MAHAMUDRA
LINEAGE
DRIKUNG
KAGYU
The
Three Streams of Lineage into Drikung Kagyu
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The
Lineage Transmission
(Three
Streams of Lineage into One)
A. The
Profound Action
Lineage
Maitreya Buddha
to
Asanga to Vasubandhu to Arya Namdrole to Namdrol De to Chokgi De to
Dulwai
De to Khenpo Yangdak Namnangze to Sengha Badra to Rinchen Zangpo to
Rata
Prajnapala to Gunamaitra to Atisha to Gampopa to Phagmo Drupa to
Lord Jigten Sumgon (founder of Drikung Kagyu) until present day
lineage
holders Chokyi Jugne (Present Chuntsang Rinpoche) and Thinley Lhundrub
(Present Chetsang Rinpoche).
B. The
Profound View
Lineage
Arya Nagarjuna to
Chandrakirti
to Rigpe Khuchuk to Elder Kusali to Younger Kusali to Atisha to Gampopa
to Phagmo Drupa to Lord Jigten Sumgon (founder of Drikung Kagyu) until
present day lineage holders Chokyi Jugne (Present Chuntsang
Rinpoche)
and Thinley Lhundrub (Present Chetsang Rinpoche).
C. The
Profound
Blessing Meditation Experience Lineage
Buddha Vajradhara
to
Siddha Tilopa to Siddha Naropa to Marpa Lotsawa to Jetsun Milarepa to
Lharje
Gampopa (Dhagpo) to Phagmo Drupa to Lord Jigten Sumgon (founder of
Drikung
Kagyu) until present day lineage holders Chokyi Jugne (Present
Chuntsang
Rinpoche) and Thinley Lhundrub (Present Chetsang Rinpoche). See table
on your left .............
A
Brief Introduction
Drikung
Kagyu Lineage
The Drikung
Kagyu Lineage
is one of the Kagyu lineages which was founded 852 years ago, by the
great
spiritual master, Kyobpa Jigten Sumgon. This lineage directly came from
Buddha Shakyamuni and the primordial Buddha, VajraDhara. All their
precious
Dharma teachings came to Gampopa from three lineages, through fully
enlightened
masters. The first lineage was called the Magnificent Blessing
Realization
lineage. From VajraDhara, it was passed on to Tilopa, from Tilopa to
Naropa,
from Naropa to Marpa, from Marpa to Milarepa, and then from Milarepa to
Gampopa. The second lineage was called the lineage of Profound View. It
came from Buddha Shakyamuni, and it was passed to Nagarjuna, then to
Chandrakirti
and so forth, on to Atisha, and then from Atisha to Gampopa. The third
lineage was called the lineage of the Most Excellent Practice. It came
from Buddha Shakyamuni to Manjushri, from Manjushri to Maitreya, from
Maitreya
to Asanga and so forth, on to Atisha, and then from Atisha to Gampopa.
Gampopa received profound teachings, secret oral transmissions,
blessings,
and so forth of all these three lineages. Then all these teachings were
given to PhagmoDrupa by Gampopa. Although Kagyu came from the same
root,
at that time the Kagyu lineage was divided into several different
branches,
each carrying the complete teachings and enlightened blessings. Like
the
wish-fulfilling tree, which comes from the same root, but is divided
into
different branches, each giving many wonderful blossoms and fruits.
Although
PhagmoDrupa had hundreds of thousands of disciples, Lord Jigten Sumgon
was one of his closest and chief disciples. PhagmoDrupa prophesied that
the teachings and blessings would be carried on by a Bodhisattva,
(Jigten
Sumgon), who already attained the ten Bhumis. Jigten Sumgon received
the
complete teachings, secret oral transmissions, explanations and
initiations,
and enlightened realization blessings, and so forth from PhagmoDrupa.
Jigten
Sumgon gave all the complete teachings, including the six Yogas of
Naropa,
to his chief disciple, Gurawa Tsultrim Dorje. All these enlightened
energies,
blessings and teachings have been handed down through the great
spiritual
masters to the present 37th and 36th lineage holders, His Holiness
Drikung
Kyabgon Chetsang Rinpoche and His Holiness Drikung Kyabgon Chungtsang.
