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Difference between revisions of "What is tantric meditation? Is it part of Tibetan Buddhism (including Nyingma)?"

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Stably [[nondual]], free from [[emotional]] sufferingAuthor has 421 answers and 53.2K answer views8mo
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There is no such thing as ‘[[tantric meditation]]’ [[per se]]; rather there are [[tantric]] {{Wiki|contemplative}} schools, both in [[Buddhism]] and [[Hinduism]], which have various [[meditative techniques]] associated with them and which are usually not associated with other {{Wiki|contemplative}} schools.
 
There is no such thing as ‘[[tantric meditation]]’ [[per se]]; rather there are [[tantric]] {{Wiki|contemplative}} schools, both in [[Buddhism]] and [[Hinduism]], which have various [[meditative techniques]] associated with them and which are usually not associated with other {{Wiki|contemplative}} schools.
  
  
 
Most [[people]] asking about [[tantrism]] will be referring to [[Buddhist]] [[tantrism]], which seems to have survived better into the {{Wiki|modern}} [[world]] than contemporaneous [[Hindu]] [[tantric]] schools. The various [[schools of Tibetan Buddhism]] are probably the best surviving examples of [[tantrism]] - [[including]] the [[Nyingma school]], which is the oldest of the four major [[schools of Tibetan Buddhism]] (the others being the [[Kagyu]] or [[Kargyu]], the [[Shakya]], and the [[Gelug]] - this [[latter]] being the most conservative and  
 
Most [[people]] asking about [[tantrism]] will be referring to [[Buddhist]] [[tantrism]], which seems to have survived better into the {{Wiki|modern}} [[world]] than contemporaneous [[Hindu]] [[tantric]] schools. The various [[schools of Tibetan Buddhism]] are probably the best surviving examples of [[tantrism]] - [[including]] the [[Nyingma school]], which is the oldest of the four major [[schools of Tibetan Buddhism]] (the others being the [[Kagyu]] or [[Kargyu]], the [[Shakya]], and the [[Gelug]] - this [[latter]] being the most conservative and  
 +
  
 
least ‘[[tantric]]’ of the four). [[Tantra]] is not actually the preferred [[name]] for this branch of [[Buddhism ]]- [[Vajrayana]] is generally preferred, which means ‘the [[Vajra vehicle]]’. From a [[scholarly]] {{Wiki|perspective}}, it’s better to leave ‘[[Vajra]]’ untranslated as it has various meanings - for example, a [[mythical]] phallus-shaped weapon, [[indestructible]], [[adamantine]], [[thunderbolt]], to [[name]] just a few possible translations.
 
least ‘[[tantric]]’ of the four). [[Tantra]] is not actually the preferred [[name]] for this branch of [[Buddhism ]]- [[Vajrayana]] is generally preferred, which means ‘the [[Vajra vehicle]]’. From a [[scholarly]] {{Wiki|perspective}}, it’s better to leave ‘[[Vajra]]’ untranslated as it has various meanings - for example, a [[mythical]] phallus-shaped weapon, [[indestructible]], [[adamantine]], [[thunderbolt]], to [[name]] just a few possible translations.
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[[Vajrayana Buddhism]] tends to include all of the [[meditative practices]] of earlier [[schools of Buddhism]] - the [[Mahayana]] and [[Hinayana schools]] - but has {{Wiki|distinctive}} practices of its [[own]]. (Note: it’s not in vogue to refer to the earliest [[schools of Buddhism]] as ‘[[Hinayana]]’ as the term is pejorative, meaning ‘[[lesser vehicle]]’. The popular workaround is to call the earliest  
 
