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Pema Rigdzin wrote: I'm willing to brush aside that you're involved just as much in philosophy with your position as I am with mine. The question is, though, would you mind explaining precisely how simply staring into the sky with no instruction, introduction, or concrete method--or talking to statues--can bring about realization, in and of itself? You must know how and why these approaches would work, since you clearly believe in them so strongly.
I am fully willing to stand corrected and admit my error if you can help me understand how the above methods could result in buddhahood despite a person having no knowledge of basics of the Buddha's teachings and therefore no effort to accumulate merit and purify obscurations/enter into knowledge of their true condition (i.e. Dzogchen/Mahamudra).
Namgyal wrote:'Even if one is not able to practice all the details of the Eleven Yogas of Vajrayogini, one who knows how to really pray deeply to the goddess Tara will receive the same benefits.' H.E. Chogye Trichen Rinpoche.
Namgyal wrote:Pema Rigdzin wrote: I'm willing to brush aside that you're involved just as much in philosophy with your position as I am with mine. The question is, though, would you mind explaining precisely how simply staring into the sky with no instruction, introduction, or concrete method--or talking to statues--can bring about realization, in and of itself? You must know how and why these approaches would work, since you clearly believe in them so strongly.
I am fully willing to stand corrected and admit my error if you can help me understand how the above methods could result in buddhahood despite a person having no knowledge of basics of the Buddha's teachings and therefore no effort to accumulate merit and purify obscurations/enter into knowledge of their true condition (i.e. Dzogchen/Mahamudra).Namgyal wrote:'Even if one is not able to practice all the details of the Eleven Yogas of Vajrayogini, one who knows how to really pray deeply to the goddess Tara will receive the same benefits.' H.E. Chogye Trichen Rinpoche.
What His Eminence is saying is that 'one who has a truly open heart may spontaneously acquire all the siddhis'. There is no need for them to study and practice in the way that you have described because like the Mahasiddha Santideva they can simply say, 'excuse me Mr. Buddha could you help me please'. Of course possessing such a child-like nature, that is so pure and uncontrived, 'is as rare as stars in daytime', but it does exist. When you assert that there is only one rather complicated path to liberation, you are actually referring only to your path, which is suitable for your complicated nature.
Lord Buddha taught 84000 different paths to freedom.
CrawfordHollow wrote:The Shantideva I am thinking about was a Madhyamaka scholar as well as a bodhisattva. Maybe you had someone else in mind?

Yudron wrote:I don't have realization, so I don't know for sure. However, I have been taught that the deity and one's lama are the same. Therefore, if by praying to your lama with deep faith and devotion is an effective path to liberation, then praying to Tara must also be. Rare, though. More likely one would have a nyam, a taste of what liberation would be like, and it would dissipate, and there would be confusion about how to proceed. You can see this from many posts on DW where people latched on to an experience and deviate into grasping, pride or delusion.
CrawfordHollow wrote:It is said that Shantideva was a scholar and master of debate but did show this to the other monks....The point being is that Shantideva had a deep and profound understanding of the Buddhist cannon, he just kept his knowledge a secret. You can read about this on http://www.khandro.net and other places.

Pema Rigdzin wrote:I suppose anything might be possible, but with human rebirth alone being the long shot it is, not to mention how hard it is to gain liberation through practicing Buddha Dharma, I really can't fathom why anyone would push the "not everyone needs to study and practice; some can just float along and figure it out themselves somehow" angle.
why waste time on an internet forumNamgyal wrote:immediately pressed his palms together in the gesture of supplication and begged for the power and realization of every quality of perfect insight.'

dorjeshonnu wrote:why waste time on an internet forumNamgyal wrote:immediately pressed his palms together in the gesture of supplication and begged for the power and realization of every quality of perfect insight.'

Andrew108 wrote:Yudron wrote:I don't have realization, so I don't know for sure. However, I have been taught that the deity and one's lama are the same. Therefore, if by praying to your lama with deep faith and devotion is an effective path to liberation, then praying to Tara must also be. Rare, though. More likely one would have a nyam, a taste of what liberation would be like, and it would dissipate, and there would be confusion about how to proceed. You can see this from many posts on DW where people latched on to an experience and deviate into grasping, pride or delusion.
My reply here is a little off topic but I thought that perhaps it might be interesting to clarify this notion of devotion and praying to the lama and how that might bring about realization without study or effort.
Devotion in this sense doesn't consists of thinking of the teacher as being outside or praying to the lama. The point here is that what ones feels is the same as the teacher feels and how you and the teacher feel is the same as how the deity feels. There is absolutely no distance between student/teacher/deity. Devotion here means bringing close or bringing together or more accurately self-liberating together the experiences of samsara - continually as an automatic function - from it's own side in an uncontrived way. The sensation of pain is the same as the teachers sensation of pain which is the same as the deities sensation of pain. There is no difference as to the nature of that pain between student/teacher/deity. It is total identification and at the same time one gives up grasping to my pain or my desire or my anger and so on. So devotion is a kind of integration. It is an understanding that your real nature and the teacher's real nature and the deity's real nature are not distant in time or in space but are/is immediately apparent.
Conceptual ideas and intellectual speculation can cut a student off from the immediacy of devotion. In the end student/teacher and deity come from the same place, are the same thing.
I thought I might interject here and give some extra idea about what devotion really means and how devotion just by itself can bring about authentic realization.
untrueNamgyal wrote:Only you know the answer to this question...
wakening, benefits from dharma studyif it is any consolation I am sure that most, if not all, of the members periodically ask themselves the same thing.
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