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    _B2SPIRIT_BUDDHISMUS
    KOCOURMIKES
    KOCOURMIKES --- ---
    OGMIOS: tak rozved aspon cely svuj Mahayanovy diskurs
    OGMIOS
    OGMIOS --- ---
    Aha, no myslel jsem tim co jsem napsal. Ze me tyhle budhisticky pyramidy pozornosti zarazej ve sve podstate.
    KOCOURMIKES
    KOCOURMIKES --- ---
    “Practice is this life, and realization is this life, and this life is revealed right here and now.” ~Maezumi Roshi

    KOCOURMIKES
    KOCOURMIKES --- ---
    OGMIOS: rozved to pls celej Mahayanovej diskurs tady...
    FORAMINIFERA
    FORAMINIFERA --- ---
    OGMIOS: promin, ale nepochopila jsem, co jsi chtel rict.
    KOCOURMIKES
    KOCOURMIKES --- ---
    “The secret of health for both mind and body is not to mourn for the past, nor to worry about the future, but to live the present moment wisely and earnestly.” ~Buddha
    OGMIOS
    OGMIOS --- ---
    FORAMINIFERA: tohle me na tom zarazi. Protoze to cemu venujes svou pozornost sili/roste. To je jako kdyz jsem se byl podivat na jednoho budhistickyho co prijel do cech a tam ze meditujte na me jako na budhu. No pekny, taky bych bral aby plna hala lidi na me myslela jako na budhu :D vzhledem k tomu ze zakouti lidskych mysli dokazi byt hluboka a skryvat ledacos mi to prijde osemetne. Nakolik cista musi byt ta bytost abych ji mohl sverit takovym zpusobem mou pozornost? Ale zase na druhou stranu svou pozornost venuju kdejakym jinym blbostem.
    KOCOURMIKES
    KOCOURMIKES --- ---
    Excerpts from "The Rainbow Body and Resurrection"
    "It seems that the Tamil Siddha tradition has its own accounts of the body of masters disappearing after death. The most famous recent case—that of Swami Ramalinga whose body dissolved into light in March, 1874—is attested to in police reports of the time. Ramalinga’s religious movement, which continues to the present day, insists on the literal disappearance of the body.
    Ramalinga’s practices involve opening the third eye and the fontanel; the fontanel, which is the aperture at
    the top of the skull, is also important in Tibetan ‘ pho wa practices (practices involving techniques for expelling the consciousness principle from the top of the skull).
    As in Tibetan dzogchen, the red sun at sunrise is contemplated with open eyes. A mantra favored by Ramalinga, the jyothi (light) mantra, (emphasizing the grace and compassion of the Dancing Shiva) is repeated continuously for six months. Having attained the signs of completion, the practitioner can contemplate the “white” sun of midday. At this point, light begins to develop a direct relationship with the body of the yogin. Entering the eyes, sunlight travels through the subtle channels of the yogic body, permeating the cells.
    ...what is important is the use of the eyes as an entryway into the subtle channels that bring the light energy into the cells and down to the molecular and atomic levels of the body. The eyes and channels provide a vital interface between the material body and the subtle body. These practices are very similar to the methods of tregchod and thodgal in Tibetan dzogchen, both Bonpo and Buddhist, as we verified in our February 2001 interviews with Loppon Tenzin Namdak.
    Once brought inside the body, the light brings about the transformation of itself : the practitioner does not manipulate it with the conscious mind; it just happens spontaneously. Ramalinga is particularly interesting not only for having revived the yogic teachings of Tirumular but also for his more modern understanding of the atomic nature of material phenomena.
    He advocated for a transformation of the entire body-mind complex at the atomic level, on the level of the pure elements, in a way that also resonates with Tibetan tantric systems description of the coarse elements and their subtle substratum (space, air, water, fire, and earth). The light body arises from the vishuddha bhutas . These purified bhutas or elements are drawn upwards and outwards from the aperture of Brahma. In effect Ramalinga is describing a bodily alchemy of distillation made possible by the energy of solar light that has been brought down into the cells.
    Ramalinga is said to have appeared by bilocation to Colonel Olcott and Madame Blavatsky. Since his disappearance in 1874, he is reported to have appeared to many people in the form of a luminous hologram; there are also many reports of Ramalinga locutions. Tulasiram, a Pondicherry author and practitioner who has written voluminously on Ramalinga, reports on a woman devotee who in 2001 was awakened from sleep by a slap from Ramalinga and was put into a state of meditative absorption. Tulasiram claims to have seen a luminous apparition of Ramalinga in his private apartment in 1982.
    The Tamil Siddha tradition is a branch of Shaivite Hinduism that is typically practiced among marginalized, non-caste based, non-Brahman yogis and medical practitioners. It is not a religion in the sense of having its own priesthood and scriptures at the service of a clearly defined community. Although there are certainly temples served by Brahman pujaris (ritual specialists) connected to Tamil Siddha tradition, their existence is more a matter of classic Hinduism acknowledging the validity of the attainment of these siddhas than a defining institutional base for the movement. The reason that the Tamil Siddhas interest us is that their approach to spiritual attainment is firmly grounded in the material body. Like the set of spiritual traditions loosely called “tantra,” the Tamil Siddha tradition recognizes the jiva (life principle or soul, which it calls the uior )."
    KOCOURMIKES
    KOCOURMIKES --- ---
    FORAMINIFERA: jj GR existuje a ma prehled.
    FORAMINIFERA
    FORAMINIFERA --- ---
    We should constantly keep in mind that Guru Rinpoche is our sole refuge, whether in happiness or in sorrow, whether in the higher realms of samsara or the lower. Without any second thoughts, we should give our whole mind to him, like throwing a pebble into a lake.