[[Vajrayana Buddhism]] tends to include all of the [[meditative practices]] of earlier [[schools of Buddhism]] - the [[Mahayana]] and [[Hinayana schools]] - but has {{Wiki|distinctive}} practices of its [[own]]. (Note: it’s not in vogue to refer to the earliest [[schools of Buddhism]] as ‘[[Hinayana]]’ as the term is pejorative, meaning ‘[[lesser vehicle]]’. The popular workaround is to call the earliest  
 +
  
 
schools [[Theravada]], but this is even more deeply problematic as [[Theravada]] is but the {{Wiki|modern}} surviving descendant of only one of the [[early Buddhist schools]], and to use it synonymously with [[Hinayana]] is absurd. I would propose adopting a term like ‘proto-Buddhist’ or ‘Ur-Buddhist’, but at the [[moment]] I don’t have the {{Wiki|ear}} of the [[scholarly]] [[world]]. End note.) The  
 
schools [[Theravada]], but this is even more deeply problematic as [[Theravada]] is but the {{Wiki|modern}} surviving descendant of only one of the [[early Buddhist schools]], and to use it synonymously with [[Hinayana]] is absurd. I would propose adopting a term like ‘proto-Buddhist’ or ‘Ur-Buddhist’, but at the [[moment]] I don’t have the {{Wiki|ear}} of the [[scholarly]] [[world]]. End note.) The  
 +
  
 
practices in common to all [[Buddhist schools]] are [[samatha]] (it’s the same in both [[Pali]] and [[Sanskrit]]) and [[vipassana]] ([[vipashyana]] in [[Sanskrit]]). I’ll start with those and then move on to the distinctively [[tantric]] or [[Vajrayana practices]].
 
practices in common to all [[Buddhist schools]] are [[samatha]] (it’s the same in both [[Pali]] and [[Sanskrit]]) and [[vipassana]] ([[vipashyana]] in [[Sanskrit]]). I’ll start with those and then move on to the distinctively [[tantric]] or [[Vajrayana practices]].
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[[Samatha]] has various translations: ‘quiescence’, or ‘[[tranquillity]]’, for example. My favorite translation is that of the {{Wiki|eminent}} [[scholar]] [[Edward Conze]]: ‘[[calming]] down’. An ordinary [[human mind]] has [[thoughts]] racing a million {{Wiki|miles}} a minute. ‘[[Calming]] down’ [[meditation]] proceeds by choosing an [[object]] (such as the [[sensation]] of the [[breath]] in the nostrils) and  
 
[[Samatha]] has various translations: ‘quiescence’, or ‘[[tranquillity]]’, for example. My favorite translation is that of the {{Wiki|eminent}} [[scholar]] [[Edward Conze]]: ‘[[calming]] down’. An ordinary [[human mind]] has [[thoughts]] racing a million {{Wiki|miles}} a minute. ‘[[Calming]] down’ [[meditation]] proceeds by choosing an [[object]] (such as the [[sensation]] of the [[breath]] in the nostrils) and  
 +
  
 
focusing so intently on that [[object]] that the racing [[thoughts]] of the [[mind]] [[calm]] down. The culmination of [[samatha]] {{Wiki|training}} occurs when the [[attention]] can become so absorbed on the [[object of attention]] that [[thoughts]] still entirely. When [[thoughts]] still entirely, one has achieved ‘[[access concentration]]’, which may then lead to [[states of absorption]] in which not only are the [[thoughts]] stilled, some or all of the sensory apparatus may also be ‘tuned out’ of [[consciousness]].
 
focusing so intently on that [[object]] that the racing [[thoughts]] of the [[mind]] [[calm]] down. The culmination of [[samatha]] {{Wiki|training}} occurs when the [[attention]] can become so absorbed on the [[object of attention]] that [[thoughts]] still entirely. When [[thoughts]] still entirely, one has achieved ‘[[access concentration]]’, which may then lead to [[states of absorption]] in which not only are the [[thoughts]] stilled, some or all of the sensory apparatus may also be ‘tuned out’ of [[consciousness]].
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[[Vipassana]], which is often translated as ‘[[mindfulness]]’ - even though my personal opinion is that this is a dreadful and horribly misleading translation given that the [[Pali]] [[sati]] and the [[Sanskrit]] [[smrti]] are also translated as [[mindfulness]] - is the other [[form]] of [[meditation]] common to all [[Buddhist schools]]. The literal - and in my opinion better - translation of  
 
