| Buddhist Meditation | 
| Four
            Anandas
                   | Four
            Sunyatas
                   | Four
            Cakras
                   | Four
            Moments of Feeling
                   | 
| ANANDA
                   (bliss)
                 | SUNYATA
                   (voidness)
                     | FROM
            HEAD TO THROAT
                   | VICITRA
                   (stimulus)
                     | 
| PARAMANANDA
                   (transcendental
                bliss)
                     | ATISUNYATA
                   (vast
                voidness)
                     | FROM
            THROAT TO HEART
                   | VIPAKSA
                   (elaborated
                reflex)
                     | 
| VIRAMANANDA
                   (wonderful
                bliss)
                     | MAHASUNYATA
                   (great
                voidness)
                     | FROM
            HEART TO NAVEL
                   | VIMARDA
                   (final
                response)
                     | 
| SAHAJANANDA
                   (simultaneously-born
                bliss)
                     | SARVASUNYATA
                   (all
                voidness simultaneously wisdom)
                     | FROM NAVEL
            TO REPRODUCTIVE ORGANS
               | VILAKSANA
                   (after
                consummation with awareness of all potentialities)
                     | 
        
        
1. Why is the
        Heruka-Form Used?
            
        
The reasons
        for this are written in detail in Professor Guenther's book, The Tantric View
        of Life. Here we shall confine ourselves to some simple reasons.
            
        
Principally, the
        answer to our question is that inwardly, the female energy is the expedient
        force, while the corresponding male energy is the wisdom-force. The outer
        bodies are the reverse of this: The female body is associated with wisdom while
        the male represents the aspect of skillful means and compassion.
            
        
Mr. Chen said,
  "Female breasts and hips are attractive. Whatever is beautiful represents
        wisdom, for beauty and wisdom are both attractive. Contrasting with this, the
        female's inner energy represents expedient force, because of this, even a single touch-sensation by a man can result for him in seminal discharge.
        Even fainting can come about from contact with a powerful dakini.
  
        
The male is
        complementary, and though his outside aspect represents skillful means, his
        inner energy is the wisdom-force. This we see since the outer body is usually
        not beautiful, only the male organ being attractive, while the inner energy is
        quickly excited and easily leads to a discharge. This is because the
        wisdom-force energy acts abruptly if the male lacks strong patience to hold in
        the semen during the love action. Only through the median channel will this
        energy become true wisdom, and the way for it to pass is through the
        reproductive organ, called the "lower gate." The upper gate is the
        nose, and these two gates must be balanced: This results in true wisdom. In the act of love with the lower gate, one takes advantage of
        the female expedient energy. At that time the median channel is easy to open.
  
        
All this
        constitutes the main reason why the heruka form is used.
            
        
We should
        also note that the yogini will receive wisdom-energy from the male and in this
        way, through vajra-love, both help each other toward
        Perfect Enlightenment.
  
        
Mr. Chen then produced
        three sheets giving answers to the question, "What are the reasons why the
        highest Buddha-position can be attained by the practice of vajra-love?"
        These are the answers he gave to an American Buddhist:
  
        
a. When we
        receive the third initiation (wang), we have the right to practice vajra-love,
        and the reason for this is as follows:
            
        
First of all,
        everything—whether good or evil by nature—is
          voidness. Hinayana affirms the voidness of self but not that of dharmas. In the
          Lesser Vehicle, the stress is very much upon the keeping of the precepts both
          by the monks and by lay people. Within the monastic discipline of this vehicle,
          a man neither touches nor even looks upon a woman.
  
        
In the
        Mahayana, it is known that all dharmas are void and a lay follower of the
        
        
This is the
        reason according to the doctrine of sunyata.
            
        
b.
        Enlightenment is attained by the highest wisdom, which penetrates the lowest
        lust and subdues it. Nothing should be left outside this wisdom. If there
        remains something which cannot be subdued by wisdom, then this wisdom is not
        the final, perfect one.
            
        
c. The
        negative method of destroying lust is by following the way of lust and using it
        to destroy itself. For instance, when we see a robber, we should follow after
        him to seize him. If we want to get a tiger-cub, we must go to the tiger's
        cave. When we are poisoned, there are medicines which are themselves poison but
        are used as effective antidotes. As another instance, when we fall down we
        should take advantage of the support offered by the same earth to get up.
            
        
It is through
        lust that we acquire a human body. When we are in the intermediate state we see
        our future parents engaged in the love-action and, loving the mother, we find
        ourselves entering her womb, that is, if we are to become a man; a female will
        be jealous of the future mother and try to get the love of the human father—and
          in the same way enter the mother's womb. Thus, we must understand that the
          cause of our unending transmigration is our own ignorance combined with the
          sorrow of desire.
  
        
Therefore,
        according to our examples, whether we want to continue as a human, become a
        heavenly person, or attain Buddhahood, we should in all cases take just this
        same way of lust.
            
