Difference between revisions of "DEHADANA"
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− | The ways in which Chod both follows and reconsiders Buddhist traditions of analyzing and valuing the body can be seen clearly in the context of dehadana—the offering of one's own body. Chod dehadana (lus sbyin) assimilates itself to a long Buddhist history of body offering, and it provides innovative perspectives on this practice. As the Buddhist virtuous act par excellence, dehadana has long held a vital place in Buddhist literature. In general, the | + | The ways in which [[Chod]] both follows and reconsiders [[Buddhist traditions]] of analyzing and valuing the [[body]] can be seen clearly in the context of dehadana—the [[offering]] of one's [[own]] [[body]]. [[Chod]] dehadana (lus [[sbyin]]) assimilates itself to a long [[Buddhist history]] of [[body]] [[offering]], and it provides innovative perspectives on this practice. As the [[Buddhist]] [[virtuous]] act par [[excellence]], dehadana has long held a [[vital]] place in [[Buddhist literature]]. In general, the |
− | act of giving (sbyin; dana) is constitutive of Buddhist communities: non-renunciants (or lay people) traditionally give alms and clothing to renunciants (or monastics), and in turn lay donors receive dharma teachings from religious specialists. Buddhist discussions of dehadana reiterate this social nature of dana by emphasizing that it is an act to be performed for the welfare of others. Dehadana serves others both in a mundane way—the practitioner physically provides another with something she requires—and in a supramundane way—the practitioner performs the act as part of the process of becoming an enlightened being in order to help others also become enlightened. | + | act of giving ([[sbyin]]; [[dana]]) is constitutive of [[Buddhist]] communities: non-renunciants (or [[lay people]]) [[traditionally]] give [[alms]] and clothing to renunciants (or [[monastics]]), and in turn lay donors receive [[dharma]] teachings from [[religious]] specialists. [[Buddhist]] discussions of dehadana reiterate this {{Wiki|social}} [[nature]] of [[dana]] by {{Wiki|emphasizing}} that it is an act to be performed for the {{Wiki|welfare}} of others. Dehadana serves others both in a [[mundane]] way—the [[practitioner]] {{Wiki|physically}} provides another with something she requires—and in a [[supramundane]] way—the [[practitioner]] performs the act as part of the process of becoming an [[enlightened being]] in order to help others also become [[enlightened]]. |
− | In early Buddhist texts, dehadana narratives reflect two different (but not mutually exclusive) intentions. The first is the role of dana in the development of merit. In such examples, dehadana is practiced with the aim of a good rebirth for oneself or another. Perhaps the most striking example of dehadana in early Buddhist literature is the Jataka story recounted by Arya Surya, wherein Sakyamuni Buddha, in a previous incarnation, accumulates merit | + | In early [[Buddhist texts]], dehadana [[Wikipedia:narrative|narratives]] reflect two different (but not mutually exclusive) {{Wiki|intentions}}. The first is the role of [[dana]] in the [[development]] of [[merit]]. In such examples, dehadana is practiced with the aim of a good [[rebirth]] for oneself or another. Perhaps the most striking example of dehadana in early [[Buddhist literature]] is the [[Jataka]] story recounted by [[Arya]] [[Surya]], wherein [[Sakyamuni Buddha]], in a previous [[incarnation]], accumulates [[merit]] |
− | through the ultimate act of generosity: offering his body to a starving tigress about to eat her cubs. This exemplary dana is echoed in numerous other Buddhist teachings, including the story of Dharmaraksita cutting the flesh of his thigh and offering it to a sick man who needs it for medicine. Analogously, Naropa is asked by his teacher Tilopa to make an offering of a mandala, but he lacks any grain, sand or water to construct one, so he uses his | + | through the [[Wikipedia:Absolute (philosophy)|ultimate]] act of [[generosity]]: [[offering]] his [[body]] to a starving [[tigress]] about to eat her cubs. This exemplary [[dana]] is echoed in numerous other [[Buddhist teachings]], [[including]] the story of [[Dharmaraksita]] cutting the flesh of his thigh and [[offering]] it to a sick man who needs it for [[medicine]]. Analogously, [[Naropa]] is asked by his [[teacher]] [[Tilopa]] to make an [[offering]] of a [[mandala]], but he lacks any grain, sand or [[water]] [[to construct]] one, so he uses his |
− | own flesh, limbs and blood. The twenty-eighth chapter in the mgur ‘bum of Milarepa describes him performing a practice that has overtones of Chod: a visualized body offering with the aim of gaining merit and repaying debt. The category of narratives illustrating dehadana as merit generation includes acts driven by the bodhisattva motivation of great compassion. This category of stories can also encompass actions with sacrificial overtones and elements of bhakti (devotion or worship). | + | [[own]] flesh, limbs and {{Wiki|blood}}. The twenty-eighth [[chapter]] in the mgur ‘bum of [[Milarepa]] describes him performing a practice that has overtones of [[Chod]]: a [[visualized]] [[body]] [[offering]] with the aim of gaining [[merit]] and repaying debt. The category of [[Wikipedia:narrative|narratives]] illustrating dehadana as [[merit]] generation includes acts driven by the [[bodhisattva]] [[motivation]] of [[great compassion]]. This category of stories can also encompass [[actions]] with sacrificial overtones and [[elements]] of [[bhakti]] ([[devotion]] or {{Wiki|worship}}). |
− | The second important intention in the practice of dehadana is the development of wisdom defined by a teleology of nirvana, or liberation from suffering. Narratives in this category include such actions as renunciation of attachment to self and mental purification. An exemplary canonical instance of this type of motivation occurs in the Astasahasrika Prajhaparamita and the Prajhaparamita-Ratnagunasamcayagatha, when the Bodhisattva Sadaprarudita, with the | + | The second important [[intention]] in the practice of dehadana is the [[development of wisdom]] defined by a {{Wiki|teleology}} of [[nirvana]], or [[liberation]] from [[suffering]]. Narratives in this category include such [[actions]] as [[renunciation]] of [[attachment]] to [[self]] and [[mental]] [[purification]]. An exemplary [[Wikipedia:canonical|canonical]] instance of this type of [[motivation]] occurs in the [[Astasahasrika]] [[Prajhaparamita]] and the Prajhaparamita-Ratnagunasamcayagatha, when the [[Bodhisattva]] [[Sadaprarudita]], with the |
− | aim of attaining the perfection of wisdom and skill in means, dismembers himself so that his body parts can be devoured by a mara. In the Cariyapitaka, the offering of one's limbs is characterized as the perfection of giving (danassa-parami), while the gift of one's whole body or life for the sake of another is characterized as the fulfillment of the perfection of giving (parami-purayim). Santideva describes the usefulness of his kusali's, or beggar's, body as an offering in the Siksasamuccaya, and Dpal sprul Rinpoche returns to this theme in his chapter on Kusali Chod in the Kun bzang bla ma'i zhal lung | + | aim of [[attaining]] the [[perfection of wisdom]] and [[skill in means]], dismembers himself so that his [[body]] parts can be devoured by a [[mara]]. In the [[Cariyapitaka]], the [[offering]] of one's limbs is characterized as the [[perfection of giving]] (danassa-parami), while the [[gift]] of one's whole [[body]] or [[life]] for the [[sake]] of another is characterized as the fulfillment of the [[perfection of giving]] (parami-purayim). [[Santideva]] describes the usefulness of his kusali's, or beggar's, [[body]] as an [[offering]] in the [[Siksasamuccaya]], and Dpal [[sprul]] [[Rinpoche]] returns to this theme in his [[chapter]] on [[Kusali Chod]] in the [[Kun bzang bla ma'i zhal lung]] |
− | (The Words of My Perfect Teacher). The Narayanapariprccha epitomizes the intention involved in all of these examples: “The Bodhisattva must think thus: ‘I have devoted and abandoned my frame to all creatures. . . . Any beings who shall require it for any purpose, it being recognized for a good, I will give hand, foot, eye, flesh, blood, marrow, limbs great and small, and my head itself, to such as ask for them.'” In this type of discourse, the donation of one's body as a paradigmatic offering represents a union of the motivations of merit generation and liberation. | + | ([[The Words of My Perfect Teacher]]). The Narayanapariprccha epitomizes the [[intention]] involved in all of these examples: “The [[Bodhisattva]] must think thus: ‘I have devoted and abandoned my frame to all creatures. . . . Any [[beings]] who shall require it for any {{Wiki|purpose}}, it being [[recognized]] for a good, I will give hand, foot, [[eye]], flesh, {{Wiki|blood}}, marrow, limbs great and small, and my head itself, to such as ask for them.'” In this type of [[discourse]], the donation of one's [[body]] as a paradigmatic [[offering]] represents a union of the motivations of [[merit]] generation and [[liberation]]. |
− | As a paramita, dana exemplifies the ideal of a symbiosis of wisdom and compassion. In paramita paradigms, dana is generally designated the first perfection, and it is distinguished by the fact that it is intended to be of immediate and direct benefit to others. Dana-paramita (sbyin pa'i pha rol tu phyin pa) corresponds with the first stage of the career of the bodhisattva, and as the | + | As a [[paramita]], [[dana]] exemplifies the {{Wiki|ideal}} of a {{Wiki|symbiosis}} of [[wisdom]] and [[compassion]]. In [[paramita]] [[paradigms]], [[dana]] is generally designated the [[first perfection]], and it is {{Wiki|distinguished}} by the fact that it is intended to be of immediate and direct [[benefit]] to others. [[Dana-paramita]] ([[sbyin pa'i pha rol tu phyin pa]]) corresponds with the first stage of the career of the [[bodhisattva]], and as the “[[perfection of giving]],” it is sometimes characterized as the “lowest” of the [[perfections]]. When [[dana-paramita]] involves the [[gift]] of the [[body]], however, it is frequently represented as the paramount [[perfection]]. We see such an {{Wiki|evaluation}} in the [[Nidanakatha]], where the [[Bodhisattva]] [[Sumedha]] makes a resolution before [[Dipankara]] to [[master]] the [[ten perfections]] that lead to the |
− | realization of an enlightened being. Upon accomplishment of these perfections, he recites the following words: “The Perfections are the sacrifice of limbs, the Lesser Perfections are the sacrifice of property, the Unlimited Perfections are the sacrifice of life.” In this articulation, the offering of the body supersedes all of the other perfections. | + | [[realization]] of an [[enlightened being]]. Upon [[accomplishment]] of these [[perfections]], he recites the following words: “The [[Perfections]] are the [[Wikipedia:sacrifice|sacrifice]] of limbs, the Lesser [[Perfections]] are the [[Wikipedia:sacrifice|sacrifice]] of property, the [[Unlimited]] [[Perfections]] are the [[Wikipedia:sacrifice|sacrifice]] of [[life]].” In this articulation, the [[offering]] of the [[body]] supersedes all of the other [[perfections]]. |
− | The topics of dana-paramita and dehadana feature prominently in Santideva’s teachings to Buddhist practitioners on the bodhisattva path. In his Bodhicaryavatara, Santideva advises that, “[a]t the beginning, the Guide prescribes giving vegetables and the like. One does it gradually so that later one can give away even one's own flesh. When insight arises that one's own flesh is like a vegetable, then what difficulty is there in giving away one's flesh and bone?” (1997, 80). In the Siksasamuccaya, Santideva draws from a variety of sources in his discussion of physical sacrifice, suffering and the gift of | + | The topics of [[dana-paramita]] and dehadana feature prominently in [[Santideva’s]] teachings to [[Buddhist practitioners]] on the [[bodhisattva path]]. In his [[Bodhicaryavatara]], [[Santideva]] advises that, “[a]t the beginning, the Guide prescribes giving vegetables and the like. One does it gradually so that later one can give away even one's [[own]] flesh. When [[insight]] arises that one's [[own]] flesh is like a vegetable, then what difficulty is there in giving away one's flesh and bone?” (1997, 80). In the [[Siksasamuccaya]], [[Santideva]] draws from a variety of sources in his [[discussion]] of [[physical]] [[Wikipedia:sacrifice|sacrifice]], [[suffering]] and the [[gift]] of |
− | the body. Here the gift of the body is also seen to contain all other perfections. This comprehensive potential of dana-paramita is illustrated in Santideva's citation of the Sagaramati Sutra in the Siksasamuccaya In this passage, a bodhisattva mahasattva is challenged by Mara and his entourage. This bodhisattva reflects on his attachment to his body in innumerable previous incarnations, which inspires a revaluation of his body as a vehicle of compassion. This passage also emphasizes the gift of one's body as the consummate perfection. Dehadana is identified with each of the other six paramitas, as the renunciation of one's body is equated with the Perfection of Giving, the offering of the body for the benefit of others with the Perfection of | + | the [[body]]. Here the [[gift]] of the [[body]] is also seen to contain all other [[perfections]]. This comprehensive potential of [[dana-paramita]] is illustrated in [[Santideva's]] citation of the [[Sagaramati]] [[Sutra]] in the [[Siksasamuccaya]] In this passage, a [[bodhisattva]] [[mahasattva]] is challenged by [[Mara]] and his entourage. This [[bodhisattva]] reflects on his [[attachment]] to his [[body]] in {{Wiki|innumerable}} previous [[incarnations]], which inspires a revaluation of his [[body]] as a [[vehicle]] of [[compassion]]. This passage also emphasizes the [[gift]] of one's [[body]] as the [[consummate]] [[perfection]]. Dehadana is identified with each of the other [[six paramitas]], as the [[renunciation]] of one's [[body]] is equated with the [[Perfection of Giving]], the [[offering]] of the [[body]] for the [[benefit]] of others with the [[Perfection]] of |
− | Conduct, enduring the dismemberment of the body for the sake of others with the Perfection of Patience, maintaining the belief in the law of karma and an ambition to enlightenment with the Perfection of Strength, the maintenance of mental stability during the dissolution of the body with the Perfection of Meditation, and the understanding of the impermanence and emptiness of all compounded things (including one's own body) with the Perfection of Wisdom. | + | Conduct, enduring the dismemberment of the [[body]] for the [[sake]] of others with the [[Perfection]] of [[Patience]], maintaining the [[belief]] in the [[law of karma]] and an [[ambition]] to [[enlightenment]] with the [[Perfection]] of Strength, the maintenance of [[mental]] stability during the dissolution of the [[body]] with the [[Perfection]] of [[Meditation]], and the [[understanding]] of the [[impermanence]] and [[emptiness]] of all [[compounded]] things ([[including]] one's [[own]] [[body]]) with the [[Perfection of Wisdom]]. |
− | Reiko Ohnuma (1998, 2000, 2007) has argued that such Buddhist didactic and narrative texts reveal ambivalent attitudes toward the offering of the body. | + | Reiko Ohnuma (1998, 2000, 2007) has argued that such [[Buddhist]] {{Wiki|didactic}} and {{Wiki|narrative}} texts reveal ambivalent attitudes toward the [[offering]] of the [[body]]. |
− | According to her interpretations, dehadana is extreme behavior, overvaluing compassion and selflessness at the expense of wisdom and moderation. In Ohnuma's reading, gift of the body narratives reveal a tension between | + | According to her interpretations, dehadana is extreme {{Wiki|behavior}}, overvaluing [[compassion]] and [[selflessness]] at the expense of [[wisdom]] and moderation. In Ohnuma's reading, [[gift]] of the [[body]] [[Wikipedia:narrative|narratives]] reveal a tension between “[[selflessness]]” and “assertion-of-self” (the [[latter]] considered to anathema to [[Buddhist doctrine]]): “[t]he [[bodhisattva]] who gives his [[body]] away is supposed to be a paragon of ‘[[selflessness]],' yet at the same time, his [[deed]] constitutes the [[Wikipedia:Absolute (philosophy)|ultimate]] ‘[[assertion]] of [[self]].' Underlying this conflict is a more general tension between the [[Buddhist]] [[rhetoric]] of [[selflessness]] and its need to assert an {{Wiki|individual}} and autonomous [[self]] capable of effecting its [[own]] {{Wiki|salvation}}” (2000, 67). Moreover, Ohnuma argues that such [[Wikipedia:narrative|narratives]] also reveal a conflict |
