Tulku Urgyen Rinpoche:
Bardo
ALL SENTIENT BEINGS ARE IN A SITUATION called bardo. Bardo means
an intermediate state which is between two points of time. Right now
we are in the intermediate state between our birth and our death called the
bardo of this life. This bardo lasts from the moment we take birth until we
enter the circumstances that will cause our passing away. Two other
bardos are sometimes included within the bardo of this life. They are
called the bardo of meditation and the bardo of dreaming. We need to
train in the bardo of meditation during the daytime and the bardo of
dreaming during the night. Now, to train in the bardo of meditation, we
need to understand what is meant by buddha nature.
Buddha nature is present in everyone, without any exception. It is the
very core of our being, the very nature of our mind. It is nature totally free
from all faults and fully endowed with all perfect qualities. What we need
to do now is simply to recognize our nature, and then sustain the
recognition of that. There is no need to create or manufacture a buddha
nature through meditation. It’s also essential to realize that every
experience manifests and vanishes within the expanse of our buddha
nature.
The bardo of meditation takes place during the period of time we are
able to recognize our buddha nature, the dharmakaya nature of our mind.
Involvement in conceptual thinking is not called meditation. Meditation in
this context refers to the time when the thought has ceased and there is an
absence of conceptual thinking. To repeat that period over and over again,
from the cessation of thought to its re-occurrence, is called training in the
bardo of meditation. Unless we recognize this nature, we will continue in
samsaric existence, taking rebirth in one realm after the other. Sentient
beings take birth from one place to the next in samsaric existence precisely
because of not recognizing their nature. This lack of knowing their nature
is called ignorance.
Essential meditation teachings are called pith instructions, and they are
both profound and direct. To illustrate this point I will tell about pith
instructions given by Paltrül Rinpoche. Once, Chokgyur Lingpa went to a
tent camp in the province of Golok to meet Paltrül Rinpoche, and stayed
with him a week. During that week Chokgyur Lingpa and his daughter
received transmission for the Bodhicharya Avatara and essential
meditation teachings.
One evening Paltrül Rinpoche taught the daughter of Chokgyur
Lingpa, Könchok Paldrön, who was to become my grandmother. She
remembered his words very clearly, and later repeated them to me. She
imitated Paltrül Rinpoche’s thick Golok accent, and said, “Don’t entertain
thoughts about what has passed, don’t anticipate or plan what will happen
in the future. Leave your present wakefulness unaltered, utterly free and
open. Aside from that, there is nothing else whatsoever to do!” What he
meant was, don’t sit and think about what has happened in the past, and
don’t speculate on what will appear in the future, or even a few moments
from now. Leave your present wakefulness, which is the buddha nature of
self-existing wakefulness, totally unmodified. Do not try to correct or alter
anything. Leave it free, as it naturally is, free and wide-open like space.
There is nothing more to do besides that. These are the vajra words of
Paltrül Rinpoche, and they are truly meaningful.
Present ordinary mind is that quality or capacity that is conscious in
everyone, from the Buddha Samantabhadra and Vajradhara all the way
down to the tiniest insect. All sentient beings are aware or conscious. That
which is aware or conscious is what we call mind, that which knows. It is
conscious, yet it also is empty, not made out of anything whatsoever.
These two qualities, being conscious and empty, are indivisible. The
essence is empty; the nature is cognizant; they are impossible to separate,
just as wetness can’t be separated from water, nor heat from a flame.
Once this nature has been recognized, training in the bardo of meditation
can begin. At the moment of not recollecting anything from the past,
not being involved in contemplating the future and not being preoccupied
with something else in the present; let your present wakefulness gently
recognize itself. When you allow this, there is an immediate and vividly
awake moment. Do not try to modify or improve upon this moment of
present wakefulness. Leave it open and free as it is.
As for the bardo of dreaming, dreams only occur after we have fallen
asleep, don’t they? Without sleep, there are no dreams. What we experience
while dreaming is experienced due to confusion. After we awaken,
from where did the dream come? Where has the dream experience gone?
We cannot find either of those places. It’s exactly the same with the
delusory daytime experiences of all the six classes of beings.
