What is the View? It is nothing less than seeing the actual state of things as they are; it is knowing that the
true nature of mind is the true nature of everything; and it is realizing that the true nature of mind is the absolute truth.
Dudjom Rinpoche says: “The View is the comprehension of the naked
awareness, within which everything is contained: sensory perception and
phenomenal existence, samsara and nirvana. This awareness has two
aspects: ‘emptiness’ as the absolute, and ‘appearances’ or
‘perception’ as the relative.”
If meditation in Dzogchen is simply to
continue the flow of Rigpa after the introduction by the master, how do
we know when it is Rigpa and when
it is not? I asked Dilgo Khyentse Rinpoche this question, and he
replied with
his characteristic simplicity: “If you are in an unaltered state, it
is Rigpa.”
If we are not contriving or manipulating the mind in any way, but simply
resting
in an unaltered state of pure and pristine awareness, that is Rigpa. If
there
is any contriving on our part or any kind of manipulating or grasping,
it is
not. Rigpa is a state in which there is no longer any doubt; there is
not really
a mind to doubt: you see directly. If you are in this state, a
complete, natural
certainty and confidence surge up with the Rigpa itself, and that is
how you
know.
The Dzogchen Tantras, the ancient teachings from which the bardo instructions come, speak of a mythical bird, the garuda, which is born fully grown. This image symbolizes our primordial nature, which is already completely perfect. The garuda chick has all its wing feathers fully developed inside the egg, but it cannot fly before it hatches. Only at the moment when the shell cracks open can it burst out and soar up into the sky. Similarly, the masters tell us, the qualities of buddhahood are veiled by the body, and as soon as the body is discarded, they will be radiantly displayed.
In Tibetan we call the essential nature of
mind Rigpa—primordial, pure, pristine awareness that is at once
intelligent, cognizant, radiant, and always awake. This nature of mind,
its innermost essence, is absolutely and always untouched by change or
death. At present it is hidden within our own mind, our sem, enveloped
and obscured by the mental scurry of our thoughts and emotions. Just
as clouds can be shifted by a strong gust of wind to reveal the shining
sun and wide-open sky, so, under certain circumstances, some
inspiration may uncover for us glimpses of this nature of mind. These
glimpses have many depths and degrees, but each of them will bring some
light of understanding, meaning and freedom.
This is because the nature of mind is the very root itself of
understanding.
What is the nature of mind like? Imagine a sky, empty, spacious, and pure from the beginning; its essence is like this. Imagine a sun, luminous, clear, unobstructed, and spontaneously present; its nature is like this. Imagine that sun shining out impartially on us and all things, penetrating all directions; its energy, which is the manifestation of compassion, is like this: Nothing can obstruct it, and it pervades everywhere.
When a much larger number of people know the nature of their minds, they’ll know also the glorious nature of the world they are in, and will struggle urgently and bravely to preserve it. It’s interesting that the Tibetan word for “Buddhist” is nangpa . It means “insider”: someone who seeks the truth not outside but within the nature of his or her mind. All the teachings and training in Buddhism are aimed at that one single point: to look into the nature of mind, and so free us from the fear of death and help us realize the truth of life.
If, at the moment of death, we have already a
stable realization of the nature of mind, in one instant we can purify
all our karma. And if we continue that stable recognition, we will
actually be able to end our karma altogether, by entering the expanse
of the primordial purity of the nature of mind, and attaining
liberation.
Padmasambhava explained this: “This power to attain stability
by just recognizing the nature of mind is like a torch which in one
instant can clear away the darkness of aeons. So if we can
recognize the nature of mind in the bardo in the same way as we can now
when it is introduced by the master, there is not the slightest doubt
that we will attain enlightenment. This is why, from this very moment
on, we must become familiar with the nature of mind through practice.”
