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Keywords and main points: Vajrapani short mantra, Padmasambhava short mantra, Simhamukha mantra. Tara short mantra, Vajrasattva short mantra, significance of 1 M recitations as deity yoga connection, importance of protector practice, authorizations for deity yoga practices, book "Dakini Teachings" by Guru Padmasambhava.
"The fault, dear Brutus, is in ourselves, that we are slaves."
Julius Caesar, in the play by Shakespeare
This is a long post. It covers a lot of tantric Buddhist theory and practice. It was originally written as a direct response to Matt in a thread he started on this tribe Tibetan Buddhist. It grew, because I had to provide the right context and an overall view, one which is so often lacking, and certainly not well communicated among the claimed sangha.
I know about major empowerments and sustained deity yoga practice. I have over sixty eight full Vajrasattva empowerments, and have been practicing mantrayana for thirty years.
I myself am not a Tibetan Buddhist per se, but rather a Sanskrit Buddhist. I did well over ten thousand hours of Sanskrit recitation as Vajrayana sadhana, and am providing a clear and definite response to specific and general issues regarding Mantrayana practice, including a whole set of teachings by Padmasambhava, as a book reference.
Why? Well, it's a primary teaching responsibility, and this is how I teach. Nobody here can break this teaching, in whole or in part. I'd be amused to see anyone try. This teaching is classical, tested, and proven. And quite universal, really. Works great for householders.
It is not intended as specific guidance for any one person, nor is there any claim made for efficacy regarding any one specific need. I always explicitly disavow such claims.
If you know of anything better, by all means do it. If you somehow dislike this classical mahayana dharma or somehow can't understand it, then you probably can't be helped anyway. It's all completely straightforward, and the confusion is, sadly enough, yours alone.
KT
Re Matt
"It seems in the texts I have encountered it usually says that one needs to recite a mantra at least a million times or more before "definite signs will occur." This was referring to the "approach" mantra, while the accomplishment and activity mantras followed. Has anyone actually gone far enough to know what happens when you recite a million mantras? Do you obtain definite siddhis? "
Matt, you ALREADY have the connection.
We all struggle with concerns about the purity and strength of our inner connections, I do too.
The point is to go forward and go upward, at least a little bit, every single day.
It is quite common to recite 1 million *short* recitations of some deity or other per year. That is in fact a very basic practice. You can do mantra washing dishes, you can do it silently in public [ e.g. on the bus ], and so forth. I do it walking around the lake, or while a passenger in the car.
I will address your specific concern with my own definite experience.
I have done 1 million each of
Vajrapani,
Vajrakilaya,
Hayagriva,
Tara,
Mahakala,
Fierce Guru Padmasambhava [ Dorje Drakpo Tsal ].
One way or another I have obtained some result with *each* of these, with all of them. Thank goodness, seems like almost all my friends are the Upstairs kind.
Let's talk about Vajrapani, a major healing and protective practice for me.
In the mid 1980's Vajrapani practice and the Thirteen Golden Dharmas of Sakya [ tantric transmissions given by H.E. Luding Khen Rinbochay which include the Four Armed high aspect of Vajrapani ] literally saved my life.
I was in a very bad place, physically and spiritually, despite years of yoga practice, squeaky clean living and so forth. A yoga teacher and tantric master from North India wanted me off the the scene, and he definitely knew how to "reach out and touch someone."
The Thirteen Golden Dharmas [ empowerments ] saved me. They saved my physical life, together with 1 M short Vajrapani recitations
HUM VAJRA PHAT
This is a restricted mantra, though openly published in quite a few places. I will of course not give the extended Vajrapani mantras here, nor the hastamudra / sacred hand gesture.
Anyway, between recitations 900,000 and 1M of Vajrapani, I developed and then lost some very small skin sores on my feet and a number of basically painless blisters. That was definitely the result of the burning power of Vajrapani practice, which literally expelled bad karma through the soles of my feet, just like the classical texts describe in tantric purification practice. Junk comes out of you, sometimes etheric, sometimes in literal fashion.
My problem was not drugs or alcohol or smoking, my problem was frustration, unhappiness, anger, and oh yes, for those months and years, the world class psychic attack. Sigh. Well, I'm still alive, I passed the test. Maybe the three year retreatants could also, but I don't expect that to be true in general. This guru was one Blue Meanie!
You won't have to worry about world class psychic attacks, they almost never happen, and anyway, this heavy duty [ non Buddhist ] tantric teacher died quite a few years back. I still use his really great yoga manuals, have a big stack of them, and bought two more this year!
So, we can learn a lot by trial and challange and especially from our own "worst enemies." The Dalai Lama said very plainly that of all his teachers, the Chinese were the best, the most important.
Even if we are not presently challenged by genocidal Islamists [ who destroyed the great Buddhist universities of Nalanda and Vikramasila in Old India ], nor the Communists [ who wiped out much of Buddhist civilization in Tibet, China, Cambodia, and so forth ], we all still have problems and challenges.
It's not just sickness and old age and death, not just economic change and the skyrocketing costs of health care.
Our worst enemies, or our best friends, are we ourselves.
Matt, you are your own best friend. You've gotten experience, you've tasted the experience of Dharma as tantra. Knowing this even once, you should go forward, and go forward every single day. It's your life, your magnetic field, you vibration, and your karma and your evolution.
