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tiistai 6. lokakuuta 2020

Open Secrets of Tantric Yoga

 

Open Secrets of Tantric Yoga



This is a short note about tantric yoga.


In tantric yoga, there are three aspects of practice: external, internal and secret.



External



External aspect refers to techniques used, such as singing of mantras or prayers, doing visualisations and mudras, or performing breathing exercises. These are all ”ways to come in contact with” but with what? With the internal and secret. External, as the name suggests, is the most external aspect of tantric yoga. Without internal and secret, tantric practice is entirely insufficient. External practice should always be understood as a way to come in contact with the internal and secret because then and then only it serves a purpose.


This can be compared to learning how to use a machine or a gadget, like a smart phone, for example. To be able to make calls with it, send messages or use the social media, we first need to learn what to do, where to go, what to press and what not to press. To use a phone, we need to know the basics to be able to use it. When we know the basics, we no longer need to keep studying the basics. We can make phone calls, send messages and do whatever we like with this simple knowledge. Knowing the technical basics allows us to use our phones in a way that meets with our needs. We might see how our friend uses his phone in a much more technically elaborate way, knows shortcuts and whatnot. Fancy and more evolved tricks can be done but learning of the basics meets with our needs perfectly.

This is a perfect analogy of tantric yoga. In a similar way, we should know from the beginning what is the primary purpose of tantric yoga. That purpose always is to know ourselves without dualistic confusion. This very point, by the way, always without exception, makes the nonphysical bodies of ours, namely awareness and mind, more important than the physical body, in the context of removing self-based delusion.


The way how tantric yoga accomplishes this is through various tantric exercises that are always learned from a valid teacher, often with empowerment. We learn how to pronounce the mantra, the meaning of the mantra, mudras for different mantras, different visualisations, how to use our breath and so on. Some tantric methods, such as Pemako Buddhism, use relatively simple techniques. Our mantras, visualisations, mudras and breathing exercises are all very simple. However, these practices meet with our demand of clarifying the natural state and becoming fully enlightened buddha in this life, perfectly. Some other styles of tantra might use much more elaborate techniques. Simple or elaborate, the main purpose is the same.


For a beginner, who is still learning the basics, lots of repetition is the way. Repeate the mantra a lot so that little by little you become to know or to feel the guru or the deity behind the mantra (without repetition). Through repetition, we learn the basics of tantric yoga. We come to understand the principles, how it all works. It is important to do as many repetitions that is necessary but mere repetition as pastime has no purpose.


External technique should always lead out of the technique, to felt sensation which is the internal aspect of practice. If we keep repeating when there is no need for it, we'll postpone undrstanding and relief coming to us.



Internal



Internal aspect of tantric yoga means to become aware and work with energy and the energy body. External technique is like using a telephone and typing in the number. After typing of the number, you wait for the phone call to be answered. You don't keep typing the number over and over, endlessly and pointlessly. So, after you type the number, guru in guru yoga or deity in deity yoga, picks up the phone. You might have been doing the external practice anything from one second to an hour but eventually you are to stop making the call and shift into receptive and attentive mode. You shift from talking and doing, to being, feeling and receiving. At this point you drop the mantra, the visualisation and so on. You begin to feel the energy of the guru or deity. You feel it with your whole being and take it in. In this way, you unify your whole mind and body that is marked with samsaric traits with the energy or blessing of the tantric practice. Then you simply keep feeling it, you ride the waves of blessings that come to your samsaric body from the perfectly enlightened archetypes of the mind, deities or nonphysical gurus. You take it all in, you feel it in muscles and bones, in your whole body and aura.


When practicing internal tantra, you mingle and blend with the guru or the deity. You unify with it, so that not a trace of your habital self remains. In order to accomplish this, you need to surrender. At least, you need to relax. If you don't relax or are not in receptive mode, you won't notice anything because the blessings stay outside of yourself. Guru yoga is practiced in all major religions by hundreds of millions of people everyday, so you don't need to worry or be afraid. If you can't relax because you're scared or are traumatized by bad human relationships, understand that the guru is not someone who has bad intentions. The sole purpose of gurus is to offer their assistance and help us out from existential pain and trauma. They are healers and liberators, so don't worry. You can take all the time you need to relaxing and opening up, no one forces you. If you have this problem or are simply sceptic, you can simply be curious about it and you'll feel something. If you stay shut, however, the guru cannot and will not force in.


