknowing delusion,
I freely accept the perfect Truth Body blessing,
As effortless, nonartificial, primal wisdom!
98 .. E S S ENTIAL T I B ETAN BUDDHISM
When Atisha arrived in Tibet, his three disciples, Ku, Ngog, and Brom,
asked him, "To attain the high state of liberation and omniscience, which is
more important to follow, the precept of the lama, or the scriptures and
commentaries? "
Atisha replied, "The precept of the lama is more important than the
scriptures and commentaries. "
"Why?" they asked.
"If you know that emptiness is the prime characteristic of all things, and
even if you can recite the entire canon by heart, if, at the time of practice
you do not apply to yourself the precept of the lama, you and the Dharma
will go your separate ways. "
They asked, "Please define the practice of the precept of the lama. Is it
simply striving to practice mental, verbal, and physical virtuous deeds, act
ing in accordance with the three vows of individual liberation, Bodhi
sattvahood, and Tantra? "
"Both of these will b e insufficient," replied Atisha.
"Why? "
"Although you keep the three vows, i f you do not renounce the three
realms of cyclic life, your deeds will only increase your worldliness.
Although you strive day and night to commit physical, verbal, and mental
virtuous acts, if you do not dedicate your efforts to universal enlightenment,
you will end up with numerous wrong attitudes. Even though you meditate
and come to be considered holy and a wise teacher, if you do not abandon
your interest in the eight worldly concerns, whatever you do will only be for
the purpose of this life, and in the future you will miss the right path."
Again they asked, "What is the highest teaching of the path?"
Atisha replied, "The highest skill lies in the realization of selflessness.
The highest nobility lies in taming your own mind. The highest excellence
lies in having the attitude that seeks to help others. The highest precept is
continual mindfulness. The highest remedy lies in understanding the intrin
sic transcendence of everything. The highest activity lies in not conforming
with worldly concerns. The highest mystic realization lies in lessening and
transmuting the passions. The highest charity lies in nonattachment. The
highest morality lies in having a peaceful mind. The highest tolerance lies in
humility. The highest effort lies in abandoning attachment to works. The
highest meditation lies in the mind without claims. The highest wisdom lies
in not grasping anything as being what it appears to be. "
1 00 .. ES S E NTIAL TIB ETAN BUDDHISM
seem very religious! Did you hit this poor old woman? " The grandmother
quickly intervened: "No, no, please don't wrongly accuse him! He never
said anything unkind to me. It was 1 who treated him wrongly. He gave me
such true teachings as 1 had never heard, 1 was deeply moved to faith. 1 only
cried because 1 realized how far from the Dharma 1 have gotten. Now you
are not like me. You are young, and have wealth and faith. This is the great
Mentor called Milarepa. You should serve him and make offerings and ask
him for teachings and instructions. "
The girl replied, "If that's it, then you both are amazing! Are you the
powerful Milarepa ? Just meeting you brings great merit! If you would tell
us the history of your lineage, it will inspire your disciples. It will instruct
us in how to transform our perceptions. 50 please tell your lineage. "
The reverend Milarepa thought, "This girl i s destined to become a disci
pie," and so he sang this song of his lineage:
The Truth Body is pervasive All-Good 5amantabhadra.
The majestic Beatific Body is great Vajradhara;
The Emanation Body, saving beings, is Shakyamuni.
1 am the yogin who descends from these three;
Daughter, do you have faith in this lineage?
"Your lineage is a great wonder, " said Peldar Boom, "it is like the gla
cier at the head of all rivers. 1 have heard that you Dharma practitioners
rely outwardly on a mentor who marks your process of consciousness, so
that you can inwardly realize the unborn Body of Truth. Please tell me
what kind of root mentor do you rely upon? "
Milarepa replied, "I have the following kind of root mentor," and he
sang a song on how to rely on a qualified mentor:
"These mentors are outstanding, " exclaimed the girl, "like turquoises
strung on a woven gold chain! But before we ask for their teachings, what
sort of empowerments do we request?"
Milarepa then sang:
Touching the vase on your crown is the outer empowerment;
Showing your body to be divine is the inner empowerment;
1 04 .. E S S ENTIAL T I B ETAN B U D D H I S M
ascended with her human body to the pure land of the angelic Dakinis, ac
companied by the sound of heavenly drums.
This is the story of Milarepa meeting his spiritual daughter, Peldar
Boom, one of his four main female heirs, at Geba Lesum of Jung.
After Atisha passed into final liberation, Drom the Teacher became his suc
cessor. On one occasion his three main disciples, the brothers Potowa,
Chengawa, and Puchungwa, asked him, "Please tell us the way of practice
that includes the essence of all paths to omniscient Buddhahood. "
The spiritual friend Drom answered, "Though there is an incalculable
number of precepts, each of which gives entry to the path of enlightenment, if
one has the necessary ground for practice, there is only one thing to attain."
"What is that one thing? " asked the three brothers.
"That which has the essence of voidness and compassion. To explain:
Voidness is the absolute spirit of enlightenment; the realization that all
things are naturally and truly unborn. Compassion is the relative spirit of
enlightenment; it is universal compassion reaching out to all beings who
have not yet realized their fundamental birthlessness. Thus those who prac
tice the path of the Universal Vehicle should first strive to develop these two
forms of the spirit of enlightenment. Once the spirit of enlightenment has
been conceived, it should be diligently cultivated. By doing so, one is sure
to realize Buddhahood with its Form Body and Truth Body, the ultimate
fruition of attaining the two kinds of spirit of enlightenment.
"There are many methods to conceive the two kinds of spirit of enlight
enment. Condensing them into a way of practice, there are only three root
methods and nine branch methods growing from them. The three root
methods are mind development, the accumulation of merit and wisdom,
and the quest of samadhi. Each root method has three principal branches.
"The three principal branch methods of mind development are the med
itations on impermanence, love and compassion, and the selflessness of all •
Chapter Thirteen:
T H E R A RITY O F F I N D I N G L I B E RTY
AND O P P O RTUNITY
Next, you who would study according to the Holy Ornaments
Should generate in mind the certain wisdom that reflects
On all the meanings appropriate to Individual Vehicle disciples,
And should especially contemplate in five ways.
First, you should contemplate the rarity of liberty and opportunity,
The misfortune of being born among a misguided people,
Of being born with imperfect faculties,
Of being deprived of the blessing of birth in a land with the doctrine,
1I6
Practicing Transcendent Renunciation 117
At every turn think how this life can serve that end.
Burn with flamelike zeal to provide for the future,
When by virtue you can transcend this unfortunate era
And quickly cross the ocean of cyclic life.
Chapter Fourteen:
L I F E ' S I M P E R M A N EN C E
Once acquired, this precious life with liberty and opportunity
Has the characteristics of instantaneity, impermanence, and decay.
The three realms are deceptive and illusory in nature.
Though beautified by the wealth of its four continents,
Our earthly environment is impermanent and exhibits decay.
Even this body should be recognized as a ball of foam,
Like those of all these beings now on earth.
In a hundred years, they will certainly not be,
Since everything born eventually dies.
Just as your own life span will come to an end,
In places like markets, crossroads, guest houses,
All these crowds of diverse beings will be scattered.
Contemplate the certainty from the heart that your relations
And the resources of your amassed possessions,
Like a city deserted, will come to nothing.
Since whatever wealth one has amassed
Is impermanent and without essence, you should be detached;
You ascend to the wealthy cities of paradise,
Even as you go beyond death and fall to miserable lives.
Be sure that pride in this life or wealth grants no equanimity,
Since one is separated in time from things outer and inner.
Since impermanence and death are certain,
Give up on the delusion of permanence.
Subatomic matter endures momentarily,
Being impermanent as a flash of lightning,
So you should realize ultimate truth just as quickly.
The variety of habitats and life-forms is transient,
Essenceless as an illusion or a banana tree,
Therefore this life-cycle is called impermanent,
And clinging to one's self or work is not acceptable.
1 20 .. E S S E N Tl A L Tl B E T A N B U D D H I S M
Chapter Fifteen:
C O NTEM P L AT I N G T H E N AT U R E O F F A I T H
Following the natural realization of impermanence,
Devote yourself exclusively to building a store of faith.
With aspiring faith, work to choose wisely your path of evolution.
With confident faith, immerse your mind in the supreme objective.
With devoted faith, purify your mental qualities.
With sincere faith, eliminate doubt about the truth.
With certain faith, meditate on what you have learned.
Practicing Transcendent Renunciation 121
The ability to heal, bear the worst suffering, learn the teaching,
Understand the lives of superior beings, and remember your past
lives.
Since these develop through faith and enhance life,
You should always meditate on the primacy of faith.
Measure faith by renunciation of cyclic life, devotion to the Three
Jewels,
Attention to study and contemplation, devotion to the three
educations,
Delight in virtue and dread of vice,
And by the aspiration to achieve higher virtues.
If you do not pursue the art of generating faith,
You will achieve no blessings but continually wander in cyclic life.
Therefore, whatever techniques you rely on,
You should exert yourself in methods of developing faith.
Recognize and abandon ambivalence about faith.
The most judicious never abandon faith,
For the slightest loss causes obscurations to grow;
Inviting negative conditions without the least care,
Even the most ingenious are unable to sustain any progress.
Those who are not completely sure, and so pursue pleasure,
Wander aimlessly and are stopped by the least circumstance.
So you must be continually mindful to avoid these six.
First, examine the objects of faith,
Then be as unchanging as the king of mountains.
Be unobstructed as a sunlit ocean sky.
Be like the bowstring, with neither tension nor laxity.
Be without sluggishness, like a steady ship.
Flow without interruption, like a great river.
Be pliant, like a young vine.
Be unperturbed by conditions, steadfast as space.
The benefits of faith are manifold and immeasurable.
As the ground of all things virtuous, it dispels misery.
As a guide on the path to enlightenment, it is the vessel of the
profound.
As the tree of the holy intention, it is the consummate virtue.
Practicing Transcendent Renunciation 1 23
Chapter Sixteen:
C O NT E M P L AT I N G E V O L U T I O N A RY C A U S A L I T Y
Next, those endowed with faith should contemplate
How virtue and vice are to be adopted and abandoned
To accord with evolutionary causality.
Virtuous action is partly consistent with merit
And partly consistent with freedom, of which there are two kinds.
Virtues that have the evolutionary effect of pleasurable existence
Were defined by the Sage as being consistent with merit.
Many kinds are enumerated, but in essence such virtues are ten.
Three are physical, four verbal, three mental.
When these ten are unrelated to the formless contemplations,
They create the effect of human and divine happiness in the desire
realm.
When related to the formless contemplations, there is another
possibility.
Virtues create all kinds of pleasure in happy lives.
Avoiding killing leads to a long and healthy life.
Avoiding stealing leads to consummate wealth.
Avoiding sexual misconduct leads to freedom from marital strife.
Avoiding false speech leads to praise from others.
Avoiding abusive speech leads to the joy of pleasant conversation.
Avoiding slander leads to enjoying freedom from discord.
Avoiding gossip leads to one's word being honored.
Avoiding greed leads to attaining one's needs.
Avoiding malice leads to the delightful experience of peace.
Avoiding false views leads to a positive outlook.
Thus these ten virtues are the chariot of heaven.
Those who aspire to the bliss of transcendence must restrain
The ten sinful actions, since they cause the misery of bad migrations,
In long, medium, or short periods of descent into hellish, pretan,
Or animal lives, with their various sufferings;
1 24 .. ESSENTI A L T I B ETAN B U D D H I S M
Chapter Seventeen:
R E A L I Z I NG TH E S U F F E R I N G O F TH E L I F E - C Y C L E
AND THE BLISS O F TRANS C ENDENCE
Next you should contemplate the sufferings of the life-cycle.
Since they lack essence and cannot endure,
The three levels and six forms of existence are a misery.
Hence you must work at the means to transcend them quickly.
In hellish lives, the misery is immeasurable.
As beings tear each other apart with their teeth,
In repetitive lives and deaths, the pain is impossible to bear.
Sawed along burn lines, you are repeatedly dismembered.
Your body is pulverized, crushed between mountains and boulders,
or in chasms.
You are lured into buildings of red-hot iron,
Or onto a ground of burning embers smoldering with flames.
Your skin is flayed, you are impaled on a stake,
Consumed inside and out by searing flames,
Boiled in molten copper until your whole body dissolves into atoms,
Or roasted in iron traps in ceaseless torment, impossible to bear.
You are pounded, chopped, hacked, and ground into bits,
Baked, skewered, flattened between iron plates, and wound in
burning wire.
Beyond these hot hells in all directions are the four surrounding
hells,
Of putrid swamps, burning trenches,
126 .. ESS ENTI A L TI B ETAN B U D D H I S M
"0 reverend teacher, please attend to me! I, called so-and-so, from this time
for as long as I live, take refuge in the Buddha, supreme of gods and hu
mans! I take refuge in the Dharma, supreme of things free from desire! I
take refuge in the Sangha, supreme of communities! May the reverend look
after me as a lay religious for as long as I live ! "
(This is to be repeated after the mentor. O n the third repetition, when
you say " look after me as a layperson," think that the vow has generated in
your continuum.)
The mentor says, "Excellent! "
The disciple says, "Excellent!"
128 .. E S S E N T I A L T I B ETAN B U D D H I S M
" 0 mentor, please attend to me! As those holy saints abandoned killing as
long as they lived, turning away from all taking of life, so I, called so and so,
from this time forth for as long as I shall live shall abandon killing and turn
away from taking of life! By this first branch I shall educate myself in the dis
cipline of those holy saints! I shall practice it! I shall accomplish it!
Furthermore, as those holy saints for as long as they lived abandoned taking
the not-given, sexual misconduct driven by lust, pretentious lies, and the
liquors of grain and distillation and all intoxicants and causes of recklessness;
just like that, I, called so-and-so, from this time forth for as long as I shall
live, shall abandon taking the not-given, sexual misconduct driven by lust,
pretentious lies, and the liquors of grain and distillation and all intoxicants
and causes of recklessness! By this five-branched vow, I will educate myself in
the discipline of those holy saints! I shall practice it! I shall accomplish it!"
The mentor says, "Excellent! "
The disciple says, "Excellent! "
ing, one achieves the adjunct lay vow. Then, in order to promptly accept
the discipline of Wanderer, one achieves the renunciation.
First, the man who wants to renounce comes before the mendicants who
are oriented around the abbot. He kneels down on one knee. The abbot
speaks:
"In order to allow you to take renunciation, you must be free of ob
structing things. If an obstructed person renounces, either the vow is not
born or, though it is born, it cannot stay and so on, and so it does not help
your life. Furthermore, there is a transgression for me. So I must ask about
obstructions; as the Root Sutra says, 'First the abbot asks about obstruc
tions and then the occasion begins for the pure one.' Answer my questions
without any side thoughts. You are not a fanatic? You are not younger than
fifteen? Though at least fifteen, you are not incapable of scaring away
crows? You have not been able to scare crows for less than seven years? You
are not a slave? You are not a debtor? You are not proceeding without your
parents' permission? You are not proceeding without your parents' permis
sion from a country not far off? You are not an invalid? You are not an ex
pelled female mendicant? You are not a thief? You are not an exile? You are
not an outcast? You are not a hermaphrodite? You are not a neuter? You are
not a serpent? You are not a beast? You are not a follower of the fanatics?
You have not committed matricide? You have not committed patricide? You
have not killed a saint? You have not divided the Community? You have not
maliciously drawn blood from a Transcendent Lord? Of the four expulsion
ary transgressions, you have not committed any one of them? You are not
living as a nihilist, disbelieving in cause and effect? You do not have a club
hand and so on? You do not have albino hair? You do not have one finger
nail and so on? You are not condemned by the king? You are not coming
without the permission of the king? You are not coming without permission
of the king from a not far-off country? You are not a famous bandit? You
are not destitute? You are not a shoemaker? You are not an untouchable?
You are not deformed? You are not a nonhuman being? You are not a per
son from the Northern Kuru continent? You have not changed your sex
three times? You are not a mannish woman? You are not a habitual sinner?
You are not an outlandish person born in another continent?
"When these have been asked and the answer has been 'I am not!' you
are then determined as free of obstructions and suitable for renunciation.
Now, since one must enter the Buddha's teaching methodically, you must
achieve the adjunct lay vow upholding the five precepts along with the
refuge vows. For that purpose, imagining this image of the Teacher to be
the Teacher himself, bow three times. Say, 'I bow three times before you!'
Then kneel down before him, join your palms together at your heart. The
130 .. E S S E N T i A L T I B ET A N B U D D H i S M
adjunct's vow is born by repeating the assertion three times, along with tak
ing the refuges. Thus think along these lines:
"'Wherever one is born in the three realms of the egocentric life-cycle, it
is a place of misery. My companions are companions in misery. What I
enjoy is enjoyment of misery. In order to be liberated from the misery of the
egocentric life-cycle, I must take refuge. Further, mundane gods cannot save
me from the suffering of the life-cycle, as it is said, "Mundane gods, them
selves bound in the prison of the life-cycle, who are they able to save? "
Thus, since the Three Jewels have the power to save from the misery of the
life-cycle, taking refuge in the Buddha, I receive a teacher of the path; tak
ing refuge in the Dharma, I receive the actual refuge; and taking refuge in
the Community, I find friends with which to practice the path. Thus, for the
sake of all beings, I must achieve unlocated Nirvana, perfect Buddhahood!
For that purpose, from this moment forth until I die, taking the complete
adjunct vow, I must keep it. Please look after me as an adjunct layperson
upholding the five precepts.'
"Thinking in that way, repeat after me. 'Venerable, please attend to me!
I, named [say your name], from this time forth for as long as I shall live, as
an adjunct, take refuge in the Buddha, supreme of two-footed beings! I take
refuge in the Dharma, supreme of things free of desire! I take refuge in the
Sangha, supreme of communities! For as long as I shall live, may the vener
able look after me! I thus express the mantra of my own aim without excess
or deficiency!' You must repeat this three times, again repeat after me for
the second time. After the second repetition, since the words of the rite are
in three parts, up to 'I take refuge in the Sangha!' expresses the refuge. 'For
as long as I shall live, as an adjunct' expresses the self. 'The venerable
please look afted' expresses the other. At the moment of saying 'as an ad
junct' during the expression of self, the adjunct vow is born in your life.
Since I have become your teacher, when I say in an emphatic voice 'as an
adjunct' and you repeat 'as an adjunct,' that is the very moment you must
generate the attitude of obtaining, thinking, 'This is the time I attain the ad
junct vow!' This is very important.
"At that time, it is necessary to know you have attained the vow and to
say that 'having become my teacher, may the teacher please look after me!'
Put that in your mind, and again repeat after me the third time. When the
third repetition is complete, I the master say, 'That is the method of attain
ing the adjunct vow. You have done well!' And you the disciple say, 'It is
good!'
"Thereby you have attained the adjunct vow. Though you have attained
it, if you do not keep it, it will not give much benefit and has great draw
backs; so you must keep it. As for the way of keeping it: thinking, 'as the
Practicing Transcendent Renunciation 131
saints mentally abandoned killing and so on, the five sins, and verbally and
physically refrained from them, so I will learn!' Then repeat after me:
'Teacher, please attend to me. As the noble saints abandoned killing as long
as they lived and refrained from killing, I [say your name], from this time
forth for as long as I shall live shall abandon killing and refrain from taking
life. By this first branch, I will educate myself in the precept of those saints.
I will achieve it. I will accomplish it. Further, just as the noble saints for as
long as they lived abandoned taking the not-given, wrong lustful sexuality,
speaking falsehood, and refrained from grain alcohol, distilled liquor, and
other intoxicants and drugs of recklessness, so I [say your name], from this
time forth for as long as I shall live, I will abandon taking the not-given,
wrong lustful sexuality, speaking falsehood, and refrain from grain alcohol,
distilled liquor, and other intoxicants and drugs of recklessness. By these
five branches, I will educate myself in the precepts of those saints. I will
achieve them. I will accomplish them.'
"The teacher says, 'It is the method. It is good!'
"And the adjunct says, 'It is good! ' "
All the Buddhas of the three times attained Buddhahood in the life-form of a
transcendent; no one did so in the form of a householder. Especially the
merit of taking one step toward a monastery with the pure ambition that
wishes transcendent renunciation is infinitely greater than the merit of all
beings of the three realms giving away their children and wives and so on
until the end of the eon. Householders cannot properly achieve the benefi
cial goal of this life and the future, since their household duties distract them
too much; hence they will suffer in this life and in the future. The transcen
dent is the opposite; their aims and activities are less, and they can achieve
readily through learning, reflecting, and meditating; in this and future lives
they are able to progress from happiness to happiness and ultimately they
are able to attain the exaltation of Nirvana peace. Thus you should think
deeply in your heart of the drawbacks of the household and the benefits of
transcendence and follow after that very Lion of the Shakyas, intensifying
your feeling, 'How good to become a transcendent!' Through this commu
nication, one changes one's attitude. Having transcended, one must no
longer adhere to householder's duties or even name or clan, so one receives
a name ending with one's Sangha division or the name of one's master."
Now having completed the three changes, in order to effect the accep
tance of the actual ethical conduct of a transcendent, one offers three bows
each to the Teacher's image and the master, one kneels and lowers one's
upper robe from one shoulder. One must repeat the following formulaic ex
pression three times to undertake the ethical conduct. Then, requesting the
master's attention, using one's new name, with refuge in the Three Jewels,
thinking, "Following the example of the peerless Lion of the Shakyas as
long as I shall live, I abandon the signs and outfit of the householder and
take up properly the signs and equipment of the transcendent, never to
transgress against them!" then one repeats after the master:
"Master, please attend to me! I, so-and-so, from this time forth for as
long as I shall live, take refuge in the Buddha, the supreme of two-footed
beings! Take refuge in the Dharma, the supreme of desireless things! Take
refuge in the Sangha, the supreme of communities! Following the transcen
dence of the Chief, the Lord, the Transcendent, the Saint, truly perfect
Buddha, Shakyamuni, Shakyasimha, Shakyaraja, I transcend. I abandon
the householder signs! I truly take up the transcendent's signs! "
One repeats three times. The master says, "That is the method of achiev
ing transcendent renunciation! You are excellent! "
One replies, "This achievement has been excellent! "
C HA PTER 5
Once you feel equanimity toward that attractive person, imagine an un
attractive person. Try to feel equanimity toward him. Think, "Because
there has been discord between us, I have developed an aversion to him and
so lack equanimity. Without it, I cannot conceive the spirit of enlighten
ment!" Thus restrain your aversion and meditate.