− | between wisdom and compassion. According to Ohnuma, the radical act of compassion of offering one's body would suggest the disregarding of a more skillful action guided by wisdom, especially if such wisdom includes an understanding of the non-duality—and thus equality—of self and other. In acts of giving one's body, Ohnuma maintains that “[t]he bodhisattva's insistence on favoring others over himself (and thus making a clear distinction between himself and others) may, in some contexts, suggest a lack of the wisdom that realizes the selflessness of all beings, and a lack of the equanimity that treats all beings (including oneself) the same” (2000, 67). | + | between [[wisdom]] and [[compassion]]. According to Ohnuma, the radical act of [[compassion]] of [[offering]] one's [[body]] would suggest the disregarding of a more [[skillful action]] guided by [[wisdom]], especially if such [[wisdom]] includes an [[understanding]] of the non-duality—and thus equality—of [[self]] and other. In acts of giving one's [[body]], Ohnuma maintains that “[t]he [[bodhisattva's]] insistence on favoring others over himself (and thus making a clear {{Wiki|distinction}} between himself and others) may, in some contexts, suggest a lack of the [[wisdom]] that realizes the [[selflessness]] of all [[beings]], and a lack of the [[equanimity]] that treats all [[beings]] ([[including]] oneself) the same” (2000, 67). |
− | I would argue that there is another way to understand such narratives that would be more in accord with their intention and context. Rather than illustrating “the bodhisattva's insistence on favoring others over [oneself],” these narratives emphasize one's interconnection with others and one's concern for and responsibility to the other, a counterpoint to our habitual mode of self-preservation and self-interest. For example, in the section on “guarding | + | I would argue that there is another way to understand such [[Wikipedia:narrative|narratives]] that would be more in accord with their [[intention]] and context. Rather than illustrating “the [[bodhisattva's]] insistence on favoring others over [oneself],” these [[Wikipedia:narrative|narratives]] {{Wiki|emphasize}} one's interconnection with others and one's [[concern]] for and {{Wiki|responsibility}} to the other, a counterpoint to our habitual mode of self-preservation and [[self-interest]]. For example, in the section on “guarding {{Wiki|introspection}}” in [[Santideva's]] [[Bodhicaryavatara]], a [[teaching]] on maintaining a [[mind]] free from [[pride]] is followed by a [[discussion]] of the appropriate |
− | attitude toward and use of the body. Santideva decries the human habit of vulgar self-protection and ego-clinging and enjoins the analysis of one's own body and its ultimate emptiness as an antidote to this behavior. He advocates that the practitioner come to his own understanding in the following way: “First, with your own intellect, peel off this sheath of skin, and with the knife of wisdom, loosen the flesh from the skeleton. Breaking the bones, look | + | [[attitude]] toward and use of the [[body]]. [[Santideva]] decries the [[human]] [[Wikipedia:Habit (psychology)|habit]] of [[vulgar]] self-protection and [[ego-clinging]] and enjoins the analysis of one's [[own]] [[body]] and its [[ultimate emptiness]] as an antidote to this {{Wiki|behavior}}. He advocates that the [[practitioner]] come to his [[own]] [[understanding]] in the following way: “First, with your [[own]] [[intellect]], peel off this sheath of {{Wiki|skin}}, and with the knife of [[wisdom]], loosen the flesh from the skeleton. Breaking the [[bones]], look |
− | inside at the marrow and examine for yourself, ‘Where is the essence here?' If searching carefully this way, you do not see an essence here, then say why you are still protecting the body today” (1997, 54). Even while considering its foulness and impermanence, Santideva emphasizes the value of the body as food to sustain other beings and the value of embodiment to facilitate action: “If you will not eat it, as impure as it is, and if you would not drink the blood nor suck out the entrails, then what will you do with the body? However, it is proper to guard it for the sake of feeding the vultures and the jackals. This wretched body of humans is an instrument for | + | inside at the marrow and examine for yourself, ‘Where is the [[essence]] here?' If searching carefully this way, you do not see an [[essence]] here, then say why you are still protecting the [[body]] today” (1997, 54). Even while considering its [[foulness]] and [[impermanence]], [[Santideva]] emphasizes the value of the [[body]] as [[food]] to sustain other [[beings]] and the value of [[embodiment]] to facilitate [[action]]: “If you will not eat it, as impure as it is, and if you would not drink the {{Wiki|blood}} nor suck out the entrails, then what will you do with the [[body]]? However, it is proper to guard it for the [[sake]] of feeding the vultures and the jackals. This wretched [[body]] of [[humans]] is an instrument for [[action]]” (1997, 54). This [[dialectical]] relationship between the usefulness and uselessness of the |
− | body is echoed in Machik's writings on Chod when she emphasizes that it is the Negative Force of pride that is the fundamental cause of suffering and spiritual malpractice. This pride is located in the body, a metonym for the complete human being in its positive and negative potentiality. It is our own individual pride and ego-clinging that obscure from us the truths not only of our impermanence, but also of our inherent interconnectedness and | + | [[body]] is echoed in [[Machik's]] writings on [[Chod]] when she emphasizes that it is the Negative Force of [[pride]] that is the [[fundamental cause]] of [[suffering]] and [[spiritual]] malpractice. This [[pride]] is located in the [[body]], a metonym for the complete [[human being]] in its positive and negative potentiality. It is our [[own]] {{Wiki|individual}} [[pride]] and [[ego-clinging]] that obscure from us the [[truths]] not only of our [[impermanence]], but also of our [[inherent]] interconnectedness and |
− | interdependence with other beings, and hence our responsibility to them. Overcoming pride also entails overcoming ideas of the body's uselessness, as the practitioner's body in Chod is revalued as literal and metaphorical food for others. | + | [[interdependence]] with other [[beings]], and hence our {{Wiki|responsibility}} to them. [[Overcoming]] [[pride]] also entails [[overcoming]] [[ideas]] of the [[body's]] uselessness, as the practitioner's [[body]] in [[Chod]] is revalued as literal and {{Wiki|metaphorical}} [[food]] for others. |
− | In canonical accounts, the gift of the body is exercised within the economy of karma. The merit gained through dehadana is determined by the purity of the intention of the one making the offering, the value of the gift, and the worthiness of the recipient. Therefore, it is traditionally of great importance to select the recipient for the gift of the body. By performing dana-paramita, the giver can eventually reap the benefits of mental purification, a good | + | In [[Wikipedia:canonical|canonical]] accounts, the [[gift]] of the [[body]] is exercised within the {{Wiki|economy}} of [[karma]]. The [[merit]] gained through dehadana is determined by the [[purity]] of the [[intention]] of the one making the [[offering]], the value of the [[gift]], and the worthiness of the recipient. Therefore, it is [[traditionally]] of great importance to select the recipient for the [[gift]] of the [[body]]. By performing [[dana-paramita]], the giver can eventually reap the benefits of [[mental]] [[purification]], a good |
− | rebirth, and even enlightenment. When one offers one's own body in an act of dehadana, one can quickly attain such benefits. However, generally speaking, one must have already accumulated great merit over numerous lifetimes and cycles of rebirth in order to make this offering. | + | [[rebirth]], and even [[enlightenment]]. When one offers one's [[own]] [[body]] in an act of dehadana, one can quickly attain such benefits. However, generally {{Wiki|speaking}}, one must have already [[accumulated]] great [[merit]] over numerous lifetimes and cycles of [[rebirth]] in order to make this [[offering]]. |
− | Unlike in Chod teachings, in Buddhist literature from the jataka tales to the songs of Milarepa, dehadana as the supreme act of giving is frequently | + | Unlike in [[Chod]] teachings, in [[Buddhist literature]] from the [[jataka tales]] to the songs of [[Milarepa]], dehadana as the supreme act of giving is frequently |
− | represented as an exemplary act by a bodhisattva who is accumulating merit and wisdom through the deed. From renunciation in the Pali traditions, to the spirit of enlightenment in the Mahayana traditions, to creation and completion in the Vajrayana traditions, offering the body is the vehicle for spiritual development and attaining enlightenment. As the danaparamita par excellence, the gift of the body is the most costly and precious possession that one can offer. In fact, some teachers have claimed that the offering of the body is simultaneously an offering of Dharma: through the act of dehadana, one is also offering a teaching of impermanence. Rather than viewing the gift of the body as | + | represented as an exemplary act by a [[bodhisattva]] who is [[accumulating merit and wisdom]] through the [[deed]]. From [[renunciation]] in the [[Pali]] [[traditions]], to the [[spirit]] of [[enlightenment]] in the [[Mahayana traditions]], to creation and completion in the [[Vajrayana traditions]], [[offering]] the [[body]] is the [[vehicle]] for [[spiritual development]] and [[attaining enlightenment]]. As the [[danaparamita]] par [[excellence]], the [[gift]] of the [[body]] is the most costly and [[precious]] possession that one can offer. In fact, some [[teachers]] have claimed that the [[offering]] of the [[body]] is simultaneously an [[offering]] of [[Dharma]]: through the act of dehadana, one is also [[offering]] a [[teaching]] of [[impermanence]]. Rather than viewing the [[gift]] of the [[body]] as |
− | an exceptional act by an exceptional being, Chod is a system that theoretically provides any Buddhist practitioner with the ritual technology to emulate bodhisattva models of the perfection of giving and to gain immediate benefits. Chod thus aligns itself with traditional Buddhist ideas of dehadana, but adapts this practice to make it available to all. | + | an [[exceptional]] act by an [[exceptional]] being, [[Chod]] is a system that theoretically provides any [[Buddhist practitioner]] with the [[ritual]] technology to emulate [[bodhisattva]] models of the [[perfection of giving]] and to gain immediate benefits. [[Chod]] thus aligns itself with [[traditional]] [[Buddhist]] [[ideas]] of dehadana, but adapts this practice to make it available to all. |
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− | To provide a sense of the ritual technologies for the practitioner's efficacious offering of the body, I will briefly describe elements of a typical Chod practice. As in other Buddhist Tantric techniques, recommended preliminaries for these practices include developing skill at both calm-abiding (zhi gnas; samatha) and insight meditation (lhag mthong; vipasyana). As in earlier Buddhist teachings, many Chod dehadana practices emphasize renunciation, purification, and self-transformation through the accumulation of merit and the exhaustion of demerit. Rather than suggesting that one must wait to accumulate adequate merit before offering the gift of the body, however, Chod provides the opportunity for immediately efficacious offering of the body through techniques of visualization. Using a technique which echoes the traditional Buddhist teaching of the of the mind-made body (manomayakaya), the practitioner engages in visualizations which allow her to experience the non-duality of agent and object as she offers her body. | + | To provide a [[sense]] of the [[ritual]] technologies for the practitioner's efficacious [[offering]] of the [[body]], I will briefly describe [[elements]] of a typical [[Chod practice]]. As in other [[Buddhist]] [[Tantric techniques]], recommended preliminaries for these practices include developing skill at both calm-abiding ([[zhi gnas]]; [[samatha]]) and [[insight meditation]] ([[lhag mthong]]; [[vipasyana]]). As in earlier [[Buddhist teachings]], many [[Chod]] dehadana practices {{Wiki|emphasize}} [[renunciation]], [[purification]], and self-transformation through the [[accumulation of merit]] and the exhaustion of {{Wiki|demerit}}. Rather than suggesting that one must wait to [[accumulate]] adequate [[merit]] before [[offering]] the [[gift]] of the [[body]], however, [[Chod]] provides the opportunity for immediately efficacious [[offering]] of the [[body]] through [[techniques]] of [[visualization]]. Using a technique which echoes the [[traditional]] [[Buddhist teaching]] of the of the [[mind-made body]] ([[manomayakaya]]), the [[practitioner]] engages in [[visualizations]] which allow her to [[experience]] the [[non-duality]] of agent and [[object]] as she offers her [[body]]. |
− | The process of giving the body as a means of attainment is commonly articulated in Chod practice texts (sgrubpa; sadhana). These practice texts exhibit the framework of mature Tantra sadhana, including the stages of generating bodhicitta, going for refuge, meditating on the four immeasurables, and making the eight-limbed offering. Generally speaking, the main section of a developed Chod sadhana has three components. The first two—a transference of consciousness | + | The process of giving the [[body]] as a means of [[attainment]] is commonly articulated in [[Chod practice]] texts (sgrubpa; [[sadhana]]). These practice texts exhibit the framework of mature [[Tantra]] [[sadhana]], [[including]] the stages of generating [[bodhicitta]], [[going for refuge]], [[meditating]] on the [[four immeasurables]], and making the eight-limbed [[offering]]. Generally {{Wiki|speaking}}, the main section of a developed [[Chod]] [[sadhana]] has three components. The first two—a [[transference of consciousness]] |
− | (nam | + | ([[nam mkha]]’ sgo ‘[[byed]]) practice, and a [[body mandala]] ([[lus dkyil]]) practice—have distinctly purifying purposes. The [[Chod]] [[transference of consciousness]] practice has parallels with other [[Buddhist practices]] called “’[[pho ba]]." In this part of the [[visualization practice]], the practitioner's [[consciousness]] is “ejected" from one's [[body]] through the [[Brahma]] aperture at the {{Wiki|crown}} of one's head. At this time, one's [[consciousness]] can be [[visualized]] as becoming [[identical]] with an |
− | enlightened consciousness, which is embodied in a figure such as Machik, Vajrayogini (Rdo rje rnal byor ma) or Vajravarahi (Rdo rje phag mo). In the body mandala practice, the practitioner identifies the microcosm of her body with macrocosms of the mundane and supramundane worlds. In this first stage of this transformation, the practitioner identifies with an enlightened being, thus overcoming attachment to her own body-mind aggregates and purifying them through this non-attachment. In the second stage, the practitioner can extend this identification: the practitioner identifies the microcosm of her body | + | [[enlightened consciousness]], which is [[embodied]] in a figure such as [[Machik]], [[Vajrayogini]] ([[Rdo rje]] [[rnal byor]] ma) or [[Vajravarahi]] ([[Rdo rje phag mo]]). In the [[body mandala]] practice, the [[practitioner]] identifies the [[microcosm]] of her [[body]] with macrocosms of the [[mundane]] and [[supramundane]] [[worlds]]. In this first stage of this [[transformation]], the [[practitioner]] identifies with an [[enlightened being]], thus [[overcoming]] [[attachment]] to her [[own]] [[body-mind]] [[aggregates]] and purifying them through this [[non-attachment]]. In the second stage, the [[practitioner]] can extend this identification: the [[practitioner]] identifies the [[microcosm]] of her [[body]] |
− | with macrocosms of the mundane and supramundane worlds. The body mandala (lus dkyil) stage also allows the practitioner to reconceptualize her body as expanding through space and time and becoming indistinguishable from the realm of the supramundane, or the Dharmadhatu (chos kyi dbyings). Through the process of reconstructing her identity, the practitioner is able to see herself as the ultimate source of offerings for all sentient beings. | + | with macrocosms of the [[mundane]] and [[supramundane]] [[worlds]]. The [[body mandala]] ([[lus dkyil]]) stage also allows the [[practitioner]] to reconceptualize her [[body]] as expanding through {{Wiki|space and time}} and becoming indistinguishable from the [[realm]] of the [[supramundane]], or the [[Dharmadhatu]] ([[chos kyi dbyings]]). Through the process of reconstructing her [[Wikipedia:Identity (social science)|identity]], the [[practitioner]] is able to see herself as the [[Wikipedia:Absolute (philosophy)|ultimate]] source of [[offerings]] for all [[sentient beings]]. |