        
To explain this apparent
        paradox, Mr. Chen spoke as follows:
              
        
Among
        non-Buddhists (in Taoism and Hinduism for instance), a divine love is
        emphasized, but this is not the vajra-love of Buddhism. If we follow precepts
        which forbid certain actions (as in the case of bhiksus and bhiksunis, who
        cannot have sexual intercourse), though this is good as far as it goes, still
        the seeds of lust lie in the eighth consciousness, and whenever they have a
        chance, they are sure to germinate. From the viewpoint of ultimate liberation,
        this way is not good—it is a way of
          repression. The Mahayana follower has a better way (but, we should note, it is
          founded upon initial practice of the Hinayana method). He is able to meditate
          upon lust and the love-action in sunyata. Thus, while he is engaged in this
          practice, no woman will be able to lure him. But when his sunyata concentration
          is disturbed, then the demon of lust may easily arise again. Thus we see that
          this too is not the way for its ultimate destruction. For this reason, there
          are in Vajrayana many mental and physical methods to actually enlarge the
          sorrow of lust and thus to finally destroy it. In practicing such methods, the
          more pleasure that the disciple experiences, the more he or she attains the
          meditation of the great voidness. According to the degree of pleasure derived
          from the practice of vajra-love, the more profound is one's knowledge of the
          void, and the better one's chance is to penetrate that lust and subdue it
          without any seeds remaining. That is why vajrayogini is so important. She is
          the mother who enables us to destroy the seeds of lust—she
            is truly called "Lust-destroying Mother."
  
        
Truly, we may
        say that when we escape from the attractions of a woman, it is only a temporary
        escape of lust. If we meet a woman in our own room when other persons are not
        present, a monk may still keep his precepts, but he does not enjoy the
        experience. In the case of an advanced yogi, would it not be better for him to enjoy
        the experience and use it, rather than escaping from it? When an advanced
        practitioner meets a woman with whom he may enjoy sexual intercourse, they can
        mutually help each other in union towards the highest goal—Buddhahood.
          In this yogic enjoyment, neither can her love disturb our voidness meditation,
          nor can she take away our semen. Would this not be the best way for the
          destruction of lust?
  
        
Is there
        anything more distasteful or more full of affliction
        than sexual intercourse? The Vajrayana recognizes this fact and offers many
        methods in the position of consequence of Buddhahood. Everyone must take good
        note of this: Just as when one is sick then a doctor's advice is necessary, and
        as we are all sick with the poison of lust, the guru's instructions are not
        merely necessary, they are absolutely essential. A little poison taken without
        the advice of a physician may cause the patient to die; in the same way, trying
        out these methods without adequate preparation in the other yanas and the
        personal teaching direct from one's guru may cause one to die spiritually—it
          may cause one directly to know the meaning of the word "hell." But
          the poison administered by the wise doctor may cure our illness, and it is the
          same with the practices taught to us by our guru, who thus gives us the
          medicine to cure our sickness of lust. This is the way of the Buddha, the great
          Physician who cures us.
  
        
d. To untie
        the heart-knot and clear it of obstructions, the yogi must first practice
        vajra-breathing. For this practice he requires the help of a yogini.
            
        
The
        heart-cakra has many ties around it and the outside one is made by the
        all-pervading energy (Appendix I, Part One, A, 5, e). This all-pervading energy
        has its central point in the secret wheel. From this cakra the energy extends
        to the four limbs. It travels by way of the psychic channels and every
        additional channel-wave makes further accumulations around the heart-cakra.
        Thus, to open the heart-cakra, first untie the outside knot. The love-action,
        which opens the secret wheel and releases the all-pervading energy, can shake
        the heart-cakra and untie its outside knot until it has completely opened.
            
        
e. All the
        cakras must be opened by the wisdom-energy so that the median channel runs
        unobstructed through all the wheels. With the opening of each wheel, there is
        the attainment of a corresponding stage of the bodhisattvas' path to
        Buddhahood. If the lower gate is opened, the first and second stages are
        attained, while the opening of the second wheel corresponds to the third and fourth
        stages of the bodhisattva, and so on.
            
        
f. It is said
        by the Yellow Sect that the holy light of the Dharmadhatu will only appear upon
        the occasion of vajra-love but not also in the Great Perfection, as held by the
        Nyingmapas.
            
        
Mr. Chen afterwards gave
        a note on this matter. He said with a laugh, "It is very strange: The
        Gelugpas say that you must use a dakini for the holy light of the Dharmakaya to
        appear. But before one may practice in this way, they rightly stress that there
        are many, many preparations to make. Tsong-khapa stresses this very much but,
        we should note, he himself never practiced vajra-love, as he was a bhiksu. So
        really the Gelugpas never practice vajra-love at all; on the other hand, among
        the Nyingmapas (who allow two methods as we have related above), one finds many
        bad lay-lamas who pretend that their consorts are for this yoga, but actually
        they are just taking advantage of the teaching and enjoying their wives like
        ordinary men!"
  
        
g.
        Every good karma to save sentient beings is found upon the altar
          of the female reproductive organs. There is a very powerful and effective
          function of this altar. Why? Because every event is void in nature and is
          composed of the male-female function. All void things function by these
          principles: The yab (father) and the yum (mother).
  