When you feel equanimity toward that unattractive person, imagine
both persons together. Think, "These two are the same in that each, from
her own viewpoint, wants happiness and doesn't want misery. From my
viewpoint, this one who seems so close now has been reborn as my enemy
countless times. This one toward whom I feel hostile has been reborn as my
mother countless times and has cared for me with love. Which one should I
like? Which one should I hate? I will feel equanimity and free myself from
attachment and aversion. Lamas and gods, please enable me to do this ! "
When you feel such equanimity, extend it to all beings. "All beings are
the same. Each wants happiness and doesn't want misery. All beings are my
relatives. Therefore I will learn equanimity and be free from attachment
and aversion to near and far, helping some and harming others. Lamas and
gods, help me to accomplish this! "
Once you have developed the mind of equanimity, implement the first of
the seven causal instructions for attaining the spirit of enlightenment.
Visualize the lamas and gods before you and contemplate: "Why are all be
ings my relatives? As there is no beginning to the life-cycle, there has also
been no beginning to my rebirths. In passing through these countless lives,
there is no form of life which I have not adopted countless times, and there
is no country or realm in which I have not been born. Of all beings, there is
not one who has not been my mother innumerable times. Each has been my
mother in human form countless times, and will become my mother many
times again. "
When you have fully experienced this truth, contemplate the kindness
which living beings have shown you when they were your mother. Visualize
the lamas and gods before you, and imagine clearly your mother of this life,
when she was young and as she grew old. "Not only is she my mother in
this life, but she has cared for me lives beyond number. In this lifetime, she
lovingly sheltered me in her womb, and when I was born she lovingly put
me on soft pillows and cradled me in her arms. She held me to the warmth
of her breasts, and suckled me with her sweet milk. She welcomed me with
loving smiles and looked at me with happy eyes. She cleaned my snotty
nose and wiped away my excrement. My slightest ailment gave her worse
misery than the thought of losing her own life. Scorning all affliction, tor
ments, and abuse, not considering herself at all, she provided me as well as
Practicing the Loving Spirit of Enlightenment 1 39
she could with food and shelter. She gave me infinite happiness and benefit,
and protected me from measureless misery and harm." Contemplate her
very great kindness. Then, in the same way contemplate the kindness of
your father and others close to you, for they have also been your mother
countless times.
When you have fully experienced this truth, meditate on beings toward
whom you feel impartial. "Though it now seems that they have no relation
ship to me, they have been my mother times beyond number, and in those
lives they protected me with love and kindness. " When you have experi
enced this truth, meditate on those beings who are now your adversaries.
Imagine them clearly in front of you, and think: "How can I now feel that
these are my enemies? As lifetimes are beyond number, they have been my
mother countless times. When they were my mother they provided me with
measureless happiness and benefits and protected me from misery and
harm. Without them I could not have lasted even a short time and without
me they could not have endured even a short time. We have felt such strong
attachment countless times. That they are now my adversaries is due to bad
evolutionary actions. At another time in the future they will again be my
mother who protects me with love." When you have fully experienced this
truth, meditate on the kindness of all beings.
Then meditate on repaying the kindness of all beings, your mothers.
Visualize the lamas and deities before you and contemplate: "From begin
ningless time these mothers have protected me with kindness. Yet as their
minds are disturbed by the demons of addictive passions, they have not ob
tained independence of mind, and are crazed. They lack the eye to see either
the path to the high states of humans and gods or the path to Nirvana, the
supreme good. They are without a spiritual teacher, the one who is the leader
of the blind. Continually pummeled by the discord of wrong deeds, they slip
toward the edge of the terrifying abyss of rebirth in the life-cycle, especially
its lower states. To ignore these kind mothers would be shameless. To return
their kindness I will free them from the misery of the life-cycle and establish
them in the bliss of liberation. Lamas and gods, enable me to do this. "
Then meditate love. Imagine a person to whom you are strongly at
tached, such as your mother. "How can she have undefiled happiness when
she does not even have the defiled happiness of the life-cycle? What she
now boasts of as happiness slips away, changing to misery. She yearns and
yearns, strives and strives, desiring a moment's happiness, but she is only
creating the causes of future misery and rebirths in lower states of being. In
this life as well, weary and exhausted, she creates only misery. She definitely
does not have real happiness. How wonderful it would be if she possessed
I40 .. E S S E N T I A L T I B E T A N B U D D H I S M
happiness and all the causes of happiness! May she possess them! 1 will
cause her to possess happiness and all its causes. Lamas and gods, please
enable me to do this! "
When you have gained experience of this, continue to meditate, first
imagining other persons who are close to you, such as your father, then
imagining a person toward whom you feel impartial, then an adversary,
and finally all beings.
Then do the meditation of great compassion and universal responsibil
ity: "My kind fathers and mothers, whose number would fill the sky, are
helplessly bound by evolutionary actions and fettering passions. The four
rivers, the river of desire, existence, ignorance, and fanaticism, sweep them
helplessly into the currents of the life-cycle, where they are battered by the
waves of birth, old age, sickness, and death. They are completely tied up by
the tight and hard to break bonds of various kinds of evolutionary actions.
From beginningless time they have entered into the iron cage of holding the
concepts 'I' and 'mine' in the center of the heart. This cage is very difficult
for anyone to open. Enshrouded by the great darkness of ignorance, which
obscures judgment of good and evil, they do not even see the path leading
to the happy states of being. Much less do they see the path leading to lib
eration and enlightenment.
"These wretched beings are ceaselessly tortured by the suffering of mis
ery, the suffering of change, and the all-pervasive suffering of creation. 1
have seen all beings, my mothers, wretched, engulfed in the ocean of the
life-cycle. If 1 do not save them, who will? If 1 were to ignore them, 1 would
be shameless, the lowest of all. My desire to learn the Mahayana would be
only words, and 1 could not show my face before the Buddhas and
Bodhisattvas. Therefore, no matter what, 1 will develop the ability to pull
all my kind sad mothers from the ocean of the life-cycle and to establish
them in Buddhahood. "
Think this and generate a very strong and pure universal responsibility.
Finally, meditate the spirit of enlightenment. Ask yourself whether or
not you can establish all beings in Buddhahood, and reflect, "I do not know
where 1 am going; how can 1 establish even one being in Buddhahood?
Even those who have attained the positions of disciple or hermit Buddha
can accomplish only the minor purposes of beings, and cannot establish be
ings in Buddhahood. It is only a perfect Buddha who can lead beings to full
enlightenment. Therefore, no matter what, 1 will obtain peerless and com
pletely perfect Buddhahood for the sake of all beings. Lamas and gods,
please enable me to do this! "
Practicing the Loving Spirit of Enlightenment 141
Through carelessness,
People hurt themselves with thorns and so on,
And to win a woman and so on,
They become obsessed and wasted.
Some kill themselves jumping off cliffs,
Taking poison and vile food,
And hurt themselves
With unmeritorious acts.
If in the power of addictive emotions
They kill even their cherished selves,
How would they fail to cause harm
To the bodies of other beings?
Thus compelled by addictions,
When they try such things as killing me,
Perhaps it's hard to feel compassion,
But what's the point of getting angry?
If it is natural for the immature
To cause harm to others,
It is wrong to get angry with them,
Like resenting fire for burning.
Even if beings are gentle natured
And the evil of harm is occasional,
It is still wrong to be angry;
Like resenting space for filling with smoke.
Though sticks and so on really hurt me,
I get angry with the thrower;
But he is also a tool, thrown by hate,
So I am only rightly angry with hate.
Long ago I inflicted
Harm of this kind on beings,
So causing injury to them,
Now this harm comes back to me.
His weapon and my body
Both are causes of my suffering;
He made the weapon, I the body,
With whom should I be angry?
Practicing the Loving Spirit of Enlightenment 1 47
Compassion
cate oneself in the precepts of such a willing spirit, one should not make it.
But whether or not one can educate oneself in those precepts, one can par
ticipate in the rite with only the conception "I will become a Buddha for the
sake of all beings. " In conceiving the willing spirit, either type of person is
allowed, but one who cannot educate himself at all in the precepts cannot
participate in the rite to conceive the acting spirit. Now the actual rite to
uphold the spirit:
"May all the Buddhas and Bodhisattvas of the ten directions please at
tend to me! May the Master please attend to me! I, named [so-and-so], by
that root of virtue of the nature of giving and ethical action and meditation
that I do, get others to do, and rejoice in others' doing, in this life and in all
of my other lives, just as all the Buddhas, Saints, Transcendent Lords, and
great Bodhisattvas in the exalted spiritual stages conceived the spirit of un
excelled perfect enlightenment, so may I, named [so-and-so], from this time
forth until I reach the seat of enlightenment, conceive the spirit of unex
celled perfect enlightenment! May I free those beings not yet freed! May I
deliver those not delivered! May I console those not consoled! May I re
lease those not ultimately released! " (Three times. )
Kneel with folded palms. Recite three times: "0 teacher, please grant to me
the authentic taking of the vow of the Bodhisattva ethic! If there is no ob
jection, out of compassion for me, please hear my plea and rightly grant it
to me! "
The Teacher gives general instructions, giving the particulars of the vow
and the dangers of not keeping it.
Repeat three times: "Please, teacher, quickly grant me true undertaking
of the vow of the Bodhisattva ethic! "
Actual taking o f the vow: The teacher recites the traditional words three
times; after each time, the vow takers say, "I undertake them! " "Gentle son
or daughter, named [so-and-so], do you undertake all the precepts and the
ethical actions of all the Bodhisattvas of the past, all the precepts and the
ethical actions of all the Bodhisattvas of the future, and all the precepts and
all the ethical actions of all the Bodhisattvas of the present everywhere, all of
those precepts and ethical actions, the ethics of vowed restraint, the ethics of
amassing virtue, and the ethics of helping beings? " "I undertake them."
One recites three times: "Guru, Buddhas, and Bodhisattvas, please at
tend to me! As ancient Buddhas conceived the will to enlightenment and
systematically lived by the Bodhisattva precepts, I also, to help beings, must
1 60 • ES SENTIAL T l B ETAN B U D D H I S M
Thus did I hear on a certain occasion. The Lord was dwelling on the
Vulture Heap Peak at Rajagerha, together with a great community of
monks and a great community of Bodhisattvas. At that time, the Lord en
tranced himself in the samadhi of teaching called "Illumination of the
Profound."
At the same time, the holy Bodhisattva Avalokiteshvara, the great mes
siah, was contemplating the practice of the profound transcendence of wis
dom; and he realized that those five body and mind processes are void in
their intrinsic reality.
Thereupon, influenced by the psychic power of the Buddha, the venera
ble Shariputra addressed the holy Bodhisattva Avalokiteshvara, the great
messiah, thus: "When any noble son wishes to engage in the practice of the
profound transcendence of wisdom, how should he learn? "
Then the holy Bodhisattva Avalokiteshvara, the greac messiah, ad
dressed the venerable Shariputra thus: "Shariputra ! When any noble son
or noble daughter wishes to engage in the practice of the profound tran
scendence of wisdom, he or she should realize it in this way: those five
body and mind processes should be truly realized to be void of any intrin
sic reality. Matter is voidness. Voidness is matter. Voidness is not other
than matter; neither is matter other than voidness. Likewise, sensations,
conceptions, emotions, and consciousnesses are also void. Shariputra!
Thus all things are voidness: signless, uncreated, unceased, stainless, im
peccable, undecreased, and unincreased. Shariputra ! Therefore, in void
ness there is no matter, no sensation, no conception, no emotion, no
consciousness, no eye, no ear, no nose, no tongue, no body, no mentality,
no form or color, no sound, no scent, no taste, no texture, no idea. There
are no sense media, from eye to mentality; and there are no consciousness
172 • ES SENTIAL T I B ETAN B U D D H I S M
Chapter Eighteen:
E S TA B L I S H I N G T H E NAT U R E O F R EA L I T Y
Once you have completed such contemplations,
You should develop experiential wisdom in your process.
Among the three paths of transcendence in the three Vehicles,
Practicing the Liberating Wisdom 1 73
The Buddha stated in the Elucidation of Intention Sutra that all mundane
and transcendent excellencies of Individual and Universal Vehicles are the
effects of mental quiescence and transcendent insight.
One might object, "Well, aren't quiescence and insight themselves excel
lencies of character of one who has already attained the fruits of medita
tion? In that case, how is it correct for all those excellencies to be the effects
of those two?"
Since actual quiescence and insight, as will be explained, are indeed ex
cellencies of character of one accomplished in the fruits of meditation, it is
granted that all excellencies of Individual and Universal Vehicles are not
their effects. However, there is no contradiction, since all samadhis beyond
one-pointedness toward virtuous objectives are classified under the heading
of "insight." With this in mind, the Lord said that all excellencies of the
three vehicles are the effects of quiescence and insight.
He further states in the Elucidation of the Intention Sutra: "If a person
practices quiescence and insight, he will become liberated from the
bondages of bad conditioning and signification." Ratnakarashanti explains
in the Instruction in Transcendent Wisdom that this means that " bad con
ditioning" bondages, which are the instincts lying in the mental processes
capable of generating ever-increasing distorted subjectivities, and "signifi
cation" bondages, which create those instincts in the form of prior and pos
terior attachment to distorted objects, are abandoned by insight and
quiescence, respectively. Now those are the benefits of what are designated
as "quiescence" and "insight," and the meaning is the same even if you do
not so designate them, as when you designate them the benefits of "medita
tion" and "wisdom." They still are to be known as the benefits of these
two, quiescence and insight.
The Buddha also stated in the Elucidation that all samadhis of Individual
and Universal Vehicles that he ever mentioned are included in quiescence
and insight. Therefore, since those eager for samadhi cannot possibly ex
plore all separate categories of samadhis, they should explore thoroughly
the method of cultivation of quiescence and insight, which provide a gen
eral framework for all samadhis.
Practicing the Liberating Wisdom 1 77
Buddha states in the Elucidation: "One sits alone in isolation, one absorbs
oneself within, one impresses in the mind the well-considered teachings,
and one goes on impressing this within the mind continuously, the very
mind that is doing the impressing. Entering in this way and repeatedly
abiding therein, when physical and mental fluency emerge, it is called 'men
tal quiescence.' This means that when the mind no longer vacillates but
works continuously, naturally abiding with its chosen object, and when the
joyous ease of mental and physical fluency is produced, then that samadhi
becomes (actual) mental quiescence. This is produced just from holding the
mind within without wavering from its chosen object and does not require
any realization of the thatness of things.
The Buddha said in the Elucidation, "Then, after attaining the physical and
mental fluency, one abandons the mode of keeping the mind focused on one
thing, and one individually investigates the well-considered things arising
as internal images in the realm of the samadhi; one confronts each one of
them. Thus, with regard to those objects of knowledge that arise as images
in the objective sphere of samadhi, their discernment, investigation, exami
nation, thorough analysis, tolerance, acceptance, differentiation, viewing,
and discrimination; all these are called 'transcendent insight.' And in this
way, the Bodhisattva becomes expert in transcendent insight."
According to Ratnakarashanti and Asanga, quiescence and insight are
not differentiated according to their chosen objects, since each of them can
take either ultimate or relative as their object. There is such a thing as an in
sight that does not realize voidness. Therefore one is called "quiescent sta
bility" because it is a quieting of the mind's attraction toward external
objects and a stabilizing of the mind on the inner object. And the other is
called "transcendent insight" because there is an "intensifying" or "ex
celling" experience.
Now there are some who assert that quiescence is the lack of the sharp
clarity of the inteilect through keeping the mind thought-free, and insight is
the presence of such sharp clarity. But they are mistaken, since such contra
dicts all of the above explanations, and since that difference is merely the
difference between samadhi afflicted by depression and samadhi without
depression. All quiescence samadhis must definitely be cleared of depres
sion, and all samadhis free of depression definitely arrive at sharp clarity of
1 78 • ES SENTIAL T I B ETAN B U D DH I SM
has not previously generated meditative realization and must newly do so.
In that context, except for the exceptional way, to be explained below, in
which a distinctive subjectivity for the realization of voidness meditates on
selflessness, in the usual context of the Transcendence Vehicle and the three
lower Tantra divisions, analytic meditation is necessary, since without prac
ticing analytic meditation, which cultivates wisdom's analysis of the import
of selflessness, meditative realization will not emerge. Now in that case, one
seeks the understanding of selflessness, repeatedly analyzing its meaning,
before one has achieved quiescence, and if quiescence has not been
achieved already, it is impossible to achieve based on that sort of analytic
meditation. Further, while quiescence is achieved by the practice of focus
ing meditation apart from analysis, there is no method to practice insight
apart from the practice of quiescence. Therefore insight must be sought
subsequently; and therefore, ultimately, you cannot get around the order
that quiescence is first sought and then insight is meditated based on the
achieved quiescence.
Of course, this order of quiescence and insight is in terms of their initial
development. Once attained, there is no fixed order, since sometimes one
will first meditate insight and later quiescence.
General Setup
by one of the great champions who personified living reason itself, one is
like a blind person wandering in a dangerous wilderness without any guide.
Thus one should rely upon the flawless scientific treatises.
On what sort of person should one rely?
The holy Nagarjuna was renowned through the three realms and was
quite clearly predicted by the Lord himself in many Sutras and Tantras as
the elucidator of the essence of the teaching, the profound import free of all
extremes of being and nothingness. So, one should seek the view that real
izes voidness by relying on his treatises. Aryadeva also was taken as equal
in authority to the Master by the great centrists such as Masters Buddha
palita, Bhavaviveka, Chandrakirti, and Shantarakshita. Hence, since both
Father Nagarjuna and Son Aryadeva were the sources for the other cen
trists, the old-time scholars called these two the "grandmother treatise cen
trists" and the others, the "partisan centrists."
Which one of these masters should one follow to seek the ultimate inten
tion of Nagarjuna and Aryadeva, the Holy Father and Son?
The eminent former mentors in the line of my oral tradition followed the
practice of the Lord of Masters Atisha in holding the system of Chandrakirti
as the supreme one. Master Chandrakirti perceived that, among the com
mentators on the Wisdom, it was Master Buddhapalita who most com
pletely elucidated the intention of the noble ones. He took the latter's system
as his basis, and, when he worked out his own elucidation of the noble in
tention, while he used many of the good statements, he refuted points that
seemed slightly incorrect in the work of Master Bhavaviveka. Therefore,
since I see the explanations of these two masters, Buddhapalita and
Chandrakirti, as very much superior in explaining the treatises of the Noble
Father and Son, I will follow them here in determining their intention.
Misknowledge is the basis of all ills and faults since all the Victor's teach
ings to counter other addictions such as attachment are only partiai reme
dies and only his teaching against misknowledge is a comprehensive
medicine. As Chandrakirti says in the Lucid Exposition: "Buddhas are
renowned in this world as regulating the activities of people by their nine
modes of teaching such as Sutras, based on the two realities. Therein,
teachings dispelling lust will not bring hatred to an end. Teachings dis
pelling hatred will not bring lust to an end. Teachings dispelling pride and
so on will not conquer the other taints. Thus, those teachings are not all
pervasive and do not bear the great import. But teachings dispelling delu-
Practicing the Liberating Wisdom 181
sion conquer all addictions, for Victors declare that all addictions truly de
pend on delusion."
That being so, the meditation on thatness is necessary as the medicine
for misknowledge and since one does not know how to cultivate the medi
cine without identifying misknowledge itself, it is very important to identify
misknowledge.
Misknowledge is the opposite of knowledge, and knowledge here
should be taken not as whatever type of common knowledge but as the
wisdom of the knowledge of the thatness of selflessness. The opposite of
that, again, is not properly understood as the mere absence of that wisdom,
as merely something else than that, but as its very antithesis. That is pre
cisely the reification of a self, and, as there are two reifications of selves, of
persons, and of things, the subjective self-habit and the objective self-habit
together constitute misknowledge. As for the manner of that reification, it
is the habitual sense that things have intrinsically objective, intrinsically
identifiable, or intrinsically real status.
These reasons bring out the mode of the habitual sense of truth status,
the negatee which is the habitual notion that the apparent intrinsic reality of
things is not merely imposed by force of beginningless mental construction
but is established within objects as their own objectivity. The presumed con
ceptual object of that habit pattern is called "self" or "intrinsic reality." Its
absence in the designated "person" is called "personal" or "subjective self
lessness," and its absence in things such as eyes, ears, and so forth is called
"selflessness of things" or "objective selflessness. " It is thus understanda ble
by implication that the habitual sense of the existence of that intrinsic real
ity in persons and things is the two "self-habits. " As Chandrakirti says in his
Four Hundred Commentary: "The 'self' is the 'intrinsic reality' which is that
objectivity in things independent of anything else. Its absence is selflessness.
It is understood as twofold by division into persons and things, called 'per
,
sonal selflessness' and 'objective selflessness. "
With regard to the innate egoistic view that also is the self-habit, in the
Introduction, Chandra refutes the position that its object is the aggregates
and comments that its object is the dependently designated self. He also
states that the conventional self is not the mere conglomerate of the aggre
gates. Thus, as its object is neither the conglomerate of the aggregates at
any one time nor the conglomerate of the temporal continuum of the aggre
gates, one must take the mere "person" and the mere "I" as the objective
basis of the mere thought "I." Thus one should not put either the separate
or the conglomerate aggregates as the substance of that "I. " This is the un
excelled distinctive specialty of this dialecticist centrist system, which 1 have
explained extensively elsewhere.
1 8 2. • E S SENTIAL TIBETAN B U D D H I S M
The object of the innate egoistic view that is the property habit is the ac
tual "mine," object of the innate cognition that thinks "mine," and is not
held to be objects such as one's eye and so on. The manner of this habit is
the habitual holding of the objects perceived as "mine" as if they were in
trinsically identifiably property.
