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This text is based on the teaching of Khenchen Prachhimba Dorjee Rinpoche given at
Dharmakirti College in Tucson, Arizona, from March 25 to April 22, 2007. The
commentary is supplemented with references to The Words of My Perfect Teacher. All
citation references are to this text.
Introduction
First, one receives the teaching on rigpa—pure, nonconceptual awareness—and then
direct understanding follows. This is the ground and the view of all of the Vajrayana
teachings.
Then one does ngondro—the preliminary practices. These prepare one as a suitable
vessel for the advanced teachings and begin the process of training the mind that leads to
enlightenment in just one lifetime. This text divides these practices into three parts: outer,
inner, and secret. Just as one teaches “a,b,c” as a foundation for reading, we learn the
ngondro as the foundation for all advanced practices.
The first of these are the Four Thoughts That Turn the Mind. The purpose is to awaken
our motivation towards enlightenment and a commitment to practice, just as one must
commit to practice to master a musical instrument. With proper motivation,
understanding comes and the rest is easy! When we understand the nature of samsara
and nirvana, that is rigpa. Then the three poisons of ignorance, attachment and anger are
finished and we attain enlightenment!
The outer ngondro is followed by the inner ngondro. We take refuge in the source of the
path to enlightenment. We further develop our motivation through bodhicitta—the
altruistic intention to achieve enlightenment not just for ourselves, but for all sentient
beings. We accumulate merit to solidify our commitment through the offering of the
mandala, and purify our body, speech and mind through the deity practice of Vajrasattva.
The secret ngondro in this text consists of the three-fold guru yoga practices, the essence
of all paths. We receive the blessings of the guru through our openness and devotion to
the teacher. This is the most direct and rapid way to progress on the path.
OUTER NGONDRO
1. Precious human birth
2. Impermanence
3. Karma
4. Suffering
INNER NGONDRO
1. Refuge
2. Bodhicitta
3. Mandala offering
4. Vajrasattva purification
SECRET NGONDRO
1. Guru Yoga
2. Yidam Guru Yoga
3. Rigpa Guru Yoga
This leads into the perfection stage in which the sacred outlook of pure view is completed
by working with the subtle energies of the body. Finally, one engages in the perfection
phase of Dzogchen—The Great Perfection—in which the nature of mind, our innate
Buddhanature, is fully realized through the direct experience of ultimate truth.
OUTER NGONDRO
The outer ngondro is divided into three parts: body, speech, and mind. First we clean the
body, then our speech and finally, the main practice, our mind (lirung).
Body – Lu Lirung
To clean the body, sit in a comfortable position with your back straight. A straight back is
the most important aspect of the posture, whether you sit in a cross-legged position or in
a chair. This facilitates natural breathing.
We clean the body by using our breath. (You may do this sequence once; but if you have
time, repeat this sequence 3 times.)
Inhale naturally, block right nostril with the right index finger, exhale forcefully out the
left nostril. Visualize the breath going out as red – the poison of desire.
Inhale naturally, block the left nostril with the left index finger, exhale forcefully out the
right nostril. Visualize the breath going out as white – the poison of anger.
Inhale naturally, exhale forcefully out of both nostrils. Visualize the breath as black – the
root poison of ignorance.
Inhale naturally through both nostrils. When repeating three times, use a stronger breath
on last exhale. This purifies our channels (tsa), winds (lung), and drops (tigle). Then all
bad karma (li), 3 poisons (nyön), and subtle obscurations (wachak) are all finished and we
are left with naked rigpa.
Conclude the practice by placing the thumbs at the base of the ring fingers, and then
fold two middle fingers of each hand over, leaving index and little fingers pointed out.
Cross your arms like Vajradhara. Then quickly extend your arms out until your
hands are on your knees like Avalokiteshvara.
Rest in the natural state of rigpa—pure nonconceptual awareness.
