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'''Four activities''' ([[wyl.]] ''las bzhi'')  
'''Four activities''' (Sk. ''caturkarman'', Tib. ལས་བཞི་, ''lé shyi'',  [[Wyl.]] ''las bzhi'') — the four activities of '''pacifying''', '''enriching''', '''magnetizing''', and '''subjugating''' are presented in the Buddhist [[tantra]]s as a classification for the rituals, based on the goal of the ritual. They are thus practised as part of the deity yoga of the [[inner tantras|inner or higher tantras]]. Practitioners visualize themselves in the form of the [[deity]] and train in:
*'''pacifying''' (Skt. ''śānticāra'', Tib. ཞི་བ་, Wyl. ''zhi ba'') conflict, sickness and famine;
*'''increasing''' (Skt. ''pauṣṭika'', Tib. རྒྱས་པ་, Wyl. ''rgyas pa'') longevity and [[merit]];
*'''magnetizing''' (Skt. ''vaśīkaraṇa'', Tib. དབང་བ་,  ''dbang ba'') the [[three realms]] and
*'''subjugating''' (Skt. ''abhicāra'', Tib. དྲག་པོ་, Wyl. ''drag po'') hostile forces,
often through the emanation of rays of light.


#Pacifying
Once accomplishment has been reached, these four activities are carried out directly as aspects of [[enlightened activity]] for the benefit of others.
#Enriching
#Magnetizing
#Subjugating


[[Category:Vajrayana]]
[[Category:Enumerations]]
[[Category:Enumerations]]
[[Category:04-Four]]

Revision as of 21:43, 10 June 2018

Four activities (Sk. caturkarman, Tib. ལས་བཞི་, lé shyi, Wyl. las bzhi) — the four activities of pacifying, enriching, magnetizing, and subjugating are presented in the Buddhist tantras as a classification for the rituals, based on the goal of the ritual. They are thus practised as part of the deity yoga of the inner or higher tantras. Practitioners visualize themselves in the form of the deity and train in:

  • pacifying (Skt. śānticāra, Tib. ཞི་བ་, Wyl. zhi ba) conflict, sickness and famine;
  • increasing (Skt. pauṣṭika, Tib. རྒྱས་པ་, Wyl. rgyas pa) longevity and merit;
  • magnetizing (Skt. vaśīkaraṇa, Tib. དབང་བ་, dbang ba) the three realms and
  • subjugating (Skt. abhicāra, Tib. དྲག་པོ་, Wyl. drag po) hostile forces,

often through the emanation of rays of light.

Once accomplishment has been reached, these four activities are carried out directly as aspects of enlightened activity for the benefit of others.