{"id":690,"date":"2017-12-13T08:34:41","date_gmt":"2017-12-13T13:34:41","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.vbatoronto.org\/en\/?p=690"},"modified":"2018-06-25T11:10:49","modified_gmt":"2018-06-25T15:10:49","slug":"the-thunder-of-the-heavenly-drum-on-the-great-perfection","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.vbatoronto.org\/en\/2017\/12\/13\/the-thunder-of-the-heavenly-drum-on-the-great-perfection\/","title":{"rendered":"The Thunder of the Heavenly Drum &#8212; On the Great Perfection"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><em>Translator Note: This article was originally published in Chinese in &#8220;The Teaching of Living and Dying&#8221; (\u751f\u8207\u6b7b\u7684\u79aa\u6cd5) by <a href=\"http:\/\/www.vbatoronto.org\/en\/master-tam\/\" target=\"_blank\">Master Tam<\/a>. Taipei: Buddhall Publishing House, 2005. For those who are interested, you can read Tam&#8217;s <a href=\"http:\/\/www.vbatoronto.org\/en\/2017\/12\/14\/tam-shek-wing-on-the-albert-einstein-archives-and-the-buddha-within\/\">recent article<\/a> on the Einstein Archives, which makes a good companion piece to the current article.<\/em><\/p>\n<p><img loading=\"lazy\" class=\"alignnone size-full wp-image-691\" src=\"http:\/\/www.vbatoronto.org\/en\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/2\/2017\/12\/sky-1551112_960_720.jpg\" alt=\"sky-1551112_960_720\" width=\"960\" height=\"475\" srcset=\"https:\/\/www.vbatoronto.org\/en\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/2\/2017\/12\/sky-1551112_960_720.jpg 960w, https:\/\/www.vbatoronto.org\/en\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/2\/2017\/12\/sky-1551112_960_720-300x148.jpg 300w, https:\/\/www.vbatoronto.org\/en\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/2\/2017\/12\/sky-1551112_960_720-768x380.jpg 768w\" sizes=\"(max-width: 960px) 100vw, 960px\" \/><\/p>\n<p>In the last few decades, Nyingma\u2019s Buddhist teaching from Tibet, the Great Perfection (Dzogchen) became popular. Many Nyingma centres were established in Europe and America. Even in Asia, there were many centres purportedly Nyingma, rushing in to present the teaching of the Great Perfection and its practice.<\/p>\n<p>Interestingly, even ordinary Tibetans have become enamoured by this trend. There is a mall on Toronto\u2019s Yonge street (the busiest street in Toronto). To cater to the lifestyle of the Chinese community nearby, this mall is open for business until 11 at night. In one of the stores, the owners hired twelve Tibetans, and they are all very friendly. In conversation I found out that they were practitioners of Kagyu and Gelug Schools of Tibetan Buddhism. And yet, they all claimed to be learning from a lama in the Nyingma tradition. \u201cWe want to learn Dzogchen,\u201d said one. \u201cEven Dalai Lama practices Dzogchen,\u201d said another.<\/p>\n<p>The Great Perfection! This Buddhist\u00a0teaching is like a storm that swept the whole world, it has become a\u00a0spiritual refuge. Studying Nyingma\u2019s teaching has become fashionable for scholars in Europe, North America and Japan. I cannot help but be reminded of a prophecy by Padmasambhava: \u201cWhen iron wings roam the sky, my teaching will spread across the world, but this is also the time when the teaching will be destroyed. What remains as authentic hangs on like a golden thread.\u201d This prophecy was passed on generations by generations and it appears to have come true now.<\/p>\n<p>What made popular the teaching of the Great Perfection can be traced back to January 1987 when Nyingma\u2019s Dudjom Rinpoche (1904\u20131987) passed away in a French village near Paris. His passing away sent a shock wave among Buddhist scholars in Europe and America. Tibetans took pride in the event.<\/p>\n<p>Dudjuom Rinpoche passed away in a seated meditative pose. After his death, a rainbow light emanated\u00a0from his body, while his body became smaller and smaller. This phenomenon is documented in Nyingma\u2019s scriptures as \u201cthe attainment of rainbow body.\u201d Many considered this a myth at first, but now to be able to witness in person, all of a sudden, the little French village was flooded with at least 8,000 people.<\/p>\n<p>At that time, a disciple of Dudjom Rinpoche, the King of Nepal, decided to build a temple for the preservation of the body. He called for Dudjom Rinpoche\u2019s senior disciples to join in a collective prayer, praying for the body to not shrink any further. Then, I just moved to Hawaii, I also received the call. I promptly proceeded to practice \u201cGuru Yoga.\u201d By the fourth day, it was said that the seated body had shrunk to about two feet high and it was no longer shrinking.<\/p>\n<p>After a year, the temple was built. The body was placed in a sandalwood box, decorated with five layers of colourful satin, and was transported from France to Nepal. During the year in France, the body did not decay. It was said that rainbow light occasionally emanated from the body.<\/p>\n<p>The death of this great\u00a0guru\u00a0has stimulated the yearning for the teaching of the Great Perfection. When the attainment of rainbow body is no longer in doubt, no one would question Nyingma\u2019s teaching, let alone its practice.<\/p>\n<p>But what kind of teaching is the Great Perfection?<\/p>\n<p>This teaching is not something foreign to Buddhist practitioners. This teaching shows up\u00a0in scriptures as \u201cthe teaching of non-duality.