Speech – Na Lirung
Next we clean our speech. First, a red hot syllable RAM comes to tip of our tongue and
“finishes” it, i.e. it disappears. The tongue is replaced by a triangle (tip forward, like the
tongue), light red in color. Then inside the triangle, we see three mantras spiral out from
the center as we recite the mantras. The spiral is spelled out syllable by syllable in the
counter-clockwise direction, while at the same time the whole spiral rotates in the
opposite direction (clockwise):
Innermost mantra spiral starts with White Sanskrit Vowels:
Outer mantra spiral finishes with Blue Mantra of Interdependent Origination – clockwise:
(If you are unable to visualize the syllables, it’s okay to just visualize the
color.)
Light goes out as offering to Buddhas and returns as a blessing; the tongue reappears. We
say the “Mantra of Increasing Mantras” (3X):
We achieve Vajra Speech (Buddha’s speech). Then rest in the natural state of rigpa.
Say the prayer “Guru, think of me!” (3X – sadhana p. 1). The first repetition, think
about Nirmanakaya—arhat/Hinayana enlightenment. The second repetition, think
about Sambhogakaya—Mahayana bodhicitta. The third repetition, think about
Dharmakaya—Buddhanature or rigpa.
The 9-fold meaning is as follows. The first repetition represents the Guru—3 kayas
(teaching). The second repetition represents the blessing—3 yanas and their natures
(listening). The third repetition represents yourself—3 as one, “one taste” (doing).
Precious Human Life: We reflect on the nature of freedom to practice the dharma.
These include not being born in one of the other realms of existence: the hell realm where
one is too tormented to practice, the pretas (hungry-ghosts) where one is too hungry and
thirsty to practice, the animal realm where one may be enslaved or attacked by others,
and the gods who spend their time in mental blankness. We are also fortunate not to be
born in a country where there is no dharma, or to be an adherent of a non-Buddhist
religious or philosophical tradition, or in a dark time when one cannot distinguish good
from bad. And we are fortunate not to be born mute or mentally deficient.
One may also contemplate the ten advantages, five individual advantages and five
circumstantial advantages. The individual advantages are having been born a human,
being born in where the dharma is available, having all one’s faculties, having the
wish to do positive actions (intention), and having the ability to turn your mind to the
dharma (faith). The five circumstantial advantages are that a Buddha has appeared, he
taught the dharma, the teachings are still available, we have the good fortune to
follow them, and we have the extraordinary compassion of a spiritual friend (teacher)
who has accepted us.
Thus to have Precious Human Life does not simply mean being born as a human. We
only have precious human life to the degree that we practice and do good virtue. In a
given day, if we are caught up in samsara all day except for one hour of practice, then
we have only one hour of precious human life. If, on the other hand, we go through
the day in the natural state of rigpa, we have many hours of precious human life. If
we do not practice and do not do good virtue, then we do not have precious human
life. (“Rare as…meaningful way!”)
Impermanence: We have this precious human life, but it is not permanent. There are
seven contemplations on impermanence. Even our universe—the outer world—is not
permanent; it too will eventually cease to exist. All beings will die, nor can anything save
them from that. Even holy beings have disappeared. Those in positions of power whether
loved or hated all die. Seasons, communities, families, friends, possessions, and our own
bodies change. We too will die and we do not know when or where. Even our next act or
breath may be our last.
Yet, impermanence does not simply mean the knowledge that we will die. Many
people understand that they will indeed die, but if we truly understand impermanence,
we think, “If I die now, who will help me?” and we realize that nothing – nobody, not
money, not anything external to me – will help me except the Dharma, so I must
practice NOW. We know that what is inside, our practice, is important. If we are lazy
in our practice, our future will be difficult. Practice now and the future will be very
easy! (“All conditioned…. and death!”)