Examine where your dreams originate from, where they dwell, and
where they disappear to. Understand that although the dream does not
truly exist, we are still deluded by it. Now, consider the dream as an
example for our being conditioned by ignorance. The buddhas and
bodhisattvas are like people who have never fallen asleep and therefore are
not dreaming, while sentient beings, due to their ignorance, have fallen
asleep and are dreaming. Buddhas exist in the primordial state of
enlightenment, a state that is completely undeluded. This state moreover is
endowed with all qualities and free from all defects. Cut through your daytime
confusion, and the double delusion of dreaming atop deluded
samsaric existence ceases as well.
After the bardo of this life comes the bardo of dying. The bardo of
dying begins the moment we catch an incurable disease that will cause our
death, until the moment we draw our last breath. The period lasting from
the inception of illness until our spirit leaves the body is called the bardo
of dying.
It is said that the best possible achievement is to be liberated into the
expanse of dharmakaya during the bardo of dying. If we have recognized
our basic nature of self-existing wakefulness and grown accustomed to it
through repeated training; a supreme opportunity arises at the moment just
before physical death. If we are adept enough we can engage in
dharmakaya phowa, the mingling of self-existing awareness, the
dharmakaya nature of mind, with the openness of basic space. This is the
highest kind of phowa: in it there is no ejector and no thing to eject. You
remain in utterly pure samadhi; mind indivisible from basic space.
Dharmakaya is like space in that it is all-pervading and impartial. When
nondual awareness mingles with basic space, this all-pervasiveness and
space are inseparable. The foundation for dharmakaya phowa is the
realization of the self-existing wisdom that is present in each one of us. It
is our awareness that needs to be recognized. Mingle awareness with the
clear sky and rest in the phowa where nothing is moved, ejected or
transferred. This liberation into primordial purity is the foremost type of
phowa.
If you have not recognized nondual awareness, or have not trained
sufficiently, and therefore can’t effect dharmakaya phowa, the bardo of
dying will progress further. The ‘outer breath’ of perceptible inhalation
and exhalation will cease, while the ‘inner breath’ of subtle energies still
continues to circulate. Between the ceasing of the outer and inner breaths
occur three experiences called appearance, increase and attainment. These
take place when the white element from your father, situated at the top of
the central channel at the crown your head, begins to move downwards,
inducing an experience of whiteness that is likened to moonlight. Next the
red element from your mother, situated below the navel, begins to move
upwards to the heart center, generating an experience of redness that is
like sunlight. The meeting of these two elements brings about an
experience of blackness followed by unconsciousness.
Simultaneous with the unfolding of these three experiences, all the
different ‘80 innate thought states’ arising from the three poisons of desire,
anger and delusion cease. There are 40 thought states that arise from
desire, 33 thought states that arise from anger and seven thought states that
arise from delusion. Every one of these ceases at the moment of blackness.
It is like the earth and sky merging: everything suddenly grows dark. The
conceptual frame of mind is temporarily suspended. If you are a
practitioner who is familiar with the awakened state of nonconceptual
awareness, you will not black out and fall unconscious at this point.
Instead, you will recognize the unceasing and unobstructed state of rigpa.
To reiterate, first there is the whiteness of appearance, second the redness
of increase and finally the blackness of attainment. These three are
followed by the state called the ground luminosity of full attainment,
which is the dharmakaya itself. People who are unfamiliar with the
awakened state of mind revealed by the cessation of conceptual thought
will at this point revert into a state of oblivion — the pure and undiluted
state of ignorance that is the very basis for further samsaric existence.
For most beings, this oblivious state of ignorance lasts until the ‘sun
rises on the third day’. However, an individual who has received instructions
from a spiritual teacher and has been introduced to the true nature
can recognize dharmakaya and attain enlightenment at this point, without
falling into unconsciousness.
This recognition and awakening are often called the merging of the
luminosity of ground and path, or the merging of the luminosity of mother
and child. Through the power of genuine training in the bardo of
meditation this recognition occurs as naturally and instinctively as a child
jumping onto his mother’s lap: the mother and the child know one another,
so there is no doubt, no hesitation. This recognition occurs
instantaneously. A tantra declares: “In one moment, the difference is
made. In one moment, complete enlightenment is attained.” If this happens,
there is no reason to undergo any further bardo experiences.
Liberation is attained right then.
