Showing posts with label Dakpo Tashi Namgyal. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dakpo Tashi Namgyal. Show all posts

You can get Clarifying the Natural State in PDF for $2 at Mahamudra Books for Cheap http://www.awakeningtoreality.com/2020/05/mahamudra-books-for-cheap.html

 

Session Start: Tuesday, March 18, 2008

(5:53 PM) AEN: hi i bought two books

(5:54 PM) AEN: one is maitreya's distinguishing phenomena and pure being

(5:54 PM) AEN: with commentary by miphan

(5:54 PM) AEN: under the guidance of khenpo tsultrim gyamtso rinpoche

(5:54 PM) AEN: the other is Clarifying the natural state by Dakpo Tashi Namgyal

(6:09 PM) AEN: oh i just realised khenpo tsultrim gyamtso rinpoche is the one who wrote the article

A Teaching on Guru Rinpoche’s Supplication That All Thoughts Be Self-Liberated

(10:38 PM) AEN: haven read alot.. just came back from bbq

(10:49 PM) AEN:

It is easy to resolve that (this conscious mind) does not consist of any shape, colour, location, support, or material substance. However, if you take it to be a definable entity that is aware and empty and you remain quietly in that state, you are still unresolved, since that is the meditative mood of stillness. Therefore, make mandala offerings, supplicate with deep devotion and investigate each instance of how it is aware, how it is empty and what its real mode is.

Through this you may find that mind is not comprised of a concrete or material substance and therefore has no shape or colour, no dwelling place or support. You may also understand that it is an aware emptiness that defies any description of being such-and-such -- it is inexpressible and yet it can be experienced.

When that is the case, the lama should try to present confusing statements. If the meditator's understanding is merely theory or hearsay it will be inconsistent and will not withstand scrutiny. If it is personal experience, it will converge on one point even when he is unable to articulate with traditional

(10:49 PM) AEN: words. When this happens, the meditator has reached personal experience.

Even so, there are eloquent and articulate meditators who lack personal experience. There are also experienced and tongue-tied meditators who are unable to explain. The lama should therefore let them thoroughly investigate and resolve this fully through real experience.

While in the previous state of lucid and thoughtfree shamatha, as before, look directly into your conscious mind. It is a wakefulness for which no words suffice. It is not a definable entity, but at the same time, it is a self-knowing aware emptiness that is clear, lucid and awake. Sustain this without distraction.

(10:54 PM) AEN: from another part:

(10:54 PM) AEN:

.

.

.

Next, in order to continue to gain personal experience, examine a particular thought or perception. You may now say, "it does not have a shape, color, or definable identity. The identity of mind is simply an aware emptiness!" Or you may deliver some other piece of theoretical understanding.

However, it isn't certain what you mean by aware emptiness. Do you mean an aware emptiness that happens after a thought event has ceased or dissolved? Or is it an aware emptiness while the thought is present? In the latter case, you may say the state is aware, but it is meaningless to say it is empty. Scrutinize in this way and continue examining.

No matter what kind of thought occurs, its experience is, in itself, something unidentifiable -- it is unobstructedly aware and yet not conceptualizing. As for perceptions, they are a mere impression of unobstructed presence, which is insubstantial and not a clinging to a solid reality. They are hard to describe as being such-and-such, and when you understand them to be this way you have reached personal experience.

Without getting distracte

(10:54 PM) AEN: Without getting distracted then, simply sustain this aware emptiness that is an unidentifiable awareness, also referred to as a perceiving emptiness that is perception devoid of a self-nature.

Someone may say, "When I look directly into a thought or perception, it dissolves and becomes an aware emptiness." This is a case of not having established certainty about the nature of thoughts and perceptions, but rather of using the idea of aware emptiness as an antidote against them.

(10:57 PM) Thusness: quite good

(10:59 PM) AEN: then there are quite a few pointing out instruction.. like actual pointing out of the innate, pointing out of the innate mind essence, etc etc

(10:59 PM) AEN: and one of them are pointing out innate thinking and another pointing out innate perception.. which i tink is about non duality

(10:59 PM) AEN: for example

(11:00 PM) Thusness: The mind essence that is empty is most difficult to understand. More difficult to experience than anatta

(11:06 PM) AEN: Pointing Out Innate Thinking

Second, the meditator should now assume the correct posture in front of (the master, and be told the following): “Let your mind remain in its natural way. When thoughts have subsided, your mind is an intangible, aware emptiness. Be undistracted and look directly into the identity of this naked state!

“At this moment, allow a feisty thought, such as delight, to take form. The very moment it vividly occurs, look directly into its identity from within the state of aware emptiness.

“Now, is this thought the intangible and naked state of aware emptiness? Or is it absolutely no different from the identity of innate mind-essence itself? Look!”

Let the meditator look for a short while.

The meditator may say, “It is the aware emptiness. There seems to be no difference.” If so, ask:

“Is it an aware emptiness after the thought has dissolved? Or is it an aware emptiness by driving away the thought by meditation? Or is the vividness of the thought itself and aware emptiness?”

If the meditator says it is like one of the first two cases, he has not cleared up th

(11:07 PM) AEN: If the meditator says it is like one of the first two cases, he has not cleared up the former uncertainties and should therefore be set to resolve this for a few days.

