Right, you still receive all samayas. There is no "samaya" free transmission.SSJ3Gogeta wrote:I'm talking about someone who just receives straight up Direct Introdution ala ChNN.
I'm pretty sure such people have sex with non-practitioners.
So would this be allowed?
Who is ngagpa?
Re: Who is ngagpa?
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Re: Who is ngagpa?
Blue Garuda wrote:There is a particular 'Ngagpa' organisation which I hope nobody has the misfortune to encounter.
which is?
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Re: Who is ngagpa?
I'll PM but there is no way I'm fodder for a libel action. Sadly, we must be aware of such things on web forums.SSJ3Gogeta wrote:Blue Garuda wrote:There is a particular 'Ngagpa' organisation which I hope nobody has the misfortune to encounter.
which is?
Actually, I won't PM as I don't know you well enough, but Google should tell you fast enough which group is full of westerners togged up in mum's dressing gowns and whose lineage seems to fade away like mist on the moors.
Last edited by Blue Garuda on Sun Aug 19, 2012 6:28 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Who is ngagpa?
Thats allright, I don't want to know then.
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Re: Who is ngagpa?
Is there a brief definition of 'samaya' which applies here?Malcolm wrote: Right, you still receive all samayas. There is no "samaya" free transmission.
I can't imagine a stronger bond than DI.
The focus in my brush with Japanese, such as 'giri' (sp.?) was more of obligation and duty, rather than a bond.
Thus punishment was deemed to be deserved based on external judgement, rather than there simply being karma vipaka.
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Re: Who is ngagpa?
Blue Garuda wrote:Is there a brief definition of 'samaya' which applies here?Malcolm wrote: Right, you still receive all samayas. There is no "samaya" free transmission.
It means that you keepgood relations with your teacher and fellow students, and you don't blab about secret practices.
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Re: Who is ngagpa?
OK. That's the vernacular, but you mentioned 'all samayas' . In DI the samaya encompasses all others, so presumably breaking it also breaks all others?Malcolm wrote:Blue Garuda wrote:Is there a brief definition of 'samaya' which applies here?Malcolm wrote: Right, you still receive all samayas. There is no "samaya" free transmission.
It means that you keepgood relations with your teacher and fellow students, and you don't blab about secret practices.
In terms of the Ngagpa, is it correct to assume they all practice Dzogchen, or do the Gelug Ngagpas not do so? (I was told there was a Gelug Ngagpa ordination, but I've not managed to confirm this.)
With regard to the hair, it seems to exclude beards etc. Is there a reason for this (chakras maybe?) . I note in pics I've seen some Ngagpas have moustaches.
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Re: Who is ngagpa?
The term sngags pa is pretty general and loose.Blue Garuda wrote:
OK. That's the vernacular, but you mentioned 'all samayas' . In DI the samaya encompasses all others, so presumably breaking it also breaks all others?
In terms of the Ngagpa, is it correct to assume they all practice Dzogchen, or do the Gelug Ngagpas not do so? (I was told there was a Gelug Ngagpa ordination, but I've not managed to confirm this.)
The probable early origin of it had to do with the fact that serious Buddhist upasakas in India typically wore white. This custom was transferred to Tibet. Because in Tibet there was no context of a wider Buddhist society, upasaka mantra practitioners came to be respected along with the monks. It was never the case that in India there was a so called "sngags pa" sangha. The sngags pa class of practitioners evolved from the circumstances of Tibetan society. So, your so called sngags pa was originally a Buddhist upasaka who practiced tantra.
Later on when the Chö tradition was evolving, alongside of this there evolved a kind of Buddhist sadhu in Tibet called a chöpa. The present day hair empowerment tradition largely is derived from chö.
These days there are many people who are told by their teachers to where stripped robes, etc., and they call themselves Ngagpas too. Also the garb of different sngag pa colleges vary -- there really isn't a set thing.
There is no sngags pa tradition in Gelug. It exists only in Nyingma. The only Ngagpas in Sakya are the Khon, and their tradition is Nyingma as well. The Kagyus don't really have ngagpas in the same way as the Nyingmapas. They have Togdens and Repas (also another kind of Buddhist sadhu). In general, the term Ngagpa has come to mean "serious tantric practitioner who is not a monk", much like its original usage. The idea that ngagpas have to follow monastic vows is a very debatable point of view --but it comes from the approach to the nine yānas found in root Anuyoga tantra, Dupa'i Do.
