KHENPO'S BLOG

All our concepts are transmitted to and analysed by our consciousness. What we see, hear, smell, taste, and feel with our eyes, ears, nose, tongue and body provides information and evidence for our consciousness to judge and make decisions. If our senses are reliable and accurate, then the information they transmit to us will not be wrong; if our senses are limited, the information they transfer to us cannot be trusted. Our five senses are not ultimately reliable, though, which can be discerned from the example of the pebble. (The pebble seems to be motionless to our naked eye, but the microscope tells us it is continuously moving.

[Excerpt from Luminous Wisdom Book Series ~ The Illusory World]

What can be detected by our five senses, including the people we meet and the surroundings we are living in, all indeed seem very real. They are like what we experience in a dream, which is also vivid to us. When we have a dream at night, we still have a strong attachment to our surroundings. We cannot deny the existence of our dream when we are in the dream. However, when we wake up from the dream, we suddenly realize that the dream and everything in it were unreal. Therefore, we have to accept that all material objects manifest in different forms if we look at them in different ways. What we see in this world depends on the structure of our eyes. The world would look different if we had different eye structures.

[Excerpt from Luminous Wisdom Book Series ~ The Illusory World]

Practitioners facing adverse conditions: When adverse conditions happen in your work or practice due to all kinds of reasons, you can eliminate these adversities by practicing the Guru Yoga of Padmasambhava.

[Excerpt from Luminous Wisdom Book Series ~ The Guru Yoga Practice of the Seven-Line Prayer to Padmasambhava]

Buddhism holds that physical suffering and misfortune have various contributing factors as their causes. Some illnesses, the so-called karma-induced illnesses, originated from a previous life. They are medically incurable, no matter how much money is spent. These may be attributed to karma. If you have a cold, headache, or fever, it may also be karma related, but not necessarily caused by karma from past lives. Hence, karma is sometimes directly responsible for certain things taking place, but other times may not be so directly involved. The point is, in all matters, Buddhism has always opposed taking the dualistic approach, affirming one thing while negating the other. The same applies to karma.

[Excerpt from Luminous Wisdom Book Series ~ The Right View : On Cause and Effect]

Our eyes are ordinary sense organs; what can be observed with our eyes are all relative. When we look at things with our naked eyes, static objects are real for us. The movement under the microscope, though, can be called the absolute truth, but absolute truth from the Buddhist point of view means a lot more than that. The microscopic view is only a lower level meaning of the absolute truth.

[Excerpt from Luminous Wisdom Book Series ~ The Illusory World]

Ongoing practitioners: Whether you are engaging in the five preliminaries or other practices, if you practice the Guru Yoga of Padmasambhava at the beginning of each year and accumulate the heart mantra or the Seven-Line Prayer 100,000 times, you may dispel all the obstacles to your practice within that year through the blessing of Padmasambhava.

[Excerpt from Luminous Wisdom Book Series ~ The Guru Yoga Practice of the Seven-Line Prayer to Padmasambhava]

As one Chinese proverb goes, “The more one strives for goodness, the greater the obstacles are.” To propagate the profound highest tantra, one will definitely encounter a great multitude of obstacles. When many esteemed masters such as Shantarakshita (8th century C.E.) first arrived in Tibet, even though they were as marvelous as the Buddha, they were not able to propagate tantra. Hence, they had to seek help from Padmasambhava.

[Excerpt from Luminous Wisdom Book Series ~ The Guru Yoga Practice of the Seven-Line Prayer to Padmasambhava]

Practitioners wishing for enlightenment: When you have completed the preliminaries and accomplished everything except enlightenment, the Guru Yoga of Padmasambhava is particularly important. Words cannot describe the realization of the true nature of mind or the Great Perfection; the true nature of mind is beyond words. The best way to attain such realization is through guru yoga, and not any other way.

[Excerpt from Luminous Wisdom Book Series ~ The Guru Yoga Practice of the Seven-Line Prayer to Padmasambhava]

If you have enough confidence and insights, visualizing offerings to Buddha and Bodhisattvas has the exactly same effects and merits as a real offering. Exoteric, especially Mind Only Chittamatra, believes that everything that we see, whatever it is Pure Land or hell, is all mind-made, the appearance is only built by one’s heart. Tantra is explaining to the very bottom of this view by its behavior and practice.

[Excerpt from Luminous Wisdom Book Series: The Blessing of Speech]