Continued from Mind-Altering Practices...
From an Asian perspective, there are certain classes of non-physical beings that thrive on the energy that is generated by warfare and killing. The Tibetans have up to eight classes of beings that affect humanity in different ways. Epidemic disease is associated with a specific class of being which feeds off of the energy of the dying.
In many of the traditions of China, India and Tibet, the tantric shaman has the ability to fulfill any of these aforementioned functions when fully trained. These shamans become mahasiddhas who have united the Three Bodies. This is the highest level of power. In many civilizations, the first king or ruler was a tantric shaman. In China, this includes the Yellow Emperor and Lao Tzu.
Tantric shamans have attained power through successful practices that often include fasting and sensory deprivation, as well as sexual yoga. This type of shaman employs dreams, visions, and inter-dimensional travel in order to retrieve useful information from other realms for all the members of the tribe, clan, or community.
Shamans serve as intermediaries between the worlds of the dead and the living. Shamans have the ability to guide the souls of the departed to their next destinations. Shamans translate the inner meanings of dreams for the benefit of the tribe.
The majority of descriptions of ascending or descending (journeys to an "upper," "middle" or "lower" world) are based on shamanic intervention on behalf of a student or patient. A shaman's journey is the defining practice of shamanic visionary experience.
In many tribes in Siberia, the shaman has to have experienced eight dismemberments of the subtle body. This is one of the key characteristics of shamanic initiation. This experience of dismemberment is also the basis of the Chod practice of Tibetan Buddhism, wherein the practitioner visualizes dismembering him/herself and offering the body parts to various "guests” at the ritual feast.
Until the latter decade of the twentieth century, Western science did not include the concept of multiple worlds, but this has been the basis of the shamanic worldview for thousands of years. The Western physicists' discoveries that echo Buddhist billion-world theory have confirmed the essential shamanic worldview: there are many parallel dimensions, and our waking reality obscures our perception of these other worlds. They are always present, but most of us cannot observe or visit them. Shamans can.
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- KTBMovie
- "Lost Secret of Immortality" For thousands of years, science and religion have searched for the key to enlightenment. Killing the Buddha uncovers the sacred knowledge of the Philosopher’s Stone and guides viewers to the mysterious Kundalini – the original enlightened energy of the body. Filmed in China and Tibet, this revolutionary film reveals the secret of practicing sexual yoga to achieve tantric enlightenment. Visit www.killingthebuddhamovie.com for more information about the motion comic and movie.
Showing posts with label China. Show all posts
Showing posts with label China. Show all posts
Wednesday, August 18, 2010
Monday, August 16, 2010
Mind-Altering Practices
Shamanism is a collection of archaic mind-altering practices existing worldwide. It is associated with the origins of human civilizations. The war shaman was the leader, the king. In China, the Mandate of Heaven is originally the concept of the war shaman being permitted to enter the Tao and create a kingdom.
The shamanic path contains the original, or native medical traditions and knowledge of humanity. It also gives us the model of the ruler of the people as a warrior- philosopher-king. War, healing and bewitching are the functions of a shaman.
The war shaman is a military archetype that pervades both Eastern and Western cultures. It represents power through conquest. It is also an ancient model for leadership in many cultures.
The healing shaman is the archetype for medicine and curing. It represents power through benefiting others. It is also an ancient model for those who retrieve information from other worlds or realms that can be used for healing. Healing shamans are guided by visions, dreams, and practices that use sacred plants.
The bewitching shaman is the negative magical archetype. It represents power through coercion, deception, and illusion. Bewitching shamans parasitically prey on weaker beings. Bewitching shamans are guided by malevolent deceased ancestors.
To be continued...
The shamanic path contains the original, or native medical traditions and knowledge of humanity. It also gives us the model of the ruler of the people as a warrior- philosopher-king. War, healing and bewitching are the functions of a shaman.
The war shaman is a military archetype that pervades both Eastern and Western cultures. It represents power through conquest. It is also an ancient model for leadership in many cultures.
The healing shaman is the archetype for medicine and curing. It represents power through benefiting others. It is also an ancient model for those who retrieve information from other worlds or realms that can be used for healing. Healing shamans are guided by visions, dreams, and practices that use sacred plants.
