Open Mind
eBook - ePub

Open Mind

View and Meditation in the Lineage of Lerab Lingpa

  1. 424 pages
  2. English
  3. ePUB (mobile friendly)
  4. Available on iOS & Android
eBook - ePub

Open Mind

View and Meditation in the Lineage of Lerab Lingpa

About this book

Get to know the teachings and legacy of the celebrated Lerab Lingpa, the influential confidant of the Thirteenth Dalai Lama, in this collection of practical instructions on the Great Perfection and reflections on the nonsectarian ( rimĂ© ) approach to Tibetan Buddhism. Lerab Lingpa (1856–1926), also known as Tertön Sogyal, was one of the great Dzogchen (Great Perfection) masters of the nineteenth and early-twentieth centuries and a close confidant and guru of the Thirteenth Dalai Lama. This volume contains translations by B. Alan Wallace of two works that are representative of the lineage of this great "treasure revealer, " or tertön. The first work, composed by Lerab Lingpa himself, is The Vital Essence of Primordial Consciousness. It presents pith instructions on all the stages of the Great Perfection, which is the highest form of meditation and practice in the Nyingma school of Tibetan Buddhism. In this practice, the meditator comes to see directly the ultimate nature of consciousness itself. The work guides the reader from the common preliminaries through to the highest practices of the Great Perfection—the direct crossing over and the achievement of the rainbow body. The second work, Selected Essays on Old and New Views of the Secret Mantrayana, is a collection of seven essays by two of Lerab Lingpa's close disciples, Dharmasara and JĂ© Tsultrim Zangpo. Dharmasara wrote six of the essays, providing detailed, erudite explanations of the compatibility among the theories and practices of Great Perfection, Mahamudra (a parallel practice tradition found in other schools), and the Madhyamaka view, especially as these are interpreted by the Indian pandita Candrakirti, the Nyingma master Longchen Rabjam, and Tsongkhapa, founder of the Geluk school of Tibetan Buddhism. The one essay by JĂ© Tsultrim Zangpo (a.k.a. Tulku Tsullo), "An Ornament of the Enlightened View of Samantabhadra, " contextualizes the Great Perfection within the broader framework of Mahayana and Vajrayana Buddhism and then elucidates all the stages of practice of the Great Perfection, unifying the profound path of cutting through and the vast path of the spontaneous actualization of the direct crossing over. This volume will be of great interest for all those interested in the theory and practice of the Great Perfection and the way it relates to the wisdom teachings of Tsongkhapa and others in the new translation schools of Tibetan Buddhism.

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Yes, you can access Open Mind by Eva Natanya, B. Alan Wallace in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in Theology & Religion & Buddhism. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.

Information

INDEX
A
Abhirati, 112
absolute space of phenomena (Tib. chos kyi dbyings, Skt. dharmadhātu)
bodhicitta and, 37–38
in death and dying, 47
in direct crossing over, 80
energy-mind dissolving into, 194
five expanses of, 9 (See also primordial consciousness, five facets of)
generation and completion in, 64
in guru yoga, 45
nature of mind and, 48
perfection of, 5–6
primordial consciousness of, 10
and pristine awareness, instruction on forcefully merging, 105–6
accomplishment, path of, 128
accomplishment, primordial consciousness of, 10
accomplishments, two. See goals, two
accumulation, path of, xxxvi, 194, 195
accumulations, two, 54, 206, 222
in Great Perfection, 153
middle way and, 247, 294
perfecting through Mahāyoga, 229
preliminary practice of accumulating, 41–43
actions, illusion-like phenomena and, 260–61, 301–2
activities
four daily, 36–37
nine kinds, 75, 200–201
Adhicitta, 13–14
Advayavajra (aka Avadhƫtipa), 215
affirmation, 83, 263, 271–72, 274, 298
aggregates, 10
in direct crossing over, 93, 96, 97
of illusory body, 169
at liberation, 217
negation and, 272
as nominal designation, 258–59
refined into body of light, 203
as source of suffering, 115–16
AkaniáčŁáč­ha, 12, 13, 26, 141, 236
AkáčŁobhya, 16, 112, 235n3
ambrosia, 41–43, 102, 116
Amitābha, 15, 112, 235n3
Amoghasiddhi, 15, 112
analogies and metaphors
acquaintance, meeting, 190–91
Anantayaƛas, 213, 264
aƛoka tree, 129
bee seeking nectar, 98–99
brook, 106
butter lamp and sketch of one, 134
cataracts, person with, 259, 268, 269–70, 275, 296–97
child crawling onto mother’s lap, 105–6
consonants, 170, 172
deer and mirage, 29
dog finding meat, 204
elephant’s footprints, seeking, 72
enemy, mistaking for friend, 180
face ...

Table of contents

  1. Cover Page
  2. Title Page
  3. Contents
  4. Foreword by H. H. the Dalai Lama
  5. Preface
  6. Translator’s Introduction
  7. The Vital Essence of Primordial Consciousness
  8. Selected Essays on Old and New Views of the Secret Mantrayāna
  9. Glossary
  10. Bibliography
  11. Index
  12. About the Translator
  13. Take Online Courses with B. Alan Wallace
  14. Also by B. Alan Wallace
  15. About Wisdom Publications
  16. Copyright