Karma: This refers to the good and bad results from our actions. The most fundamental
principle is to do good, or at least cause no harm. There are ten negative actions to be
avoided:
Intentionally taking the life of another
Taking what is not given
Sexual misconduct
Lying
Sowing discord between others
Harsh speech
Worthless chatter
Desirous thoughts about other’s property
Wishing harm on others
Wrong views, including that our actions have no karmic effect, eternalism and
nihilism
The first three relate to the body, the next four relate to speech, and the last three are
acts of mind. There are also ten corresponding positive actions to be adopted:
Protect the lives of beings
Practice generosity
Follow the rules of discipline
Tell the truth
Reconcile disputes
Speak pleasantly
Recite prayers
Be generous
Help others
Engage in the true and authentic view
Help animals. Do good actions. “Intention is by far the most important factor.”
Non-Buddhist karma is different, but similar. Buddhists take refuge. Even some
Buddhist practices do not, in themselves, lead to enlightenment. Shamata—no
thinking—leads to the god realm, still part of samsara. We still have some thoughts
like, “I am a god.” So it is very important to pay attention to your actions. When you
wake up in the morning, arouse bodhicitta. At night, dedicate the merit of your
actions. At all times, be mindful and vigilant of your actions. (“The karmic results…
abandon vice!”)
The suffering of samsara: Suffering is difficult; ordinary happiness is temporary. The six
realms are all samsara. Even gods fall to the hell realm when they die. There are
eighteen hells: eight hot hells, eight cold hells, neighboring hells and ephemeral hells.
There are two types of pretas: those who live collectively and those who move through
space. The first group suffer from extreme hunger and thirst, with mouths the size of the
eye of a needle, throats as thin as a horse’s hair and stomachs the size of a country. The
second group live in constant terror and hallucination, thinking of nothing but evil and
undergoing continuous torture. Animals suffer from being hunted, attacked and eaten by
others, or from stupidity and being exploited.
The Buddha taught that humans suffer from birth, old age, sickness and death. In
addition, the suffering of humans may be classified into three types:
The suffering of change—we lose things we want (attachment) or get things we
don’t want (aversion).
Suffering of suffering—pain and mental anguish
All-pervasive suffering—subtle suffering due to total immersion in the causes of
suffering
Other human sufferings include fear of meeting our enemies, fear of losing loved
ones, fear of not getting what we want or getting what we don’t want, similar to the
suffering of change.
The demigods suffer from envy, quarrelling and fighting. The gods live in a mindless
euphoric state in which they exhaust their good karma then fall to a lower realm
based on remaining negative karma.
After carefully contemplating these Four Thoughts, we should feel great compassion for
all who suffer and strong motivation to achieve enlightenment for the benefit of all
sentient beings. Having achieved this state, rest your mind in the natural state of rigpa. If
you have this foundation (of the Four Thoughts), practice comes very easily! This
foundation is very, very important. If you do good and have a good heart, good comes.
You will really understand and you will help many people. You can die and come again to
help even more.
INNER NGONDRO
The inner ngondro includes the practices of refuge, bodhicitta, the offering mandala, and
Vajrasattva purification.
Refuge
Taking refuge is a sign of faith. There are three kinds: vivid, eager, and confident faith.
“Vivid faith is the faith that is inspired in us by thinking of the immense compassion of
the Buddhas and great teachers.” “Eager faith is our eagerness to be free of the sufferings
of lower realms … our eagerness to enjoy the happiness of higher realms and of
liberation … our eagerness to engage in positive actions … and our eagerness to avoid
negative actions.” “Confident faith is the faith in the Three Jewels that arises from the
depth of our hearts…”
Faith leads to motivation of which there are three different levels: lesser beings are
motivated by fear of the lower realms, middling beings are motivated by achieving
nirvana for ourselves, and great beings are motivated by the desire to help all beings
overcome sufferings and achieve enlightenment.
Fold your hands together like a lotus bud (not flat, but empty inside) filled with a wish-
fulfilling jewel and bring them to your heart while visualizing the refuge tree (see
Mipham Rinpoche’s Refuge Tree) – “the five branched wish-granting tree” (p. 3)
Padmasambhava is in the center with his Indian consort, Mandrava –“the
Vajradhara Guru of Oddiyana sits before me.”