In a way, you could say that you let yourself be embraced and held in the presence of the guru or deity. When you do this it feels magnificient. It is like you're healed and liberated on cellular level. It feels like that because your usual sense of self that is filled with dualistic distortions and habitual mistakes, becomes illuminated and removed, and your true being comes forth.


That is a crucial point to understand, that in tantra, the guru and deities are practiced and worshipped, not for their sake but our own. The meaning is always to know oneself but in tantra because there are seemingly external beings involved, one can be confused if one doesn't understand that it's all done to know oneself, to become fully enlightened, for the sake of all sentient beings.


Guru or deity yoga is a type of transmission or re-establisment of your own completely wakeful being, in the place of your self-based confusions with myriad expressions. Mingling or unifying with guru or deity, reveals our true being and purifies the self-based notions from our subtle body. Mingling with the object of the tantric practice, removes dirt from our system, from the organs (chakras) and channels (nadis) of our subtle body. This takes time and repetition but each session brings a relief because it is so healing, supportive, loving and liberating. Tantric practice is pleasant and joyful by nature.



To be succesful in this, one really needs to understand that tantra is a lot about internal yoga, feeling the guru or deity. External technique is just a way to generate and to come in contact with the internal. For an advanced practitioner, external technique can last only a second and then in an instant she or he shifts to internal.


Depending on one's stage of purification or bhumi perfections in our 13 Bhumi Model, one either,


  1. only generates the guru or deity without realising that the guru and deity is oneself as fully liberated being, or

  2. generates the guru or deity, while recognising partially that the guru and deity is oneself as fully liberated being, or

  3. recognises entirely that the guru and deity is oneself as fully liberated being.


From internal, the domain of the secret is entered.



Secret



Secret aspect of tantra is one's basic nature. This basic nature is lucid and aware in effortless manner. This basic nature that is also the secret aspect of tantra, is effortless natural presence, clear mindedness, sober, fresh and selfless existence. It is without contraction or duality because it is not a thing, or a self. This basic nature is the foundation of all existence. It is the bedrock of goodness and only good things grow out of it, in the form of thoughts, emotions and actions. Because it is entirely good and without contracted selfing, it is a very different kind of existence than samsaric existence. There is no contraction and thinking processes in terms of me and other. Simultaneously it cannot express itself in ways that hurt others. Our basic nature is liberating and the very reason why existential liberation is possible in the first place. Us humans and some other kinds of beings have the opportunity to recognise this basic nature of ours and through doing so, we can change. In this way we can become enlightened, through the process of transformation.


The purpose of yoga is to offer a way, techniques and methods, how self-based contraction can be removed and natural condition of peace, freedom and true selfless joy is re-established. The easiest way this can be accomplished is through tantric yoga, whether in the form of guru yoga or deity yoga. Again, guru or deity is not exercised for any other purpose than our own knowledge.

So, after external and internal comes secret, this basic nature, and in that there is no duality. All dualities such as self and other, or doing and being cease. We enter a world within us where there is no self-based views at all. There is only equalness, that is seen to be the same in everything. There is joy of deepest kind where there is no me claiming or attaching to it. Neither in this natural condition, there is pain or confusion. The whole samsaric engine that spits out sorrow, envy, jealousy, anxiety, depression, hate, panic, nervousness, dullness, fogginess, fear and distortion ceases to exist. In tantric yoga, there is no guru, because you have become the guru and there is no deity because you have become the deity. There is no contracted self or subtle distortions because the samsaric mind no longer exists, it has been released. Tantric practices enable this momentarily and over a long period of time, self-based notions are ground to disappearing dust.


In this way tantric yogas make the natural state or ourselves as buddhas appear. Our mind becomes clear like the sky, fresh like wild mint, joyous like children playing, strong like a lion and caring like a grandmother. This is who we are.