[[Vipassana]], which is often translated as ‘[[mindfulness]]’ - even though my personal opinion is that this is a dreadful and horribly misleading translation given that the [[Pali]] [[sati]] and the [[Sanskrit]] [[smrti]] are also translated as [[mindfulness]] - is the other [[form]] of [[meditation]] common to all [[Buddhist schools]]. The literal - and in my opinion better - translation of  
 +
  
 
[[vipassana]] is ‘[[insight]]’. As with any term which has been used by [[people]] for 2,500 years (compare terms of {{Wiki|Western philosophy}} such as [[substance]] and [[essence]] to see how they have fared), [[vipassana]] can refer to various [[meditative practices]] which have absolutely nothing in common with one another. [[Vipassana]] can be used to refer to a sort of analytic [[thinking]]  
 
[[vipassana]] is ‘[[insight]]’. As with any term which has been used by [[people]] for 2,500 years (compare terms of {{Wiki|Western philosophy}} such as [[substance]] and [[essence]] to see how they have fared), [[vipassana]] can refer to various [[meditative practices]] which have absolutely nothing in common with one another. [[Vipassana]] can be used to refer to a sort of analytic [[thinking]]  
 +
  
 
process by which the [[meditator]] (so-called, as I would argue that what I’m describing should not be called [[meditation]] at all!) [[thinks]] through the arguments of certain [[Buddhist doctrines]] and arrives at the conclusion that the {{Wiki|dogma}} is correct. [[Vipassana]] can also be used to refer to any [[meditation]] on changing rather than fixed [[objects]] - such as what I prefer to  
 
process by which the [[meditator]] (so-called, as I would argue that what I’m describing should not be called [[meditation]] at all!) [[thinks]] through the arguments of certain [[Buddhist doctrines]] and arrives at the conclusion that the {{Wiki|dogma}} is correct. [[Vipassana]] can also be used to refer to any [[meditation]] on changing rather than fixed [[objects]] - such as what I prefer to  
 +
  
 
call ‘{{Wiki|introspection}}’ which is [[meditation]] on constantly changing [[thoughts]] and [[feelings]], or [[meditation]] on [[bodily sensations]] such as what is popular in [[vipassana]] [[retreats]] tracing their origin to Goenka’s teachings. Or [[vipassana]] can refer to  
 
call ‘{{Wiki|introspection}}’ which is [[meditation]] on constantly changing [[thoughts]] and [[feelings]], or [[meditation]] on [[bodily sensations]] such as what is popular in [[vipassana]] [[retreats]] tracing their origin to Goenka’s teachings. Or [[vipassana]] can refer to  
 +
  
 
‘[[insight]]’ into the direct [[nature]] of things - which is to say, it can mean the same thing as [[anatta]] or [[nonduality]]. You can probably easily see why I’m not a fan of using words with a 2,500 year history in my [[own]] [[philosophy]] - they’re a trainwreck of meaning.
 
‘[[insight]]’ into the direct [[nature]] of things - which is to say, it can mean the same thing as [[anatta]] or [[nonduality]]. You can probably easily see why I’m not a fan of using words with a 2,500 year history in my [[own]] [[philosophy]] - they’re a trainwreck of meaning.
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[[Meditations]] that are specific to [[tantric]] or [[Vajrayana]] schools are the following. 1) [[Deity yoga]]. This is [[visualization]] [[meditation]] in which a [[meditative deity]] ([[yidam]]) is vividly [[visualized]]. In more advanced [[forms]] of [[deity]] of [[yoga]], very complex scenes with moving parts are [[visualized]]. (My [[own]] [[suspicion]] regarding the effectiveness of this [[form]] of [[meditation]]  
 