        
In Tantric
        Buddhism:
            
        
Yab stands
        for the male, signifying great compassion and expedient means;
            
        
Yum stands
        for the female, symbolizing wisdom and the great voidness.
            
        
Concluding these
        reasons, Mr. Chen again warned all who might think of practicing these methods:
              
        
In this
        meditation, the most essential thing is the identification of pleasure and
        sunyata, and there is a most necessary warning which must indeed be heeded: If
        one has no attainment in the sunyata meditation, then one must not try to
        practice the third initiation methods.
            
        
Padmasambhava
        said: "My secret path is very dangerous; it is just like a snake in the
        bamboo, which, if it moves, must either go up or come down." There is no
        middle way here, either by this method one gains Full Enlightenment or else one
        falls straight into hell.
  
        
2. On Vajrayana Precepts:
            
        
"During the last
        few nights, said Mr. Chen, "I have had some special instructions in my
        dreams. My guru the Karmapa Rinpoche appeared, his room very full of fruits and
        flowers, some of which I offered him. Very clearly he said to me: 'You should
        present the Tantric precepts as they are explained in your book, not in the
        usual way of instruction in
  
        
Mr. Chen produced a
        handsome silk-covered Chinese work, saying, "This is my book—the one the Karmapa Rinpoche referred to. In it,
          all the precepts of the Hinayana, Mahayana and Vajrayana on the subject of lust
          and love are collected and classified. This subject has never been discussed by
          the Tibetan writers but my Essays of Qu Gong Zhai (the book's title) have been
          very much praised by some Chinese. They described it as a very fragrant work
          since at the time of reading it they noticed a sweet perfume in the room. Also,
          when I was writing it I could smell this fragrance quite strongly." Said Mr. Chen, turning over its pages, "It is the beloved Manjusri
            Mahasattva who appears here on the frontispiece; the book is protected by Wei Tuo
            as well—his picture guards
            the book's last pages."
  
        
"Alas! In the
        Tibetan anuttarayoga works which are translated into Chinese, such as some of
        the wang rituals, I have never seen anywhere mention of the fourteen Vajrayana
        precepts. This is strange," said Mr. Chen. "Only the Mahayana
        precepts have been emphasized and gurus instruct their disciples to learn and
        practice these, but do not advise them regarding the Vajrayana silas, although
        these are extremely important."
  
        
a. The
        fourteen Vajrayana precepts. In our homage, one of the five great vajra-herukas
        is called "Secret-Accumulation Vajra" and his ritual is one of the
        anuttarayoga practices now known by the Chinese. But in connection with this,
        the Vinaya (Hinayana) and the bodhisattva silas (Mahayana) are spoken of, but
        nothing is said about the fourteen silas of the Adamantine Vehicle. It is just
        the same in other Chinese works—they are all
          silent about the esoteric precepts. Even in the Ngag-rim of the Yellow Sect,
          these are not discussed. I managed to read about the tradition of these silas
          and then afterwards got them as a special instruction from my Gelugpa guru. But
          at that time I had not yet obtained the third initiation so he only bestowed
          upon me the transmission of the precepts but not their real explanation.
  
        
"In
        
        
Why are these
        precepts neither written in Tsong-khapa's book nor explained upon the occasions
        of Tantric initiation? This is because the fourteen are mostly concerned with
        the identification of sunyata and pleasure; because it would be necessary to
        mention the details of vajra-love, these precepts are kept secret.
            
        
If a rinpoche
        is also a great scholar, he may be able to give other explanations, but it does
        happen that disciples are told the words of the precepts, but not their
        meanings. For instance, one sila, the fifth one, says: "You should not
        lose your bodhicitta." This, however, does not mean the common bodhicitta
        of the Mahayana. It is the fifth precept and this has a secret meaning; the
        proper explanation is: "You should not discharge your semen." Even if
        scholars are learned, they will seldom give the hidden meanings.
  
        
To take
        another example, the ninth precept states: "You should not doubt the
        purified Dharma." Purification in the Hinayana and sublimation in the
        Mahayana has long passed, so what does that precept mean? The sorrow of lust
        has been purified by the Lesser Vehicle practices, where the opposite sex is
        thought of as very dangerous and one's own physical body is analyzed to see the
        nature of the thirty-six corrupt parts (see Ch. IX, E, 1, a, i). Following this comes the attainment of a meditative body and its
        subsequent sublimation in sunyata, so it is no longer a flesh body. Further,
        the physical body (realized as sunyata in the Mahayana), becomes transmuted in
        the Tantra of the growing yoga (see Ch. XIII, Part One, D), when one attains a
        Buddha-body. This body, purified and with an opened
        median channel, is the body used in vajra-love. In this initiation even the
        name "penis" is not given to the reproductive organ; it is called a
  "vajra." The practices of yoga, therefore, do not resemble human
        love, one other important difference being that in Tantra the semen is retained.
  
        
Mr. Chen then
        recapitulated:
              
        
From the
        Hinayana meditations, we come to the Mahayana, when the human organ becomes
        sunyata. From sunyata meditations, one passes on to the five
          wisdoms and the five elements, forming the vajra. This vajra, which is
        not at all like the ordinary human organ, may then enter the lotus of the
        dakini, and at that time one's power of meditation must be maintained. If one
        cannot maintain the spiritual power during vajra-love, then whatever is done at
        that time is not this meditation.
  
