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    _B2SPIRIT_BUDDHISMUS
    KOCOURMIKES
    KOCOURMIKES --- ---
    Twofold Emptiness Explained
    The first fold is "emptiness of self":
    There seems to be a lot of misunderstanding regarding the question of selfhood and whether a personal, individual self of any kind actually exists. Some think there is a personal self that underlies the fictional self, which is only a conceptual construction. This is the view of an "atman" or "self-soul" that the Buddha thoroughly refuted. The so called conventional self can't be found to exist within the body-mind nor outside the body-mind. That leaves no other option for its existence except within imagination.
    In a dark room, a rope may be mistaken to be a snake, along with all the descriptions about snakes that the mind contains. We feel anxiety, fear and our adrenalin and blood pressures go up, as well as heart beat.
    But if we look closely at the rope in brighter light, we won't be able to find a snake within the rope, or upon the rope, nor outside of the rope. That leaves only the imagination as its residence. It's the same regarding our snake-self. Our body-mind is like the rope. The mind infers a self as a personal "me" upon and within the body-mind in the darkness of confused mental functioning. We have real feelings felt about this imaginary "me" that create moods, altered bio-chemistry and sense of a "suffering me". But if we introspectively look within our mental events, we won't find a "me" anywhere; not in the body, not in the mind; we only find thoughts and feelings ABOUT a self, but no self is discovered. Then the lights go on and suddenly the subconscious mind ceases to generate the mistaken "me" belief. The personal self or "me" was no more real than the imaginary snake! There is no "liberation or enlightenment" beyond this direct insight and cessation of this cognitive error, and none without it. Read this below.
    Khenpo Tsulstrim Gyatso:
    "When we realize the selflessness of the individual, however, this whole process stops. The wrong views that have their root in the belief in self cease, then the mental afflictions cease, then karmic actions cease, and as a result of that, birth in samsara’s cycle of existence ceases."
    Khenpo Tsulstrim Gyamtso
    "We can formulate the following logical reasoning: Karmic actions and results are mere appearances devoid of true existence, because no self, no actor, exists to perform them. This is a valid way to put things because if the self of the individual does not exist, there cannot be any action, and therefore there cannot be any result of any action either."
    Khenpo Tsulstrim Gyamtso
    "Someone might ask, “Isn’t it nihilistic to think that karmic actions and their results do not exist?” In fact, this is not a nihilistic view because there exists no self to have any nihilistic view. There can be a nihilistic view only if there is someone to hold it, but since there is no one to have any view, then there can be no nihilism. Furthermore, since the thought of nihilism neither arises nor abides nor ceases, there can be no nihilism in genuine reality. Genuine reality transcends the conceptual fabrications of realism and nihilism. It transcends karmic actions and results, and the absence of karmic actions and results as well. If karmic actions and their results do not exist in the abiding nature of reality, then what is the quality of their appearance?
    Nagarjuna describes this in the chapter’s thirty-third verse:
    Mental afflictions, actions, and bodies, as well as actors and results, are like cities of imaginary beings, like mirages, and like dreams."
    Khenpo Tsulstrim Gyatso
    "Some people might argue, “There are yogis and yoginis who realize selflessness, and this proves that the self really does exist after all, or else who would be the ones who possessed this realization?”
    Nagarjuna answers this claim in the third verse:
    "The ones who do not cling to “me” or “mine” do not exist either. Those who do not cling to “me” or “mine” see accurately, So they do not see a self."
    Khenpo Tsulstrim
    The second "fold" is "emptiness of all objectively existing things":
    In the Sutra Requested by Madröpa, the Buddha said:
    Whatever arises from conditions does not arise. It does not have the nature of arising. Whatever depends on conditions is explained to be empty, And to know emptiness is the way to be conscientious.