    --Guru Yoga, Dilgo Khyentse Rinpoche
    KOCOURMIKES
    KOCOURMIKES --- ---
    Complete Thogal Instructions

    THE OPEN DOORWAY
    http://www.theopendoorway.org/Dzogchen-Thodgal.htm
    KOCOURMIKES
    KOCOURMIKES --- ---
    Dr. Sanjay Gupta: Paul Farmer, the doctor who taught me to be more selfless - CNN.com
    http://edition.cnn.com/...y-gupta-partners-in-health-champions-for-change/index.html?linkId=39124406
    KOCOURMIKES
    KOCOURMIKES --- ---
    The practice of Dzogchen or Atiyoga
    is to realize the tathagatagarbha, or "buddha nature," which has been present as our true nature since the very beginning. Here it is not sufficient to focus on contrived practices that involve intellectual effort and concepts. To recognize our true nature, the practice should be utterly beyond fabrication.

    The practice is simply to realize the emptiness and the radiance, or natural expression, of wisdom, which is beyond all intellectual concepts. It is the true realization of the absolute nature just as it is - the ultimate fruition.

    - Dilgo Khyentse Rinpoche - Guru Yoga - Shambhala Publications
    KOCOURMIKES
    KOCOURMIKES --- ---
    ! Celosvětová transmise Gurujógy - úterý 2. srpna 2017 v 05:00 !

    Milí přátelé,

    v úterý 2. 8. 2017 v 05:00 (GMT+2) proběhne celosvětová transmise Gurujógy
    dzogčhenu – v den výročí mistra Guru Padmasambhavy a Ješe Čhogjal , formou živého videopřenosu praxe s Mistrem Čhögyal Namkhai Norbuem.

    Budeme se na Vás těšit jak v Praze, tak na ostatních místech ČR, kde bude video transmise probíhat přesně ve stejný okamžik jako na celém světě.

    Noví zájemci by se měli zúčastnit předchozího výkladu.

    V PRAZE BUDE PROBÍHAT PŘÍPRAVA A VÝKLAD, zájemci prosím hlašte se na
    blue@dzogchen.cz a sledujte naše webové stránky http://www.dzogchen.cz/

    ADRESA: Opletalova 35, Praha 1 – ve STŘEDY 18:30 /ÚTERÝ 20:00

    18.7. 2017 ÚTERÝ od 20:00 - praxe gurujógy na Guru Padmasambhavu
    26.7. 2017 STŘEDA od 18:30 – praxe gurujógy na Guru Padmasambhavu
    1.8. 2017 ÚTERÝ od 20:00 – praxe gurujógy na Guru Padmasambhavu

    2. 8. 2017 STŘEDA od 05:00 transmise
    Pokud znáte ve vašem okolí někoho, kdo má dlouhodobý zájem o nauku dzogčhenu, můžete jej o tomto informovat. Člověk, který chce přijmout při teto příležitosti transmisi, by měl mít seriózní zájem o následovaní nauky dzogčhenu a je vhodné, aby měl přečtenu alespoň jednu knížku od Čhögjal Namkhai Norbua, a aby se zúčastnil některého z výkladu a nácviku praxe – buď v Praze, nebo na jiných kontaktních místech ČR: http://www.dzogchen.cz/