− | The third part of the core practice of Chod is the offering of the body, which can take many forms depending on the particular practice text. In the fifth text of The Great Explanation collection of teachings attributed to Machik, there is a discourse between Machik and Tonyon Samdrub on the method of giving | + | The third part of the core [[practice of Chod]] is the [[offering]] of the [[body]], which can take many [[forms]] depending on the particular practice text. In the fifth text of The Great Explanation collection of teachings attributed to [[Machik]], there is a [[discourse]] between [[Machik]] and Tonyon Samdrub on the method of giving |
− | the body (Lab sgron 1974, 144-230). The first step is the purification of the body, which involves transforming it into offerings that will please the members of one’s dharma community, including one’s bla ma, yi dam, and dakinis and dharma protectors. Next, the practitioner transforms her body into valuable goods in order to recompense all of the karmic debts she has accrued through innumerable lives. The transformation of one’s body into substances to meet the needs and desires of one’s guests recalls more traditional Indic offering practices (mchod pa; pwja). For example, in such practices within | + | the [[body]] ([[Lab sgron]] 1974, 144-230). The first step is the [[purification]] of the [[body]], which involves [[transforming]] it into [[offerings]] that will please the members of one’s [[dharma]] {{Wiki|community}}, [[including]] one’s [[bla ma]], [[yi dam]], and [[dakinis]] and [[dharma protectors]]. Next, the [[practitioner]] transforms her [[body]] into valuable goods in order to recompense all of the [[karmic debts]] she has accrued through {{Wiki|innumerable}} [[lives]]. The [[transformation]] of one’s [[body]] into {{Wiki|substances}} to meet the needs and [[desires]] of one’s guests recalls more [[traditional]] [[Indic]] [[offering]] practices ([[mchod pa]]; pwja). For example, in such practices within |
− | Mahayana Buddhist traditions, one makes offerings to buddhas and bodhisattvas, sometimes including the enlightened beings in the lineage of teachings one has received. As John Makransky explains, “[b]y following the ritual format, a practitioner generates the purest motivation to give the very best substances to the highest object: the supreme field of karmic merit (punyaksetra, tshogs zhing), the | + | [[Mahayana]] [[Buddhist traditions]], one makes [[offerings]] to [[buddhas]] and [[bodhisattvas]], sometimes [[including]] the [[enlightened beings]] in the [[lineage]] of teachings one has received. As [[John Makransky]] explains, “[b]y following the [[ritual]] format, a [[practitioner]] generates the purest [[motivation]] to give the very best {{Wiki|substances}} to the [[highest]] [[object]]: the supreme field of [[karmic merit]] ([[punyaksetra]], [[tshogs zhing]]), the [[buddhas]]” (1996, 314). [[Chod]] dehadana adapt these |
− | practices by using the practitioner’s own body as the vehicle of generating merit. Machik explains that many people, because of their habits of ego-clinging, are incapable of sufficient acts of dana to mitigate their negative karmic acts. Acting as a surrogate, the Chod practitioner visualizes donating her own body with the intention of liberating others from negative karmic retribution, as well as to repay kindnesses that she herself has received. As Machik states, “I give this body . . . as compensation for the karmic debt incurred from beginningless time to the final moment.” | + | practices by using the practitioner’s [[own]] [[body]] as the [[vehicle]] of generating [[merit]]. [[Machik]] explains that many [[people]], because of their [[habits]] of [[ego-clinging]], are incapable of sufficient acts of [[dana]] to mitigate their negative [[karmic]] acts. Acting as a surrogate, the [[Chod]] [[practitioner]] [[visualizes]] donating her [[own]] [[body]] with the [[intention]] of liberating others from negative [[karmic retribution]], as well as to repay kindnesses that she herself has received. As [[Machik]] states, “I give this [[body]] . . . as compensation for the [[karmic debt]] incurred from [[beginningless]] time to the final [[moment]].” |
− | This third component of the offering emphasizes one's act of charity in assisting all sentient beings to become free from suffering and to attain enlightenment. The practitioner generates the following thought: “I give up my body in order that all sentient beings, throughout the three realms, that | + | This third component of the [[offering]] emphasizes one's act of [[charity]] in assisting all [[sentient beings]] to become free from [[suffering]] and to [[attain enlightenment]]. The [[practitioner]] generates the following [[thought]]: “I give up my [[body]] in order that all [[sentient beings]], throughout the [[three realms]], that |
− | are clinging and attached to the self give up their ego-fixations.” This component has several different stages according to the different types of sentient beings that are being addressed. The body takes different forms according to the desires of the recipients, who can be benign, wrathful and/or beatific beings. In Chod practice, this offering of the body provides the vehicle for cutting through attachment to self. Through techniques of visualization, the body is transformed into a sign of abundance: one's own body, given its inherent emptiness, is visualized as multifarious attractive things that fulfill the needs and desires of all sentient beings. | + | are [[clinging]] and [[attached]] to the [[self]] give up their ego-fixations.” This component has several different stages according to the different types of [[sentient beings]] that are being addressed. The [[body]] takes different [[forms]] according to the [[desires]] of the recipients, who can be benign, [[wrathful]] and/or beatific [[beings]]. In [[Chod practice]], this [[offering]] of the [[body]] provides the [[vehicle]] for cutting through [[attachment]] to [[self]]. Through [[techniques]] of [[visualization]], the [[body]] is [[transformed]] into a sign of abundance: one's [[own]] [[body]], given its [[inherent]] [[emptiness]], is [[visualized]] as multifarious attractive things that fulfill the needs and [[desires]] of all [[sentient beings]]. |
− | Because of its dramatic representation of cutting through the body to offer it as food, Chod dehadana has frequently been misinterpreted as an exotic and esoteric practice with its roots in indigenous shamanic traditions. Due to the limited access of early ethnographers to Tibetan culture and Chod practice in particular, emphasis has been placed on the elements of Chod that were most visible, accessible and “translatable.” Early researchers were likely drawn to specific practices due to the accoutrement of musical instruments and singing, and they often seemed compelled by the apparently | + | Because of its dramatic [[representation]] of cutting through the [[body]] to offer it as [[food]], [[Chod]] dehadana has frequently been misinterpreted as an exotic and [[esoteric practice]] with its [[roots]] in indigenous [[shamanic]] [[traditions]]. Due to the limited access of early ethnographers to [[Tibetan culture]] and [[Chod practice]] in particular, {{Wiki|emphasis}} has been placed on the [[elements]] of [[Chod]] that were most [[visible]], accessible and “translatable.” Early researchers were likely drawn to specific practices due to the accoutrement of musical instruments and singing, and they often seemed compelled by the apparently “{{Wiki|shamanistic}}” content |
− | of these practices. Western presentations of Chod have thus tended to represent body offering practices such as the White Offerings (dkar tshogs) and Red Banquets (dmar tshogs) (introduced in the early twentieth century through the work of Alexandra David-Neel and Walter Y. Evans-Wentz with Kazi Samdrup) in a sensational fashion, stressing their macabre elements rather than contextualizing and historicizing them in relation to Buddhist traditions. Contemporary | + | of these practices. [[Western]] presentations of [[Chod]] have thus tended to represent [[body]] [[offering]] practices such as the White [[Offerings]] (dkar [[tshogs]]) and [[Red]] Banquets ([[dmar]] [[tshogs]]) (introduced in the early twentieth century through the work of [[Alexandra David-Neel]] and Walter Y. {{Wiki|Evans-Wentz}} with Kazi Samdrup) in a sensational fashion, stressing their macabre [[elements]] rather than contextualizing and historicizing them in [[relation]] to [[Buddhist traditions]]. Contemporary |
− | scholars have continued to insist on the exotic and | + | [[scholars]] have continued to insist on the exotic and “{{Wiki|shamanistic}}” [[character]] of [[Chod]] praxis. However, when we return to the [[Tibetan]] sources attributed to [[Machik]] ([[including]] the texts I have translated and discuss in detail in the last [[chapter]]), the [[Chod practice]] of [[offering]] one's [[body]] does not appear as exotic or excessive. While [[Machik]] does develop new [[techniques]] for [[liberation]] from [[suffering]], she also emphasizes the correlations of her praxis with [[orthodox]] [[Buddhist teachings]]. |
− | Machik's intentions to assimilate her teachings to traditional Buddhist ideas and to develop an innovative praxis are evident in The Distinctive Eightfold Supplementary Section, which is often taken to be one of the teachings that Machik gave to the Indian scholars who came to investigate her teachings. Such attribution suggests that this is one of the earliest texts documenting Machik's system of Chod. Although it does not contain all of the elements that come | + | [[Machik's]] {{Wiki|intentions}} to assimilate her teachings to [[traditional]] [[Buddhist]] [[ideas]] and to develop an innovative praxis are evident in The {{Wiki|Distinctive}} Eightfold Supplementary Section, which is often taken to be one of the teachings that [[Machik]] gave to the [[Indian]] [[scholars]] who came to investigate her teachings. Such attribution suggests that this is one of the earliest texts documenting [[Machik's]] system of [[Chod]]. Although it does not contain all of the [[elements]] that come |
− | to be associated with later Chod sadhana, it usefully illustrates somes of the core elements of the praxis. As in the other foundational discussions of the Chod practice of visualizing the offering of one's body as food for sentient beings, the phrase used for giving away or offering the body in this text is | + | to be associated with later [[Chod]] [[sadhana]], it usefully illustrates somes of the core [[elements]] of the praxis. As in the other foundational discussions of the [[Chod practice]] of [[visualizing]] the [[offering]] of one's [[body]] as [[food]] for [[sentient beings]], the [[phrase]] used for giving away or [[offering]] the [[body]] in this text is |
− | + | “[[phung po]] gzan du bskyur,”38 that is, to toss away (bskyur) one's [[aggregates]] as [[food]] (gzan). The [[relation]] between the usefulness and uselessness of the [[body]] is highlighted here: the [[body-mind]] [[aggregates]] are to be considered as unnecessary garbage that one needs to abandon, while the description of the [[visualization]] also emphasizes the value of the [[body]] which is [[offered]]. | |
− | According to The Distinctive Eightfold Supplementary Section, the practice has three parts: a preliminary meditation on cultivating compassion and loving-kindness; the main practice of giving one's body, which is possessed of the six perfections; and the conclusion of dedicating the merit one has generated through the practice to the unsurpassed spirit of enlightenment. The preliminary meditation requires the practitioner to generate compassion for all sentient beings, paying special attention to beings that have caused harm to (gnod byed) or obstructed (bgegs) the practitioner. During this meditation, the practitioner cultivates the intention to offer her body and visualizes those to whom she will offer her body. | + | According to The {{Wiki|Distinctive}} Eightfold Supplementary Section, the practice has three parts: a preliminary [[meditation]] on [[cultivating]] [[compassion]] and [[loving-kindness]]; the main practice of giving one's [[body]], which is possessed of the [[six perfections]]; and the conclusion of dedicating the [[merit]] one has generated through the practice to the [[unsurpassed]] [[spirit]] of [[enlightenment]]. The preliminary [[meditation]] requires the [[practitioner]] to generate [[compassion]] for all [[sentient beings]], paying special [[attention]] to [[beings]] that have [[caused]] harm to ([[gnod]] [[byed]]) or obstructed ([[bgegs]]) the [[practitioner]]. During this [[meditation]], the [[practitioner]] cultivates the [[intention]] to offer her [[body]] and [[visualizes]] those to whom she will offer her [[body]]. |
− | In the main part of the practice, the practitioner visualizes her body as very large; with an envisioned sword of wisdom, she cuts through her neck and makes her body an offering to the harmdoers (gnod byed), satisfying them all according to their particular desires for meat, blood or bones. By visualizing her body as totally consumed, the practitioner's mind will no longer be attached to concerns about the past, present or future. Instead, she can dwell in a | + | In the main part of the practice, the [[practitioner]] [[visualizes]] her [[body]] as very large; with an envisioned [[sword of wisdom]], she cuts through her neck and makes her [[body]] an [[offering]] to the harmdoers ([[gnod]] [[byed]]), satisfying them all according to their particular [[desires]] for meat, {{Wiki|blood}} or [[bones]]. By [[visualizing]] her [[body]] as totally consumed, the practitioner's [[mind]] will no longer be [[attached]] to concerns about the {{Wiki|past}}, {{Wiki|present}} or {{Wiki|future}}. Instead, she can dwell in a |
− | natural state of open awareness: “the mind (sems) does not hanker after the past, does not anticipate the future, and does not notice the present. You rest softly and very loosely. Then, meditatively cultivating compassion you give your body as food; the mind rests in the state of reality (gnas lugs). In that way, visualize the tip of day and the fading away of night cycling (khor ro ro) in turn (re mos).” For the conclusion of the practice, the practitioner recites a variation on the traditional Buddhist statement of going for refuge and dedicating the merit of her actions, repeating three times: “I myself go for refuge to the Buddha, Dharma, and the Sangha until enlightenment. By the merit of the actions including the giving of myself for the benefit of | + | natural [[state]] of open [[awareness]]: “the [[mind]] ([[sems]]) does not hanker after the {{Wiki|past}}, does not anticipate the {{Wiki|future}}, and does not notice the {{Wiki|present}}. You rest softly and very loosely. Then, meditatively [[cultivating]] [[compassion]] you give your [[body]] as [[food]]; the [[mind]] rests in the [[state]] of [[reality]] ([[gnas lugs]]). In that way, [[visualize]] the tip of day and the fading away of night cycling ([[khor ro ro]]) in turn (re mos).” For the conclusion of the practice, the [[practitioner]] recites a variation on the [[traditional]] [[Buddhist]] statement of [[going for refuge]] and dedicating the [[merit]] of her [[actions]], repeating three times: “I myself go for [[refuge]] to the [[Buddha]], [[Dharma]], and the [[Sangha]] until [[enlightenment]]. By the [[merit]] of the [[actions]] [[including]] the giving of myself for the [[benefit]] of |
− | beings, may I attain buddhahood.” At this point in the teaching, there is the imperative to the practitioner: “Your activity should be comfortable!” The Chod practitioner must be advanced enough in her practice that the practice of visualizing the distribution of one's body as food should be helpful on the Buddhist path and not a further obstruction or distraction. | + | [[beings]], may I [[attain buddhahood]].” At this point in the [[teaching]], there is the {{Wiki|imperative}} to the [[practitioner]]: “Your [[activity]] should be comfortable!” The [[Chod]] [[practitioner]] must be advanced enough in her practice that the practice of [[visualizing]] the distribution of one's [[body]] as [[food]] should be helpful on the [[Buddhist path]] and not a further obstruction or [[distraction]]. |
− | In the same text, Machik provides an elaboration of the three parts of the practice. In the preliminary practice, Machik emphasizes that the generation of compassion and loving-kindness by the Chod practitioner will provide an antidote to aggression, thereby “pacifying negative influences, male negative influences (pho gdon), illness, pain and discomfort.” In the main practice, through visualizing the offering of one's body as food, the Chod practitioner | + | In the same text, [[Machik]] provides an [[elaboration]] of the three parts of the practice. In the [[preliminary practice]], [[Machik]] emphasizes that the generation of [[compassion]] and [[loving-kindness]] by the [[Chod]] [[practitioner]] will provide an antidote to [[aggression]], thereby “pacifying negative [[influences]], {{Wiki|male}} negative [[influences]] (pho gdon), {{Wiki|illness}}, [[pain]] and discomfort.” In the main practice, through [[visualizing]] the [[offering]] of one's [[body]] as [[food]], the [[Chod]] [[practitioner]] |