    IN THIS CHAPTER, Nagarjuna explains the meaning of this passage and proves its validity with logical reasoning. The reason Nagarjuna composed this chapter was that people believe that causal conditions are real. As a result of that, they believe that things really happen. They believe that arising is real. When they believe that, it is difficult for them to believe in emptiness and to gain confidence that all phenomena are empty of inherent existence. However, in order to understand the true nature of reality, we must realize that nothing ever really happens. We must realize that arising and birth are not real. Therefore, Nagarjuna analyzes causes, conditions, and arising, and he proves that they are in fact empty of any inherent nature.
    Khenpo Tsultrim Gyamtso
    KOCOURMIKES
    KOCOURMIKES --- ---
    KOCOURMIKES: "No thought: no problem. It’s not possible to have a problem without believing a prior thought. To notice this simple truth is the beginning of peace." Byron Katie
    KOCOURMIKES
    KOCOURMIKES --- ---
    Dzogchen means "Great Perfection"
    "Everything is seen to be perfect, just the way it is." Byron Katie
    "Everything is naturally perfect just as it is." Dilgo Khentse Rinpoche
    Only ignorant thoughts disagree!
    KOCOURMIKES
    KOCOURMIKES --- ---
    KOCOURMIKES
    KOCOURMIKES --- ---
    Dzogchen scholar and practitioner, David Germano explains (below) details of Dzogchen Nyinthig according to Longchenpa; it becomes clear that the later rendition of Dzogchen (Nyingthig) is not a direct Dharmakaya path as was earliest Semde, but became a hybrid of Yogini Tantra practices and original non-tantric Dzogchen. This turned Dzogchen into a gradualist type of Atiyoga based on Sambhogakaya methods instead of more direct Dharmakaya methods.
    'Somatic functions: the universal ground of the karmic propensities-derived body'
    Foundational consciousness’s (alaya, sem, karmic mind) .... points to its interdependence with embodiment, namely the deeply somatic character of the unconscious. The "Treasury of Reality’s Expanse" (ibid.) describes the “universal ground-as-body” (alaya) as the “beginningless karmic propensities for manifestation in terms of a body,” which becomes the “basis for the constellation of factors making up our individual bodies.” In general, the ordinary body is termed “ripened karmic propensities” (Longchenpa 1983b, vol. 2, 329.6) since it forms via the dynamics of karmic propensities from the moment of conception onwards:
    "When the karmic mind; constellation of eight modes of consciousness, and fifty one mental factors manifest along with the karmic propensities, it is termed the “sheath” or “body” of the ripening karmic propensities. Furthermore, they are three in number – the flesh and blood body of the desire realm, the light body ripening in the four meditative states, and the psychic body (yid lus)which is latent in the formless realm". (Longchenpa 1971a, vol. 3, 202.3)
    The three bodies correspond to the three realms of cyclic existence: (i) the flesh and blood corporeal body of the sensual realm, with the major limbs (the two arms, two legs, and head) and auxiliary appendages (the fingers, toes, chin); (ii) the luminous, etherealized bodies of the form realm corresponding to various levels of deities and rarefied states of meditation; and (iii) the “psychic bodies” of the formless realm, in which existence is attenuated to concentrated psychic energy without material physicality.
    In the third case, embodiment is limited to a ghost- like existence between lives in the intermediate process (bar do), a mere mental image deriving from the karmic propensities of eons of embodied existence. In this way, the lived body can manifest on three different levels, which can be understood as dimensions of experience accessible to us in this life – the coarse physical level enmeshed in material existence, a vibrant subtle body reflexively sensed in contemplation, and the experiential body in various states – dreams, post-death, rarified contemplative states, visions, various imaginative processes, and acts of cognitive modeling.
    The basic point is that the karmic traces constituting the unconscious dynamics of the foundational consciousness are deeply constitutive of all forms of embodiment:
    "Since the karmic propensities for a body are present within the root psychic energy (of the universal ground), the bodies of flesh and blood, light, and the psyche manifest, and hence (this division of the universal ground) is termed (the “universal ground of the karmic propensities- derived body.” (Longchenpa 1983b, vol. 2, 36.2)
    This somatic character of the foundational consciousness extends deeply into the body’s interior structure and processes, since the cosmogonic drama leading to it is not only interiorized within the consciousness and unconscious processes of sentient life, but is also somatically embedded within the body’s physiological detail.