    Přejeme Vám bdělé momenty.
    Zdraví vaši modří
    KOCOURMIKES
    KOCOURMIKES --- ---
    Rigpa is not generated through conceptualizing, meditation, practices, ritual or transmissions from a teacher.
    To know rigpa the mind needs to stop looking at its products.
    Instead the mind needs to look at what is looking at its products.
    That which is looking directly at these printed words IS rigpa.
    KOCOURMIKES
    KOCOURMIKES --- ---
    Thoughts about Marigpa
    Marigpa is the opposite of rigpa. Rigpa is our primordial wisdom Awareness. It's an awareness that knows it's own nature as being what it always is.
    Marigpa is a cognitive state of ignorance. It is ignorant of its own true nature. Rigpa and marigpa are mutually exclusive.
    Rigpa knows it's true nature non-conceptually. It's not a thought "about" it's true nature.
    In Dzogchen we describe two types of cognition; one is "togpa" (namtok) as ordinary thoughts and the other is "sherab" or "yeshe" as rigpa's non-conceptualized wisdoms.
    Ordinary thoughts as namtok are always marigpa.
    Primordial, non-conceptual wisdoms as yeshe and sherab, are rigpa cognitions.
    This is why all traditions say there are no namtok or thoughts in rigpa. Every thought is marigpa manifesting as slivers of the mind's incessant, karmic daydreaming. The famous ignorance that Buddha declared to be the root of all suffering is in fact to be found as only your current thought.
    Your current ignorance or marigpa can't be the last thought nor the next thought; the totality of samsara can never be more than your current thought.
    It can be noticed that during any thought, the wisdom self-certainty of transparent rigpa is always absent.
    So it's obvious that any thinking or conceptualizing will never contain rigpa's enlightened wisdoms, but only it's opposite.
    Let's clarify further regarding Rigpa and thoughts... One of this century's greatest Dzogchen masters was Tulku Urgyen. He wrote on this topic often and with great emphasis. Here is a quote from his book titled As It Is, volume 2, pages 168 and 169:
    A student asks: Can there be thinking during Rigpa?
    Rinpoche: "It is essential to resolve the fact that there is no namtog (thought) whatsoever in the state of rigpa; it is impossible. Darkness cannot remain when the sun rises. A hair cannot remain in a flame. It is only in a moment of distraction that you lose the continuity of rigpa. It is only out of that loss, which is marigpa, unknowing, that thinking can possibly start to move. This loss of continuity, in the sense of forgetting and being distracted, is called co-emergent ignorance. To reiterate, thinking means to conceptualize out of the state of unknowing. Thinking only begins after marigpa sets in, at the loss of rigpa! During the non-distraction of rigpa, no thought can begin. I cannot emphasize this enough - there is no thought during the state of rigpa!"
    The Buddha taught this:
    "Conceptualizing is a disease, conceptualizing is a cancer, conceptualizing is an arrow. By going beyond all conceptualizing (thinking), monk, he is said to be a sage at peace."
    MN 140 Dhātuvibhaṅga Sutta
    FORAMINIFERA
    FORAMINIFERA --- ---
    Nice dokument k emptiness meditacii

    KOCOURMIKES
    KOCOURMIKES --- ---
    and why we just dont experience the ever present radiant emptiness rigpa ?

    we only experience ever present radiance! Look around you! The sky, the grass, the birds, your thoughts, your egoic daydreams.

    because it is energetic phenomenon of decency, of freedom (from ego, self), liberation from all those things. radiant emptiness ramains, free

    not exactly; egoic mind and it's actions are also "ever present radiance", as is everything!



    ཆོས་རྣམས་མ་ལུས་གཉིས་མེད་པའི།
    །རང་རིག་བྱང་ཆུབ་སེམས་ཉིད་དོ།

    One's knowledge of the non-duality of
    all phenomena is bodhicitta.

    — Vajrasattvamāyājālaguhyasarvādarśa-nāma-tantra
    KOCOURMIKES
    KOCOURMIKES --- ---
    Another way to meditate on emptiness is to ask yourself, “What am I doing now?” You reply, “I’m sitting.”

    "Then ask yourself, “Why do I say that "I" am sitting?” “There’s no other reason at all to believe that "I" am sitting except that my body is doing the action of sitting.”

    "And when you say, “I’m thinking” or “I’m listening to teachings,” why do you believe "you" are thinking or listening to teachings? There’s no other reason at all except that your mind is thinking or listening to teachings."

    "This way of meditating helps us to recognize the object to be refuted. It is only because the aggregates (body/mind) are sitting, standing, eating, drinking or sleeping that we believe “I’m sitting,” “I’m standing,” “I’m eating,” “I’m drinking” or “I’m sleeping.” The I is merely imputed in dependence upon the aggregates ( body/mind) and the actions of the aggregates (body/mind). With this reasoning, there’s suddenly a big change in your view of the I. The concrete I, the seemingly real I, suddenly becomes empty right there. The seemingly real I from its own side that appeared before is not there."

    Prasangika View
    Lama Zopa
    KOCOURMIKES
    KOCOURMIKES --- ---
    i wonder, how to do it, when one just relaxes into nature of mind, how to do it that everything drops and is cleared and just bare radiant rigpa, radiant emptiness present. how to to get to bare rigpa, to radiant emptiness ?

    *

    your mind is approaching this as though something and someone exists.

    first indoctrinate the mind with this:

    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.

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