For someone who fails to be liberated at the moment of death, according
to the Liberation Through Hearing in the Bardo known among Tibetans as Bardo Tödröl, the ensuing bardo states are said to generally
last 49 days, with a certain sequence of events occurring every seven days.
This is true for the average person who has engaged in a mixture of good
and evil deeds. For a person who has committed a great deal of evil during
his lifetime, the bardo can be very short; he or she may plunge immediately
into the lower realms. For very advanced practitioners the bardo is
also very short, because there is immediate liberation. But for the ordinary
person who is somewhere in between these two states, the intermediate
state is said to last an average of 49 days.5
After the bardo of dying the bardo of dharmata begins. Ordinary
people feel they have woken up after being in an unconscious state for
three and a half days; to them it seems as though the sky unfolds again.
Various dissolution stages occur during the bardo of dharmata: mind
dissolving into space, space into luminosity, luminosity into unity, unity in
wisdom and, finally, wisdom dissolving into spontaneous presence. Here,
this unity refers to the form of the deities. First, colors, lights and sounds
will occur. Only four colors appear at this time, and this is called the
experience of the four wisdoms combined. The green light of all-accomplishing
wisdom is missing at this point, because the path has not yet been
perfected. ‘Luminosity dissolving into unity’ refers to the forms of the
deities. Different deities begin to appear, first in their peaceful and then in
their wrathful form. Some are as tiny as mustard seeds, while others are as
big as Mount Sumeru. The most important thing at this point is to
recognize that everything, whatever appears, is a manifestation of your
nature. The deities are your own manifestations: they do not come from
anywhere else. So, feel 100% confident that whatever is experienced is
nothing other than yourself. Another way of explaining this is that
whatever appears is emptiness, and that which experiences is also
emptiness. Emptiness cannot harm emptiness, so there is no point
whatsoever in being afraid. With that kind of confidence, it is possible to
attain liberation at the sambhogakaya level.
The light from the peaceful and wrathful deities is intense and overwhelming.
If you have received instructions regarding this stage, you can
recognize them with confidence as expressions of your own essential
nature. Otherwise, pale, soft lights representing the six realms will appear
in different colors. Those who are unfamiliar with such phenomena will be
naturally attracted to those more comfortable types of light, and this
attraction is what pulls the mind back into the six realms of existence. In
this way the fourth bardo, the bardo of becoming, begins.
During the bardo of becoming, your power of perception is seven times
clearer than during the normal waking state in this life. You will remember
whatever you have done in the past and will be able to understand
whatever is taking place. You will possess six recollections: the ability to
remember the teacher, the teachings, the yidam deity for whom you have
received empowerment, and so on. When remembering the teachings you
received and practiced, it is most important to acknowledge that you have
died and are in the bardo state. Next, try to remember that everything that
takes place in the bardo is deluded experience. While various things are
perceived, they lack any self-nature, unlike in our present experience.
Now, if we put our hand into boiling water or into a flaming furnace it will
burn. Likewise, we can be crushed by the weight of huge stones. But in the
bardo, nothing that takes place is real. Everything is just an illusory
experience — so how can it harm you? This is very important to keep in
mind.
At this point in the bardo, the force of your intention is unobstructed. It
is thus possible to take rebirth in one of the five natural nirmanakaya
realms, the five pure lands of the nirmanakaya buddhas. The easiest place
to be born is in Sukhavati, the Blissful Realm of Buddha Amitabha.
Buddha Amitabha made thirteen eminent vows in the past, and due to the
strength of these it is not necessary to have purified all disturbing
emotions before being reborn in his pure realm. To enter the other
buddhafields, total purification is necessary, but this is not true for
Sukhavati. What is most important here is to be free from doubt. Engendering
one-pointed determination like an eagle soaring through the sky,
think without any hesitation, “I will now go directly to the pure land of
Amitabha!” If you can hold to this single thought in the bardo of becoming,
that alone is sufficient to go there. As long as you are not attached to
anything, nothing can tie you down or prevent you from reaching
Sukhavati. To be sure that you are free of attachments, before death, mentally
offer everything you own to Buddha Amitabha. Make a mandala
offering out of all your possessions and enjoyments, relatives and friends.
Anything to which you remain attached, even something as small as a
needle and thread; is enough to act as an anchor for your mind.