    Earlier Buddha-nature literature in Mahayana was pervaded by evocative metaphors placing divinity (whether potential or actual) within the ordinary body, but details are sparse on how that might actually work. The rise of yogic physiology in yogini tantras constituted a deeply somatic turn in Buddhist contemplation and discourse that focused on the intimate physiological detail of the human peripersonal space.
    At times this took the form of an abstract mapping of Buddhist doctrinal concepts and iconographic detail onto the human body, but contemplation also involved genuine attention to ordinarily unconscious physiological processes and intense physical sensations. This somatic discourse entailed that all important concepts had to be embodied in very precise manners.
    Thus the heart forming one of the four main “wheels” (S: cakra) of Buddhist subtle bodies is the somatic residence of the divine ground of pure awareness. Its cosmogonic luminosity – technically termed the “presencing of the ground” (gzhi snang) – spills out from the heart into a series of “luminous channels” (‘od rtsa) extending throughout the body from a central channel running up the body’s torso. As complicated physical and mental human structures evolve based upon it, it remains within the human body’s central vitality channel as a radiation of the heart’s radiant light via the network of the latter’s luminous channels.
    The foundational consciousness (sem) is understood as deriving from the luminous channels’ “brightness” (gdangs), and is viewed as “clouds” which obscure the heart’s pristine awareness and thus must be cleared away via contemplation.
    It (sem) is located within the “vitality channel” (srog rtsa), a term usually specifying the aorta or blood channel trunk, and often associated with the spinal cord (rgyungs pa) in these texts (Longchenpa 1971a).
    In Tibetan medical texts, the aorta is termed the “black vitality channel” and the spinal cord the “white vitality channel,” clearly relating to the key role of blood and nervous energy. The luminous channel of transcendence remains located within this vitality channel, such that its somatic reality again reiterates the primacy and primordiality of Buddha-nature in terms of human being, and the secondary and derivative nature of the fundamental consciousness (sem).
    In summary, these unconscious processes – both mundane and divine – are deeply intertwined with somatic processes and realities. This entails both that our physical state is a direct function of our relationship to unconscious processes, and that the key to gnosis lies through a somatic engagement rather than a purely cognitive one.
    Contemplative functions: the gnostic transformation:
    These models of the unconscious dimensions of being as well as bifurcated models of creation and agency are clearly manifest in the Seminal Heart’s (Nyingthig) contemplative traditions.
    The contemplative focus on the foundational consciousness (sem, alaya) is chiefly on its eradication through traditional practices of “calming” (shamatha) and insight (vipassana). These function to deconstruct the foundational con- sciousness’s sedimented patterns, while also opening up a clearing for the divine ground’s efflugence to emerge in the field of reflexive awareness.
    Similar practices include meditations on the sounds of the elements (wind, water, etc.) through cultivating calming based upon the sound of natural elements, as well as the “differentiation of samsara and nirvana” (‘khor ‘das ru shan) practice in which people act crazily in an isolated valley until pure fatigue exhausts ordinary constructions of experience. This culminates in the breakthrough (khregs chod) contemplative praxis, which essentially is a form-free relaxed presence of mind immersed within the depth unconscious of the (pure) ground.
    However, the most distinctive contemplative practices are those focusing on a deeply somatic experi- ence of creative imaginal processes termed “direct transcendence” (thod rgal). This core practice involves cultivating a spontaneous flow of images understood to be the effulgent flow of luminosity from the heart’s universal ground through the eyes into exterior space. As this ordinarily unconscious process becomes reflexively self-aware, an alternative form of organization and patterning comes to the fore. Hence a dual tracked contemplative model is explicitly geared toward first eradicating the shallower layers of unconscious processes, and second bringing deeper processes into reflexive awareness.