On the other hand, if he personally experiences it to belike the latter case, he has seen the identity of thought and can therefore be given the following pointing-out instruction:

“When you look into a thought’s identity, without having to dissolve the thought and without having to force it out by meditation, the vividness of the thought is itself the indescribable and naked state of aware emptiness. We call this “Seeing the natural face of innate thought”, or, “Thought dawns as dharmakaya.”

“Previously, when you determined the thought’s identity and when you investigated the calm and the moving mind, you found that there was nothing other than this intangible single mind that is a self-knowing, natural awareness. It is just like the analogy of water and waves.

(11:07 PM) AEN: icic..

(11:10 PM) Thusness: what is the example?

(11:10 PM) AEN: i just pasted above :P

(11:10 PM) AEN: u din receive?

(11:11 PM) AEN: 'pointing out innate thinking'

(11:11 PM) Thusness: it said for exmple

(11:12 PM) AEN: did u see Pointing Out Innate Thinking

Second, the meditator should now assume the correct posture in front of (the master, and be told the following): “Let your mind remain in its natural way. When thoughts have subsided, your mind is an intangible, aware emptiness. Be undistracted and look directly into the identity of this naked state!

etc etc

(11:12 PM) AEN: never receive?

(11:13 PM) Thusness: nv

(11:13 PM) AEN: ok continue from there:

(11:13 PM) AEN: “At this moment, allow a feisty thought, such as delight, to take form. The very moment it vividly occurs, look directly into its identity from within the state of aware emptiness.

(11:13 PM) AEN: “Now, is this thought the intangible and naked state of aware emptiness? Or is it absolutely no different from the identity of innate mind-essence itself? Look!”

(11:13 PM) AEN: Let the meditator look for a short while.

(11:13 PM) AEN: The meditator may say, “It is the aware emptiness. There seems to be no difference.” If so, ask:

(11:13 PM) AEN: “Is it an aware emptiness after the thought has dissolved? Or is it an aware emptiness by driving away the thought by meditation? Or is the vividness of the thought itself an aware emptiness?”

(11:13 PM) AEN: If the meditator says it is like one of the first two cases, he has not cleared up the former uncertainties and should therefore be set to resolve this for a few days.

(11:13 PM) AEN: On the other hand, if he personally experiences it to belike the latter case, he has seen the identity of thought and can therefore be given the following pointing-out instruction:

(11:13 PM) AEN: “When you look into a thought’s identity, without having to dissolve the thought and without having to force it out by meditation, the vividness of the thought is itself the indescribable and naked state of aware emptiness. We call this “Seeing the natural face of innate thought”, or, “Thought dawns as dharmakaya.”

(11:13 PM) AEN: “Previously, when you determined the thought’s identity and when you investigated the calm and the moving mind, you found that there was nothing other than this intangible single mind that is a self-knowing, natural awareness. It is just like the analogy of water and waves.

(11:13 PM) AEN: etc...

(11:14 PM) AEN: then theres also innnate pointing of perception

(11:16 PM) Thusness: This is very good!

(11:16 PM) Thusness: This is anatta.

(11:16 PM) AEN: icic..

(11:17 PM) Thusness: from who?

(11:17 PM) AEN: Clarifying The Natural State by Dakpo Tashi Namgyal

(11:18 PM) AEN: if im not wrong there are two series and same cover design, only difference in color

(11:18 PM) AEN: the other is by Thrangu Rinpoche i tink

(11:18 PM) Thusness: however this must be extended to all 6 senses

(11:18 PM) AEN: yea i only copied the innate pointing of thinking

(11:19 PM) Thusness: Actually it is just insight that is all.

(11:19 PM) AEN: there is also perception... where it uses visual perception

(11:19 PM) AEN: oic

(11:19 PM) Thusness: it cannot be attained as a state.

(11:20 PM) Thusness: only as an insight. Once bahiya sutta is understood

(11:20 PM) AEN: ...."Previously you cleared up uncertainties when you looked into the identity of a perception and resolved that perceptions are mind. Accordingly, the perception is not outside and the mind is not inside. It is merely, and nothing other than, this empty and aware mind that appears as a perception. It is exactly like the example of a dream-object and the dreaming mind..."

(11:20 PM) AEN: icic..

(11:20 PM) Thusness: it is a natural state

(11:20 PM) AEN: oic..

(11:22 PM) Thusness: empty luminosity

(11:22 PM) AEN: icic..

(11:22 PM) Thusness: but must be understood from DO [Soh: Dependent Origination].

(11:23 PM) Thusness: The first 2 cases is 'I Amness'

(11:23 PM) AEN: oic..

(11:24 PM) Thusness: I m glad that it is stated.

(11:26 PM) AEN: icic..

(11:27 PM) AEN: oh wait

(11:27 PM) AEN: clarifyign the natural state is not in two series, though it has same cover design as 'Crystal Clear' by thrangu rincpoeh

(11:27 PM) AEN: rinpoche

(11:27 PM) AEN: lol

(11:28 PM) Thusness: where u get this?

(11:28 PM) Thusness: do I hv the book?

(11:28 PM) AEN: ya the same qn is also asked when allowing visual perception such as mountain and a houe to be vividly experienced, and the books says, "Let the meditator look. He may say, Theres no difference. Its an intangible, aware emptienss." If so, then ask:

(11:29 PM) AEN: "Is it an awre emptiness after hte perceived image has disappered? Or is the image an awre emptiness by means of cultivating the aware emptiness? Or is the perceived image itself an aware emptiness?"