        
These are the
        various reasons why this practice is called a holy and "purified
        Dharma," and this, according to the precept, we "should not
        doubt."
  
        
b. The eight
        precepts. This second group of Tantric silas also are not often discussed in
        
        
Outwardly,
        the eight precepts may not seem connected with our subject, but their inner
        meaning relates to this third initiation. For instance, one of the precepts
        reads: "If a person with faith asks you a question about the Dharma and
        you refuse to reply or tell the questioner not to ask, then this is a great
        sin." In this precept, the request seems just to concern the Dharma and
        nothing particular is said about the Dharma of vajra-love. That the question in
        the precept really refers to this, is kept secret.
        Sometimes this is so great a secret that even certain gurus do not know the
        true meaning here.
  
        
c. When one
        may and may not practice.
            
        
"I am sorry to say," said Mr. Chen, "that I do not know Tibetan very
        well and that many Tibetan gurus were not proficient in Chinese. My translator
        for discussing these matters with my teachers was a young bhiksu, so for this
        reason alone they would not discuss third initiation. He replied, 'If you can
        practice this vajra-love yoga without any leak (discharge) occurring, you can
        go to any woman.' So in
        
        
"I came to the
        conclusion that first one should study and practice all the other yanas and
        yogas very deeply. Only after this would one be able
        to take up these methods with success."
  
        
"Furthermore, only
        after I had tried to practice vajra-love did I discover the twelve kinds of
        discharge, so that my guru's advice was quite correct, but unfortunately at
        first I did not realize that the word 'discharge' had so many meanings. In my
        book, I have collected together from many sources all the twelve meanings of
        this term. As far as I know," said Mr. Chen, "there is no other place
        where they are all found together."
  
        
The first
        four kinds of discharge pertain to the body, where energy leaks in these four
        ways: As discharge of semen through the seminal duct, as exhalations through
        the mouth, as perspiration through the pores of the skin, and as urine through
        the urethra. These are called the "four leaks of the body."
  
        
The four
        leaks of the mind. During vajra-love, if a mind arises dominated by human love,
        then this is the first mind-leak. Not only does a thought of human love
        constitute a leak, but also the slightest lustful craving (trsna). Third, if
        avidya (ignorance) rules the mind, this is a leak. Lastly, if false views
        condition one's ways of thinking, this is a serious leak of the mind.
            
        
How can one
        accomplish meditation so successfully that these four leaks cannot occur? It
        seems almost impossible! It means that first one must have attained success in
        sunyata meditations. If there is no sunyata attainment, then these four, in
        particular, very easily leak. A Kargyupa treatise discusses these a little, and
        on this subject it is better than the Ngag-rim, but it was not my fortune to
        see the former before I began the third initiation practices.
            
        
Four leaks
        remain and these concern energy and, therefore, speech. In Tantric philosophy,
        speech always corresponds to breath and inner energy
        mixed.
  
        
Mr. Chen now described
        the five kinds of inner energy (prana) and their four leakages:
              
        
Upward-moving
        energy: If one talks of love with a dakini during one's yogic love practice,
        then this energy is leaked away. It is not good to talk; the whole vajra-love
        process should be carried out in silence.
            
        
Downward-moving
        energy: This concerns the vajra-love action of penetration and withdrawal. The
        rhythm should be slow and the penetration sometimes deep and sometimes shallow,
        not always quick and deep like that of the common lustful person. If one
        practices only quick and deep action, then this is a leak of the downward-moving
        energy.
            
        
Energy of the
        navel: This energy abides in the lower half of the body. If one frequently
        changes the posture for vajra-love—and there are
          many different positions for its practice—then
            this energy is leaked away.
  
        
All-pervading
        energy of the body; in yogic love-practice, there are four events: The descent
        of the pleasure, retaining the semen, taking up the semen, and making the semen
        pervade everywhere in the body. If one practices too long and repeats some of
        these steps again and again, then a leak will occur of this all-pervading
        energy. One should only meditate on sunyata during the whole process, and there
        is no need to repeat its parts.
            
        
"These four leaks
        of energy-speech are my own opinion," said the yogi, "and although
        there is no basis for them in the works of the ancients, still they are quite
        reasonable."
  
        
This
        completes the twelve leaks, but there is yet another energy.
        The fifth energy never leaks away during yogic love; otherwise one would die
        from it, for this energy is the very life energy (jivitendriya) itself. If it
        were easily leaked, then it would also be easy for people to die, but, for most
        people, death is not so easy.
  
        
"Since my
        experiences in
        
        
d.
        Classification of precepts
            
        
"I have made a list
        here of all these various precepts," said Mr. Chen picking up his book."
  