Samantabhadra is at the top with his consort, Samantabhadri.
Between Samantabhadra and Padmasambhava are the lineage gurus (Vajrasattva,
Garab Dorje… H.H. Jigmed Phuntsok Rinpoche…) – “surrounded by lineage
gurus…”
To Padmasambhava’s lower right and left are Yidams Avalokiteshvara, Hayagriva,
etc. – “yidams”
In front of Padmasambhava are the Buddhas of the three times: Past, Present
(Shakyamuni –“in front of him the supreme teacher”), and Future. The tree
shows three, but we think of all Buddhas of past present and future.
On Padmasambhava’s right are the Bodhisattvas (Manjushri, Avalokiteshvara,
Vajrapani, Samantabhadra, etc.) – “the eight close sons, the Mahayana’s noble
assembly”
On Padmasambhava’s left are the Arhats, the Hinayana sangha – “the eight…
sravakas [hearers] and pratyekabuddhas [solitary realizers].”
Behind Padmasambhava are the 64 million Dzogchen Tantra Texts – “the
Buddha’s sublime words…the Buddhist scripture”
The Dharma protectors, the Dharmapalas (millions) are at the bottom – “the
assembly of wisdom protectors.”
The whole vision is filled with sentient beings. Visualize your mother on your left and
your father on your right, and all other beings in front of you with your “enemies” in
the very front.
All sentient beings make prostrations and recite the refuge prayer three times with
prostrations:
“In the assembly of gurus, Yidams, and dakinis, that fill the furthest reaches of
space…”
Bringing the hands up to the crown (Buddha) – “and in the Buddha” – purifies
your body
Then to the throat (Dharma) – “Dharma” – purifies your speech
Finally to the heart (Sangha) – “and noble Sangha” – purifies your mind
Then prostrate touching hands, knees and head to the floor – “I and all the six
classes go for refuge respectfully” – purifies the obscurations of the 5 poisons.
The five poisons are finished; and we understand the 5 kayas.
Visualization is important, but the most important thing is to have very good faith and
motivation. Repeat the refuge prayer 100,000 times (one lak). It’s better to do it slowly
with faith and motivation than to just finish it. If you just finish it with no feeling, then
this is not useful. If you are going to do one lak, even doing a little bit each day you will
accumulate virtue now. To illustrate, if someone gives you a banana, the whole banana is
yours now, whether you eat it slowly and savor it, or whether you gobble it up. It is
better to do our prayers slowly with feeling.
When we take refuge in the Buddha, Dharma and Sangha, samsara is finished, we help
people, and we attain enlightenment. Samsara refuge is wrong thinking. We only take
refuge in fully enlightened beings.
I take refuge in the Buddha means I am a future Buddha; I take refuge in the Dharma
means I am the future Dharma; I take refuge in the sangha means I am the future sangha.
To take refuge in the Christian cross as the 4 kayas or to say “a,b,c” as a mantra or as
Buddha, Dharma, Sangha is wrong. There is no blessing as there is with mantra. If you do
OM AH HUNG BENZA GURU PEME SIDDHI HUNG, and then OM AH HUNG HRI,
enlightenment will come.
With high thinking, the 4 kayas will come. But if you lie, kill, and so forth, your practice
is not completed and enlightenment will not come. With strong faith and visualization it
will come.
Levels of refuge
There are four levels of refuge.
Outer—refuge in the Buddha, Dharma, and Sangha
Inner—refuge in the Guru, Yidam, and Dakini
Secret—refuge in the Nirmanakaya, Sambhogakaya, and Dharmakaya (or channels
[tsa], winds [lung], and drops [tigle])
Most secret—refuge in primordial wisdom, Buddhanature’s nature—emptiness,
expression—clarity, and compassion—all-pervasive.
These may also be characterized as an “outside 9” and an “inside 9.” The outside 9 are:
Outer—Buddha, Dharma, Sangha
Inner—Guru, Yidam, Dakini
Secret—Nirmanakaya, Sambhogakaya, Dharmakaya
With low thinking, we take refuge in the Buddha. With middle thinking, we take refuge
in the Yidam. With high thinking, we take refuge in the channels, winds, and drops.