[[Meditations]] that are specific to [[tantric]] or [[Vajrayana]] schools are the following. 1) [[Deity yoga]]. This is [[visualization]] [[meditation]] in which a [[meditative deity]] ([[yidam]]) is vividly [[visualized]]. In more advanced [[forms]] of [[deity]] of [[yoga]], very complex scenes with moving parts are [[visualized]]. (My [[own]] [[suspicion]] regarding the effectiveness of this [[form]] of [[meditation]]  
 +
  
 
is that the [[visualization]] of a complex scene with moving parts requires a very broad scope of [[attention]]. My [[own]] [[idea]] is that {{Wiki|learning}} to play the Well-Tempered Clavier of Bach on the piano at a high level provides a similar [[benefit]] in terms of attentional scope.) [[Deity yoga]] often involves [[visualizing]] oneself as the [[deity]]; the line of {{Wiki|reasoning}} behind this is  
 
is that the [[visualization]] of a complex scene with moving parts requires a very broad scope of [[attention]]. My [[own]] [[idea]] is that {{Wiki|learning}} to play the Well-Tempered Clavier of Bach on the piano at a high level provides a similar [[benefit]] in terms of attentional scope.) [[Deity yoga]] often involves [[visualizing]] oneself as the [[deity]]; the line of {{Wiki|reasoning}} behind this is  
 +
  
 
very similar to the popular [[Christian]] {{Wiki|concept}} of ‘What would {{Wiki|Jesus}} do?’. 2) [[Guru yoga]]. This is basically [[deity yoga]] wherein the [[guru]] is substituted for the [[deity]]. If your [[guru]] is actually really cool, great! If not…well, the possibilities for exploitation, [[including]] {{Wiki|sexual}} exploitation, are tremendous. 3) [[Subtle body]] [[yoga]]. [[Deity yoga]] and [[guru yoga]] are  
 
very similar to the popular [[Christian]] {{Wiki|concept}} of ‘What would {{Wiki|Jesus}} do?’. 2) [[Guru yoga]]. This is basically [[deity yoga]] wherein the [[guru]] is substituted for the [[deity]]. If your [[guru]] is actually really cool, great! If not…well, the possibilities for exploitation, [[including]] {{Wiki|sexual}} exploitation, are tremendous. 3) [[Subtle body]] [[yoga]]. [[Deity yoga]] and [[guru yoga]] are  
 +
  
 
normally part of the ‘[[development]]’ or ‘generation’ stage (the 7th of the 9 vehicles in [[Tibetan]] Vajryana) whereas [[subtle body]] [[yoga]] constitutes the ‘completion’ stage, the 8th [[yana]] just prior to the [[highest yana]] (the 9th) which is [[nondual]]. I know less about [[subtle body]] [[yoga]] than any other [[form]] of [[meditation]] because a) I’ve never been trained in it, and b) it  
 
normally part of the ‘[[development]]’ or ‘generation’ stage (the 7th of the 9 vehicles in [[Tibetan]] Vajryana) whereas [[subtle body]] [[yoga]] constitutes the ‘completion’ stage, the 8th [[yana]] just prior to the [[highest yana]] (the 9th) which is [[nondual]]. I know less about [[subtle body]] [[yoga]] than any other [[form]] of [[meditation]] because a) I’ve never been trained in it, and b) it  
 +
  
 
appears to be less easy to understand than other [[forms]] of [[meditation]], [[including]] [[deity yoga]] and [[guru yoga]]. I have, however, read a decent amount about [[tummo]], which is a [[subtle body]] practice. Although the very notion of a ‘[[subtle body]]’ seems non-empirical, pseudoscientific, and {{Wiki|superstitious}}, I suspect that [[subtle body]] [[yoga]] is quite legitimate and involves both  
 