People and situations and emotions can come and go, but you have to be your own light and continue to take refuge in yourself through practice.
I have had many many many spiritual breakthroughs. I could use a couple more. It's not about bein greedy. I've relied on the practices to keep me whole and together and functioning under different conditions of challenge, like the one mentioned above.
But dharma is not primarily about psychic or energetic experiences or visions, although those may be meaningful and indeed real breakthroughs.
Dharma is about developing Wisdom, Compassion, and Power [ jnana, karuna, bala ]. If you are developing a clearer sharper mental state, if your heart is more open and sensitive, if your spiritual strength and magnetic field are even a few percent stronger than a year back, then that is real progress, and something to honor. The changes can be subtle, the point is to make the progress stable and to continue to go forward.
We all need power practices to purify and protect ourselves. Vajrapani is such a practice, and a very good protector sadhana if one has not established a protector practice for oneself.
My general recommendation to Buddhist tantrikas is this:
Do A Million Short Protector Recitations, like say the Vajrapani Four Syllable Mantra.
In my understanding and personal experience, 1M protector recitations is of vital importance on all levels, just as a basic foundation, and Vajrapani, the protector aspect of Vajrasattva, is central and universal to all the schools, even the ancient Chinese Shao Lin School [ of Kung fu ], the Chinese schools in general, and the Japanese school known as Shingon.
A full Vajrapani is completely bestowed in many major empowerments, such as Dzogchen Breakthrough - Patrul Tsik Sum Ne Dek, any high Vajrasattva empowerment such as Cakrasamvara, Kalacakra, even in a major transmission [ not permission blessing ] of goddess yogas such as Vajrayogini, Cittamani Tara, and so forth.
Vajrapani is the principal protector of the Medicine Buddha. So, if you have a Highest Yoga Tantra empowerment of Medicine Buddha, and any Dzogchen Medicine Buddha Padmasambhava includes Medicine Buddha, then clearly you have a High empowerment of Vajrapani. Too bad basically no-one knows about Vajrapani within the Medicine Buddha, even after a high transmission of same.
Many many people in the West have a major Vajrapani empowerment without knowing it, in fact it is common for western tantrikas to have a buch of Vajrapani empowerments [ folded in though the various major transmissions ] and be completely unaware of this remarkable and important blessing! So they can practice, they just don't know they can practice.
I M short Vajrapani done in a focused fashion, like say in a year's time, is a profound way to purify karma, remove obstacles, defend one's magnetic field, remove depression and so forth. It does work for some, and of course no claim is made that it works for everyone, or "handles everything". It is wrong to make any *specific* claim of applicability for any one person, that any one person will get the hoped for result.
It is known to work, it did work for me, and in the case of Jamgon Kongtrul the Great, the practice of Vajrapani, by itself, restored his sight. He was blind, and Vajrapani practice restored his sight. So profound results do happen, we just can't claim they work in general.
It was the combination of tantric transmissions and protector recitations that saved my life in the eighties. After getting a stack of Sakya transmissions, I broke through a life-threatening psychic danger, although not getting out of the woods by any means. I was however able to rebuild my very torn or shredded magnetic field, and was strong enough to practice more and to receive more transmsissions.
In particular, I soon received three major cycles of key Kagyu transmissions from Kyabje Kalu Rinbochay, in Vancouver, Salt Spring Island, and Seattle. E.G. Kalacakra Master Empowerment, Mahakala, Hayagriva, Milarepa, Phowa, Six Yogas of Niguma, Medicine Buddha, Amitayus.
The Kalu Rinbochay transmissions of Hayagriva and Mahakala became a primary focus, and that was what got me through in the longer term. But it was a short and powerful empowerment of Vajrapani, and the short and powerful practice of Vajrapani, that
a] got me out of a near coma
b] got me back on my feet
c] made it possible for me to practice and heal myself, shredded magnetic field notwithstanding.
And I could have practiced a lot more, and a lot better. I *should* have completed, in one year, a million Simhamukha to go along with the Vajrapani! Both were in the Thirteen Golden Dharmas of Sakya. But no one told me about the practice and I had no text. I did not know it was a crucial and powerful protector practice, nor how to do it.
So let's talk about Simhamukha, to help the western students.
If you have ANY Longchen Nyingtik empowerment in full, such as Rigdzin Dupa, or Dechen Gyalmo, Patrul Tsik Sum Ne Dek etc., you have a FULL Simhamukha transmission [ as well as Vajrapani and Vajrasattva ]. Why? Simhamukha is the principal guardian of the Longchen Nyingtik cycle of Great Treasure Revealer Jigme Lingpa.
This year many people in many parts of America received full Simhamukha empowerment, because Lama Wangdor Rinbochay gave Patrul Tsik Sum Ne Dek on an extended coast to coast tour.
So this is in itself a powerful practice for protection and purification, once people figure out they can actually do this, and how much it will help them.
For their benefit, here is the basic mantra:
A KA SA MA RA CA SHA DA RA SA MA RA YA PHAT!
It's a highest yoga tantra practice, and thus restricted to initiates only, even though the mantra has been published all over in public books and websites. I am confirming that this is the correct mantra [ for Nyingmas etc. ], and it could possibly be of great help to some of you who have the authorization.
As with Vajrapani, so with Simhamukha: authorized practitioner can do the 1 M recitations, and perhaps get some good result, even without the text.
