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Astus wrote:I hear in arguments for the superiority of Dzogchen that it includes the possibility of attaining the rainbow body. Frankly, besides that it sounds cool, I don't see the point of it at all. It might be a great miracle to see someone's body vaporise with colourful lights, but beyond that what? Realisation of the 3/4 bodies are inherent in awareness so it is not the case that buddhahood is at stake. Then why the fuss?
narraboth wrote:Sarma schools also claim that their paths can achieve rainbow body, but I am not sure if they are the same kind of rainbow body.
heart wrote:Kalden,
I think you misunderstood the question. When the Buddha died he left a body behind so why would full enlightenment include a rainbow body?
/magnus
Astus wrote:Kalden,
As Heart said, it's something else I've raised here as a question.
Narraboth,
You say with a rainbow body it's easier to help many beings. But if one dies the flesh and bones are left behind and there is not limit for emanation bodies whether one has a human body here or not. That's why I ask what extra rainbow body has.
kirtu wrote:narraboth wrote:Sarma schools also claim that their paths can achieve rainbow body, but I am not sure if they are the same kind of rainbow body.
In fact when I pointed this out on a similar discussion on esangha Namdrol asserted that the Sarma school tantra practices resulting in rainbow body are not the same as the Dzogchen rainbow body.
Kirt
conebeckham wrote:Namdrol may be right, I don't know.....he probably is. But it's important to note that quite a few "Sarma" Lamas practiced Dzokchen secretly, as well. Some of those Rainbow Bodies may have been Dzokchen-produced. Those Lamas just didn't talk about it.
Astus wrote:Maybe I've missed something here in Narraboth's answer but I still don't see the use of dissolving the physical body into rainbow lights ....
rainbow body - (tib: 'ja lus) The sign of full realization in dzogchen is the attainment of the rainbow body. The realized dzogchen practitioner, no longer deluded by apparent substantiality or dualisms such as mind and matter, releases the energy of the elements that compose the physical body at the time of death. The body itself is dissolved, leaving only hair and nails, and the practitioner consciously enters death.
narraboth wrote:This kind of discussion is interesting, but is also like two ants debating about which skyline building is higher. Don't spend too much time on it unless you are already near the top of one of them.
yes, indeed. Astus wrote:I hear in arguments for the superiority of Dzogchen that it includes the possibility of attaining the rainbow body. Frankly, besides that it sounds cool, I don't see the point of it at all. It might be a great miracle to see someone's body vaporise with colourful lights, but beyond that what? Realisation of the 3/4 bodies are inherent in awareness so it is not the case that buddhahood is at stake. Then why the fuss?

Sonrisa wrote:Hi!
Sorry to bombard this topic and Im not sure if I should have started a new thread for it. But, what is a rainbow body? Somene tried to explain it to me and said that the person shrinks a bit
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