\u201d It is also called \u201cthe teaching beyond comprehension.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>In the Chinese translation of the Buddhist canon, one famous text is called <em>Vimalak\u012brti-nirde\u015ba<\/em> (<em>\u201cThe Teaching of Vimalak\u012brti\u201d<\/em>). In China, there are a total of seven different translations, the earliest one was translated by a Han monk called Yan Fudiao (\u56b4\u4f5b\u8abf) in 188 AD. The central character is Vimalak\u012brki. Nyingma considers him a lineage master and what he presented is exactly the teaching of non-duality.<\/p>\n<p>The dissemination of this teaching and its meditative practice began with Garab Dorje (55\u2013?) and continues generation by generation. His disciple, Ma\u00f1ju\u015br\u012bmitra, had for a long time resided in Mount Wutai in China, so he had to be a monk who travelled from Xiyu (Central Asia) to China in the early part of Eastern Han dynasty (25\u2013220 AD). A Tang monk by the name of Huixiang also documented that since the Han dynasty, Mount Wutai was a residence for monks \u201cfrom foreign lands.\u201d Ma\u00f1ju\u015br\u012bmitra was most likely one of them.<\/p>\n<p>About Vimalak\u012brti, he is a legendary character in Buddhist texts. He was a merchant from\u00a0the town of Va\u012b\u015bal\u012b. He had wives and servants, living a life of\u00a0luxury. He was often found visiting gambling dens and brothels. Yet, Buddha\u2019s disciples were often admonished by him, including \u015aariputra and \u0100nanda, no one could escape from his admonishment. He even lectured Maitreya, Prabh\u0101vy\u016bha, Jagt\u012b\u1e43dhara, and Sudatta, bodhisattvas well-known in Buddhism. Those who got\u00a0the slap knew very well that this merchant was in the right, that he far surpassed them in his practice. The only one who qualified as a match was Ma\u00f1jusr\u012b, who was an expert in non-duality. At one point in <em>Vimalak\u012brti-nirde\u015ba<\/em>, Vimalak\u012brti was sick. Buddha told his disciples and the boddhisattvas to visit him, but no one was willing except Ma\u00f1jusr\u012b. Only he was not fearful of Vimalak\u012brti\u2019s criticism in the teaching.<\/p>\n<p>Did this Vimalak\u012brti truly exist? I believe he did, because in the old Sanskrit texts, any occasion mentioning him, he is always \u201cLicchavi Vimalak\u012brti.\u201d Licchavi is the name of a clan. To refer to a person first by his clan and his name is very formal. If he were fictitious, there is no call for such formality.<\/p>\n<p>Besides, the Licchavis had a profound relationship with Sakyamuni Buddha. Sakyamuni was born in Kapilavastu, which is now Tilorakot, north west of Nepal. South of it is Va\u012b\u015b\u0101l\u012b, the home of the eight prominent clans in V\u1e5bji, most notably, the Licchavis.<\/p>\n<p>Towards the end of Sakyamuni\u2019s life, he wanted to return to his birthplace. Travelling through V\u1e5bji, the four Licchavi clans, blue, yellow, red and white, all came out to welcome him. Each clan decorated the animals and carriages according to the colour of the clan. From afar, one could see the four festive colours, and Buddha was very happy. He said to his disciples, \u201cThe gatherings of Licchavis are like the gatherings in the thirty-three heavens.\u201d One can see the special connection, a deep sentimental connection between the Licchavis and Buddha.<\/p>\n<p>According to <em>Vimalak\u012brti-nirde\u015ba<\/em>, Vimalak\u012brti was a bodhisattva who came from a land in the east. Coincidentally, Ma\u00f1jusr\u012b, according to <em>The Buddha Speaks of Ma\u00f1ju\u015br\u012b\u2019s Pure Vinaya S\u016btra<\/em>, was also a bodhisattva from Ratnaketa, a land from the east. Both of these teachers of non-duality came from the east, this fact has relevance to the teaching of <em>Atiyoga<\/em>.<\/p>\n<p>In the tantric practice, only practitioners of Atiyoga treat the direction one faces in meditation as the east, regardless of the true direction. The primary deity is Vajrasattva, which is the Buddha of the east. The practice of Atiyoga happens to be the practice of non-duality, the Great Perfection. Following the Nyingma tradition of the Great Perfection, in the preliminary practice, the deity must be Vajrasattva of the east. One can see that this teaching is rooted in\u00a0the eastern land.<\/p>\n<p>We can say a few more things about Ma\u00f1jusr\u012b.<\/p>\n<p>In T\u0101ran\u0101tha\u2019s <em>History of Buddhism in India<\/em>, in Candrarak\u1e63ita\u2019s kingdom in Odivi\u015ba<em>, <\/em>Ma\u00f1jusr\u012b appeared as a monk offering the king Mah\u0101y\u0101na teachings.<\/p>\n<p>Candrarak\u1e63ita was the first of the\u00a0line of Candra kings. Historians had established that Candrarak\u1e63ita rose to power around 324 BC, the throne\u00a0was named the Maurya dynasty. The king died in 300 BC. This coincided with Ma\u00f1ju\u015br\u012b&#8217;s spreading of\u00a0Mah\u0101y\u0101na teachings. This suggests\u00a0that the teaching of Great Perfection has been around for a long time.<\/p>\n<p>However, if one goes along with <em>Ratnakara\u1e47\u1e0da S\u016btra<\/em>, Ma\u00f1ju\u015br\u012b appeared even earlier. It was said, \u201cAt the time the Victorious One was enlightened\u2026 Ma\u00f1ju\u015br\u012b arrived in this Saha world from the kingdom of treasures where Ratnaketa Buddha resides. He came to see \u015a\u0101kyamuni Buddha to pay homage and respect.