appears to be less easy to understand than other [[forms]] of [[meditation]], [[including]] [[deity yoga]] and [[guru yoga]]. I have, however, read a decent amount about [[tummo]], which is a [[subtle body]] practice. Although the very notion of a ‘[[subtle body]]’ seems non-empirical, pseudoscientific, and {{Wiki|superstitious}}, I suspect that [[subtle body]] [[yoga]] is quite legitimate and involves both  
 +
  
 
attentional practices drawing [[awareness]] to aspects of the {{Wiki|nervous system}} which are there to be noticed but are not particularly obvious, as well as [[yogic practices]] which are non-attentional in [[nature]] and involve producing certain effects in the [[body]]. By way of example, [[tummo]] appears to involve [[visualization]] of a heat source (e.g. a [[fire]] [[visualized]] within the  
 
attentional practices drawing [[awareness]] to aspects of the {{Wiki|nervous system}} which are there to be noticed but are not particularly obvious, as well as [[yogic practices]] which are non-attentional in [[nature]] and involve producing certain effects in the [[body]]. By way of example, [[tummo]] appears to involve [[visualization]] of a heat source (e.g. a [[fire]] [[visualized]] within the  
 +
  
 
[[body]]), [[breathing]] [[techniques]] which raise {{Wiki|body temperature}} (not dissimilar from [[techniques]] like that of Wim Hof), and isometric muscular exercises which also raise {{Wiki|body temperature}}. I am not certain what exactly [[tummo]] contributes to ‘[[enlightenment]]’ as such, but it is definitely a {{Wiki|practical}} [[form]] of [[yoga]] for someone [[meditating]] in a cold [[cave]] high in the [[Himalayas]] during the winter.
 
[[body]]), [[breathing]] [[techniques]] which raise {{Wiki|body temperature}} (not dissimilar from [[techniques]] like that of Wim Hof), and isometric muscular exercises which also raise {{Wiki|body temperature}}. I am not certain what exactly [[tummo]] contributes to ‘[[enlightenment]]’ as such, but it is definitely a {{Wiki|practical}} [[form]] of [[yoga]] for someone [[meditating]] in a cold [[cave]] high in the [[Himalayas]] during the winter.
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The [[highest]] ‘[[yana]]’ in [[tantric]] or [[Vajrayana Buddhism]] is not exclusive to [[Vajrayana]]: it is simply [[nondual]] practice, called [[Dzogchen]] by the [[Nyingma school]] and [[Mahamudra]] by the kagyu/kargyu school. It seems fairly obvious to me that [[nondual]] practice has been associated with certain usages of [[vipassana]] from the beginning of [[Buddhism]], and it is equally obvious  
 
The [[highest]] ‘[[yana]]’ in [[tantric]] or [[Vajrayana Buddhism]] is not exclusive to [[Vajrayana]]: it is simply [[nondual]] practice, called [[Dzogchen]] by the [[Nyingma school]] and [[Mahamudra]] by the kagyu/kargyu school. It seems fairly obvious to me that [[nondual]] practice has been associated with certain usages of [[vipassana]] from the beginning of [[Buddhism]], and it is equally obvious  
 +
  
 
that [[nondual]] practice is a feature of [[Hindu]] {{Wiki|contemplative}} [[thought]] from at least as early as the [[Wikipedia:Upanishads|Upanishads]]. In [[Vajrayana]] schools, [[nondual]] practice is regarded as the [[highest]] or greatest [[vehicle]] for obvious [[reasons]]: stability in [[nonduality]] is the basis of [[liberation]] from [[emotional]] [[suffering]], and [[nondual]] practice cannot occur without the fundamental ‘[[breakthrough]]’  
 
that [[nondual]] practice is a feature of [[Hindu]] {{Wiki|contemplative}} [[thought]] from at least as early as the [[Wikipedia:Upanishads|Upanishads]]. In [[Vajrayana]] schools, [[nondual]] practice is regarded as the [[highest]] or greatest [[vehicle]] for obvious [[reasons]]: stability in [[nonduality]] is the basis of [[liberation]] from [[emotional]] [[suffering]], and [[nondual]] practice cannot occur without the fundamental ‘[[breakthrough]]’  
 +
  
