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[[Image:Jikme Lingpa from 12 Dzogchen Teachers.jpg|frame|Rigdzin [[Jikmé Lingpa]], who revealed the [[Longchen Nyingtik]]]]'''Mind terma''' (Tib. དགོངས་གཏེར་, ''gong ter''; [[Wyl.]] ''dgongs gter'') — a category of [[terma]], discovered within the mindstream of the [[tertön]].
[[Image:Jikme Lingpa from 12 Dzogchen Teachers.jpg|frame|Rigdzin [[Jikmé Lingpa]], who revealed the [[Longchen Nyingtik]]]]'''Mind terma''' (Tib. [[དགོངས་གཏེར་]], ''gong ter''; [[Wyl.]] ''dgongs gter'') — a category of [[terma]], discovered within the mindstream of the [[tertön]].


[[Dilgo Khyentse Rinpoche]] writes:
[[Dilgo Khyentse Rinpoche]] writes:
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[[Category:Termas]]
[[Category:Termas]]
[[Category:Seven Authoritative Transmissions]]

Latest revision as of 11:11, 14 February 2022

Rigdzin Jikmé Lingpa, who revealed the Longchen Nyingtik

Mind terma (Tib. དགོངས་གཏེར་, gong ter; Wyl. dgongs gter) — a category of terma, discovered within the mindstream of the tertön.

Dilgo Khyentse Rinpoche writes:

Mind treasures arise in the following way: In many instances, after bestowing an empowerment or giving a teaching, Padmasambhava made the prayer, "In the future, may this treasure arise in the mind of such and such tertön." While doing so, he would focus his prayers and blessings on the tertön, usually an incarnation of one of his disciples. When, due to Guru Rinpoche's blessings, the times comes, both the words and the meaning of the treasure arise clearly in the tertön's mind. The tertön can then write these down without having to think.[1]

Examples of gong ter are:

Alternative Translations

  • treasure of enlightened intent

Notes

  1. Dilgo Khyentse, Brilliant Moon (Boston & London: Shambhala, 2008), page 141.

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