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>According to the s\u016btra, shortly after Ma\u00f1ju\u015br\u012b joined \u015a\u0101kyamuni\u2019s sangha group, he disappeared for three months. \u0100nanda questioned him his whereabouts. Ma\u00f1ju\u015br\u012b answered, \u201cI spent a month in the royal palace with the queen, then a month at a school, and then a month in various brothels.\u201d \u0100nanda became very angry. He struck the gong to rouse the monks, wanting to chase him out of the sangha.<\/p>\n<p>You see, Ma\u00f1ju\u015br\u012b\u2019s behaved exactly as Vimalak\u012brti. They do not follow conventions and dogma. They even became \u201cintimate\u201d with prostitutes. This is what makes practitioners of non-duality different. In particular, Ma\u00f1ju\u015br\u012b appeared as a monk but openly did not follow the precepts of a monk. No wonder \u015a\u0101kyamuni\u2019s five hundred disciples unanimously proclaimed, \u201cI do not want to see Ma\u00f1ju\u015br\u012b. I do not want to hear his name. Wherever he goes is not where we should go. Why? Ma\u00f1ju\u015br\u012b\u2019s behaviour is different from our precepts.\u201d (cf. <em>The Buddha Speaks of Ma\u00f1ju\u015br\u012b\u2019s Travels S\u016btra<\/em>)<\/p>\n<p>What made Ma\u00f1ju\u015br\u012b so unusual? He was a bodhisattva who was \u201cliberated beyond comprehension.\u201d Since his state of mind was beyond ordinary comprehension, what appears to be action of greed, hatred and ignorance, such poisons cannot taint his mind. As such, there was no need to follow precepts to avoid the stain and obscuration. In <em>Vimalak\u012brti-nirde\u015ba<\/em>, it says, \u201cFire giving rise to a lotus is rare. Practicing Zen while immersed in desire is just as rare.\u201d Ma\u00f1ju\u015br\u012b\u2019s practice is precisely\u00a0the Zen practice while being immersed.<\/p>\n<p><em>Avata<\/em><em>\u1e43saka S\u016btra <\/em>(the section on dharma-dh\u0101tu) also contains stories of bodhisattvas in such practice. It was said that Ma\u00f1ju\u015br\u012b was mentoring Sudhana. He went on a pilgrimage to visit fifty-three bodhisattvas and to learn about their bodhisattva way. Among them, three fit into this \u201czen while immersed\u201d model.<\/p>\n<p>The first one was Jayo\u1e63m\u0101ya. This bodhisattva did not practice Buddhism. He was seen climbing mountains of swords, flinging himself in fire. Sudhana suspected he was a devil pretending to be a bodhisattva. The action depicts ignorance.<\/p>\n<p>The second one was King Anala. This bodhisattva meted out cruel punishments to his people everyday, \u201ccutting off a hand or a foot, an ear or the nose, gauging out their eyes, chopping off heads, severing the body, boiling in cauldron, burning in fire, or pushing off a high mountain.\u201d Sudhana was shocked by such brutality. The action depicts hatred.<\/p>\n<p>The third one was Vasumitra. Vasumitra was a prostitute. Living in a place of decadence, she was intimate with everyone in it. The action depicts greed and desire.<\/p>\n<p>Sudhana went on a pilgrimage because of Ma\u00f1ju\u015br\u012b\u2019s suggestion. By the time he revisted Ma\u00f1ju\u015br\u012b, he had entered into\u00a0Buddhahood. The three bodhisattvas in his visit are representative of the teaching of non-duality, which is distinctly different from Buddha\u2019s other teachings.<\/p>\n<p>However, this \u201czen while immersed\u201d feature cannot become an excuse for Buddhists for bad behaviour. For a practitioner entering into non-duality, one\u2019s attainment is on the eighth <em>bh\u016bmi<\/em>\u00a0(&#8220;stage&#8221;) or further in the bodhisattvahood, which is no ordinary achievement. It was said that N\u0101g\u0101rjuna, the famous buddhist teacher, was merely a first-bh\u016bmi bodhisattva. Who among us can surpass N\u0101g\u0101rjuna, or even Ma\u00f1ju\u015br\u012b and Vimalak\u012brti? One cannot make excuses of one\u2019s misconduct in the name of non-duality.<\/p>\n<p>Non-duality (<em>advaya<\/em>) refers to all matters that are beyond relativity, thereby refuting the existence of relativity in itself. That said, a profound relativity is the meditative entrance to the wisdom realm of non-duality, which itself is relative to the conceptual reality that naturally arises upon the wisdom realm.<\/p>\n<p>We do live in the world of duality. This world is the said conceptual reality; it is a world governed by relativity. That is why we have concepts and ideas, the good and the bad, the beauty and the beast, living and dying, and so on. These dichotomous pairs are the \u201cduality\u201d that we insist on differentiating. Without duality, we cannot think, we cannot function in our lives.<\/p>\n<p>Buddhism says that because we are so busy, so hung up, and then so busy coping with relativity, that we end up flowing in a never-ending cycle (<em>sa\u1e43s\u0101ra<\/em>). To realize non-duality is the only way to become free from the confines of sa\u1e43s\u0101ra.<\/p>\n<p>Does non-duality imply not distinguishing the good from the bad?<\/p>\n<p>Not at all. When discussing a matter or an idea, Buddhists always examine it from three perspectives: its essence\u00a0(<em>prak<\/em><em>\u1e5bi<\/em>), the appearance (<em>lak\u1e63ana<\/em><em>) and its function or capacity (prayojana<\/em><em>, v<\/em><em>\u1e5btti<\/em>).