Heart Lamp: Lamp of Mahamudra and Heart of the Matter
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During the centuries this system of effortless training has been applied by people from all any occupation -- tailers and kings, monks and business men and provided them with a simple method to not only withstand the changes of life but also to transcend them. Like the waves on an ocean, the ups and downs, joys and sorrows, we meet in our lives can be seen as movements in the ocean, giving true peace and room for caring for others.
I will be hard to find another book which is as concise as Heart Lamp.
The audience is the steadily increasing followers of Buddhism in the Americas, Europe and Asia, which is grown in the wake of Tibetan masters’ teaching outside of Tibet. Heart Lamp is unique in that its translator worked closely with several of the most respected meditation masters of recent times and was able to receive knowledge from the lifeblood” of the living tradition.
Heart Lamp is unique in its brevity without losing the depth of a true spiritual lineage the training in which can bring about enlightenment in a single lifetime. And, it is being used as the textbook during meditation retreats around.
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Heart Lamp - Tsele Natsok Rangdrol
RANGJUNG YESHE BOOKS WWW.RANGJUNG.COM
PADMASAMBHAVA Treasures from Juniper Ridge Advice from the Lotus-Born Dakini Teachings
PADMASAMBHAVA AND JAMGÖN KONGTRÜL The Light of Wisdom, Vol. 1 The Light of Wisdom, Vol. 2
YESHE TSOGYAL The Lotus-Born
GAMPOPA The Precious Garland of the Sublime Path
DAKPO TASHI NAMGYAL Clarifying the Natural State
TSELE NATSOK RANGDRÖL Mirror of Mindfulness Empowerment Heart Lamp
CHOKGYUR LINGPA Ocean of Amrita The Great Gate Skillful Grace
JAMGÖN MIPHAM RINPOCHE Gateway to Knowledge, Vol. 1, Vol. 2, & Vol. 3
TULKU URGYEN RINPOCHE Blazing Splendor Rainbow Painting As It Is, Vol. 1 As It Is, Vol. 2 Vajra Speech Repeating the Words of the Buddha
KHENCHEN THRANGU RINPOCHE Crystal Clear Songs of Naropa King of Samadhi Buddha Nature
CHÖKYI NYIMA RINPOCHE Present Fresh Wakefulness Indisputable Truth Union of Mahamudra & Dzogchen Bardo Guidebook Song of Karmapa
TSIKEY CHOKLING RINPOCHE Lotus Ocean
TULKU THONDUP Enlightened Living
ORGYEN TOBGYAL RINPOCHE Life & Teachings of Chokgyur Lingpa
DZIGAR KONGTRÜL Uncommon Happiness
TSOKNYI RINPOCHE Fearless Simplicity Carefree Dignity
DZOGCHEN TRILOGY COMPILED BY MARCIA BINDER SCHMIDT Dzogchen Primer Dzogchen Essentials Quintessential Dzogchen
ERIK PEMA KUNSANG Wellsprings of the Great Perfection A Tibetan Buddhist Companion The Rangjung Yeshe Tibetan-English Dictionary of Buddhist Culture
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PUBLICATION DATA:
TSELE NATSOK RANGDRÖL
(RTSE LE RGOD TSHANG PA SNA TSHOGS RANG GROL, B. 1608).
FULL TITLE: Lamp of Mahamudra, The Immaculate Lamp that Perfectly and Fully Illuminates the Meaning of Mahamudra, the Essence of all Phenomena.
FOREWORD BY DILGO KHYENTSE RINPOCHE.
INTRODUCTION BY TULKU URGYEN RINPOCHE.
TRANSLATED FROM THE TIBETAN BY ERIK PEMA KUNSANG.
EDITED BY MARCIA BINDER SCHMIDT 4TH ED.
TIBETAN TITLE: chos thams cad kyi snying po phyag rgya chen poíi don yang dag par rab tu gsal bar byed pa dri ma med paíi sgron ma.