The bewitching shaman is the negative magical archetype. It represents power through coercion, deception, and illusion. Bewitching shamans parasitically prey on weaker beings. Bewitching shamans are guided by malevolent deceased ancestors.
To be continued...
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Friday, July 23, 2010
The Seventh Yoga of Naropa: Forceful Entry (Switching Bodies)
The forceful entry is a legendary yoga that is said to have been lost in its complete form in Tibet, although Indian yogis claim to have preserved the tradition. Like many of the yogas, there are two or three versions. The art of hypnosis, for example, is described in medieval India not as suggestion but as forcefully entering another's body and controlling them. The most important idea of forceful entry is that it is possible for an adept to switch his consciousness from one body to another without dying and without discontinuity of consciousness. The idea would be that the yogi who possesses this skill is able to transfer his consciousness from an aged body to that of another body. In China it was believed that it was possible to transfer consciousness into the child of a wealthy family, resulting in enhanced material benefits. There is a recurrent legend in China that Taoists who have been traveling out of body have returned to find their physical body cremated and thus were forced to enter the body of a recently deceased individual in the area in order to maintain an earthly existence. This is the basis of one of the stories from China of the Eight immortals (eight Taoist masters of ancient times).
One of the most beloved figures of the Eight Immortals is Ti Kuai Li or Iron Crutch Li. He is usually shown with a crutch and a gourd that contains medicinal herbs; he is associated with medicine and healers. He is known as an irascible and unpredictable figure and, since he has the form of a beggar, is known to fight for the rights of the poor and needy.
He was not always a crippled beggar. One time when he had left his body to go to the mountains to do his spiritual cultivation (some say with Lao Tzu himself), he gave precise instructions to one of his students that if he was not back in seven days to burn his body. Unfortunately, while he was away his student got news that his mother was very ill and on death’s door. Even though it had only been six days that his master had been gone his student decided that he had waited long enough; he burned his master’s body and then took off for his home village to visit his ailing mother. So when the master returned after being gone for seven days he found that his body was now a heap of ashes. Desperate, he was forced to enter the body of dead beggar he found at the side of the road, who had a crippled leg. From then on he inhabited this unfortunate body, hence his often terrible temper.
The idea of being trapped without a body, or consciousness traveling from body to body, is relatively common in yogic alchemical literature.
One of the most beloved figures of the Eight Immortals is Ti Kuai Li or Iron Crutch Li. He is usually shown with a crutch and a gourd that contains medicinal herbs; he is associated with medicine and healers. He is known as an irascible and unpredictable figure and, since he has the form of a beggar, is known to fight for the rights of the poor and needy.
He was not always a crippled beggar. One time when he had left his body to go to the mountains to do his spiritual cultivation (some say with Lao Tzu himself), he gave precise instructions to one of his students that if he was not back in seven days to burn his body. Unfortunately, while he was away his student got news that his mother was very ill and on death’s door. Even though it had only been six days that his master had been gone his student decided that he had waited long enough; he burned his master’s body and then took off for his home village to visit his ailing mother. So when the master returned after being gone for seven days he found that his body was now a heap of ashes. Desperate, he was forced to enter the body of dead beggar he found at the side of the road, who had a crippled leg. From then on he inhabited this unfortunate body, hence his often terrible temper.
The idea of being trapped without a body, or consciousness traveling from body to body, is relatively common in yogic alchemical literature.
Tuesday, July 20, 2010
The Fourth Yoga of Naropa: Clear Light Yoga
The idea of clear light and the experiences associated with practitioners who have had luminous meditation experiences is probably the most important theme in the Tibetan yogic worldview; experiences of luminosity are common to many other meditation practices as well. It is believed in the Tibetan view that at the time of death there is a universal experience of seeing a brilliant white radiance, which is considered to be the underlying reality itself. The belief is that an unprepared person is terrified by the brilliance of the void in its luminous form and flees, preventing true liberation; liberation results when the practitioner can unite with the clear light of the void without fear.
Almost all Tibetan practices are said to be preparation for navigating the death experience successfully. The Dalai Lama describes meditation as a means for the practitioner to achieve deeper and deeper levels of clear light during his or her lifetime. In China, Bodhidharma (470-543 A.D.), the founder of Zen, describes a number of clear light experiences in his famous Bloodstream Sermon. He says these experiences occur prior to complete enlightenment, which he describes as seeing your true nature or Original Face.