These are among the most precious spiritual masters in the Drikung
Kagyu
lineage and the direct lineage holder of Jigten Sumgon. Among his
disciples,
Lord Jigten Sumgon prophesied again and again, "In the future my
teachings
will flourish by the two Bodhisattvas, who are like the sun and the
moon,
through their compassion and wisdom." His Holiness Chetsang Rinpoche is
like the sun. He is the emanation of Chenrezig, the compassionate
deity.
His Holiness Chungtsang Rinpoche is like the moon. He is the emanation
of Manjushri, the wisdom deity.
The Drikung is
known
for the Great Phowa Practice and great meditators. There are many
stories
about those who have attained enlightenment in one lifetime. In the
1980's
the great Drikung yogis who taught in Tibet and India were Pachung
Rinpoche
and Khyunga Rinpoche, and other great teachers. Khyunga Rinpoche has
attained
the realization of the Yidam. He saw Chakrasamvara face to face in one
life time. He taught many three year retreats, including the six Yogas
of Naropa. During that time there were many wonderful inspirations
given
by these great retreat masters. Even in these days, there are great
Drikung
Meditation Masters such as Garchen Rinpoche, Tenzin Nyima Rinpoche, and
Druwang Rinpoche. Druwang Rinpoche has highly realized Mahamudra and is
known for going to town and singing spiritual songs like Milarepa.
Sometimes
he offers a song of inner spiritual realization to His Holiness the
Dalai
Lama and their Holinesses the Drikung Kyabgons, and other high lamas.
There
are many great teachers who are in retreat in Tibet and India attaining
their goals. His Holiness Kyabgon Chetsang Rinpoche has established the
Drikung Kagyu Institute, JangChubling, in Dehra Dun, Northern India.
There
are many monks attending school there and many engaged in the three
year
retreat. His Holiness travels to the many Drikung monasteries in
Ladakh,
India and Nepal, giving extensive teachings to monks, nuns, and lay
people
from the east and from the west.
Five-fold Profound Path of Mahamudra
Of the Glorious Drigung Kagyu Lineage
In the Kagyu tradition of Tibetan Buddhism, Mahamudra
or the “Great Seal” is
considered the essence of the Buddhas’ teachings. It is also sometimes
referred to as the highest and most profound teaching of the Buddhas.
This Mahamudra is sometimes compared to Dzogchen (“Great Completeness”)
– the essence of the Buddhas’ teachings according to the Nyingma
lineage. Not surprisingly, there have been a number of figures in the
history of Tibetan Buddhism who taught the synthesis or union of
Mahamudra and Dzogchen. Others mastered both but taught them separately
to different students as they saw fit. There are yet others – in the
majority – who focused on mastering either Dzogchen or Mahamudra.
The Mahamudra lineage can be traced according to the “far-lineage” as
well as the “near-lineage.” The “far-lineage” is traced from the current
holders of this profound lineage back all the way to the historical
Buddha Shakyamuni. The “near-lineage” on the other hand is traced from
the current holders back to the Indian mahasiddhas such as Saraha,
Maitripa, Tilopa and Naropa who received Mahamudra teachings directly
from Buddha Vajradhara. However, it should be pointed out that although
these Indian mahasiddhas received Mahamudra teachings directly from
Buddha Vajradhara (and hence is part of the “near-lineage”) they are
also holders of the “far-lineage” as they also received Mahamudra
teachings from human teachers who were holders of this “far-lineage.”
Hence, the Mahamudra lineages that are currently held by the various
Kagyu lineages are both of the “far” as well as “near” lineages. It
should be pointed out that Mahamudra lineages are also found in the
Gelug tradition as several past masters of this tradition also received
Mahamudra instructions from holders of the Mahamudra in the Kagyu
tradition. This lineage of the Mahamudra is known as the “Gelug-Kagyu
Mahamudra” lineage – sometimes translated as the “Gelug Whispered
Mahamudra” or he “Gelug Oral Mahamudra” lineage.