I have different kinds of Sakya Simhamukha practice texts, and different kinds of Nyingma Simhamukha practice texts. That is valuable and important, but the main focus is always the same : authorizing empowerment and correct practice and conscious commitment to samaya, as in Mahayana vows.
I do *not* claim to know what practice is most appropriate or most beneficial for any one person, nor have I any idea what manifest results will come of practice. This is a very very general discussion. In particular, it is often the recommendation or personal guru direction to begin Protector practice only AFTER Vajrasattva and guruyoga.
For many people that will be appropriate as a stepwise progressive path. Sometimes a person needs to jump in, and ramp up with daily protector practice. In all cases, use yogic common sense. Don't strain or force anything. It's like athletics. It's a system.
Still, doing 1 M recitiations of a short protector practice, at some point, is very important. Doing 1M recitations of some deity each year is a baseline of practice. This means in the course of five or six years a person can reasonably expect to complete the basic requirement [ 1 M recitations for one diety yoga ] which establishes the connection with several deities.
If you are Kagyu, whatever Kagyu lineage, you are *expected* to do
a) 100,000 long Vajrasattva *after* Vajrasattva-authorizing empowerment
b) 1 M guru yoga recitations *after* receiving the empowerment, such as Milarepa or Karma Pakshi.
That's the baseline.
If you are Nyingma, you are *expected* to do
a) 100,000 long Vajrasattva *after* Vajrasattva-authorizing empowerment
b) 1 M guru yoga recitations *after* receiving the empowerment, such as Padmasambhava in particular.
That's the baseline.
There are very good reasons for this kind of approach. Vajrasattva purifies obstacles and clears the magnetic field, and connects one with all the Hundred Familes of Buddhatantra. Guruyoga connects us with the lineage.
This kind of approach [ Vajrasattva plus Guru yoga ] is not strictly speaking necessary across the board for everyone. But it does cover a lot of ground.
Simply put,
a) if you do the 100K Vajrasattva, a lama has to give you *some* respect.
b) if you do the 1 M guruyoga, a lama has to give you *some* respect.
a) if you do the 100K Vajrasattva *and* 1 M guruyoga of Any Kind, a lama has to give you some real respect as an actual tantric Buddhist, no matter their lineage or yours.
There are other ways, of course.
Here is a basic short mantra for Vajrasattva:
OM VAJRASATTVA HUM
Here is another
OM VAJRASATTVA AH
Once initiated for Vajrasattva, and not otherwise, one can do 1M of these short Vajrasattva, in one formula, not both. That is also a real practice connecting one to Vajrasattva, and thus worthy of respect among the claimed-to-be sangha.
It is easy to do 1M short Tara mantras. Here is the basic short and universal Tara mantra:
OM TARE TAM SVAHA
It is quite common to complete 1M of the standard
OM TARE TUTTARE TURE SVAHA
It is easy to do 1M short Padmasambhava recitations. Here is a little known but valid short and universal mantra for Padmasambhava, which I have in Tibetan and Chinese script. It is
Padmasambhava:
OM PADMA VAJRA HUM
To do this one MUST have a Padmasambhava guruyoga empowerment. But it is only six syllables. Ig a person cannot complete 1 M recitations of 6 syllable Padmsambhava in one year, then the problem is one of time management and commitment, not difficulty or elaborateness of practice. I did 1 M fierce Padmasambhava in one year, and that was 17 syllables, not 6 or 12.
Here's the deal : you can do more than you think, more than you know to be possible. And, it will take time and commitment.
Padmasambhava made it clear that SOME daily practice is a requirement of highest yogatantra. You can read that in the book "Dakini Teachings" which talks about the perspective, the vows, and so forth very clearly and concisely. I have vows of daily sadhana, daily practice. Since tantric empowerment and practice quite literally saved my life, I never consider this a burden, but rather a source of life and healing and wisdom.
This one book, "Dakini Teachings", a record of teachings given by Guru Padmasambhava, is a whole library of tantric Buddhist discipline and practice. The first 100 pages of this book are invaluable for all Mahayana and Tantrayana practitioners and would be practitioners, and you can get the book openly from Amazon, Snow Lion and so forth.
This book is inexpensive, and sidesteps the need to try and get this kind of teaching in bits and pieces over time. What a great blessing! It can save you years of confusion and doubt and wasted time, and really establish a person on the path of Mahayana and Tantric practice through correct understanding.
No one anywhere can speak against this book. It is my professional recommendation. You can try hard over a period of years to find anything better. Too bad nobody ever mentions it, eh?
Someone has to know how these things work. Anyway, you have been helped.
Sarva mangalam! Siddhi rastu!
KT
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Re: some classical core guidance on mantra recitation, short mantras for a number of tantric deities, strategies for mantra practice and results of practice
Mon, August 31, 2009 - 10:29 PMHi K,
Thanks for your thoughtful and informative post. -
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Re: some classical core guidance on mantra recitation, said to be useful
Sat, September 19, 2009 - 2:57 PM
Re Matt:
"Thanks for your thoughtful and informative post. "
I *really* appreciate the Thank You, Matt! That is what closes the circuit of communication.
Rereading my post, it actually is quite functional and useful in objective terrms, but that is never the same thing as someone actually showing appreciation, as you have done.
A couple days ago I took a major atiyoga / dzogchne initiation in a lineage with which I was not familiar. One of the small number of people there asked me a number of questions about mantra practice.