As for the innate objective self-habit, its objects are the form aggregate
and so on, the eyes, ears, and so forth of both self and others and imper
sonal inanimate objects and so on. Its mode is as explained above.
In the Introduction Commentary, Chandra affirms that "delusion is
misknowledge, which functions as the reification of the intrinsic objectivity
of nonobjectively existent things. It is superficial, with a nature of obscura
tion, seeing intrinsic realities in things. " Further, in saying "thus, by the
force of the addictive misknowledge included in the 'existence' member,"
he equates that misknowledge which is the truth habit about objects with
addictive misknowledge. Thus, while there are two systems of classification
of objective self-habits either as addictive or as cognitive obscurations, this
system chooses the former way.
This is also the statement of the Noble Father and Son , as in the
Voidness Seventy: "Reification of the reality in things born of conditions,
the Teacher called it 'misknowledge'; therefrom the twelve members arise.
Seeing truly and knowing well the voidness of things, misknowledge does
not occur, is ceased; thereby the twelve members cease." Here "reification
of the reality in things" indicates the habitual perception of "truth" or "re
ality status" in those things.
In the Jewel Rosary, Nagarjuna also states in the same vein that "as long
as there is the aggregate habit, so long will there be the 'I' habit. " That is,
that egoistic views will not be reversed as long as the truth habit about the
aggregates is not.
The context here is the identification of that "delusion" which is one of
the three poisons and hence equivalent to addictive misknowledge. To get
rid of that misknowledge, he declares it necessary to understand the import
of the profound relativity, which happens when the import of voidness
arises as the import of relativity. Therefore one must interpret addictive
delusion according to Chandrakirti's explanation in the Four Hundred
Commentary as the reification of reality in things.
This system was lucidly proclaimed by Chandrakirti, following Bud
dhapalita's elucidation of the intention of the noble ones.
Now that just-explained misknowledge which is thus habituated to the
two selves is not the conscious holding of persons and things hypostatized
by the distinctive beliefs of Buddhist and non-Buddhist philosophers, such
as unique, permanent, and independent person; objects that are external
Practicing the Liberating Wisdom 183
yet are the aggregates of indivisible atoms without eastern and s o on direc
tional facets; subjects that are internal cognitions yet that are consciousness
continua composed of indivisible instantaneous consciousnesses without
any temporal prior and posterior components; and such as a true nondual
apperception devoid of any such subjects and objects. It rather consists of
the two unconscious self-habits, which exist commonly both for those af
fected by theories and for those unaffected by theories and which have per
sisted from time immemorial without having depended on any theoretical
seduction of the intellect. Therefore it is that same unconscious self-habit
which is here held as the root of the egocentric life-cycle.
This reason reveals that all living beings are bound in the life-cycle by
the unconscious misknowledge. Further, since intellectual misknowledge
exists only for those philosophers, it is not properly considered the root of
the egoistic life-cycle.
It is extremely important to come to an exceptional certitude about this
point. If one does not know this at the time of determining the view, one will
not know how to hold as principal the determination of the nonexistence of
the hypothetical object held by unconscious misknowledge, while keeping
the negation of the intellectually held objects subordinate. And if one refutes
the two selves and neglects the negation of the habit pattern of unconscious
misknowledge, then one will have determined a selflessness that is merely a
rejection of those "selves" hypothesized by the philosophers, as explained
above. Even at the time of meditation, one's meditation will be just the
same, since the "determination of the view" involves meditation as well.
Thus even in meditation only the manifest habits will be involved in the final
analysis, and one will experience only the absence of the two selves that are
merely those hypothesized by the intellectual habits. To think that this will
eliminate the unconscious addictions is a great exaggeration.
One should also understand according to the statement of Dharmakirti
in the Commentary on Validating Cognition: "Who sees a self always rei
,
fies an '! there; supposing one identifies with that; identifying, one becomes
obscured with faults. Seeing qualities, one desires them, one grasps their at
tainment as 'mine.' Thus, as long as one is attached to the self, so long will
one revolve in the life-cycle."
First, once one holds to intrinsic identifiability in the objective basis of
the thought "I," attachment to the self arises. Therefrom craving for the
happiness of the self arises. Then, since the self's happiness cannot arise
without dependence on one's property, craving arises for property, the
"mine. " Then, being obscured by such faults, one begins to see the qualities
in those things. Then one grasps onto the property as the means of accom
plishing the happiness of the self. Through the addictions thus produced,
1 84 • ES SE NTiAL TIBETAN B U D D H I S M
conceptually motivated action occurs, and from such action, the life-cycle
itself is constantly held together. As Nagarjuna says in the Voidness
Seventy, "Action has its cause in addictions; construction's nature is from
addictions; the body has its cause in actions; and all three are empty of in
trinsic reality. " In such a way one must practice finding certainty in the se
quence involved in the evolution of the egoistic life-cycle.
the thatness of selflessness and voidness; and because even though without
negating the object of self-habits one can at least withdraw the mental
gravitation toward that object, that is not acceptable as applying the mind
to selflessness.
The reason for this is that when the mind is applied to an object, there
are three habits: one holding that object in truth, one holding it as truthless,
and one holding it without either qualification. So just as the nonholding of
truthlessness is not necessarily the truth habit, so the disconnection from
the two selves is not necessarily the application to the two selflessnesses; be
cause there are limitless states of mind included in the third option.
The two self-habits, further, function through perceiving things chiefly
as persons and objects, and therefore it is necessary to determine right on
the very basis of error the nonexistence of that thereon so held; otherwise it
is like searching for footprints in the house of a thief already gone into the
forest.
Therefore, since errors will be terminated by meditating on the import
thus determined, such a voidness is the supreme import of thatness. And if
some other false import of thatness is determined, it is no more than
wishful thinking, and you should consider it outside the meaning of the
scriptures.
Thus the misknowledge in truth habits about fabrications of persons
such as males and females and things such as forms and sensations is elimi
nated by finding and meditating upon the view that understands the void
ness that is selflessness. When misknowledge is eliminated, eliminated too
are the conceptual thoughts that are improper attitudes reifying the signs of
beauty and ugliness and so on by perceiving the objects of truth habits.
When they are eliminated, all other addictions, desire and so on, which
have egoistic views as their root, are eliminated. When they are eliminated,
actions motivated by them are eliminated. When they are eliminated, invol
untary birth in cyclic life as propelled by actions is eliminated.
Considering this process, the firm determination "I will attain libera
tion ! " is generated, and thence one seeks the utterly incisive view of that
ness.
In regard to the sequence of generation of the two self-habits, it is the
objective self-habit that generates the personal self-habit. Nevertheless, in
entering the truth of selflessness, it is by first generating the view of per
sonal selflessness that one must later generate the view of objective selfless
ness. As Nagarjuna states in the Jewel Rosary: "A creature is not earth,
water, fire, wind, space, or consciousness; if it is none of these things, what
else might a creature be? Since the creature as collocation of elements is not
real in itself, so each element, itself a collocation, is not really real either."
186 ". E S S E N T I A L T I B ET A N B U D D H I S M
Thus he first declares the nonreality of the person and then the nonreality
of its designative bases, the elements earth and so on.
As for the reason why one must understand it that way, while there is no
variation of degree of subtlety in the selflessness to be ascertained in the
basic person or in the basic thing, because of the essentiality of the subject
of concern, it is easier to ascertain selflessness in the person and harder to
ascertain it in the thing. For example, it is difficult to ascertain objective
selflessness in the eye, ear, and so on but easy to ascertain it in things such
as images, and this can be used as an example of the varying cases in deter
mining selflessness with regard to things and persons above.
If one knows well the condition of the "I" anchoring the concept of self
that thinks "I," and one applies the reason about it to internal things such
as eye and nose and external things such as vases, one should come to un
derstand them in just the same way. Then, knowing the nature and seeing
the reality of one thing, one can be able to know and see the natures of all
other things.
"Person" is a term used in contexts such as the six species of persons
such as gods, or the types of persons such as individual persons or holy per
sons, and in referring to the accumulator of evil and good action, the expe
riencer of their effects, the traveler in cyclic life, the practicer of the path for
the sake of liberation, and the attainer of liberation. Chandrakirti in his
Introduction Commentary quotes a standard Scripture: "The demon-mind
'self,' it forces you to adopt its view; this aggregate of emotions is void,
therein no sentient being. Just as one says 'chariot,' depending on its aggre
gate of components, so depending on the aggregates, one says 'superficial
sentient being.'''
The first sentence teaches the personal selflessness that is the ultimate
absence of "person"; the first phrase calls the personal self-habit the
" demon-mind" ; the second phrase shows the holder of that habit to be the
victim of evil views; and the third and fourth phrases state that the aggre
gates are devoid of any personal self. The second verse teaches the con
ventional existence of the self, the first two phrases giving the example and
the last two applying it to the meaning. It teaches that the "person" is a
mere designation based on the aggregates, because this Scripture states the
aggregate-conglomerate must be understood as either the simultaneous
conglomerate of aggregates or their sequential conglomerate. Thus neither
the spatial conglomerate nor the temporal continuum of the aggregates can
be posited as the "person." When the conglomerate is posited as designa
tive base, that which is conglomerated is also posited as a designative base;
so it is illogical for either to be the "person" itself.
Practicing the Liberating Wisdom 187
Here one uses the first of the four key procedures for determining self
lessness, analyzing one's own mental process in order to identify one's own
mode of habitual adherence to a personal self. This has been already ex
plained.
The second key procedure (is as follows): If that person has intrinsically
real status, it must be established as actually the same or actually different
from the aggregates of body and mind, and thus one decides that there is no
way for it to be established in any other way. In general, in regard to such
things as pots and pillars, if one determines them on one side as matching,
one excludes them on the other side from differing, or such a thing as a pot,
if determined here as differing, is excluded on the other side from match
ing-as this is established by experience, there is no third option other than
sameness or difference. Therefore one must become certain that it is impos
sible for a self to exist and to be neither the same as nor different from the
aggregates.
The third key procedure is to see the faults in the hypothesis that the
person and the aggregates are intrinsically really the same.
The fourth key procedure is to see well the faults in the hypothesis that
the person and the aggregates are really different. Thus, when these four
keys are complete, the pure view realizing the thatness of personal selfless
ness is developed.
To rehearse the third key procedure, if self and aggregates were the same
entity with intrinsically real status, three faults would accrue. The first is
that there would be no point in asserting a self, since if the two were intrin
sically really established as a single entity they would never be at all differ
entiable, since the two being absolutely established as a single entity could
necessarily never appear as different to a cognition that perceived them.
The reason for this is that, while there is no contradiction for a superficial
thing's appearance being different from its real mode of existence, such a
difference does preclude any truth status in that thing, since a true thing
must really exist in just the way it appears to any cognition.
Thus the postulation of an intrinsically objective self is (only) for the
sake of establishing an agent for the appropriation and discarding of the
aggregates, and this is not plausible when the self and the aggregates have
become the same. As Nagarjuna states in the Wisdom, "When it is asserted
that there is no self but for appropriation, then that the appropriation itself
is the self; and then that self of yours is nonexistent. " The second fault is
that the self would become a plurality. If the self and the aggregates were
really the same, then just as one person has many aggregates, so one would
come to have many selves; or, as the self is no more than one, the aggregates
188 $ E S S E N T I A L T I B ETAN BUDDHISM
would become one. Chandrakirti says in the Introduction: "If the aggre
gates were the self, as they are many so the self would become many. "
The third fault is that the self would become endowed with production
and destruction. As Nagarjuna says in the Wisdom: "If the aggregates were
the self, then it would become endowed with production and destruction."
That is, just as the aggregates are endowed with production and destruc
tion, so the self would become endowed with production and destruction,
since the two are a single entity.
Now, if one thinks this is merely an acceptance of the momentary pro
duction and destruction of the self or the person each instant, while it is ad
mitted that there is no fault in accepting this merely conventionally, the
opposition here asserts the intrinsic identifiability of the person and so must
assert the intrinsically objective production and destruction of that person,
which assertion has three faults, as Chandrakirti states in the Introduction.
First, "Things intrinsically identifiably separate are not rationally in
cluded in a single continuum"; that is, it is illogical for things that are ob
jectively established as different, in being former and later, to relate with
the later depending on the former; because the former and later things are
self-sufficiently and independently established and cannot properly relate
to one another. Thus, since it is incorrect to include them in one continuum,
the "I" cannot rightly remember its former life, "At that time I was like
that," just as two different persons such as Devadatta and Yajiia cannot re
member each other's lives. In our system, though things are destroyed in
every instant, conventionally there is no contradiction for former and later
instants to be included in a single continuum, so it is possible for former
lives to be remembered. Those who do not understand this point generate
the first of the four wrong views mentioned in Scripture as relating to a for
mer limit. When the Buddha often says, "I was this former person," they
think that the person at the time of Buddhahood and the person of this for
mer life are the same, or that, since created things are instantaneously de
stroyed, they cannot be the same, so both of them must be permanent, and
so forth. In order not to fall into such (views), one must understand prop
erly the way-at the time of remembering former lives-in which the gen
eral "I" is remembered without specifically qualifying it as to country, time,
and nature.
The second fault is the fault of the effect of action committed becoming
lost, when, if the person were intrinsically identifiable, it would be impossi
ble to bring the agent of the action and the experience of the evolutionary
effect together on a single basis, the mere "I."
The third fault is that of receiving the evolutionary effect of actions not
performed; if such could happen, there would be the extreme absurdity that
Practicing the Liberating Wisdom 1 89
finding any self either the same or different from the aggregates, that
same rationality analytic of thatness will not discover any intrinsic reality
in one's property. If you cannot perceive the son of a barren woman, his
property such as eyes and so on will also not be perceived. Thus that ra
tionality which determines the lack of intrinsically objective status of
one's own "I" or "self" or "person" should realize the entire import of
the thatness of personal selflessness, that all persons and their property,
from hell beings up to Buddhas, have no intrinsic reality as the same or as
different from their designative bases, whether they be contaminated or
uncontaminated aggregates. And thereby one should also understand the
method of establishing the lack of intrinsic reality of all those beings'
property. . . .
Arising as Illusion
When one has not properly identified the measure of the negatee as ex
plained above, when one's analysis of the object cools down, one first be
gins to imagine that the object does not exist, then one comes to experience
the analyzer also as likewise (nonexistent), then even that ascertained as
nonexistence ceases to have existence, and one comes into a state wherein
there is no ground of ascertaining anything at all as "this is it" or "this is
not it. " There then arises perception of a fuzzy, foggy appearance, occur
ring from the failure to distinguish between intrinsically real existence and
nonexistence and mere existence and nonexistence. Such a voidness is the
kind of voidness that destroys relativity, and therefore the arisal of such a
fuzzy, foggy perception derived from such a realization is definitely not the
meaning of illusoriness.
Therefore when one analyzes rationally and one comes to consider that
such a "person" is not present even in the slightest upon any intrinsically es
tablished object, sustaining that consideration one might have perceptions
that arise in a fuzzy, foggy manner; just this is not very difficult. Such expe
riences occur for all those who admire the centrist philosophies and have a
casual learning of the teachings that demonstrate intrinsic realitylessness.
But the real difficulty is to negate completely any objectively established in
trinsic reality and yet develop a deep certainty about the representation of
how that intrinsically unreal person itself is the accumulator of evolutionary
actions and the experiencer of evolutionary effects and so on. When the
combination of those two facts-realitylessness and the ability to represent
those things-is carried to the extreme limit of existence, that is the view of
the central way, so extremely difficult to discover. . . .
When one investigates with the rationality analytic of ultimate reality,
nothing whatever is discovered that can withstand analysis such as a person
who is born, does actions, and transmigrates. Nevertheless, illusory things
occur as the evolutionary effects of good and bad actions. One must de
velop one's understanding according to this statement of the Buddha.
Furthermore, when one does not practice in equipoise by concentrating
upon the view that has decisively penetrated into reality, but merely finds
1 92 ". E S S E N T I A L T I B ETAN B U D D H I S M
For example, when the visual consciousness sees an illusory horse or ox,
one depends on the certainty in mental consciousness that the apparent
horse or ox does not exist, and one generates a certainty that the horse or
ox appearance does not exist as it seems. In the same way, one depends on
both the undeniable appearance of person and object in conventional cog
nition and the certainty through rational cognition that that very thing is
empty of an objectively established intrinsic reality, and thereby one gener
ates the certainty that that person is an illusory or false appearance. By that
key one reaches the essence of the meditation on voidness as like space
wherein one's concentration allows not even an iota of mental orientations
that are substantivistic sign-habits. When one arises from that concentra
tion, and one regards the arisal of apparent objects, the aftermath illusory
voidness arises. In that manner when one investigates repeatedly with the
rationality analytic of the presence or absence of intrinsically objective sta
tus in things, after one has generated an intense certitude about intrinsic re
alitylessness, one's observation of the arisal of appearances is the arisal in
illusoriness, and there is no separate method of determining the voidness
that is illusoriness. Thereupon, when one engages in activities such as pros
trations and circumambulations, the certitude from the above analysis is
taken into account, and the engagement in those activities becomes the ed
ucation in the arisal of illusoriness. One should perform those activities
from within the actuality of that awareness. When one purifies that, the
mere remembrance of the view causes those things to arise in illusoriness.
To express the method of seeking that certainty in an easily under
standable way: Having initiated the proper arisal in general of the above-
Practicing the Liberating Wisdom 193
O bjective Selflessness
"Objects" are the five aggregates that are the person's designative base, the
six elements such as earth, and the six media such as eye and so forth. Their
voidness of objectively established intrinsic reality is the selflessness of
those things. There are two parts to the way of determining this: one negat
ing objective self by the reasonings mentioned above, and the other negat
ing it by other reasonings previously unmentioned. . . .
194 ". E S S E N T I A L T I B ETAN BUDDHISM
Here there are two chief points of resistance that obstruct the realistic
view. One is the reificatory view or absolutist view that has a fixed orienta
tion toward truth habits that hold to the truth status in things. The other is
the repudiative view or nihilistic view that goes too far by not appreciating
the measure of the negatee and becomes unable to incorporate in its system
the certitude about cause and effect within relativity, losing all ground of
recognition about anything such as "this is it" and "this isn't it." These two
views are completely eliminated by the negation of intrinsic reality based
on the reason that brings certitude that from such and such a causal condi
tion such and such an effect occurs. For the ascertainment of the import of
the thesis radically refutes absolutism, and the ascertainment of the reason
radically refutes nihilism.
Therefore all things-inner, such as emotions, and outer, such as
sprouts-that occur in dependence on misknowledge and so forth and
seeds and so forth, respectively, being thus relative are not correctly estab
lished as intrinsically identifiable. For if they were to be intrinsically objec
tively established, it would be necessary for each to have an independent,
self-sufficient reality status, which would preclude their dependence on
causes and conditions. As Aryadeva says in the Four Hundred, "What ex
ists relativistically will never become independent. All this is without inde
pendence; hence the self does not exist."
By this one should realize that persons and things such as pots have no
intrinsically real status, since they are designated in dependence on their
own aggregation of components; this is the second formulation of the rea
son of relativity. Since things are dependently produced and dependently
designated, they are not objectively the same as what they depend upon; for
if they were the same, all actions and agents would become the same.
Neither are those two objectively different; for if they were, any connection
could be refuted and that would preclude any dependence.
Thus having derived certitude about the voidness that is the voidness of
all the objectifying attitudes of substantivism, it is extremely praiseworthy
to assume responsibility for ethical choice by not abandoning the certitude
about the relevance of the evolutionary effects of actions. As Nagarjuna
states in the Disclosure of the Spirit of Enlightenment, "Knowing this void
ness of things, the one who still takes responsibility for evolutionary ac
tions and effects, this one is even more wondrous than wonder, even more
miraculous than miracles! "
To achieve this, one must distinguish between intrinsically real existence
and mere existence, and between lack of intrinsically identifiable existence
and nonexistence.
1 96 ". E S S E N T I A L T I B ETAN BUDDHISM
When you discover the view that realizes the two selflessnesses from the
above teaching of the necessary conditions for transcendent insight, you
should meditate on transcendent insight.
How many transcendent insights are there?
Here I have not mainly taught the high stages of transcendent insight but
have emphasized the transcendent insight to be meditated by common indi
viduals. To completely analyze that type of transcendent insight, there are
the insights of the four realities, the insights of the three doors, and the in
sights of the six investigations.
The insights of the four realities are stated in the Elucidation of the
Intention as the four, "discernment" and so forth. Among them, "discern
ment" takes the contents of reality as its object, and "investigation" takes
the nature of reality as its object. The first contains thorough examination
and thorough analysis, and the second contains examination and analysis,
since they respectively discern coarse and subtle objects. The identification
of these four is stated in the Stages of the Disciples and in the Instruction in
Transcendent Wisdom.
The insights of the three doors are stated in the Elucidation of the
Intention as the insights arisen from signs, arisen from thorough investiga
tion, and arisen from individual discrimination. As for the description of
these three, taking the import of selflessness as an example, first, selflessness
198 ". E S S E N T I A L T I B ETAN BUDDHISM
being common to both quiescence and insight, and thus there are also four
conscious attitudes in insight.
As for the way of practice, it is the procedure of first seeking quiescence
and then, based on that, subsequently practicing insight, and that is the rea
son why quiescence and insight are differentiated by their different proce
dures in practice, even though they may both take the same object, such as
selflessness. Especially, since the meditation of the two transcendent in
sights-that concerned with the levels of peace through specific discern
ment of the faults and virtues of the higher and lower realms, and that
concerned with selflessness cultivated through analysis with the wisdom of
the specific discrimination of the meaning of selflessness-is indispensably
necessary to generate a firm and intense certainty, it has the greater power
to abandon specific abandonees, defilements, and obscurations. As for the
phenomenologically concerned transcendent insight, it is not only the med
itation concerned with levels of peace that abandons the manifest addic
tions, but it is also stated by Ratnakarashanti in the Instruction to be the
analytic meditation that discerns the nature of the eighteen elements, by
which illustration one can understand the other insights meditated by dis
tinguishing phenomenal objects.