Most of Kagyu Mahamudra lineages stem from the Mahamudra teachings that
were given by Gampopa (1079-1153) to his students. Gampopa himself
received Mahamudra from his root-teacher Milarepa (1052-1135) who in
turn received it from his root-teacher Marpa (1012-1096). Marpa was a
Tibetan who traveled to India and Nepal and received many teachings from
the Indian mahasiddhas – the most important being Naropa and Maitripa
who transmitted to Marpa the complete Mahamudra ground, path and
fruition. Gampopa himself combined the profound teachings of Mahamudra
with the graduated approach of practice as taught by the Kadam
tradition. The Indian pandit Atisha founded the Kadam tradition in
Tibet. Gampopa was a monk in the Kadam tradition before he became
Milarepa’s disciple. Although there are many scholarly debates in
Tibetan Buddhist history over the status and types of Mahamudra, Gampopa
seemed to have mainly advocated two possible approaches to Mahamudra.
According to Gampopa, Mahamudra can be approached via the way of sutra
as well as via the way of tantra. Hence, there is sutra-Mahamudra and
tantra-Mahamudra. Sometimes it is said that Gampopa also taught a third
approach to Mahamudra which is neither sutra-based nor tantra-based.
The Kagyu Lineage Masters – Tilopa, Naropa and Marpa
From Gampopa onwards, many different Mahamudra lineages began to
crystallize according to the different styles of Mahamudra taught by
Gampopa and his spiritual descendents. Some of the Mahamudra traditions
that can be traced back to Gampopa or his descendents are the tradition
of “Simultaneous Production and Union,” the “Six Equal Tastes,” the
“Four Letters” and the “Fivefold Profound Path.” These traditions are
still upheld by the four surviving Kagyu lineages (Karma, Taglung,
Drukpa and Drigung Kagyu).
In the Drigung Kagyu, the main Mahamudra system is that known as the
“Fivefold Profound Path of Mahamudra” or also known as the “Possessing
Five.” Although Gampopa himself also taught this particular approach of
Mahamudra, its name was given by his successor Phagmo Drupa (1110-1170)
who was the root-teacher of the founder of the Drigung Kagyu, Kyobpa
Jigten Sumgon. Although this system of the Five-fold Profound Path is
chiefly held by Drigung Kagyupas, Phagmo Drupa himself also authored a
text on this system known as “Verses on the Fivefold Path.” Masters of
Trophu Kagyu (this particular Kagyu lineage no longer survive as an
independent lineage) and Taglung Kagyu have also written on this
particular system. Gyalwa Yang Gonpa, a teacher of the Drukpa Kagyu
wrote the “Drop of Nectar: the Fivefold Path.” The Omniscient Pema Garpo
of the Drukpa Kagyu also wrote about this system in his “Kernel of
Mind.” Situ Chokyi Jungne also wrote extensive commentaries on the
Fivefold Profound Path. In his “Preface” to Khenpo Konchog Gyaltsen
Rinpoche’s book “The Garland of Mahamudra Practices,” (a translation of
Gyalwang Kunga Rinchen’s [1475-1527] “Clarifying the Jewel Rosary of the
Fivefold Profound Path.”) His Holiness Drigung Kyabgon Chetsang Rinpoche
points out that these days those who rely on this system mostly follow
the commentaries given by Drigung Dharmakirti. Many other Drigung Kagyu
teachers of the past also wrote extensive commentaries on this system of
the Mahamudra. It goes without saying that Kyobpa Rinpoche himself also
wrote several texts and many songs on this subject.
Dharma Lord Gampopa
According to this system then, the five “folds” of this profound path
of Mahamudra are
1) bodhicitta – the altruistic intention of liberating all sentient
beings from samsara,
2) yidam – practice of visualizing oneself as a supremely enlightened
being,
3) guru-yoga – seeking union with the wisdom-mind of the Teacher,
4) mahamudra – actual engagement of Mahamudra and finally,
5) dedication – perfect dedication of one’s virtues.