Kim Katami, 1st October 2020

Pemako Buddhism,

www.pemakobuddhism.com

Become a monthly supporter or make a single donation here: https://www.pemakobuddhism.com/34566


perjantai 28. kesäkuuta 2019

Wrathful Buddhas

Wrathful Buddhas

Buddhism discusses self-delusion as poisons of the mind (skt. kleshas). These include mind states such as anxiety, fear, anger, jealousy, desire and depression. These mind states are very strong, destructive, hurtful and make us very confused and lost. Because of these poisons we feel lost and are ignorant about our reality.

In tantric practice we practice wrathful buddhas or deities to transform the mind poisons back into their natural liberated unconstricted condition. This is how tantrics transform selfing, one's self-based beliefs and views, so that natural condition can be realised and lived in the society.

Wrathful deity: (skt) Mahakala or (tib.) Gonpo.


Wrathful deities look angry, fierce, mad and crazy with desire. They look scary. They look like demons but are not demons. Perhaps in someones eyes wrathful buddhas look like orcs from the movie. However, it is the mind poisons that are evil, nasty, scary and orc- or demon-like, not the deities. Wrathful deities are liberated buddhas. They are archetypes of our mind and energy in their enlightened, not in their confused, form. This is crucial to understand because if you don't, you just think that this is medieval spirit worship or something silly like that. Wrathful deities are pure and liberated, like liberated anger, liberated jealousy or liberated confusion. We could say that they are dynamic expressions of the liberated mind. We could also say that they are liberated self, liberated me or suffering in its liberated form. This is the meaning of one taste* or sameness of samsara and nirvana.
*one of the main stages of mahamudra

Cultivating wrathful buddhas is not always easy because they stir our subconscious poisons and bring them to the surface. This is actually what they supposed to do and the gift of wrathful tantric practice. It is an immense gift to get to scoop from the bottom of the subconscious mind, to get one's hands to that foundational poison-mud. There is no better way to bring it to light, in the open, than wrathful practice. When poisons come up, they may confuse and make us nervous a bit. Those poisons come to the surface so at times we find ourselves in the middle of a puddle of deadly poison. A mature yogini or yogi can enjoy the ride and let it play out by itself. But someone who is still learning the dynamics of tantric practice, it can be a shock. We simply need to practice what we have learned. That's all and it will work out, like it has for thousand generations of yogis before us. Going through this process gives us freedom and maturation as human beings. People who never had difficulty in their life are naive, spoiled, immature and lack character. Doing wrathful practice is definitely also a way to grow up because it requires one to stop whining and bullshitting oneself and others. In these situations tantric lamas sometimes give you words of encouragement while other times you get scolded for not giving it your all. If you don't give it your all, if you're not serious about it, you're in wrong place. In this case, if you are not committing to the process 100%, you might only be making your life worse with wrathful practice.

We start all practices by first learning the practice. In the beginning, we get to know the deity or deities. We get a feel of their energy. As we keep cultivating the deity, we become familiar with it and begin to unite with it. Finally, as the deity drills its hole through the poisonous area in our mind, that it's meant for, we see that the deity is me. We also come to see that both me and the deity are empty, and that the deity is actually a marvellous celebration of life itself. This is the gift of tantric practice.

-Kim Katami, 28.6.2019
Open Heart Sangha,

perjantai 1. huhtikuuta 2016

All initiations and deity empowerments

All initiations and deity empowerments



This is a complete name list of teachings that Mata and myself have received from various  masters during 2013-2014.


See also "Full list of my teachers and masters".

- Kim Katami, 24.11.2014




Masters/mahasiddhas
  1. Thirumular
  2. Babaji
  3. Bogar Natha (a.k.a. Lao Tsu, 29)
  4. Agastya (a.k.a. Padmashambhava, 11)
  5. Rama
  6. Krishna
  7. Lahiri (a.k.a. Vimalamitra, 24)
  8. Sriyukteswar (a.k.a. Garab Dorje, 25)
  9. Mataji
  10. Ramalinga (a.k.a. Isha Natha/Jesus Christ, 26)
  11. Padmashambhava (a.k.a. Agastya, 4)
  12. Tilopa
  13. Luipa
  14. Milarepa
  15. Asanga
  16. Nagarjuna
  17. Saraha
  18. Virupa
  19. Kilapa
  20. Shantipa
  21. Jomo Memo
  22. Machig Lapdron
  23. Niguma
  24. Vimalamitra (a.k.a. Lahiri Mahasaya, 7)
  25. Garab Dorje (a.k.a. Sri Yukteswar, 8)
  26. Isha Natha/Jesus Christ (a.k.a. Ramalinga, 10)
  27. Dharmakirti
  28. Lao Tsu, (a.k.a. Bogar Natha, 3)
  29. Kukai
Other masters and teachers