<\/p>\n<p>What Buddhists try to be rid of is just\u00a0the <em>relative<\/em> nature (perspective) of things, not their appearance or their function. Because the nature is none other than \u201cemptiness\u201d (<em>\u015b\u016bnyat\u0101<\/em>) and yet,\u00a0we treat it as \u201csubstantial,\u201d which gives rise to delusive thinking. Note that the phenomena and the function cannot be abandoned. Otherwise, one ends up in nihilism. (Buddha called this perspective\u00a0&#8220;damaged emptiness.&#8221;)<\/p>\n<p>Because we do recognize the reality of appearance and function, good and evil, or fact and fiction, they are not rendered indistinguishable. While we make conceptual distinctions, we also recognize their emptiness. Once we have entered into the realm of emptiness (not merely something we treat as a piece of knowledge), while we may make relative conceptual distinctions, we do not become trapped and attached to them.<\/p>\n<p>In fact, when we make such distinctions, we have never for one moment seen the true nature of things. What we get hung up on\u00a0is their function or their appearance, and then we become attached to our conceptuality of them, which in turn is seen as substantial.<\/p>\n<p>Say if I ask you, what is water?<\/p>\n<p>We may answer, water flows. It cleans, it is drinkable, fish live in water, boats float on water. This matter is called water.<\/p>\n<p>A person of science may say, water is a compound formed by two hydrogen atoms and one oxygen atom. At zero degree Celsius, it freezes into a solid form; at 100 degrees, it turns into a vapour.<\/p>\n<p>Yet, all these answers never touch upon the true nature of water. What defines as water depends only on its appearance and its capacity. Say, the combination of two hydrogen atoms and one oxygen atom is just the phenomenon.<\/p>\n<p>This is why, life after life, we flow in a cyclical world of phenomena. We have mistaken the phenomenon along with the function as the nature, as the true substance. Life after life, we never have a glimpse of the \u201cabsolute\u00a0truth.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>This so-called \u201cabsolute truth\u201d is the realm of emptiness. When one has gone beyond the appearance and the function, what arises is the nature as a state of non-attainment.<\/p>\n<p>In Sanskrit, \u201cempty\u201d is \u015b\u016bnya, and \u015b\u016bnya means \u201czero.\u201d Zero represents nothing and yet it does have an appearance and a function. Take the zero-sum game. We all understand that this \u201czero\u201d points at the stock market and similar phenomena. The same \u201czero\u201d is sufficient for a stock market to operate itself.<\/p>\n<p>Between living and dying, we can view all phenomena and their function as real. But viewing them as the nature is what traps us into a never-ending cycle.<\/p>\n<p>To become free from sa\u1e43s\u0101ra, the \u201cduality\u201d of\u00a0relativity is key. Every single phenomenon and its function manifest in \u201cduality.\u201d I am not going to offer more examples but consider this: can you find something that is <em>not<\/em> relative to it?<\/p>\n<p>I bet you cannot. There is no way. In our world, we are so used to relativity dictating our lives, our thinking, our values, our order. This is the \u201ccommon karma\u201d for the beings in our world.<\/p>\n<p>The teaching of non-duality is to guide us to break from this \u201ccommon karma,\u201d and it is the only way. The only way to break free is to break away from the chains of relativity, to enter into the realm of emptiness.<\/p>\n<p>Therefore the teaching of non-duality is Buddhist ultimate teaching. We call it <em>nit\u0101rtha<\/em>.<\/p>\n<p>Although we call this teaching nit\u0101rtha, there are still many levels of teaching in between. This is a matter of practicality. Depending on the practitioner\u2019s tendencies, what is presented may not be the ultimate. In Buddhism, this is called \u201cexpedience.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>The truly ultimate teaching pervades everything and everywhere (<em>dharma-dh\u0101tu<\/em>); it transcends relativity. A more expedient way may be taught according to the state of mind of the practitioner. The former (&#8220;ultimate&#8221;) places an emphasis on the view, the latter (&#8220;expedient&#8221;) places an emphasis on the meditative practice.<\/p>\n<p>Here we talk about the view.<\/p>\n<p>The ultimate view goes beyond space and time, this is also a characteristic of the Great Perfection practice.<\/p>\n<p>In the life of a human being, to say a person is trapped by relativity, the saying is still from the perspective of our world. More profoundly speaking, humans are trapped by all the relative concepts given space and time. On the path of the Great Perfection, one does not only break free from relativity, one has to break free from the shackles\u00a0of space and time, which is what we mean by \u201cpervading dharmadh\u0101tu.\u201d (At this point, \u201crelativity\u201d becomes \u201cmutual obstruction.\u201d Limitation <em>is<\/em> mutual obstruction. For a moment, let&#8217;s\u00a0this idea aside.)<\/p>\n<p>For example, when we speak of time, we have the concepts of past, present and future. To view all matters through this conceptual lens is a view that is limited.