Almost all Tibetan practices are said to be preparation for navigating the death experience successfully. The Dalai Lama describes meditation as a means for the practitioner to achieve deeper and deeper levels of clear light during his or her lifetime. In China, Bodhidharma (470-543 A.D.), the founder of Zen, describes a number of clear light experiences in his famous Bloodstream Sermon. He says these experiences occur prior to complete enlightenment, which he describes as seeing your true nature or Original Face.
Friday, July 16, 2010
The Second Yoga of Naropa: Dream Yoga
The goal of this practice is to have lucid dreams. Many Tibetan texts have been created by Tibetans dreaming and communicating with deities. Tibetan literature is believed to be a creation between the tantric deities and the Tibetan masters.
Dream yoga is an ancient practice based on the idea that gaining lucidity or awareness that one is dreaming while one is dreaming provides a quantum leap of awareness. The practitioner uses self-suggestion until lucidity occurs and success is said to provide great spiritual and health benefits to the practitioner. Like all Asian arts, dream yogic practices are transmitted in a teacher to student lineage, usually with an initiation ceremony of some kind.
In Tibet, it could be argued that dreams within dreams are from other dimensions. Skilled practitioners can communicate with enlightened deities, ancestors, etc. and bring this information back as powerful teachings.
Many Western scholars ignore the influence of dreams and their consequences within shamanic cultures. Western society has lost the ability to use dreaming as a survival tool. Hunter-gatherer cultures are essentially based on the visions or dreams of the shamans who function as intermediaries between the world of the living and the world of the dead. It is normal for example, within a hunter-gatherer culture, for individuals to be guided by dreams with either ancestors or animal guardians. Similarly, in China, many of the meditation lineages in both Buddhism and Taoism consider consciousness projection to be one of the results of successful energy cultivation. The founder of the water-boxing martial arts system, Chen Tuan, was known to leave his body for 100-day periods. Here once again we have the primordial archetype of a shaman who can hibernate like a bear while he travels out of body for three months intervals; during this time fellow practitioners were guarding his body.
Dream yoga is an ancient practice based on the idea that gaining lucidity or awareness that one is dreaming while one is dreaming provides a quantum leap of awareness. The practitioner uses self-suggestion until lucidity occurs and success is said to provide great spiritual and health benefits to the practitioner. Like all Asian arts, dream yogic practices are transmitted in a teacher to student lineage, usually with an initiation ceremony of some kind.
In Tibet, it could be argued that dreams within dreams are from other dimensions. Skilled practitioners can communicate with enlightened deities, ancestors, etc. and bring this information back as powerful teachings.
Many Western scholars ignore the influence of dreams and their consequences within shamanic cultures. Western society has lost the ability to use dreaming as a survival tool. Hunter-gatherer cultures are essentially based on the visions or dreams of the shamans who function as intermediaries between the world of the living and the world of the dead. It is normal for example, within a hunter-gatherer culture, for individuals to be guided by dreams with either ancestors or animal guardians. Similarly, in China, many of the meditation lineages in both Buddhism and Taoism consider consciousness projection to be one of the results of successful energy cultivation. The founder of the water-boxing martial arts system, Chen Tuan, was known to leave his body for 100-day periods. Here once again we have the primordial archetype of a shaman who can hibernate like a bear while he travels out of body for three months intervals; during this time fellow practitioners were guarding his body.
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The First Yoga of Naropa: Yoga of Psycho
The first of the Six Yogas of Naropa is tummo (inner heat); it is the yoga of psycho - physical heat. This practice uses a combination of visualization and breathing techniques that eventually result in the adept being able to survive arctic temperatures with very little clothing. It is said that in 1100 A.D., Milarepa, the most well - known Tibetan to have completed the Six Yogas, was able to spend all winter in the Himalayas in a light cotton garment.
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TUMMO/INNER HEAT. Tummo is Tibetan for “inner fire” and is one of the Six Yogas of Naropa. It includes regulation of the breath, concentration on the navel center or in the lower abdomen and visualization of sacred syllables.Traditionally in Tibet, a practitioner of tummo would be tested by being put out naked into the snow and then having wet sheets wrapped around their body. Then they would need to generate enough heat within their body to dry multiple sheets.