I wrote down for him a number of Nyingma mantras, including Mahakala, and provided two key sources for major Nyingma practice texts that he is authorized to use, but did not know. Thus he was internally blocked.
And this is someone who has major transmissions for Dudjom Troma ( from ten years back ), for Bardo / Hundred Deities, and all kinds of good stuff. This is someone who set up a practice center!
But he didn't know how to practice. So, as in the above post, I explained to him about the basic step of Doing 1M Recitations of this or that.
At this gig I helped three people, one newbie and two people who really should know a whole lot more about how to practice.
What I have learned is that quite commonly individuals spend up to five or ten years as "initiates" but really don't have a clue as to how to do a practice. The point here is to broadcast the tools and the strategies so that everyone can benefit.
This is what we call Mahayana. This is my gig. If I don't do this work, I fail both my Mahayana and Vajrayana teaching vows ( which are not specifically Tibetan ). If I do it effectively, there is deep and broad benefit.
Being repeatedly shown this basic failure point, I find it of greatest importance to get people going with the basics, with texts and transmissions and mantras and sadhana methodology. If I can help one person, I can save them literally years of confusion and ignorance. This is real mahayana and tantrayana teaching work. It requires no lama certification, nor any working knowledge of the Tibetan language per se.
Learning to do mantra is no different than learning a musical instrument. It is not an intellectual problem, it is a matter of working with oneself through a specific vehicle. I believe this is very easy to understand.
I learned a musical instrument when I was young, and I spent seven years in church choir. I learned to listen and to harmonize. I beleive that communication and co-operation require much less abstract analysis than most people think, and more skill development and more awareness.
The point is to be a Practice Person. Otherwise, all these opportunities just go to waste.
Best,
KT
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Re: some classical core guidance on mantra recitation, said to be useful
Tue, October 13, 2009 - 9:59 AMThank you for your generous and detailed sharing of knowledge. Your words bring great benefit for those of us who aspire to understand and practice. I cannot thank you enough.
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Re: some classical core guidance on mantra recitation, short mantras for a number of tantric deities, strategies for mantra practice and results of practice
Mon, September 28, 2009 - 12:47 AMdear K,
this mantra guidance post is very, very helpful info.
thank you for posting it, i've printed it out & re-read it & highlighted it,
it is very straightforward & explains things very well.
how do you count / keep track of #'s of repetitiion while doing dishes, or
like you said here :
"You can do mantra washing dishes, you can do it silently in public [ e.g. on the bus ], and so forth.
I do it walking around the lake, or while a passenger in the car."
with some of these, i can see that you would be able to use a mala, like on the bus,
or in a car, but what about when washing dishes, etc ?
i've done mantra recitations while driving, w/ mala in 1 hand, is that a bad or dumb thing to do ?
is it ok for me to do Vajrapani mantra, if i have a Vajrasattva empowerment, since Vajrapani is wrathful version of Vajrasattva ?
or do i need to have a specific Vajrapani empowerment ?
also, one Lama Rinpoche recommended to me & taught me a Mahakala mantra in a private audience/divination/healing,
but i've never had a Mahakala empowerment. this Lama Rinpoche had given me a Chod empowerment, so does that include Mahakala ?
i've been doing at least 1 mala worth of Mahakala mantra per day, it does help my mental calmness a lot.
I had the Chenrezig emowerment in 1992 with His Holiness the Dalai Lama (in a big crowd, with no translation)
so since Mahakala is an emanation of Chenrezig, does that cover it ?
You are so knowledgable about which empowerments include which authoriations for practice,
i find that fascinating,
is there a book that tells about that,
or is it in many different books, or is it just years of your experience
& talking to lots of different people ?
also, one website i read said that i need to use a different mala for each different mantra,
because the energy permeates the mala, do you agree with that ?
thanks to your helpful recommendations,
i ordered the dakini teachings & the crystal and the way of light book by namkai norbu and
i ordered that "the dharma that shines..." book by kalu rinpoche, so i'll have those 3 soon.
thanks for all your help & i hope that my many questions don't drive you crazy. :)
May all beings Benefit !
sincerely,
Wendy -
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Re: some classical core guidance on mantra recitation, short mantras for a number of tantric deities, strategies for mantra practice and results of practice
Mon, September 28, 2009 - 2:35 AMFor the benefit of all other beings on the road (and yourself) - when you drive, keep both hands on the wheel.
I do a lot of mantra and prayer while driving, but I do not count my repetitions while I am driving. I figure those will just help make up for all the inattention I have done my practice with over the years.
I understand the mantra prescription idea/reality, counting the numbers. But I am the type of person who likes to do it for its own sake. I guess this is a matter of character/disposition/karma.
Do enjoy your mantra practice! Off to work now...
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Re: some classical core guidance on mantra recitation, short mantras for a number of tantric deities, strategies for mantra practice and results of practice
Mon, September 28, 2009 - 1:30 PMWhen I started doing prostrations, I got caught up in seeing how many I did and counting how many I had left to do. Drove me nuts since I couldn't stop my mind from counting since I could always see how many I'd done. So, I timed my prostrations, about 15 minutes for 100. After that I simply set the timer for fifteen minutes and stopped the counting--some days are fast, some days are slow, but I think it all works out in the end. I also timed mantra recitations that I can do on the road, walking, washing dishes. I have one of those iPods that have a great stopwatch on it. I can start and stop the stopwatch. For Vajrasattva short matra, I can do 25 malas in about 30 minutes. I add an extra 5 minutes for mistakes and slowing down. This way I don't worry about the actual number. My mind can just relax and enjoy the recitation.
