Three neighs of the horse: Difference between revisions

From Rigpa Wiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
(Tibetan.)
m (More about the three neighs)
Line 1: Line 1:
'''Three neighs of the horse''' (Tib. རྟ་མགྲིན་གྱི་རྟ་སྐད་ཐེངས་གསུམ་, Wyl. ''rta mgrin gyi rta skad thengs gsum'') associated with [[Hayagriva]] or Lotus Speech.
'''Three neighs of the horse''' (Tib. རྟ་མགྲིན་གྱི་རྟ་སྐད་ཐེངས་གསུམ་, Wyl. ''rta mgrin gyi rta skad thengs gsum'') is the [[mandala]] practice associated with [[Hayagriva]] or Lotus Speech. From Hayagriva's point of view the universe is gullible and the horse's neigh is to awaken and provoking gullible beings.
 
The three neighs are waking the world to the fact that [[Samsara]] and [[Nirvana]] are non-originated,  offering the whole world and demanding obedience.
 
== Further Reading ==
* Chogyam Trungpa, The Tantric Path of Indestructible Wakefulness (volume 3), Shambhala, 2013, ISBN 978-1590308042


[[Category:03-Three]]
[[Category:03-Three]]
[[Category:Kagyé]]
[[Category:Kagyé]]

Revision as of 20:51, 23 April 2017

Three neighs of the horse (Tib. རྟ་མགྲིན་གྱི་རྟ་སྐད་ཐེངས་གསུམ་, Wyl. rta mgrin gyi rta skad thengs gsum) is the mandala practice associated with Hayagriva or Lotus Speech. From Hayagriva's point of view the universe is gullible and the horse's neigh is to awaken and provoking gullible beings.

The three neighs are waking the world to the fact that Samsara and Nirvana are non-originated, offering the whole world and demanding obedience.

Further Reading

  • Chogyam Trungpa, The Tantric Path of Indestructible Wakefulness (volume 3), Shambhala, 2013, ISBN 978-1590308042