Before one can begin to engage in the practices laid out in this system,
one first needs to focus on the foundational practices. Practice of the
first “fold” assumes the prior completion of what is known as the
“foundational practices” (Tib. ngondro). These foundational practices
are divided into the outer and inner. The outer foundational practices
refer to the “Four Thoughts that Turn the Mind” taught by Gampopa. These
are establishing in one’s mental-continuum the four realizations of
1) the good fortune of obtaining a precious human birth,
2) the universality of impermanence,
3) the infallible workings of cause and effect and
4) the nature of samsara as unsatisfactoriness.
After a firm foundation on these four thoughts has been established in
one’s
mental-continuum, one can begin to engage in the inner foundational
practices. These are:
1) going for refuge which confirms and establishes one’s commitment
to the
Triple Jewel,
2) Vajrasattva purification practice for the eradication of one’s
negative
karma and karmic imprints,
3) mandala-offering for the profound accumulation of merit necessary for
attainment of complete Buddhahood and
4) guru-yoga for the inspiration-blessings of the root and lineage
teachers.
Only after these practices have been “completed” (100,000 practices of
each of the four) does one properly begin the first fold of the
Five-fold Profound Path
– bodhicitta.
Regarding bodhicitta, Kyobpa Rinpoche sang in one of his many
vajra-songs,
“If the steed of love and compassion
Does not run for the benefit of others,
It will not be rewarded in the assembly of gods and humans.
Attend therefore to the preliminaries.”
Drigung Kyobpa Rinpoche
Bodhicitta is briefly defined as the “altruistic intention to free
all sentient beings from samsara.” Very often bodhicitta is confused
with compassion. Although compassion is one of the most important
factors in the generation of bodhicitta, it is not in itself bodhicitta.
The arousal of bodhicitta begins by first attending to the generation of
loving-kindness for all sentient beings. It is said that loving-kindness
is the feeling that one gets when one sees a newborn child. When we see
a small child, we often automatically think kind and friendly thoughts
towards the child. We spontaneously wish that the child be safe, happy
and protected from all harm. There is nothing as soothing as the sight
of a soundly sleeping child. It is that warmth and unconditional love
that we are trying to generate for all sentient beings. We try to regard
all sentient beings as our own children whom we love unconditionally. We
pray for their well-being, safety and protection and are willing to give
up our own lives for their sakes. When we are able to feel this way
towards all sentient beings, we will naturally be able to generate
compassion. Compassion is the feeling of wanting to free others from
suffering and the causes of suffering. It is the feeling that we get
when we encounter someone suffering from a terrible disease or
undergoing intense physical and emotional pain. We want to be able to
help and to ease that pain; that suffering. Having thus generated and
cultivated both loving-kindness and compassion, we can then arrive at
the point when we are ready to truly generate bodhicitta.
As defined earlier, bodhicitta is the “altruistic intention to free all
sentient beings from samsara.” Realizing that sentient beings are
completely under the power of samsaric suffering, we come home to the
powerful recognition that only by arriving at the state of complete
Buddhahood can samsaric suffering be conquered once and for all.
Although there are many ways to ease the suffering of sentient beings,
they are all temporary and non-final. Only by completely uprooting the
cause of suffering are we then thoroughly free from suffering. And this
is the state of ultimate liberation; of complete Buddhahood. This
knowledge – the knowledge of the faults, cause, end of and path to the
end of samsara is wisdom. Hence, bodhicitta is the resolve that arises
from loving-kindness and compassion on the one hand and wisdom on the
other hand. When these two aspects come together, bodhicitta is
generated.
The second section of the Five-fold Profound Path is the practice of
Yidam. Yidam practice refers to the generation and completion practices
of the highest yoga tantra and in this particular case in the highest
yoga tantra system of the Chakrasamvara cycle of teachings. Although the
principal yidam of Marpa was Hevajra, his teacher Naropa predicted that
Marpa’s lineage would eventually rely on Chakrasamvara as their main
yidam. Hence, it was the practice of Chakrasamvara that Marpa
transmitted to his main disciple, Milarepa.