        
There are
        eight precepts drawn from the Hinayana and fourteen from the Mahayana. In the
        Tantra, there are also fourteen plus eight. To these
        we add the twelve leaks, plus the precepts of the five Buddhas and their dakinis—altogether
          then more. Finally, there are four precepts of the Dharmakaya in Chan which are
          also found in the teaching of mahamudra. (See Chenian Booklet
            No. 47.) Altogether in this book, then, there are a grand total of 70
          precepts from the different yanas.
  
        
"I have classified
        them according to yanas and then dealt with each precept under four different headings." Mr. Chen showed his book to the listener and
        writer. Along the top line were written the original precepts. The second row
        of characters contained, he said, accounts of those who had actually practiced.
        Then followed the real meanings of the preceptual words—"We shall only talk about a few instances
          from this line," the yogi said. "The fourth line shows very clearly
          how the precept of the first line may be broken."
  
        
In this way,
        the contrast between actions in the different yanas is clearly brought out.
        There is no actual contradiction among them, for all the precepts emphasize
        right conduct, but the meaning of this differs on the various levels.
            
        
For example,
        a Hinayana precept states: "Even though you are a layman, you should not
        have sexual intercourse at the wrong time or in the wrong place." Now all the yogi's conduct in the Vajrayana is meditation, he or
        she never leaves it either by day or by night, practicing diligently in action.
        Thus, for the yogi practicing vajra-love, there is no wrong time and no wrong
        place. According to the eight Vajrayana precepts, meetings of yogis and yoginis
        for the purpose of worship and making offerings should be conducted decorously,
        with no squabbling between them. Such gatherings take place in a temple, and,
        according to the Hinayana precept, that would undoubtedly be a "wrong
        place." In the Vajrayana, however, it is quite in order—provided
          that the union is carried out in the correct yogic manner. There seems to be a
          contradiction but really there is none; it is just an instance of the
          relativity of conduct: What is good sila in one yana may be quite the reverse in another.
  
        
Now we should
        examine more clearly the true meanings of these as for meditation—for
          this is our subject. If one has no doubt about this purified Dharma, then, as
          we have explained, one should diligently practice it. However, and this cannot
          be said too many times, one must accompany one's actions with sunyata
          meditation and completely identify this with whatever pleasure arises. A right
          dharma, which is not an act of lust, may be done at any time. One may therefore
          perform vajra-love at the holy Tantric altar.
  
        
This precept
        is broken if one makes love in a human way, lacking purification and skill in
        sunyata. It is also broken if the Holy Pride of Buddhahood is not present all
        the time. Even if the time and place are both auspicious, but the dharmas have
        not been purified and lust dominates one's practice, then still the precept is
        broken.
            
        
Let us take
        another example, this time from the Mahayana. In the bodhisattva silas, it
        says: "Neither hurt your enemies nor love your friends." But the yogi
        practicing the third initiation is bound to love his friends (the dakinis). How
        is it, then, that he does not break this Mahayana precept? In the yogi's
        meditation, love has already been identified with sunyata and is therefore not
        common, human love. As his love is not selfish or human, the precept is not
        broken.
  
        
On the other
        hand, common persons who try to practice vajra-love lack the absolutely
        essential basis of sunyata-realization. They have never tried practicing the
        three wheels of sunyata (see
        
        
In my book
        every precept on the subject is examined thus. Having seen apparent
        contradictions between the Vajrayana spirit and the words of precepts in the
        two lower yanas, we now examine a case where two Tantric precepts appear to
        clash.
            
        
One, the
        thirteenth, says: "If you do not obey the command of your guru to practice
        the rites of the third initiation when he orders, then this precept is
        broken."
  
        
On the other
        hand, that precept seems to be contradicted by the fifth among the fourteen:
  "If you lose your bodhicitta then this precept is broken."
  
        
Suppose that
        one practices in accordance with the guru's instruction but is unable to
        prevent a discharge—then the fifth will be
          broken. When this meditation is practiced properly, a discharge will not occur,
          but if semen is lost, one should not go to the guru and say, "Oh, this is
          a very bad meditation!" One should speak to the teacher in this way:
  "First permit me to make very good foundations and when these are strong,
          then I shall practice. Please wait! I shall aim at attainment after the
          conditions for it are fulfilled." In this way neither of the precepts is
          broken; indeed, both may be perfectly observed.
  
        
Another group
        of precepts is found in the teaching of mahamudra, where there are four laws of
        nature which are not very widely known:
            
        
First, one
        should not hold on the truth too tightly—this
          corresponds to realization of sunyata, to non-reality.
  
Second, keep
        the mind always as vast as the Dharmakaya.
            
Third, be
        alone—this is the nature of the Dharmakaya.
  
Fourth,
        always maintain a natural mind; no force is needed.
            
        
These four are
        very hard to keep without a realization of the Dharmakaya. In mahamudra they
        are explained in this way, but their correspondences with vajra-love are never
        mentioned.
            
        
e. The act of
        vajra-love. These sections correspond with the four mahamudra precepts given
        above.
            
        
First, if the
        semen is lost during the act of vajra-love one should meditate upon its
        non-reality. If great pleasure results from the act, then this pleasure must be
        identified with non-reality.
            