Although Ratnakarashanti explains in the Instruction that one must
generate quiescence and insight on the stage of yoga oriented toward the
phenomenological before generating quiescence and insight oriented to
ward the ontological, here, following the view of Shantideva and Kama
lashila and others, insight is generated after first generating whatever sort
of quiescence, and I mean here the transcendent insight oriented ontologi
cally toward ultimate reality.
The Esoteric Communion also explains the orientation toward mind
only, as taught in the Visit to Lanka: "depending on mind alone, do not
imagine any external objects"; the orientation toward thatness; and the
teaching of the three stages of the yoga of nonappearance. It also appears
to explain, as above, the procedure of practice of quiescence and insight
through focused meditation and analytic meditation in the first two stages.
Thus it accepts a similar procedure of developing quiescence and insight in
the mental process oriented toward reality. My own interpretation is that
in the context of the Unexcelled Yoga the procedure of developing the un
derstanding of the view must be practiced according to the central way
treatises. In practice, however, although sometimes there are conscious at
titudes analytic of thatness during the aftermath intuitions of the creation
stage and perfection stage, and although the perfection stage yogin who
has achieved the ability to concentrate on the essentials in the body must
200 ". E S S E N T I A L TI B E T A N B UDDH I SM
do not function with regard to all objects cognized, because it is stated that
the egocentric individual desiring liberation must investigate reality from
many scriptural and rational perspectives.
Again you may think that the meditation on thatness, as it is for the pur
pose of generating nondiscrimination, is not produced by analytic discrimi
nation, since cause and effect must correspond in nature. The Lord himself
clearly answered this concern, in the Kashyapa Chapter: " Kashyapa, for
example, when you rub two sticks together, they produce fire and are them
selves completely consumed in the process. In the same way, Kashyapa, au
thentic analytic discrimination produces the faculty of holy wisdom, and,
being produced, it serves to consume that authentic discrimination itself. "
Here he clearly states that the holy wisdom is generated by discrimination.
Similarly Kamalashila states in his Middle Meditation Stages, "When the
yogi analyzes with wisdom and does not cognize as ultimately certain any
intrinsic objectivity of anything, he enters the samadhi free of discrimina
tive thought, and he realizes the utter nonexistence of the intrinsic objectiv
ity of things but merely meditates exclusively on the abandonment of all
conscious attitudes; he never eliminates that particular discrimination of
that absence of mental function, and he will never realize the utter nonexis
tence of intrinsic objectivity, since he is devoid of the illumination of wis
dom. Thus, from the authentic specific discrimination arises the fire of the
true wisdom of reality, like fire arisen from rubbing sticks, which then
burns the sticks of discrimination. This is what the Lord stated. " Otherwise
it would never happen that the uncontaminated would arise from the con
taminated, the transcendental from the mundane, a Buddha from a living
being, a holy person from an alienated individual, and so forth. For in all
these cases the effect is dissimilar from the cause.
Nagarjuna states in the Disclosure of the Spirit of Enlightenment that
"where discriminations occur, how could there be voidness? The Trans
cendent Lords do not perceive any mind in the form of discriminated and
discrimination; where there is discrimination and discriminated, there is no
enlightenment." But here he is teaching that enlightenment will not be at
tained when truth status is perceived in discriminated and discrimination
and does not negate discriminative wisdom or the mere function of discrim
inated and discrimination. Otherwise it would contradict his extensive de
termination of thatness through many discriminative analyses in that text;
and if mere discrimination were meant, their not being seen by Buddha
means their nonexistence. Again Nagarjuna states in the same text,
"Voidness, called 'nonproduction,' 'voidness,' and 'selflessness,' if it is con
templated as anything less, it does not serve as meditation on that. " This
does not refute meditation that takes voidness and selflessness intrinsically
202 "* E S S E N T I A L T I B ETAN BUDDHISM
by Tsong Khapa
214
Practicing the Creation Stage 2 I 5
Instantaneous Self-Creation
In a split second I myself become the blue-black Fury Vajra, with three
faces, black, white, and red; six arms holding vajra, wheel, and lotus in the
right, and bell, jewel, and sword in the left; embraced by Touch Vajra simi
lar to myself. We are both adorned with the eight jeweled ornaments, our
shoulders draped with heavenly shawls, our waists covered with divine
silken robes.
Inner Sacrifice
OM AH VIGHNANTAKRT HUM.
OM SHUNYATA JNANA VAJ RA SVABHAVA ATMAKO HAM.
All becomes emptiness. From the actuality of emptiness comes HUM YAM
HUM, from the gray-blue YAM arises a semicircular blue-green disk of wind,
adorned on the two sides by two five-point vajras, arising from the HUMS.
Upon that, there is HUM RAM HUM, from the red RAM arises a triangular
red fire plane, adorned on the two sides by two vajras arising from two
Practicing the Creation Stage 2 I 7
HUM S . Upon that arising from OM AH HUM, a tripod of human heads and
above that arising from AH a skull, red inside and white outside. Within it
from an AH arises an eight-petaled red lotus marked with AH. In its center
are the five meats and the five nectars. In the sky above them on a solar
seat, arising from HUM is a five-point white vajra, whose center is marked
by HUM. From it light radiates, wind stirs, fire blazes, and the substances in
the skull melt and boil. The vajra with its solar seat falls within, and the
substances become equal in flavor. All taints are purified, and it becomes
translucent as milk-white crystal. The lotus with its AH melts, and a light
bright as sunlight blazes forth, and all naturally becomes the nectar of wis
dom. The light-rays of OM like a laser hook attract the wisdom of all
Transcendent Lords of the ten directions; merging it expands into an ocean.
OM AH HUM (7X)
Sense Offerings
OM AH VI GHNANTAKRT HUM.
OM SHUNYATA JNANA VAJRA SVABHAVA ATMAKO HAM
HUM All becomes emptiness. From the actuality of emptiness from AH,
there are vast expansive skull bowls; inside each is its letter, such as AM,
PAM, PUM, adorned with a squiggle. Therefrom arise offering water, water
for the feet, water for the mouth, food, flowers, incense, light, scent, food,
music. Their nature is bliss emptiness, their aspects are the offering sub
stances, and their function is to give special uncontaminated bliss to the six
sense bases.
OM ARGHAM AH HUM. OM PADYAM AH HUM. OM ANCAMANAM AH
H UM. OM PROKSHANAM AH HUM. OM PUSHPE AH HUM. OM DHUPE
AH HUM. OM ALOKE AH HUM. OM GANDHE AH HUM. OM NAIVI DYE AH
HUM. OM SHABDA AH HUM.
Refuge
I always take refuge in the Bliss Lords, who practice the play of mind like a
taintless moon, using the limitless arts of their holy compassion-may they
always abide in my mind!
I always take refuge in the holy Dharma, the reality uniformly experi
enced in all things, ground of the successes of all holy spiritual heroes, sure
liberator from all superstitions!
I take refuge in the Community of the lords of discipline, truly freed
from all bonds, endowed with the glory of best compassion, established on
stages such as the joyous!
May I conceive the holy spirit of enlightenment, the mind adorned by in
tense aspiration, wherein the instincts for all obscurations are eradicated by
the purification of thought and evolutionary effects. ( 3X)
Practicing the Creation Stage 2 1 9
Vajrasattva Meditation
From PAM on my crown a lotus and from AH a moon disk, upon them
from HUM a five-pointed white vajra, marked in the center with HUM.
From that vajra light radiates, then from its gathering together there arises
a white Vajrasattva with one face, two arms holding vajra and bell. His
consort, white Vajradhatvishravi, has one face and two arms holding skull
and diamond chopper, embracing him. Both are adorned with various jew
eled ornaments. He sits in the vajra position; upon a moon in his heart
there is a white HUM radiating light, inviting wisdom heroes similar to
himself.
OM VAJRASATTVA SAPARIVARA
ARGHAM PADYAM PUSHPE DHUPE ALOKE
GANDHE NAIVI DYE SHABDA PRATICCHA HUM SVAHA
JAH HUM BAM HOH
May they become indivisible! Again, light radiates from the heart HUM,
inviting consecration deities
OM PANCHAKULA SAPARIVARA ARGHAM PADYAM PUSHPE DHUPE
ALOKE GANDHE NAIVI DYE SHABDA PRATICCHA HUM SVAHA
May all Transcendent Lords openly please confer consecration. When I
pray thus, they hold up a vessel filled with wisdom nectar and confer con
secration upon him.
OM SARVA TATHAGATA ABHISHEKHATA SAMAYA SH RIYE HUM
The body becomes filled with wisdom nectar, and he becomes adorned
on the crown by Akshobhya. "Lord Vajrasattva, please cleanse and purify
all losses of vows and all sins and obscurations of myself and others. " By
praying thus, light radiates from the heart HUM purifying the sins and de
filements of all beings, also offerings are given to the Buddhas and
Bodhisattvas, and all their virtues are concentrated into light, dissolving
into the heart HUM making his luster and energy outstanding.
OM VAJ RASATTVASAMAYAM. ANUPALAYA VAJRASATTVENOPA-
TISHTHA. DRDHO ME BHAVA. SUTOSHYO ME BHAVA. S U POSHYO ME
BHAVA. ANURAKTO ME BHAVA. SARVASI D DHIM ME PRAYACCHA. SARVA
KARMASUCHA ME. CHITTAM SHRIYAM KURU HUM. HA HA HA HA HOH
220 .. E S S EN T I A L T I B E T A N B U D D H I S M
Refuge Evocation
I myself become the luminous Akshobhyavajra. The blue HUM on the varie
gated lotus and sun disk in my heart emits light-rays like laser hooks that
draw the deities of the Akshobhya mandala, indivisible from the vajra mas
ter, down from their natural abodes. The light-rays return to my own heart.
OM SARVATATHAGATA ARGHAM PAOYAM PUSHPE • • , . • • • • ,
• SHABOA . . . GANOHA
• . RASA S PARSHE PUJAMEGHASAMU
. • . . . •
I always take refuge in the holy Dharma, the reality uniformly experi
enced in all things, ground of the successes of all holy spiritual heroes, sure
liberator from all superstitions!
I take refuge in the Community of the lords of discipline, truly freed
from all bonds, endowed with the glory of superior compassion, who have
reached the stages such as joy!
May I create the holy spirit of enlightenment, adorned by the lofty aspi
ration, which purifies the resolve and maturity to eradicate the instincts for
all obscurations!
May that mind which is the actuality of perfect enlightenment now truly
abide on the sole path of all Bliss Lords, the way of tenfold pure excellence,
such as generosity and so on!
May all the Buddhas and the Bodhisattvas please think of me! I,
Akshobhyavajra, from this time forth until I come to the seat of enlighten
ment, may I conceive the holy, unexcelled spirit of enlightenment, just as
the three-times protectors certainly accomplished their enlightenment. I
will uphold firmly all three ethics, that of the vow of restraint, that of
achieving virtue, and that of helping beings. I uphold from now on the
vow arisen from the Buddha yoga of the unexcelled Three Jewels: Buddha,
Dharma, and Sangha. I will truly uphold also the holy masters. I will al
ways give the four kinds of gifts each day at the six times in keeping the
delightful vow of the great supreme jewel clan. In regard to the great pure
lotus clan arising from the great enlightenment, I will hold each Dharma'
of the Three Vehicles: outer, inner, and secret. I will uphold truly each and
every vow I have in the great supreme karma clan, and I will do what I can
of ritual offerings. I will conceive the holy unexcelled spirit of enlighten
ment for the sake of all sentient beings. I will uphold all the vows com
pletely. I will save those not yet saved. I will deliver those not yet delivered.
I will console those not consoled. I will establish sentient beings III
Nirvana.
May the members of the assembly field return to their own abodes!
From HUM upon the iron fence a vajra tent like a stupa, under the tent
upon the fence a vajra canopy. Beneath this to the ground from HUM the
vajra ground. In all the outer directions there is a net of arrows radiating,
fiercely blazing with wisdom fire. On the crown moon of the deities a white
OM, on the throat lotus a red AH, and on the heart sun a blue HUM-OM
AH HUM ( 3x).
ture, and they playfully delight with the five objects of desire. They sit in
vajra position in their seats in the center of a shining halo of light.
On the (facing center) right and left seats at the eastern door are respec
tively white Maitreya and Kshitigarha with Vairochana crowns: three faces,
white, black, and red; six arms holding wheel, vajra, and pundarika in the
rights, and bell, jewel, and sword in the lefts. Maitreya also holds in the
upper right a wheel-marked naga tree flower. On the right and left seats at
the southern door are respectively yellow Vajrapani and Aksagarbha with
Ratnasambhava crowns: three faces, yellow, black, and white; hand imple
ments like Ratnasambhava. On the right and left seats at the western door
are respectively red Lokeshvara and Manjushri with Amitabha crowns:
three faces, red, black, and white; hand implements like Amitabha. On the
right and left seats at the northern door are respectively green Sarva
nivarana Viskhambhini and Samantabhadra with Amoghasiddhi crowns:
three faces, green, black, and white; hand implements like Amoghasiddhi.
All deities from Vairochana to Samantabhadra have hair in royal topknot
wearing jeweled crowns, jeweled earrings together with a blue utpala
flower beautified with ribbons, jeweled necklaces, pearl sashes, precious
bracelets, anklets, and jeweled belt sashes. Upper bodies are draped with
cloth of heavenly shawls and the lower bodies covered with divine silks.
Adorned by the thirty-two marks and eighty signs. At peace in an orb of ra
diant light, each one is seated in the vajra position.
In the eastern door black Yamantaka with Vairochana crown: three
faces, black, white, and red; six arms holding staff, wheel, and vajra in the
rights, and noose over chest with threatening gesture, bell and ax in the
lefts. In the southern door white Prajnantakrt with Ratnasambhava crown:
three faces, white, black, and red; six arms holding vajra-marked white
staff, and sword in the rights, and noose over chest with threatening ges
ture, bell and ax in the lefts. In the western door red Hayagriva with
Amitabha crown: three faces, red, black, and white; six arms holding lotus,
sword, :ind pounder in the rights, and bell on the hip, ax and noose in the
lefts. In the northern door black Vighnantakrt with Amoghasiddhi crown:
three faces, blue, white, and red; six arms holding double vajra, wheel, and
spear in the rights, and noose over chest with threatening gesture, bell, and
ax in the lefts. In the southeast black Achala with Vairochana crown, three
faces, black, white, and red; six arms holding sword, vajra, and wheel in
the rights, and threatening gesture over heart, ax and noose in the lefts. In
the southwest door blue Takkiraja with Ratnasambhava crown: three faces,
black, white, and red; first two hands held in the Humkara gesture, other
two rights vajra and sword, lefts noose and iron hook. In the northwest
blue Niladanda with Amitabha crown: three faces, blue, white, and red; six
226 "* E S SENTI A L T I B ETAN BUDDHISM
arms holding blue staff marked with vajra, sword and wheel in the righ
and noose over chest with threatening gesture, lotus and ax in lefts. In t
northeast blue Mahabala with Amoghasiddhi crown: three faces, blac
white, and red; six arms holding vajra-marked black staff, vajra and whc
in the rights, and noose over chest with threatening gesture, trident and
in the lefts. Above blue Ushnishacakravarti with Akshobhya crown: thr
faces, blue, white, and red, first two hands in the ushnisha gesture, otb
two rights vajra and lotus, lefts threatening gesture and sword. Below bl
Sumbharaja with Akshobhya crown, three faces, black, white, and red; !
arms holding vajra, wheel, and jewel in the rights, and noose over chc
with threatening gesture, lotus and sword in the lefts.
All ten of the terrible ones have yellowish-red hair flaming up; their bro'
and eyelashes flare intensely orange. Each face has three eyes and four sha
fangs, which grind horribly. Their fierce, loud laughs HA HA reverberate, al
their faces are wrinkled with intensity of expressions. They have big bellil
Their hair is bound by blue Ananta snakes, red Takshaka snakes serve
earrings, striped Kulika snakes adorn the shoulders, white Padma sna�
serve as necklaces, yellow Shankhapala snakes serve as bracelets, green Ja
snakes serve as sashes, nectar-colored Vasuki snakes serve as belts, and wh
Mahapadma snakes serve as anklets. Intense wisdom-fire blazes from thl
bodies; they stand in the center ready to punish all evil beings.
From my own heart HUM light-rays radiate. All living beings are ;
tracted, streaming into the mandala like vajra heroes, unhindered from t
four directions; abiding there, they are consecrated by the light-rays of t
enlightenment spirits of the five father-mothers in union and attain the bl
and mental joy of all Transcendent Lords-becoming Vajrasattvas procec
ing each to his own Buddhaland.
The laser hook light-rays of the blue HUM of my heart invite the deit
from Vairochana to Sumbharaja setting them in my points such as t
crown, and they become actually indivisible from my form aggregate a
so on. On the crown Vairochana, throat Amitabha, navel Ratnasambha1
groin Amoghasiddhi, navel Lochana, heart Mamaki, throat Pandaravasi
crown Tara, eyes Kshitigarbhas, ears Vajrapanis, nose Khagarbha, tong
Lokeshvara, heart Manjushri, secret organ Sarvanivarana Viskhambhi
joints Samantabadhra, crown Maitreya, doors of the eyes Rupavajr;
doors of the ears Shabdavajras, door of the nose Gandhavajra, door of t
mouth Rasavajra, door of the vajra Sparshavajra, right hand Yamanta1
Practicing the Creation Stage 227
Upon the central seat from HUM a solar disk arises and in its center from
OM a moon disk and upon that an eight-petaled red lotus, and in the center
of that stacked up are OM AH HUM. These merge and become a single
moon orb. It emits light-rays, and all animate and inanimate objects gather
and dissolve into the moon.
OM DHARMADHATU SVABHAVA ATMAKO HAM.
I am that appearing moon, the mere energy mind, root of all beings and
things.
Upon the moon, like water bubbles bursting from water, are white OM,
red AH, and blue H U M . They emit light-rays and invite infinite masses of
the five Buddha-clans and their retinues from the ten directions. They dis
solve and completely transform into a white five-pointed vajra marked at
the center with OM AH HUM.
VAJRA ATMAKO HAM
The vajra together with the letters completely transforms into myself, the
white Primal Protector: three faces, white, black, and red; six arms holding
vajra, wheel, and lotus in the rights, and bell, jewel, and sword in the lefts.
228 "* E S S E N T I A L T I B ETAN BUDDHISM
Adorned with precious jewels and various robes of silk, from their natUl
abodes the male and female Transcendent Lords embrace in union, creati
streams of enlightenment spirit, which suffuse all the realms of space wi
hosts of Akshobhyas in order to tame all beings. They bless all beings to f
perience uncontaminated physical and mental bliss. Then the Akshobh}
merge together in the Mandala Palace and enter into me. I become the bl
Emanation Body Vajrasattva, with three faces, blue, white, and red, six an
holding vajra, wheel, and lotus in the rights, and bell, jewel, and sword
the lefts, and adorned with precious jewels and various robes of silk.
The front, back, right, and left sides of my body become the Mand�
Palace's four corners. The mouth, nose, anus, and urethra become the fa
doors. The five-colored pure energies that carry thoughts become the fi1
fold wall. The tongue cognition becomes the precious molding. The i
testines become the jeweled nets, and the sinews become the half ne
Parts of the white spirit become the half-moons, the eye cognition becorr
the mirrors, and the nose cognition becomes the garland of flowers. T
tongue sense becomes the bells, and the body sense becomes the yak-t
fans adorning the nets and half nets. The ear and body cognitions becOl
the banners and victory standards flying on the parapet. The eight liml
the calves, thighs, forearms, and biceps become the eight pillars. The be
becomes the mandala's interior vases. The ear senses become the ha
moon vajras in the corners. The pure five aggregates become the five colt
of the Mandala Palace. The four essential places: secret spot, navel, hea
and nose-tip, become the four triumphal arches, and the eye senses I
come the Dharma wheels above them, with the mind cognition the de
and the nose sense the triumphal arches' banners. The mind sense becon
the central lotus. Thus all parts of my body become parts of the Mand:
Palace.
From my crown to hairline, the reality of the form aggregate, white (
transforms into white Vairochana . . . . From hairline to throat, the real
of the ideation aggregate, red AH transforms into red Amitabha. . . . Ff(
throat to heart between the two breasts, the reality of the consciousness :
gregate, blue H U M transforms into blue Akshobhya . . . . From the heart
the navel, the reality of the sensation aggregate, yellow SVA transforms if
yellow Ratnasambhava . . . . From navel to groin, the reality of the emoti
aggregate, green HA transforms into green Amoghasiddhi.
At the navel, the reality of the body's earth element, yellow LAM tral
Practicing the Creation Stage 229
forms into white Lochana . . . . At the heart, the reality of the body's water
element, blue MAM transforms into blue Mamaki . . . . At the throat, the re
ality of the body's fire element, red PAM transforms into red Pan
daravasini . . . . At the crown, the reality of the body's air element, green
TAM transforms into green Tara . . . . At the eyes, the reality of the eye
senses, THLIMS transform into white Kshitigarbhas. . . . At the doors of the
eyes, the reality of form, JAHS transform into white Rupavajras. . . . The
first two arms of both male and female hold each other in mutual embrace.
At the ears, the reality of the ear senses, OMS transform into yellow
Vajrapanis . . . . At the doors of the ears, the reality of sound, HUMs trans
form into yellow Shabdavajras. . . . The first two arms of both male and fe
male hold each other in mutual embrace. At the nose, the reality of the nose
sense, OM transforms into yellow Akashagarbha . . . . At the door of the
nose, the reality of scent, BAM transforms into red Gandhavajra . . . . At the
tongue, the reality of the tongue sense, OM transforms into Lokeshvara. . . .
At the door of the mouth, the reality of tastes, HOH transforms into green
Rasavajra . . . . At the heart, the reality of the mind sense, HUM transforms
into red Manjushri . . . . At the vajra, the reality of the body media, OM
transforms into green Sarvanivarana Viskhambhini . . . . At the door of the
vajra, the reality of textures, KHAM transforms into blue Sparshavajra . . . .