− | produces an antidote for desire and attachment, thereby “pacifying infection, exhaustion, and female negative influences (mo gdon).” And in the concluding part of the practice, resting in one's natural state becomes an antidote for delusion, whereby | + | produces an antidote for [[desire]] and [[attachment]], thereby “pacifying infection, exhaustion, and {{Wiki|female}} negative [[influences]] (mo gdon).” And in the concluding part of the practice, resting in one's natural [[state]] becomes an antidote for [[delusion]], whereby “[[naga]] negative [[influences]] ([[klu]] gdon) and [[illnesses]] accompanied by {{Wiki|depression}}” are pacified. [[Machik's]] [[elaboration]] of the practice makes clear that her {{Wiki|novel}} [[techniques]] for [[offering]] the [[body]] are grounded in [[traditional]] [[Buddhist ethics]]. [[Machik]] also associates her [[body]] [[offering]] praxis with the [[philosophical]] [[tradition]] of [[Prajhaparamita]] by arguing that the giving of one's [[body]] as [[food]] is a [[realization]] of the [[six paramita]] or [[perfections]] of {{Wiki|behavior}}. Not only does the giving of one's [[body]] exemplify the [[perfection of giving]], the act contains within itself the other [[five perfections]]: it exemplifies the [[perfection]] of [[moral discipline]] because one gives the [[body]] for the [[sake]] of [[sentient beings]]; it exemplifies the [[perfection]] of [[forbearance]] because one gives the [[body]] without [[anger]]; it exemplifies the [[perfection]] of perseverance because one gives the [[body]] again and again in [[visualized]] practice; it exemplifies the [[perfection]] of [[concentration]] because one practices the [[visualization]] without [[distraction]]; and it exemplifies the [[perfection of wisdom]] because one rests in the [[state]] of [[reality]] and [[emptiness]]. |
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+ | In the same text [[Machik]] also links her praxis with [[Wikipedia:canonical|canonical]] [[Buddhist]] [[Wikipedia:narrative|narratives]] by distinguishing two modes of giving one's [[body]] as [[food]] through an example that evokes [[King]] Sibi's donation of one of his [[eyes]] to a [[blind]] [[Brahman]] as recounted in the [[Sibi Jataka]]. In the first mode, the [[practitioner]] is encouraged to generate [[compassion]] toward [[sentient beings]] with [[eye]] [[illnesses]] by [[Wikipedia:Imagination|imagining]] that she is experiencing such an {{Wiki|illness}} herself. Grounded in that [[compassion]], she should generate the [[intention]] to give her [[own]] [[eyes]] in order to remedy the [[eye]] [[illnesses]] of others. In the second mode, the [[practitioner]] is instructed to [[visualize]] eighty thousand types of obstructors ([[bgegs]]) [[arising]] in front of her to whom she gives her [[eyes]]; her [[mind]] then rests without any | ||
− | + | [[thought]]. [[Machik]] instructs the [[practitioner]] to repeat these two modes of practice, substituting other [[body]] parts such as her hands: she repeats the process of generation of [[compassion]], [[intention]] of [[offering]], [[visualization]] of the recipients and the [[offering]], and [[attainment]] of the [[state]] of resting her [[mind]] in non-thought. By practicing these two modes of giving her [[body]] as [[food]], the [[practitioner]] is able to deepen her {{Wiki|psychophysical}} [[experience]] of [[compassion]] through affective association of herself with the other who is [[suffering]] and through personifying obstructions as worthy recipients of her [[offerings]]. This | |
− | + | [[cultivation of compassion]] allows her to attain [[non-attachment]] and clear [[awareness]] of her [[mind]] in its natural [[state]]. | |
+ | In this early [[sadhana]], some aspects of the practice of giving away the [[body]] as [[food]] differ from later descriptions of the practice. There is no {{Wiki|distinct}} [[element]] of separating the [[mind and body]], usually referred to as “[[nam mkha]]’ sgo ‘[[byed]]” or “’[[pho ba]]” in [[Chod practices]]. Perhaps more notably, the recipients of the [[offering]] do not include Dud, the “Negative Forces” that become a central [[characteristic]] of [[Chod practices]] (as I discuss further in the next [[chapter]]). | ||
− | + | Rather, the recipients in The {{Wiki|Distinctive}} Eightfold Supplementary Section are primarily “harmdoers” ([[gnod]] [[byed]]), “obstructors” ([[bgegs]]), and those that have a need for a {{Wiki|distinctive}} [[body]] part, such as one who [[suffers]] from an [[eye]] {{Wiki|illness}}. In addition, the practice is aimed not at “cutting through the Negative Forces, or Dud,” but at pacifying {{Wiki|male}}, {{Wiki|female}} and [[naga]] negative [[influences]] (pho gdon, mo gdon and [[klu]] gdon). | |
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− | + | While this early [[sadhana]] [[teaching]] does not include all of the [[elements]] that later become associated with the [[Chod practice]] traced back to [[Machik]], it does illustrate the [[essential]] [[philosophical]] and [[ritual]] aspects of [[Chod]] [[body]] [[offering]]. The text not only echoes [[Prajhaparamita]] teachings by explicitly linking the [[offering]] of the [[body]] to the [[six perfections]], but it also develops the dynamic of grounding one's [[aspirations]] for [[enlightenment]] in one's [[embodied]] [[experience]]. This [[elemental]] practice contains the [[pith]] of [[Chod]] praxis—the [[ritual]] support for cutting through [[attachment]] to the [[embodied]] [[self]] and | |
− | + | discriminative [[mental functioning]] to achieve [[liberation]] from [[suffering]]. In [[Chod]], the [[paramita]] of the [[gift]] of the [[body]] is highlighted through the [[visualization]] of the [[body]] as a sign of abundance. This [[offering]] is presented in its most {{Wiki|ideal}} and idealized [[form]]: one's [[own]] [[body]], due to its [[inherent]] [[emptiness]], is [[visualized]] as [[transformed]] into multifarious [[pleasing]] things to fulfill the [[desires]] of all [[sentient beings]], while simultaneously providing the [[vehicle]] for cutting through [[attachment]] to [[self]]. | |
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+ | Echoing the [[Siksasamuccaya]], the [[offering]] of the [[body]] in [[Chod]] is seen as the [[essence]] of [[Buddhist Dharma]]. In The Great Explanation collection of [[Machik's]] teachings, one of [[Machik's]] [[avatars]], referred to as the “Mother” of [[Chod]], states that “the condensed meaning of all [[Dharma]], the [[root]] meaning of practice, is the meaning of [[offering]] and [[charity]] of the [[body]].” As with other examples of dehadana in the [[Buddhist canon]], the [[offering]] of the [[body]] in [[Chod]] exemplifies the [[renunciation]] of all [[attachments]] and the [[purification]] of all [[mental]] [[obscurations]]. The [[paramita]] of the [[offering]] of the [[body]] is explicitly foregrounded, | ||
− | + | which provides the central motif for the [[ritual]] technology of [[Chod]]. But in [[Chod]], the abstract {{Wiki|ideal}} of dehadana is [[realized]] in practice: the [[practitioner]] [[visualizes]] giving her [[body]] in order immediately and actually to attain the [[merit]] and [[wisdom]] suggested in earlier [[gift]] of the [[body]] [[Buddhist]] [[Wikipedia:narrative|narratives]]. In [[Chod]], as in its [[Buddhist]] antecedents, [[attachment]] to the [[body]] is a {{Wiki|metaphor}} for [[attachment]] to a [[belief]] in one's [[self]] as {{Wiki|individual}} and [[permanent]]. Such a [[belief]] is also intimately interconnected with one's {{Wiki|discrimination}} of oneself from other [[sentient beings]]. The [[offering]] of one's [[own]] [[body]] is a strategic antidote for a self-construct that fosters [[ego-clinging]] and results in [[mental afflictions]] and habitual behaviors that perpetuate one's [[suffering]]. The [[gift]] of the [[body]] in [[Chod]] also benefits the {{Wiki|innumerable}} [[beings]] to which one makes the [[offering]]. The systematization of [[Chod]] thus provides practitioners with | |
− | + | [[ritual]] technologies for [[offering]] the [[body]] in order to help all [[beings]] [[attain enlightenment]]. | |
+ | By enacting the [[gift]] of the [[body]] within the context of [[visualization]], the [[Chod]] system not only avoids the dangers of excessive acts of [[Wikipedia:sacrifice|sacrifice]], but also provides a [[ritual]] technology to emulate the [[bodhisattva]] example of [[offering]] one's [[body]]. In order fully to understand the significance of [[Chod]] praxis, it is crucial to appreciate that [[Chod]] is grounded in the core [[Mahayana]] [[principle]] of [[bodhisattva]] [[motivation]]. This [[bodhisattva]] [[motivation]] arises from | ||
− | + | [[bodhicitta]], the [[desire]] to [[attain enlightenment]] in order to help all other [[sentient beings]] themselves to overcome [[suffering]]. According to the teachings of [[Chod]], the examples of [[bodhisattvas]] who have [[offered]] their [[own]] [[bodies]] are not to be taken as abstract ideals, but rather as concrete models for [[action]]. This revaluation can be seen in [[Machik's]] explanation of the special [[quality]] of the [[Chod]] system in The Great Explanation. Rather than gradually [[transforming]] oneself over many lifetimes, as in [[Pali]] and [[Mahayana]] [[Buddhist practice]], the [[Chod]] [[practitioner]] “is" an [[enlightened being]] in the practice. [[Machik]] explains that the results of the practice “do not come to [[fruition]] at a much later time; rather [[[Chod]]] is an instruction for complete [[awakening]] in one [[life]] and in | |
− | |||
− | + | one [[body]]." In the [[Chod]] [[body]] [[offering]] practice, [[merit]] is not understood as gradually [[accumulated]] through various [[bodies]] and [[lives]] but immediately generated, {{Wiki|reflecting}} the [[Vajrayana]] orientation of [[Chod]]. As [[Machik]] emphasizes, once “the living [[body]] that is held so dear" is “cast away without a [[thought]] as [[food]] for {{Wiki|demons}}, then fixation on the [[self]] of this interim [[body]] will be severed spontaneously. . . . Abiding within the [[state of emptiness]], {{Wiki|unborn}} cognizant [[awareness]] hidden in the basic [[sphere]] of the sky is unimpeded and automatically, innately free." Through [[Chod practice]], the [[practitioner]] is able to [[manifest]] herself in {{Wiki|innumerable}} [[bodies]] as an [[enlightened being]] through {{Wiki|innumerable}} {{Wiki|temporal}} and spatial [[realms]], bringing relief from [[samsara]] to {{Wiki|innumerable}} [[sentient beings]]. | |
− | + | All levels of [[Tibetan Buddhist]] [[Chod]], whether [[Sutra]] or [[Tantra]], whether outer, inner, or secret, whether generation or [[completion stage]], are designed not only to cut through the [[habitual tendencies]] and [[afflictions]] of the [[mind]], but also to [[accumulate]] [[wisdom]] and [[merit]]. While the [[Chod]] system is most remarkable in its singular technique for eradicating [[self-grasping]], the [[motivation]] to cut [[self-grasping]] is a fundamental—and fundamentally—Buddhist one. This [[root]] [[motivation]] can be traced through various precedents for the [[visualization]] of the [[offering]] of one's [[own]] [[body]] to a [[gathering]] of [[sentient beings]]. As we have | |
− | + | seen, the combination of [[bodhisattva]] [[motivation]] and [[merit]] generation in the [[offering]] of the [[body]] is evident in some of the earliest [[Buddhist texts]]. [[Chod]] teachings often explicitly invoke such precedents. For example, [[Machik Labdron]] is recorded as remarking, “previously [[Buddha Sakyamuni]] actually gave his head, limbs, appendages and so forth, to whomever [[desired]] without hesitation. Are contemporary practitioners not {{Wiki|aware}} of this precedent? Or do they . . . not appreciate the injunctions in the [[Buddha's speech]]?” [[Machik's]] [[Wikipedia:Rhetoric|rhetorical]] questions [[acknowledge]] the [[Indic]] antecedents and [[bodhisattva]] [[motivation]] of | |
− | + | [[Chod]]. Rather than [[transforming]] the [[body]] through the act of giving, as in the [[Pali]] and [[Mahayana]] models, in [[Chod]] the [[body]] is [[transformed]] in the act of giving. Thus, dehadana within the context of the [[Chod]] teachings is an act of self-transformation through the [[imagined]] [[Wikipedia:sacrifice|sacrifice]] of one's [[body]]: a {{Wiki|revolution}} of one's [[self]] grounded in the usefulness of one's [[embodiment]]. | |
− | Chod | + | The [[Wikipedia:scientific method|methodology]] and praxis of [[Chod]] represent a complex theorization of relationships among {{Wiki|psychophysical}} constituents—including [[embodiment]], [[consciousness]] and sub-conscious modes of being. Moreover, [[embodiment]] in [[Chod]] praxis cultivates and is cultivated by the reciprocal [[relation]] between an [[awareness]] of the [[impermanence]] of one's being and the [[development of wisdom]] and [[compassion]]. In dehadana practices associated with [[Tibetan Buddhist]] [[Chod]], we see a [[dialectical]] |
− | + | relationship between the uselessness and usefulness of the [[body]]. [[Chod]] teachings [[stress]] that {{Wiki|mortal}} [[embodiment]] is the door to [[understanding]] [[human being]]. The habitual [[illusion]] of a unified self—independent and enduring—is often located in one's identification with a {{Wiki|stable}} [[body]]. Yet it is exactly this [[paradox]] that generates the [[potency]] and efficacy of [[Chod]] praxis. As I will elaborate in the next [[chapter]], the {{Wiki|heuristic}} [[visualization]] and cutting of the [[body]] also involves the “cutting away” and “[[offering]]” of the [[mind]] to facilitate analytical-experiential [[awareness]] and the dismantling of ego-grasping. Further, one | |
− | + | cannot attain [[liberation]] from habitual [[grasping]] of the unified [[self]] by rejecting the [[body]]. The [[Chod]] [[practitioner]] requires a sustained [[attention]] to being in the [[body]] as a [[condition]] of becoming [[human]]. In order to cut through one's {{Wiki|individual}} mode of [[self-grasping]], it is important to understand the exact [[nature]] of the [[constructed]] [[self]] that is the [[subject]] and [[object]] of [[attachment]], [[including]] its [[embodied]] [[gender]] [[Wikipedia:Identity (social science)|identity]] and [[corresponding]] lived [[experiences]]. | |
− | |||
− | cannot attain liberation from habitual grasping of the unified self by rejecting the body. The Chod practitioner requires a sustained attention to being in the body as a condition of becoming human. In order to cut through one's individual mode of self-grasping, it is important to understand the exact nature of the constructed self that is the subject and object of attachment, including its embodied gender identity and corresponding lived experiences. | ||
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− | While Chod practices are obviously rooted in Buddhist philosophical discourses, the offering of the body in Chod can also speak to Western philosophical conversations. As a complement to considering Chod reinterpretations of the Buddhist praxes of gift of the body from a historical perspective, Chod can also be read in terms of contemporary theoretical ideas about | + | While [[Chod practices]] are obviously rooted in [[Buddhist]] [[philosophical]] [[discourses]], the [[offering]] of the [[body]] in [[Chod]] can also speak to [[Western]] [[philosophical]] conversations. As a complement to considering [[Chod]] reinterpretations of the [[Buddhist]] praxes of [[gift]] of the [[body]] from a historical {{Wiki|perspective}}, [[Chod]] can also be read in terms of contemporary {{Wiki|theoretical}} [[ideas]] about “[[body]],” “[[gift]],” and “[[Wikipedia:sacrifice|sacrifice]].” [[Chod]] interweaves these three concerns in ways that provoke one to reconsider each of the terms in itself and in [[relation]] to one another. In [[Chod]] dehadana, the [[body]] is the [[ritual]] agent of giving and the [[gift]] itself; the [[body]] is also the material and the site of the [[ritual]]. The [[offered]] [[body]] can be seen as a commodity within a system of economic exchange, but the transmuted [[body]] also {{Wiki|transcends}} systems of exchange. |
− | Discussions theorizing “the | + | Discussions theorizing “the [[gift]]” are usually dated to the 1924 publication of Marcel Mauss' Essai sur le don (The [[Gift]]). Mauss' study examines the customs and practices of exchange among what he labels “{{Wiki|archaic}}” {{Wiki|societies}}, referring to communities [[including]] the [[Northwest]] [[American]] {{Wiki|Indians}}, Melanesians and Polynesians. This work was influential in [[illuminating]] how [[gift]] exchange contributes to {{Wiki|social}} [[organization]] and function in these specific cultures, as |