<\/p>\n<p>The practice of the Great Perfection is different. Besides the three times of past, present and future, there is an idea of \u201cindefinite time\u201d (<em>aniyata<\/em>). In the old days, this idea was very difficult to understand. How could time be indefinite? Now, modern humans can at least handle the concept of time difference (e.g., time difference between Toronto and Beijing), making the concept of \u201cindefinite time\u201d easy to accept. However, taking time difference as an analogy to indefinite time is still limited by three-dimensional space and linear time. This understanding of indefinite time, in the practice, is to become free of as well. The meaning of indefinite time goes in the territory of multi-dimensional space and multi-dimensional time and the relative interchange between them.<\/p>\n<p>There is a famous example about this issue.<\/p>\n<p>Some physicists insist that humans can travel in time. This idea is a challenge to Einstein\u2019s theory.<\/p>\n<p>Here is a conundrum: can one travel to the past and murder one\u2019s grandfather and yet, this person can still exist in the \u201cpresent&#8221;?<\/p>\n<p>Common sense may say it is impossible. Quantum physicists think otherwise. They suggest that the world is splitting at every single moment into infinite number of worlds. When one travels to the past, it is likely that if one murders the grandfather in one world, he can still be born into our world.<\/p>\n<p>This is a glimpse into the world\u00a0of the Great Perfection. As far back as 2,300 years ago, the time Ma\u00f1ju\u015br\u012b appeared in our world, this view already existed in Buddhism. Both space and time are multi-dimensional and there is interchange between them. In any space and any time there arises uncountable lives and phenomena. They are none other than images upon a certain space-time continuum; they appear along with function, but the essence is empty. A practitioner is to break free of the constraints from all space and time, or one risks being trapped by a world of illusions, taking the illusions as substantial.<\/p>\n<p>Not too long ago, Oxford University Press published a book called <a href=\"http:\/\/www.platonia.com\/books.html\" target=\"_blank\"><em>The End of Time<\/em><\/a>. It is a work by a physicist, <a href=\"http:\/\/www.platonia.com\/index.html\" target=\"_blank\">Julian Barbour<\/a>, culminating thirty-five years of research on time. His conclusion is that time does not exist. It is only an illusion. This conclusion is exactly what Buddhist called emptiness. It took me a lot of effort to read it again. Perhaps I will write another essay on the Great Perfect after, because Barbour\u2019s way of defining time is very similar. At least on the non-existence of time, the two are the same. In our lingo, we call it \u201csimultaneous life and death&#8221; (spontaneity).<\/p>\n<p>The simultaneity of life and death is very much against common sense. When we are born, we are alive for a period of time before dying. Clearly there is a gap in time. So what do we mean by \u201csimultaneous\u201d? We can only describe this state of mind as \u201cbeyond comprehension.\u201d Nyingma\u2019s ultimate teaching only guides one in the practice, to enter into non-duality and to realize this state of mind. But what it is like cannot be described. And there is not such a need, because in doing so, we can only think about it or talk about it. What can be said, what can be thought of, are conceptual and within the limitation of space and time. Within it nothing is <em>not<\/em> relative. And yet, this state of mind cannot be spoken of or to think of using such concepts. Following the meditative path to arrive at this state of mind can be described as \u201cabsolute,\u201d because it is no longer relative in terms of the\u00a0movement of space and time.<\/p>\n<p>Barbour meant the same except he attempted to use a set of limited concepts to explain (to think and to discuss) a realm that is beyond. He said everything is like a world of quantum mechanics. A sub-atomic particle can exist in two different places, yet the distance between them can be as vast as the whole universe.<\/p>\n<p>According to our concepts, distance implies time. In the world of quantum mechanics, time is clearly refuted, simultaneity\/spontaneity implies that time is zero.<\/p>\n<p>Barbour expanded quantum mechanics to include our ordinary world. He said that our life and death is akin to the sub-atomic particle; they are illusions that appear simultaneously and spontaneously.<\/p>\n<p>How does he explain these simultaneous illusions and yet we feel like they takes a long time? He made use of many recent physics concepts to explain. Ultimately, not dissimilar to Nyingma\u2019s teaching, one has to break free from the common understanding of space-time continuum. A modern physicist can be in line with Buddhist thinking from thousands of years ago is really intriguing. Since time is zero, we can also say that the ultimate Buddhist teaching and Barbour\u2019s thinking appear simultaneously and spontaneously.<\/p>\n<p>On the interchange in multi-dimensional space and time, we can approach it from the idea of \u201cIndra\u2019s net\u201d in <em>Avata<\/em><em>\u1e43saka S\u016btra<\/em><em>.