The Heart of the Matter: The Unchanging Convergence of Vital Points that Show Exactly How to Apply the View and Meditation of the Definitive Meaning (nges don gyi lta sgom nyams su len tshul ji ltar bar ston pa rdo rjeíi mdo ëdzin zhes bya ba bzhugs so).
INTRODUCTION BY CHÖKYI NYIMA RINPOCHE
eISBN: 978-962-7341-79-6
1. MAHAMUDRA. 2. VAJRAYANA PHILOSOPHY—BUDDHISM.
3. BUDDHISM—TIBET. I. TITLE.
COVER DESIGN: MARRYANN LIPAJ
COVER PHOTO COURTESY OF MANI LAMA BY TONY HAGEN 1962
v3.1
CONTENTS
Cover
Rangjung Yeshe Books
Title Page
Copyright
Dedication
Advice to Myself
Forward by H. H. Dilgo Khyentse Rinpoche
Introduction by Ven. Tulku Urgyen Rinpoche
Lamp of Mahamudra
Prologue
Section One: GROUND MAHAMUDRA
The View
Section Two: PATH MAHAMUDRA
Shamatha and Vipashyana
Faults and Qualities
Experience and Realization
The Four Yogas
The Five Paths and the Ten Bhumis
Enhancement
Section Three: FRUITION MAHAMUDRA
The Three Kayas of Buddhahood
Epilogue
The Heart of the Matter
Introduction
The Heart of the Matter
Translator’s Afterword
Well-wishes
Glossary for Lamp of Mahamudra
Masters and Texts Quoted in The Heart of the Matter
This book is dedicated to the Buddadharma and all sentient beings. It is said that when the teachings of the Buddha flourish, there will be happiness for all beings in this life, in the bardo, and in following lives.
Tulku Urgyen Rinpoche
ADVICE TO MYSELF
Guru, source of refuge, having bowed down at your feet,
Today I give myself this piece of pertinent advice.
You hypocrite and begging drifter in the darkest age.
Many years have passed since through the teaching’s gate you walked,
But even now your mind has yet to mingle with the Dharma.
How shameful is your wallowing in these endless strings of thought,
So wouldn’t it be better now to blend your mind with Dharma?
Young of age you are, but lifespans are uncertain.
Never sure when magic-substance bodies will be shed.
Still you’re chained by clinging to the pleasures of this life,
So wouldn’t it be better now to urgently exert yourself in Dharma?
Nothing else will help you when you die apart from Dharma.
But while you have the teachings you still drift off, so distracted.
How despicable it is just to feign a Dharma person,
So wouldn’t it be better now to achieve the lasting benefit sublime?
Servant and employees, your enjoyments, goods and wealth—
You don’t see as Dharma-demons of distraction.
Still you yearn to get more worldly fame and gain,
So wouldn’t it be better now to live in solitude sincerely?
Though you’ve met a couple of highly qualified masters,
You have never served them with a genuine devotion.
How despicable it is just to rival them or socialize as equals,
So wouldn’t it be better now to respect your samayas?
Without keeping the samayas and vow correctly,
And without being qualified to be a spiritual guide,
Still you contrive to sit ahead of virtuous people.
So wouldn’t it be better now to live alone in mountain retreats?
Without having solved your general doubts through learning,
And without having reached the inner stronghold through meditation,
You still fool yourself with teaching the Dharma to others.
So wouldn’t it be better now to practice the essential?
You may have received some empowerments and guiding instructions,
But not really brought them into your stream-of-being.
How silly it is to live with the Dharma and mind disconnected.
So wouldn’t it be better now to train in the deepest meaning?
Without having gone through development stage’s approach and accomplishment,
And without possessing the confidence of completion stage’s view,
How deluded it is to pretend to be the refuge of the dead and the living.
So wouldn’t it be better now to seek at least a refuge for yourself?
Without having matured yourself with the ripening empowerments,
And without having soaked yourself with the liberating instructions,
Still you fool yourself with pretending to be a guide for others.
So wouldn’t it be better now to achieve at least you own benefit?