− | well as providing theoretical constructs for the study of other cultures, including our own. Mauss argues that common exchange of everything between clans, households and individuals is the oldest known economic system and provides foundations for law and justice; he argues for the “return to the ever-present bases of law, to its real fundamentals and to the very heart of normal social life,” predicated on the self-aware citizen who is neither too subjective, too insensitive or too realistic (1966, 67). In Mauss' view, the economy of gift giving emphasizes the interdependence of social networks rather than encouraging the alienation of individuals. | + | well as providing {{Wiki|theoretical}} constructs for the study of other cultures, [[including]] our [[own]]. Mauss argues that common exchange of everything between [[clans]], households and {{Wiki|individuals}} is the oldest known economic system and provides foundations for law and justice; he argues for the “return to the ever-present bases of law, to its real fundamentals and to the very [[heart]] of normal {{Wiki|social}} [[life]],” predicated on the [[self-aware]] citizen who is neither too [[subjective]], too insensitive or too {{Wiki|realistic}} (1966, 67). In Mauss' view, the {{Wiki|economy}} of [[gift]] giving emphasizes the [[interdependence]] of {{Wiki|social}} networks rather than encouraging the alienation of {{Wiki|individuals}}. |
− | In contemporary discussions of gift giving in Asia, we see a variety of interpretations of the economy of the gift. Maria Heim (2004) provides a survey of South Asian sources from roughly the eleventh to thirteenth centuries, including Hindu Dharmasastra anthologies (nibandhas) and Jain and Buddhist compendia (sangaha), emphasizing the social norms and moral duty of giving. Heim argues that the Indic concept of dana differs from Mauss' understanding of don, since the giver of dana does not expect reciprocity or obligation. As Heim notes in her discussion of the work of Thomas Trautmann (1981), although dana might not participate in an economy of mundane reciprocity, the act of offering suggests an expectation of gaining spiritual merit. | + | In contemporary discussions of [[gift]] giving in {{Wiki|Asia}}, we see a variety of interpretations of the {{Wiki|economy}} of the [[gift]]. Maria Heim (2004) provides a survey of [[Wikipedia:South Asia|South Asian]] sources from roughly the eleventh to thirteenth centuries, [[including]] [[Hindu]] [[Dharmasastra]] {{Wiki|anthologies}} (nibandhas) and [[Jain]] and [[Buddhist]] compendia ([[sangaha]]), {{Wiki|emphasizing}} the {{Wiki|social}} norms and [[moral]] [[duty]] of giving. Heim argues that the [[Indic]] {{Wiki|concept}} of [[dana]] differs from Mauss' [[understanding]] of don, since the giver of [[dana]] does not expect reciprocity or {{Wiki|obligation}}. As Heim notes in her [[discussion]] of the work of Thomas Trautmann (1981), although [[dana]] might not participate in an {{Wiki|economy}} of [[mundane]] reciprocity, the act of [[offering]] suggests an expectation of gaining [[spiritual]] [[merit]]. |
− | A different perspective on the expectation of supramundane reciprocity is argued by Kwangsu Lee, who provides a historical study of the intertwined practices of merit-making and donation within Buddhist communities in India from time of the Buddha. According to Lee, “[b]y c. 600 BC donations appear to have increasingly formed an important part of the new emergent economic order which was marked by remarkable technological growth, surplus production and a widening gap between the producers and the consumers. . . . The widespread notion of earning merit through donation was due mainly to the adoption of the Buddhist faith by | + | A different {{Wiki|perspective}} on the expectation of [[supramundane]] reciprocity is argued by Kwangsu Lee, who provides a historical study of the intertwined practices of merit-making and donation within [[Buddhist]] communities in [[India]] from time of the [[Buddha]]. According to Lee, “[b]y c. 600 BC {{Wiki|donations}} appear to have increasingly formed an important part of the new emergent economic order which was marked by remarkable technological growth, surplus production and a widening gap between the producers and the consumers. . . . The widespread notion of earning [[merit]] through donation was due mainly to the adoption of the [[Buddhist faith]] by [[Asoka]]” (1998, 78). In contrast to Heim, Lee emphasizes the role of [[gift]] giving in a developing market {{Wiki|economy}}. Both Heim and Lee [[stress]] the ways in which the [[gift]] functions as a “commodity” in a system of exchange. |
− | In Makransky's study of tantric practices, he also describes an economy in which an offering (puja) is given with the expectation of spiritual exchange: “With the development of tantric forms of Mahayana practice, puja constituted both a material offering ritual and a structured meditative visualization of boundless offerings to Buddhist deities whose presence was invoked and from whom blessings in the form of light and nectar were received. All such elements of Indian Buddhist practice were incorporated into Tibetan Buddhist offering practice and | + | In Makransky's study of [[tantric practices]], he also describes an {{Wiki|economy}} in which an [[offering]] ([[puja]]) is given with the expectation of [[spiritual]] exchange: “With the [[development]] of [[tantric]] [[forms]] of [[Mahayana]] practice, [[puja]] constituted both a material [[offering ritual]] and a structured [[meditative]] [[visualization]] of [[boundless]] [[offerings]] to [[Buddhist deities]] whose presence was invoked and from whom [[blessings]] in the [[form]] of {{Wiki|light}} and [[nectar]] were received. All such [[elements]] of [[Indian Buddhist]] practice were incorporated into [[Tibetan Buddhist]] [[offering]] practice and {{Wiki|literature}}” (Makransky 1996, 313-14). Here the “guests” of the [[practitioner]] are [[sacred]] [[beings]] from whom the [[practitioner]] could “receive” a reciprocal [[gift]]: for example, [[karmic merit]] or [[blessings]] in the [[form]] of {{Wiki|light}} |
− | and nectar. In contrast, through Chod dehadana, one does not receive positive merit, but rather pays karmic debts. In most Chod sadhana, the body is sacrificed not to superior or supranatural beings, but to one's karmic debtors and harmdoers, as well as to one's cohort (parents, friends, teachers). | + | and [[nectar]]. In contrast, through [[Chod]] dehadana, one does not receive positive [[merit]], but rather pays [[karmic debts]]. In most [[Chod]] [[sadhana]], the [[body]] is sacrificed not to {{Wiki|superior}} or supranatural [[beings]], but to one's [[karmic]] debtors and harmdoers, as well as to one's cohort ([[parents]], friends, [[teachers]]). |
− | A cultural theory of economy based on usefulness might help us to understand Chod dehadana, which uses the gift to revalue embodiment as a productive condition. On the other hand, the praxis of Chod resists the reification of the self as an object of economic value and exchange. As in the problem of the | + | A {{Wiki|cultural}} {{Wiki|theory}} of {{Wiki|economy}} based on usefulness might help us to understand [[Chod]] dehadana, which uses the [[gift]] to revalue [[embodiment]] as a {{Wiki|productive}} [[condition]]. On the other hand, the praxis of [[Chod]] resists the [[reification]] of the [[self]] as an [[object]] of economic value and exchange. As in the problem of the |
− | usefulness and uselessness of the body, Chod praxis disrupts the existential and social categories of | + | usefulness and uselessness of the [[body]], [[Chod]] praxis disrupts the [[existential]] and {{Wiki|social}} categories of “{{Wiki|productive}}” and “non-productive.” This [[dialectic]] between {{Wiki|productive}} and non-productive in [[Chod]] [[gift]] of the [[body]] practice has intriguing parallels with Jacques Derrida's theories of the [[gift]]. For [[Derrida]], if the [[gift]] is truly to be a [[gift]], it interrupts or suspends economic exchange. It defies, or even denies, reciprocity or return. In order to be a [[gift]], it must simultaneously be contextualized by {{Wiki|economics}} while sublating {{Wiki|economics}}: it must be “aneconomic” ([[Derrida]] 1992, 7). For [[Derrida]], the [[gift]] qua given |
− | gift is impossible: “If there is gift, the given of the gift (that which one gives, that which is given, the gift as given thing or as act of donation) must not come back to the giving (let us not already say to the subject, to the donor). It must not circulate, it must not be exchanged, it must not in any case be exhausted, as a gift, by the process of exchange, by the movement of circulation of the circle in the form of return to the point of departure” (1992, 7; emphasis in original). Within a Western philosophical context, Derrida writes of giving the gift of infinite love to finite others, engaging the | + | [[gift]] is impossible: “If there is [[gift]], the given of the [[gift]] (that which one gives, that which is given, the [[gift]] as given thing or as act of donation) must not come back to the giving (let us not already say to the [[subject]], to the {{Wiki|donor}}). It must not circulate, it must not be exchanged, it must not in any case be exhausted, as a [[gift]], by the process of exchange, by the {{Wiki|movement}} of circulation of the circle in the [[form]] of return to the point of departure” (1992, 7; {{Wiki|emphasis}} in original). Within a [[Western]] [[philosophical]] context, [[Derrida]] writes of giving the [[gift]] of [[infinite]] [[love]] to finite others, engaging the |
− | awareness of one's own finite self as an ethical actor: “the mortal thus deduced is someone whose very responsibility requires that he concern himself not only with an objective Good but with a gift of infinite love, a goodness that is forgetful of itself. There is thus a structural disproportion or dissymmetry between the finite and responsible mortal on the one hand and the goodness of the infinite gift on the other hand” (1995, 51). Derrida has called this gift of infinite love without expectation of reciprocity an “impossible gift.” This impossible gift reveals a rift within the system of market economies: it rejects common exchange valuation and commodification. It exists outside the perimeter of the cycle of economic exchange, sidestepping concerns of debt and obligation, reciprocity and return. | + | [[awareness]] of one's [[own]] finite [[self]] as an [[ethical]] actor: “the {{Wiki|mortal}} thus deduced is someone whose very {{Wiki|responsibility}} requires that he [[concern]] himself not only with an [[objective]] Good but with a [[gift]] of [[infinite]] [[love]], a [[goodness]] that is forgetful of itself. There is thus a structural disproportion or dissymmetry between the finite and responsible {{Wiki|mortal}} on the one hand and the [[goodness]] of the [[infinite]] [[gift]] on the other hand” (1995, 51). [[Derrida]] has called this [[gift]] of [[infinite]] [[love]] without expectation of reciprocity an “impossible [[gift]].” This impossible [[gift]] reveals a rift within the system of market economies: it rejects common exchange valuation and commodification. It [[exists]] outside the perimeter of the cycle of economic exchange, sidestepping concerns of debt and {{Wiki|obligation}}, reciprocity and return. |
− | The gift of the body in Chod is another kind of impossible gift: as I explained above, it is only possible through visualization and narration. The body is conceived as an inexhaustible resource, perpetually renewable through one's bond to samsara, even as an enlightened being. The | + | The [[gift]] of the [[body]] in [[Chod]] is another kind of impossible [[gift]]: as I explained above, it is only possible through [[visualization]] and narration. The [[body]] is [[conceived]] as an inexhaustible resource, perpetually renewable through one's bond to [[samsara]], even as an [[enlightened being]]. The “[[gift]]” part of the “[[gift]] of the [[body]]” in [[Chod]] is what [[Derrida]] might refer to as a “[[pure]] [[gift]],” that is, one that does not demand [[mundane]] reciprocity (even when [[offered]] in a group setting). It |
− | does not even demand supramundane reciprocity; rather, it is a transformative inner act of self-making that imbues the self with a deeper moral sense and a more profound understanding of one's embodiment. Dana-paramita also might be considered a practice of pure gift giving in the context of moral training. The offering is a transformative gift within an economy dictated by the law of karma (including the possibility for transformation through the “payment” of | + | does not even demand [[supramundane]] reciprocity; rather, it is a transformative inner act of self-making that imbues the [[self]] with a deeper [[moral]] [[sense]] and a more profound [[understanding]] of one's [[embodiment]]. [[Dana-paramita]] also might be considered a practice of [[pure]] [[gift]] giving in the context of [[moral]] {{Wiki|training}}. The [[offering]] is a transformative [[gift]] within an {{Wiki|economy}} dictated by the [[law of karma]] ([[including]] the possibility for [[transformation]] through the “payment” of “[[karmic debts]]” to others) and the [[corresponding]] capacity for [[yogic]] [[purification]]. On the other hand, [[Chod]] dehadana subverts the system of exchange that is constitutive of more [[Wikipedia:Convention (norm)|conventional]] economies. This [[transformation]] of the [[gift]] of the [[body]], in keeping with the [[bodhisattva vow]] and the project to become a [[bodhisattva]] or a [[buddha]] oneself, occurs through remembering and practicing one's {{Wiki|responsibility}} to others—that is, in practicing [[compassion]] and [[loving-kindness]]. |
− | In Chod, the internalized act of offering the body as a gift can also be seen as a sacrifice. Following the work of Henri Hubert and Marcel Mauss (1964), the agent in such an offering can be simultaneously identified with and distinguished from the victim. Hubert and Mauss' study of sacrifice is grounded in their interpretation of the Vedic soma sacrifice as a transformative act that desacralizes and resacralizes the subject (the one who realizes the benefits), the object/victim (without which/whom there could be no transformative effect), as well as the object/recipient of the offering (such as a deity who is sustained through the offering). However, it might also be considered that a transformative act is impossible in this context. The success of the Vedic sacrifice was determined by the success of sustaining the divine and maintaining order in the cosmos, so rather than transforming the subject and community, this type of sacrifice serves to perpetuate the status quo. | + | In [[Chod]], the internalized act of [[offering]] the [[body]] as a [[gift]] can also be seen as a [[Wikipedia:sacrifice|sacrifice]]. Following the work of Henri Hubert and Marcel Mauss (1964), the agent in such an [[offering]] can be simultaneously identified with and {{Wiki|distinguished}} from the victim. Hubert and Mauss' study of [[Wikipedia:sacrifice|sacrifice]] is grounded in their [[interpretation]] of the {{Wiki|Vedic}} soma [[Wikipedia:sacrifice|sacrifice]] as a transformative act that desacralizes and resacralizes the [[subject]] (the one who realizes the benefits), the object/victim (without which/whom there could be no transformative effect), as well as the object/recipient of the [[offering]] (such as a [[deity]] who is sustained through the [[offering]]). However, it might also be considered that a transformative act is impossible in this context. The [[success]] of the {{Wiki|Vedic}} [[Wikipedia:sacrifice|sacrifice]] was determined by the [[success]] of sustaining the [[divine]] and maintaining order in the [[cosmos]], so rather than [[transforming]] the [[subject]] and {{Wiki|community}}, this type of [[Wikipedia:sacrifice|sacrifice]] serves to perpetuate the {{Wiki|status}} quo. |
− | In contrast, Chod sacrifice is closely akin to “Dharma-sacrifice,” as expressed in the Vimalakirtinirdesa. Vimalakirti's teaching explicitly contrasts “Dharma-sacrifice” to other types of sacrifice and offerings, including Vedic sacrifices. Each of the elements of a Dharma¬sacrifice reflects a key Buddhist principle: great compassion and loving-kindness; the perfection of generosity (dana-paramita) and the other five perfections; and meditation on the three signs of emptiness, signlessness and wishlessness. According to this discourse, not only is the bodhisattva exemplary because of “his extreme | + | In contrast, [[Chod]] [[Wikipedia:sacrifice|sacrifice]] is closely akin to “Dharma-sacrifice,” as expressed in the [[Vimalakirtinirdesa]]. [[Vimalakirti's]] [[teaching]] explicitly contrasts “Dharma-sacrifice” to other types of [[Wikipedia:sacrifice|sacrifice]] and [[offerings]], [[including]] {{Wiki|Vedic}} [[sacrifices]]. Each of the [[elements]] of a Dharma¬sacrifice reflects a key [[Buddhist]] [[principle]]: [[great compassion]] and [[loving-kindness]]; the [[perfection of generosity]] ([[dana-paramita]]) and the other [[five perfections]]; and [[meditation]] on the three [[signs]] of [[emptiness]], signlessness and wishlessness. According to this [[discourse]], not only is the [[bodhisattva]] exemplary because of “his extreme |