Remaining in the clarity and confidence of Rigpa allows all your thoughts and emotions to liberate naturally and effortlessly within its vast expanse, like writing in water, or painting in the sky. If you truly perfect this practice, karma has no chance to be accumulated, and in this state of aimless, carefree abandon, what Dudjom Rinpoche calls “uninhibited, naked ease,” the karmic law of cause and effect can no longer bind you in any way.
The practice of mindfulness, of bringing the
scattered mind home, and so of bringing the different aspects of our
being into focus, is called Peacefully Remaining or Calm Abiding.
All the fragmented aspects of ourselves, which had been at
war, settle and dissolve and become friends. In that settling we begin
to understand ourselves more, and sometimes even have glimpses of the
radiance of our fundamental nature.
How can the wisdom mind of the buddhas be
introduced? Imagine the nature of mind as your face; it is always with
you, but you cannot see it without help. Now imagine that you have
never seen a mirror before. The introduction by the master is like
holding up a mirror suddenly in which you can, for the first time, see
your face reflected.
Just like your face, this pure awareness of Rigpa is not something
“new” that the master is giving you that you did not have before, nor
is it something you could possibly find outside of yourself. It has
always been yours, and has always been with you, but up until that
startling moment you have never actually seen it directly.
Just as the ocean has waves, and the sun has rays, so the mind’s own radiance is its thoughts and emotions. The ocean has waves, yet the ocean is not particularly disturbed by them. The waves are the very nature of the ocean. Waves will rise, but where do they go? Back into the ocean. And where do the waves come from? The ocean.
In the same manner, thoughts and emotions
are the radiance and expression of the very nature of the
mind. They rise from the mind, but where do they dissolve? Back into
the mind. Whatever rises, do not see it as a particular problem. If you
do not impulsively react, if you are only patient, it will once again
settle into its essential nature.
When you have this understanding, then rising thoughts only enhance
your practice. But when you do not understand what they intrinsically
are—the radiance of the nature of your mind—then your thoughts become
the seed of confusion. So have a spacious, open, and compassionate
attitude toward your thoughts and emotions, because in fact your
thoughts are your family, the family of your mind. Before them, as
Dudjom Rinpoche used to say: “Be like an old wise man, watching a child
play.”
Where exactly is our buddha nature? It is in
the skylike nature of our mind. Utterly open, free and limitless, it
is fundamentally so simple and so natural that it can never be
complicated, corrupted, or stained, so pure that it is beyond even the
concept of purity and impurity.
To talk of this nature of mind as skylike is, of course, only a
metaphor that helps us to begin to imagine its all-embracing
boundlessness; for the buddha nature has a quality the sky cannot have,
that of the radiant clarity of awareness.
It is said: “It is simply your flawless present awareness, cognizant
and empty, naked and awake.”
Realizing the View subtly but completely transforms your vision of everything. More and more, I have come to realize how thoughts and concepts are all that block us from always being, quite simply, in the absolute. Now I see clearly why the masters so often say: “Try hard not to create too much hope and fear,” for they only engender more mental gossip. When the View is there, thoughts are seen for what they truly are: fleeting and transparent, and only relative. You see through everything directly, as if you had X-ray eyes. You do not cling to thoughts and emotions or reject them; you welcome them all within the vast embrace of Rigpa. The things you took so seriously before—ambitions, plans, expectations, doubts, and passions—no longer have any deep and anxious hold on you, for the View has helped you to see the futility and pointlessness of them all, and born in you a spirit of true renunciation.
Whatever our lives are like, our buddha
nature is always there. And it is always perfect. We say that not even
the buddhas can improve it in their infinite wisdom, nor can sentient
beings spoil it in their seemingly infinite confusion.
Our true nature could be compared to the sky, and the confusion of the
ordinary mind to clouds. Some days the sky is completely obscured by
clouds. When we are down on the ground, looking up, it is very
difficult to believe that there is anything else there but clouds. Yet
we have only to fly in a plane to discover above the clouds a limitless
expanse of clear blue sky. From up there, the clouds we assumed were
everything seem so small and so far away down below.
