Four yogas: Difference between revisions

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#one-pointedness (Tib. [[རྩེ་གཅིག་]], ''tsé chik''; Wyl. ''rtse gcig''), which establishes the state of [[shamatha]]
#one-pointedness (Tib. [[རྩེ་གཅིག་]], ''tsé chik''; Wyl. ''rtse gcig''), which establishes the state of [[shamatha]]
#simplicity (Tib. [[སྤྲོས་བྲལ་]], Wyl. ''spros bral''), which is reached through the clear seeing of [[vipashyana]]
#simplicity (Tib. [[སྤྲོས་བྲལ་]], ''trödral'';  Wyl. ''spros bral''), which is reached through the clear seeing of [[vipashyana]]
#one taste (Tib. [[རོ་གཅིག་]], ''ro chik''; Wyl. ''ro gcig''), when shamatha and vipashyana become one
#one taste (Tib. [[རོ་གཅིག་]], ''ro chik''; Wyl. ''ro gcig''), when shamatha and vipashyana become one
#non-meditation (Tib. [[སྒོམ་མེད་]], ''gom mé''; Wyl. ''sgom med'') is reached when one goes beyond the mind, and beyond the concept of a meditator meditating, the level of [[Dzogchen]].  
#non-meditation (Tib. [[སྒོམ་མེད་]], ''gom mé''; Wyl. ''sgom med'') is reached when one goes beyond the mind, and beyond the concept of a meditator meditating, the level of [[Dzogchen]].  

Revision as of 13:49, 3 January 2018

Four yogas (Tib. རྣལ་འབྱོར་བཞི་, naljor shyi, Wyl. rnal 'byor bzhi)—four stages of attainment in the meditation practice of Mahamudra.

  1. one-pointedness (Tib. རྩེ་གཅིག་, tsé chik; Wyl. rtse gcig), which establishes the state of shamatha
  2. simplicity (Tib. སྤྲོས་བྲལ་, trödral; Wyl. spros bral), which is reached through the clear seeing of vipashyana
  3. one taste (Tib. རོ་གཅིག་, ro chik; Wyl. ro gcig), when shamatha and vipashyana become one
  4. non-meditation (Tib. སྒོམ་མེད་, gom mé; Wyl. sgom med) is reached when one goes beyond the mind, and beyond the concept of a meditator meditating, the level of Dzogchen.

Teachings Given to the Rigpa Sangha

Further Reading