Esoteric Instructions
on the Six Yogas of Naropa
(1) Tibetan: Chos drug
gi man ngag
Sanskrit: Saddharmopadesha
Author: Tilopa (988-1069)
Tengyur vol. 53, no.
2330.
(2) Tibetan: bKaâ yang
dag paâi tshad ma zhes bya ba mkhaâ Îgro maâi man ngag
Sanskrit: Ajnasamyak-pramana-nama-dakinyupadesha
Tengyur vol. 53, no.
2331
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The work entitled Esoteric Instructions
on the Six Yogas of Naropa, which is actually comprised of two smaller
texts, is included in the Tantric section of the Tibetan Ten-gyur
or "Translated Treatises" (see Section 1 above). It focuses on the
yoga practices gathered by the great Indian renouncer Tilopa (988-1069)
from the spiritual masters of several individual lineages of Tantric teaching.
These sets of yoga teachings, which Tilopa later transmitted to his principal
disciple, Naropa (c.956-1040), became the primary source of the so-called
"Six Doctrines (or Yogas) of Naropa" (Naro Chö-druk, na ro chos drug).
The Six Doctrines are comprised of the yogas of mystic heat (tum-mo, gtum
mo), radiant clear light (ö-sel, Îod gsal), illusory body (gyu-lu,
sgyu lus), dream state (mi-lam, rmi lam), intermediate state (bardo), and
transference of consciousness (phowa, Îpho ba). Of these six advanced techniques,
only three are directly connected with the yogic practices surrounding
death and dying; namely, radiant clear light, intermediate state, and consciousness
tranference (we will discuss these topics in more detail below). The remaining
three yogas are indeed fundamental to the practices of dying but are not
as explicitly related to these techniques. The Six Yogas, collectively
presented as a coherent system (perhaps for the first time) by Tilopa in
his Esoteric Instructions on the Six Yogas of Naropa, are without doubt
founded upon the religious experiences of early Indian mysticism, and play
an important role in the development of the basic components that make
up much of Tibet's later literature on death, intermediate state, and rebirth. |
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A Brief Synopsis of the
Six Yogas of Naropa
Tibetan: Chos drug bsdus
paâi zin bris
Author: Padma dkar po
(1527-1592)
I(Bhu)-Tib-114; 77-902197
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The Six Yogas constitute the most significant
yogic and meditative techniques of the Kagyu school of Tibetan Buddhism
or "Transmission of the Oral Teaching Sect" (bkaâ brgyud pa), founded by
Naropa's chief Tibetan disciple, Marpa Chökyi Lodrö. The sixteenth
century Kagyu leader, Pema Karpo (Padma dkar po, 1527-1592), was a prolific
author and scholar-practitioner, whose intimate relationship to the Tibetan
yogic tradition is best exemplified in his written commentaries and meditation
guides on the Six Yogas, such as this skillfully composed digest entitled
A Brief Synopsis of the Six Yogas of Naropa. Pema Karpo's text provides
a succinct overview of all six yoga practices, including a remarkably detailed
description of the specific exercises involved in the subtle yoga of radiant
clear light. According to this tradition, the clear light is the most subtle,
profound, and powerful level of consciousness. Indeed, it is the fundamental
nature of the mind itself, whose appearance is said to be like the sky's
own natural cast at dawn before sunrise, its brilliance radiating everywhere
in all directions. This mind of radiant clear light is indestructible and
untainted by the emotional and psychological confusions that perpetuate
the ongoing cycle of birth and death (samsara). We are told that the clear
light is experienced briefly by all human beings at the very first moment
of death, by advanced yogic practitioners in the highest states of meditation,
and unceasingly by all Buddhas. Interestingly enough, this very subtle
radiance is said also to be experienced, though rarely noticed, in more
mundane moments, such as fainting, sneezing, and orgasm, as well as in
the first instant before and after dreaming. However, only at the moment
of death is the conscious and unwavering realization of the clear light
tantamount to the achievement of Buddhahood. |
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A Collection of Kagyu-pa
Texts on Naropaâs Six Yogas
Volume Title: Naro chos
drug Texts of the ÎBrug-pa dKaâ-brgyud-pa Traditions. Thimphu : Kunsang
Topgay, 1978. I(Bhu)-Tib-199; 79-901832.