<\/em><\/p>\n<p>Indra\u2019s net is a decorative piece in the palace in the Tr\u0101yastri\u1e43\u015ba heaven. Every knot in the net is decorated with a piece of jewel, each jewel, like a crystal, reflects the image from itself and all the other jewels in the net and every reflection is an image of itself and the reflections on all other jewels. Jewels and jewels reflect off of each other, reflections and reflections bounce off each other, repeatedly they becomes an infinite exchange of light and images.<\/p>\n<p>Following Nyingma\u2019s view, the Indra\u2019s net is not limited to what <em>Avata<\/em><em>\u1e43saka S\u016btra<\/em> says as \u201cone is many, many is one.\u201d In fact, it symbolizes the breaking free of the interchange of multi-dimensional space-time continua.<\/p>\n<p>We can explain with an example.<\/p>\n<p>Say we only look at the image on one jewel. In sequence, we see an image of a baby in a cradle, then an image of a middle-age person, and finally an image of an old man dying. An ordinary person would interpret from the perspective of\u00a0linear\u00a0time and three-dimensional space, that this sequence reflects the flow from birth to death, and be attached to it as substantial.<\/p>\n<p>Say instead we see the images in a reverse order, first the old man, the middle-age man and then the baby, then based on our perspective we would assume that the three images are unrelated, that they cannot be of the same person.<\/p>\n<p>However, if the first image is the middle-age person, and the old man, and then the baby, we then may assume the middle-age man has aged and died and then there is a newborn again.<\/p>\n<p>This is a very simple example. In it we make use of only three images. Because of the difference in sequence, we make up different interpretations because of our limitation in space and time.<\/p>\n<p>However, Buddhists would say, the three images are simultaneously reflected on the jewel you look at. They are not separated by a gap in time. When you are looking, you are constrained by linear time, and thus there is a sequence in the images.<\/p>\n<p>Why are we\u00a0constrained by linear time? This is determined by the common karma of beings. Humans share\u00a0the same karma and can only recognize a world of linear time and three-dimensional space. Within dharmadh\u0101tu there are many beings. Some beings, given\u00a0to their common karma of multi-dimensional time, can recognize that the three images are spontaneous\u00a0and are of one person.<\/p>\n<p>This illustrates what Buddhists say as non-arising and non-ceasing, neither\u00a0continuous nor\u00a0discrete, neither\u00a0the same\u00a0nor\u00a0different, neither\u00a0coming nor\u00a0going.<\/p>\n<p>This is a realm that is beyond thinking beyond words. Just because we are attached to time as substantial, we feel that there is life and death, there is permanence and annihilation, there is coming and going. Because we are attached to space as substantial, which is why there is oneness and there is duality.<\/p>\n<p>Because of our limitation and our attachments, we cannot see the true face of dharmadh\u0101tu. Once we can break free of such limitations, we can realize directly that it is all a delusion from the interchange of time and space. What we see is a sequence of the interchange but we are ignorant of the inter-reflections like the Indra\u2019s net that are infinite and simultaneous. Depending on one\u2019s karma, the images are interpreted based on one\u2019s limitation.<\/p>\n<p>From this example, we can begin to grasp what Buddhists refer to as karma.<\/p>\n<p>For example, the Americans involvement in Iraq is not a fate. In the images in the Indra\u2019s net, there is an image of the Americans attacking Iraq, but at the same time, there exists an image of the two heads of state opening a bottle of champagne, celebrating peace. Because of karma, there appeared the image of war. This image is insubstantial, but its appearance and its function are real. As a result, we see images of Iraqis dying, and the Americans proclaiming that human rights prevail.<\/p>\n<p>We can also explain with quantum mechanics.<\/p>\n<p>According to quantum mechanics, we cannot truly see the truth. When you observe a phenomenon, regardless of the tool you use, you have added energy on the phenomenon you observe, thereby changing the phenomenon. What we can see is the changed phenomenon.<\/p>\n<p>This is karma.<\/p>\n<p>When we observe the images on the Indra\u2019s net, is it war or is it peace? This is determined by the \u201cadded energy.\u201d This added energy is the common karma of us humans.<\/p>\n<p>The future of human beings is entirely determined by the common karma. In the Indra\u2019s net, there exists an image of humans thriving in future generations, there also exists an image of humans destroying themselves. Which image is to appear, we cannot observe because we do not know what kind of energy we are to add to the images or what sequence is to appear.<\/p>\n<p>Buddha describes this as <em>mah\u0101karu<\/em><em>\u1e47\u0101<\/em> or great compassion. This great compassion pervades every world in dharmadh\u0101tu \u2013 all dimensions of space and time.<\/p>\n<p>According to Nyingma, to realize the realm beyond space-time constraints, the three \u201cnatural liberations\u201d (<em>rang grol<\/em>) are completed. They are the natural liberation of the mind, the natural liberation of reality, the natural liberation of equality.