        
"The meditations in
        this section are all within the third initiation, but this process belongs to
        the fourth, as we shall see. How can a meditator be expected to keep this
        precept? Retaining the semen during the sunyata meditation may lead on to the
        practice of the fourth initiation; if it is lost, the precept is not in this
        case broken, though the practice is not good."
  
        
Second, hold
        the semen in the organ. To do this, one must maintain a samapatti upon the
        vastness of the sky. If one can do this, the meditator will avoid seminal
        discharge and any of the reproductive organs. The samapatti under these
        conditions will cause the semen to dissolve.
            
        
Third, take
        the semen up, identifying pleasure and sunyata. This state of non-dualism
        fulfills the meaning of "alone" in the third mahamudra precept.
  
        
Fourth, the
        semen should then be made to pervade the whole body; this must be done
        naturally and without force so that the fourth precept is not broken.
            
        
"I have given only
        selections from the different precepts (together with their interpretations),
        for," said Mr. Chen, turning over many pages of his book, "there is
        no room to deal with them all here." He said humbly, "I have gathered
        them together and earnestly tried to practice them, but I tearfully confess
        that in most people's practice, breaches of the precepts are often
        committed."
  
        
"In
        
        
"However, we
        repeat, if a person receives the third initiation from his guru and is
        well-prepared by his previous training in the other yogas and yanas, then there
        will be no danger for him."
  
        
"However," the
        yogi warned very seriously, "if one performs vajra-love without the
        necessary initiations and preparations, then one will fall straight into
        hell!"
  
        
There are
        many practical methods for the third initiation, but here we will only give the
        main principles, that is, the perfect identification of the four pleasures with
        the four wisdoms. The practical methods themselves must be obtained from a
        guru.
            
        
3. The Four Sunyatas
        in the Vajrayana
            
        
The meaning
        of sunyata in the Mahayana and that in the Vajrayana are quite different,
        though in "Tibetan Yoga and Secret Doctrines," they are listed by the
        editor as though the two were comparable. They differ just as the idea of
        sunyata in the Hinayana and the Mahayana differs. Evans-Wentz has stated
        (p.206) that the third degree of sunyata in the Vajrayana (all-voidness) is
        equivalent to the thirteenth voidness (the sunyata of phenomena) in the
        Mahayana list of eighteen. We should not be confused by their names, thinking that
        because those seem similar, that they actually represent the same reality. His
        equation is not correct, for Mahayana sunyata, as we have seen, lays more
        stress upon mentality, lacking a balancing emphasis on materiality. On the
        other hand, the four sunyatas of the Tantra concern the heavy sorrows of the
        five poisons and the material elements.
  
        
Mahayana
        samapatti of sunyata is done while sitting quietly engaged in mental practice;
        Vajrayana samapattis of sunyata may be practiced during the vajra-love act when
        excitation is of physical forces great. It is when the semen is actually being
        secreted that it is necessary to attain and hold these four sunyatas.
            
        
Summing this up, the
        yogi said:
              
        
In all three
        yanas there is the same sunyata, but Hinayana doctrine retains the notion of
        small particles, while the Mahayana concentrates on meditating with the mind.
        How these contrast with active Tantric meditation when mentality and
        materiality are blended!
            
        
4. Lines from
        the Ode, "Always Remember"
  
        
I wrote this
        long poem at the request of some friends. A person we knew had meditated for
        100 days without any positive results and, disheartened, had gone away. The
        poem was requested as some good advice for him. After it had been printed in
        
        
Mr. Chen then translated
        his poem, giving between the lines his own commentary, here placed in
        parentheses.
              
        
"Tantric
        Vinaya is like keeping precepts in the breaking of them."
  
        
(In Hinayana,
        the precepts are used as an escape from non-virtue; one "hides away"
        in sunyata in the Mahayana; but in the Vajrayana, one tries to keep the
        precepts while breaking them. This is very difficult, and can be done only
        after keeping the precepts pure in the other two yanas.)
  
        
"Tantric
        samatha is like getting life from death."
  
        
(The deeper
        one enters ordinary samatha, the more like death the state of the yogi becomes.
        But in Vajrayana, samatha is like the most vivid life, for one obtains some
        functional salvation from this highest samatha. In the concluding sections of
        the chapters on the yanas of cause, I have given a guide for the yogi's
        practice. However, I do not give one for the highest Tantra because here, one
        is always meditating—at every time, in every
          place. Wherever one happens to be is the mandala; whatever words one utters,
          these are the mantric syllables. As to the mind, bodhicitta is constantly
          present. In dream, sleep, work, or exercise, the meditation must be maintained.
          Therefore, there is no need to give a schedule because this meditation is in
          the position of consequence.)
  
        
"Tantric
        wisdom uses the position of consequence as the position of cause."
  
        
(Here one
        uses the wisdom of the final truth as one's instrument, and from this some
        functional salvation is reached. Tantric methods are always in the position of
        Buddhahood. It is quite different from Mahayana, in which sunyata seems to be
        the end of all things. In the Tantra, both the mental and material are
        integrated causes of salvation.)
            
        
The
        last line of the poem reads:
            
        
"If
        a little mistake is made, one will fall into hell. Always remember this."
  