Clean channels represent Nirmanakaya.
Winds going up in the central channel represent Sambhogakaya.
Drops (essence) represent the Dharmakaya—nondual thinking (no “hot” or “cold”).
Buddha is the source of refuge and blessings; Dharma is the source of teachings and good
virtue; and Sangha is the source of support. But this alone is Hinayana refuge—the wish
for enlightenment for ourselves.
In arousing bodhicitta, there are three degrees of courage: that of a king, a boatman, and a
shepherd. The courage of a king is the wish first to achieve Buddhahood for oneself, then
to help others. The courage of a boatman is the wish to achieve Buddhahood for oneself
and others at the same time. The courage of a shepherd is the wish that all others achieve
Buddhahood before achieving it for oneself.
The seeds of bodhicitta are the Four Immeasurables: boundless love, compassion,
sympathetic joy, and impartiality [equanimity].
Lovingkindness is the wish for happiness for all sentient beings.
Compassion is the wish for all sentient beings to be free of suffering.
Sympathetic joy – “…to have a mind free of jealousy” – refers to a feeling of joy at both
the worldly prosperity and accomplishments of others and the wish that they do even
better, but especially that they achieve enlightenment.
Equanimity – “impartiality means giving up our hatred for enemies and infatuation with
friends, and having an even-minded attitude towards all beings, free of attachment to
those close to us and aversion for those who are distant.”
To nurture these seeds as a meditation practice, one meditates upon each of them,
beginning with equanimity, then the other three in the above order.
Equanimity—Meditate on your enemies without animosity, as if they are your own
loving mother or father. Think of them as neutral persons, then as ones you love. Think of
everyone as the same, without any particular positive or negative feelings whatever. You
feel compassion equally for all, as if inviting them all, without exception, to a great
banquet.
Lovingkindness—Meditate now on all those beings with great love, like that of loving
parents taking care of their young children. Think of well-being and happiness for all
beings, as much as you would like it for yourself, from the bottom of your heart!
Compassion—Meditate on the sufferings of beings even to the point of tears filling your
eyes and wish for them to be free from that. Imagine them as if they were your own child.
Focus at first on individuals, one at a time; then step by step add others until you meditate
on all beings as a whole. Help others as much as you can. Develop your lovingkindness
and compassion until they become fundamental to who you are.
Sympathetic joy—We cultivate a feeling of delight, instead of displeasure, “when some
beings, through the force of their own past actions, possess some distinction or wealth…”
Appreciate what they have or have done and wish they could do even better and achieve
higher realms; and how wonderful it would be if all others could live at that level, too.
Then wish for all those beings to have the everlasting happiness of Buddhahood.
There are further practices for developing our bodhicitta—our good heart. Among them
are considering others as equal to oneself, exchanging oneself and others, and considering
others more important than oneself. One can also practice tonglen. The principle training
in the application bodhicitta in Mahayana is the Six Perfections: transcendent generosity,
discipline [ethics], patience, diligence [joyous effort], concentration, and wisdom. See
also the Bodhicharyavatara (Bodhisattva’s Way of Life) by Shantideva. In the chapter on
“Generosity” we may give practice, material, and even our bodies, but if you give
something then suffer because of your generosity, this is not good. If you can’t actually
give something, you visualize and pray.
Altruistic motivation:
Pray for all sentient beings’ enlightenment = Best (wisdom)
Pray for all sentient beings to be happy = Better (compassion)
Pray for long life of the lama = Good
Don’t think, “Me first, my suffering will be finished and I will achieve
enlightenment” [king’s courage]. Think about the enlightenment of all other sentient
beings first [shepherd’s courage].
In the text:
Recite and meditate on the Four Boundless Qualities or Four Immeasurables (bottom
of p. 4; “May all sentient beings … to those near and far!”) “A suitable number of
times” is traditionally 3X, but is better thought of as developing the feeling of
bodhicitta.