We should always try to remember: The clouds are not the sky and do not
“belong” to it. They only hang there and pass by in their slightly
ridiculous and nondependent fashion. And they can never stain or mark
the sky in any way.
Our buddha nature has an active aspect, which is our “inner teacher.” From the very moment we became obscured, this “inner teacher” has worked tirelessly for us, tirelessly trying to bring us back to the radiance and spaciousness of our true being. Not for one second, my master Jamyang Khyentse said, has the inner teacher given up on us. In its infinite compassion, one with the infinite compassion of all the buddhas and all the enlightened beings, it has been ceaselessly working for our evolution—not only in this life but in all our past lives—using all kinds of skillful means and all types of situations to teach and awaken us and to guide us back to the truth.
Feeling the living presence of Buddha, of Padmasambhava, of your master, and simply opening your heart and mind to the embodiment of truth, really does bless and transform your mind. As you invoke Buddha, your own buddha nature is inspired to awaken and blossom, as naturally as a flower in sunlight.
Dilgo Khyentse Rinpoche describes a yogi
wandering through a garden. He is completely awake to the splendor and
beauty of the flowers, and relishes their colors, shapes and scents.
But there is no trace of clinging or any “after-thought” in his mind.
As Dudjom Rinpoche says:
“Whatever perceptions arise, you should be like a little child going
into a beautifully decorated temple; he looks, but grasping does not
enter into his perception at all. You leave everything fresh, natural,
vivid and unspoiled. When you leave each thing in its own state, then
its shape doesn’t change, its color doesn’t fade and its glow does not
disappear. Whatever appears is unstained by any grasping, so then all
that you perceive arises as the naked wisdom of Rigpa, which is the
indivisibility of luminosity and emptiness.”
When the teachings “click” for you somewhere deep in your heart and mind, then you really have the View. Whatever difficulties you face, you will find you have some kind of serenity, stability, and understanding, and an internal mechanism—you could call it an “inner transformer”—that works for you, to protect you from falling prey to wrong views. In that View, you will have discovered a “wisdom guide” of your own, always on hand to advise you, support you, and remind you of the truth. Confusion will still arise, that’s only normal, but with a crucial difference: No longer will you focus on it in a blinded and obsessive way, but you will look on it with humor, perspective, and compassion.
One of the greatest Buddhist traditions
calls the nature of mind “the wisdom of ordinariness.” I cannot say it
enough: Our true nature and the nature of all beings is not something
extraordinary.
The irony is that it is our so-called ordinary world that is
extraordinary, a fantastic, elaborate hallucination of the deluded
vision of samsara. It is this “extraordinary” vision that blinds us to
the “ordinary,” natural, inherent nature of mind. Imagine if the
buddhas were looking down at us now: How they would marvel sadly at the
lethal ingenuity and intricacy of our confusion!
It is said that when Buddha attained
enlightenment, all he wanted to do was to show the rest of us the
nature of mind and share completely what he had realized. But he also
saw, with the great sorrow of infinite compassion, how difficult it
would be for us to understand
For even though we have the same inner nature as Buddha, we have not
recognized it because it is so enclosed and wrapped up in our
individual ordinary minds.
Imagine an empty vase. The space inside is exactly the same as the
space outside. Only the fragile walls of the vase separate one from the
other. Our buddha mind is enclosed within the walls of our ordinary
mind. But when we become enlightened, it is as if the vase shatters
into pieces. The space “inside” merges instantly into the space
“outside.” They become one: There and then we realize that they were
never separate or different; they were always the same.
There is a spark of hope, a playful humor
about the posture we take in meditation, which lies in the secret
understanding that we all have the buddha nature. So when you assume
this posture, you are playfully imitating a buddha, acknowledging and
giving real encouragement to the emergence of your own buddha nature.
You begin to respect yourself as a potential buddha.
