Kristy, See below. Be well, ED



"Dzogchen, the Path of Self-Liberation

The particular method of Dzogchen is called the Path of Self-Liberation,
and to apply it nothing need be renounced, purified, or transformed.
Whatever arises as one's karmic vision is used as the path.

The great master Pha Tampa Sangye [South Indian Yogin of the 11 century
(ed.)] once said: It is not the circumstances which arise as one's
karmic vision that condition a person into the dualistic state; it is a
person's own attachment that enables what arises to condition him.
If this attachment is to be cut through in the most rapid and effective
way, the mind's spontaneous capacity to self-liberate must be
brought into play.

The term self-liberation should not, however, be taken as implying that
there is some 'self' or ego there to be liberated. It is a
fundamental assumption...at the Dzogchen level, that all phenomena are
void of self-nature.

'Self -Liberation', in the Dzogchen sense, means that whatever
manifests in the field of experience of the practitioner is allowed to
arise just as it is, without judgement of it as good or bad, beautiful
or ugly.

And in that same moment, if there is no clinging, or attachment, without
effort, or even volition, whatever it is that arises, whether as a
thought or as a seemingly external event, automatically liberates
itself, by itself, and of itself.

Practicing in this way the seeds of the poison tree of dualistic vision
never even get a chance to sprout, much less to take root and grow.(p33)

Not Sutra, not Tantra, Dzogchen does not see itself as the high point of
any hierarchy of levels, and is not a gradual path.

Dzogchen is the Path of Self-Liberation, and not the Path of
Transformation, so it does not use visualization as a principle
practice; but it is beyond limits, and practices of any of the other
levels can be used as secondary practices.

The principle practice of Dzogchen is to enter directly into non-dual
contemplation, and to remain in it, continuing to deepen it until one
reaches Total Realization. (p34) top
<http://www.dzogchen.org.au/index.php?page=dzogchen#top> "


http://www.dzogchen.org.au/index.php?page=dzogchen
<http://www.dzogchen.org.au/index.php?page=dzogchen>


--- In [email protected], Kristy McClain <healthyplay1@...>
wrote:
>

ED..   One final comment on this..   I think the attached comments
correlate with my prior comment.  They teach that the environment is
simply not the focus.  That, in fact, being distracted is equally
relevant  to the process.  Or -- this is how I am reading this.  Take
care.. k        Longchenpa makes an astonishing commentary on a portion
from the Dzogchen Semde root tantra, the Kunje Gyalpo.  I have included
both Longchenpa's commentary and the relevant text from the Kunje
Gyalpo.  Quotes are from Longchenpa's The Precious Treasury of the Basic
Space of Phenomena, published by Padma Publishing.  My comments are
beneath the KJG quotes below.   "Spontaneously present meditative
stability, settled in its own place, is understood to be ongoing, like
the flow of a river, without having to be deliberately cultivated. 
Within that context, everything arises as the true nature of phenomena,
and so there is no error or obscuration, no dullness or agitation, no
distraction or even the lack of it, because any object of distraction
arises as the display of that nature."   From the Kunje Gyalpo:   To
ignore what is inherent and seek afar for something else,  eagerly
trying to arouse the bliss that requires no effort... there is no
greater debility than this. Undistracted meditative absorption is a
stake that tethers one to reification. With respect to what is and
always has been , there is no distraction, nothing to be lost.
Undistracted meditative absorption seduces one with hope. Such are the
Mahayana approaches based on either causes or results, which reveal what
is provisional....  With respect to what is and always has been, there
is no distraction, no loss. The state in which nothing need be done
transcends all effort and achievement.   Jackson:  Notice above where
Longchenpa says any object of distraction arises as the display of that
nature.  In other words, whatever you are distracted by is itself the
display of Rigpa and so you are actually still noticing Rigpa's display.
As an example, when you are simply present to the here and now observing
the sky, while observing the sky, a strong distracting thought or image
enters your mind.  Suddenly you are no longer in the here and now
noticing the sky, but rather you are observing this thought.  This is in
traditional Mahayana vehicles of meditation considered to be distraction
and is taught to be avoided and corrected.  One is taught to stay in
here and now awareness.  But Longchenpa is saying those distracting
thoughts are themselves just as valid as the sky as objects of
experience.  Those thoughts are also occurring in the here and now, so
when you are observing thoughts or images you are also fully in here and
now presence.  Both the sky and thoughts are equally Rigpa's pure
display.  So in this way it is understood that distraction is
impossible.  If this extremely subtle and vital point is understood, all
effort at trying to maintain an undistracted state drops away.  All
experiences of every kind are equally the display of Rigpa.  Then one
may ask:  Well, ok ... then what exactly do I do when practicing
Dzogchen?  Great question!  But it must remain  unanswered, or else the
answer will be turned into a new something to do.  In Dzogchen the
notion that there is something to do or practice is considered an
illness.  You are already Rigpa Awareness, what would be the point of
doing something in order to become what you already are?



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