The first two arms of both male and female are holding each other in mu
tual embrace. At the joints, the reality of the joints, SAMS transform into
green Samantabhadras. . . . At the crown of the head, the reality of the
nerves and sinews, MAIM transforms into white Maitreya . . . . All the gods
from Vairochana to Maitreya have ornaments of precious jewels and varie
gated robes of silk.
At the right hand, its reality HUM transforms into black Yamantakrt. . . .
At the left hand, its reality HUM transforms into white Prajnantakrt. . . . At
the mouth, its reality HUM transforms into red Hayagriva . . . . At vajra, its
reality HUM transforms into black Vighnantakrt. . . . At the right shoulder's
nerve, its reality HUM transforms into black Achala . . . . At the left shoul
der's nerve, its reality HUM transforms into blue Takkiraja . . . . At the right
knee, its reality HUM transforms into blue Niladanda . . . . At the left knee,
its reality HUM transforms into blue Mahabala . . . . At the crown its reality
HUM transforms into blue Ushnishachakravarti. . . . At the two heels, its re-
ality HUMs transform into blue Sumbharaja with Akshobhya crown: three
faces, black, white, and red; six arms holding vajra, wheel, and jewel in the
rights, and noose over chest with threatening gesture, lotus and sword in
the lefts. All ten terribles have yellowish-red hair flaming up and have all
the other manners of ferocity.
1.30 "* E S S E N T I A L T I B ETAN B U D D H I S M
Ekajati, at the right shoulder's nerve from HUM the Buddha consort Vajri,
at the left shoulder's nerve from HUM Vishva Ratna, at the right knee from
HUM Vishva Padma, at the left knee from HUM Vishva Karma. At the
crown from HUM Akasha Vajri, and at the soles from H UMS earth god
desses.
From the unperceivable realm of my secret place HUM transforms into a
blue five-pointed vajra, with the central spoke a jewel marked with OM and
the hole blocked with a golden PHAT. From the unperceivable realm of my
consort's secret place AH transforms into an eight-petaled red lotus with
the hole blocked with a golden PHAT. My vajra and her lotus suffuse with
five-color light-rays. I become Ratnasambhava.
OM SARVA TATHAGATA ANURAGANA VAJ RA SVABHAVATMAKO HAM
I become Vajradhara. HUM-Engaged in union, I feel bliss of supreme
joy. I become Amoghasiddhi. PHAT
OM SARVA TATHAGATA PUJA VAJRA SVABHAVA ATMAKO HAM
All the gods of the body mandala are satisfied, the melted drop falls into the
consort's lotus, and that very drop becomes the fountainhead of all deities,
the Transcendent Lords and the five clans and so on. One part of the drop
becomes a BHRUM, which transforms into the square four-doored
Mandala Palace, replete with all its characteristics, including seats. The
other part of the drop becomes the thirty-two parts, each upon a seat. They
transform into-
OM AH HUM HUM. OM AH KHAM HUM. OM AH OM HUM. OM AH
SVA HUM. OM AH AH H U M . OM AH HA HUM. OM AH LAM HUM. OM AH
MAM H UM. OM AH BAM HUM. OM AH TAM HUM. OM AM JAH HUM. OM
AH HUM HUM. OM AH BAM HUM. OM AH HOH HUM. OM AH MAI M
HUM. OM AH THLIM HUM. OM AM OM HUM. OM AH OM HUM. OM AH
OM H U M . OM AH HUM H U M . OM AH OM H U M . OM AH SAM HUM. OM
AH HUM HUM. OM AH HUM HUM. OM AH HUM HUM. OM AH HUM
HUM. OM AH HUM HUM. OM AH HUM HUM. OM AH HUM HUM. OM AH
HUM HUM. OM AH HUM HUM. OM AH HUM HUM.
The thirty-two respectively transform into vajra and vajra, wheel, jewel,
lotus, vajra cross, wheel, vajra, blue lotus, vajra cross, red mirror, blue lute,
perfume conch, food vessel, wheel-marked naga tree flower, wheel, jewel,
jewel, lotus, lotus, sword, sword, staff, vajra, lotus, vajra cross, sword,
234 "* E S S EN T I A L T I B ETAN BUDDHISM
Repetition of Mantras
Melting in sexual union, the Mother dissolves into the Father. The devotee
hero Father dissolves into the wisdom hero. The wisdom hero dissolves
into the samadhi hero. The samadhi hero's vowel dissolves into the HA. The
HA dissolves into its top. The top dissolves into the moon crescent. The
moon crescent dissolves into the drop. The drop dissolves into the squiggle.
And finally the squiggle dissolves into clear light translucency.
Then the four goddesses, the realities of the four immeasurables, feel
sorrow no longer to see the Lord. They desire to look upon him and so
strive to arouse him with sweet songs.
o Thou of Diamond Mind, 0 Lord who dwells in the realms of beings,
Pray grant refuge to me, who loves the great goal, joy, and pleasure!
o Best Friend, 0 great Father of living beings,
o Savior, if thou wish me to remain in life,
Pray arise right now to make me happy!
o Thou of Diamond Body, whose wheel of speech benefits all
beings,
Teacher of the absolute enlightenment essential to win Buddhahood,
o Savior, if thou wish me to remain in life,
Pray arise right now to make me happy,
Through your great love, 0 Passion's Devotee!
o Thou of Diamond Speech, 0 Lover and Helper of all,
Always dynamic to accomplish people's necessary aims,
o Savior, if thou wish me to remain in life,
Pray arise right now to make me happy,
With thy ecstatic deeds of perfect goodness!
o Thou of Diamond Passion, essential help of the supreme vow,
o Thou of Equal Vision, best heir of perfect Buddhas,
o Savior, if thou wish me to remain in life,
Pray arise right now to make me happy,
o Treasury of Many Jewels of Excellence!
From the KSHUM of my left thumb, the earth foundation. From the ri
finger SUM there is Sumeru standing at the middle of the great ocean on t
earth and stirring up the essence of nectar. HUM on the tongues of t
guests becomes a one-pointed red vajra with a light-ray tube. I make t
offering!
To the mouth of the actuality of the concentrated body, speech, mil
excellence, and deeds of all transcendent lords of the ten directions a
three times, the origin of the eighty-four thousand masses of teachings, t
master of the holy community, the kind root mentor-OM AH HUM.
To the mouth of Victor Vajradhara OM AH HUM
To the mouth of the glorious protector Arya Nagarjuna OM AH HUM
Bodhisattva Matangipa OM AH HUM
Great Adept Tilopa OM AH HUM
Great Pandit Narotapa OM AH HUM
Translator Marpa OM AH HUM
Dharma King Tsong Khapa OM AH HUM
Again to the mouth of Victor Vajradhara OM AH HUM
Bodhisattva Vajrapani OM AH HUM
King Indrabhuti OM AH HUM
Naga Vajra Yogini OM AH HUM
Lord Visukalpa OM AH HUM
Glorious Saraha OM AH HUM
Glorious Arya Nagarjuna OM AH HUM
Practicing the Creation Stage 23 9
Glorious Chandrakirti OM AH H U M
Lopa Dorje O M AH H U M
Greatly accomplished Kanhapa O M AH H U M
Master Trinki Shuk Chen O M AH H U M
Lord Go O M AH HUM
Mangrap Sengye Gyaltsen O M AH HUM
Ngok Yeshe Sengye O M AH H U M
Ngok Aryadeva O M AH H U M
Lansta Nima Cham O M AH H U M
Takpa Renchen Trak O M AH H U M
Thur Hlawa Tsultrim Kyab O M AH HUM
Thang Pewa Pagpa Kyab O M AH H U M
Serding pa Zhon nu O M AH H U M
All-knowing Choku Ohzer O M AH H U M
All-knowing Phagpa Oh O M AH H U M
All-knowing Choje Buton Renchen drup OM AH H U M
All-knowing holy master Sonam Gyalsten O M AH H U M
All-knowing Tragyor Namkha Zangpo O M AH H U M
All-knowing peerless great Rendawa O M AH H U M
Dharma King great Tsong Khapa O M AH H U M
Kedrup Gelek Pal Zangpo O M AH H U M
All-knowing Losang Kalsang Gyatso O M AH H U M
Venerable Losang Palden Yeshe O M AH H U M
All-knowing Losang Jampal Gyatso O M AH H U M
Also to the mouths of all those masters who gave initiations, ex
pounded the tantras, and gave oral traditional teachings OM AH
HUM
(To the thirty-two deities of the mandala)
VAJ RAD H R K OM AH H U M .
S PARS HAVAJ RA O M A H H U M .
J INAJ I K O M AH H U M .
RATNADHRK O M AH H U M .
AROLIK OM AH HUM.
P RAJ NADHRK O M AH H U M .
M O HARATI O M AH H U M .
DVE SHARATI O M AH H U M .
RAGARATI O M A H H U M .
VAJ RARATI O M AH H U M .
RU PAVAJ RA O M AH H U M .
S HAB DAVAJ RA O M AH H U M .
240 .. E S S E N T I A L T I B ET A N BUDDHISM
GAND HAVAJ RA O M AH H U M .
RASAVAJ RA O M A H H U M .
MAITRI O M AH H U M .
KS HITIGARBHA O M AH H U M .
VAJ RAPANI O M A H H U M .
KHAGA R B HA O M AH H U M .
L O K E S HVARA O M AH H U M .
MANJ U S H R I O M AH H U M .
SARVANIVARANA V I S KAM B H I N O M AH H U M .
SAMANTABHADRA O M A H H U M .
YAMANTAKRT O M AH H U M .
PRAJNANTAKRT O M AH H U M .
PADMANTAKRT O M AH H U M .
VIGH NANTAKRT O M AH H U M .
ACHALA O M AH H U M .
TA K K I RAJA O M AH H U M .
N I LADANDA O M AH H U M .
MAHABALA O M AH H U M .
U S HNIS HACHAKRAVA RTI O M AH H U M .
S U M B HARAJA O M AH H U M .
To the mouth of the deities and mandala gods of the four Tantras
AH H U M .To the mouth of the oath-bound protectors who saw the previ
Buddhas, heard the holy Dharma, relied on the supreme community, ,
have pledged to protect the doctrine and the four sections of the com
nity, and upon whom the ancient masters relied and practiced-OM
HUM.
To all the heroes, yoginis, direction protectors, realm protectors, na
and so forth, who reside in the twenty-four regions, the thirty-two pia
and the eight great cemeteries O M AH H U M .
To the local spirits of natural sites and to all beings as deities O M
HUM.
All the deities of the mandala experience natural bliss and entrance
themselves in the samadhi of the indivisibility of great bliss and Thatness;
thus they become delighted by the mystic and absolute sacrifice offerings.
The laser hook light-rays of the blue H U M of my heart invite the deities
from Vairochana to Sumbharaja, setting them in my vital points such as the
crown. On the crown Vairochana, throat Amitabha, navel Ratnasam
bhava, secret place Amoghasiddhi, navel Lochana, heart Mamaki, throat
Pandaravasini, crown Tara, eyes Kshitigarbha, ears Vajrapani, nose
Khagarbha, tongue Lokeshvara, heart Manjushri, secret organ Sarva
nivarana Viskhambhini, joints Samantabhadra, crown Maitreya, eye-doors
Rupavajra, ear-doors Shabdavajra, nose-door Gandhavajra, tongue-door
Rasavajra, vajra-door Sparshavajra, right hand Yamantakrt, left hand
Prajnantakrt, mouth Hayagriva, vajra Vighnantakrt, right shoulder's nerve
Achala, left shoulder's nerve Takkiraja, right knee Niladanda, left knee
Mahabala, crown Ushnishachakravarti, and two soles Sumbharajas. Then
each part of the divine palace dissolves into each part of my body.
From the sexual contact of myself as Father-Mother in union the light
rays of enlightenment spirit radiate intensely, consecrating all beings, puri
fying all obscurations and transforming them all into H U M S . These fill the
realm of space and then transform into Vajradharas. They are attracted by
my light-rays and dissolve into me.
Mentor's Benedictions
1. VAJ R A R E P E T I T I O N
Arising from the summit of truth, she will attain nondual intuition.
Abiding in the communion samadhi, there is nothing whatever fur-
ther to learn.
This is the Perfection Yoga, and the great Vajradhara,
Supreme in all ways, is born from that.
Since the three states, past, present, and future,
Are purified through clear light, he sees them all at once.
These truths abide well sealed, in the glorious Communion Tantra;
They should be understood from the mentor's speech,
In accordance with the Explanatory Tantras . . . .
Who devotedly always strives in service and worship,
Who retains her learning, such a one
Need not be examined by the superior Mentor
He should be given the Mentor's grace.
Who falls from the summit of a high mountain
May think, "I mustn't fall! "-but she will fall.
Who obtains the helpful prophecy by the Mentor's kindness
May think, "I should not be delivered," yet he will be delivered! . . .
2. M I N D O BJ E C T I V E
I pay homage and bow down! With homage I bow down!
With homage, homage, homage I bow down!
Offering praises, I pay homage!
Who praises, who is praised?
I myself pay homage to my own intuition,
When will I understand that we are like
Water poured in water, butter poured in fire? . .
Now it is to be clearly explained by the perfected yoginii,
Explaining here the purity of the three voidnesses as clear light.
That is called universal voidness, the purity of the three intuitions.
The abode of those intuitions is reality and the unexcelled omni-
science.
Unchanging, not appearing, nondual, and supremely peaceful,
It is not in the range of existence or nonexistence, or of any words.
Then, from the purity of clear light, the three intuitions emerge;
One becomes the omniscient one, supreme in all one's aspects,
Endowed with the thirty-two auspicious signs and the eighty marks.
25 2 .. E S S EN T I A L T I B ETAN BUDDHISM
3. S E L F - E MP O W E R M E N T
Homage to the Great Vajra,
Chief of all the vajras;
Out of love I will explain
The actual self-empowerment.
254 .. E S S E N T I A L T I B ETAN BUDDHISM
First, one gets the empowerment following the creation stage, one under
stands the intention of the four kinds of Tantras, one has wisdom and
knowledge of physical, verbal, and mental isolation. One intensely aspires
to both realities, and one truly propitiates the Vajra Master. Having pleased
the Mentor and having made the great offerings in group rites, one offers
even one's own young mate. Then one gets the private instruction in the
self-empowerment from the Mentor's own mouth, and one gets the secret
initiation, together with the rosary, water, perfect Buddha, vajra, bell, mir
ror, name, mastership, and permission initiations. Then one should praise
the Mentor with this praise:
"Your body has no inner void,
Nor flesh, nor bone, nor blood;
It is a purposeful manifestation
Just like a rainbow in the sky. . . .
Homage to the unconditional you ! "
Thus having praised the Vajra Master with these praises, one should
pray that he is pleased by these verses:
"Whose very substance is omniscient intuition,
Who purifies the wheel of the life-cycle,
Now please kindly bestow upon me
The chief jewel of all elucidations!
Abandoning the lotuses of your feet,
I take no refuge in any other Lord.
May the hero of beings, the Great Ascetic,
Grant me supreme genius! "
Thus fearlessly praying
She hears these words,
Feels compassion with his disciple,
And begins the self-empowerment.
To know the stage of self-empowerment,
One must teach the superficial reality;
That will be attained in no other way
Than through the kindness of the Mentor.
The stage of the self-empowerment
Who does not discover it,
Though she studies Sutras, Tantras, and rites,
Her pains will ever prove fruitless.
Who attains the stage of self-empowerment
Practicing the Perfection and Great Perfection Stages 255
4. UNIVERSAL ENLIGHTENMENT
I pay homage to the Vajra Hero,
Teacher of universal voidness.
I will explain the fourth stage
Of direct enlightenment.
The self-existent Lord,
The sole, great-souled deity;
Greater than him is the Vajra Master,
Because she grants the personal instructions . . . .
Having truly propitiated him
For a year or even for a month,
When that Mentor is well pleased,
Then worship her as much as possible . . . .
The disciple folds his palms
To please the Mentor with worship and praise.
"I pay homage to you, the unconditional,
Liberated from the three realms,
Equanimous as the space,
Not corrupted by all desires. . . .
Grant the vision of direct enlightenment,
Whose nature is universal voidness! "
The disciple should press her palms together,
Praise the Mentor, and then entreat him:
"Great Savior, grant me the vision
Of direct enlightenment,
Free from evolution and birth,
Beyond the three luminances." . . .
Thus the yoginli should please the Mentor
By expressing her excellencies truly;
Their compassion arises for the disciple,
And she puts forth this very stage.
Night-moon is luminance; the spread of sun-rays is radiance. The interval is
the luminance-imminence; one proceeds through these not just once
258 .. E S S EN T I A L T I B E TAN BUDDHISM
through one's own natural instincts. What is neither night nor day nor the
interval is free from those instincts. That is the instant of enlightenment,
the supreme teaching of the Mentor, the objective of the yoginli. . . . This
instant just before the sunrise is the immaculate ultimate of reality. . . . In
an instant she will attain the untroubled inner bliss of Buddha enlighten
ment. . . .
The yoginli attains thus such reality,
Gaining the inexhaustible body of the sole friend of beings,
Whose nature is animate and inanimate
The Human-lion made of intuition,
The cause of all beings.
That crooked body becomes straight,
Firm, and abiding without any abode,
Whose eyes are wide open even when they are closed,
Who is entranced even when not meditating.
Even though she uses words, she is inexpressible.
Though he has enjoyments, he has no grasping,
Though she is the savior of the world, she is the slave of others . . . .
The essence of all things, with the genius of the immaculate
Teaching gained by the Mentor's kindness,
Is clear and pure, extremely subtle, natural supreme peace,
The realm of Buddha Nirvana.
Free of notions of duality, nature of constant bliss,
The yogin/i should meditate that reality.
Liberated from good and evil, herself, here and now,
Become the Lord Vajrasattva!
5. C O M M UN I O N
I pay homage to the Protector,
Whose nature is cause and effect,
Yet abandons all dualities;
I will explain the final stage of communion.
Abandoning the two notions
Of egoistic life and liberation,
Wherein they become the same thing;
That is called "communion. "
Knowing the addictive and purificative
Both as the absolute itself;
Practicing the Perfection and Great Perfection Stages 259
by Padma Sambhava
EMA HOH!
The one mind that pervades all life and liberation,
Though it is the primal nature, it is not recognized,
Though its bright intelligence is uninterrupted, it is not faced,
Though it ceaselessly arises everywhere, it is not recognized.
To make known just this objective nature,
The three-times victors proclaimed the inconceivable
Eighty-four thousand Dharma teachings,
Teaching none other than this realization.
Though Scriptures are measureless as the sky,
Their import is three words identifying intelligence.
This direct introduction to the intention of the Victors
Just this is the entry into freedom from progression.
KYAI HO !
Fortunate children! Listen here!
"Mind"-though this great word is so well known
People do not know it, know it wrongly or only partially;
And by their not understanding its reality precisely,
They come up with inconceivable philosophical claims.
The common, alienated individual, not realizing this,
By not understanding her own nature on her own,
Suffers roaming through six life-forms in three realms.
Such is the fault of not realizing this reality of the mind.
Disciples and hermit Buddhas claim realization
Of a partial selflessness but do not know this exactly.
Bound up in claims from their treatises and theories,
They do not behold clear light transparency.
Disciples and hermits are shut out by clinging to subject and object,
Centrists are shut out by extremism about the two realities,
Ritual and performance Tantrists, by extremism in service and
practice,
And great (Maha) and pervasive (Anu) Tantrists,
By clinging to the duality of realm and intelligence.
They err by remaining dualistic in nonduality,
262 .. E S S E N T I A L T I B ETAN BUDDHISM
Then the Transcendent Lord Padmottama, the Saint, the perfectly enlight
ened Buddha, spoke to the Bodhisattva Avalokiteshvara: " Give me, gentle
son, the queen, the great science of the six-syllable mantra with which I
may liberate from suffering hundreds of thousands of millions of billions of
various beings, so that I may cause them to reach unexcelled perfect en
lightenment as swiftly as possible."
Then the Bodhisattva Avalokiteshvara, the great spiritual hero, gave the
great science, the six-syllable mantra to the perfectly enlightened Buddha,
the Transcendent Lord, the Saint Padmottama:
OM MA NI PAD ME H U M .
At that instant, when this great science of the six-syllable mantra was
given forth, then the four great continents, along with the heavenly resi
dences of the deities, trembled like a leaf of a banana tree, and the four
great oceans were churned up together with all of their demons and ob
structors. All of these demons and obstructors were terrified, and the forest
demons and the cannibals, and the Great Black One, Mahakala, together
with all his great retinue fled away.
Thereupon the Transcendent Lord Padmottama extended his elephant
trunk-like arms and offered the Bodhisattva Avalokiteshvara, the great
spiritual hero, a pearl necklace worth many hundreds of thousands, and
Avalokiteshvara, receiving that pearl necklace himself, offered it in turn to
the Saint, the Transcendent Lord, the perfectly enlightened Buddha
Amitabha. He in turn, receiving that necklace, again returned an offering to
the Transcendent Lord, the Saint, the perfectly enlightened Buddha
Padmottama. Thereupon the Transcendent Lord, the Saint, the perfectly
enlightened Buddha Padmottama, receiving this great science, the six
syllable mantra, returned to his Padma buddhaverse.
"Hey, noble one! Listen well, and keep this in your mind! In hell, heaven,
and the between, the body is born by apparition. But when the perceptions
of the mild and fierce deities arose in the reality between, you did not rec
ognize them. So after five and a half days, you fainted with terror. Upon
awakening, your awareness became clearer, and you immediately arose in a
likeness of your former body. As it says in the Tantra: 'Having the fleshly
form of the preceding and emerging lives, senses all complete, moving un
obstructed, with evolutionary magic powers, one sees similar species with
pure clairvoyance.'
"Here 'preceding' means that you arise as if in a flesh-and-blood body
determined by the instincts of your preceding life. If you are radiant and
have traces of the auspicious bodily signs and marks of a mythic hero, it is
because your imagination can transform your body; thus, that perceived in
the between is called a 'mental body.'