  1. Baba
  2. Mata
  3. Ananda Mayi Ma
  4. Arjuna
  5. Gorakhnatha
  6. Patanjali
  7. Matsyendranatha
  8. Punnakeesar
  9. Narada
  10. Sharapa
  11. Kanapa
  12. Karuvoorar
  13. Sivavakkiyar
  14. Ramadevar
  15. Yamaoka Tesshu
  16. Ueshiba Morihei
  17. Miyamoto Musashi
  18. Kukai, Kobo Daishi
  19. 16th Karmapa
  20. 17th Karmapa
  21. Mingyur Rinpoche
  22. Drenchen Rema
  23. Ayu Khandro
  24. Do Khyentse
  25. Gogen Yamaguchi

Various deities,
known in buddhism, hinduism and shinto

Here listed not in any special order though most in the list constitute smaller systems for specific spiritual fruit.

  1. Ganesha
  2. Parvati
  3. Muruga
  4. Shiva
  5. Hari
  6. Harihara
  7. Palahari
  8. Harinarayana
  9. Balanarayana
  10. Brahmanarayana
  11. Suryanarayana
  12. Satyanarayana
  13. Vishnu
  14. Dakshinamurti
  15. Shivamurti
  16. Brahmamurti
  17. Dattatreya
  18. Nandi
  19. Avalokiteshvara
  20. Vajrasattva
  21. Vajradhara
  22. Aksobhya
  23. Amitabha
  24. Amoghasiddhi
  25. Ratnashambhava
  26. Vairochana
  27. Samantabhadra
  28. Kali
  29. Mahakala
  30. Vajrayogini
  31. Chinnamasta
  32. Savitri
  33. Sundari
  34. Kamalatmika
  35. Saraswati
  36. Bhuvaneshwari
  37. Sadashiva
  38. Maheshvara
  39. Rudra
  40. Parameshvara
  41. Shiva (the same as number 4)
  42. Tripura Sundari
  43. Sivakama Sundari
  44. Raja Sundari
  45. Rani Sundari
  46. Bala Sundari
  47. Manjushri
  48. Vajrakilaya
  49. Vajrapani
  50. Vajrabhairava
  51. Kalachakra
  52. Cundi (an aspect of Avalokiteshvara)
  53. Sahasra Avalokiteshvara
  54. Cintamani Avalokiteshvara
  55. Ekadasamukha Avalokiteshvara
  56. Hari Prem
  57. Hari Moni
  58. Kashi Moni
  59. Praja Moni
  60. Rashi Moni
  61. Hara Moni
  62. Adi Buddha
  63. Ganeshwari
  64. Naradeshwari
  65. Gaurangi
  66. Nakuleshwari
  67. Vidyeshwari
  68. Sunyeshwari
  69. Sarweshwari
  70. Saradeshwari
  71. Nareshwari
  72. Savitreshwari
  73. Parameshwari
  74. Satyeshwari
  75. Garudeshwari
  76. Shambeshwari
  77. Maitreshwari
  78. Maneshwari
  79. Vijneshwari
  80. Agneshwari
  81. Paladeshwari
  82. Kareshwari
  83. Kameshwari
  84. Mareshwari
  85. Muleshwari
  86. Kalinkini
  87. Muruga (the same as number 3)
  88. Subramuniya
  89. Skandakumara
  90. Brahmakumara
  91. Vishnukumara
  92. Shivakumara
  93. Harikumara
  94. Kalakumara
  95. Devikumara
  96. Vaishnavi
  97. Yamantaka
  98. Avalokiteshwari
  99. Black Madonna
  100. Vaishravana (tib. Kubera)
  101. Hayagriva
  102. Hevajra
  103. Mahavairocana Vajradhatu
  104. Mahavairocana Garbhadhatu
  105. Acala Vidyaraja
  106. Akashagarbha
  107. Ksitigarbha
  108. Akashagarbha
  109. Sthamaprapta
  110. Samantabhadra
  111. Bhaisajyaguru
  112. Maitreya
  113. Vajravarahi
  114. Narodakini
  115. Krishna Yogini (tib. Tröma Nagmo)
  116. Shri Devi (tib. Palden Lhamo)
  117. Ekajati
  118. Rahula
  119. Vajrasadhu
  120. Nidra Yogini
  121. Nidrani
  122. Nidrama
  123. Simhamukha
  124. Amaterasu
  125. Amenominakanushi no kami
  126. Futsunushi/Katori O-Kami
  127. Kashima O-Kami

