Heart Drops Of Dharmakaya: Dzogchen Practice Of... «QUICK – PLAYBOOK»
Shardza Tashi Gyaltsen (1859–1935) was a prolific scholar and practitioner who lived much of his life in solitary retreat. He is perhaps most famous for attaining the ( jalus ) upon his death, a phenomenon in which a master's physical form dissolves into light, leaving behind only hair and nails. This text is considered his distilled wisdom, preserved and brought to the West through the commentary of Lopon Tenzin Namdak , the most senior teacher of the Bön tradition today. The Four Pillars of Practice
These involve physical and mental purifications, such as visualizing oneself as a flaming blue dorje to cleanse the body and dispel desire. Heart Drops Of Dharmakaya: Dzogchen Practice Of...
This practice focuses on "cutting through" the layers of conceptual thought to directly recognize the naked, natural state of awareness. Shardza Tashi Gyaltsen (1859–1935) was a prolific scholar
The manual is structured into four distinct sections, guiding the practitioner from foundational concepts to the most advanced esoteric techniques: The Four Pillars of Practice These involve physical
These practices deal with the transition of consciousness during death and the "intermediate states" (bardos), teaching the practitioner how to maintain awareness when the physical body fails. Core Philosophy: The Natural State
The Luminous Path: Exploring the Heart Drops of Dharmakaya In the high-altitude landscape of Tibetan spirituality, few texts are as revered within the Bön tradition as Heart Drops of Dharmakaya ( Kunzang Nying-tig ). Written by the 19th-century master , this manual serves as a definitive guide to Dzogchen —the "Great Perfection"—which posits that enlightenment is not a distant goal to be reached through arduous effort, but a natural state of mind already present in every being. The Author and the Rainbow Body