"At that time, if you are to be born as a god, you will have visions of the
heavens. If you are to be born as a titan, a human, an animal, a pretan, or a
hell being, you will have visions of whichever realm you will be born in.
'Preceding' here means that for up to four and a half days you experience
yourself as having a fleshly body of your previous life with its habitual in
stincts. 'Emerging' means that you begin to have visions of the place where
you are heading for rebirth . . . .
"Therefore do not follow after every vision that happens. Don't be at
tached to it! Don't adhere to it! If you are stubborn and attached to all of
them, you will roam in suffering through the six realms. Up until yesterday,
the visions of the reality between dawned for you, but you did not recog
nize them. So you have had to wander here now. So now if, without waver
ing, you can develop recognition, the spiritual teacher's orientation can
open your awareness of the clear light, the naked, pure, vibrant void. Enter
into it, relax into the experience of nonholding, nondoing! Without having ,
to enter a womb, you will 1be liberated.
"If you do not recognize the light, then meditate that your spiritual
teacher or archetype deity is present on the crown of your head, and devote
yourself totally with a forceful faith. It is so important! Do it without wa
vering again and again! "
Various Treasures of Tibetan Spiritual Culture 271
So you should say. If the deceased recognizes the light at this point, she
will not wander in the six realms and will be liberated. But if the power of
negative evolution still makes this recognition difficult, you should again
speak as follows:
"Hey, noble one! Listen without your mind wandering! 'Senses all com
plete, moving unobstructed' means that even if in life you were blind, deaf,
crippled, and so on, now in the between, your eyes clearly discern forms,
your ears hear sounds, and so forth. Your senses become flawlessly clear
and complete . . . . Recognize this as a sign that you have died and are wan
dering in the between! Remember your personal instructions!
"Hey, noble one! What is 'unobstructed' is your mental body; your
awareness is free from embodiment and you lack a solid body. So now you
can move hither and thither everywhere through walls, houses, lands,
rocks, and earth, even through Meru, the axial mountain; except through a
mother's womb and the vajra throne at Bodhgaya. This is a sign that you
are wandering in the existence between, so remember the instructions of
your spiritual teacher! Pray to the Lord of Great Compassion!
"Hey, noble one! 'With evolutionary magic powers' means that you,
who have no special abilities or meditational magic powers whatsoever,
now have magic powers arising from the result of your evolution. In a split
second you can circle this four-continent planet with its axial mountain.
You now have the power just to think about any place you wish and you
will arrive there in that very instant. You can reach anywhere and return
just as a normal man stretches out and pulls back his arm. But these various
magic powers are not so miraculous; if you don't specially need them, ig
nore them! You should not worry about whether or not you can manifest
this or that, which you may think of. The fact is you have the ability to
manifest anything without any obstruction. You should recognize this as a
sign of the existence between! You should pray to your spiritual teacher!
"Hey, noble one! 'One sees similar species with pure clairvoyance'
means that beings of the same species in the between can see each other.
Thus if some beings are of the same species, all going to be reborn as gods,
they will see each other. Likewise other beings of the same species, to be
reborn in whichever in the six realms, will see each other. So you should
not be attached to such encounters! Meditate on the Lord of Great
Compassion!
" 'With pure clairvoyance' refers also to the vision of those whose pure
clairvoyance has been developed by practice of contemplation, as well as to
the vision of those whose divine power of merit has developed it. But such
272 ... E S S E N T I A L T I B ETA N B U D D H I S M
yogis or deities cannot always see between beings. They see them only
when they will to see them, and not when they do not, or when their con
templation is distracted.
"Hey, noble one! As you have such a ghostly body, you encounter rela
tives and familiar places as if in a dream. When you meet these relatives,
though you communicate with them, they do not answer. When you see
your relatives and dear ones crying, you will think, 'Now I have died, what
can I do?' You feel a searing pain, like a fish flopping in hot sand. But how
ever greatly you suffer, tormenting yourself at this time does not help. If you
have a spiritual teacher, pray to your spiritual teacher. Or else pray to the
compassionate archetype deity. Don't be attached to your loved ones-it is
useless. Pray to the compassionate ones, and do not suffer or be terrified!
"Hey, noble one! Driven by the swift wind of evolution, your mind is
helpless and unstable, riding the horse of breath like a feather blown on the
wind, spinning and fluttering. You tell the mourners, 'Don't cry! Here I
am!' They take no notice, and you realize you have died, and you feel great
anguish. Now, do not indulge in your pain! There is a constant twilight,
gray as the predawn autumn sky, neither day nor night. That kind of be
tween can last for one, two, three, four, five, six, or seven weeks-up to
forty-nine days. Though it is said that for most people the suffering of the
existence between lasts twenty-one days, this is not always certain due to
people's different evolutionary histories.
"You think, 'How nice it would be to have a new body!' Then you will
have visions of looking everywhere for a body. Even if you try up to nine
times to enter your old corpse, due to the length of the reality between, in
the winter it will have frozen, in the summer it will have rotted. Otherwise
your loved ones will have burned it or buried it or given it to birds and
beasts, so it affords no place to inhabit. You will feel sick at heart and will
have visions of being squeezed between boulders, stones, and dirt. This
kind of suffering is in the nature of the existence between. Even if you find
a body, there will be nothing other than such suffering. So give up longing
for a body! Focus yourself undistractedly in the experience of creative non
action!
" . . . Your body is mental, so even if it is killed and cut up, you cannot
die. In fact, your form is the void itself, so you have nothing to fear. The
yamas are your own hallucinations and themselves are forms of the void.
Your own instinctual mental body is void. Voidness cannot harm voidness.
Signlessness cannot harm signlessness. You should recognize that there is
nothing other than your own hallucination. There is no external, substan
tially existent yama, angel, demon, or buH-headed ogre and so on. You
must recognize all this as the between!
Various Treasures of Tibetan Spiritual Culture 273
Praise to Mahakala
HUM !
Homage to the swift Lokeshvara!
o Great Black Mahakala! You wear a tiger skin!
Your ankleted feet trample an obstructor!
Your six arms are adorned with snakelets;
The rights hold chopper and rosary
And fiercely rattle a damaru drum!
The lefts hold a skull bowl and a trident
And a noose with which you bind all demons!
Your face is fierce, you gnash your fangs!
Your three eyes bulge, your hair burns upward!
Forehead anointed with red lead powder,
Your crown is sealed with Akshobhya Buddha!
Your garland, fifty blood-soak'd human heads,
Your diadem, five bejeweled human skulls!
Various Treasures of Tibetan Spiritual Culture 27 5
BHYO H !
Mind-essence working the four miraculous activities,
Not deviant from the essence, neither being mind alone,
Absolute indivisible, free of color or form,
Her miracles mere magic, fitting each being's mind;
She manifests, she the peaceful Glory Goddess!
Peacemaker, Peace Being, her reality is peace,
Chief Lady of the retinue of peace,
Her symbolic body a perfectly pure white!
I bow to the all-peacemaking Mother Goddess!
Pray cease all disease, demons, and obstructions!
BHYO H !
Mind-essence working the four miraculous activities,
Not deviant from the essence, neither being mind alone,
Absolute indivisible, free of color or form,
Her miracles mere magic, fitting each being's mind;
She manifests, she the prospering Glory Goddess!
Growthmaker, Growth Being, her reality is growth,
Chief Lady of the retinue of growth,
Her symbolic body a perfect golden yellow!
I bow to the all-prospering Mother Goddess!
Please expand my life span and my merit!
BHYO H !
Mind-essence working the four miraculous activities,
Not deviant from the essence, neither being mind alone,
Absolute indivisible, free of color or form,
276 ;\) ES 5 ENTIAL T l B ETAN BUDDH!S M
Tenzin Gyatso,
His Holiness the Fourteenth Dalai Lama of Tibet
O S LO, DECE M B E R 1 0, 1 9 8 9
to learn to live in harmony and peace with each other and with nature.
That is not just a dream but a necessity. We are dependent on each other in
so many ways that we can no longer live in isolated communities and ig
nore what is happening outside those communities. We need to help each
other when we have difficulties, and we must share the good fortune that
we enjoy. I speak to you as just another human being, as a simple monk. If
you find what I say useful, then I hope you will try to practice it.
I also wish to share with you today my feelings concerning the plight
and aspirations of the people of Tibet. The Nobel Prize is a prize they well
deserve for their courage and unfailing determination during the past forty
years of foreign occupation. As a free spokesman for my fellow country
men and -women, I feel it is my duty to speak out on their behalf. I speak
not with a feeling of anger or hatred toward those who are responsible for
the immense suffering of our people and the destruction of our land,
homes, and culture. They too are human beings who struggle to find happi
ness and deserve our compassion. I speak to inform you of the sad situation
in my country today and of the aspirations of my people, because in our
struggle for freedom, truth is the only weapon we possess.
The realization that we are all basically the same human beings, who
seek happiness and try to avoid suffering, is very helpful in developing a
sense of brotherhood and sisterhood-a warm feeling of love and compas
sion for others. This, in turn, is essential if we are to survive in this ever
shrinking world we live in. For if we each selfishly pursue only what we
believe to be in our own interest, without caring about the needs of others,
we may end up harming not only others but also ourselves. This fact has
become very clear during the course of this century. We know that to wage
a nuclear war today, for example, would be a form of suicide; or that to
pollute the air or the oceans, in order to achieve some short-term benefit,
would be to destroy the very basis for our survival. As individuals and na
tions are becoming increasingly interdependent we have no other choice
than to develop what I call a sense of universal responsibility.
Today we are truly a global family. What happens in one part of the
world may affect us all. This, of course, is not only true of the negative
things that happen, but is equally valid for the positive developments. We
not only know what happens elsewhere, thanks to the extraordinary mod
ern communications technology, we are also directly affected by events that
occur far away. We feel a sense of sadness when children are starving in east
ern Africa. Similarly we feel a sense of joy when a family is reunited after
decades of separation by the Berlin Wall. Our crops and livestock are conta
minated and our health and livelihood threatened when a nuclear accident
Various Treasures of Tibetan Spiritual Culture 283
happens miles away in another country. Our own security is enhanced when
peace breaks out between warring parties on other continents.
But war or peace; the destruction or the protection of nature; the viola
tion or the promotion of human rights and democratic freedoms; poverty
or material well-being; the lack of moral and spiritual values or their exis
tence and development; and the breakdown or the development of human
understanding, are not isolated phenomena that can be analyzed and tack
led independently of one another. In fact, they are very much interrelated at
all levels and need to be approached with that understanding.
Peace, in the sense of the absence of war, is of little value to someone
who is dying of hunger or cold. It will not remove the pain of torture in
flicted on a prisoner of conscience. It does not comfort those who have lost
their loved ones in floods caused by senseless deforestation in a neighboring
country. Peace can last only where human rights are respected, where the
people are fed, and where individuals and nations are free. True peace with
ourselves and with the world around us can be achieved only through the
development of mental peace. The other phenomena mentioned above are
similarly interrelated. Thus, for example, we see that a clean environment,
wealth, or democracy means little in the face of war, especially nuclear war,
and that material development is not sufficient to ensure human happiness.
Material progress is of course important for human advancement. In
Tibet we paid much too little attention to technological and economic de
velopment, and today we realize that this was a mistake. At the same time,
material development without spiritual development can also cause serious
problems. In some countries too much attention is paid to external things
and very little importance is given to inner development. I believe both are
important and must be developed side by side so as to achieve a good bal
ance between them. Tibetans are always described by foreign visitors as
being a happy, jovial people. This is part of our national character, formed
by cultural and religious values that stress the importance of mental peace
through the generation of love and kindness to all other living sentient be
ings, both human and animal. Inner peace is the key: If you have inner
peace, the external problems do not affect your deep sense of peace and
tranquillity. In that state of mind you can deal with situations with calm
ness and reason, while keeping your inner happiness. That is very impor
tant. Without this inner peace, no matter how comfortable your life is
materially, you may still be worried, disturbed, or unhappy because of the
circumstances.
Clearly it is of great importance, therefore, to understand the interrela
tionship among these and other phenomena and to approach and attempt
284 ;\) E S S E N T i A L T I B ETAN BUDDHISM
to solve problems in a balanced way that takes these different aspects into
consideration. Of course it is not easy. But it is of little benefit to try to
solve one problem if doing so creates an equally serious new one. So really
we have no alternative; We must develop a sense of universal responsibility
not only in the geographic sense but also in respect to the different issues
that confront our planet.
Responsibility lies not only with the leaders of our countries or with
those who have been appointed or elected to do a particular job. It lies with
each of us individually. Peace, for example, starts within each one of us.
When we have inner peace, we can be at peace with those around us. When
our community is in a state of peace, it can share that peace with neighbor
ing communities and so on. When we feel love and kindness toward others,
it not only makes others feel loved and cared for but it helps us also to de
velop inner happiness and peace. And there are ways in which we can con
sciously work to develop feelings of love and kindness. For some of us, the
most effective way to do so is through religious practice. For others it may
be nonreligious practices. What is important is that we each make a sincere
effort to take seriously our responsibility for each other and for the natural
environment.
I am very encouraged by the developments that are taking place around
us. After the young people of many countries, particularly in northern
Europe, have repeatedly called for an end to the dangerous destruction of
the environment that was being conducted in the name of economic devel
opment, the world's political leaders are now starting to take meaningful
steps to address this problem. The report to the United Nations Secretary
General by the World Commission on the Environment and Development
(the Brundtland report) was an important step in educating governments
on the urgency of the issue. Serious efforts to bring peace to war-torn zones
and to implement the right to self-determination of some peoples have re
sulted in the withdrawal of Soviet troops from Afghanistan and the estab
lishment of independent Namibia. Through persistent nonviolent popular
efforts, dramatic changes, bringing many countries closer to real democ
racy, have occurred in many places, from Manila in the Philippines to
Berlin in East Germany. With the cold-war era apparently drawing to a
close, people everywhere live with renewed hope. Sadly, the courageous ef
forts of the Chinese people to bring similar change to their country was
brutally crushed last June. But their efforts too are a source of hope. The
military might has not extinguished the desire for freedom and the determi
nation of the Chinese people to achieve it. I particularly admire the fact
that these young people, who have been taught that "power grows from
the barrel of the gun," chose instead to use nonviolence as their weapon.
Various Treasures of Tibetan Spiritual Culture 285
arms but with the powerful weapons of truth and determination. I know
that I speak on behalf of all the people of Tibet when I thank you and ask
you not to forget Tibet at this critical time in our country's history. We too
hope to contribute to the development of a more peaceful, more humane,
and more beautiful world. A future free Tibet will seek to help those in
need throughout the world, to protect nature, and to promote peace. I be
lieve that our Tibetan ability to combine spiritual qualities with a realistic
and practical attitude enables us to make a special contribution in however
modest a way. This is my hope and prayer.
In conclusion, let me share with you a short prayer that gives me great
inspiration and determination:
For as long as space endures,
And for as long as living beings remain,
Until then may I, too, abide
To dispel the misery of the world.
Thank you.
Notes
INTRODUCTION
Shakyamuni, whose name literally means "the sage of the Shakya clan,"
was the historic Buddha of our era, living from ca. 563 B.C.E. to 4 8 3 B.C.E.
Tibetan Buddhists consider him the founder of the three main forms or Ve
hicles of Buddhism, the Monastic or Individual (Hinayana) , the Messianic
or Universal (Mahayana), and the Apocalyptic or Tantric (Vajrayana) Vehi
cles.
The brahmins were the priests of ancient Indian society, the mediators
between humans and the gods of the Vedic world, presiding over the sacri
ficial ritual that provided the main channel of communication with the di
vine. Their cosmology was based on a sense of better days in the past,
coupled with a sense of the present as a process of deterioration. This but
tressed their authoritarian mistrust of new generations, which caused them
to resist all change, innovation, and progress.
Tantra comes from a verb meaning "to weave" and a noun meaning
"thread." As a religious category it refers to methods of spiritual practice,
ways of transforming the ordinary world into a divine one, by weaving an
enlightened universe in place of the realm of suffering. It can also refer to a
set of texts that describe these methods. A mantra is a sacred sound, word,
or phrase that is magically creative in the sense that it can alter an old or
produce a new state of affairs by being repeated or, in some cases, even vi
sualized as letters. The use of mantras is central in most Tantric practices.
A Bodhisattva is a person, who can be animal or divine as well as
human, who has conceived the will to enlightenment and vowed to mani
fest the spirit of enlightenment, thus dedicating all his or her lives to the at
tainment of perfect Buddhahood for the sake of all beings.
Dharma has eleven main meanings, ranging from "thing," through
"quality," "duty," "law," "religion," "doctrine," and "teaching," up to
"truth," "reality," "absolute," and even "liberation" or "Nirvana." Whenever
292 NOTES TO INTRODUCTION
it is left untranslated and in upper case, it means the latter meanings, espe
cially "Truth" or "Free Reality. " Thus a Dharma king is a ruler who ac
knowledges the primacy of the higher reality of liberating Truth and rules
his country within an orientation toward that Truth.
Ganden, literally "the joyous heaven," is the Tibetan name for Tushita,
the heaven where Maitreya, the future Buddha, dwells. The residence of the
Dalai Lama incarnations in Drepung Monastery was called the Ganden
Palace because of the Dalai Lamas' association with the progressive, opti
mistic outlook of the Buddha who will visit the world in the future, enlight
ening millions of beings. When the Dalai Lamas became head of the
Tibetan government, after r 642, the government as a whole adopted the
name.
The Karmapa Lamas were the originators of the formal institution of
the recognized reincarnation. In the first decade of the thirteenth century a
small boy was recognized as the reincarnation of the great lama Karma
Dusum Kyenpa and was subsequently enthroned as Karma Pakshi, the Sec
ond Karmapa. The seventeenth Karmapa is currently recognized as incar
nate in not one but two young boys, who are being trained as spiritual
teachers.
Shambhala is a mythical country somewhere in the vicinity of Siberia or
the North Pole where most of the population is enlightened and life is gen
erally happy. This land is invisible to the rest of the world, except for a few
adepts, until a time a few centuries hence when it becomes visible and the
more unhappy people on outer earth try to conquer it. There ensues a sort
of Armageddon-like conflict, at the end of which life all over the world be
comes as idyllic as Shambhala had been for a lengthy period of centuries.
Shambhala is the basis of the modern legends of Shangri-la.
The Kalachakra (Time-wheel) Tantra is practiced by learned yogins and
yoginis who must first be initiated into the vision of the "Time-machine
Buddha" by entering the palace of this Buddha-deity. The architecture of
such a palace is represented by a geometric pattern that uses squares, circles,
symbols, and architectural elements to provide a sort of blueprint for the
three-dimensional building; this pattern is called a mandala, a sphere of
essence. For major initiation rituals conducted by lamas for large groups,
the monks create such a mandala using particles of fine sand mixed with
pure pigment. When you see this mandala, the seed of the vision of the full
blown mandala-palace is planted in the subconscious; years of focused med
itation are needed to grow this seed into a stable and transformative vision.
Pali was a literary language developed in Sri Lanka during the early cen
turies of the common era, based on the up-to-then orally transmitted litera
ture of the monastic Buddhist Scriptures, systematically memorized and
NOTES TO I NT R O D U C T I O N 293
preserved since the Buddha's time in a language resembling the spoken lan
guage of the Magadha region of central India (present-day Bihar province).
The word Hinduism originates from the Arabic and basically means no
more and no less than "Indian religion," i.e., religion in the Indian region.
It thus covers a great variety of religious forms and institutions, including
Indian Buddhism and Jainism. It is also used more narrowly to refer to
those forms of Indian religion that subscribe to the divine authorship of the
ancient Vedas, which Buddhists and Jains do not. Following this latter
usage, one tends to refer to non-Buddhist and non-Jain Indian religions as
"Hinduism," even though the various groups of believers in Shiva, Vishnu,
Indra, or Brahma had no such word to describe themselves.
The Mahayana (Universal Vehicle) Scriptures began to appear in India
around the first century B.C.E., starting with the Transcendent Wisdom
Scriptures, though there are no firm grounds for specific dating. By the time
of large-scale translation of these Scriptures into Chinese from the fourth
century C.E., there were thousands of texts, roughly the equivalent of forty
or fifty Bibles, in addition to a huge Sanskrit literature very similar to the
Pali collection of Scriptures.
A key point is that the Tibetan "Stages of the Path of Enlightenment"
teachings are not simply to be classified as exoteric, or "gradual" teaching,
the opposite of esoteric, "subitist," or mystical teachings. The path of en
lightenment genre evolved in the apocalyptic or Tantric context, in which
the stages of the foundational path are compressed and focused to prepare
for entry onto the Tantric Vehicle. In the same way, the Tantric "prelimi
nary practices" are merely prostrations, purifications, offerings, and so on,
but their special context and accompanying visualizations make them
Tantric prostrations and so on.
Once practitioners have achieved the prerequisite understanding of tran
scendent renunciation, compassionate commitment to all beings, and the
wisdom of selflessness, they have the freedom from programmed drives and
habitual self-image rigidity that enables them to begin a conscious process
of accelerating their evolution. This begins in initiation into a mandala, a
sacred alternative universe of an enlightened being, in this case the Buddha
archetype Hevajra, in order to reshape body and mind methodically ac
cording to the dictates of wisdom and compassion. This reshaping process
begins in the imagination, in what is called the creation stage, and con
cludes with rehearsals of actual death, out-of-body voyaging, ordinary
body reentry, and so on in what is called the perfection stage.
Morphic resonance is a term coined by the evolutionary biologist Rupert
Sheldrake to explain a statistical pattern he observed in primitive life-forms,
where the adopting of a particular pattern of behavior and embodiment by
294 NOTES TO CHAPTER I
beings transmuted into precious elixirs. The five hooks are various types of
flesh, such as beef and horse meat, and the five lamps are blood, urine, and
so forth, all internal substances usually thought of as impure but here trans
muted imaginatively into pure elixir of divine life.