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Heat yoga is probably among the oldest practices, dating back to shamanic hunter- gatherer cultures. Like many of the techniques and practices we will be discussing, the original technique led to physiological, transformative results. These results provided a greatly enhanced survival advantage, which was then passed down to descendants, probably both genetically and culturally. Thus, any culture that had to exist in extremely cold climates appears to have linked inner heat with both a survival and a consciousness- illuminating affect.
In China, at the hunter-gatherer level of development, survival was largely based on skill derived from hereditarily transmitted animal martial arts systems. Each village or clan had a specific animal guardian with a system of corresponding martial arts, often based on sword, spear, and a variety of other weapons; these systems were used to protect the tribe from marauders. Very few students of Zen realize that one of the oldest sayings from the Shaolin temple, the legendary source of both Zen and martial arts, is "kill the leader of the bandits and you save the whole village."
The basis for all martial arts systems is chi development; martial arts skills are determined by the amount of heat that the individual has been able to generate through specific breathing, visualization and meditation practices. Energy cultivation is the basis of both the martial arts and medical traditions dating back toprehistoric times in Asia.
Essentially, an individual who mastered these practices could be expected to live to a much greater age than most people as well as maintain a very high level of health. In theory, this would allow the clans that had mastered these techniques to survive and reproduce successfully at a much greater rate than those who were not able to master this yogic skill. Heat yoga can compensate for nutritional inadequacy in winter months, so fasting practices could benefit those in times of extreme cold or famine. Heat yoga and fasting practices are techniques that ultimately became the basis of many Tibetan yogic systems.
Even in modern times, martial arts masters are able to fight successfully past their seventies. There have been many cases in which elderly practitioners successfully defeated challengers or armed opponents. In one story, Wang Pei Sheng, a well-known master, defeated four Japanese soldiers carrying bayonets with his bare hands, using tai chi skills, during the Japanese occupation of Beijing. Similarly, in Japan, the belief was that one true samurai armed with a sword could defeat ten armed opponents. In China, the belief has always been that success in combat is determined by the level of chi development of the practitioner. In modern times, these arts have continued to be transmitted because of their health benefits and their associations with longevity. In ancient times, the medical system, the martial arts system and the system of spiritual cultivation were not separate; you see this in the monastic teaching systems that existed in China, Tibet and India.
____________________________________________________
TUMMO/INNER HEAT. Tummo is Tibetan for “inner fire” and is one of the Six Yogas of Naropa. It includes regulation of the breath, concentration on the navel center or in the lower abdomen and visualization of sacred syllables.Traditionally in Tibet, a practitioner of tummo would be tested by being put out naked into the snow and then having wet sheets wrapped around their body. Then they would need to generate enough heat within their body to dry multiple sheets.
____________________________________________________
Heat yoga is probably among the oldest practices, dating back to shamanic hunter- gatherer cultures. Like many of the techniques and practices we will be discussing, the original technique led to physiological, transformative results. These results provided a greatly enhanced survival advantage, which was then passed down to descendants, probably both genetically and culturally. Thus, any culture that had to exist in extremely cold climates appears to have linked inner heat with both a survival and a consciousness- illuminating affect.
In China, at the hunter-gatherer level of development, survival was largely based on skill derived from hereditarily transmitted animal martial arts systems. Each village or clan had a specific animal guardian with a system of corresponding martial arts, often based on sword, spear, and a variety of other weapons; these systems were used to protect the tribe from marauders. Very few students of Zen realize that one of the oldest sayings from the Shaolin temple, the legendary source of both Zen and martial arts, is "kill the leader of the bandits and you save the whole village."
The basis for all martial arts systems is chi development; martial arts skills are determined by the amount of heat that the individual has been able to generate through specific breathing, visualization and meditation practices. Energy cultivation is the basis of both the martial arts and medical traditions dating back toprehistoric times in Asia.