<\/p>\n<p>Natural liberation is because all matters in dharmadh\u0101tu are natural arisings. Since they are natural arisings and not via an external\u00a0force, what can be done about\u00a0their natural liberation is also <em>not\u00a0<\/em>via\u00a0an external\u00a0force.<\/p>\n<p>The three natural liberations are completed in stages prior to the attainment of buddhahood. The completion of buddhahood is a completion of <em>dhamak\u0101ya<\/em>, <em>sambhogak\u0101ya<\/em>, and <em>nirmanak\u0101ya<\/em>. Lacking one in attainment is not the completion of Buddhahood (the completion of three k\u0101yas).<\/p>\n<p>Dharmak\u0101ya is the attainment of the nature of dhamadh\u0101tu; sambhogak\u0101ya is the attainment of the phenomenon of dharmadh\u0101tu; nirmanak\u0101ya is the attainment of the <em>virtue<\/em>\u00a0of dharmadh\u0101tu. There are the \u201cThree Sayings\u00a0of the Great Perfection\u201d:<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>The essence is primordially pure.<\/p>\n<p>The phenomena-themselves arise naturally.<\/p>\n<p>The great compassion pervades everywhere.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>It is very difficult to explain fully the sayings. The explanation itself may require\u00a0referencing\u00a0many Buddhist texts and can get very dry. Here I will discuss the three natural liberations and see if the readers can grasp the spirit of it.<\/p>\n<p>First, on the liberation of the mind itself. Our mind is trapped by space and time, and by the appearance and by the function. We become attached to our understanding as the truth. We cannot realize emptiness, such as time is zero.<\/p>\n<p>We have discussed this previously. What I want to point out is how we trap ourselves.<\/p>\n<p>We trap ourselves by being attached to a self (\u201cme\u201d), and from the perspective of \u201cme\u201d we distinguish all phenomena and their function (&#8220;mind&#8221;). Buddhists call this grasping, the self is the grasper, the appearance and the function are the grasped. The \u201cgrasped\u201d becomes knowledge and experience, some even consider it the truth. Our mind is trapped by this grasping. The completion of the natural liberation of the mind is to realize the emptiness of this grasping.<\/p>\n<p>At this stage, Buddha and bodhisattvas are treated as symbols. Every symbol carries a special meaning. For example, Ma\u00f1ju\u015br\u012b symbolizes wisdom, Avalokite\u015bvara represents great compassion. Such symbolic meanings are what Buddhists refer to as \u201cconvenient constructs.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>One can question the motivation behind a bunch of symbolic constructs.<\/p>\n<p>Buddhists say, we all live in a world of constructs. Each construct has its function. We have latitudes and longitudes, as such airplanes can determine their flight paths. We have the traffic light, the traffic flow becomes orderly. Similarly, with the symbols in one\u2019s practice, they can transform one\u2019s state of mind. As well, the practitioner can realize emptiness. The construct itself is insubstantial, but relying on it in the practice, one can get a glimpse of its appearance and its function.<\/p>\n<p>Extending this meditative experience to our everyday living, practitioners can realize the emptiness of our conventional world. Most important, through such practice, one does not fall into the trap of pessimism and negativity, because all matters are functioning as such. Obviously, the practitioner must also fulfill his or her duty in society.<\/p>\n<p>The natural liberation of the mind is exactly this way, where one sees all matters as natural arisings, even the self, the \u201cme\u201d, is also a natural arising, then the mind does not become distorted by grasping, and becomes free from attachments. Once the traps are broken, the mind is naturally free.<\/p>\n<p>Now on the natural liberation of reality. The premise of the natural liberation of the mind is not truly free from space and time of our world. Even if a person who has perfected the liberation of the mind, one can still distinguish between sa\u1e43s\u0101ra and nirv\u0101\u1e47a, in that one prefers nirv\u0101\u1e47a over sa\u1e43s\u0101ra.<\/p>\n<p>With such bias, the concept of nirv\u0101\u1e47a becomes a trap. To become liberated is to become free from the space and time in realizing emptiness. Buddha says, dharmadh\u0101tu includes all worlds. \u201cAll worlds\u201d include infinite space-time continuua regardless of\u00a0dimensions. All these phenomena are merely the natural arisings within dharmadh\u0101tu, whether it is sa\u1e43s\u0101ra or nirv\u0101\u1e47a.<\/p>\n<p>The natural liberation of reality is exactly this way, where the teaching rests on the zero-sum of space and time. This idea was very difficult to explain in the past. One could only illustrate this \u201czero\u201d as the absolute that is free of all relativity. Many sects believe that this \u201cabsolute\u201d is the ultimate Buddhist teaching. Nyingma\u2019s teaching of the Great Perfection thinks differently: one more natural liberation is required.<\/p>\n<p>Finally, we are on to the natural liberation of equality. Buddhists speak of equality all the time, but the meaning in the natural liberation is not merely about \u201cequality.\u201d There is a special meaning.