Having aroused the bodhicitta feeling, we say the bodhicitta prayer (top of p. 5; “HO,
As the victors … the reaches of space.”), accumulating 100,000 repetitions.
Say the final prayer 3X (I and all…bodhicitta) on p. 5 (Cross out OM AH HUNG).
Dissolve the visualization and receive the blessing:
The visualized refuge tree all dissolves into Padmasambhava/Mandarava.
Padmasambhava dissolves into light, which dissolves into our heart chakra.
We offer this to all sentient beings’ enlightenment and dissolve into light.
We rest our mind in the natural state of rigpa.
Offering Mandala
We make the mandala offering to accumulate merit and wisdom. Most important is our
intention, our motivation. First, if I now lack merit, then I will do the mandala offering to
get sönam (luck, merit). With the motivation of bodhicitta, make the offering to the
Buddhas and Bodhisattvas. Motivation of the offering is very important. If one offers
riches with hope for good things to come to oneself, no good virtue comes. One example
is the old, dirty-looking woman who offered a candle with true bodhicitta and her candle
kept burning, while others’ candles burnt out. Another example is the boy who offered
barley to Buddha Tsedrup with true bodhicitta. Seven grains fell into the Buddha’s cup
and the boy was reborn 7 times as a world king. A small offering with good motivation
brings good virtue. A big offering without good motivation brings no virtue.
What do we offer? We offer all of our good feelings from all six consciousnesses (the five
senses and mind consciousness). We offer (material) offerings, prostrations,
visualizations and the offering mudra. If we have no money or no material, then we can
imagine offering flowers, perfume, clothes, etc. Offering all you see is a short mandala
offering. When you see something nice, instead of attachment, “Oh, I want that,” you
offer it.
We offer our meditation. This is the best offering. For example, Jigmed Namjyak offered
his guru many actions, taking care of him in his old age. Once when Jigmed Namjyak
was meditating, he forgot to give his guru lunch, but his guru said, “Ok, today no lunch.”
The most important offering is meditation.
Best: offering meditation
Second best: offering actions of care and respect, e.g. making food, giving a massage,
cleaning, making everything nice, etc.
Third best: offering material, e.g. money and clothing.
The Mandala: Repeat this sequence 30X, 10X, 1X or visualize it depending on time:
Clean (wash) the channel in the center of your right wrist at base of palm.
Holding the offering plate in your left hand, wipe it clockwise with this part of
your right wrist (to clean your mind).
Sprinkle a little (scented) water on the offering plate. The plate represents your
mind; and the water represents bodhicitta.
Then, with barley (or other grain or offering material) in your hand, drop a little 7
times in this order:
6
4
3 1 5
2
7
☺me here
Continue to add offering material to the plate in this sequence for each repetition.
Notes: You place the offerings 1-5, then the sun and moon illuminate the offering.
If you don’t have a physical mandala plate, visualization or the hand mudra is
okay.
Having made the offerings, we have merit [sönam], but we also have bad karma, so we
do Vajrasattva purification practice.
Vajrasattva Purification
Vajrasattva is the Buddha of Purification. This practice purifies the negative obscurations
stored as negative karma in our alaya consciousness. All negative actions, however
serious, can be purified.
You are now transparent, a body of light. At the lower end of the central channel in
your lower abdomen (below the naval) the chakra of manifestation has 64 channels
branch out and upwards like the spokes of an umbrella. At the level of your heart, the
chakra of Dharma has 8 channels radiating downwards. At your throat level, the
chakra of enjoyment has 16 channels radiating upwards. At your crown, the chakra of
great bliss has 32 channels radiating downwards. Nectar flows down through the
central channel and into the spokes spreading throughout your body, like a crystal
vase filled with milk.