    Conclusion:
    Explicit models of unconscious mental and physical processes arose within Indian Buddhism in response to the Abhidharma tradition’s intensive analysis of consciousness, both in theory and practice. Yogacarin Buddhists subsequently discerned the limits of conscious awareness, and, in the process, the underlying conditions that must necessarily support all ordinary conscious experience. Until this point, the notion of a foundational consciousness (alaya-vijñana) had largely remained a solution to an Abhidharmic problem concerning the relationship between different modalities and functions of consciousness. Once the notion of a foundational consciousness (alaya) underlying all other forms of mind was fully articulated, however, it became an interpretive nexus inviting speculation on its relationship to other processes outside consciousness awareness and control. These included Buddha-nature and pure consciousness (amala-vijñana), leading increasingly to speculation on older but as of yet poorly developed notions of original purity hidden within ordinary existence. This basic tension – namely whether fundamental consciousness is defiled or pure – came to be further developed in philosophical esoteric movements in Tibet. In at least one such tradition, the Great Perfection, we find a complex new synthesis elaborating both aspects into a deeply somatic portrayal of the unconscious as a dramatic unfolding of radically active divine and distorted processes with contrasting paradigms of creation and causality."
    From: "A COMPARISON OF ALAYA-VIJÑANA IN YOGACARA AND DZOGCHEN" David F. Germano and William S. Waldron
    MAKROUSEK
    MAKROUSEK --- ---
    The Buddhist DJ priest, bringing techno to the temple - BBC News
    http://www.bbc.com/news/av/magazine-39980723/the-buddhist-dj-priest-bringing-techno-to-the-temple
    KOCOURMIKES
    KOCOURMIKES --- ---
    Vajrapani puja: clearing the obstacles | Mahabodhi on the web
    https://mahabodhi1925.wordpress.com/buddhist-resources/more-devotional-texts/vajrapani-puja/
    KOCOURMIKES
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    KOCOURMIKES
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    KOCOURMIKES
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    The real story on the Chakras — Tantrik Studies
    http://tantrikstudies.squarespace.com/blog/2016/2/5/the-real-story-on-the-chakras

    Iran Chamber Society: Religion in Iran: The Secrets of Zoroastrianism
    http://www.iranchamber.com/religions/articles/secrets_of_zoroastrianism.php
    KOCOURMIKES
    KOCOURMIKES --- ---
    Chokyi Nyima Rinpoche wrote:
    "Basically and fundamentally, our mind is utterly empty, sheer bliss, totally naked. We do not need to make it like this; we do not need to cultivate it by meditating, to create this state by meditating.
    Give up thinking of anything at all, about the past, the future or the present. Remain thought-free, like an infant.
    Innate suchness is unobscured the moment you are not caught up in present thinking.
    That which prevents us from being face to face with the real Buddha, the natural state of mind, is our own thinking. It seems to block the natural state.
    Rigpa, the Natural State, is not cultivated in meditation. The awakened state is not an object of the intellect. Rigpa is beyond intellect, and concepts.
    This is the real Buddhadharma, not to do a thing. Not to think of anything like Saraha said, "Having totally abandoned thinker and what is thought of, remain as a thought-free child."
    Thinking is delusion.
    When caught up in thinking we are deluded. To be free of thinking is to be free.
    That freedom consists in how to be free from our thinking.
    As long as the web of thinking has not dissolved, there will repeatedly be rebirth in and the experiences of the six realms.
    The method: But if you want to be totally free of conceptual thinking there is only one way: through training in thought-free wakefulness. (rigpa).
    Strip awareness to its naked state.
    If you want to attain liberation and omniscient enlightenment, you need to be free of conceptual thinking.
    Being free of thought is liberation.
    This is not some state that is far away from us: thought-free wakefulness actually exists together with every thought, inseparable from it... but the thinking obscures or hides this innate actuality. Thought free wakefulness (the natural state) is immediately present the very moment the thinking dissolves, the moment it vanishes, fades away, falls apart.
    Simply suspend your thinking within the non-clinging state of wakefulness: that is the correct view."