<\/p>\n<p>Many scholars in Buddhism, when approaching Nyingma\u2019s \u201cnatural liberation of equality,\u201d tend to be careless in handling \u201cequality\u201d and as such, underestimate the importance of the liberation in the teaching.<\/p>\n<p>One cannot fault the scholars for such mistakes. Modern writing on the Great Perfection, the special meaning of \u201cequality\u201d is never mentioned. The only exception is in Dudjom Rinpoche\u2019s writing, where he pointed out that for a practitioner of the Great Perfection, the precept is not to step over the <em>samaya <\/em>(vow)\u00a0of \u201cinsubstantiality\u201d and \u201cconventionality.\u201d This is to point out the meaning of \u201cequality\u201d with great seriousness.<\/p>\n<p>What does this all mean?<\/p>\n<p>\u201cInsubstantiality\u201d is the emptiness of essence. By \u201cconventionality,\u201d what pervades all worlds is universal and conventional. From the perspective of emptiness, all worlds are equal, all natural arisings are conventional.<\/p>\n<p>A tantric text called <em>Garuda-tantra<\/em> has the following verse:<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>The naturally arising of primordial wisdom<\/p>\n<p>All pervading and free from conceptuality.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>\u201cAll pervading\u201d means it pervades all worlds; \u201cFree from conceptuality\u201d is that regardless of the arising, its existence is a natural, perfect match with the space and time it abides in,\u00a0and hence \u201cconventional.\u201d All arisings are naturally as such and conventional; one is not superior over another.<\/p>\n<p>At this stage of practice, through the interchange of space and time one is to thoroughly realize the essence of dharmadh\u0101tu. The realization is not only the \u201czero sum\u201d of space and time, but also the whole dharmadh\u0101tu that is full of life.<\/p>\n<p>Dharmadh\u0101tu is primordially immovable; the entirety of space and time is zero.<\/p>\n<p>This dharmadh\u0101tu is immovable, yet it becomes the foundation of all natural arisings. Because space and time are multi-dimensional, and in each of them has its natural arisings, all things exist as such.<\/p>\n<p>This dharmadh\u0101tu embeds within everything, they\u00a0are all equal. The interchange of time and space is full of life, and as such everything is\u00a0a reflection of this life force, and therefore they are all equal.<\/p>\n<p>I wrote this to point out the non-duality in the Great Perfection teaching and why it is beyond comprehension and beyond words. One can not only transcend space and time to realize emptiness, <em>at the same time<\/em>, one can also realize the life force in dharmadh\u0101tu through the change of space and time (and thus become free from their constraints). The two levels of transcendence is not only to show the attainment beyond comprehension, the teaching itself is beyond comprehension as well!<\/p>\n<p>Modern physics has transcended space and time, but it has yet fully entered into the territory Nyingma\u2019s teaching. We do see the field is inching closer and closer. Julian Barbour\u2019s proposal of time as zero can be viewed as the second revolution in physics. Perhaps it has knocked on the door of Nyingma.<\/p>\n<p>Nyingma has described its teaching as \u201cthe Thunder of the Heavenly Drum.\u201d This is the only metaphor given the space and time of our world. Listening to the knocking of a modern physicist is like listening to such a heavenly thunder. May this thunder bring joy to all beings!<\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Translator Note: This article was originally published in Chinese in &#8220;The Teaching of Living and Dying&#8221; (\u751f\u8207\u6b7b\u7684\u79aa\u6cd5) by Master Tam. Taipei: Buddhall Publishing House, 2005. For those who are interested, you can read Tam&#8217;s&#46;&#46;&#46;<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":4,"featured_media":691,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":[],"categories":[3],"tags":[],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.vbatoronto.org\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/690"}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.vbatoronto.org\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.vbatoronto.org\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.vbatoronto.org\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/4"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.vbatoronto.org\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=690"}],"version-history":[{"count":7,"href":"https:\/\/www.vbatoronto.org\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/690\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":699,"href":"https:\/\/www.vbatoronto.org\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/690\/revisions\/699"}],"wp:featuredmedia":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.vbatoronto.org\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media\/691"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.vbatoronto.org\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=690"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.vbatoronto.org\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=690"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.vbatoronto.org\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=690"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}