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Re: some classical core guidance on mantra recitation, short mantras for a number of tantric deities, strategies for mantra practice and results of practice
Mon, October 12, 2009 - 11:27 AM
Re Wendy:
"i've done mantra recitations while driving, w/ mala in 1 hand, is that a bad or dumb thing to do ? "
No good, Wendy.
No malas or anything else in hands when driving. Period.
You can chant while you're driving. These recitations don't count towards mantra accumulation, because you cannot and should not maintain an inner focus.
You can chant as a passenger, and accumulate that way.
I accumulate mantras on the bus or public transportation, for example.
You can accumualte by time. See how much time it takes to complete 10 malas on your watch. That's how you know.
Best,
KT
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Re: some classical core guidance on mantra recitation, short mantras for a number of tantric deities, strategies for mantra practice and results of practice
Mon, September 28, 2009 - 1:37 PMI would like to discuss with anyone who is familiar the refuge practice. -
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Re: some classical core guidance on mantra recitation and malas
Wed, October 14, 2009 - 6:36 PMRe Wendy A
"also, one website i read said that i need to use a different mala for each different mantra,
because the energy permeates the mala, do you agree with that ? "
This is nonsense. The reverse is true. You can put more energy & more different kinds of energies into one mala from different Buddhist recitations and it all works together.
One good mala can be used in all cases.
A great general purpose mala is quartz crystal, 108 beads, about 6 or 7 millimeters diamerter bead, on a wire thread, which won't break.
This can be used for peaceful or wrathful or male or female deities, in any combination, over any number of years. It can be used for Pacifying, Enriching, Controlling, and Destroying/ Reversing Harm mantras.
Do yourself a favor. Get a 108x7 mm quartz crystal mala strung on wire, and use it for everything.
Lapis Lazuli and Turquoise are great for peaceful Medicine Buddha, and also for the most wrathful mantra practices, such as Vajrakilaya.
I carry a wire strung 6 mm turquoise mala in my pocket whenever I leave the house.
It is not necessary to count recitations on a mala, you can do it by time, once you know how long it takes to do 108 short recitations, for example.
I have lots of crystal malas, including amethyst, moonstone, tiger eye, carnelian, pearl and so forth. Crystal mala is better than wood. But you don't need any mala at all in principle. You just need to develop mantra practices that work for you, or that will work for you over time.
The best place for a mala is in your heart. Typically, male deity mantra malas spin clockwise in the horizontal plane of the heart, while female deity mantra malas spin counterclockwise on the horizontal plane of the heart.
You need to know the Sanskrit seed syllable of the deity to place in the middle of the mantra mala in the heart.
Best,
KT
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Re: Major Vajrasattva ALWAYS includes full Vajrapani
Wed, October 14, 2009 - 7:11 PMRe Wendy A
"is it ok for me to do Vajrapani mantra, if i have a Vajrasattva empowerment, since Vajrapani is wrathful version of Vajrasattva ?
or do i need to have a specific Vajrapani empowerment ? "
Correct. This is importantly true.
A MAJOR ( highest yoga tantra ) Vajrasattva ALWAYS includes a basic form of Manjusri / Bodhisattva of Wisdom, AND basic Avalokitesvara / Bodhisattva of Compassion, AND Vajrapani / Bodhisattva of Power.
There are many different forms of each of these deities, and some are extremely specialized. Some practice texts require the exact type of lineage and individual lineage, and will not work without that specific authorization.
That's why I got so very many authorizations in so many lineages. I have full access for everything Kagyu and Nyingma. You don't need that - it is for broader and deeper teaching work, for my service to the many kinds of tantric practitioners.
You may not know what is the right practice for you, what will work for you now or what you will need later.
My position is this:
1) Everyone needs a protector practice in hand, for the time you will need it.
2) Vajrapani is an excellent protector, and is certainly included in every major Vajrasattva empowerment.
3) It is very little effort to complete 1 million 4 syllable Vajrapani recitations in one year.
4) The 4 syllable Vajrapani mantra is found in different lineages. It is HUM VAJRA PHAT. Another short Vajrapani mantra is OM VAJRAPANI HUM. This also is generic.
5) You don't need to do many different protector practices, but you do need one in hand! This requirement can be fulfilled many ways. Major high end practices such as Padmasambhava and Vajrayogini have lots of built in protection / warding capabilities.
6) If you don't have any protector empowerment, nor even any empowerrment, do 1M short Tara recitations for protection and removing obstacles. The basic Tara practice is open to all, even without Mahayana Refuge. This mantra is
OM TARE TUTTARE TURE SVAHA
7) A short simple practice that you actually use in a consistent way will benefit much more than heavy duty methods that are wasted by never being used!
I did 1M of the HUM VAJRA PHAT and got a powerful healing response after 900K recitations. Small simple mantra. Powerful result. I didn't even have a decent Vajrapani text.
I now have Vajrapani practice texts in Kagyu, Sakya, and Gelugpa lineage, and many many practice texts for the ultimate Nyingma Vajrapani, who is Vajrakilaya. I have five major empowerments for Vajrapani in the Sakya lineage alone.