At the same time, you still recognize your relative condition. But
because you have let yourself be inspired by a joyful trust in your own
true buddha nature, you can accept your negative aspects more
easily and deal with them more generously and with more humor.
When you meditate, invite yourself to feel the self-esteem, the
dignity, and the strong humility of the buddha that you are. If you
simply let yourself be inspired by this joyful trust, it is enough: Out
of this understanding and confidence, meditation will naturally arise.
The masters stress that to stabilize the
View in meditation, it is essential, first of all, to accomplish this
practice in a special environment of retreat, where all the
favorable conditions are present; amid the distractions and busyness of
the world, however much you meditate, true experience will not be born
in your mind.
Second, though there is no difference in Dzogchen between meditation
and everyday life, until you have found true stability through doing
the practice in proper sessions, you will not be able to
integrate the wisdom of meditation into your experience of daily life.
Third, even when you practice, you might be able to abide by the
continual flow of Rigpa with the confidence of the View, but if you are
unable to continue that flow at all times and in all situations, mixing
your practice with everyday life, it will not serve as a remedy when
unfavorable circumstances arise, and you will be led astray into
delusion by thoughts and emotions.
To recognize the nature of your mind is to engender in the ground of your being an understanding that will change your entire worldview and help you discover and develop, naturally and spontaneously, a compassionate desire to serve all beings, as well as a direct knowledge of how best you can do so, with whatever skill or ability you have, in whatever circumstances you find yourself.
Buddha was a human being, like you or me. He never claimed divinity, he merely knew he had the buddha nature, the seed of enlightenment, and that everyone else did too. The buddha nature is simply the birthright of every sentient being, and I always say: “Our buddha nature is as good as any buddha’s buddha nature.”
If your mind is able to settle naturally of its own accord, and if you find you are inspired simply to rest in its pure awareness, then you do not need any method of meditation. However, the vast majority of us find it difficult to arrive at that state straight away. We simply do not know how to awaken it, and our minds are so wild and so distracted that we need a skillful means or method to evoke it.
By “skillful” I mean that you bring together your understanding of the essential nature of your mind, your knowledge of your various, shifting moods, and the insight you have developed through your practice into how to work with yourself, from moment to moment. By bringing these together, you learn the art of applying whatever method is appropriate to any particular situation or problem, to transform that environment of your mind.
The purpose of meditation is to awaken in us
the skylike nature of mind, and to introduce us to that which we
really are, our unchanging pure awareness that underlies the whole of
life and death.
In the stillness and silence of meditation, we glimpse and
return to that deep inner nature that we so long ago lost sight of amid
the busyness and distraction of our minds.
Dudjom Rinpoche used to tell the story of a
powerful bandit in India, who, after countless successful raids,
realized the terrible suffering he had been causing. He yearned for
some way of atoning for what he had done, and visited a famous master.
He asked him: “I am a sinner, I am in torment. What’s the way out? What
can I do?”
The master looked the bandit up and down and then asked him what he was
good at.
“Nothing,” replied the bandit.
“Nothing?” barked the master. “You must be good at something!”
The bandit was silent for a while, and eventually admitted: “Actually
there is one thing I have a talent for, and that’s stealing.”
The master chuckled: “Good! That’s exactly the skill you’ll need now.
Go to a quiet place and rob all your perceptions, and steal all the
stars and planets in the sky, and dissolve them into the belly of
emptiness, the all-encompassing space of the nature of mind.”
Within twenty-one days, the bandit had realized the nature of his mind,
and eventually came to be regarded as one of the great saints of
India.
When the View is constant,
The flow of Rigpa unfailing,
And the merging of the two luminosities continuous and
spontaneous,
All possible delusion is liberated at its very root,
And your entire perception arises, without a break, as
Rigpa.