Essentially, an individual who mastered these practices could be expected to live to a much greater age than most people as well as maintain a very high level of health. In theory, this would allow the clans that had mastered these techniques to survive and reproduce successfully at a much greater rate than those who were not able to master this yogic skill. Heat yoga can compensate for nutritional inadequacy in winter months, so fasting practices could benefit those in times of extreme cold or famine. Heat yoga and fasting practices are techniques that ultimately became the basis of many Tibetan yogic systems.
Even in modern times, martial arts masters are able to fight successfully past their seventies. There have been many cases in which elderly practitioners successfully defeated challengers or armed opponents. In one story, Wang Pei Sheng, a well-known master, defeated four Japanese soldiers carrying bayonets with his bare hands, using tai chi skills, during the Japanese occupation of Beijing. Similarly, in Japan, the belief was that one true samurai armed with a sword could defeat ten armed opponents. In China, the belief has always been that success in combat is determined by the level of chi development of the practitioner. In modern times, these arts have continued to be transmitted because of their health benefits and their associations with longevity. In ancient times, the medical system, the martial arts system and the system of spiritual cultivation were not separate; you see this in the monastic teaching systems that existed in China, Tibet and India.
Thursday, July 15, 2010
What is the Kundalini?
In the writings of the Indian expert on kundalini, Gopi Krishna, we find the following: Heaven has planted in the human body a powerful reservoir of psychic energy that, when roused to activity, can lead to transcendental states of consciousness, genius, and supernormal psychic gifts.
Though millions of ordinary people may know about the breakthroughs in astronomy, medicine, chemistry, and other branches of science, hardly anybody is familiar with a far more important development: the almost unbelievable potential lying dormant in their own brain. It is this power center in the human body that the sages in India knew as Kundalini and that adepts in other parts of the world called by names as varied as the “sun behind the sun” and the “philosopher’s stone.”
-Gopi Krishna, Kundalini: The Evolutionary Energy in Man
What is this kundalini that we are talking about here? To understand kundalini we must understand the term prana, which means something quite close to the Chinese chi. Prana is life energy and, like chi, can be linked to the breath. Also, like chi, it is the original energy that gives life to and supports all of our physical, mental and even emotionalactivities. As an old saying goes, “Where there is breath, there is life.” We can go without food or even water (as in some yogic practices in India as well as in China) for days, weeks, or even months at a time but we cannot go for more than a few minutes without breathing.
Many yogic practices are about strengthening or purifying the prana or life force. The specific aspect of the life force that is called kundalini is said to reside deep in the first chakra of the body, lying coiled there like a snake. The image of a snake rising through the spinal core is used to describe the awakening of the kundalini energy. This energy called the kundalini is the juncture where the body meets the other elements of consciousness. Activation of the kundalini spreads this primal energy up along channels called nadis, through the knots of the chakras. Or course to do this one needs proper coaching. Although occasionally pain is described, usually the sensations of heat, pleasure, and even ecstasy are reported.
Though millions of ordinary people may know about the breakthroughs in astronomy, medicine, chemistry, and other branches of science, hardly anybody is familiar with a far more important development: the almost unbelievable potential lying dormant in their own brain. It is this power center in the human body that the sages in India knew as Kundalini and that adepts in other parts of the world called by names as varied as the “sun behind the sun” and the “philosopher’s stone.”
-Gopi Krishna, Kundalini: The Evolutionary Energy in Man
What is this kundalini that we are talking about here? To understand kundalini we must understand the term prana, which means something quite close to the Chinese chi. Prana is life energy and, like chi, can be linked to the breath. Also, like chi, it is the original energy that gives life to and supports all of our physical, mental and even emotionalactivities. As an old saying goes, “Where there is breath, there is life.” We can go without food or even water (as in some yogic practices in India as well as in China) for days, weeks, or even months at a time but we cannot go for more than a few minutes without breathing.
Many yogic practices are about strengthening or purifying the prana or life force. The specific aspect of the life force that is called kundalini is said to reside deep in the first chakra of the body, lying coiled there like a snake. The image of a snake rising through the spinal core is used to describe the awakening of the kundalini energy. This energy called the kundalini is the juncture where the body meets the other elements of consciousness. Activation of the kundalini spreads this primal energy up along channels called nadis, through the knots of the chakras. Or course to do this one needs proper coaching. Although occasionally pain is described, usually the sensations of heat, pleasure, and even ecstasy are reported.
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