The sixty-four arts of love are a standard set of erotic practices detailed
in the Kama Sutra literature. These heralds are different kinds of female an
gels, celestial, from imaginary realms, and from the subtle, subatomic di
mensions of bliss and ecstasy. Orgasmic (Skt. saha;a; Tib. [han skyes) is
usually translated euphemistically by "natural" or "spontaneous," or some
such, since erotic language seems out of place in "spiritual" contexts.
Bringing in the earthiness of Buddhist spirituality might cause misunder
standing in some, but it is a translator's duty to be as clear as the original.
Of course, orgasmic bliss does not refer only to the mechanical climax of
ordinary sexuality; it includes the ecstasy of the melting of the sense of rigid
boundaries between self and other that develops from the intensity of the
wisdom of selflessness, an ecstasy whose intensity departs from and goes
way beyond the bliss of ordinary sexual melting. The only other occasion
in ordinary sentient life where such bliss is inevitable is in the temporary
dissolution of individuation in the process of death, but dying bliss is
harder for most beings to remember than sexual bliss.
Tibetan medicine classifies diseases according to their principal causes,
which are the three disturbances, wind, bile, and phlegm, and their combi
nations, which correspond to the three emotional addictions of lust, hate,
and delusion and their combinations. Each of the four categories includes a
list of a hundred and one diseases, for a total of four hundred and four. Of
course, when these are analytically subdivided in diagnosis, there are thou
sands of different disorders.
Things are naturally free from signs because they have no intrinsic sig
nificance in themselves, significance being attributed to them by mental
habits of beings. When you look at the letter A, it seems to pronounce itself
inside your head, making the sound "aey," as if it emerged naturally from
the three lines of the letter. But a person who didn't know the roman alpha
bet wouldn't hear any "aey"; you don't hear it if you turn the letter upside
down or on its side. Thus the three lines are free from intrinsically being the
sign for the letter A or the sound "aey." If you think about this, you enter
the realm of understanding the profound and liberating Buddhist insight
into signlessness, closely related to selflessness, voidness, identitylessness,
and so on.
The three kindnesses of a mentor are the kindness of giving initiations
and vows, the kindness of transmitting inherited teachings, and the kind-
NOTES TO C H A PTER I 297
ness of giving personal instructions based on his or her own insight and re
alization.
Communion translates Tibetan zung 'jug, which refers to the interpene
trating union of compassion and wisdom, bliss and voidness, magic body
and clear light, at the fifth stage of the perfection stage, when the practi
tioner becomes a perfect Buddha. Vajradhara is the Tantric Buddha Arche
type Deity par excellence. I also translate Sanskrit Samaja in the name of
the Buddha of the Guhyasamajatantra as communion, as it ultimately
comes around to the same thing.
The ten excellent qualities of a mentor are mentioned in the Ornament
of the Universal Vehicle Scriptures, as ( I ) a just mind, (2) a concentrated
mind, (3 ) a wise mind understanding selflessness, (4) greater knowledge, ( 5 )
delight in teaching Dharma, (6) wide textual knowledge, (7) profound real
ization of voidness, ( 8 ) skill in teaching, (9) love for his or her disciples, and
( 10) enterprise in teaching.
The ten outer and ten inner abilities of a vajra mentor constitute a de
tailed list of a mentor's expertise in visualizing, meditating, creating man
dalas, performing rituals, conferring initiation, and so forth.
The five blissful clans are the Buddha clans that correspond to the five
aggregates, the Transcendent clan (form aggregate), the Jewel clan (sensa
tions), Lotus clan (ideas), Action clan (emotions), and Vajra clan (con
sciousnesses), whose fathers and mothers are respectively Vairochana and
Lochana, Ratnasambhava and Mamaki, Amitabha and Pandaravasini,
Amoghasiddhi and Tara, and Akshobhya and Vajradhatvishvari. All the
ways of dividing the elements, sense media, and body parts of the mentor
correspond to groups of Buddha deities in this visualization practice.
The hundred clans is an even more elaborate way of analyzing the
components of a Buddha mentor, moving the imagination toward the vi
sion of every atom and subatomic energy as a male or female Buddha or
Bodhisattva.
The four blocks are the emotional blocks of body, speech, and mind,
and the cognitive blocks that prevent omniscience. The four initiations are
the vase, secret, wisdom science, and word initiations that purify and em
power body, speech, mind, and intuitive wisdom and make possible the at
tainment of the Four Bodies of Buddhahood, the Emanation, Beatific,
Wisdom-Truth, and Reality-Truth Bodies.
The three sufferings are the suffering of change (ordinary happiness that
turns into suffering in time), the suffering of suffering (ordinary suffering),
and the suffering of creation (inherent in egocentric existence in any state
due to the inevitable dissolution of that state).
29 8 NOTES TO CHAPTER I
The five forces of the mind-cultivation ( blo spyong) tradition are those
of positive determination, habituation, eradication, positive accumulation,
and focused aspiration. They are elements of the process of conscious evo
lution from negative states of being toward more positive states.
The spirit of enlightenment (Skt. bodhichitta) is the will and determina
tion to become perfectly enlightened for the sake of all beings, in order to
have the ability to effectively help all beings find happiness. There are two
kinds of this spirit, the conventional spirit, which is the will to attain en
lightenment, and the ultimate spirit, which is the realization of the selfless
ness or voidness of all things from ignorance to enlightenment, which is the
Bodhisattva's awareness of the ultimate nonduality of enlightenment and
unenlightenment.
The mounting of give-and-take upon the breath refers to the visualiza
tion practice of giving all your own happiness to other beings and taking
upon yourself all their suffering, sending them your happiness with your
exhalation in the form of rays of light and taking in their suffering with
your inhalation in the form of clouds of darkness that are consumed in the
radiance of awareness of voidness in your heart and turned into the light of
happiness that floods back out to the beings.
The messianic vows are the Bodhisattva vows to become a Buddha to
free all beings from all sufferings, part of the conventional spirit of enlight
enment. The three ethics of the Supreme Vehicle are the ethics of restraint
of evil, of gathering virtue, and of benefiting others.
Reality is described as ultimately truth-free to indicate the nonabsolute
ness and therefore sheer relativity of all distinctions and rigid divisions,
even those between true and false, black and white, good and evil. Ultimate
truthlessness does not lead to the nihilism of relative truthlessness; it simply
takes away the absolutist sting of egotistical truth.
Nagarjuna was one of the greatest human teachers of ancient India living
a mythic six hundred years from ca. 50 B.C.E. to 5 50 C.E. He was especially
renowned for his discovery of the Universal Vehicle Scriptures, beginning
with the Transcendent Wisdom Scripture and for writing his profound man
ual called Wisdom. Tibetans also regard him as a founder of a major Tantric
tradition of practice, the noble tradition of the Esoteric Communion.
The dhuti or avadhuti nerve is the central channel of the yogic subtle
nervous system of nerve channels and wheel complexes. This channel runs
from midbrow up over the crown and down just in front of the spine to the
coccyx and thence up to the tip of the genitalia. It has a number of com
plexes, often five, the most important being that at the heart level, at the
height of the breasts. Here the Mentor is invited into the center of that
NOTES TO CHAPTER 2 299
heart-wheel complex, the Tantric seat of the soul, the subtle energy contin
uum of bodymind existence that is the essence of the selfless individual, mi
grating from life to life and ultimately reaching Buddhahood.
The five forces are the same as those identified on p. 298.
Soul-ejection ( 'pho ba) is a practice of forcefully pushing the subtle
bodymind of the practitioner out of the heart center up the central channel
and out of the coarse body into a rebirth in a Buddha-land. This is done to
ensure a positive rebirth in order to continue your practice of the path of
Buddhahood. It can also be done by a skilled yogin or yogini for the soul of
a dying person using special rituals and visualizations.
CHAPTER 2: Seeing the Buddha
At the beginning of each of the following chapters, I will quote a verse
or two from the Quintessence work, to link it, the heart of this Essential
book, with the texts in these chapters. For example, at the head of this
chapter, we see again the refuge formulation from the Mentor Worship.
The first refuge is the Mentor as indivisible from the Buddha, and so we
need to know more deeply what the Tibetan Buddhists think a Buddha is.
The chapter goes on to give us a Tibetan vision of the Buddha during his
life on earth and beyond.
Tse Chokling Yongdzin Yeshe Gyaltsen ( 1 71 3 - 1 79 3 ) was one of the
most famous teachers of the eighteenth century, offered the Ganden throne
at the head of the Geluk order, personal tutor of the Eighth Dalai Lama,
and a prolific author. Among his most famous works are his biographies of
the mentors of the path of enlightenment tradition, beginning with this bi
ography of Shakyamuni Buddha, written in the context of his collection of
biographies of all the "Path of Enlightenment" teachers. It is especially use
ful in our context because he tells the Buddha's story as Tibetans see it, with
a view to inspiring the spiritual practice of the audience.
A buddhaverse is a universe as seen in its reality by enlightened beings.
They are sometimes presented as celestial realms of perfect happiness, such
as the Sukhavati buddhaverse of the Buddha Amitabha. Other Mahayana
Scriptures make the point that this universe, in all its apparent ordinariness,
is the Saha (Barely Tolerable) buddhaverse of Shakyamuni Buddha, pre
sented to us ordinary beings in this way for the sake of our spiritual educa
tion and evolution.
Yama is the judge of the dead and the lord of the hells in Buddhist myth.
He employs numerous demon minions, called Yama-demons, who inflict
tortures on beings whose negative evolutionary habits have brought them
into these incarnations of paranoia.
300 NOTES TO C H A PTER 2
The Thirty-three heaven is the heaven presided over by the god Indra,
the king of the desire-realm gods in the Indian mythoverse. Like the Greek
Olympus, it is on the top of the axial mountain at the center of the flat
earth.
Incalculable eons are Indian time spans, billions of years long, measuring
the evolution and decay of universes, which have no first beginning, no "big
bangs," but do arise and dissolve in extremely long cycles, within a context
of an infinite expanse of other universes at other points in their own cycles,
that is, in a context of unlimited infinities and eternities of space and time.
The Akanishta heaven is the highest heaven of the form realm, that is, of
all spatial realms, since the formless realms have no coarse spatial exten
sion. It is in that sense on the event horizon between finitude and infinitude,
since the first formless realm is the realm of infinite space. It therefore in
cludes an infinite number of buddhaverses within its core region, known as
the Dense Array because it is the realm of immeasurable creativity, the
dwelling of various Creator Gods as well as of all Beatific Body Buddhas.
The five certainties of the Beatific Body of a Buddha are that its abode is
always Akanishta's "Dense Array" region, its time is until the end of cyclic
life of all beings, it is adorned with all auspicious signs and marks, its ret
inue is all enlightened Mahayana Bodhisattvas, and it articulates only the
Universal Vehicle teachings.
The Tushita (Tib. Ganden, "satisfaction") heaven is the desire-realm
heaven second above Indra's Thirty-three heaven, a heaven of solid plea
sure where Bodhisattvas descend to dwell in a staging area for their even
tual descent to the earth of human beings. At this point it may be useful to
present a table of the Indo-Tibetan cosmology of the heavens, human
realms, and lower depths (see the table on the opposite page).
In all these lavish descriptions, which Tibetans inherited from the lush
literary imagination of India, there are always eight of these and thirty-two
of those, and so forth, as if these were the invariant patterns that occur
when Buddhas are born and so forth.
The three lower states are hell, the hungry pretan realm, and the subhu
man animal realms. That the earth moves six ways means merely that it
shook in the four directions and up and down. The significance of this vio
lent but nondestructive quaking is that material solidity is subordinate to
the cosmic event of the birth of the great being.
Brahma is referring either to a former life of Buddha, when he was a
thousand-headed deity who gave away his life in order to receive a teaching
of the Dharma, or, perhaps more likely, to a thousand times when Buddha
was a human and gave his life away in order to receive teachings of the
Dharma.
THE B U D DH I ST WORLD OF THE THREE REALM S
F
o - beyond conscious/unconscious
R
R
E - absolute nothingness
M A
L
L - infinite consciousness
E
M
S
S - infinite space (mass)
F
o - immeasurable impartiality - Akanishtha, Visionary,
R Sublime, Carefree
M - Stable, Unconscious
- Fruitful, Meritorious
R - Cloudless
E - Supernal Beauty
A - immeasurable joy - Boundless Beauty
L - Lesser Bea u ty
M - Clear Light
- immeasurable compassion - Boundless Light
- Lesser Light
- Great Brahma
- immeasurable love - Chief Brahma
- Lesser Brahma
The six kinds of beings are gods, antigods or titans, humans, animals,
pretans, and hell beings. The eighteen great omens are the usual sort of mir
acles, lights shining, flowers blooming out of season, angels appearing, jew
els appearing, and so on. The Saha world is this universe as a buddhaverse,
and at such moments the ground becomes smooth and even, soft, lumi
nous, and jewellike. A kinnara is a sort of reverse centaur, i.e., a being with
a human body and a horse's head. Kinnaras live in the mythical Himalayas
and are associated with erotic pleasure, aesthetics, music, magic, and po
etry. The seven treasures of a noble person are faith, justice, learning, gen
erosity, conscience, consideration, and wisdom.
Various precious offering objects, even mansions, are made of seven jew
els, the standard list including diamond, ruby, sapphire, emerald, topaz,
beryl, and lapis.
The three wretched or horrid states are the hells, pretan realms, and ani
mal realms. The vision here is that the light-rays from the Buddha were so
powerful that they pulled beings out of these dreadful realms and set them
around him in the park.
The spell of Shankara (Skt. dharani) is for pacifying any disturbance,
Shankara meaning "peacemaking." I have not yet found the actual spell.
I have not been able to find the proper Indian spelling of the Anga king's
name, so I have used the Tibetan transliteration, Shunchidala.
The Three Baskets are the three divisions of the exoteric Buddhist
Scriptures, the Discipline, the Discourses, and the Sciences ( Vinaya-Sutra
Abhidharma) . The four divisions of the Tantras are the Action, Per
formance, Yoga, and Unexcelled Yoga Tantra divisions.
The three realms of cyclic life are the realms of desire, form, and form
lessness; see the cosmology chart in the notes to chapter 2.
The eight worldly concerns are for profit and loss, fame and notoriety,
praise and blame, pleasure and discomfort.
This song of Milarepa occurs in the compilation The Hundred Thousand
Songs of Milarepa. Milarepa lived in the eleventh and twelfth centuries, and
his many songs have come down in many recensions. The basis for this
translation is the compilation by Tsangnyon Heruka ( 14 5 2-1 5°7). This was
previously translated, rather freely, by G. C. C. Chang, in a seminal publica
tion, The Hundred Thousand Songs of Milarepa (New York: University
Books, 1962; rpt. Boston: Shambhala, 1994).
The primary mentor of a practitioner, the one upon whom he or she re
lies as icon to develop awareness of the immediacy of the perfect Buddha, is
called the root mentor (Tib. rtsa bai bla rna).
The triad, base, path, and fruit is common to all Tibetan path teachings.
Milarepa approaches the triad from a fruitional viewpoint, where you pro
ject yourself into nonduality at the start, immersing yourself in reality right
away; you proceed on the path without considering it apart from the goal,
and you deepen your experience of the fruit of intimate, ecstatic union with
all beings and things, where your every experience is timelessly sealed with
the stamp of bliss-void-indivisible.
Ankay! seems to be a way of saying "wow! " or "whoopee! " in Peldar
Boom's local dialect.
Now that Peldar Boom has recognized Milarepa and asked for teach
ings, note how he gets right down to earth and makes her aware of her day
to-day bad habits. The mentor's instructions are personal in this way, not
consisting of highflown secret teachings but exposing the real problems in a
person's life.
"Dromtonpa's Outline of the Path" is also from the Sayings of the
Kadampa Mentors, discussed above. The last few selections in this section
provide overviews of the path that proceeds from the recognition of the
Buddha through the mentor.
Gampopa ( 1°79-1 1 5 3 ) was one of the main disciples of Milarepa. He
founded the Kagyu order as a monastic tradition, combining the personal
instruction meditation traditions from Marpa and Milarepa with Kadam
order monastic curricula. His main way of presenting the path can be con
densed into the precious four themes.
Sachen Kunga Nyingpo ( 1092-1 1 5 8 ) was the second important founder
of the Sakya order. As a young man he received a direct revelation from the
304 NOTES TO C H A PTER 4
Bodhisattva Manjushri giving this set of four themes for practice of the
basic path.
Tsong Khapa ( 1 3 5 7- 1 4 1 9 ) was considered an incarnation of Manjushri,
but he also received a personal revelation from the Bodhisattva in the early
1 3 90S while meditating on the roof of the Jokang Cathedral of Lhasa. The
"Three Principles of the Path" then revealed were considered a seed of his
massive work, Lam Rim Chenmo, the Great Stages of the Path.
CHAPTER 4: Practicing Transcendent Renunciation
Kunkyen Longchen Rabjam ( 1 3 °8-1 3 63 ) was the greatest author of the
Nyingma order, who formulated the basic curriculum of the school, synthe
sizing traditions of ancient teachings from the dynastic period of Tibetan
Buddhism in the eighth and ninth centuries with the latest developments in
Kadam, Sakya, and Kagyu order teachings. In translating this section from
his Treasury of Wish-Fulfilling Gems, chapters 1 3- 1 6, I was helped by a
preliminary version kindly done for me by my colleague Joseph Loizzo.
The Holy Ornaments are the great Mahayana Buddhist masters of classi
cal India, such as Nagarjuna and Asanga and their colleagues and successors.
The auspicious marks and signs are physical marks of a highly evolved
being, such as a crown dome, a golden complexion, wheel marks on palms
and soles, and a tuft of white hair at midbrow. World monarchs have these
signs, and perfect Buddhas have them to a much greater degree.
The three realms, already mentioned, are the realms of desire, form, and
formlessness.
A pretan is a life-form ranked between animal and hell being, often
translated "hungry ghost," based on the Chinese translation from the San
skrit preta. They are not ghosts but are solidly reborn in a realm whose
dominant characteristic is scarcity of food and drink. They are always tor
mented by hunger and thirst, their grotesque embodiments reflecting insa
tiable appetites, with gigantic stomachs, long, narrow throats, and so forth.
The eighteen voidnesses are the voidnesses of things, nothingnesses, in
trinsic realities, perceptions, and so forth up to the voidness of voidness.
The thirty-seven accessories to enlightenment are a famous set of facul
ties developed by the Buddhist practitioner, including the four foci of mind
fulness, the four authentic abandonments, the four magic powers, the five
spiritual faculties, the five strengths, the seven enlightenment accessories,
and the noble eightfold path. Faith, mindfulness, learning, diligence, samadhi,
ethics, conscience, authentic speech, livelihood, view, and various forms of
wisdom of selflessness-these are the kinds of faculties.
The six transcendences are the famous set of virtues, giving, ethics, tol
erance, enterprise, meditation, and wisdom.
NOTES TO C H A PTER 5 3 05
These lay and monastic vows are taken from Tsong Khapa's Great
Stages of the Path of Enlightenment. I include them here to show the prac
tical outcome of the contemplations so eloquently set torth by Longchen
Rabjampa. When people decide to use their human lives to best evolution
ary advantage, they naturally seek to commit themselves to a higher level
of ethical commitment, simplifying and focusing their lives in order to de
velop the contemplation and understanding necessary for real transfor
mation.
Purchok Ngawang Jampa Rinpoche ( 1 682-1762) was a famous teacher
of the eighteenth century, teaching the Seventh Dalai Lama and many other
eminent lamas, such as Jangkya Rolway Dorje. He sets forth in this text on
monastic vows the practical instructions for the ceremonies conferring
monastic ordination. I discovered in looking through previous anthologies
about Tibetan Buddhism that they focused only on the spectacular medita
tions, exotic rituals, and mystic realizations, while millions of Tibetans over
many centuries have been inspired by the Dharma to enter holy orders on
one level or another. So many did become religious, in fact, that the high
percentage of monastics in the Tibetan population was a distinctive charac
teristic of its modern (seventeenth to twentieth century) society.
CHAPTER 5 : Practicing the Loving Spirit of Enlightenment
Asanga (ca. fourth century C.E. ) was one of the eight greatest saints,
sages, and authors of classical Buddhist India. His sevenfold cause-and
effect precept for developing the spirit of enlightenment through recogni
tion of the motherhood of beings is what is called an oral tradition precept.
Asanga himself received it directly from Maitreya Bodhisattva, and he
handed it down to his disciples. Atisha brought it to Tibet, and it descended
in various lines to Tsong Khapa, from whom it descended through the
"Ganden" or "Ensa" oral tradition even to the present, especially to the
Fourteenth Dalai Lama. The original text of this selection is a commentary
on Tsong Khapa's Three Principles of the Path by the Fourth Panchen
Lama, Tenpai Nyima ( 1 781-1 8 5 3 ), which I translated thirty-two years ago
under the guidance of Venerable Geshe Wangyal; indeed the translation is
ornamented by Geshe Wangyal's own inimitable oral-commentary style. It
is also available in G. Wangyal, The Door of Liberation (Boston: Wisdom
Publications, 1 9 9 5 ) . I have modified the translation considerably for the
present edition, going back to the Tibetan original.
The "Eight Verses on Mind Development" were written in the Kadampa
tradition by Geshe Langri Tangpa Dorjey Sengey, who lived in the late
eleventh and early twelfth century. They are a most concise version of the ex
change of self and other precept for developing the spirit of enlightenment
306 NOTES TO CHAPTER 5
of love and compassion. This precept for conceiving the spirit is believed
to have been given by the Bodhisattva Manjushri to Shantideva, who passed
it down through successors in India until the time of the Guru Dharmakirti
of Suvarnadvipa (Java), when the transmission left India, in the early
eleventh century. Atisha went to Java to recover this precept, then took it to
Tibet with him, handing it on to Dromtonpa. Dromtonpa's main successor
was Potowa, who in turn handed the main transmission to Langi Thangpa.
For previous translation and commentary, see G. Rabten and G. Dhargyey,
Advice from a Spiritual Friend (London: Wisdom Publications, 1984).