If you have a Kalacakra empowerment, or a Gelugpa empowerment of Heruka Vajrasattva, then ask for the restricted Vajrapani Mahacakra text from
www.fpmt.org
They may well provide you the text.
The FPMT Vajrapani Mahacakra is a short and really good Vajrapani practice, with a long activity mantra.
It is not necessary to have many transmissions and practices. But try to get a major transmission which will give you access to a good range of practices, i.e. anything that has a highest yogatantra Vajrasattva built in.
Best,
KT
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Re: Knowledgeable through field research / "Pearl Rosary" compilation of basic practices
Wed, October 14, 2009 - 7:32 PMRe Wendy A
"You are so knowledgable about which empowerments include which authoriations for practice,
i find that fascinating,
is there a book that tells about that,
or is it in many different books, or is it just years of your experience
& talking to lots of different people ? "
Thirty years of comparative field research, with sixty teachers, including a bunch of tantric lineage holders of all schools ( Tibetan, Chinese, Japanese, etc. ), including some none here know about.
I have to be very very VERY careful in what I say. I *cannot* afford to give you any wrong knowledge or guesses, especially in the area of mantras. I have to compare and verify and confirm a lot of stuff. My investment in this area of knowledge then benefits many, where so many people are in fact very weak and doubtful and blocked in practice.
Nyingma lineage is extremely complicated and diverse. I'm connected to seven different Nyingma / Dzogchen lineages, and I have practice texts for all these lineages. You don't want to know how tricky this gets.
Now let's talk about something practical, a book which teaches a number of deity practices in a general way. It is Drikung Kagyu lineage, and I have many of the Drikung esoteric texts, which are excellent. I do not have the text "Pearl Rosary", but I trust everything from this source, the Garchen Institute.
Here is the basic info for the book
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www.garchen.net/GBI-Shop/
Pearl Rosary: The Path of Purification
By Khenchen Konchog Gyaltshen Rinpoche
edited by Khenmo Trinlay Chodron
This very valuable text contains eleven sadhanas with commentary by Khenchen Konchog Gyaltshen Rinpoche. Sadhanas include: Chenrezig Meditation Practice, Manjushri Meditation Practice, Vajrapani Meditation Practice, Green Tara Meditation Practice, White Tara Meditation Practice, Supplication to the Seven Taras, Buddha Amitabha Meditation Practice, Buddha Amitayus Meditation Practice, Medicine Buddha Meditation Practice, Vajrasattva Meditation Practice, and Achi Chokyi Drolma Meditation Practice.
"The contents of this text [are] primarily meant for people who are far away and don't have the opportunity to engage in Dharma practice in the presence of the teacher. The book itself is a representation of the teacher, and therefore is meant to help one's Dharma practice. The text describes the mehods of visualization and how to incorporate practice into our day to day life experience . . . The visualization of these deities is mainly concerned with the practices of tantrayana and mantrayana, which are the highest forms of practice. The path of visualization is very powerful and if properly engaged in, it is capable of transforming our life within a single moment."
"By engaging in this kind of practice, infinite clarity of mind is achieved, and through such power, we are able to purify our ordinary body and manifest the body of the deity. Likewise, we are able to purify our ordinary body and manifest the body of the deity. Likewise, we are able to purify ordinary speech, and manifest wisdom speech. Futhermore, we are able to purify the deluded ordinary mind, and realize the wisdom mind."
from the foreward by
His Holiness Drikung Kyabgon Chetsang Rinpoche
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This book is openly available. It you do not have a basic set of practice texts, try this book.
The same Garchen Institute Bookstore
www.garchen.net/GBI-Shop/
offers many individual, more detailed practice texts, and these serve many New School practitioners ( i.e. Sakya, Gelugpa, Kagyu ) for many needs.
This Bookstore is very helpful, and very open with their practice offerings. I recommend their practice texts. I have a good stack of Drikung Kagyu practice texts.
Sarva mangalam. Siddhi rastu!
KT
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Re: Knowledgeable through field research / "Pearl Rosary" compilation of basic practices
Thu, October 15, 2009 - 12:31 PMthank you very much for all of your help ! i really appreciate the information more than words can say.
thanks for all the info about the mantra recitations & protector mantras & this pearl rosary book.
you help people So Much ! thank you for being you ! :)
i've just finished reading "the crystal & the way of light"
& starting on Kalu Rinpoche's book "the dharma that illuminates all beings...'
thanks very very much ! may all beings benefit !
wendy
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Re: Major Vajrasattva ALWAYS includes full Vajrapani
Thu, October 15, 2009 - 12:37 PMhi K, thank you very much for all of your fascinating teachings & for all that you do to promote the Dharma.
i don't have a HYT Vajrasattva empowerment yet, just that Vajrasattva that was included in the big major cycle Phadmasambhava Dzogchen empowerment. I have Phowa, from Chagdud Khandro, so maybe that includes Vajrapani ?
anyway, i'll try to get a HYT Vajrasattva Empowement. does Shitro include Vajrapani empowerment ?
may all beings benefit !
sincerely,
wendy -
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Re: Shitro / Dzogchen empowerment ALWAYS includes High Vajrasattva; book references and practice texts and authorizations
Sat, October 17, 2009 - 10:22 AM
Summary:
Re: Shitro / Dzogchen empowerment ALWAYS includes High Vajrasattva; book references and practice texts and authorizations
Hi Wendy.