So wouldn’t it be better now to seek at least a refuge for yourself?
When soon you come to the bardo’s narrow passage
There is indeed help to get from your many followers and attendants,
But still you fool yourself with keeping the company of Dharmaless people.
So wouldn’t it be better now to train alone in meditation?
When you lie chained in Yama’s demonic chains,
Your wealth cannot help you in the slightest,
But still you fool yourself with hoarding wealth and means.
So wouldn’t it be better now to reduce this craving for material things?
On the border where you chose between samsara and nirvana,
To make the untrue choice will bring you lasting trouble,
While mundane deeds will all lie wasted and in vain.
So wouldn’t it be better now to find a goal that’s permanent?
Without having cut the concepts of samsaric things,
And without having aimed your heart at the Three Jewels,
You will continue to roam repeatedly within samsara,
So wouldn’t it be better now to focus on the sacred Dharma?
Without understanding that your homeland is a demon’s prison,
And without seeing relatives and friends as Mara’s henchmen,
To cling and remain stuck will just drive you to the lower realms,
So wouldn’t it be better now to cut all likes and dislikes from their root?
Without remaining at the feet of an authentic master,
Who will close the doors to rebirth in samsara’s lower realms?
Having given all—your body, life, belongings—to your guru,
Wouldn’t it be better now to seek a refuge with complete sincerity?
Unless you seek the Dharma and apply the practice,
Why would the Dharma ever try to seek you out!
Having given yourself, both life and limb, not shying away from any troubles,
Wouldn’t it be better now to train in the profound instructions?
A Dharmaless and indolent man, born in the kaliyuga,
Spoke one day these lines of good advice
To give a helpful counsel to himself.
By its merits may all beings quickly reached awakening.
FOREWORD
Kyabje Dilgo Khyentse
The most learned Tsele Pema Lekdrub was the body-emanation of the great translator Vairotsana, and he attained the pinnacle of learning and accomplishment of the masters of the Land of Snow. Also known as Kongpo Götsangpa Natsok Rangdröl, he was unmatched in his three qualities of scholarship, virtue and noble-mindedness.
Among the five volumes of his collected works, I considered that this Lamp of Mahamudra would benefit everyone interested in the Dharma. The words are clear and easy to understand, and lengthy scholarly expositions are not emphasized. This text, easy to comprehend and containing all the key points and very direct instructions, results from following the oral advice of a qualified master.
In order to help the foreigners who are presently interested in the Dharma to gain true confidence, I, old Dilgo Khyentse, encouraged my disciple Erik Pema Kunsang to translate this book into English. Therefore, may everyone trust in this.
Written on the twenty-fifth day of the first month of the
year of the Earth Dragon by Dilgo Khyentse.
SUMMARY OF MAHAMUDRA
An Introductory Discourse by
Tulku Urgyen Rinpoche
Mahamudra has three modes: Sutra Mahamudra, Mantra Mahamudra, and Essence Mahamudra.
Sutra Mahamudra is attaining the stage of complete buddhahood through traversing the five paths and ten bhumis.
Mantra Mahamudra is experiencing the four joys via the third empowerment, which lead to the four levels of emptiness. The four types: joy, supreme joy, non-joy, and innate joy lead one to the means for realizing the ultimate view of Mahamudra. In the traditional statement to reach the true wisdom by means of the symbolic wisdom,
the symbolic wisdom refers to the four levels of emptiness invoked by the four joys while true wisdom is Mahamudra of the natural state. Introducing Mahamudra of the naked, natural state in this way is called Mantra Mahamudra.
Essence Mahamudra is described in terms of essence, nature, and expression. The essence is nonarising, the nature is unobstructed, and the expression is what manifests in manifold ways. Essence Mahamudra is pointed out through skillful means as follows: Essence Mahamudra is your naked, ordinary mind resting in unfabricated naturalness.
Although the teachings on Essence Mahamudra and Dzogchen of the Natural State use different terminology, in actuality