 
([[trekcho]] in [[Tibetan]]) first occurring. Once the [[breakthrough]] to [[nonduality]] happens, the practice is first to simply to sustain the [[nondual]] mode of [[experience]] through [[attention]] as much as possible, such that one trains to be in [[nonduality]] more and more often, and then to be able to still the [[mind]] ([[samatha]]) within the [[nondual]] mode without having any particular  
 
([[trekcho]] in [[Tibetan]]) first occurring. Once the [[breakthrough]] to [[nonduality]] happens, the practice is first to simply to sustain the [[nondual]] mode of [[experience]] through [[attention]] as much as possible, such that one trains to be in [[nonduality]] more and more often, and then to be able to still the [[mind]] ([[samatha]]) within the [[nondual]] mode without having any particular  
 +
  
 
[[object of meditation]]. [[Mahamudra]] and [[Dzogchen practice]] have what I’ve just described in common, but [[Dzogchen]] includes a further practice called [[togal]] in which [[visions]] or [[hallucinations]] are cultivated. I have difficulty interpreting accounts of some of the ‘[[visions]]’ in [[togal]]. The first of the four ‘[[visions]]’ seems to be run of the mill {{Wiki|psychedelic}} hallucinatory  
 
[[object of meditation]]. [[Mahamudra]] and [[Dzogchen practice]] have what I’ve just described in common, but [[Dzogchen]] includes a further practice called [[togal]] in which [[visions]] or [[hallucinations]] are cultivated. I have difficulty interpreting accounts of some of the ‘[[visions]]’ in [[togal]]. The first of the four ‘[[visions]]’ seems to be run of the mill {{Wiki|psychedelic}} hallucinatory  
 +
  
 
stuff, and a sufficiently advanced [[meditator]] can induce acid-like or {{Wiki|psilocybin}} mushroom-like [[hallucinations]] at will (believe me, it’s really cool to be able to do this). The subsequent ‘[[visions]]’ of [[togal]] seem more like what happens on a Cherokee [[vision]] quest or on {{Wiki|Ayahuasca}}, and I don’t have any personal [[experience]] with these types of [[experiences]] and can’t comment on them.
 
stuff, and a sufficiently advanced [[meditator]] can induce acid-like or {{Wiki|psilocybin}} mushroom-like [[hallucinations]] at will (believe me, it’s really cool to be able to do this). The subsequent ‘[[visions]]’ of [[togal]] seem more like what happens on a Cherokee [[vision]] quest or on {{Wiki|Ayahuasca}}, and I don’t have any personal [[experience]] with these types of [[experiences]] and can’t comment on them.
 +
  
 
It turned out to be a bit of a lengthy answer, but I think I’ve covered the major bases of what [[meditative practices]] set apart tantra/Vajrayana from other {{Wiki|contemplative}} schools. Naturally, there’s a great deal of further {{Wiki|nuance}} to be found with further reading.
 
It turned out to be a bit of a lengthy answer, but I think I’ve covered the major bases of what [[meditative practices]] set apart tantra/Vajrayana from other {{Wiki|contemplative}} schools. Naturally, there’s a great deal of further {{Wiki|nuance}} to be found with further reading.
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{{R}}
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[[Category:Buddhist Terms]]
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[[Category:Meditation]]
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[[Category:The Six Paramitas]]
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[[Category:Vajrayana]]

Latest revision as of 04:45, 26 February 2024

0dbG8.jpg





Christopher Martin


There is no such thing as ‘tantric meditationper se; rather there are tantric contemplative schools, both in Buddhism and Hinduism, which have various meditative techniques associated with them and which are usually not associated with other contemplative schools.