A dzogchen empowerment ALWAYS includes full Vajrasattva at the highest level and authorizes a tremendous amount of practice and practice texts in the Nyingma lineage. You already have this.
There are many ways to get a dzogchen / Vajrasattva empowerment.
It could be via Peaceful or Wrathful Padmasambhava at the Dzogchen level.
It could be via a Dzogchen level Vajrakilaya, or a Troma empowerment, or a Dzogchen level Tara empowerment.
It could be via Dzogchen Trekcho empowerment, e.g, the "Tsik Sum Ne Dek" / Breakthrough empowerment of the Patrul Rinbochay lineage, known as "Hitting The Essence in Three Words".
This does not mean that anyone with a Dzogchen Breakthrough empowerment can do "all" the practices and all the practice texts of the Nyingma school. There are many different sets of Nyingma and Dzogchen practices.
However, there are twenty one practices conferred by Tsik Sum Ne Dek / Breakthrough, and one of these is dzogchen level Vajrasattva, and Dzogchen level Vajrasattva contains and authorizes many practices at that level.
You have Shitro, Wendy, in particular you have the Shitro of Longchen Nyingtik as revealed by Jigme Lingpa. There are other forms, such as Karma Lingpa Shitro.
The point is that any kind of authentic Shitro empowerment always includes the Tsik Sum Ne Dek / Breakthrough empowerment and authorizations, and the full set of Hundred Deities, as detailed in the set of mantras given in the book
"The Tibetan Book of the Dead, First Complete Translation",
specifically
Coleman, Graham, with Thupten Jinpa (eds.) (2005) The Tibetan Book of the Dead [English title]: The Great Liberation by Hearing in the Intermediate States [Tibetan title]; composed by Padma Sambhava: revealed by Karma Lingpa; translated by Gyurme Dorje. London: Penguin Books ISBN 978-0-140-45529-8 (the first complete translation)
There are other translations. This is the *only* one to get. It has the Shitro mantras and many specific mantras for deities such as Avalokitesvara, Manjusri, Vajrapani, the Five Buddha Families in both peaceful and wrathful forms, and Vajrasattva. Everything in this book is authorized by a Shitro empowerment.
All of these deities and practices are subsumed into one overall mantra, which is
OM BODHICITTA MAHASUKHA JNANADHATU A
OM RULU RULU HUM BHYO HUM
That of course has been openly published, but the detailed practice texts still remain completely restricted, not to be shown to or shared with anyone lacking this type of empowerment. To break secrecy remains a most grave offence, even though much has been openly published. ( It's ironic, I know, but that is the rule to be followed. )
A number of important shorter and longer practice texts authorized by Shitro / Hundred Deities empowerment are available, from different sources.
One very important source for restricted practice texts is
www.tibetantreasures.com
and with Shitro you are authorized to obtain many of these.
See
www.tibetantreasures.com/tthtm...s.html
Examples
"Razor That Destroys At A Touch", a comprehensive Vajrakilaya ( ultimate wrathful Vajrasattva, subsuming many wrathful deities )
Amitabha
Akshobhya
Simhamukha ( very short, a main wrathful goddess guardian of Longchen Nyingtik )
Hayagriva ( very short, a wrathful Amitabha )
Manjusri ( very short )
To my very great surprise, their current practice text catalog no longer mentions the main detailed practice text for Dudjom Shitro. This was available for years, but it is now unlisted, rather than listed as out of stock.
Anyway, the Vajrakilaya is a Most Important practice text. It is primary for all Nyingma practitioners, both as deity yoga and as protector practice. If this is the only practice one takes up from the Shitro cycle, it covers most everything! Vajrakilaya was a primary practice for both Padmasambhava and Yeshe Tsogyel, and they were principal cofounders of Buddhist tantra in Tibet. Vajrakilaya is an ultimate wrathful Vajrasattva.
Theer are many mantras for Vajrakilaya (that have been openly published, though this should never have happened, but it is done ). Ths simplest one is
OM VAJRA KILI KILAYA
The commonly used one is
OM VAJRA KILI KILAYA SARVA VIGHNAN BAM HUM PHAT
Another is
OM VAJRA KILI KILAYA SARVA VIGHNAN BAM HUM PHAT JA HUM AH
and there are the Activity mantras and retinue mantras and so forth.
I will not give here ( or elsewhere ) the sacred hand gestures nor other details of these practices.
Now, two more texts to round out the presentation.
First,
"The Golden Letters" by John Reynolds, Snow Lion Publications.
This gives the basic text for Tsik Sum Ne Dek, the Breakthrough teaching of Dzogchen Trekcho. Without this text and commentary one does not have the complete transmission of the Tsik Sum Ne Dek empowerment.
Second,
"Dzogchen Essentials, the Path that Clarifies Confusion", compiled and edited by Marcia Binder Schmidt.
See
www.amazon.com/Dzogchen-E...341533#noop
I have already mentioned the indispensible
"Dakini Teachings", by Padmasambhava
Simply put, if one follows the lineage of Padmasambhav, it is not possible to practice properly without his lineage instruction, and this covers most theory and practice from the beginning levels of vows and refuge and so forth, through Mahayana and Vajrayana levels of practice.
So, this exposition now completes a basic teaching on Shitro / Hundred Deities and Nyingma practice, up through Dzogchen Trekcho / Breakthrough.
You have been helped.