“Think that you are receiving the four empowerments: vase, secret, wisdom, and
word. You are also purified of the four kinds of obscurations: karmic obscurations,
obscurations of negative emotions, conceptual obscurations, and obscurations of
habitual tendencies. The wisdom of the four joys arises in you: joy, supreme joy,
extraordinary joy, and innate joy. The levels of the four kayas are established in you:
the Nirmanakaya, the Sambhogakaya, the Dharmakaya, and the svabhavikakaya.”
Pray to guru Vajrasattva for you and all sentient beings (pp. 7-8 “Protector, under the
sway… faults and misdeeds”). Vajrasattva absolves you as on p. 8.
Vajrasattva dissolves into light. The light comes into you through the crown of your
head. You become Vajrasattva. Together with all sentient beings as Vajrasattva, we repeat
the six syllable mantra as it radiates from our hearts:
OM VAJRASATTVA HUNG
or
OM BENZA SATO HUNG
The syllables are arranged counter-clockwise, then rotate clockwise so that they
appear in the correct order. The HUNG is blue, the OM is white, the BENZA (vajra)
is yellow, the SA is red, and the TO is green. Light radiates out in the five colors as an
offering to the Buddhas and Bodhisattvas who are pleased. They send light back as a
blessing which dissolves into you. You attain the ordinary and supreme
accomplishments (siddhis), the four levels of Vidyadhara, and the ultimate result—
enlightenment.
Light then radiates out to all sentient beings completely surrounding you. They are
seen in the colors of the five Buddha families, with you in the center facing East as in
this figure:
East
White (or blue) Vajrasattvas
West
Red Vajrasattvas
The entire visualized universe dissolves into the Vajrasattvas. They dissolve into you,
then you melt into light and dissolve into the OM, which dissolves into the BENZA,
which dissolves into the SA, which dissolves into the TO, which dissolves into the
HUNG, which dissolves from the bottom up into nonconceptual emptiness. Rest in
that state.
We then pray for the quick fruition of your good virtue as on p. 8 (“With this virtue…
utterly pure”)
If you do not have time to do the complete Vajrasattva practice as described above, you
may do the SHORT VAJRASATTVA PRACTICE: Recite the mantra OM BENZA SATO AH as
Vajrasattva, and then say the prayer on page 8:
Guru Yoga
The guru is your spiritual friend, a qualified teacher. He or she is considered to be a real
Buddha, as they are the source of our guidance on the path to liberation. Buddhism is an
oral tradition. It has been passed by word of mouth, supplemented by a vast array of
written texts, from teacher to student since the time of the historic Buddha, Shakyamuni.
The blessing of receiving the teachings in this way is one of the most treasured traditions
in all of Buddhism. Through devotion and faith our mind merges with his in
Buddhanature.
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His hat has two layers, inner and outer, which symbolize the union of generation
and perfection stages. The three points represent the three kayas. It is emblazoned
with a sun and a moon, symbolizing skillful means and wisdom. The blue border
represents unlimited samaya. On top is a vajra, symbolizing unshakable
concentration, and a vultures feather, a symbol of realization of the highest view
and the culmination of practice.
He holds a varjra in his right hand at his heart. His left hand rests in his lap
holding a skull-cup filled with wisdom nectar and contains a long-life vase toped
with a sprig from a wish-granting tree. He is in union with Mandarava, queen of
the dakinis. All the lineage lamas are gathered around as in a cloud.
“From Chamara continent come their wisdom counterparts”—wisdom Buddhas,
dakinis, etc., come and merge into our refuge tree visualization. First we
visualize, and then the actual wisdom beings come and dissolve into our
visualization.
“Rejoicing… nirvana.” We are happy at others virtue. We offer our good hearts and good
practice all to Padmasambhava. Why do we make this offering? Through this, all our
afflictive desires and attachments are finished!
“May you remain… realms exist.” We ask the guru to come, because if there is no guru,
there is no way to understand.
“I beseech you… Dharma.” Please teach. Why? Dharma teaching ends our ignorance so
that we may attain enlightenment.
Recite “In the magnetizing … empowerments” 3X. Like crying with devotion, think of
Padmasambhava—all 3 kayas—coming to this world. We pray for his blessing.