Most people asking about tantrism will be referring to Buddhist tantrism, which seems to have survived better into the modern world than contemporaneous Hindu tantric schools. The various schools of Tibetan Buddhism are probably the best surviving examples of tantrism - including the Nyingma school, which is the oldest of the four major schools of Tibetan Buddhism (the others being the Kagyu or Kargyu, the Shakya, and the Gelug - this latter being the most conservative and


least ‘tantric’ of the four). Tantra is not actually the preferred name for this branch of Buddhism - Vajrayana is generally preferred, which means ‘the Vajra vehicle’. From a scholarly perspective, it’s better to leave ‘Vajra’ untranslated as it has various meanings - for example, a mythical phallus-shaped weapon, indestructible, adamantine, thunderbolt, to name just a few possible translations.


Vajrayana Buddhism tends to include all of the meditative practices of earlier schools of Buddhism - the Mahayana and Hinayana schools - but has distinctive practices of its own. (Note: it’s not in vogue to refer to the earliest schools of Buddhism as ‘Hinayana’ as the term is pejorative, meaning ‘lesser vehicle’. The popular workaround is to call the earliest


schools Theravada, but this is even more deeply problematic as Theravada is but the modern surviving descendant of only one of the early Buddhist schools, and to use it synonymously with Hinayana is absurd. I would propose adopting a term like ‘proto-Buddhist’ or ‘Ur-Buddhist’, but at the moment I don’t have the ear of the scholarly world. End note.) The


practices in common to all Buddhist schools are samatha (it’s the same in both Pali and Sanskrit) and vipassana (vipashyana in Sanskrit). I’ll start with those and then move on to the distinctively tantric or Vajrayana practices.


Samatha has various translations: ‘quiescence’, or ‘tranquillity’, for example. My favorite translation is that of the eminent scholar Edward Conze: ‘calming down’. An ordinary human mind has thoughts racing a million miles a minute. ‘Calming down’ meditation proceeds by choosing an object (such as the sensation of the breath in the nostrils) and


focusing so intently on that object that the racing thoughts of the mind calm down. The culmination of samatha training occurs when the attention can become so absorbed on the object of attention that thoughts still entirely. When thoughts still entirely, one has achieved ‘access concentration’, which may then lead to states of absorption in which not only are the thoughts stilled, some or all of the sensory apparatus may also be ‘tuned out’ of consciousness.


Vipassana, which is often translated as ‘mindfulness’ - even though my personal opinion is that this is a dreadful and horribly misleading translation given that the Pali sati and the Sanskrit smrti are also translated as mindfulness - is the other form of meditation common to all Buddhist schools. The literal - and in my opinion better - translation of


vipassana is ‘insight’. As with any term which has been used by people for 2,500 years (compare terms of Western philosophy such as substance and essence to see how they have fared), vipassana can refer to various meditative practices which have absolutely nothing in common with one another. Vipassana can be used to refer to a sort of analytic thinking


process by which the meditator (so-called, as I would argue that what I’m describing should not be called meditation at all!) thinks through the arguments of certain Buddhist doctrines and arrives at the conclusion that the dogma is correct. Vipassana can also be used to refer to any meditation on changing rather than fixed objects - such as what I prefer to


call ‘introspection’ which is meditation on constantly changing thoughts and feelings, or meditation on bodily sensations such as what is popular in vipassana retreats tracing their origin to Goenka’s teachings. Or vipassana can refer to


insight’ into the direct nature of things - which is to say, it can mean the same thing as anatta or nonduality. You can probably easily see why I’m not a fan of using words with a 2,500 year history in my own philosophy - they’re a trainwreck of meaning.