(11:31 PM) AEN: then he goes on to say the fist two cases is tat the meditators has not thoroughly investigate the above and should be once more sent to meditate and resolve this. But if he does experience that the vividly perceivd visual image itself -- unidentifiable in any way other than as a mere persence of unconfined perception -- is an aware emptiness, the master should then give this pointing out instruction: "When you vividly perceive a mountain or a house, no matter how this perception appears, it does not need to disappear or be stopped. Rather, while this perception is experienced, it is itself an intangible, empty awareness. This is called seeing the identity of perception.

(11:31 PM) AEN: i got it from Evergreen just now

(11:31 PM) AEN: nope

(11:31 PM) AEN: the bk u lent me was Crystal Clear

(11:31 PM) AEN: but no 'Clarifying the Natural State'

(11:31 PM) Thusness: ic

(11:33 PM) Thusness: Anyway luminosity-emptiness cannot be separated

(11:33 PM) AEN: it also talks about the 4 yogas, simplicity, one taste, non meditation etc

(11:33 PM) AEN: icic..

(11:33 PM) Thusness: u must first understand anatta first.

(11:34 PM) Thusness: I like it.

(11:34 PM) AEN: oic..

(11:34 PM) AEN: it has guides to practice of shamatha and vipashyana

(11:35 PM) Thusness: Emptiness must be understood without essence & operate like DO [Soh: Dependent Origination].

(11:35 PM) AEN: icic..

(11:38 PM) Thusness: But u must be able to correctly discern stage 1 & 2

(11:38 PM) AEN: oic..

(11:39 PM) Thusness: case 1 & 2 is just about stage 1

(11:41 PM) Thusness: when a person experience stage 2, he might mistaken it that he has understood what that is described above.

(11:41 PM) AEN: icic..

(11:44 PM) Thusness: when u read, u r able to discern correctly

(11:44 PM) Thusness: that is gd.

(11:44 PM) AEN: oic..

(11:44 PM) Thusness: didn't waste my effort ...haha

(11:44 PM) AEN: lol

(11:45 PM) Thusness: normal practitioners even after stage 2 will not understand

(11:45 PM) AEN: oic..

(11:46 PM) Thusness: and is unable to appreciate the passage

(11:46 PM) AEN: i bought another book which is also all about nonduality

(11:46 PM) AEN: oic

(11:47 PM) Thusness: buddhism or advaita

(11:48 PM) AEN: buddhism

(11:49 PM) AEN: its called "maitreya's distinguishing phenomena and pure being"

(11:49 PM) AEN: its a text by maitreya bodhisattva

(11:49 PM) AEN: commentaries by Mipham

(11:49 PM) AEN: i bought it bcos it contains some stuff which i was just contemplating on yesterday

(11:49 PM) AEN: lol

(11:49 PM) Thusness: is it good?

(11:49 PM) AEN: haven read a lot yet... wait i copy for u some parts

(11:53 PM) AEN: ..."Those who cling compulsively to the existence of outer objects claim, "Outer objects exist, because no one can deny that anything composed of atoms, such as mountains and any other object observed in common, exists." But that is not how it is.

(11:54 PM) AEN: Given what appear to be outer and perceivable in common, such as mountains and so on, as the postulate subject, these are not outer referents discrete from the inner consciousness and existing with a material essence, because they are the inner perceiving awareness itself appearing as the image of this and that outer referent for those whose operative habitual tendenceis correspond, just like forms in a dream.

(11:54 PM) AEN: What are being called "outer objects observed in common" are not referents existing as something extrinsic to or other t han consciousness, because they are only apparently experienced as common by a variety of beings whose mindstreams are not identical. But this is what proves that they are nothing other than differeing perceptions of differing mindstreams.

(11:54 PM) AEN: And how does it prove that? What are claimed to be "factors observed in common" are proposed as providing the proof for the existence of outer referents. But these can only be posited as "outer referents experiecned in common" due to a similarity in the character of their appearance from the subjective viewpoint of distinct mindstreams. But that means these appearances are the private impressions of mindstreams which differ among themselves. And that means they could never constitute common experience.

(11:54 PM) AEN: Thus to say, "There are outer objects which are something other than a mere appearance (or impression)" and to say, "Here is one expereinced in common" could never be demonstrated logically, since, to do so, one would have to posit the existence of objects other than those which appear to a mind. But it would make no sense to posit an object that could not appear to any mind, since it could not be evaluated through valid cognition.

(11:54 PM) AEN: still typing.. hehe

(11:57 PM) AEN:

On subjecting this so-called "common experience" to critical scrutiny, the reason for claiming it to be "common" turns out to be built on the similarity of appearance with respect to mindstreams which themselves differ, so it follows that, even though there is a similarity in the appearance, its underlying cause includes no necessity of a

(11:57 PM) AEN: specific outer common referent literally existing, just as corresponding appearances manifest for spectators under the influence of the charm of an illusionist. Similarly, for creatures whose operative habitual tendenceis correspond, not only will environements and so on have a similar appearance for as long as the energy of those habitual

(11:57 PM) AEN: tendenceies has not been exhausted, but, what is more, the specific cause for their appearing to be similar will not be existence of a referent on the outside. Just as something which one type of being sees as water will be seen as existing under another apperance by others among the six types of beings whose karmic impressions differ, anything perceived should be understood to be neither more nor less than a self-manifestation of the mentality internal to a specific observer.

(11:57 PM) Thusness: The first book better

(11:57 PM) AEN: icic..