Chakrasamvara
There are many different forms of Chakrasamvara appearing with different
number of faces, hands, and number of surrounding retinues. In the
Drigung Kagyu lineage, the most popular and common Chakrasamvara deity
practice is in the form of the Five-deity Chakrasamvara. The Five-deity
Chakrasamvara includes the central deity of the two-armed, single-faced
male Chakrasamvara deity in union with the female Vajravarahi deity
(these two in union are taken as a single deity) and four surrounding
dakinis in the four directions.
Yidam practice is a very special tantric practice in which one
transforms one’s normal, samsaric experience of reality into an
extraordinary experience of the true state of all phenomena. While the
teachings of the sutra-level consider ignorance as the root cause of
samsaric existence, the tantric teachings identify the ordinary
appearances as the root cause of samsara. The practice of Yidam is a
special and profound method to quickly transform ordinary appearances
into enlightened appearances. To be more accurate, this practice
uncovers the actual state of appearances and reveal them to be pure and
empty unceasingly. Yidam practice does not make ordinary appearances
into something they are not – pure and empty of inherent existence.
Rather, it uncovers the purity and emptiness that have always been there
but obscured and unseen. Due to the tantric nature of these teachings,
it is best that one receive the details of these teachings directly from
an authentic teacher of the lineage. It is hoped that this brief
description of Yidam practice as the second section of the Five-fold
Profound Path of Mahamudra will encourage the reader to seek out these
profound teachings from a valid and reliable teacher of the lineage when
the time and conditions are right. Kyobpa Rinpoche sang,
“If one's body, the King of Deities
is not stabilized on this Unchanging Ground,
The retinue of dakinis will not assemble.
Be sure, therefore, of your body as the yidam.”
The third section of the Five-fold Path is the practice of Guru-yoga or
the practice of attaining union with the wisdom mind of the Teacher
(guru). There are many types of teachers – our parents as our first
teachers, our grade school teachers who taught us to read and write,
teachers in the secular arts and sciences, spiritual teachers who gave
us the Refuge vows, those who gave us the lay or monastic vows, the
Bodhisattva-vow preceptors, Vajra-teachers who conferred tantric
empowerments on us and finally those teachers who introduced to us the
nature of our mind. In a sense, the Teacher referred to here in the
practice of guru-yoga is all of them; all of these teachers. However, it
is not so much a practice directed at a particular individual or person
whom we call our “Teacher” but the basic wisdom-mind within all these
teachers who have taught us. By having confidence in and relying on this
basic wisdom-mind that we locate within our teachers (and in particular
in the teacher(s) who introduced to us the nature of our mind), we
strive to recognize this same wisdom-mind that is inherent in us. In
particular, we need to rely on an authentic and experienced teacher who
has him/herself recognized his/her own nature of mind and can help us
recognize ours as well. The practice of Guru-yoga is extolled in the
tradition as the most direct and profound method to the quick
recognition of the nature of mind. Many Kagyu teachers have taught that
the quickest and surest way to recognize the nature of mind is a mind
filled with devotion. When devotion is present, recognition of the
nature of mind is not far. Kyobpa Rinpoche sang,
If on the Guru, the Snow Mountain of the Four Kayas,
The Sun of Devotion fails to shine,
The Stream of Blessings will not flow.
Attend, therefore, to this mind of devotion.
The Guru-yoga practiced as the third section of the Fivefold Profound
Path is slightly more involved and detailed than the Guru-yoga practice
found in the set of practices found in the inner foundational practices
(ngondro). Specifically, the Four-kayas Guru-yoga” is practiced here.
These four kayas or “bodies” refer to the Emanational body (Skt.
nirmanakaya, Tib. trul-ku), Enjoyment body (Skt. sambhogakaya, Tib.
long-ku), Reality body (Skt. dharmakaya, Tib. cho-ku) and Nature body
(Skt. svabhavikakaya, Tib. ngowo nyi-ku) which is the inseparability of
the first three bodies. Within this context, the first three bodies are
considered relative truth and the fourth body is ultimate truth. A
practitioner will first practice the Emanational body Guru-yoga practice
where the Teacher is visualized in the form of Shakyamuni Buddha
(herself in her ordinary form). She then meditates on the Teacher on the
Enjoyment body level as Vairochana (and herself as the yidam) Buddha and
for the Reality body in the form of Vajradhara Buddha. Finally, when she
arrives at the Nature body level of guru yoga practice, the Teacher
meditated on without any form, color, name or shape.