Meditations that are specific to tantric or Vajrayana schools are the following. 1) Deity yoga. This is visualization meditation in which a meditative deity (yidam) is vividly visualized. In more advanced forms of deity of yoga, very complex scenes with moving parts are visualized. (My own suspicion regarding the effectiveness of this form of meditation


is that the visualization of a complex scene with moving parts requires a very broad scope of attention. My own idea is that learning to play the Well-Tempered Clavier of Bach on the piano at a high level provides a similar benefit in terms of attentional scope.) Deity yoga often involves visualizing oneself as the deity; the line of reasoning behind this is


very similar to the popular Christian concept of ‘What would Jesus do?’. 2) Guru yoga. This is basically deity yoga wherein the guru is substituted for the deity. If your guru is actually really cool, great! If not…well, the possibilities for exploitation, including sexual exploitation, are tremendous. 3) Subtle body yoga. Deity yoga and guru yoga are


normally part of the ‘development’ or ‘generation’ stage (the 7th of the 9 vehicles in Tibetan Vajryana) whereas subtle body yoga constitutes the ‘completion’ stage, the 8th yana just prior to the highest yana (the 9th) which is nondual. I know less about subtle body yoga than any other form of meditation because a) I’ve never been trained in it, and b) it


appears to be less easy to understand than other forms of meditation, including deity yoga and guru yoga. I have, however, read a decent amount about tummo, which is a subtle body practice. Although the very notion of a ‘subtle body’ seems non-empirical, pseudoscientific, and superstitious, I suspect that subtle body yoga is quite legitimate and involves both


attentional practices drawing awareness to aspects of the nervous system which are there to be noticed but are not particularly obvious, as well as yogic practices which are non-attentional in nature and involve producing certain effects in the body. By way of example, tummo appears to involve visualization of a heat source (e.g. a fire visualized within the


body), breathing techniques which raise body temperature (not dissimilar from techniques like that of Wim Hof), and isometric muscular exercises which also raise body temperature. I am not certain what exactly tummo contributes to ‘enlightenment’ as such, but it is definitely a practical form of yoga for someone meditating in a cold cave high in the Himalayas during the winter.


4) There is also the famous or infamous sexual yoga or ‘tantric sex’ in which the bliss of sexual coitus is to be used as a path to enlightenment. There is quite a lot of mystery surrounding the origins of this practice and its early use, but I have read Dzogchen texts dating from (I think) the 14th century in which sexual yoga is described in a Dzogchen context in a very straightforward way without any mystery.


The highestyana’ in tantric or Vajrayana Buddhism is not exclusive to Vajrayana: it is simply nondual practice, called Dzogchen by the Nyingma school and Mahamudra by the kagyu/kargyu school. It seems fairly obvious to me that nondual practice has been associated with certain usages of vipassana from the beginning of Buddhism, and it is equally obvious


that nondual practice is a feature of Hindu contemplative thought from at least as early as the Upanishads. In Vajrayana schools, nondual practice is regarded as the highest or greatest vehicle for obvious reasons: stability in nonduality is the basis of liberation from emotional suffering, and nondual practice cannot occur without the fundamental ‘breakthrough


(trekcho in Tibetan) first occurring. Once the breakthrough to nonduality happens, the practice is first to simply to sustain the nondual mode of experience through attention as much as possible, such that one trains to be in nonduality more and more often, and then to be able to still the mind (samatha) within the nondual mode without having any particular


object of meditation. Mahamudra and Dzogchen practice have what I’ve just described in common, but Dzogchen includes a further practice called togal in which visions or hallucinations are cultivated. I have difficulty interpreting accounts of some of the ‘visions’ in togal. The first of the four ‘visions’ seems to be run of the mill psychedelic hallucinatory


stuff, and a sufficiently advanced meditator can induce acid-like or psilocybin mushroom-like hallucinations at will (believe me, it’s really cool to be able to do this). The subsequent ‘visions’ of togal seem more like what happens on a Cherokee vision quest or on Ayahuasca, and I don’t have any personal experience with these types of experiences and can’t comment on them.


It turned out to be a bit of a lengthy answer, but I think I’ve covered the major bases of what meditative practices set apart tantra/Vajrayana from other contemplative schools. Naturally, there’s a great deal of further nuance to be found with further reading.


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