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The Six Yogas tradition of the Kagyu School,
represented here in this Collection of Kagyu-pa Texts on Naropa's Six Yogas,
teaches that there are actually three intermediate periods, or bardo states:
the transitional periods between birth and death (Bardo of Ordinary Life),
between falling asleep and waking (Bardo of Dreams), and between death
and the next life (Bardo of Becoming). At any given moment, all living
beings are caught in one or more of the three bardo situations, propelled
forward by the force of their own past actions (karma). A unique feature
of the Six Yogas tradition is that it offers a set of meditative techniques
for mastering each of these three states. The most powerful of such practices,
however, is the yoga of dying, which is meant to be exercised in the first
moment of the bardo between death and rebirth (Bardo of Becoming). According
to the texts, death begins with a gradual process of dissolution, in which
the senses and energies that worked in cooperation with consciousness degenerate
by stages. These dissolutions are experienced, only partially, in our daily
life while falling asleep, and can be consciously generated in meditation
by advanced yogins; but only at the time of death are they experienced
both completely and inevitably. When practitioners become skilled in inducing
the dissolution phases, they gain the ability to apply the same techniques
during sleep, and ultimately during the first moments of dying. The dying
process culminates in the appearance of the radiant mind of clear light
(see above). For those individuals who had gained mastery of the bardo
yogas in their lifetimes, the true nature of this fundamental radiance
is immediately recognized, as the Tibetans say, like a child being returned
to its mother's lap. At that very moment of recognition, the dying practitioner
is liberated from the cycle of birth and death. In most ordinary cases,
however, the dying individual is generally unfamiliar with the mind of
clear light, and is thus unable to recognize it. Consequently, he or she
is propelled with little or no control into the bardo state of becoming,
which leads eventually to rebirth in a new existence. |
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A Book of Three Inspirations:
A Treatise on the Stages of Training in the Six Yogas of Naropa
Tibetan: Zab lam na roâi
chos drug gi sgo nas Îkhrid paâi rim pa yid ches gsum ldan
Author: Tsong kha pa
(1357-1419)
I(Sik)-Tib-146; 72-906421
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In addition to constituting the most notable
meditative practices of the Kagyu-pa order, the tradition of the Six Yogas
of Naropa was adopted also by the powerful Geluk-pa or "System of Virtue
Sect" (dge lugs pa), which was founded by the brilliant philosopher-saint
Dzongka-pa (Tsong kha pa, 1357-1419), and which eventually became the institutional
seat of the successive Dalai Lamas. Dzongka-pa's treatise, A Book of Three
Inspirations, is regarded as one of the finest works on the subject of the
Six Yogas, and over the past five hundred years has served as a standard
for the majority of works that later followed. In A Book of Three Inspirations,
Dzongka-pa discusses the practices of all Six Doctrines with extraordinary
precision and depth, quoting from a wealth of Indian and Tibetan sources
as well as drawing upon his own profound inner experience. For our interests,
however, Dzongka-pa's text is distinguished by its detailed presentation
of the yoga of consciousness transference or phowa, including a rare description
of the extremely secret yoga of forceful projection or drong-juk (grong
Îjug). Briefly, phowa is the practice of ejecting the consciousness out
from the top of the head at the time of death and transferring it to a
more favorable realm of existence. A person may choose to practice this
method of consciousness transference in order to be reborn in a heavenly
realm or a Buddha's Pure Land, or in order to have the energy of his or
her past meritorious karma continue, without interruption, into the next
life. Traditionally it is held that the appearance of a tiny hole at the
fontanelle of the dead person's head is a sign of a successful transference
of the individual's consciousness. During certain meditative exercises
designed to prepare people for this practice, teachers test their
students'
proficiency in the yoga of transference by sticking a flower stem in the
hole that begins to develop at their crown. If their preparatory training
is successful, and this hole in turn grows larger, it is said the flower
will actually stand upright.
Directly connected with the yoga of transference
is the esoteric method of forceful projection or drong-juk, in which a
practitioner projects his or her own consciousness into a corpse of either
a dead human being or animal. The practice is thus metaphorically referred
to as the "reanimation of corpses." In A Book of Three Inspirations, Dzongka-pa
informs us that drong-juk was brought to Tibet from India by Marpa Chökyi
Lodrö, the teacher of Milarepa (Mi la ras pa, 1040-1123), who in turn
gave it to his÷Marpaâs÷son, Dharma Do-de (Dharma mdo sde). Unfortunately,
Dharma Do-de met with a sudden and untimely death, taking with him the
authentic wisdom of the drong-juk technique. Nevertheless, in spite of
this apparent break in the lineage of transmission, Dzongka-pa says that
the practice of forceful projection continued to be taught secretly in
the oral transmission traditions and is never to be discussed publicly. |
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Instruction on the Three
Bardo States
Tibetan: Bar do rnam
gsum gyi zhal gdams
Author: Khyung po rnal
Îbyor (d.ca.1135)
In Shangs-pa bKaâ-brgyud-pa
Texts. Sumra, H.P., Urgyen Dorje, 1977. I-Tib- 1734; 77-906849.
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In Tibet, there are actually two principal
traditions of the Six Yogas, one attributed to Naropa and the other to
his sister Niguma. The Six Doctrines (or Yogas) of Niguma (Nigu Chö
Druk, ni gu chos drug) were transmitted in a vision directly through the
female yogini Sukha Siddhi to the Tibetan poet and scholar-practitioner
Khyung-po Nenjor, founder of the obscure Shang-pa Kagyu sect or "Transmission
of the Oral Teaching of Shang Valley" (shangs pa bkaâ brgyud). Nigumaâs
Six Yogas are essentially the same as those of Naropa, differing only in
points of emphasis, and are particularly associated with the Shang-pa order.
Khyung-po Nenjor's brief Instruction on the Three Bardo States, drawn from
his visionary revelations, elucidates the yogas of the three bardos--those
of the waking state, dream state, and after-death state--within the context
of Niguma's esoteric doctrines, and explains how these three intermediate
states are to be implemented as a spiritual practice whose ultimate goal
is liberation from the ongoing rounds of rebirth and the subsequent achievement
of Buddhahood. |