A term such as meditation is not really appropriate for
Dzogchen practice, you can see, as ultimately it implies meditating
“on” something, whereas in Dzogchen all is only and forever Rigpa. So
there is no question of a meditation separate from simply abiding by
the pure presence of Rigpa. The only word that could possibly describe
this is non-meditation. In this state, the masters say, even if
you look for delusion there is none left. Even if you looked for
ordinary pebbles on an island of gold and jewels, you wouldn’t have a
chance of finding any.
Sometimes when I meditate, I don’t use any
particular method. I just allow my mind to rest, and I find, especially
when I am inspired, that I can bring my mind home and relax very
quickly. I sit quietly and rest in the nature of mind; I don’t question
or doubt whether I am in the “correct” state. There is no effort, only
a rich understanding, wakefulness, and unshakable certainty.
When I am in the nature of mind, the ordinary mind is no longer
there. There is no need to sustain or confirm a sense of being: I
simply am. A fundamental trust is present. There is nothing in
particular to do.
In death all the components of the body and
mind are stripped away and disintegrate. As the body dies, the senses
and subtle elements dissolve, and this is followed by the death of the
ordinary aspect of the mind, with all its negative emotions of anger,
desire, and ignorance. Finally nothing remains to obscure our true
nature, as everything that in life has clouded the enlightened mind has
fallen away. And what is revealed is the primordial ground of our
absolute nature, which is like a pure and cloudless sky.
This is called the dawning of the Ground Luminosity, or Clear Light,
where consciousness itself dissolves into the all-encompassing space of
truth. The Tibetan Book of the Dead says of this moment:
The nature of everything is open, empty and naked like the sky.
Luminous emptiness, without center or circumference; the pure,
naked Rigpa dawns
Do not make the mistake of imagining that the nature of mind is exclusive only to our minds. It is in fact the nature of everything. It can never be said too often that to realize the nature of mind is to realize the nature of all things.
We are so addicted to looking outside
ourselves that we have lost access to our inner being almost
completely. We are terrified to look inward, because our culture has
given us no idea of what we will find. We may even think that if we do,
we will be in danger of madness. This is one of the last and most
resourceful ploys of ego to prevent us from discovering our real
nature.
So we make our lives so hectic that we eliminate the slightest risk of
looking into ourselves. Even the idea of meditation can scare people.
When they hear the words egolessor emptiness, they
think that experiencing those states will be like being thrown out the
door of a spaceship to float forever in a dark, chilling void. Nothing
could be further from the truth. But in a world dedicated to
distraction, silence and stillness terrify us; we protect ourselves
from them with noise and frantic busyness. Looking into the nature of
our mind is the last thing we would dare to do.
All the Buddhist teachings are explained in
terms of Ground, Path, and Fruition. The ground of Dzogchen is the
fundamental, primordial state, our absolute nature, which is already
perfect and always present.
Patrul Rinpoche says: “It is neither to be sought externally, nor is
it something you did not have before and that now has to be newly born
in your mind.” So from the point of view of the Ground—the absolute—our
nature is the same as the buddhas’, and there is no question at this
level, “not a hair’s breadth,” the masters say, of teaching or
practice to do.
When you have fully recognized that the
nature of your mind is the same as that of the master, from then on you
and the master can never be separate, because the master is onewith
the nature of your mind, always present, as it is.
When you have recognized that the master and you are inseparable, an
enormous gratitude and sense of awe and homage is born in you. Dudjom
Rinpoche calls this “the homage of the View.” It is a devotion that
springs spontaneously from seeing the View of the nature of mind.
Imagine you are sitting in front of a glass
door that leads out into your garden,
looking through it, gazing out into space. It seems as though there is
nothing
between you and the sky, because you cannot see the surface of the
glass. You
would bang your nose if you got up and tried to walk through, thinking
it wasn’t
there. But if you touch it you will see at once that there is
something there
that holds your fingerprints, something that comes between you and the
space
outside.
In the same manner, the ground of the ordinary mind prevents us from
breaking
through to the skylike nature of our mind, even if we can still have
glimpses
of it. We have to break out of the ground of the ordinary mind
altogether, to
discover and let in the fresh air of Rigpa.