− | sacrifice," he is | + | [[Wikipedia:sacrifice|sacrifice]]," he is “[[worthy of offerings]] from all [[people]], [[including]] the [[gods]]" (Thurman 1998, 40). This suggests that the [[Dharma]] [[Wikipedia:sacrifice|sacrifice]] is situated within an {{Wiki|economy}} of exchange, with the [[offerings]] of the [[bodhisattva]] being “worthy" of reciprocity. However, the text subsequently describes an [[offering]] made by [[Vimalakirti]]: upon relunctantly accepting a string of {{Wiki|pearls}} [[offered]] to him by a [[householder]], [[Vimalakirti]] distributes half of the {{Wiki|pearls}} to the poor of the city and offers the other half to the [[Tathagata]] [[Dusprasaha]], who [[emanates]] another [[universe]] which is [[manifest]] to the audience. [[Vimalakirti]] then makes a |
− | speech which resonates with the observations of Derrida: “‘The giver who makes gifts to the lowliest poor of the city, considering them as worthy of offering as the Tathagata himself, the giver who gives without any discrimination, impartially, with no expectation of reward, and with great love—this giver, I say, totally fulfills the Dharma-sacrifice'" (1998, 41). As in Chod dehadana, a totally fulfilled Dharma-sacrifice is one that is | + | {{Wiki|speech}} which resonates with the observations of [[Derrida]]: “‘The giver who makes gifts to the lowliest poor of the city, considering them as worthy of [[offering]] as the [[Tathagata]] himself, the giver who gives without any {{Wiki|discrimination}}, impartially, with no expectation of reward, and with great love—this giver, I say, totally fulfills the Dharma-sacrifice'" (1998, 41). As in [[Chod]] dehadana, a totally fulfilled Dharma-sacrifice is one that is “[[pure]]," without an expectation of reciprocity from its recipient. |
− | Based on the The Great Explanation, some generalizations may be drawn regarding the strategies through which Chod refigures the gift of offering the body in three productive ways. First, as the sacrifice of the body is an internalized act in Chod, practitioners are able to avoid immoderate behavior while cultivating wisdom and compassion. Second, unlike traditional representations of dehadana wherein the gift of the body is performed by a highly-realized bodhisattva, in the Chod system the offering can be made by any practitioner since it is made through a contemplative visualization. Maximum merit for this | + | Based on the The Great Explanation, some generalizations may be drawn regarding the strategies through which [[Chod]] refigures the [[gift]] of [[offering]] the [[body]] in three {{Wiki|productive}} ways. First, as the [[Wikipedia:sacrifice|sacrifice]] of the [[body]] is an internalized act in [[Chod]], practitioners are able to avoid immoderate {{Wiki|behavior}} while [[cultivating]] [[wisdom]] and [[compassion]]. Second, unlike [[traditional]] {{Wiki|representations}} of dehadana wherein the [[gift]] of the [[body]] is performed by a highly-realized [[bodhisattva]], in the [[Chod]] system the [[offering]] can be made by any [[practitioner]] since it is made through a {{Wiki|contemplative}} [[visualization]]. Maximum [[merit]] for this |
− | gift is determined not by the quality of the recipients, but by their virtual quantity and diversity. Chod praxis thus transvalues the attainments of the giver and the suitability of the recipient through the visualized offering of the body. Through identification with an enlightened being, the practitioner attains the capacity of a bodhisattva whose every act is characterized by great compassion, means and wisdom. As the practitioner’s body is transformed | + | [[gift]] is determined not by the [[quality]] of the recipients, but by their virtual {{Wiki|quantity}} and diversity. [[Chod]] praxis thus transvalues the [[attainments]] of the giver and the suitability of the recipient through the [[visualized]] [[offering]] of the [[body]]. Through identification with an [[enlightened being]], the [[practitioner]] attains the capacity of a [[bodhisattva]] whose every act is characterized by [[great compassion]], means and [[wisdom]]. As the practitioner’s [[body]] is [[transformed]] |
− | into an abundance that completely fulfills the needs and desires of all sentient beings, all karmic debts are repaid, technically freeing the practitioner from the cyclic existence of samsara. Explicitly invoking earlier dehadana narratives, Chod provides techniques through which practitioners can alleviate the suffering of others in order that they may no longer find it necessary to commit actions that result in karmic demerit. Chod also allows the practitioner to make a sacrifice, in Vimalakirti’s terms, without any discrimination, impartiality, or expectation of reward. | + | into an abundance that completely fulfills the needs and [[desires]] of all [[sentient beings]], all [[karmic debts]] are repaid, technically freeing the [[practitioner]] from the [[cyclic existence]] of [[samsara]]. Explicitly invoking earlier dehadana [[Wikipedia:narrative|narratives]], [[Chod]] provides [[techniques]] through which practitioners can alleviate the [[suffering]] of others in order that they may no longer find it necessary to commit [[actions]] that result in [[karmic]] {{Wiki|demerit}}. [[Chod]] also allows the [[practitioner]] to make a [[Wikipedia:sacrifice|sacrifice]], in Vimalakirti’s terms, without any {{Wiki|discrimination}}, impartiality, or expectation of reward. |
− | Finally, rather than producing a sharp distinction between donors and religious experts, Chod rituals involve both lay and monastic Buddhists. In the context of Chod, dana is primarily conceived of as a transformation of the practitioner (lay or ordained), rather than a gift from non- renunciant to renunciants. The act of renunciation is thus also transvalued in Chod. Rather than being manifested through the tradition of renunciants dependent on gifts | + | Finally, rather than producing a sharp {{Wiki|distinction}} between donors and [[religious]] experts, [[Chod]] [[rituals]] involve both lay and [[monastic]] [[Buddhists]]. In the context of [[Chod]], [[dana]] is primarily [[conceived]] of as a [[transformation]] of the [[practitioner]] (lay or [[ordained]]), rather than a [[gift]] from non- renunciant to renunciants. The act of [[renunciation]] is thus also transvalued in [[Chod]]. Rather than being [[manifested]] through the [[tradition]] of renunciants dependent on gifts |
− | from the lay community, renunciation in Chod occurs through the act of renouncing one’s own body. The success of the offering is also functionally independent of the response of a worthy recipient, so important in earlier discussions of dana. In this act of renunciation through offering of the body, giver and gift are explicitly identified. Since both the giver and the gift are consumed by the recipient, the offering of the body incorporates and is | + | from the lay {{Wiki|community}}, [[renunciation]] in [[Chod]] occurs through the act of renouncing one’s [[own]] [[body]]. The [[success]] of the [[offering]] is also functionally {{Wiki|independent}} of the response of a worthy recipient, so important in earlier discussions of [[dana]]. In this act of [[renunciation]] through [[offering]] of the [[body]], giver and [[gift]] are explicitly identified. Since both the giver and the [[gift]] are consumed by the recipient, the [[offering]] of the [[body]] incorporates and is |
− | incorporated by the other. This process thus encapsulates the attainment of non-attachment and the transcendence of self-other dualities. | + | incorporated by the other. This process thus encapsulates the [[attainment]] of [[non-attachment]] and the {{Wiki|transcendence}} of self-other dualities. |
− | The transformation of the practitioner's self-identity through visualization thereby instills a sense of responsibility to others. Drawing on canonical representations of dehadana, Chod reconfigures and revalues such practices, and thereby makes offerings of the body accessible to all practitioners and expressive of an array of Buddhist teachings. | + | The [[transformation]] of the practitioner's self-identity through [[visualization]] thereby instills a [[sense]] of {{Wiki|responsibility}} to others. Drawing on [[Wikipedia:canonical|canonical]] {{Wiki|representations}} of dehadana, [[Chod]] reconfigures and revalues such practices, and thereby makes [[offerings]] of the [[body]] accessible to all practitioners and expressive of an array of [[Buddhist teachings]]. |
Revision as of 20:14, 2 February 2020
Dehadana in Buddhist Practice
The ways in which Chod both follows and reconsiders Buddhist traditions of analyzing and valuing the body can be seen clearly in the context of dehadana—the offering of one's own body. Chod dehadana (lus sbyin) assimilates itself to a long Buddhist history of body offering, and it provides innovative perspectives on this practice. As the Buddhist virtuous act par excellence, dehadana has long held a vital place in Buddhist literature. In general, the
act of giving (sbyin; dana) is constitutive of Buddhist communities: non-renunciants (or lay people) traditionally give alms and clothing to renunciants (or monastics), and in turn lay donors receive dharma teachings from religious specialists. Buddhist discussions of dehadana reiterate this social nature of dana by emphasizing that it is an act to be performed for the welfare of others. Dehadana serves others both in a mundane way—the practitioner physically provides another with something she requires—and in a supramundane way—the practitioner performs the act as part of the process of becoming an enlightened being in order to help others also become enlightened.
In early Buddhist texts, dehadana narratives reflect two different (but not mutually exclusive) intentions. The first is the role of dana in the development of merit. In such examples, dehadana is practiced with the aim of a good rebirth for oneself or another. Perhaps the most striking example of dehadana in early Buddhist literature is the Jataka story recounted by Arya Surya, wherein Sakyamuni Buddha, in a previous incarnation, accumulates merit
through the ultimate act of generosity: offering his body to a starving tigress about to eat her cubs. This exemplary dana is echoed in numerous other Buddhist teachings, including the story of Dharmaraksita cutting the flesh of his thigh and offering it to a sick man who needs it for medicine. Analogously, Naropa is asked by his teacher Tilopa to make an offering of a mandala, but he lacks any grain, sand or water to construct one, so he uses his
own flesh, limbs and blood. The twenty-eighth chapter in the mgur ‘bum of Milarepa describes him performing a practice that has overtones of Chod: a visualized body offering with the aim of gaining merit and repaying debt. The category of narratives illustrating dehadana as merit generation includes acts driven by the bodhisattva motivation of great compassion. This category of stories can also encompass actions with sacrificial overtones and elements of bhakti (devotion or worship).
The second important intention in the practice of dehadana is the development of wisdom defined by a teleology of nirvana, or liberation from suffering. Narratives in this category include such actions as renunciation of attachment to self and mental purification. An exemplary canonical instance of this type of motivation occurs in the Astasahasrika Prajhaparamita and the Prajhaparamita-Ratnagunasamcayagatha, when the Bodhisattva Sadaprarudita, with the
aim of attaining the perfection of wisdom and skill in means, dismembers himself so that his body parts can be devoured by a mara. In the Cariyapitaka, the offering of one's limbs is characterized as the perfection of giving (danassa-parami), while the gift of one's whole body or life for the sake of another is characterized as the fulfillment of the perfection of giving (parami-purayim). Santideva describes the usefulness of his kusali's, or beggar's, body as an offering in the Siksasamuccaya, and Dpal sprul Rinpoche returns to this theme in his chapter on Kusali Chod in the Kun bzang bla ma'i zhal lung
(The Words of My Perfect Teacher). The Narayanapariprccha epitomizes the intention involved in all of these examples: “The Bodhisattva must think thus: ‘I have devoted and abandoned my frame to all creatures. . . . Any beings who shall require it for any purpose, it being recognized for a good, I will give hand, foot, eye, flesh, blood, marrow, limbs great and small, and my head itself, to such as ask for them.'” In this type of discourse, the donation of one's body as a paradigmatic offering represents a union of the motivations of merit generation and liberation.
As a paramita, dana exemplifies the ideal of a symbiosis of wisdom and compassion. In paramita paradigms, dana is generally designated the first perfection, and it is distinguished by the fact that it is intended to be of immediate and direct benefit to others. Dana-paramita (sbyin pa'i pha rol tu phyin pa) corresponds with the first stage of the career of the bodhisattva, and as the “perfection of giving,” it is sometimes characterized as the “lowest” of the perfections. When dana-paramita involves the gift of the body, however, it is frequently represented as the paramount perfection. We see such an evaluation in the Nidanakatha, where the Bodhisattva Sumedha makes a resolution before Dipankara to master the ten perfections that lead to the
realization of an enlightened being. Upon accomplishment of these perfections, he recites the following words: “The Perfections are the sacrifice of limbs, the Lesser Perfections are the sacrifice of property, the Unlimited Perfections are the sacrifice of life.” In this articulation, the offering of the body supersedes all of the other perfections.
The topics of dana-paramita and dehadana feature prominently in Santideva’s teachings to Buddhist practitioners on the bodhisattva path. In his Bodhicaryavatara, Santideva advises that, “[a]t the beginning, the Guide prescribes giving vegetables and the like. One does it gradually so that later one can give away even one's own flesh. When insight arises that one's own flesh is like a vegetable, then what difficulty is there in giving away one's flesh and bone?” (1997, 80). In the Siksasamuccaya, Santideva draws from a variety of sources in his discussion of physical sacrifice, suffering and the gift of
the body. Here the gift of the body is also seen to contain all other perfections. This comprehensive potential of dana-paramita is illustrated in Santideva's citation of the Sagaramati Sutra in the Siksasamuccaya In this passage, a bodhisattva mahasattva is challenged by Mara and his entourage. This bodhisattva reflects on his attachment to his body in innumerable previous incarnations, which inspires a revaluation of his body as a vehicle of compassion. This passage also emphasizes the gift of one's body as the consummate perfection. Dehadana is identified with each of the other six paramitas, as the renunciation of one's body is equated with the Perfection of Giving, the offering of the body for the benefit of others with the Perfection of
Conduct, enduring the dismemberment of the body for the sake of others with the Perfection of Patience, maintaining the belief in the law of karma and an ambition to enlightenment with the Perfection of Strength, the maintenance of mental stability during the dissolution of the body with the Perfection of Meditation, and the understanding of the impermanence and emptiness of all compounded things (including one's own body) with the Perfection of Wisdom. Reiko Ohnuma (1998, 2000, 2007) has argued that such Buddhist didactic and narrative texts reveal ambivalent attitudes toward the offering of the body.
According to her interpretations, dehadana is extreme behavior, overvaluing compassion and selflessness at the expense of wisdom and moderation. In Ohnuma's reading, gift of the body narratives reveal a tension between “selflessness” and “assertion-of-self” (the latter considered to anathema to Buddhist doctrine): “[t]he bodhisattva who gives his body away is supposed to be a paragon of ‘selflessness,' yet at the same time, his deed constitutes the ultimate ‘assertion of self.' Underlying this conflict is a more general tension between the Buddhist rhetoric of selflessness and its need to assert an individual and autonomous self capable of effecting its own salvation” (2000, 67). Moreover, Ohnuma argues that such narratives also reveal a conflict
between wisdom and compassion. According to Ohnuma, the radical act of compassion of offering one's body would suggest the disregarding of a more skillful action guided by wisdom, especially if such wisdom includes an understanding of the non-duality—and thus equality—of self and other. In acts of giving one's body, Ohnuma maintains that “[t]he bodhisattva's insistence on favoring others over himself (and thus making a clear distinction between himself and others) may, in some contexts, suggest a lack of the wisdom that realizes the selflessness of all beings, and a lack of the equanimity that treats all beings (including oneself) the same” (2000, 67).