When the body is left behind, only the consciousness continues on —
all alone like a strand of hair plucked from a slab of butter. If the consciousness
is not bound by attachment to anything in this world, then
nothing can hold it back, though the existence of doubt can make some
difference. A consciousness that harbors doubt about rebirth in the pure
land of Amitabha can still be reborn there, but it will remain captive inside
a closed lotus bud for 500 years, until it has purified the obscuration of
doubt. If you can surrender all attachment to the things you have known in
this life and one-pointedly make the resolve, “I will go straight to
Amitabha’s pure land,” then it is 100% certain that you will arrive. There
is no hesitation or question whatsoever about this.
In the bardo of becoming you will remember, “My stability in practice
was not sufficient for me to be liberated into dharmakaya at the moment of
passing away. It was also not quite sufficient to be liberated into
sambhogakaya during the bardo of dharmata. So now here I am in the
bardo of becoming.” Acknowledging this, make up your mind to be
completely free of attachment to anything. Otherwise, even the smallest
attachment to relatives or possessions will obsess and worry your spirit,
like a dog chasing a scrap of meat. Only such attachments can really tie
your consciousness back to this world.
If you do have to be reborn in this world, you will continue through the
bardo of becoming while seeking a new rebirth. When meeting the parents
who will give birth to you, imagine them as the yidam deity with consort.
Let your mind enter the womb in the form of the syllable HUNG, and make
the resolve to become a pure Dharma practitioner.
The Vajrayana teachings provide many opportunities, many chances on
different levels. If we miss one opportunity, we get another chance, and if
we miss that there is still a chance to try again. As long as your samayas
are unbroken, there are many precious teachings in Vajrayana that will
help you cross the bardos.
When you are fatally sick or when you face death, make up your mind
to combine the practice of recognizing mind essence with the resolve to go
straight to the pure land of Sukhavati. As the great master Karma
Chagmey said, “May I soar like a vulture in the sky directly to Sukhavati,
without looking back for a single moment!” Don’t look back! Remain
totally unattached to anything in this world. Don’t have any doubt: then
there is no question that you will go straight there.
Always remember to begin with taking refuge and forming the
bodhichitta resolve to benefit all beings. For the main part of practice,
imagine yourself as the yidam deity. This is called the development stage.
Gently look into, “Who is it that visualizes? What is it that imagines all
this?” Not finding anything which visualizes or imagines is called the
completion stage. At the very same moment of looking into the thinker,
the fact that there is no thing to see is immediately seen. Anyone can see
that, if they know how to look. In the very first instant there is an absence
of thought. This state is not like a black-out, in that you are not
unconscious, but vividly awake. Yet this wakefulness doesn’t form
thoughts about anything. It’s like space; not the night sky, covered by
darkness, but like the sky lit by sunlight, where the sunlight and space are
indivisible. That is the naked ordinary mind present in everyone. It’s
naked because at that moment there is no conceptualizing, no thought
activity. Ordinarily, every moment of consciousness is occupied with
conceptualizing and creating something. Therefore, leave your present
wakefulness totally unfabricated.
Remember always to conclude your practice by dedicating the merit
and making pure aspirations. The pain may be very strong when we are
seriously ill; we might be in agony and feel miserable. Give up the
thought, “I’m suffering! How terrible it is for me!” Instead, think, “May I
take away all the pain and sickness of all sentient beings, and may their
stream of negative karmic ripening be interrupted! May it all be taken
upon myself! May I take upon myself all the sickness, difficulties and
obstacles which the great upholders of the Buddhadharma experience.
May their hindrances ripen upon me so that they all are free from any
difficulties whatsoever!” Such an attitude accumulates an immense
amount of merit and purifies immeasurable obscurations. It is difficult to
find anything that can create more merit than keeping this perspective. It is
much, much better than lying there moaning, “Why should this happen to
me! Why do I have to suffer?” That kind of self-pity is not of much use.
The wishes we make when we are close to drawing our last breath are
incredibly powerful. It is said that the resolve the mind forms at the verge
of death will definitely be fulfilled, whether it is pure or evil. Some people
die with the thought, “So and so did that to me! May I take revenge!”
