Three modes of liberation: Difference between revisions
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The '''three modes of liberation''' describe degrees of increasing naturalness in the liberation of thoughts and emotions through the mastery of [[Dzogchen]] practice. | The '''three modes of liberation''' (Tib. གྲོལ་ལུགས་གསུམ་, [[Wyl.]] ''grol lugs gsum'') describe degrees of increasing naturalness in the liberation of thoughts and emotions through the mastery of [[Dzogchen]] practice. | ||
The three modes of liberation that are specifically mentioned are: | The three modes of liberation that are specifically mentioned are: | ||
#Liberation through recognition of thoughts (Tib. ཤར་གྲོལ་ , Wyl. ''shar grol''), like recognizing an old friend in a crowd | #Liberation through recognition of thoughts (Tib. ཤར་གྲོལ་, Wyl. ''shar grol''), like recognizing an old friend in a crowd | ||
#Liberation where the thought frees itself, or self-liberation (Tib. རང་གྲོལ་ , Wyl. ''rang grol''), like a snake uncoiling and unwinding its own knots | #Liberation where the thought frees itself, or self-liberation (Tib. རང་གྲོལ་ , Wyl. ''rang grol''), like a snake uncoiling and unwinding its own knots | ||
#Liberation of thoughts as [[dharmakaya]], without their bringing either benefit or harm (Tib. ཕན་མེད་གནོད་མེད་དུ་གྲོལ་བ་ , Wyl. ''phan med gnod med du grol ba''), like a thief entering an empty house | #Liberation of thoughts as [[dharmakaya]], without their bringing either benefit or harm (Tib. ཕན་མེད་གནོད་མེད་དུ་གྲོལ་བ་ , Wyl. ''phan med gnod med du grol ba''), like a thief entering an empty house |
Latest revision as of 13:51, 12 April 2018
The three modes of liberation (Tib. གྲོལ་ལུགས་གསུམ་, Wyl. grol lugs gsum) describe degrees of increasing naturalness in the liberation of thoughts and emotions through the mastery of Dzogchen practice.
The three modes of liberation that are specifically mentioned are:
- Liberation through recognition of thoughts (Tib. ཤར་གྲོལ་, Wyl. shar grol), like recognizing an old friend in a crowd
- Liberation where the thought frees itself, or self-liberation (Tib. རང་གྲོལ་ , Wyl. rang grol), like a snake uncoiling and unwinding its own knots
- Liberation of thoughts as dharmakaya, without their bringing either benefit or harm (Tib. ཕན་མེད་གནོད་མེད་དུ་གྲོལ་བ་ , Wyl. phan med gnod med du grol ba), like a thief entering an empty house
References & Further Reading
- His Holiness the Dalai Lama, Dzogchen : The Heart Essence of the Great Perfection, published by Snow Lion, ISBN 1-55939-156-1, pages 83-84, and pages 186-187.
- His Holiness the Dalai Lama, Mind in Comfort and Ease: The Vision of Enlightenment in the Great Perfection (Somerville: Wisdom Publications, 2007), pages 223-224.
- Sogyal Rinpoche, The Tibetan Book of Living and Dying, revised and updated edition, Harper San Francisco and also Rider, 2002, ISBN 0-7126-1569-5, pages 167-170