I would argue that there is another way to understand such narratives that would be more in accord with their intention and context. Rather than illustrating “the bodhisattva's insistence on favoring others over [oneself],” these narratives emphasize one's interconnection with others and one's concern for and responsibility to the other, a counterpoint to our habitual mode of self-preservation and self-interest. For example, in the section on “guarding introspection” in Santideva's Bodhicaryavatara, a teaching on maintaining a mind free from pride is followed by a discussion of the appropriate
attitude toward and use of the body. Santideva decries the human habit of vulgar self-protection and ego-clinging and enjoins the analysis of one's own body and its ultimate emptiness as an antidote to this behavior. He advocates that the practitioner come to his own understanding in the following way: “First, with your own intellect, peel off this sheath of skin, and with the knife of wisdom, loosen the flesh from the skeleton. Breaking the bones, look
inside at the marrow and examine for yourself, ‘Where is the essence here?' If searching carefully this way, you do not see an essence here, then say why you are still protecting the body today” (1997, 54). Even while considering its foulness and impermanence, Santideva emphasizes the value of the body as food to sustain other beings and the value of embodiment to facilitate action: “If you will not eat it, as impure as it is, and if you would not drink the blood nor suck out the entrails, then what will you do with the body? However, it is proper to guard it for the sake of feeding the vultures and the jackals. This wretched body of humans is an instrument for action” (1997, 54). This dialectical relationship between the usefulness and uselessness of the
body is echoed in Machik's writings on Chod when she emphasizes that it is the Negative Force of pride that is the fundamental cause of suffering and spiritual malpractice. This pride is located in the body, a metonym for the complete human being in its positive and negative potentiality. It is our own individual pride and ego-clinging that obscure from us the truths not only of our impermanence, but also of our inherent interconnectedness and interdependence with other beings, and hence our responsibility to them. Overcoming pride also entails overcoming ideas of the body's uselessness, as the practitioner's body in Chod is revalued as literal and metaphorical food for others.
In canonical accounts, the gift of the body is exercised within the economy of karma. The merit gained through dehadana is determined by the purity of the intention of the one making the offering, the value of the gift, and the worthiness of the recipient. Therefore, it is traditionally of great importance to select the recipient for the gift of the body. By performing dana-paramita, the giver can eventually reap the benefits of mental purification, a good
rebirth, and even enlightenment. When one offers one's own body in an act of dehadana, one can quickly attain such benefits. However, generally speaking, one must have already accumulated great merit over numerous lifetimes and cycles of rebirth in order to make this offering. Unlike in Chod teachings, in Buddhist literature from the jataka tales to the songs of Milarepa, dehadana as the supreme act of giving is frequently
represented as an exemplary act by a bodhisattva who is accumulating merit and wisdom through the deed. From renunciation in the Pali traditions, to the spirit of enlightenment in the Mahayana traditions, to creation and completion in the Vajrayana traditions, offering the body is the vehicle for spiritual development and attaining enlightenment. As the danaparamita par excellence, the gift of the body is the most costly and precious possession that one can offer. In fact, some teachers have claimed that the offering of the body is simultaneously an offering of Dharma: through the act of dehadana, one is also offering a teaching of impermanence. Rather than viewing the gift of the body as
an exceptional act by an exceptional being, Chod is a system that theoretically provides any Buddhist practitioner with the ritual technology to emulate bodhisattva models of the perfection of giving and to gain immediate benefits. Chod thus aligns itself with traditional Buddhist ideas of dehadana, but adapts this practice to make it available to all.
Dehadana in Chod Praxis
To provide a sense of the ritual technologies for the practitioner's efficacious offering of the body, I will briefly describe elements of a typical Chod practice. As in other Buddhist Tantric techniques, recommended preliminaries for these practices include developing skill at both calm-abiding (zhi gnas; samatha) and insight meditation (lhag mthong; vipasyana). As in earlier Buddhist teachings, many Chod dehadana practices emphasize renunciation, purification, and self-transformation through the accumulation of merit and the exhaustion of demerit. Rather than suggesting that one must wait to accumulate adequate merit before offering the gift of the body, however, Chod provides the opportunity for immediately efficacious offering of the body through techniques of visualization. Using a technique which echoes the traditional Buddhist teaching of the of the mind-made body (manomayakaya), the practitioner engages in visualizations which allow her to experience the non-duality of agent and object as she offers her body.
The process of giving the body as a means of attainment is commonly articulated in Chod practice texts (sgrubpa; sadhana). These practice texts exhibit the framework of mature Tantra sadhana, including the stages of generating bodhicitta, going for refuge, meditating on the four immeasurables, and making the eight-limbed offering. Generally speaking, the main section of a developed Chod sadhana has three components. The first two—a transference of consciousness
(nam mkha’ sgo ‘byed) practice, and a body mandala (lus dkyil) practice—have distinctly purifying purposes. The Chod transference of consciousness practice has parallels with other Buddhist practices called “’pho ba." In this part of the visualization practice, the practitioner's consciousness is “ejected" from one's body through the Brahma aperture at the crown of one's head. At this time, one's consciousness can be visualized as becoming identical with an
enlightened consciousness, which is embodied in a figure such as Machik, Vajrayogini (Rdo rje rnal byor ma) or Vajravarahi (Rdo rje phag mo). In the body mandala practice, the practitioner identifies the microcosm of her body with macrocosms of the mundane and supramundane worlds. In this first stage of this transformation, the practitioner identifies with an enlightened being, thus overcoming attachment to her own body-mind aggregates and purifying them through this non-attachment. In the second stage, the practitioner can extend this identification: the practitioner identifies the microcosm of her body
with macrocosms of the mundane and supramundane worlds. The body mandala (lus dkyil) stage also allows the practitioner to reconceptualize her body as expanding through space and time and becoming indistinguishable from the realm of the supramundane, or the Dharmadhatu (chos kyi dbyings). Through the process of reconstructing her identity, the practitioner is able to see herself as the ultimate source of offerings for all sentient beings. The third part of the core practice of Chod is the offering of the body, which can take many forms depending on the particular practice text. In the fifth text of The Great Explanation collection of teachings attributed to Machik, there is a discourse between Machik and Tonyon Samdrub on the method of giving
the body (Lab sgron 1974, 144-230). The first step is the purification of the body, which involves transforming it into offerings that will please the members of one’s dharma community, including one’s bla ma, yi dam, and dakinis and dharma protectors. Next, the practitioner transforms her body into valuable goods in order to recompense all of the karmic debts she has accrued through innumerable lives. The transformation of one’s body into substances to meet the needs and desires of one’s guests recalls more traditional Indic offering practices (mchod pa; pwja). For example, in such practices within
Mahayana Buddhist traditions, one makes offerings to buddhas and bodhisattvas, sometimes including the enlightened beings in the lineage of teachings one has received. As John Makransky explains, “[b]y following the ritual format, a practitioner generates the purest motivation to give the very best substances to the highest object: the supreme field of karmic merit (punyaksetra, tshogs zhing), the buddhas” (1996, 314). Chod dehadana adapt these
practices by using the practitioner’s own body as the vehicle of generating merit. Machik explains that many people, because of their habits of ego-clinging, are incapable of sufficient acts of dana to mitigate their negative karmic acts. Acting as a surrogate, the Chod practitioner visualizes donating her own body with the intention of liberating others from negative karmic retribution, as well as to repay kindnesses that she herself has received. As Machik states, “I give this body . . . as compensation for the karmic debt incurred from beginningless time to the final moment.” This third component of the offering emphasizes one's act of charity in assisting all sentient beings to become free from suffering and to attain enlightenment. The practitioner generates the following thought: “I give up my body in order that all sentient beings, throughout the three realms, that
are clinging and attached to the self give up their ego-fixations.” This component has several different stages according to the different types of sentient beings that are being addressed. The body takes different forms according to the desires of the recipients, who can be benign, wrathful and/or beatific beings. In Chod practice, this offering of the body provides the vehicle for cutting through attachment to self. Through techniques of visualization, the body is transformed into a sign of abundance: one's own body, given its inherent emptiness, is visualized as multifarious attractive things that fulfill the needs and desires of all sentient beings.
Because of its dramatic representation of cutting through the body to offer it as food, Chod dehadana has frequently been misinterpreted as an exotic and esoteric practice with its roots in indigenous shamanic traditions. Due to the limited access of early ethnographers to Tibetan culture and Chod practice in particular, emphasis has been placed on the elements of Chod that were most visible, accessible and “translatable.” Early researchers were likely drawn to specific practices due to the accoutrement of musical instruments and singing, and they often seemed compelled by the apparently “shamanistic” content
of these practices. Western presentations of Chod have thus tended to represent body offering practices such as the White Offerings (dkar tshogs) and Red Banquets (dmar tshogs) (introduced in the early twentieth century through the work of Alexandra David-Neel and Walter Y. Evans-Wentz with Kazi Samdrup) in a sensational fashion, stressing their macabre elements rather than contextualizing and historicizing them in relation to Buddhist traditions. Contemporary
scholars have continued to insist on the exotic and “shamanistic” character of Chod praxis. However, when we return to the Tibetan sources attributed to Machik (including the texts I have translated and discuss in detail in the last chapter), the Chod practice of offering one's body does not appear as exotic or excessive. While Machik does develop new techniques for liberation from suffering, she also emphasizes the correlations of her praxis with orthodox Buddhist teachings.
Machik's intentions to assimilate her teachings to traditional Buddhist ideas and to develop an innovative praxis are evident in The Distinctive Eightfold Supplementary Section, which is often taken to be one of the teachings that Machik gave to the Indian scholars who came to investigate her teachings. Such attribution suggests that this is one of the earliest texts documenting Machik's system of Chod. Although it does not contain all of the elements that come
to be associated with later Chod sadhana, it usefully illustrates somes of the core elements of the praxis. As in the other foundational discussions of the Chod practice of visualizing the offering of one's body as food for sentient beings, the phrase used for giving away or offering the body in this text is
“phung po gzan du bskyur,”38 that is, to toss away (bskyur) one's aggregates as food (gzan). The relation between the usefulness and uselessness of the body is highlighted here: the body-mind aggregates are to be considered as unnecessary garbage that one needs to abandon, while the description of the visualization also emphasizes the value of the body which is offered.
According to The Distinctive Eightfold Supplementary Section, the practice has three parts: a preliminary meditation on cultivating compassion and loving-kindness; the main practice of giving one's body, which is possessed of the six perfections; and the conclusion of dedicating the merit one has generated through the practice to the unsurpassed spirit of enlightenment. The preliminary meditation requires the practitioner to generate compassion for all sentient beings, paying special attention to beings that have caused harm to (gnod byed) or obstructed (bgegs) the practitioner. During this meditation, the practitioner cultivates the intention to offer her body and visualizes those to whom she will offer her body.
In the main part of the practice, the practitioner visualizes her body as very large; with an envisioned sword of wisdom, she cuts through her neck and makes her body an offering to the harmdoers (gnod byed), satisfying them all according to their particular desires for meat, blood or bones. By visualizing her body as totally consumed, the practitioner's mind will no longer be attached to concerns about the past, present or future. Instead, she can dwell in a
natural state of open awareness: “the mind (sems) does not hanker after the past, does not anticipate the future, and does not notice the present. You rest softly and very loosely. Then, meditatively cultivating compassion you give your body as food; the mind rests in the state of reality (gnas lugs). In that way, visualize the tip of day and the fading away of night cycling (khor ro ro) in turn (re mos).” For the conclusion of the practice, the practitioner recites a variation on the traditional Buddhist statement of going for refuge and dedicating the merit of her actions, repeating three times: “I myself go for refuge to the Buddha, Dharma, and the Sangha until enlightenment. By the merit of the actions including the giving of myself for the benefit of
beings, may I attain buddhahood.” At this point in the teaching, there is the imperative to the practitioner: “Your activity should be comfortable!” The Chod practitioner must be advanced enough in her practice that the practice of visualizing the distribution of one's body as food should be helpful on the Buddhist path and not a further obstruction or distraction.
In the same text, Machik provides an elaboration of the three parts of the practice. In the preliminary practice, Machik emphasizes that the generation of compassion and loving-kindness by the Chod practitioner will provide an antidote to aggression, thereby “pacifying negative influences, male negative influences (pho gdon), illness, pain and discomfort.” In the main practice, through visualizing the offering of one's body as food, the Chod practitioner
produces an antidote for desire and attachment, thereby “pacifying infection, exhaustion, and female negative influences (mo gdon).” And in the concluding part of the practice, resting in one's natural state becomes an antidote for delusion, whereby “naga negative influences (klu gdon) and illnesses accompanied by depression” are pacified. Machik's elaboration of the practice makes clear that her novel techniques for offering the body are grounded in traditional Buddhist ethics. Machik also associates her body offering praxis with the philosophical tradition of Prajhaparamita by arguing that the giving of one's body as food is a realization of the six paramita or perfections of behavior. Not only does the giving of one's body exemplify the perfection of giving, the act contains within itself the other five perfections: it exemplifies the perfection of moral discipline because one gives the body for the sake of sentient beings; it exemplifies the perfection of forbearance because one gives the body without anger; it exemplifies the perfection of perseverance because one gives the body again and again in visualized practice; it exemplifies the perfection of concentration because one practices the visualization without distraction; and it exemplifies the perfection of wisdom because one rests in the state of reality and emptiness.
In the same text Machik also links her praxis with canonical Buddhist narratives by distinguishing two modes of giving one's body as food through an example that evokes King Sibi's donation of one of his eyes to a blind Brahman as recounted in the Sibi Jataka. In the first mode, the practitioner is encouraged to generate compassion toward sentient beings with eye illnesses by imagining that she is experiencing such an illness herself. Grounded in that compassion, she should generate the intention to give her own eyes in order to remedy the eye illnesses of others. In the second mode, the practitioner is instructed to visualize eighty thousand types of obstructors (bgegs) arising in front of her to whom she gives her eyes; her mind then rests without any
thought. Machik instructs the practitioner to repeat these two modes of practice, substituting other body parts such as her hands: she repeats the process of generation of compassion, intention of offering, visualization of the recipients and the offering, and attainment of the state of resting her mind in non-thought. By practicing these two modes of giving her body as food, the practitioner is able to deepen her psychophysical experience of compassion through affective association of herself with the other who is suffering and through personifying obstructions as worthy recipients of her offerings. This
cultivation of compassion allows her to attain non-attachment and clear awareness of her mind in its natural state. In this early sadhana, some aspects of the practice of giving away the body as food differ from later descriptions of the practice. There is no distinct element of separating the mind and body, usually referred to as “nam mkha’ sgo ‘byed” or “’pho ba” in Chod practices. Perhaps more notably, the recipients of the offering do not include Dud, the “Negative Forces” that become a central characteristic of Chod practices (as I discuss further in the next chapter).
Rather, the recipients in The Distinctive Eightfold Supplementary Section are primarily “harmdoers” (gnod byed), “obstructors” (bgegs), and those that have a need for a distinctive body part, such as one who suffers from an eye illness. In addition, the practice is aimed not at “cutting through the Negative Forces, or Dud,” but at pacifying male, female and naga negative influences (pho gdon, mo gdon and klu gdon).
While this early sadhana teaching does not include all of the elements that later become associated with the Chod practice traced back to Machik, it does illustrate the essential philosophical and ritual aspects of Chod body offering. The text not only echoes Prajhaparamita teachings by explicitly linking the offering of the body to the six perfections, but it also develops the dynamic of grounding one's aspirations for enlightenment in one's embodied experience. This elemental practice contains the pith of Chod praxis—the ritual support for cutting through attachment to the embodied self and
discriminative mental functioning to achieve liberation from suffering. In Chod, the paramita of the gift of the body is highlighted through the visualization of the body as a sign of abundance. This offering is presented in its most ideal and idealized form: one's own body, due to its inherent emptiness, is visualized as transformed into multifarious pleasing things to fulfill the desires of all sentient beings, while simultaneously providing the vehicle for cutting through attachment to self.