    KOCOURMIKES
    KOCOURMIKES --- ---
    Dzogchen master, Chokyi Nyima (son of Tulku Urgyen):
    "Being free of thought is liberation."
    KOCOURMIKES
    KOCOURMIKES --- ---
    Chokyi Nyima Rinpoche wrote:
    "Basically and fundamentally, our mind is utterly empty, sheer bliss, totally naked. We do not need to make it like this; we do not need to cultivate it by meditating, to create this state by meditating.
    Give up thinking of anything at all, about the past, the future or the present. Remain thought-free, like an infant.
    Innate suchness is unobscured the moment you are not caught up in present thinking.
    That which prevents us from being face to face with the real Buddha, the natural state of mind, is our own thinking. It seems to block the natural state.
    Rigpa, the Natural State, is not cultivated in meditation. The awakened state is not an object of the intellect. Rigpa is beyond intellect, and concepts.
    This is the real Buddhadharma, not to do a thing. Not to think of anything like Saraha said, "Having totally abandoned thinker and what is thought of, remain as a thought-free child."
    Thinking is delusion.
    When caught up in thinking we are deluded. To be free of thinking is to be free.
    That freedom consists in how to be free from our thinking.
    As long as the web of thinking has not dissolved, there will repeatedly be rebirth in and the experiences of the six realms.
    The method: But if you want to be totally free of conceptual thinking there is only one way: through training in thought-free wakefulness. (rigpa).
    Strip awareness to its naked state.
    If you want to attain liberation and omniscient enlightenment, you need to be free of conceptual thinking.
    Being free of thought is liberation.
    This is not some state that is far away from us: thought-free wakefulness actually exists together with every thought, inseparable from it... but the thinking obscures or hides this innate actuality. Thought free wakefulness (the natural state) is immediately present the very moment the thinking dissolves, the moment it vanishes, fades away, falls apart.
    Simply suspend your thinking within the non-clinging state of wakefulness: that is the correct view."
    KOCOURMIKES
    KOCOURMIKES --- ---
    Dzogčhen | Mezinárodní komunita dzogčhenu Česká republika
    https://www.dzogchen.cz/
    KOCOURMIKES
    KOCOURMIKES --- ---
    tady nejsou navody, na FB.
    KOCOURMIKES
    KOCOURMIKES --- ---
    pokud to nekoho zajima zkouset, tak frekventujte CNN Rinpocheho v prve rade, a FB skupiny tady

    [ KOCOURMIKES @ BUDDHISMUS ]
    KOCOURMIKES
    KOCOURMIKES --- ---
    IOM_NUKSO: popisy technik Dzogchenu co tady pristaly. Pokud jsi mentalne nestabilni, mohlo by to zpusobit psychicke potize (psychotickou epizodu, nocni mury), v takovem pripade je treba s tim prestat, vzit si vecer tabletu a jit spat, opakovat 14 dni.
    IOM_NUKSO
    IOM_NUKSO --- ---
    KOCOURMIKES: co je mysleno tim 'to'? k cemu to varovani patri??
    KOCOURMIKES
    KOCOURMIKES --- ---
    "In emptiness there’s no such thing as you and I. In emptiness there’s no such thing as this and that. In emptiness there’s nothing."
    "In emptiness there’s no samsara, no liberation, no hell, no enlightenment, no negative karma, no good karma. In emptiness there’s no gain, no loss. In emptiness there’s no gaining a friend, no losing a friend."
    "Such things exist only in the view of the obscuring mind, by labeling “gain” and “loss,” by labeling “gaining a friend” and “losing a friend,” by labeling “enlightenment” and “hell,” by labeling “liberation” and “samsara,” by labeling “virtue” and “nonvirtue.” "
    "In emptiness there’s no east and west. In emptiness there’s no I and no he or she, another separate person. In emptiness there is no here and there."
    "It might be useful to meditate this way when you have a problem in your life. It is a great protection psychologically, stopping depression and also stopping the creation of heavy negative karma."
    Prasangika View
    Lama Zopa
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