(11:58 PM) AEN: the second bk is more theoretical i tink

(11:58 PM) Thusness: yes

(11:58 PM) Thusness: first is a meditative & intuitive experience

(11:59 PM) AEN: btw those are comments, not the real text by maitreya

(11:59 PM) AEN: icic

(11:59 PM) AEN: the real text is also included tho

(11:59 PM) Thusness: second is to logically understand something from a buddhist perspective

(12:00 AM) AEN: oic..

(12:00 AM) Thusness: it is not an arising of prajna wisdom

(12:00 AM) AEN: icic..

(12:01 AM) Thusness: u can take first book as ur guide.

(12:01 AM) AEN: oic..

(12:02 AM) Thusness: lend it to me once u finished

(12:02 AM) AEN: ok

(12:09 AM) Thusness: even after anatta experience

(12:10 AM) Thusness: u must practice dropping especially as a lay.

(12:11 AM) AEN: oic..

(12:17 AM) AEN: oh i just realised the author of Clarifying the Natural State, Dakpo Tashi Namgyal, is not a modern master.. he's 16th century master

(12:18 AM) AEN: the book is translated from tibetan by Thrangu Rinpoche

(12:18 AM) Thusness: ic

(12:19 AM) AEN: "The words of Dakpo Tashi Namgyal are unique. Adorned with plenty of pithy advice out of his personal experience, practitioners are greatly benefited by his instructions on how to remove hindrances and progress further. His methods for practicing Mahamudra are preeminent. This book is indispensable as it focuses exclusively on practice."

(12:19 AM) Thusness: Tibetan masters seem to hv deeper insight.

(12:19 AM) AEN: -- Khenchen Thrangu Rinpoche

(12:19 AM) AEN: oic

(12:19 AM) AEN: hmm how come :P

(12:20 AM) AEN: bcos of the teachings?

(12:20 AM) Thusness: no insight

(12:20 AM) AEN: huh

(12:21 AM) Thusness: I m referring to insight

(12:21 AM) AEN: o icic..

(12:22 AM) Thusness: I c many dualistic teachings nowadays

(12:22 AM) AEN: oh i just found out Crystal Clear is Thrangu Rinpoche's "loose commentaries on "Clarifying the Natural State"" based on talks

(12:22 AM) AEN: oic..

(12:23 AM) Thusness: in buddhist circles

(12:23 AM) AEN: icic..

(12:23 AM) Thusness: esp zen

(12:23 AM) AEN: oic but a few zen masters are quite enlightened rite (Soh: while it is true that most Zen masters just like most other masters in any given traditions haven't realised anatta, there is actually quite a number of Zen Masters that are/were very clear about anatta including [founder of Chinese Ch'an] Zen Patriarch Bodhidharma, Zen Master Dogen, Zen Master Steve Hagen, Zen Master Thich Nhat Hanh, Zen Master Hong Wen Liang (洪文亮禅师), Zen Master Hui Lü, Zen Master Barry Magid, Zen Master Ven. Jinmyo Renge osho, Zen Master Judith Ragir, Zen Master Hakuun Yasutani, Zen Master Kubota [Akira] Ji'un, Zen Master Shohaku Okumura,继程法师 and many others I haven't mentioned)

(12:24 AM) Thusness: yes

(12:24 AM) AEN: oic so y isit that many zen ppl are dualistic

(12:24 AM) AEN: due to lack of proper teaching or guidance or concept?

(12:25 AM) Thusness: yes

(12:25 AM) AEN: oic..

(12:35 AM) Thusness is now Offline

(12:40 AM) AEN: btw u know mahamudra also practices self inquiry?

(12:40 AM) AEN: (C) Finally, practice the meditation by looking directly at self as guided by the question ‘Who am I?’ This meditation was taught by Milarepa. Rest in this non-dual awareness.

(12:40 AM) AEN: so not only zen :P actually theravada also... particularly thai forest tradition, ajahn chah that side

(1:07 AM) AEN: Hi

Very interesting posts.

I'm just speaking from direct experience about the awareness, which seems relevant to this debate too.

I would call it "aware nothingness" really, as it feels empty and without identity.

Yet time and again, it always feels to be the same, stable and unchanging. And recalling distant memories, it feels the same too. Perhaps that's why Vedantins describe it so. It spontaineously realises itself several times a day and it feels like it's always there too. The dimension within which all experience seems to happen, within which consciousness changes through the day.

But how can this aware nothingness feel so unchanging if it is not so? I am open to it being impermanent, but it does not feel like this.

I'd also be very grateful if someone could simply describe how Buddha nature is impermanent too.

Many thanks

Metta

Dolphin

(1:07 AM) AEN: --- http://www.lioncity.net/buddhism/index.php?showtopic=66843

(1:49 AM) AEN: btw wat is the problem with 'Crystal Clear' which u said last time?

(3:18 AM) AEN: OPRAH WINFREY (HOST): Well, if I’m not the memories and I’m not the things that happened

to me and I’m not my story, then who am I?

ECKHART TOLLE (AUTHOR, "A NEW EARTH"): That's the question. And, in fact, who am I is

actually a question that in some spiritual -- eastern spiritual teachings is used as a kind of

(3:18 AM) AEN: mantra or pointer that you repeat to yourself in a meditation setting. So you sit down and

you ask yourself, who am I? And you're not supposed to answer that question. You leave the

blank after the question. In that blank, in that empty space, if it works, if this practice works

as it should, you suddenly get a sense of your own presence…

OPRAH WINFREY (HOST): Mm-hmm.