Through the immense strength the mind displays during the last moments
before expiring, that person’s mind can be reborn as a powerful evil spirit
with the ability to harm others. On the other hand, if we make pure wishes
and aspirations, there is no question that they will be fulfilled. With the
finality of our human life acutely on our minds, the wishes we make and
resolves we form are immensely powerful. This is very important to
remember.
At the moment of death, ‘time does not change, experiences change’.
Time here means that there is no real death that occurs, because our innate
nature is beyond time. It is only our experiences that change. All these experiences should be regarded as nothing but a paper tiger. When we
meet a real tiger, we will feel frightened, but if we see that it is merely an
imitation — a paper tiger — we are not frightened at all. We have no fear
that the paper tiger will eat us. In the same way, all the different
experiences that occur after death all seem real, yet they’re not. In the
bardo, flames cannot burn us, weapons cannot cut us; everything is
illusory and insubstantial. It is emptiness.
At Tulku Chökyi Nyima Rinpoche’s monastery, called Bong Gompa,
north of Central Tibet, the bursar was about to pass away. My uncle,
Tersey Tulku was present. While the bursar was dying, he never stopped
talking. He said, “Well, well, now this element is dissolving, now that
element is dissolving, now consciousness is dissolving into space. Now
space is split open and all the different manifestations are appearing. The
vajra chains are fluttering around like crystal garlands and fresh flowers.
Dharmata is truly amazing!” He was laughing, and then he died. Of
course, he was someone who was quite stable in awareness.
The experiences that will appear at death and after are inconceivable,
and cannot exactly be described beforehand. One thing is certain, however:
whatever is experienced is a ‘mere appearance without any selfnature,’
merely felt to be, yet insubstantial. Everything is the play of emptiness.
Whatever is experienced is nothing other than a manifestation of
your innate nature — visible, but with no concrete substance.
Not recognizing that whatever appears in the bardo is your nature; you
can be terrified by the sounds, frightened by the rays and afraid of the
colors. These sounds, colors and lights are the natural manifestation of
buddha nature. They are, in fact, the Body, Speech and Mind of the
enlightened state: the colors are the Body, the sounds are the Speech, and
the light rays are the manifestation of Mind. They appear to everyone,
without exception, because everyone has buddha nature.
Although these experiences appear to everyone, they can differ in the
length of time they are experienced. This probably corresponds to the
degree of stability in mind essence. Other than this difference in duration,
the experiences are the same for everyone. The most important thing to
remember is not to feel sad or depressed about anything — there is no
point in that. Instead, have the attitude of a traveler who is returning home
while joyfully carrying the burden of the suffering of all sentient beings.
Theravada dun believe in bardo isnt it?
Originally posted by Rooney9:Theravada dun believe in bardo isnt it?
Many Theravada Ajahns believe in an intermediate state, and even Ajahn Brahmavamso admit that from his experience of dealing with the dead there is an intermediate between death and rebirth.
Also, in the original 18 schools following the Nikayas prior to the Mahasanghika school, many of the schools actually teach about the intermediate state, and there is nothing in the Nikayas that disprove it and on the other hand it eludes to it, but not as elaborate as some of the Mahayana and the Vajrayana texts. It just so happens that Theravada is one of the 18 original schools that do not talk about an intermediate state, and that Theravada is the only remaining school of the 18.
Originally posted by An Eternal Now:Many Theravada Ajahns believe in an intermediate state, and even Ajahn Brahmavamso admit that from his experience of dealing with the dead there is an intermediate between death and rebirth.
Also, in the original 18 schools following the Nikayas prior to the Mahasanghika school, many of the schools actually teach about the intermediate state, and there is nothing in the Nikayas that disprove it and on the other hand it eludes to it, but not as elaborate as some of the Mahayana and the Vajrayana texts. It just so happens that Theravada is one of the 18 original schools that do not talk about an intermediate state, and that Theravada is the only remaining school of the 18.
was it expounded and confirmed by the Buddha? did he uttered on bardo?
This is mentioned in the Tibetan Book of the Living and DEad. A very interesting book.
Yes I know, I have read that book before many years ago. you read it before?
Originally posted by Rooney9:Yes I know, I have read that book before many years ago. you read it before?
Yes, I read the Chinese version.