Sarva mangalam! Siddhi rastu!
KT
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Re: Refuge practice - See book "Dakini Teachings" by Padmasambhava
Sat, October 17, 2009 - 10:40 AM
Re Embrace:
"I would like to discuss with anyone who is familiar [ with ] the refuge practice."
There are different kinds and levels of Refuge practice, outer inner, secret and absolute. The absolute level is known as Mahamudra or Atiyoga / Great Perfection.
It is necessary to understand refuge in order to practice it properly. For that one needs a good, clear, exact book length teaching.
"Dakini Teachings" by Padmasambhava covers this need in a most valuable and effective way. The teachings given in the first one hundred pages are indispensible for anyone engaging outer or inner levels of Buddhist Refuge, including Ten Precepts, Mahayana vows and so forth.
Yes, it is a Nyingma text. But it is not only Nyingma. The principles developed in the text are universal to Mahayana and Tantra in general, and I would recommend this book just as much to Chinese tantric Buddhists and Japanese tantric Buddhists. There are other good texts, but I have seen nothing better than this. This is my primary, central text as a Buddhist guru. Without this kind of teaching, Buddhist practice is extremely weak, confused, and often founders through lack of a clear map and compass. What you need most is a clear map and compass for Dharma practice, and here you have it!
This exposition of the Buddhist Paths is perfectly acceptable to the Sakya and Kagyu lineages. It is perfectly acceptable to HH the Dalai Lama. That should be good enough for most people here!
www.amazon.com/Dakini-Tea.../9627341363
Dakini Teachings (Paperback)
by Padmasambhava (Author), Erik Pema Kunsang (Translator), Nyang-ral Nyima Ozer (Author), Yeshe Tsogyal (Author), Marcia Binder Schmidt (Author), Erik Pema Kunsang (Author)
Product Description
Padmasambhava, the Indian mystic and tantric Buddhist master, is second only to Buddha Shakyamuni as the most famous personage in the Tibetan tradition of Buddhism. In the ninth century, he made the journey across the Himalayan Mountains to establish Buddhism for the people in that country. Now, more than 1,000 years later, we are able to hear and be touched by his voice as contained within this collection of oral advice. The selections in Dakini Teachings are timely advice - short, direct instructions relating to the three levels of Buddhist practice: Hinayana, Mahayana, and Vajrayana. The main emphasis of Padmasambhava's teaching is that spiritual knowledge must be personalized and not remain as mere theory. The book includes an introductory discourse by Tulku Urgyen Rinpoche and a short biography of Padmasambhava by Jamgon Kongtrul the First.
Product Details
Paperback: 222 pages
Publisher: North Atlantic Books; 2nd edition (June 29, 2004)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 9627341363
ISBN-13: 978-9627341369
You have been helped.
Sarva mangalam! Siddhi rastu!
KT
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Re: Refuge practice - See book "Dakini Teachings" by Padmasambhava
Tue, November 3, 2009 - 10:56 AMKT, I have only just now seen this! Thank you kindly for this information. I apreciate the book referal.
Much love and light to you!
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Re: Shitro / Dzogchen empowerment ALWAYS includes High Vajrasattva; book references and practice texts and authorizations
Mon, October 19, 2009 - 1:09 AMthank you very much !
keep being you. you have helped many people.
may all beings benefit & be happy !
sincerely,
wendy -
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Re: teachings sometimes receive thanks, so :-)
Wed, October 28, 2009 - 1:44 PM
Re Wendy:
"thank you very much !"
KT responds
:-)
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Re: teachings sometimes receive thanks, so :-)
Tue, November 3, 2009 - 10:26 AMWith this, confirming the above thread has been read, appreciated, and is prompting further interest. Thank you. -
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This is the maximum depth. Additional responses will not be threaded.
Re: teachings sometimes are broadly useful too, thus good bridges can be built
Thu, November 19, 2009 - 11:37 AM
Hi All,
I have now linked a number of tribes to this tribe very directly.
This specific thread has now been made known in follow up posts to threads I have started at tribe Meditation, tribe Chakra Tribe, and several others. Doing so is important in connecting tribes together in useful, helpful ways. It is also of great importance in continuing to make available authentic and practical teaching on Buddhist practice.
Again, thanks for your support. The simple fact that this tribe has been supportive of my work ( particularly on this thread ) gives me good ground to stand upon when building these bridges of communication and working with other tribes through deep engagement.
This is especially important given continuing harassment in several quarters over recent months. I know for certain that the verys serious problems I have encountered in this my teaching work are being successfully resolved, on several levels.
Thus, the benefit of this kind of public service will not be drowned in general confusion nor poisoned by campaigns of aggression. It has just taken a lot of follow up work from me all over the place. I now see that it is proven very worthwhile.
I will add to this thread more teachings and references. I've just had to do serious fire fighting and damage control. That is the price for working and communicating in diverse contexts ( in the present case, various tribes ).
The bridges I have built are definitely holding up. One significant result of this is certainly the large growth of this tribe in the last two years. About two hundred people have joined tribe Tibetan Buddhism, and it is reasonable to think that my broadcast posts to many tribes have provided important outreach for this tribe, as well as for over ten major tantric Buddhist teachers of all schools.
So, there are levels of communication.
This is for All Our Relations.
Sarva mangalam. Siddhi rastu! May All Beings Benefit! May There Be Accomplishment!
Best,
KT
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