by Karma Dondrup Tashi » Fri Oct 14, 2011 9:26 pm
When one bestows the deity initiation on the body and the goddess initiation using ritual substances, then subtle, ordinary accomplishments manifest. By transforming the inner world of one’s experience, one’s own body-image is imprinted with the form of the deity.
Through the initiation into the state of pure presence which is outside of time, one’s own body is experienced as insubstantial and never having come into existence… By seeing the nature of one’s own mind, the state of contemplation shines forth… All latching on to ‘me’ and ‘mine’ has been exhausted; in this state without grasping there is nothing tainted or anything to correct.
Tantra of the Hidden Lamp of Pure Awareness. Ch. 2
In the tradition of anuttara-tāntra, the student receives a four-fold abhiṣeka. The entire ceremony is called an abhiṣeka, and each of the four parts is also called an abhiṣeka, because they are each a particular empowerment. The four abhiṣekas are all connected with experiencing the phenomenal world as a sacred maṇḍala…
…after taking the samaya oath, the student receives the first abhiṣeka, the abhiṣeka of the vase… Symbolically, the abhiṣeka of the vase is the coronation of the student as prince or princess, a would-be king of the maṇḍala. It signifies the student’s graduation from the ordinary world to the world of continuity, the tantric world…
Amṛita… is used in conferring the second abhiṣeka, the secret abhiṣeka. This transmission dissolves the student’s mind into the mind of the teacher of the lineage. In general, amṛita is the principle of intoxicating extreme beliefs, belief in ego, and dissolving the boundary between confusion and sanity so that co-emergence can be realized…
By drinking amṛita, a mixture of liquor and other substances… the mind of the student merges with the mind of the teacher and the mind of the yi-dam [i.e. meditation deity], so that the boundary line between confusion and wakefulness begins to dissolve. In the third abhiṣeka… the abhiṣeka of knowledge and wisdom, the student begins to experience joy, mahāsukha [literally, "great bliss"] – uniting with the world. This is sometimes called the union of bliss and emptiness, which signifies greater openness and greater vision taking place.
The fourth abhiṣeka… is known as the abhiṣeka of suchness [i.e. reality]. The student experiences that he does not have to dwell on the past, present or future. He could just wake himself up on the spot. The student’s mind is opened to the ultimate notion of sacred outlook, in which there is nobody to flash sacred outlook. There is just a sense of the doer and the doing dissolving into one…
Chogyam Trungpa, Sacred Outlook: The Vajrayoginī Shrine and Practice
Lexicographers say it is called “secret” because it is the initiation obtained from tasting the secret substance.
mK’as Grub.rJe (1385 – 1438)
Then seated upon one's tiger skin, one should eat the "spiced food" of the sacrament, enjoying it, and one should eat with eagerness the "kingly rice." ... The chief lady should offer to the master an unmarred sacred skull filled with liquor, and having made obeisance to him, she should drink it herself.
Snellgrove, 1987