ECKHART TOLLE (AUTHOR, "A NEW EARTH"): …that has nothing to do with your thought

processes. Your own sense of conscious presence, your being-ness, your presence, which

part of which is actually also your physical presence, but it's a sense of aliveness.

OPRAH WINFREY (HOST): Mm-hmm.

ECKHART TOLLE (AUTHOR, "A NEW EARTH"): Every cell of the body becomes part of that

sense of presence and aliveness. So, as we state here, we can (unintelligible) if we can get a

little glimpse of that. A glimpse of our own presence, which again is nothing to do with

thinking. It is deeper than thinking.

OPRAH WINFREY (HOST): How do we get a glimpse of it sitting here?

ECKHART TOLLE (AUTHOR, "A NEW EARTH"): We get a glimpse of it. I recommend

(3:19 AM) AEN: I recommend that see if

you can feel the inner aliveness in your body. As (unintelligible), is there any sense in which

you can feel that there is an aliveness in every cell of the body? Now, if people…

OPRAH WINFREY (HOST): But isn't my mind thinking that?

ECKHART TOLLE (AUTHOR, "A NEW EARTH"): Your mind may be thinking, yes, of course, I’m

alive.

OPRAH WINFREY (HOST): Like in the book you say, feel the aliveness in your hands. Okay.

ECKHART TOLLE (AUTHOR, "A NEW EARTH"): Yes.

OPRAH WINFREY (HOST): When I go to feel the aliveness in my hand, I can't feel the aliveness

in my hand unless I had a mind in which to feel that.

ECKHART TOLLE (AUTHOR, "A NEW EARTH"): No. So, if you close your eyes and you hold out

your hand like this…

OPRAH WINFREY (HOST): Yes, yes.

ECKHART TOLLE (AUTHOR, "A NEW EARTH"): …and then you -- the question…

OPRAH WINFREY (HOST): You feel this -- the vibrating sensation in your hand.

(3:20 AM) AEN: ...ECKHART TOLLE (AUTHOR, "A NEW EARTH"): So the moment you enter the inner aliveness of

the body, you sense – there is a sense of self that is deeper than thinking. You are that

aliveness that you feel. You are that alive presence. And so -- and this applies whether your

past or your personal history is a happy one or an unhappy one. For most people, it's a very

mixed story.

(1:30 PM) Thusness: Dolphin is not bad but the way u answer must be more careful and precise.

(1:30 PM) AEN: oic..

(1:32 PM) Thusness: I read his reply.

(1:32 PM) Thusness: need to explain more.

(1:32 PM) Thusness: He seems to agree in his latest mail.

(1:33 PM) AEN: icic.. seems to agree with?

(1:33 PM) AEN: im just starting to read now

(1:36 PM) AEN: hmm

(1:36 PM) AEN: so how to reply him

(1:37 PM) Thusness: he said he re-read and more deeply. "But permanent, as the Advaitins say, the awareness it is not necesarily so, even though it has the appearance of it in direct human experience."

(1:38 PM) Thusness: What he meant by this?

(1:38 PM) Thusness: I read it as he thinks although it appears permanent in direct human experience, it is not so.

(1:40 PM) AEN: wat he means ah

(1:41 PM) AEN: oh lol u asking the same thing

(1:41 PM) Thusness: what he said is he begin to understand why it is impermanent.

(1:42 PM) Thusness: only in appearance it is permanent though in direct human experience it seems to be permanent.

(1:42 PM) Thusness: I will tell u how to answer why...going to makan.

(1:43 PM) AEN: oic..

(1:43 PM) AEN: ok

(1:43 PM) Thusness: for him, u must answer more carefully.

(1:44 PM) AEN: icic..

(1:44 PM) Thusness: Quote what i said in the url and link it with views. The relationship between views and consciousness.

(1:44 PM) Thusness: How it distort an experience and make it appears permanent.

(1:45 PM) Thusness: Tok to u after I makan.

(1:45 PM) AEN: ok..

(1:45 PM) AEN: which url

(1:45 PM) AEN: oh

(1:45 PM) AEN: http://awakeningtoreality.blogspot.com/2008/02/thusnesss-reply-to-longchen-at.html

(1:46 PM) AEN: The Link Between Non-Duality and Emptiness ?

(1:50 PM) Thusness has changed his/her status to Idle

(2:37 PM) Thusness: no

(2:38 PM) AEN: oic which url

(2:38 PM) AEN: u mean the buddha nature is not I AM

(2:39 PM) Thusness: yes

(2:39 PM) AEN: icic..

(2:42 PM) AEN: u mean link it with karmic propensities?

(2:43 PM) Thusness: yes

(2:52 PM) Thusness: r u denying the "I AMness" experience?

(2:54 PM) AEN: u mean in the post?

(2:54 PM) AEN: no

(2:54 PM) AEN: its more like the nature of 'i am' rite

(2:54 PM) Thusness: what is being denied?

(2:54 PM) AEN: the dualistic understanding?

(2:55 PM) Thusness: yes it is the wrong understanding of that experience. Just like 'redness' of a flower.

(2:55 PM) AEN: oic..

(2:55 PM) Thusness: Vivid and seems real and belongs to the flower. It only appears so, it is not so.

(2:57 PM) Thusness: When we see in terms of subject/object dichotomy, it appears puzzling that there is thoughts, no thinker. There is sound, no hearer and there is rebirth, but no permanent soul being reborn.

