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The Bardo States

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The Bardo States


Central to the Tibetan concept of after-life existence is the Bardo . The word means literally "intermediate state". According to Tibetan esotericists, steeped as they are in Buddhist learning, all

existence is nothing but a series of alternating transitional states, or "bardos ". Waking, sleeping , meditating , dying, wandering in the spirit world , reincarnating; all these are bardos . Generally however, the term is used to


designate the period from physical death to physical rebirth . And, just as waking existence can be divided into bardos (such as waking and sleeping ), so can the afterlife existence.


Basically then, the Bardo Thodel describes a distinct sequence of states (bardos ) through which the individual passes through between death and rebirth . There are three distinct stages , which are as follows:


The Chikai Bardo (orhChi-kha Bar-do – a number of Tibetan letters are silent ) or Intermediate period of the moment of death . This includes the process of dying; and the dissolution of the elements (earth , water, fire, and


air) that make up the physical body . During this period one experiences the "Clear Light ", one's own innate Buddha-nature . This is therefore a very favourable moment for the attainment of Enlightenment and liberation from the wheel of rebirth .

The Tibetan account of the Chikai Bardo shows striking parallels with the so-called "Near Death Experience" of people who have died, experienced themselves floating out of their bodies , and so on, and then been revived.

The Chonyid Bardo (or Chos-nidd Bar-do) or Intermediate period of visions of deities. This refers to the state where one experiences visions of deities , Heaven and Hell , Judgment, and so on. Modern writers have been struck by the parallels with the psychedelic and psychotic states, and experiences of "astral travelling" and the "astral plane"

The Sidpa Bardo (or Srid-pa'i Bar-do) or Inter-mediate period of rebirth. During this bardo the consciousness descends and chooses a new body to be born into. (Buddhists do not accept the existence of a single continuing entity which "reincarnates", and refer instead to the "rebirth " of the consciousness -stream in a new body ).

The number of days given in the Tibetan Book of the Dead – 49 – is obviously symbolic , although the Tibetans themselves, like all people (including Westerners) who are immersed in a particular religious tradition , take it in a literal context.


Source

www.spiritofmaat.com