The current Drigung Kyabgon Chetsang Rinpoche writes:
“Externally are the three bodies of the Teacher, the relative truth
(On the level of) absolute truth the self-arising luminosity of the
teacher
Is the nature of one’s own mind.
The Teacher, one’s own mind and the Buddha are inseparable
Appearing as the manifestation of the Nature body.”
When the mind has become ripened through Guru-yoga practice, one finally
arrives at the heart of the Five-fold Profound Path – the actual
practice of Mahamudra itself.
Regarding the Mahamudra, again, the present Drigung
Kyabgon Chetsang Rinpoche writes:
“Sustain the fresh, non-arising mind without delusion.
In this uncontrived, natural state
Completely avoid the fabrication of meditation and meditator
The non-meditating, undisturbed, ordinary mind
Remains non-attached and non-separated
Free from hope and fear, grasping and letting-go
Rejection and acceptance, meditation and post-meditation.”
We will not be discussing this topic any further as Mahamudra is best
learnt directly from a living teacher. However, there is a link to a
simple but yet profound teaching on Mahamudra given spontaneously by one
of the most important Drigung Kagyu lineage masters alive today – His
Eminence Garchen Rinpoche who is the main Drigung Kagyu Rinpoche in
Eastern Tibet.
Finally, there is the section on Dedication as the fifth section of the
Fivefold Profound Path. Dedication is one of the most distinctive
features of Buddhist practice – a practice that is done at the end of
all practices be it of the hinayana or mahayana (both sutra and tantra
levels). By dedicating the merit of one’s practice for the welfare of
all sentient beings’ complete liberation from all suffering and the
causes of suffering one ensures that one’s practice remains pure and
beneficial. As with most practices, there are relative and ultimate
aspects (and it is important to remember that one does not privilege one
aspect over the other but rather perfectly practice on both levels as
they are in reality inseparable). On the ultimate level of Dedication –
Dedication in the context of Mahamudra – one dedicates the merit with
the understanding of the emptiness of oneself, the merit dedicated and
the dedication itself; the threefold emptiness.
The Five-fold Profound Path of Mahamudra is a complete path to the
attainment of perfect enlightenment within one lifetime. Many
practitioners in the past have taken this Path and arrived at the other
shore of complete peace. At the present, there are also many sincere
practitioners of this Path practicing under the expert and compassionate
guidance of the lineage teachers of the Drigung Kagyu lineage. There are
also many other sincere practitioners of Mahamudra tradition of Gampopa
following the different Mahamudra traditions that have developed out of
Gampopa’s basic Mahamudra system. Furthermore, aside from the purely
Kagyu Mahamudra lineages, there is also the Mahamudra practice lineage
within the Gelug lineage. Mention should also be made of the “union” of
Mahamudra and Dzogchen practices derived from some lineage masters of
the Kagyu and Nyingma.
“In order that all beings who have been my mothers
May quickly be liberated from samsara and
May attain perfect enlightenment,
I dedicate all merit accumulated by
Myself, and all ordinary and enlightened beings in the three times
As well as the merit of the innately pure Buddha-nature.”
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DEDICATION
Dedicated
to the impeccable perpetuation of the glorious Kagyu lineage and to the
success
of its leaders and followers in accomplishing their commitment to
bring
all sentient beings to the state of enlightened awareness.
THE
FOUR LIMITLESS THOUGHTS
May
all
mother sentient beings, boundless as the space, have happiness and the
causes of happiness.
May
they
be liberated from suffering and the causes of suffering.
May
they
never be separated from the happiness which is free from sorrow.
May
they
rest in equanimity, free from attachment and aversion.
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