There are rough as well as gentle waves in
the ocean; strong emotions come,
like anger, desire, jealousy. The real practitioner recognizes them
not as a
disturbance or an obstacle but as a great opportunity. The fact that
you react
to arisings such as these with habitual tendencies of attachment and
aversion
is a sign not only that you are distracted but that you do not have
the recognition
and have lost the ground of Rigpa. To react to emotions in this way
empowers
them and binds you even tighter in the chains of delusion.
The great secret of Dzogchen is to see right through them, as soon as
they
arise, to what they really are: the vivid and electric manifestation
of the
energy of Rigpa itself. As you gradually learn to do this,
even the most turbulent emotions fail to seize hold of you and instead
dissolve,
as wild waves rise and rear and sink back into the calm of the ocean.
There is no swifter, more moving, or more
powerful practice for invoking the
help of the enlightened beings, for arousing devotion and realizing
the nature
of mind, than the practice of Guru Yoga. Dilgo Khyentse Rinpoche
wrote: “The words Guru Yoga mean ‘union with the nature of the guru,’”
and in
this practice we are given methods by which we can blend our own minds
with
the enlightened mind of the master.
The master—the guru—embodies the crystallization of the blessings of
all buddhas,
masters, and enlightened beings. So to invoke him or her is to invoke
them all;
and to merge your mind and heart with your master’s wisdom mind is to
merge
your mind with the truth and very embodiment of enlightenment.
The nature of mind is the background to the whole of life and death like the sky, which enfolds the whole universe in its embrace.
The whole point of Dzogchen meditation
practice is to strengthen
and stabilize Rigpa and allow it to grow to full maturity. The
ordinary, habitual
mind with its projections is extremely powerful. It keeps
returning, and takes
hold of us easily when we are inattentive or distracted.
As Dudjom Rinpoche used to say: “At present our Rigpa is like a little
baby,
stranded on the battlefield of strong arising thoughts.” I like to say
that
we have to begin by babysitting our Rigpa, in the secure environment
of meditation.
Imagine a person who suddenly wakes up in the
hospital after an automobile
accident to find that she is suffering from total amnesia. Outwardly,
everything
is intact: She has the same face and form, her senses and her mind are
there,
but she doesn’t have any idea or any trace of a memory of who she
really is.
In exactly the same way, we cannot remember our true identity, our
original
nature. Frantically, and in real dread, we cast around and improvise
another identity, one we clutch with all the desperation of someone
falling
continuously into an abyss. This false and ignorantly assumed identity
is “ego.”
In Tibetan we call the essential nature of
mind Rigpa—primordial,
pure, pristine awareness that is at once intelligent, cognizant,
radiant, and
always awake. This nature of mind, its innermost essence, is
absolutely and
always untouched by change or death. At present it is hidden within
our own
mind, our sem, enveloped and obscured by the mental scurry of our
thoughts and
emotions. Just as clouds can be shifted by a strong gust of wind to
reveal the
shining sun and wide-open sky, so, under certain circumstances, some
inspiration
may uncover for us glimpses of this nature of mind. These glimpses
have many
depths and degrees, but each of them will bring some light of
understanding,
meaning and freedom.
This is because the nature of mind is the very root itself of
understanding.
According to Dzogchen, the entire range of all possible appearances, and all possible phenomena in all the different realities, whether samsara or nirvana, all of these without exception have always been and will always be perfect and complete, within the vast and boundless expanse of the nature of mind. Yet, even though the essence of everything is empty and “pure from the very beginning,” its nature is rich in noble qualities, pregnant with every possibility, a limitless, incessantly and dynamically creative field that is always spontaneously perfect.
Using the mantra, offer your heart and soul
in fervent and one-pointed devotion, and merge and mix and blend your
mind with that of Padmasambhava or your master.