21 dimensions

21 dimensions each with their own mudra. 21 dimensions refer to three different 7 chakra-systems in the 1. torso and head (mantra: Om, bright light), 2. limbs (Hum, black light) and 3. above the head (A, transparent).
First system of seven chakras (bright light) and their corresponding dimensions:

  1. +1, First dimension, root center
  2. +2, Second dimension, sex center
  3. +3, Third dimension, navel center
  4. +4, Fourth dimension, heart center
  5. +5, Fifth dimension, throat center
  6. +6, Sixth dimension, forehead/center of the head
  7. +7, Seventh dimension, crown center

Second system of seven chakras (black light) and their dimensions:

  1. -1, Eigth dimension, shoulder/hip
  2. -2, Ninth dimension, upper arm/thigh
  3. -3, Tenth dimension, elbow/knee
  4. -4, Eleventh dimension, forearm/shin
  5. -5, Twelth dimension, wrist/ankle
  6. -6, Thirteenth dimension, palm/foot
  7. -7, Fourteenth dimension, fingers/toes

Third system of seven chakras (transparent) and their dimensions:

  1. +-1, Fifteenth dimension, above the head
  2. +-2, Sixteenth dimension, above the head
  3. +-3, Seventeenth dimension, above the head
  4. +-4, Eighteenth dimension, above the head
  5. +-5, Nineteenth dimension, above the head
  6. +-6, Twentieth dimension, above the head
  7. +-7, Twentyfirst dimension, above the head

Practices

  1. Dzogchen (referring to this field of spiritual teachings in general)  
  2. Tibetan Heart Yoga, 4 levels
  3. Thögal of Vimalamitra with two different mudras/parts of practice (referring to practices that lead to full buddhahood and rainbow body)
  4. Thögal of Padmashambhava, referring to practices that lead to full buddhahood and Diamond Light body
  5. Sem Dzin, Vimalamitra's Wisdom Meditation (referring to a 12-part set of meditation practices)
  6. Dzogchen Ngöndro, Vimalamitra Yoga (referring to a 19-part set of physical-energetic-spiritual yoga practices)
  7. Tibetan Hatha Yoga, Yoga teachings given by Machig Lapdron
  8. Phowa, Yoga of Death and Dying
  9. Chöd of Machig Lapdron, a complete form of Chöd-practice
  10. Chinkon Kishin, esoteric spiritual practice given by aikido O-sensei Morihei Ueshiba for midn purification and meditation

Four aspects of rigpa as transmitted by Vimalamitra and Garab Dorje

  1. Lhundrup Bubki Rigpa: Rigpa of all-encompassing spontaneous presence
  2. Tselgyi Rigpa: Effulgent Rigpa
  3. Ngowoi Rigpa: Essence Rigpa
  4. Ghzi/Zhi Rigpa: Basis Rigpa

  1. Jivanmukta/Arhat/Purity of mind
  2. Paramukta/Full Buddhahood/Mahasiddha

Vidyadhara Bhumis with corresponding mudras

  1. Matured Vidyadhara, 1. bhumi
  2. Vidyadhara with power over life, 2.-4. bhumis
  3. Mahamudra Vidyadhara, 5.-10. bhumis
  4. Spontaneously accomplished Vidyadhara, 11.-13. bhumis

Meditations and samadhis

  1. Shamatha with support/Concentration
  2. Shamatha without support/Savikalpa Samadhi
  3. Nirodha/Nirvana/Nirvikalpa Samadhi/Cessation