ChNN does not emphasize a chatechistic approach to samaya where you are behaving like a hinayāna practitioner, obsessed with the details of one's vows.
Samaya means "being together". So in this case it refers to your relatsionship with the teachings, teacher, fellow students, and ultimately all beings. If you treat other people like shit, if you are rude to them without cause, etc., then you have made mistake. Also we often do not understand when we have broken a samaya so it is pointless to obsess about the vows. There are hundreds and thousands of samayas. So, we just do Guru yoga.
M
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Re: Who is ngagpa?
I wish you would write a book of such clear guidance on aspects of practice........or several!Malcolm wrote:The term sngags pa is pretty general and loose.Blue Garuda wrote:
OK. That's the vernacular, but you mentioned 'all samayas' . In DI the samaya encompasses all others, so presumably breaking it also breaks all others?
In terms of the Ngagpa, is it correct to assume they all practice Dzogchen, or do the Gelug Ngagpas not do so? (I was told there was a Gelug Ngagpa ordination, but I've not managed to confirm this.)
The probable early origin of it had to do with the fact that serious Buddhist upasakas in India typically wore white. This custom was transferred to Tibet. Because in Tibet there was no context of a wider Buddhist society, upasaka mantra practitioners came to be respected along with the monks. It was never the case that in India there was a so called "sngags pa" sangha. The sngags pa class of practitioners evolved from the circumstances of Tibetan society. So, your so called sngags pa was originally a Buddhist upasaka who practiced tantra.
Later on when the Chö tradition was evolving, alongside of this there evolved a kind of Buddhist sadhu in Tibet called a chöpa. The present day hair empowerment tradition largely is derived from chö.
These days there are many people who are told by their teachers to where stripped robes, etc., and they call themselves Ngagpas too. Also the garb of different sngag pa colleges vary -- there really isn't a set thing.
There is no sngags pa tradition in Gelug. It exists only in Nyingma. The only Ngagpas in Sakya are the Khon, and their tradition is Nyingma as well. The Kagyus don't really have ngagpas in the same way as the Nyingmapas. They have Togdens and Repas (also another kind of Buddhist sadhu). In general, the term Ngagpa has come to mean "serious tantric practitioner who is not a monk", much like its original usage. The idea that ngagpas have to follow monastic vows is a very debatable point of view --but it comes from the approach to the nine yānas found in root Anuyoga tantra, Dupa'i Do.
ChNN does not emphasize a chatechistic approach to samaya where you are behaving like a hinayāna practitioner, obsessed with the details of one's vows.
Samaya means "being together". So in this case it refers to your relatsionship with the teachings, teacher, fellow students, and ultimately all beings. If you treat other people like shit, if you are rude to them without cause, etc., then you have made mistake. Also we often do not understand when we have broken a samaya so it is pointless to obsess about the vows. There are hundreds and thousands of samayas. So, we just do Guru yoga.
M
Those moving into Dzogchen with a background of Vajrayana would find it very useful, I'm sure.
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Re: Who is ngagpa?
Dzogchen is Vajrayana you know, at least in the Nyingma.
/magnus
/magnus
"We are all here to help each other go through this thing, whatever it is."
~Kurt Vonnegut
"The principal practice is Guruyoga. But we need to understand that any secondary practice combined with Guruyoga becomes a principal practice." ChNNR (Teachings on Thun and Ganapuja)
~Kurt Vonnegut
"The principal practice is Guruyoga. But we need to understand that any secondary practice combined with Guruyoga becomes a principal practice." ChNNR (Teachings on Thun and Ganapuja)
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Re: Who is ngagpa?
Yes, I do know that view. To enter Dzogchen, one is not required to abandon Vajrayana. I still keep all my HYT commitments, etc. but remove the limitation by using the self-generation etc. within Dzogchen Atiyoga practice, as ChNNR teaches.heart wrote:Dzogchen is Vajrayana you know, at least in the Nyingma.
/magnus
Equally, to enter Dzogchen does not require Vajrayana view as a prerequisite, if I interpret ChNNR correctly. Accordingly, Dzogchen is not Vajrayana unless you have a Vajrayana view.