Gradually you will feel yourself coming closer to Padmasambhava, and
closing the gap between you and his wisdom mind. Slowly, through the
blessing and power of this practice, you will find you actually
experience your mind being transformed into the wisdom mind of
Padmasambhava and the master: You begin to recognize their
indivisibility. Just as if you put your finger into water it will get
wet, and if you put it into fire it will burn, so if you invest your
mind in the wisdom mind of the buddhas it will transform into their
wisdom nature.
What happens is that gradually your mind begins to find itself in the
state of Rigpa, as the innermost nature of mind is nothing other than
the wisdom mind of all the buddhas. It is as if your ordinary mind
gradually dies and dissolves, and your pure awareness, your buddha
nature, your inner teacher, is revealed. This is the true meaning of
“blessing”–a transformation in which your mind transcends into the
state of the absolute.
The Dzogchen Tantras, the ancient teachings from which the bardo instructions come, speak of a mythical bird, the garuda, which is born fully grown. This image symbolizes our primordial nature, which is already completely perfect. The garuda chick has all its wing feathers fully developed inside the egg, but it cannot fly before it hatches. Only at the moment when the shell cracks open can it burst out and soar up into the sky. Similarly, the masters tell us, the qualities of buddhahood are veiled by the body, and as soon as the body is discarded, they will be radiantly displayed.
Just as the ocean has waves, and the sun has
rays, so the mind’s own radiance
is its thoughts and emotions. The ocean has waves, yet the ocean is
not particularly
disturbed by them. The waves are the very nature of the ocean. Waves
will rise,
but where do they go? Back into the ocean. And where do the waves come
from?
The ocean.
In the same manner, thoughts and emotions are the radiance and
expression of
the very nature of the mind. They rise from the mind, but where do
they dissolve?
Back into the mind. Whatever rises, do not see it as a particular
problem. If
you do not impulsively react, if you are only patient, it will once
again settle
into its essential nature.
When you have this understanding, then rising thoughts only enhance
your practice.
But when you do not understand what they intrinsically are—the
radiance of the
nature of your mind—then your thoughts become the seed of confusion.
So have
a spacious, open, and compassionate attitude toward your thoughts and
emotions,
because in fact your thoughts are your family, the family of your
mind. Before
them, as Dudjom Rinpoche used to say: “Be like an old wise man,
watching a child
play.”
The preliminary training of meditation
practice and purification ripens and opens the student’s heart and mind
to the direct understanding of the truth.
Then, in the powerful moment of introduction, the master can
direct his realization of the nature of mind—what we call the master’s
“wisdom mind”—into the mind of the now authentically receptive
student.
The master is doing nothing less than introducing the student
to what the Buddha actually is, awakening the student to the
living presence of enlightenment within. In that experience, the
Buddha, the nature of mind, and the master’s wisdom mind are all fused
into, and revealed as, one. The student then recognizes, in a blaze of
gratitude, beyond any shadow of doubt, that there is not, has never
been, and could not ever be any separation: between student and master,
between the master’s wisdom mind and the nature of the student’s mind.
Dudjom Rinpoche says of the moment when Rigpa is directly revealed: “That moment is like taking a hood off your head. What boundless spaciousness and relief! This is the supreme seeing: seeing what was not seen before.” When you “see what was not seen before,” everything opens, expands, and becomes crisp, clear, brimming with life, vivid with wonder and freshness. It is as if the roof of your mind were dying off, or a flock of birds suddenly took off from a dark nest. All limitations dissolve and fall away, as if, the Tibetans say, a seal were broken open.
Imagine you were living in a house on the top of a mountain which was itself at the top of the whole world. Suddenly the entire structure of the house, which limited your view, just falls away and you can see all around you, both outside and inside. But there is not any “thing” to see; what happens has no ordinary reference whatsoever; it is total, complete, unprecedented, perfect seeing. This is how it feels when Rigpa is directly revealed.