An old post for rooney -
[b]From the Theravadin Perspective
From http://www.lioncity.net/buddhism/lofiversi...php/t17918.html,
Basically,
Ajahn Brahm (and the
forest monks of Ajahn Chah) believe
there is an antarabhava, partly from the
numerous accounts in
the
Suttas, and according to Ajahn his personal
experiences dealing
with
the dying in Thailand (I have not inquired
further on this). Hoping
he
has written on this and will be published.
From http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Pali/message/7751?viscount=100,
>
>*Intermediate State
between Existences*
> >
> >In contrast to the orthodox stand,
there is significant
Pali canonical
evidence strongly suggestive of an intermediate
state between one
existence and
another, a view supported by Theravada
fundamentalists. Various
suttas from the
Nikayas clearly talk about a state of existence
before actual
rebirth as a
another sentient being. Let me quote some
examples from them.
> >
> >In Mahatanhasankhaya Sutta (MN 3
the Buddha
states that for conception to
occur, one of the conditions is that the being
to be reborn
(gandhabba) has to
be present at the moment of union between the
father and mother.
Here, it is
implicitly stated that there is an intermediate
state of existence
between death
in the previous existence and rebirth in the
next.
> >
> >There are various references to the
rebirths of
bodhisattas as well as other
beings, which also imply as much. According to
Sampasadaniya Sutta
(DN 2
and
Sangiti Sutta (DN 33), some beings "enter the
mother's womb
unknowing, stay
there unknowing and leave it unknowing", while
others "enter the
mother's womb
knowing, stay there knowing, and leave it
unknowing". One who
"enters the
mother's womb knowing, stays there knowing and
leaves it knowing�
is, according
to the commentary, a bodhisatta in its last
rebirth. This is
confirmed by
several suttas that describe the bodhisatta's
moment of entry into
the mother's
womb as "being mindful and fully aware�.
[Mahapadana Sutta (DN
14);
Acchariya-abbhuta Sutta (MN 123);
Pathama-tathagata-acchariya Sutta
(AN 4: 27);
Bhumicala Sutta (AN 8:70)].
> >
> >There are references to a fivefold
typology of
non-returners, one of which is
called antaraparinibbayi (�attainer of Nibbana
in the
interval�
, in
the
Samyutta Nikaya (SN 48:15, 24, 66, 51:26, 54:5,
55:25); Purisagati
Sutta (AN
7:55) and Samyojana Sutta (AN 4:131). Ven
Bhikkhu Bodhi, in his
"The Connected
Discourses of the Buddha: a new translation of
the Samyutta
Nikaya", Volume II
(Note 65, Pp 1902-1903), argues (with support
from Samyojana Sutta)
that the
antaraparinibbayi is "�one who has abandoned the
fetter of
rebirth
(upapattisamyojana) without yet having abandoned
the fetter of
existence
(bhavasamyojana)."
> >
> >Orthodox Theravadins argue against this
interpretation of
the
antaraparinibbayi because in the Kathavatthu
(e.g. Kv 366), an
Abhidhamma text
regarded by them as canonical, the idea of
antarabhava
(intermediate life) was
strongly refuted.
> >
> >However, there is further evidence to
consider. In Metta
Sutta (Khp 9, Sn
1:
there is reference to bhuta (those who have been
born) and sambhavesi
(those seeking birth). Several suttas
[Channovada Sutta (MN 144);
Channa Sutta
(SN 4:35:87); Catuttha-nibbana-patisamyutta
Sutta (Ud 74)] mention
the states of
"here or beyond or between the two". Kutuhala
Sutta (SN 4:44:9)
also tells of "a
being [that] has laid down his body but has not
yet been reborn in
another
body".
> >
> >All the above references from the
suttas implying an
intermediate state of
existence should provide sufficient food for
thought by Theravadins
and ample
reason to keep an open mind regarding the
mystery of dying and
rebirth.
> >
> >Although fundamentalist Theravadins may
subscribe to a
belief of an
intermediate afterlife, it does not necessarily
mean that they
accept all of the
bardo (�gap in between� or intermediate state)
teachings postulated
by the
Vajrayana tradition.
btw, i was told by someone who visited Ajahn
Brahm yesterday (he
came Singapore for a talk), that Ajahn Brahm cld
read his mind
[/b]