I have encountered one Dzogchen teacher who does require Vajrayana Ngondro as a prerequisite for Dzogchen and DI, however - but only his version of it, which may or may not be typical of those with a Vajrayana focus rather than a Dzogchen perspective.
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Re: Who is ngagpa?
What does that mean?Blue Garuda wrote:Yes, I do know that view. To enter Dzogchen, one is not required to abandon Vajrayana. I still keep all my HYT commitments, etc. but remove the limitation by using the self-generation etc. within Dzogchen Atiyoga practice, as ChNNR teaches.heart wrote:Dzogchen is Vajrayana you know, at least in the Nyingma.
/magnus
As for the rest, come on guys, in the end Dzogchen is your primordial state, whether you think it belongs into Vajrayana or not is pretty much irrelevant when you consider that.
Although many individuals in this age appear to be merely indulging their worldly desires, one does not have the capacity to judge them, so it is best to train in pure vision.
- Shabkar
- Shabkar
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Re: Who is ngagpa?
I'm amazed you are asking, since ChNNR has explained it several times recently re. Jnanadhakini and also Dark Blue Garuda. I'm not going to repeat any details of those teachings here as it would be too off-topic and maybe also break samaya.Pero wrote:What does that mean?Blue Garuda wrote:Yes, I do know that view. To enter Dzogchen, one is not required to abandon Vajrayana. I still keep all my HYT commitments, etc. but remove the limitation by using the self-generation etc. within Dzogchen Atiyoga practice, as ChNNR teaches.heart wrote:Dzogchen is Vajrayana you know, at least in the Nyingma.
/magnus
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Re: Who is ngagpa?
Ok I'll PM you.Blue Garuda wrote:I'm amazed you are asking, since ChNNR has explained it several times recently re. Jnanadhakini and also Dark Blue Garuda. I'm not going to repeat any details of those teachings here as it would be too off-topic and maybe also break samaya.Pero wrote:What does that mean?Blue Garuda wrote: Yes, I do know that view. To enter Dzogchen, one is not required to abandon Vajrayana. I still keep all my HYT commitments, etc. but remove the limitation by using the self-generation etc. within Dzogchen Atiyoga practice, as ChNNR teaches.
Although many individuals in this age appear to be merely indulging their worldly desires, one does not have the capacity to judge them, so it is best to train in pure vision.
- Shabkar
- Shabkar
Re: Who is ngagpa?
Well, you should follow your Guru's teachings of course. But you should know that there are many Dzogchen cycles that contain both sadhana and ngondro. If you read Tulku Urgyen's "As it is" volume 1 and 2 you will understand a little about it. So it isn't so clear cut as one might have wanted it to be. In the Nyingma tradition many of us don't do ngpondro just once either, we do it many times or every day and we always combine it with resting in the natural state. The same is true about sadhana practices. Whatever you do is supposed to be helpful for resting in the natural state or else it is of a very limited value.Blue Garuda wrote:Yes, I do know that view. To enter Dzogchen, one is not required to abandon Vajrayana. I still keep all my HYT commitments, etc. but remove the limitation by using the self-generation etc. within Dzogchen Atiyoga practice, as ChNNR teaches.heart wrote:Dzogchen is Vajrayana you know, at least in the Nyingma.
/magnus
Equally, to enter Dzogchen does not require Vajrayana view as a prerequisite, if I interpret ChNNR correctly. Accordingly, Dzogchen is not Vajrayana unless you have a Vajrayana view.
I have encountered one Dzogchen teacher who does require Vajrayana Ngondro as a prerequisite for Dzogchen and DI, however - but only his version of it, which may or may not be typical of those with a Vajrayana focus rather than a Dzogchen perspective.
/magnus
"We are all here to help each other go through this thing, whatever it is."
~Kurt Vonnegut
"The principal practice is Guruyoga. But we need to understand that any secondary practice combined with Guruyoga becomes a principal practice." ChNNR (Teachings on Thun and Ganapuja)
~Kurt Vonnegut
"The principal practice is Guruyoga. But we need to understand that any secondary practice combined with Guruyoga becomes a principal practice." ChNNR (Teachings on Thun and Ganapuja)
Re: Who is ngagpa?