Shantideva was a great Indian master who lived in the eighth century. His
story tells of a strange monk who seemed very lazy and nonconforming to
his teachers and fellow students. Derisively they called him Bhusuku, liter
ally "he who eats, sleeps, and defecates." He slept in classes, slept a lot
in the daytime, and had a good appetite. Finally it came his turn to present
his knowledge to the monastery or face expulsion. The whole community
turned out for the farce of Bhusuku giving a lecture. He prayed the night be
fore to Manjushri, the Bodhisattva of incisive wisdom. When he mounted
the podium, he asked the audience if they wanted a recital of teachings they
were familiar with or something unprecedented. " Oh, the latter by all
means! " they said. He then recited the eight hundred or so verses of the
Guide to the Bodhisattva Way of Life, profound in meaning and beautiful in
expression, one of the greatest classics in India or Tibet. Its Sanskrit original
still exists, with several commentaries, and its Tibetan translation is univer
sally used in the practice of Tibetan Buddhism. This selection, the passages
on cultivating tolerance, the remedy for hatred (from chapter 6), and com
passion through the precept of exchanging self and other (from chapter 8 ),
are considered the locus classicus for the transmission of this special precept,
the foremost upholder of which in the present day is His Holiness the Dalai
Lama. For previous translations, see Shantideva (S. Batchelor, trans.), Guide
to the Bodhisattva Way of Life (Dharamsala, India: Library of Tibetan
Works and Archives, 1979); the Dalai Lama, A Flash of Lightning in the
Dark of Night (Boston: Shambhala Press, 1994).
The section on cultivating compassion through the exchange of self and
other occurs in chapter 8 of Shantideva's great work. After exchanging self
and other, one looks upon oneself with the other's eyes and imagines see
ing oneself as inferior, equal, and superior with eyes of contempt, rivalry,
and jealousy. This is a powerful method of cultivating the ability to substi
tute other-concern for self-concern. I do not quote the verses on this prac
tice because this selection has become so long. Please consult the original
work.
N O T E S TO C H A PTER 6 307
The five body and mind processes are the five aggregate constituents of
body and mind already encountered above; to repeat, forms, sensations,
ideas, emotions, and consciousnesses.
"Establishing the Nature of Reality" is the eighteenth chapter of The
Treasury of Wish-Fulfilling Gems by the great Nyingma Lama Longchen
Rabjam discussed above (see notes to chapter 4).
Datura is the notorious "loco weed" that stimulates hallucinations in
cows and even humans, though it is used by shamans in the American south
west to teach to vision-questers the illusoriness of habitual objective reality.
" The wish-granting gem that fulfills both aims": both aims are aims of
self and other; enlightenment fulfills self-interest by being a state of perfect
and stable bliss, the highest happiness, unimaginable by those addicted to
fleeting pleasures, and fulfills other-interest by effortlessly extending itself
with the energy of such bliss to relieve the tensions of others and introduce
them to their own deeper blissful nature.
Late in life, around 1 4 1 4 C.E., Tsong Khapa wrote a more concise ver
sion of his Great Stages of the Path of Enlightenment, called, naturally
enough, the Short Stages of the Path. The next selection, " Tsong Khapa's
Medium-Length Transcendent Insi ght, " includes portions of the third sec
tion of this text, the section dealing with transcendent insight (Skt.
vipashyana) , the critical, analytic meditation used to develop transcendent
wisdom that understands the nature of reality. Quiescence is the other main
type of meditation, one-pointed, noncritical, thought-free meditation, used
to calm and sharpen the focus of the mind but unable by itself to provide
the meditator with new insight or deeper understanding. Enlightenment
and liberation must thus be achieved by an integrated approach, an ap
proach that focuses the acuity of the one-pointed mind on the task of criti
cal penetration of the true nature of reality. I published an earlier version in
The Life and Teachings of Tsong Khapa (Dharamsala, India: Library of
Tibetan Works and Archives, 198 3 ). I have here gone back to the original
and retranslated it to accord with my current translation usage.
Thatness is a Buddhist way of referring to the immanent ultimacy of all
things, perceived by wisdom as each thing's unique nonduality with the in
finite, called its thatness since its conventional name seems inadequate to
express its reality. It is sometimes opposed to "suchness," which designates
the transcendent ultimacy of all things, the fact that each thing's reality
transcends its conventional name and can appear only as if "such" as itself,
i.e., not quite only itself.
The Transcendence Vehicle is a way to refer to the exoteric Universal Ve
hicle in a context where the Tantra Vehicle is understood to be the esoteric
Universal Vehicle.
NOTES TO C H A PTER 6 3 09
The three lower Tantra divisions are those of Action, Performance, and
Yoga Tantras.
The philosopher-yogin-saints mentioned in "Conditions Necessary for
Transcendent Insight" constitute the pantheon of the Tibetan curriculum:
Nagarjuna (ca. 50 B.C.E.- 5 5 0 C.E. ! ) , Aryadeva (ca. second-fourth century),
Buddhapalita (ca. fifth century), Bhavaviveka (ca. fifth-sixth century),
Chandrakirti (ca. sixth-seventh century), Shantarakshita (ca. eighth cen
tury), and Kamalashila (eighth-ninth century) were the greatest teachers of
the centrist (Madhyamika) tradition of critical philosophy within which
Tsong Khapa here writes.
I use addiction to translate Tibetan nyon mongs, which means a dis
torted emotional or conceptual state, such as hatred or confusion, which
takes over your mind and drives you to involuntary thoughts and acts.
They are addictive in that they trick you into thinking your following their
dictates will bring you satisfaction, yet they actually put you in states where
you feel all the more unsatisfied. Addictive misknowledge is the instinctual
level of delusion described below, contrasted with cognitive misknowledge,
which is simply the failure to know realities.
The following discussion may seem rather technical in nature, but I can
not emphasize enough the importance of this type of teaching within the
Tibetan curriculum, a teaching that demonstrates the supremely intelligent
approach the Tibetan Buddhists have developed, building on the knowl
edge of their Indian ancestors, for dealing with the psychology of identity.
The misknowledge described in such detail is basically the misappropria
tion of identity-the reification and rigidification of identity, of self, in sub
jects and objects-that traps conscious beings in an oppressive world in
which the self-absolutized subjectivity is constantly being overwhelmed by
a massive and inescapable universe of objectivities. Overcoming this mis
knowledge leads to the wisdom that sees through the alienation and discov
ers the freedom and relationality revealed when the intrinsic identity habit
is discarded. For further details about this, see my Central Philosophy of
Tibet (Princeton, N.J.: Princeton Univ. Press, 1984); and my Life and Teach
ings of Tsong Khapa (Dharamsala, India: Library of Tibetan Works and
Archives, 1 9 8 3 ) .
It may b e useful to list the types of misknowledge Tsong Khapa discusses
in a single list:
presumed self must either be the same as the bodymind processes or differ
ent from them, and that there is no third option
3 . The key of ascertaining the lack of true sameness
4. The key of ascertaining the lack of true difference
"Praise of Buddha Shakyamuni for His Teaching of Relativity" was writ
ten by Tsong Khapa on the morning of his final enlightenment, in 1 3 9 8 , in
his retreat cave on Oede Gungyel Mountain above Olkha. For further infor
mation, see my Central Philosophy of Tibet (Princeton, N.].: Princeton Univ.
Press, 1984), wherein I published an earlier version of my translation, along
with considerable biographical detail and commentary in an introduction.
"Discovery of Mother Voidness" was written at the sacred mountain Wu
Tai Shan in Shensi province of China by the great Mongolian lama Jankya
Rolway Dorje ( 1 7 1 7- 1 7 8 6 ) . Like the previous poem written by Tsong
Khapa, it fits into the literary category of "Enlightenment Song" (Tib. Ita
NOTES TO C H A PTER 7 3II
mgur), being an expression of joy and appreciation in the euphoria and lu
cidity of just having attained a comprehensive freedom from ageless suffer
ing and anxiety. The Mother symbolism here is poignant, building on ancient
traditions. Transcendent Wisdom herself is called Mother of all Buddhas;
wisdom is associated with female, and compassion with male.
"Some of the bright ones of our school . . . ": here Rolway Dorje cri
tiques his colleagues in the Geluk order for overintellectualizing the matter
and not putting the vital point of selflessness into practice.
"The systematists . . . ": here he critiques various Indian Buddhist
philosophers and those in Tibet still caught up in their theoretical postures,
misperceiving the white elephant of reality as tiger, monkey, and bear.
"The many sages . . . ": here he teases the many Tibetan sages in various
orders, repeating their many highflown phrases for ultimate reality, conced
ing their correctness, but then challenging them to press themselves inter
nally (symbolized by pressing their fingers on their own noses), "Do I really
understand it all that well myself?"
From "Cheer up" on he proceeds, not to reject any of the Indian or Ti
betan sages he has named, but rather to agree with them all, embracing all
their understandings in the ecstasy of his own fresh vision of reality, con
cluding with apologies for any brusqueness of manner.
recitation manual for the creation stage yoga of the Esoteric Communion
Archetype Deity, was arranged by Tsong Khapa, combining the Indian
Guhyasamaja literature with the personal instructions of the Adepts de
scending from Nagarjuna and disciples through the agency of the great
Adept Naropa and the Tibetan translator Marpa. It was polished and re
fined in subsequent centuries in the Tantric monasteries of the Geluk order.
The version here translated in abbreviated form is that used by the Namgyal
Monastery of the Potala, currently in exile in Dharamsala; it shows by the
mentors listed in its spiritual salutation that it was fixed in the late eigh
teenth century, in the time of the Eighth Dalai Lama.
The contents of this manual are meant for recitation in a slow chant,
punctuated by musical interludes during the sense-offering sequences,
while the detailed visualizations of body and mind, self and others in this
celestial mandala environment are to be vividly contemplated in the mind's
eye. You should not try to visualize these deities, and especially not project
yourself into being the main deity, unless you are initiated into the practice.
3 12 N O T E S TO CHAPTER 7
I include this manual here to show the reader the essence of the Tibetan
Buddhist Unexcelled Yoga Tantra creation stage practice, since hundreds of
thousands of lamas over millennia have assiduously performed it and have
developed the ability to see with the inner eye these elaborate alternative di
mensions in all their jeweline beauty and detail.
The main point of the creation stage is given in the "Quintessence" verse
repeated at the head of the chapter, to use the disciplined imagination in
meditation to cleanse one's habits of perception and conception of the solid
ity of the suffering-bound ordinary world and the ordinary self. One thereby
creates an imaginative, holographic blueprint for an enlightened, divine
world where self and others may enjoy the perfect happiness of wisdom and
compassion. Environment is visualized as divine residence, and self is visual
ized as Buddha-deity, death is visualized as Truth Body of the absolute, be
tween state is visualized as Beatific Body, and life-state is visualized as
Emanation Body. Once persistent meditation, visualization, and focused sta
bilization have enabled you to enter such a world completely in imagina
tion, you are ready to enter the perfection stage practices, where you begin a
process of transformation to develop the ability actually to enter such di
mensions, to change your embodiment, and to change your mentality, tra
versing at will the realms of death, between, and alternative life-worlds.
In the benedictory verses at the end, there are numerous allusions to
practices and lists of items that may pique the reader's curiosity. I include
the verses for their beauty and the outline they provide of the path of Unex
celled Yoga Tantra. There is no space here to annotate these allusions thor
oughly.
The Inner Sacrifice is a visualizational and ritual simulation of a holy
grail, a grail with the magical power to transmute the ordinary poisons of
egocentric life into elixirs of enlightened immortality.
The meditator as Akshobhyavajra in the center of the mandala visual
izes that the deities sitting and standing around the jewel mansion are
drawn on light-rays into positions on his (even if the meditator is a woman
in ordinary life, she visualizes herself here as male) body, and then those
miniaturized deities in those spots dissolve into light as one's body dissolves
into light as the death-dissolution sequence ensues. With the mantra OM
SHUNYATA, etc., one imagines oneself as dissolved into the absolute as at
death, but here one's infinite awareness is the Truth Body of all Buddhas.
The Supreme Triumph over Evolution visualization is very complicated,
involving a sending out of the deities visualized within the micro-mandala
in the drop in the sexual center of the male-female union where they go out
into the ordinary world as light-rays and transform all its negative aspects
into positive ones, thus making the bliss-void-wisdom of the mandala tri-
N O T E S TO CH APTER 8 313
umph over the miserable ignorance of the evolutionary world. It is not nec
essary to elaborate more here, as anyone trying actually to do this visual
ization would have to receive initiation and formal training.
The triply enfolded spiritual heroes refers to visualizing oneself on the
coarse level as Akshobhyavajra with three faces, six arms, and so on in the
ordinary scale of the mansion and others, here called the Devotee Hero. In
one's heart is again oneself as a thumb-size Guhyasamaja deity with one
face and two arms, called a Wisdom Hero. In his heart again is a mustard
seed-size dark blue HUM letter, shining with rainbow light-rays, called a
Samadhi Hero.
CHAPTER 8: Practicing the Perfection and Great Perfection Stages
The realm of the perfection stage, or of the great perfection, depending
on which system you use to approach it, is the realm of the deepest mystery
and the most incredible magic in the Tibetan tradition. It is the realm of
practice of the Tibetan Adepts, whom I have called psychonauts, by anal
ogy with our astronauts-i.e., those highly trained scientists who are also
courageous explorers of the most far-out dimensions of reality as they have
discovered it. I have discussed their world somewhat in the introduction to
my recent translation of The Tibetan Book of the Dead (New York: Ban
tam, 1994). In this chapter I present a glimpse of the vast literature of this
most advanced region of the Tibetan evolutionary path.
The first work is an excerpt from Five Stages of the Perfection Stage by
Nagarjuna, considered by Tibetans to be the same Nagarjuna as the great
centrist philosopher, though modern scholars do not accept this, since it
involves crediting the Indo-Tibetan belief in the six-century longevity of
Nagarjuna. Though a work originally produced in India, it is considered
a fundamental codification of the yogic instruction in the practice of the
perfection stage. It serves as the basis of numerous Tibetan works on the
perfection stage, the most important of which is Tsong Khapa's Extremely
Brilliant Lamp of the Five Stages, which I have been working on for ten
years and hope to finish in 1996. After much deliberation, I decided it is
perfect to excerpt for this chapter to convey the essence of this most ad
vanced dimension of essential Tibetan Buddhism. An extra advantage is
that it also connects with the Esoteric Communion, which was presented as
the example of the creation stage.
The five stages of the perfection stage are counted in various ways; here
they are counted as ( I ) vajra repetition (sometimes called speech isolation),
(2) mind-objective (or mind isolation), ( 3 ) self-anointment (sometimes
called magic body), (4) universal enlightenment (sometimes called clear
light), and ( 5 ) communion, which is the same as perfect Buddhahood. The
314 NOTES TO C H A PT E R 8
Indeed, this is why they need each other, since the stabilization of a specially
balanced contemplative sexual union is the only state other than actual
death through which all of the ten neural winds can be forced to dissolve in
the central channel, thereby breaking the compulsive connection of the
yogin and yogini with their habitual coarse body. After having attained that
stage and thus being ready for the self-empowerment teaching, yogin and
yogini, though they love each other totally and universally, are colleague
psychonauts, not merely pair-bonded ordinary egocentric mates. Thus, in
the process of going further into the realm of subtle body practice, voyaging
into out-of-body practices of magic body and clear light, they are naturally
willing to give each other away, especially to the all-important mentor, at the
moment of receiving the "jumping-off" instructions in the magic body. For
a fascinating discussion of this issue, see Miranda Shaw, Passionate Enlight
enment (Princeton, N.J.: Princeton Univ. Press, 1 994).
The three luminances (Skt. aloka) are the three intuitive wisdoms that
occur when the yoginli enters the final phase of the dissolution process. It
has eight stages: ( I ) earth dissolves into water, (2) water into fire, ( 3 ) fire
into wind, (4) wind into gross consciousness, ( 5 ) gross consciousness into
luminance, (6) luminance into luminance-radiance, (7) luminance-radiance
into luminance-imminence, and ( 8 ) luminance-imminence into clear-light
translucency, the ultimately subtle state. The subjective signs of these disso
lutions are, respectively, ( I ) mirage, (2) smoke, ( 3 ) fireflies, (4) candle
flame, ( 5 ) moonlit sky, (6) sunlit sky, (7) blacklit sky, and ( 8 ) predawn gray
lit twilight sky. The three luminances, or luminance intuitions, are states
( 5 ), (6), and (7)·
"The Natural Liberation Through Naked Vision" is an important for
mulation of the Nyingma tradition's Great Perfection teachings, attributed
to Padma Sambhava, later discovered by the treasure-finder Karma Lingpa.
I take this excerpt from my full-length translation, published as an appen
dix to my Tibetan Book of the Dead (New York: Bantam, 1994).
It is clear that this teaching very much resembles the communion teach
ings of the perfection stage. It teaches the most advanced, radical vision of
nonduality, the Buddha-vision accessible to the psychonaut once he or she
has been able consciously to traverse the death experience and can remem
ber the clear-light translucency of ultimate mind.
CHAPTER 9: Various Treasures of Tibetan Spiritual Culture
light of Tibetan myth, since this Sutra is one of the first Buddhist texts tu
come to Tibet. Legend has it arriving miraculously from the air on the roof
of the palace of King Lha Totori Nyentsen. It was kept there and revered,
and three generations later Tibetans learned to read it!
This eulogy to the Twenty-one Taras must be included, since so many
Tibetans of all walks of life have it memorized and recite it up and down
the mountains, day in and day out. Tara is the Mother Mary figure for all
Tibetans. So all-encompassing is her presence, she is invoked daily in these
main twenty-one forms, though Tibetans believe her to be functioning in
limitless forms, for the sake of all beings. For an earlier translation of this
homage, see M. Willson, In Praise of Tara (London: Wisdom Publications,
1982). For the iconography of Tara, see Rhie and Thurman, Wisdom and
Compassion: The Sacred Art of Tibet (New York: Abrams, 199 1 ) .
"Description of the Between" comes from my translation of The Ti
betan Book of the Dead (New York: Bantam, 1994). I include it to give the
reader a brief description of the between (Tib. bardo; Skt. antarabhava)
state, the subjective experience of beings after death and before the next re
birth. Though this idea was inherited from Indian Buddhism, the Tibetans
developed it carefully and incorporated it in the very heart of their culture,
which helped them cope with death, both of loved ones and of themselves,
and gave their lives the dimension of being open both to the subtle dimen
sion and to a limitless future.
Mahakala was a demon who was once unleashed upon the world and
was tormenting even the gods with his greed and aggression, as the god
Brahma had given him the boon that no outside enemy could defeat him.
The Bodhisattvas Manjushri and Avalokiteshvara teamed up, transformed
themselves into a horse and a pig, entered his mouth and anus, and then
began to expand in size. When the demon, about to explode, begged to sur
render, the Bodhisattvas chained him up and then began a process of con
verting him to gentleness and compassion. Eventually he became a protec
tor of the Dharma, a fierce cherubim or seraphim, using his demonic strength
to keep lesser evil spirits and calamities at bay. He is propitiated by most
Tibetans in one of his many forms. This short invocation, " Praises of Var
ious Fierce Protectors," is from the equivalent of the "Book of Common
Prayer," published in Dharamsala.
Shri Devi is the fiercest form of Tara. Art historians and mythographers
associate her with the Hindu goddess Kali. She has become thoroughly do
mesticated in Tibet, serving as special protectress of the Dalai Lamas and
the nation. Her "soul-lake" is in central Tibet, and is used as an oracular
mirror by high lamas when they go to search for the reincarnation of a
Dalai or a Panchen Lama.
NOTES TO CHAPTER 9 3 [7
Yama is the god of death, inherited from India by the Tibetans. Tsong
Khapa was considered an incarnation of Manjushri, who himself adopts
his fiercest form of Yamantaka (Killer of Death) when he confronts Death
and overwhelms him so that all beings, including Death, can become im
mortal. Tsong Khapa had a vision of Yama, now redeemed as a protector
of the Dharma, and left this famous invocation.
Vaishravana is the guardian deity of the north and the jolly god of
wealth (perhaps an Indo-Tibetan archetype of Santa Claus ! ) . He is con
stantly invoked by Tibetans, who ask his help to keep the economy in good
shape so that the spiritual institutions may be handsomely supported.
Setrabjen (Rhino Breastplate Wearer) is a typical Tibetan fierce deity,
one who can be invoked to protect against more local, not only spiritual,
difficulties. The author of this invocation is a lama who lives and teaches in
the United States, the reincarnation of an abbot of the Tantric University of
Upper Lhasa, which was located in the Ramochey National Cathedral.
" Prayer of the Word of Truth," written by the Dalai Lama some years
after his escape from the Chinese Red Army into exile in India, has become
something of a hymn for the Tibetan exile community around the world.
The Word of Truth is a Buddhist concept, indicating the Buddhist faith that
if one sincerely upholds the truth, its simple power will eventually over
whelm injustice, the might of arms and numbers, and lies and negativity,
and the good, the right, and the innocent will prevail. It is closely associ
ated with the Gandhian idea of "truth upholding" (satyagraha) , which is
the heart principle underlying nonviolent social action. This is a principle
that the Dalai Lama and the majority of Tibetans have steadfastly clung to,
in spite of the lethal persecution and official neglect they have suffered for
nearly half a century.
I close this Essential book with this last selection, the very moving
speech given by His Holiness the Dalai Lama in Oslo, on the occasion of
his being awarded the Nobel Prize for Peace, which I include by kind per
mission of Snow Lion Publications, Ithaca, New York, who originally pub
lished it in America in the Dalai Lama, A Policy of Kindness ( 1990). In it
we can hear the echo of the compassion and universal responsibility teach
ings given here in chapter 5, as well as the wisdom teachings in chapter 6. It
also concludes our journey in this book on a positive note, on the manifes
tation of the wisdom and compassion of Tibet. He reaches out from Tibet's
own darkest hour into our modern world and offers all of us from all na
tions a vision of a positive twenty-first century, at a time when things still
seem quite worrisome.
(continued from front Hap)
'ibetan Buddbis
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