(2:58 PM) Thusness: It is puzzling because of our deeply held view of seeing things inherently where dualism is a subset of this 'inherent' seeing.

(2:59 PM) Thusness: So what is the problem?

(2:59 PM) AEN: icic..

(2:59 PM) AEN: the deeply held views?

(2:59 PM) Thusness: yeah

(2:59 PM) Thusness: what is the problem?

(3:01 PM) AEN: back

(3:02 PM) Thusness: The problem is the root cause of suffering lies in this deeply held view. We search and are attached because these views. This is the relationship between 'view' and 'consciousness'. There is no escape. With inherent view, there is always 'I' and 'Mine'. There is always 'belongs' like the 'redness' belongs to the flower.

(3:02 PM) Thusness: Therefore despite all transcendental experiences, there is no liberation without right understanding.

(3:02 PM) AEN: oic..

(3:03 PM) AEN: but that guy said something like the 'I'ness illusion is lost or something

(3:03 PM) AEN: though he still tinks its permanent and formless

(3:03 PM) Thusness: u don't have to care what is said lah.

(3:03 PM) AEN: hahaha

(3:03 PM) AEN: ok

(3:08 PM) AEN: he thinks awareness is the void background of experiences

(3:08 PM) AEN: even though he does treat it as 'self'

(3:08 PM) Thusness: doesn't

(3:09 PM) AEN: ya

(3:09 PM) Thusness: but after reading the url, he knows what u meant.

(3:09 PM) AEN: oic..

(3:09 PM) Thusness: The subtlety of the 'bond' cannot be underestimated.

(3:10 PM) AEN: icic..



Jon Norris:


Moonbeams of Mahamudra


‘Moonbeams of Mahamudra’ by Dakpo Tashi Namgyal (1511-1587) is one of the central texts of the Kagyu Lineage. When it comes to mahamudra manuals, it ranks in importance just behind the Ninth Karmapa’s ‘Ocean’ texts. For many years, the only English translation we had of this text was the one done by Lobsang Lhalungpa on Long Island back in the 70s under the sponsorship of Dr. Shen. From 1990 to 1995, Khenchen Thrangu Rinpoche conducted a series of five annual retreats in Big Bear Lake in California during which he gave a page by page reading transmission for this text, and his brilliant lectures are now collected in another marvelous book, ‘Essentials of Mahamudra’.

https://www.amazon.com/Essent.../dp/0861713710/ref=sr_1_1...

Most Kagyupas practice mahamudra using the widely popular method known as ‘the five part mahamudra’ which depends heavily on deity yoga (the generation and completion stages of mahayoga and anuyoga). But the Ninth Karmapa’s and Tashi Namgyal’s mahamudra manuals embody the ‘essence’ tradition of mahamudra as found in Gampopa’s earliest presentation. This mahamudra can be practiced independently of deity visualization, and focuses directly on shamatha and vipashyana. The Sixteenth Karmapa (Rangjung Rigpe Dorje) felt that this direct system would be more suitable for the western mind, and I heartily agree.

All these years later, I have become an avid student of Dudjom Lingpa’s dzogchen system as taught by Alan Wallace, and I am quite amazed at the similarities between Gampopa’s essence mahamudra and Dudjom’s quintessential dzogchen. Both systems hinge on mastery of shamatha and vipashyana, moving from recognition of the nature of mind to rigpa and on to spontaneous presence. The only significant difference is that the mahamudra manuals conclude with ‘cutting through’ (khregs chod), while Dudjom’s dzogchen manuals add a subsequent step in ‘direct crossing over’ (thod gyal).

https://www.amazon.com/Dudjom.../dp/1614293147/ref=sr_1_1...

Alan Wallace published Dudjom’s five principle dzogchen texts in a trilogy called ‘Visions of the Great Perfection’, and now we have something new on the mahamudra front as well. Elizabeth Callahan has just finished new translations of both Tashi Namgyal’s ‘Moonbeams of Mahamudra’ and Wangchuk Dorje’s ‘Dispelling the Darkness of Ignorance’, and they are both included in the same volume. This book will be released on March 12th. It won’t be cheap as books go, but it will be the best bargain of your life as liberation goes! Elizabeth translated the original restricted version of Wangchuk Dorje’s ‘Ocean’ manual, and it is superb. She knows her stuff. If I were you, I would pre-order this book and set aside some time in March for the meditation cushion!

https://www.amazon.com/Moonbe.../dp/1559394803/ref=sr_1_1...

~ Ŧoƞpa Ɉoƞ
A few excerpts from 'Clarifying the Natural State' by the great 14th century Mahamudra Master, Dakpo Tashi Namgyal.

(please take note that Mind here does not refer to the 'mind' with the small letter 'm' (a.k.a. thoughts and perceptions) but refers to the true nature of Mind, the true nature of all thoughts and perceptions, which is aware-emptiness)


"Clearing Up Uncertainties About Basis and Expression

This has four points:

Resolving that thoughts are mind
Resolving that perceptions are mind
Investigating the calm and the moving mind
Resolving that all experience is nonarising


Resolving That Thoughts Are Mind

Assume the same posture as before. Let your mind be evenly composed as aware emptiness. From within this state project a vivid thought, such as anger. Look directly into it and thoroughly investigate from what kind of substance or basis it arose.

Perhaps you suppose that it arose from this state of empty and aware mind itself. If so, examine whether it is like a child born from its mother or like light shining from the sun. Or is it the mind that becomes the thought?