Dudjom Rinpoche, Jigdral Yeshe Dorje said this quite clearly in his Dzogchen View of Ngondro.heart wrote:Blue Garuda wrote:
Well, you should follow your Guru's teachings of course. But you should know that there are many Dzogchen cycles that contain both sadhana and ngondro. If you read Tulku Urgyen's "As it is" volume 1 and 2 you will understand a little about it. So it isn't so clear cut as one might have wanted it to be. In the Nyingma tradition many of us don't do ngpondro just once either, we do it many times or every day and we always combine it with resting in the natural state. The same is true about sadhana practices. Whatever you do is supposed to be helpful for resting in the natural state or else it is of a very limited value.
/magnus
If you are a Dzogchen practitioner, Ngondro *is* the practice of Dzogchen.
Also Patrul Rinpoche states very clearly how much both he and his vajra siblings engaged ngondro.
Terton Sogyal, Lerab Lingpa likewise details his practice activity at a tantric level.
Re: Who is ngagpa?
Chogyal Rinpoche, Namkhai Norbu, says this very clearly in every retreat. If you are a Dzogchen practitioner, Guru Yoga is the practice of Dzogchen.ngodrup wrote:
Dudjom Rinpoche, Jigdral Yeshe Dorje said this quite clearly in his Dzogchen View of Ngondro.
If you are a Dzogchen practitioner, Ngondro *is* the practice of Dzogchen.
They are saying the same thing -- way of proceeding is a little different.
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Re: Who is ngagpa?
The thread is about defining Ngagpa, not Ngondro.
As Heart (Magnus) said, he is foll0wing the teaching of his Guru and I am following mine.
Quoting a string of other Gurus is a fairly obvious adverse criticism. otherwise, why do it - do statistics define who is 'right'?
I completed Ngondro twice in the Gelugpa and now am not at all surprised, being old, that some Gurus I met subsequently made it clear that their Ngondro was superior and available, at a price. It was always dressed up as a world peace temple donation etc etc.
I have seen several posts on different threads about this and whilst I am not naming names I can't help thinking that some people are simply posting because they feel defensive and possibly offended that some regard DI as the start, rather than Ngondro.
Becoming a Ngagpa may or may not require a ritual ordination, but I think the discussion of Ngondro is pretty much off-topic as it does not define who is or is not a Ngagpa.
As Heart (Magnus) said, he is foll0wing the teaching of his Guru and I am following mine.
Quoting a string of other Gurus is a fairly obvious adverse criticism. otherwise, why do it - do statistics define who is 'right'?
I completed Ngondro twice in the Gelugpa and now am not at all surprised, being old, that some Gurus I met subsequently made it clear that their Ngondro was superior and available, at a price. It was always dressed up as a world peace temple donation etc etc.
I have seen several posts on different threads about this and whilst I am not naming names I can't help thinking that some people are simply posting because they feel defensive and possibly offended that some regard DI as the start, rather than Ngondro.
Becoming a Ngagpa may or may not require a ritual ordination, but I think the discussion of Ngondro is pretty much off-topic as it does not define who is or is not a Ngagpa.
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Re: Who is ngagpa?
This thread is funny.
Just practise! No need to argue about ngondro or DI or whatever, just do *something*, find realization and then one's life has a purpose no?
Just practise! No need to argue about ngondro or DI or whatever, just do *something*, find realization and then one's life has a purpose no?
Phenomenon, vast as space, dharmata is your base, arising and falling like ocean tide cycles, why do i cling to your illusion of unceasing changlessness?
Re: Who is ngagpa?
This is true, good point.Malcolm wrote:Chogyal Rinpoche, Namkhai Norbu, says this very clearly in every retreat. If you are a Dzogchen practitioner, Guru Yoga is the practice of Dzogchen.ngodrup wrote:
Dudjom Rinpoche, Jigdral Yeshe Dorje said this quite clearly in his Dzogchen View of Ngondro.
If you are a Dzogchen practitioner, Ngondro *is* the practice of Dzogchen.
They are saying the same thing -- way of proceeding is a little different.
/magnus
"We are all here to help each other go through this thing, whatever it is."
~Kurt Vonnegut
"The principal practice is Guruyoga. But we need to understand that any secondary practice combined with Guruyoga becomes a principal practice." ChNNR (Teachings on Thun and Ganapuja)
~Kurt Vonnegut
"The principal practice is Guruyoga. But we need to understand that any secondary practice combined with Guruyoga becomes a principal practice." ChNNR (Teachings on Thun and Ganapuja)