        
5. Conclusion
            
        
If one has
        already passed through and accomplished the previous yanas' meditation, then
        there will be no danger in the practice of the third initiation. Here we have
        outlined the principles; it is necessary to get the actual details from a
        personal teacher.
            
        
B. Meditations of the Fourth Initiation
              
        
There are two
        sections here, the first dealing with the main meditation and the second with
        its subsidiary practices.
            
        
1. The main
        practice is called: "Meditation of the identification of the maya-body and
        the holy light."
  
        
When the third
        initiation meditation has been accomplished, both the median channel and the
        heart-wheel will have opened, as we have seen. In the heart wheel the body of
        wisdom is formed by identifying wisdom-energy with mind. This is called the
        maya-body and is the source of the sambhogakaya.
            
        
With the help
        of the dakini in the third initiation, the yogi forms this maya-body, which is
        certainly not a body of flesh but (as its name suggests), it is a magical body,
        capable of being expanded or contracted without limit. Now, this maya-body must
        be identified with the holy light of the Dharmakaya.
            
        
An
        accomplished guru will know when this holy light has become manifest to a third
        initiation disciple, and he will explain the significance of the experience.
        This is the initiation of the actual Dharmakaya of truth.
            
        
As to the
        ritual of this initiation, what occurs is that during the act of vajra-love,
        the holy light appears between the vajra and the lotus (the male and female
        reproductive organs). At that time it should be observed and explained. If the
        third initiation practice is not accomplished, then the experience of the
        Dharmakaya initiation, witnessing the holy light, cannot arise.
            
        
However, if
        this were the only way, then the fourth initiation could never be experienced
        by bhiksus, as they do not use a noble consort. For them there is another way: A bhiksu who has well practiced the first and second
        initiation and established his realization of sunyata, can skip over the third
        initiation with its dakini practice and directly meditate on the holy light.
        This view is held to by the Nyingmapa, Sakyapa, and Kagyupa schools, though the
        Gelugpa say that one must practice the third before the fourth initiation. We
        need a concentrated chapter to discuss the mahamudra special practices of the
        fourth initiation.
  
        
Here ends the
        account of the main meditations in all four initiations of the anuttarayoga
        Tantra. Now we add some material on the subsidiary practices.
            
        
2. Subsidiary
        Meditations
            
        
We do indeed
        thank Evans-Wentz for his very valuable works and the six meditations he
        describes in them—though we have only
          talked about one. Now we shall choose from those which remain and our readers
          will see why these have been selected.
  
        
a. Dream.
        Before going to sleep, one should practice the sunyata meditations (see Ch. X, Part
        One, D). From this practice will come the holy light,
        a state of meditation without thoughts or disturbance from dreams; a perfectly
        still sunyata experience.
  
        
Then one
        should try to receive a dream, and when one is obtained, it must be recognized
        as a dream while still dreaming. After this one should learn
          to transform one's dreams at will while dreaming, and finally to fly in the
          dream-state to the
  
        
Why have we
        taken the dream-doctrine first? We have already meditated before sleeping on
        the six similes of sunyata, in the last one of which, voidness is likened to a
        dream (see Ch. X, Part One, D, 2, a). With a basis of this practice, upon
        meeting with dreams, one can learn to recognize them as dreams.
            
        
Beyond the
        sunyata meditations, there are some Tantric methods. Visualize a red A in the
        throat-wheel. The redness of the bija causes blood to flow plentifully in that
        region, resulting in strong pulsations affecting the psychic channels, which at
        that point easily vibrate. A itself, as mentioned
        before, signifies sunyata. Further, the two arteries to the left and right of
        the windpipe may be pressed, resulting in the experience of many dreams.
  
        
Readers may
        see more on this method in Evans-Wentz's "Tibetan Yoga and Secret
        Doctrines," where it is given in his Book III, Chapter III.
  
        
b. Bardo: The
        intermediate state. This has three stages of practice with light: White, black,
        and red.
            
        
The whole
        practice is detailed in a Nyingma book, the Bardo Thodol (also edited by
        Evans-Wentz as The Tibetan Book of the Dead). During life one should read this
        over and become familiar with its contents. There is no need to practice
        specially its mandalas, etc., provided that the main practices which we have detailed
        are carried out. Then, at the time of death, one should be quite prepared, and
        with the aid of a good lama to read the book aloud while one is dying (to give
        additional guidance) one will certainly attain liberation.
            
        
c. Phowa: Transference
        of consciousness. This may be practiced if the median channel is clear and the
        red and white bodhicitta practice accomplished. Simply meditate upon the
        essence of the five elements and the five wisdoms and gather these together in
        one point, in the heart-wheel. Then utter HI. This will cause the essence to be
        sent out through the Buddha-hole in the crown of the head to the wisdom-Buddha
        visualized on the head. This hole is to be carefully distinguished from the
        Brahma-randhra, used in Tantric Hinduism, which is four fingers' widths from
        the forehead back along the skull and is usually marked by a slight transverse
        depression. It is the intersection of two of the skull-bones.
            