Next, observe the way in which it remains. When it appears in the form of anger, examine whether this anger is accompanied by the fetter of intense clinging to things as being real or whether it is simply an appearance of anger, an openness in which there is no identity to take hold of.

Finally, observe how a thought departs. Is the thought stopped or does it dissolve? If it is stopped, who stopped it or what circumstance made it stop? If it dissolves, examine whether it dissolves due to some circumstance or whether it dissolves by itself.

In the same way, a variety of gross and subtle thoughts should be examined to gain some experience. If the meditator holds a wrong understanding, it should be eliminated with a counter-argument and a hint given. After that, the meditator should once more continue examining.

You may not have found that the thought arose from a particular location in a particular way, that it dwells in a particular shape or form or that it departs to a particular place. Nevertheless, your concepts about whether thought are mind are different, whether they are related as inside and outside, or as the body and its limbs and so forth must be destroyed. You must experience that the various thoughts, in whatever form they arise, are an empty appearance and not a definable entity. You must recognize that they arise out of yourself and dissolve into yourself. Since mind is unconfined, you must become certain that it is mind that merely appears or is seen as being thoughts. You must resolve that thoughts and mind are indivisible.

Take the metaphor of a wave on water. The wave is nothing other than the water, and yet it is seen as a wave. Although it appears as a wave, it has never changed from being of the nature of water. In the same way, with the various types of thoughts, from the very moment they appear, they are nothing other than the aware emptiness of unidentifiable mind.

Moreover, since this mind is unconfined, it does appear as a variety of thoughts. Even though it appears as them, it has not changed from being the aware emptiness of the mind that is not a definable entity. You must settle this point decisively. You must gain the experience of certainty in the fact that the various types of thoughts are mind.

Similarly, give rise to a happy or a sad thought and investigate whether there is any difference in their identity. In this way, also become certain in regard to opposing types of thoughts."

---------

Investigating the Calm and the Moving mind


Maintain the same physical posture as mentioned before. Let your mind be serenely calm in the state of aware emptiness. Now, investigate by looking directly into it.

While in this state of serene calm allow a thought to vividly stir. Investigate it too by looking directly into it.

Next, investigate the two instances of calm and thought movement to see if there is any difference in their arrival, remaining and departure or in their definable identity.

If there is a difference between remaining calmly and an abrupt movement of thought, examine to see if their difference consists in being better or worse, empty or not empty, having or not having an identity, and between being or not being identifiable.

If there is no difference, investigate to see if their lack of disparity consists in being identical or in being similar while different.

If identical, investigate how they are identical at the beginning, middle and end. If similar, examine how they are similar. Investigate in this way to gain some experience.


In case an incorrect understanding is held, it should be stopped with a counter-argument, a hint should be given and the investigation resumed.

Turning away from the belief that these two -- serene calm and abrupt thought movement -- are of entirely different substances, you must experience that they are the same mind, the mind that is identical in being rootless and intangible, and in being an aware emptiness that is self-knowing and naturally pure.

This being so, whichever of the two happens, there is no need to accept or reject, repress or encourage. Rather, you should become confident that this aware emptiness is naturally free -- in the very stillness when calm and in the very arising when thoughts occur.


---------

Note: Case 1 ~ 2 of 'Pointing out innate thinking' and 'Pointing out innate perception' is still resting on the Witness, while realising the vividness of thought and perception as aware-emptiness is realisation of non-duality + emptiness (see stage 5 & 6 of Thusness's Six Stages of Experience). But it is a recognition of what 'always is', and should not be mistaken with any passing non-dual experience of fusing.

Steps of Pointing-Out Instruction


This has two parts:

Pointing out innate mind-essence
Pointing out innate thinking
Pointing out innate perception

Pointing Out Innate Mind-Essence
First, when giving the pointing-out instruction, no one else should be present besides the master and disciple. If you prefer, assume the posture as before. Then the master says:

"Let your mind be as it naturally is without trying to correct it. Now, isn't it true that all your thoughts, both subtle and gross, subside in themselves? Rest evenly and look to see if this mind doesn't remain calm in its own natural state."

The master lets the disciple look.

"That's called shamatha."


-

"During this state, do not become dull, absent-minded or apathetic. Is it not true that you cannot verbally formulate that the identity of this mind is such-and-such, nor can you mentally form a thought of it? Rather, isn't it a totally unidentifiable, aware, unconfined and lucid wakefulness that knows itself by itself?

"Within the state of evenness, look to see whether it isn't an experience without any 'thing' experienced."

The master then lets the disciple look.

"That's called vipashyana."

-

"Here, these two are mentioned sequentially, but in actuality this kind of shamatha and vipashyana are not separate. Rather, look to see if this shamatha isn't the vipashyana that is an unidentifiable, self-knowing, natural awareness. Also look to see if this vipashyana isn't the shamatha of abiding in the natural state untainted by conceptual attributes. Rest evenly and look!"

The master lets the disciple look.

"That's called the unity of shamatha and vipashyana."

-

"Both are contained within your present mind. Experiencing and recognizing this is called the birth of meditation practice.

"This is what is given many names, such as buddha-mind, mind-essence of sentient beings, nonarising dharmakaya, basic natural state, innate mind, original wakefulness, Mahamudra, and so forth. And this is what all the sutras and tantras, true treatises and instructions aim at and lead to."

-

Having said this, if the master prefers, he can inspire further confidence by giving relevant quotations from the scriptures. Otherwise, it may not be necessary to say more than the following, since some people of lesser intelligence may get confused when the explanation is too long.