Still as Vajrayogini receive the four empowerments (“From the three syllables … and the
four kayas actualized” (pp. 11-12). Three colored lights stream from his three places and
enter our three places. White light from the OM in his forehead enters our forehead and
purifies our body, grants the vase empowerment, and plant the seed of nirmanakaya. Red
light from the AH in his throat enters our throat and purifies our speech, grants the secret
empowerment, and plants the seed of sambhogakaya. Blue light from the HUNG in his
heart enters our heart and purifies our mind, grants the wisdom empowerment, and plants
the seed of dharmakaya. Then the guru and his retinue dissolve into light and which melts
into your heart (merging his Buddhanature with your Buddhanature), purifies all karma
and subtle obscurations, grants the word empowerment, and plants the seed of
svabhavikakaya. Think not only of yourself, but about all sentient beings. He will teach
tantra to all beings, give refuge to all. (As an alternative, you can substitute a deity
practice as indicated in the sadhana pg. 11 for this prayer; see appendix p. 13).
Recite the mantra (accumulate 1 lak). Afterwards, rest in the state of rigpa.
Then again you think of Padmasambhava and complete “From the three
syllables…” (p. 11).
Finish your Guru Yoga practice with the concluding aspiration prayer “In all my
lives… Vajradhara.” (p. 12).
Ngondro is important! It’s not enough to do just shamata practice. We can have peaceful
feeling with shamata, but we stay in samsara, reborn as a god. We will not attain
enlightenment.
Comments on the Guru
There are many lamas, gurus, and lineages, but your teacher is really Padmasambhava.
First check the guru well. The lama is the “glue” [samjye] between Padmasambhava (the
Mahaguru) and the great student. If your guru is good, then you will understand
Dzogchen, and then achieve enlightenment. If the guru is not good, then your practice is
not good and this gives you a lifetime problem. First check the guru, then practice, then
fruition comes.
The guru should be pure and not have transgressed the three types of vows: Hinayana
(Pratimoksa), Mahayana (Bodhisattva), and Vajrayana (Tantra). He should be learned in
the tantras, sutras, and shastras (commentaries). He should be well versed in ritual
practices. He should be generous, pleasant, teach each according to his needs, and act
according to what he teaches. Above all, he should be so filled with compassion that he
loves each being like his only child.
For example, if we are baby cows, milk is like the Dharma; the mother cow is the guru.
You have to check if the mother cow has milk before you buy it. (If you get a bull, there
will be no milk, just meat and bad karma!) You practice, then you feel good, then you
grow into a big cow. What do we look for in the guru? How do we check the guru? We
look for compassion and wisdom. Don’t look at outside (clothes, lineage, or monastery).
If a high Rinpoche does not have compassion and wisdom, then no virtue or
enlightenment will come.
Avoid those who do not have qualities from study, reflection and meditation. Avoid those
who are puffed up with pride, profits and honors. Avoid those with very little knowledge,
strong negative emotions, or who are lax in their vows and samayas. Avoid those whose
qualities are not superior to your own and those who lack the love and compassion of
bodhicitta. If you are to trust your spiritual teacher, examine him properly, even over
several years.
What happens if we get a “bad guru”? Then do the Vajrasattva prayer and quietly separate
yourself from him. If his motivation is not good, bad karma will come to him. But don’t
throw out Buddhism. The person is wrong, not Buddhism. If you check out a guru and
find he is not good, then there is no samaya.
Once you have examined the guru and are certain of his qualifications and can trust him
with your life, then follow the teacher as a Buddha. Especially, keep your vows and
samaya commitments to practice, e.g., mantra repetitions for ngondro or empowerments
you have received. Maintain pure view. Emulate your teacher. “You should be like a swan
gliding smoothly on an immaculate lake.”
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PAGE 27
1 – Mt. Meru
2-5 – Four continents
6 – Sun
7 – Moon
SA
TO HUNG BENZA
OM
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