        
Mr. Chen fetched his
        ritual silver-lined human skull cup to show us these positions.
              
        
The
        Buddha-hole lies four fingers further back and is, in
        many people, marked by a slight circular depression. If the consciousness
        leaves the Brahma-hole, one may go to heaven; whereas if it leaves from the
        Buddha-hole, one gains complete liberation.
  
        
On another occasion, Mr.
        Chen told a story about this meditation. He said, "When I was in
  
        
"Now, at that time,
        I had already practiced the phowa techniques and obtained success in them, but
        my wife had not yet practiced this meditation. It seemed to us that it would be
        a good thing if she could obtain realization of consciousness-transference, for
        then she might help our parents attain a good rebirth, in case they should die
        while I was away."
  
        
"Therefore, she
        began to meditate in seclusion in a room of our house. While this practice was
        going on, my wife did not engage in or talk about household matters. Indeed,
        the only time when she spoke at all was when we had gone to bed, and then only
        about the meditation she was performing."
  
        
"Upon the table in
        her meditation room we had constructed the mandala for phowa practice. As we
        had no real jewels, some imitation stones were used. On the fourth day, as she
        uttered the HI, one of these stones jumped up out of the mandala, rose a foot
        or so, and fell back into place. She told me that night of her experience. I
        said, 'Good, good. It means you will attain success in your practice!'"
  
        
"The next day, when
        she again uttered HI, she felt some pain in the top of the skull. When she
        showed this to me, I saw that the region of the Buddha-hole was swollen, and
        that some blood was issuing out. Knowing the extent of her practice and seeing
        these signs, I knew that in only five days she had achieved signs of
        proficiency in this method for the transference of consciousness."
  
        
"During the
        remainder of the time, she practiced the meditations to give long life, for
        this is the customary precaution after opening the Buddha-hole. Unless this is
        done, the yogi may die prematurely before many beings have been benefited by
        his functions of Buddhahood."
  
        
"Later, while I was
        in
        
        
Some books
        have said that if there are only three signs then it is an undoubted sign of
        success in phowa practice. These signs are: Swelling of the area around the
        Buddha-hole, the opening of the bones at this point so that a blade of grass
        can be inserted, and the emission of a little blood from the same place.
        However, I do not agree, for these are but outward signs and we should
        certainly judge according to inward realization. For the latter, there are four
        conditions:
            
        
First, the
        visualization of the Buddha on the head must have been perfectly accomplished.
            
        
Second, the
        median channel must be open; otherwise there is no clear way out of the
        Buddha-hole. Only through a median channel free of obstacles can the departing
        continuity of consciousness realize the Dharmakaya and pass into the
        
        
Third, when
        the syllable HI is uttered, it must contain the gathered forces from the
        wisdom-energy. By the force of this wisdom-energy sound, one may go to the
        
        
Fourth, all the
        elements and wisdom which are to be sent out must be gathered at the
        wisdom-point in the heart. After this, one may experience death, or have the
        feeling of death.
            
        
"I have had such an
        experience," related Mr. Chen. "I had this feeling and I immediately
        concentrated on the tips of my fingers, so as to disperse these gathered
        forces, and this restored me to life."
  
        
"I have written a
        long essay on this subject according to the three outward signs and, in
        addition, thoroughly expounding these four inward conditions. This work, too,
        has been published in
        
        
Finally,
        among the six doctrines, two have so far not been described. Why do we not talk
        more about the clear-light and maya-body? Outwardly, the maya-body is included
        in the first initiation growing yoga, while inwardly it is the wisdom-Buddha in
        the heart, practiced in the second and third initiation meditations. As for the
        light practices, we are concerned with it in all the other five doctrines. So
        we have no need to further discuss these two matters.
            
        
A little more
        discussion is necessary, however, to show how the four
        sorrows of the Hinayana meditations have developed in the Vajrayana:
  
        
In the third
        initiation—Great Lust (vajra-love) is developed.
  
In the
        sleeping-yoga—Great Ignorance is developed (ignorance and
          sleep are akin).
  
When the
        yidam is wrathful—Great Wrath is
          developed.
  
In the
        growing-yoga of the first initiation—Great Pride
          is developed.
  
        
What remains?
        Great Doubt; this we shall treat in the chapter on Chan.
            
        
In the
        Tibetan Tantric practices, thus, we see that there are correspondences with the
        first four Hinayana poisons. In Chan (and in mahamudra, which is its
        equivalent), there is a correspondence with the Great Doubt as well, as we
        shall see. Readers should refer to our diagrams (see the one in Ch. IX and
        those two in Ch. X, Part Two).
            
        
"Finished!"
        said Mr. Chen.
        
        
Some readers may find
        themselves rather dizzy at these rarefied heights of attainment. To return us
        to this world, before we close Bhante told two anecdotes which, while they are
        related to our most serious subject, still made us all laugh. He said, "Do
        you know, Mr. Chen, a Nyingmapa friend once told me that he had received a wang
        in
  
        
"And again, others
        tell stories that some Nyingmapa wangs are of such an exalted nature that one
        may transmit them to others, without practicing them oneself!"