Echoing the Siksasamuccaya, the offering of the body in Chod is seen as the essence of Buddhist Dharma. In The Great Explanation collection of Machik's teachings, one of Machik's avatars, referred to as the “Mother” of Chod, states that “the condensed meaning of all Dharma, the root meaning of practice, is the meaning of offering and charity of the body.” As with other examples of dehadana in the Buddhist canon, the offering of the body in Chod exemplifies the renunciation of all attachments and the purification of all mental obscurations. The paramita of the offering of the body is explicitly foregrounded,
which provides the central motif for the ritual technology of Chod. But in Chod, the abstract ideal of dehadana is realized in practice: the practitioner visualizes giving her body in order immediately and actually to attain the merit and wisdom suggested in earlier gift of the body Buddhist narratives. In Chod, as in its Buddhist antecedents, attachment to the body is a metaphor for attachment to a belief in one's self as individual and permanent. Such a belief is also intimately interconnected with one's discrimination of oneself from other sentient beings. The offering of one's own body is a strategic antidote for a self-construct that fosters ego-clinging and results in mental afflictions and habitual behaviors that perpetuate one's suffering. The gift of the body in Chod also benefits the innumerable beings to which one makes the offering. The systematization of Chod thus provides practitioners with
ritual technologies for offering the body in order to help all beings attain enlightenment. By enacting the gift of the body within the context of visualization, the Chod system not only avoids the dangers of excessive acts of sacrifice, but also provides a ritual technology to emulate the bodhisattva example of offering one's body. In order fully to understand the significance of Chod praxis, it is crucial to appreciate that Chod is grounded in the core Mahayana principle of bodhisattva motivation. This bodhisattva motivation arises from
bodhicitta, the desire to attain enlightenment in order to help all other sentient beings themselves to overcome suffering. According to the teachings of Chod, the examples of bodhisattvas who have offered their own bodies are not to be taken as abstract ideals, but rather as concrete models for action. This revaluation can be seen in Machik's explanation of the special quality of the Chod system in The Great Explanation. Rather than gradually transforming oneself over many lifetimes, as in Pali and Mahayana Buddhist practice, the Chod practitioner “is" an enlightened being in the practice. Machik explains that the results of the practice “do not come to fruition at a much later time; rather [[[Chod]]] is an instruction for complete awakening in one life and in
one body." In the Chod body offering practice, merit is not understood as gradually accumulated through various bodies and lives but immediately generated, reflecting the Vajrayana orientation of Chod. As Machik emphasizes, once “the living body that is held so dear" is “cast away without a thought as food for demons, then fixation on the self of this interim body will be severed spontaneously. . . . Abiding within the state of emptiness, unborn cognizant awareness hidden in the basic sphere of the sky is unimpeded and automatically, innately free." Through Chod practice, the practitioner is able to manifest herself in innumerable bodies as an enlightened being through innumerable temporal and spatial realms, bringing relief from samsara to innumerable sentient beings.
All levels of Tibetan Buddhist Chod, whether Sutra or Tantra, whether outer, inner, or secret, whether generation or completion stage, are designed not only to cut through the habitual tendencies and afflictions of the mind, but also to accumulate wisdom and merit. While the Chod system is most remarkable in its singular technique for eradicating self-grasping, the motivation to cut self-grasping is a fundamental—and fundamentally—Buddhist one. This root motivation can be traced through various precedents for the visualization of the offering of one's own body to a gathering of sentient beings. As we have
seen, the combination of bodhisattva motivation and merit generation in the offering of the body is evident in some of the earliest Buddhist texts. Chod teachings often explicitly invoke such precedents. For example, Machik Labdron is recorded as remarking, “previously Buddha Sakyamuni actually gave his head, limbs, appendages and so forth, to whomever desired without hesitation. Are contemporary practitioners not aware of this precedent? Or do they . . . not appreciate the injunctions in the Buddha's speech?” Machik's rhetorical questions acknowledge the Indic antecedents and bodhisattva motivation of
Chod. Rather than transforming the body through the act of giving, as in the Pali and Mahayana models, in Chod the body is transformed in the act of giving. Thus, dehadana within the context of the Chod teachings is an act of self-transformation through the imagined sacrifice of one's body: a revolution of one's self grounded in the usefulness of one's embodiment.
The methodology and praxis of Chod represent a complex theorization of relationships among psychophysical constituents—including embodiment, consciousness and sub-conscious modes of being. Moreover, embodiment in Chod praxis cultivates and is cultivated by the reciprocal relation between an awareness of the impermanence of one's being and the development of wisdom and compassion. In dehadana practices associated with Tibetan Buddhist Chod, we see a dialectical
relationship between the uselessness and usefulness of the body. Chod teachings stress that mortal embodiment is the door to understanding human being. The habitual illusion of a unified self—independent and enduring—is often located in one's identification with a stable body. Yet it is exactly this paradox that generates the potency and efficacy of Chod praxis. As I will elaborate in the next chapter, the heuristic visualization and cutting of the body also involves the “cutting away” and “offering” of the mind to facilitate analytical-experiential awareness and the dismantling of ego-grasping. Further, one
cannot attain liberation from habitual grasping of the unified self by rejecting the body. The Chod practitioner requires a sustained attention to being in the body as a condition of becoming human. In order to cut through one's individual mode of self-grasping, it is important to understand the exact nature of the constructed self that is the subject and object of attachment, including its embodied gender identity and corresponding lived experiences.
Gift and Sacrifice in Chod
While Chod practices are obviously rooted in Buddhist philosophical discourses, the offering of the body in Chod can also speak to Western philosophical conversations. As a complement to considering Chod reinterpretations of the Buddhist praxes of gift of the body from a historical perspective, Chod can also be read in terms of contemporary theoretical ideas about “body,” “gift,” and “sacrifice.” Chod interweaves these three concerns in ways that provoke one to reconsider each of the terms in itself and in relation to one another. In Chod dehadana, the body is the ritual agent of giving and the gift itself; the body is also the material and the site of the ritual. The offered body can be seen as a commodity within a system of economic exchange, but the transmuted body also transcends systems of exchange.
Discussions theorizing “the gift” are usually dated to the 1924 publication of Marcel Mauss' Essai sur le don (The Gift). Mauss' study examines the customs and practices of exchange among what he labels “archaic” societies, referring to communities including the Northwest American Indians, Melanesians and Polynesians. This work was influential in illuminating how gift exchange contributes to social organization and function in these specific cultures, as
well as providing theoretical constructs for the study of other cultures, including our own. Mauss argues that common exchange of everything between clans, households and individuals is the oldest known economic system and provides foundations for law and justice; he argues for the “return to the ever-present bases of law, to its real fundamentals and to the very heart of normal social life,” predicated on the self-aware citizen who is neither too subjective, too insensitive or too realistic (1966, 67). In Mauss' view, the economy of gift giving emphasizes the interdependence of social networks rather than encouraging the alienation of individuals.
In contemporary discussions of gift giving in Asia, we see a variety of interpretations of the economy of the gift. Maria Heim (2004) provides a survey of South Asian sources from roughly the eleventh to thirteenth centuries, including Hindu Dharmasastra anthologies (nibandhas) and Jain and Buddhist compendia (sangaha), emphasizing the social norms and moral duty of giving. Heim argues that the Indic concept of dana differs from Mauss' understanding of don, since the giver of dana does not expect reciprocity or obligation. As Heim notes in her discussion of the work of Thomas Trautmann (1981), although dana might not participate in an economy of mundane reciprocity, the act of offering suggests an expectation of gaining spiritual merit.
A different perspective on the expectation of supramundane reciprocity is argued by Kwangsu Lee, who provides a historical study of the intertwined practices of merit-making and donation within Buddhist communities in India from time of the Buddha. According to Lee, “[b]y c. 600 BC donations appear to have increasingly formed an important part of the new emergent economic order which was marked by remarkable technological growth, surplus production and a widening gap between the producers and the consumers. . . . The widespread notion of earning merit through donation was due mainly to the adoption of the Buddhist faith by Asoka” (1998, 78). In contrast to Heim, Lee emphasizes the role of gift giving in a developing market economy. Both Heim and Lee stress the ways in which the gift functions as a “commodity” in a system of exchange.
In Makransky's study of tantric practices, he also describes an economy in which an offering (puja) is given with the expectation of spiritual exchange: “With the development of tantric forms of Mahayana practice, puja constituted both a material offering ritual and a structured meditative visualization of boundless offerings to Buddhist deities whose presence was invoked and from whom blessings in the form of light and nectar were received. All such elements of Indian Buddhist practice were incorporated into Tibetan Buddhist offering practice and literature” (Makransky 1996, 313-14). Here the “guests” of the practitioner are sacred beings from whom the practitioner could “receive” a reciprocal gift: for example, karmic merit or blessings in the form of light
and nectar. In contrast, through Chod dehadana, one does not receive positive merit, but rather pays karmic debts. In most Chod sadhana, the body is sacrificed not to superior or supranatural beings, but to one's karmic debtors and harmdoers, as well as to one's cohort (parents, friends, teachers). A cultural theory of economy based on usefulness might help us to understand Chod dehadana, which uses the gift to revalue embodiment as a productive condition. On the other hand, the praxis of Chod resists the reification of the self as an object of economic value and exchange. As in the problem of the
usefulness and uselessness of the body, Chod praxis disrupts the existential and social categories of “productive” and “non-productive.” This dialectic between productive and non-productive in Chod gift of the body practice has intriguing parallels with Jacques Derrida's theories of the gift. For Derrida, if the gift is truly to be a gift, it interrupts or suspends economic exchange. It defies, or even denies, reciprocity or return. In order to be a gift, it must simultaneously be contextualized by economics while sublating economics: it must be “aneconomic” (Derrida 1992, 7). For Derrida, the gift qua given
gift is impossible: “If there is gift, the given of the gift (that which one gives, that which is given, the gift as given thing or as act of donation) must not come back to the giving (let us not already say to the subject, to the donor). It must not circulate, it must not be exchanged, it must not in any case be exhausted, as a gift, by the process of exchange, by the movement of circulation of the circle in the form of return to the point of departure” (1992, 7; emphasis in original). Within a Western philosophical context, Derrida writes of giving the gift of infinite love to finite others, engaging the
awareness of one's own finite self as an ethical actor: “the mortal thus deduced is someone whose very responsibility requires that he concern himself not only with an objective Good but with a gift of infinite love, a goodness that is forgetful of itself. There is thus a structural disproportion or dissymmetry between the finite and responsible mortal on the one hand and the goodness of the infinite gift on the other hand” (1995, 51). Derrida has called this gift of infinite love without expectation of reciprocity an “impossible gift.” This impossible gift reveals a rift within the system of market economies: it rejects common exchange valuation and commodification. It exists outside the perimeter of the cycle of economic exchange, sidestepping concerns of debt and obligation, reciprocity and return.
The gift of the body in Chod is another kind of impossible gift: as I explained above, it is only possible through visualization and narration. The body is conceived as an inexhaustible resource, perpetually renewable through one's bond to samsara, even as an enlightened being. The “gift” part of the “gift of the body” in Chod is what Derrida might refer to as a “pure gift,” that is, one that does not demand mundane reciprocity (even when offered in a group setting). It
does not even demand supramundane reciprocity; rather, it is a transformative inner act of self-making that imbues the self with a deeper moral sense and a more profound understanding of one's embodiment. Dana-paramita also might be considered a practice of pure gift giving in the context of moral training. The offering is a transformative gift within an economy dictated by the law of karma (including the possibility for transformation through the “payment” of “karmic debts” to others) and the corresponding capacity for yogic purification. On the other hand, Chod dehadana subverts the system of exchange that is constitutive of more conventional economies. This transformation of the gift of the body, in keeping with the bodhisattva vow and the project to become a bodhisattva or a buddha oneself, occurs through remembering and practicing one's responsibility to others—that is, in practicing compassion and loving-kindness.
In Chod, the internalized act of offering the body as a gift can also be seen as a sacrifice. Following the work of Henri Hubert and Marcel Mauss (1964), the agent in such an offering can be simultaneously identified with and distinguished from the victim. Hubert and Mauss' study of sacrifice is grounded in their interpretation of the Vedic soma sacrifice as a transformative act that desacralizes and resacralizes the subject (the one who realizes the benefits), the object/victim (without which/whom there could be no transformative effect), as well as the object/recipient of the offering (such as a deity who is sustained through the offering). However, it might also be considered that a transformative act is impossible in this context. The success of the Vedic sacrifice was determined by the success of sustaining the divine and maintaining order in the cosmos, so rather than transforming the subject and community, this type of sacrifice serves to perpetuate the status quo.
In contrast, Chod sacrifice is closely akin to “Dharma-sacrifice,” as expressed in the Vimalakirtinirdesa. Vimalakirti's teaching explicitly contrasts “Dharma-sacrifice” to other types of sacrifice and offerings, including Vedic sacrifices. Each of the elements of a Dharma¬sacrifice reflects a key Buddhist principle: great compassion and loving-kindness; the perfection of generosity (dana-paramita) and the other five perfections; and meditation on the three signs of emptiness, signlessness and wishlessness. According to this discourse, not only is the bodhisattva exemplary because of “his extreme
sacrifice," he is “worthy of offerings from all people, including the gods" (Thurman 1998, 40). This suggests that the Dharma sacrifice is situated within an economy of exchange, with the offerings of the bodhisattva being “worthy" of reciprocity. However, the text subsequently describes an offering made by Vimalakirti: upon relunctantly accepting a string of pearls offered to him by a householder, Vimalakirti distributes half of the pearls to the poor of the city and offers the other half to the Tathagata Dusprasaha, who emanates another universe which is manifest to the audience. Vimalakirti then makes a
speech which resonates with the observations of Derrida: “‘The giver who makes gifts to the lowliest poor of the city, considering them as worthy of offering as the Tathagata himself, the giver who gives without any discrimination, impartially, with no expectation of reward, and with great love—this giver, I say, totally fulfills the Dharma-sacrifice'" (1998, 41). As in Chod dehadana, a totally fulfilled Dharma-sacrifice is one that is “pure," without an expectation of reciprocity from its recipient.
Based on the The Great Explanation, some generalizations may be drawn regarding the strategies through which Chod refigures the gift of offering the body in three productive ways. First, as the sacrifice of the body is an internalized act in Chod, practitioners are able to avoid immoderate behavior while cultivating wisdom and compassion. Second, unlike traditional representations of dehadana wherein the gift of the body is performed by a highly-realized bodhisattva, in the Chod system the offering can be made by any practitioner since it is made through a contemplative visualization. Maximum merit for this
gift is determined not by the quality of the recipients, but by their virtual quantity and diversity. Chod praxis thus transvalues the attainments of the giver and the suitability of the recipient through the visualized offering of the body. Through identification with an enlightened being, the practitioner attains the capacity of a bodhisattva whose every act is characterized by great compassion, means and wisdom. As the practitioner’s body is transformed
into an abundance that completely fulfills the needs and desires of all sentient beings, all karmic debts are repaid, technically freeing the practitioner from the cyclic existence of samsara. Explicitly invoking earlier dehadana narratives, Chod provides techniques through which practitioners can alleviate the suffering of others in order that they may no longer find it necessary to commit actions that result in karmic demerit. Chod also allows the practitioner to make a sacrifice, in Vimalakirti’s terms, without any discrimination, impartiality, or expectation of reward.
Finally, rather than producing a sharp distinction between donors and religious experts, Chod rituals involve both lay and monastic Buddhists. In the context of Chod, dana is primarily conceived of as a transformation of the practitioner (lay or ordained), rather than a gift from non- renunciant to renunciants. The act of renunciation is thus also transvalued in Chod. Rather than being manifested through the tradition of renunciants dependent on gifts
from the lay community, renunciation in Chod occurs through the act of renouncing one’s own body. The success of the offering is also functionally independent of the response of a worthy recipient, so important in earlier discussions of dana. In this act of renunciation through offering of the body, giver and gift are explicitly identified. Since both the giver and the gift are consumed by the recipient, the offering of the body incorporates and is
incorporated by the other. This process thus encapsulates the attainment of non-attachment and the transcendence of self-other dualities. The transformation of the practitioner's self-identity through visualization thereby instills a sense of responsibility to others. Drawing on canonical representations of dehadana, Chod reconfigures and revalues such practices, and thereby makes offerings of the body accessible to all practitioners and expressive of an array of Buddhist teachings.