"The meaning in a nutshell is this: allow your mind to be as it naturally is, and let thoughts dissolve in themselves. This is your innate mind, which is an unidentifiable, self-knowing, natural awareness. Remain one-pointedly in its continuity and do not get distracted.

"During the daily activities between breaks as well, try to keep this kind of mindfulness undistractedly as much as you can.

"It is important to continue training persistently for a couple of days. Otherwise, there may be a danger of this seeing of mind-essence, which you ahve pursued through various means, slipping away."

"The meditator should therefore train in focusing on that for a couple of days.

Pointing Out Innate Thinking

Second, the meditator should now assume the correct posture in front of (the master, and be told the following):

"Let your mind remain in its natural way. When thoughts have subsided, your mind is an intangible, aware emptiness. Be undistracted and look directly into the identity of this naked state!

"At this moment, allow a feisty thought, such as delight, to take form. The very moment it vividly occurs, look directly into its identity from within the state of aware emptiness.

"Now, is this thought the intangible and naked state of aware emptiness? Or is it absolutely no different from the identity of innate mind-essence itself? Look!"

Let the meditator look for a short while.

The meditator may say, "It is the aware emptiness. There seems to be no difference." If so, ask:

"Is it an aware emptiness after the thought has dissolved? Or is it an aware emptiness by driving away the thought from meditation? Or, is the vividness of the thought itself an aware emptiness?"


If the meditator says it is like one of the first two cases, he had not cleared up the former uncertainties and should therefore be set to resolve this for a few days.

On the other hand, if he personally experiences it to be like the latter case, he has seen identity of thought and can therefore be given the following pointing-out instruction:

"When you look into a thought's identity, without having to dissolve the thought and without having to force it out by meditation, the vividness of the thought is itself the indescribable and naked state of aware emptiness. We call this seeing the natural face of innate thought or thought dawns as dharmakaya.

"Previously, when you determined the thought's identity and when you investigated the calm and the moving mind, you found that there was nothing other than this intangible single mind that is a self-knowing, natural awareness. It is just like the analogy of water and waves.


"This being so, is there any difference between calm and movement?

"Is there any difference between thinking and not thinking?

"Is it better to be serenely calm? Do you need to be elated about it?

"Is it worse when a thought abruptly arises? Do you need to be unhappy about it?

"Unless you perceive this hidden deception, you will suffer the meditation famine. So, from now on, when a thought does not arise you need not deliberately make one arise so as to train in the state of its arising, and when the thought does arise you need not deliberately prevent it, so as to train in the state of its nonarising. Thus, do not be biased toward calm or movement.

"The principle for this thought can be applied to all thoughts. However, the meditator should train for a while in simply making use of thoughts, so when no thoughts arise, conjure one up on purpose and sustain its essence. Otherwise, there is a danger of losing sight of the identity of thoughts.

The meditator should, therefore, be instructed to continue practicing diligently for several days. If it is preferably, bring in some quotations to instill certainty.

---------

Pointing Out Innate Perception

Third, the physical posture and so forth should be kept just as before. Then ask:

"While in the composure of the natural state, allow a visual perception, such as that of a mountain or a house, to be vividly experienced. When looking directly at the experience, is this perception itself an intangible aware emptiness? Or, is it the aware and empty nature of mind? Look for a while to see what the difference between them is."

Let the meditator look. He may say, "There is no difference. It is an intangible, aware emptiness." If so, then ask:

"Is it an aware emptiness after the perceived image has disappeared? Or, is the image an aware emptiness by means of cultivating the aware emptiness? Or, is the perceived image itself an aware emptiness?"

If the answer comes that it is one of the first two cases, the meditator has not thoroughly investigated the above and should therefore once more be sent to meditate and resolve this.

If he does experience that the vividly perceived visual image itself -- unidentifiable in any way other than as a mere presence of unconfined perception -- is an aware emptiness, the master should then give this pointing-out instruction:

"When you vividly perceive a mountain or a house, no matter how this perception appears, it does not need to disappear or be stopped. Rather, while this perception is experienced, it is itself an intangible, empty awareness. This is called seeing the identity of perception."

"Previously you cleared up uncertainties when you looked into the identity of a perception and resolved that perceptions are mind. Accordingly, the perception is not outside and the mind is not inside. It is merely, and nothing other than, this empty and aware mind that appears as a perception. It is exactly like the example of a dream-object and the dreaming mind.

"From the very moment a perception occurs, it is a naturally freed and intangible perceiving emptiness. This perceiving yet intangible and naked state of empty perception is called seeing the natural face of innate perception or perception dawning as dharmakaya.

"This being so, 'empty' isn't something better and 'perceiving' isn't something worse, and perceiving and being empty are not separate entities. So, you can continue training in whatever is experienced. When perceiving, in order to deliberately train in perception, there is no need to arrest it. When empty, in order to deliberately train in emptiness, you do not need to produce it.

"Whenever you recall the mindful presence of practice, all of appearance and existence is the Mahamudra of dharmakaya, without the need to adjust, accept or reject. And so, from now on, continue the training without being biased toward perception or emptiness by repressing or encouraging either of them.

"Nevertheless, for a while allow various kinds of perceptions to take place. While perceiving it is essential to be undistracted from sustaining the unidentifiable essence."

Thus, let the meditator train for several days. If it is preferred, bring in some quotations to instill certainty.