Five branch winds: Difference between revisions

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#The [[naga]] wind (Tib.ཀླུའི་རླུང་, ''lu'i lung''; Wyl. ''klu'i rlung''). This lung is connected with the eyes and sight.  
#The [[naga]] wind (Tib.ཀླུའི་རླུང་, ''lu'i lung''; Wyl. ''klu'i rlung''). This lung is connected with the eyes and sight.  
#The tortoise wind (Tib. རུ་སྦལ་གྱི་རླུ་རླུང་, ''rubal gyi lung''; Wyl. ''ru sbal gyi rlung''). This wind connects with the heart and the sense of hearing [check].  
#The tortoise wind (Tib. རུ་སྦལ་གྱི་་རླུང་, ''rubal gyi lung''; Wyl. ''ru sbal gyi rlung''). This wind connects with the heart and the sense of hearing [check].  
#The lizard wind (Tib.རྩངས་པའི་རླུང་, ''tsangpé lung''; Wyl. ''rtsangs pa'i rlung'') — associated with the nose and the sense of smell.
#The lizard wind (Tib.རྩངས་པའི་རླུང་, ''tsangpé lung''; Wyl. ''rtsangs pa'i rlung'') — associated with the nose and the sense of smell.
#The devadatta wind (Tib.ལྷས་བྱིན་གྱི་རླུང་,  ''lhéjin gyi lung''; Wyl. ''lhas byin gyi rlung'') — related to the sense of taste [check].
#The devadatta wind (Tib.ལྷས་བྱིན་གྱི་རླུང་,  ''lhéjin gyi lung''; Wyl. ''lhas byin gyi rlung'') — related to the sense of taste [check].

Revision as of 20:42, 23 April 2017

The five branch winds (Tib. yenlak gi lung nga; Wyl. yan lag gi rlung lnga) are part of the our subtle psycho-physical system. The five branch winds enable the senses to operate. They are:

  1. The naga wind (Tib.ཀླུའི་རླུང་, lu'i lung; Wyl. klu'i rlung). This lung is connected with the eyes and sight.
  2. The tortoise wind (Tib. རུ་སྦལ་གྱི་་རླུང་, rubal gyi lung; Wyl. ru sbal gyi rlung). This wind connects with the heart and the sense of hearing [check].
  3. The lizard wind (Tib.རྩངས་པའི་རླུང་, tsangpé lung; Wyl. rtsangs pa'i rlung) — associated with the nose and the sense of smell.
  4. The devadatta wind (Tib.ལྷས་བྱིན་གྱི་རླུང་, lhéjin gyi lung; Wyl. lhas byin gyi rlung) — related to the sense of taste [check].
  5. The 'king of wealth deities' wind (Tib. ནོར་ལྷ་རྒྱལ་གྱི་རླུང་, nor lha gyal gyi lung; Wyl. nor lha rgyal gyi rlung). This wind connects with the body and the sense of touch.

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