Extract :  ON ANOTHER  OCCASION, when I encountered Orgyan Tsokyey Dorje- the embodiment of the  magical illusion of timeless awareness- he bestowed advice for refining  my perception of things so that I could see that they are iilusory  (gyu-ma). He said, "For me to introduce you directly to the  interdependence of causes and conditions coming together, consider this:  The cause is the ground of being as basic space (zhi-ying), which is  pristinely lucid (dang-sal) and endowed with the capacity for anything  whatsoever to arise. The condition is a consciousness that conceives of  an 'I.' From the coming together of these two, all sensory appearances  (nang-wa) manifest like illusions.
  "In this way, the ground of  being as basic space, ordinary mind (sem) that arises from the dynamic  energy (tzal) of that ground, and the external and internal phenomena  that constitute the manifest aspect of that mind are all interlinked  (lu-gugyud), like the sun and its rays. Thus, we use the expression  'occurring in interdependent connection.'
  "Here are some  metaphors for this process: It is like the appearance of a magical  illusion, which depends on the pristine clarity of space as the cause  and manifests through the interdependent connection created by the  synchronicity of the conditions -that is, magical substances, mantras,  and the mind that creates the illusion.
  "All phenomena, which  manifest as they do, are ineffable, yet appear due to the influence of  conceiving of an 'I.' This process is like a mirage appearing from the  synchronicity of vividly clear space and the presence of warmth and  moisture.
  "All sensory appearances of waking consciousness, dream  states, the bardo, and future lifetimes are apparent yet ineffable.  Confusion comes about due to fixation on their seeming truth. This is  like a dream that one does not consider false- thinking, 'This is a  dream' -but instead reifies and fixates on as some enduring objective  environment.
  "Due to the predominant condition of the perception  of an inner 'I,' the realm of phenomena manifests as something 'other.'  This is like the appearance of a reflection through the interdependent  connection of a face and a mirror coming together.
  "Because one  is thoroughly ensnared by concepts of identity (dag-dzin), the realms of  the six states manifest one after the other. This is like the cities of  the gandharvas appearing in one's environment -for example, on a plain  at sunset -as visionary experiences reified by the ordinary mind.
  "While  sensory appearances are primordially such that they have never existed,  the myriad appearances that are seen, heard, smelled, tasted, or felt  are like echoes -subjective appearances manifesting as though they were  something else.
  "All sensory appearances are not other than the  ground of being, but are of one taste with that ground itself, like the  reflections of all the planets and stars in the ocean that are not other  than the ocean, but are of one taste with the water itself.
  "Due  to the concept of an 'I,' self and other manifest as though they truly  existed within the panoramic sky of the ground of being, expansive basic  space. This is analogous to bubbles forming on water.
  "The  pristine lucidity of the ground of being as empty basic space is forced  into the narrow confines of the subjective perception of consciousness  based on conceptual mind (yidshey). The influence of this entrenched  habit causes sensory appearances perceived in confusion to manifest in  all their variety. This is like the appearance of a hallucination when  pressure is applied to the optic nerve or when one's nervous system is  disturbed by an imbalance of subtle energy (lung).
  "Sensory  appearances manifest from the ground of being in all their variety in  view of a consciousness that conceives of an 'I,' yet they do not  diverge from or occur outside of that ground. This is like the case of  an adept who has gained mastery (wang gyur-wa) over states of meditative  absorption (tingnge-dzin) that permit the emanation and control of  phantoms. Although a variety of phantoms manifest when such an  individual is engaged in this process of emanation and control, in  actuality these phantoms are free of any basis and have never existed as  real objects.
  "Ah, my incredible little child, meditate  progressively in this way and, having realized that all sensory  appearances are illusory, you will become a yogin of illusion."
  Saying this, he vanished. | 
The book says that in order to benefit fully from the book, one needs an empowerment. What is your view on this? Truth or merely tradition? And where can one get such an empowerment?
PLAIN ENGLISH would make this book better and potentially helpful to a lot more people.
The truth is supposedly simple, yet it has to be expressed with a bunch of nonsensical prose.
@Soh,
Thank you. I have read 135 pages so far, and it is quite intelligible to me. I agree, I think it is a fantastic text. But the "ground of being" as awareness/space thing also sounded a bit suspicious to me. It sounds like Advaita. But awareness is empty of inherent existence. Is there even such a thing as "pure awareness"? Could it exist without some kind of object (which also depends on the abstraction awareness), subtle or gross? I think not. Atleast not to my experience.
Btw, I wrote the first anonymous comment, not the second.
This book is a bunch of bull. Empowerment my foot. Go look for the author. Pay him, he empower on your head. Simple practice dun do, go read liao become more deluded.
I think it is a matter of respecting the lineage. Such rules are not given without reason. The poster above me is just a perfect example of what happens when the books are read by people who are not qualified. They slander the Dharma which has far-reaching consequences into the future.
Therefore, before one poofs at these rules, it is better to be humble and assume that there is wisdom beyond our own understanding. There are consequences we may not have factored in.
There is also such a thing as respect. The retriever of this treasure has placed such conditions on its propagation, if in this day and time, we place so much stock in copyright issues, why are we so negligent about the wishes of a whole lineage of masters and transmissions.