| Buddhist Meditation | 
| a. Anger
                   b. Enmity
                     c. Affliction
                   d. Concealment
                   e. Deception
                   f. Flattery
                   g. Pride
                   h. Injury
                   i. Envy
                   j. Parsimony
               | k.
            Shamelessness
                   l.
                Non-shyness
                     m. Unbelief
                   n.
              Low-spiritedness
                   o. Restlessness
                   p. Sloth
                   q.
              Negligence
                   r. Distraction
                   s. Forgetfulness
                   t.
              Non-discernment
                 | 
        
3. The Four
        Intermediate Dharmas:
  
        
a.
        Repentance. If one repents one's evil deeds, this is good, but repenting
        almsgiving is bad.
            
        
b.
        Drowsiness. Sleeping for a short time at night is not bad, but sleeping long or
        in daytime is not good.
            
        
c.
        Reflection. It is good to reflect upon one's own deeds, but to reflect upon
        evil deeds of the guru is bad.
            
        
d.
        Investigation: One should investigate one's own thoughts and actions, but not
        those of holy persons.
            
        
These four
        intermediate dharmas should be considered carefully
        and only their virtuous aspects should be done.
  
        
4. The
        Precepts and the Ten Virtues
            
        
Furthermore,
        the Buddha also commanded his disciples to follow the five precepts emphasized
        by almost all religions (though explained in elaborate detail in the Vinaya): non-killing, non-stealing, non-adultery,
        non-lying, and non-intoxication. He also taught the ten virtues, forbidding
        their opposites, the ten evils. The ten virtues are:
  
        
a. Non-killing
        
b. Non-stealing
            
c. Non-adultery
            
d. Non-lying
            
e. Non-duplicity
            
f. Non-coarseness
        in language
            
g. Non-use of
        filthy language
            
h. Non-covetousness
            
i. Non-hatred
            
j. Non-ignorance.
            
        
The Buddha
        said:
            
        
There is one
        way for the bodhisattva to annihilate all sufferings of evil existence. It is
        this: day and night, constantly remember the good dharmas,
        think about them, and observe them, so that their impression becomes stronger
        and stronger in the mind and not the least evil has a chance of mingling
        therein. Such a practice will enable one to free oneself forever from evil
        deeds, to complete the work of good dharmas, and
        frequently to have opportunities to be in the presence of Buddhas.
  
        
B. Distinguishing Right from Wrong
              
        
1. The
        Eightfold Right Path
            
        
John Morley
        (1838-1923) said, "It is not enough to do good;
        one must do it the right way." One should have a passionate love of the
        right and a burning hatred for the wrong. Buddha has helped us distinguish the
        two by setting up the Eightfold Right Path, which we should practice without
        doubt or laziness; and not merely in word, but in deed. The eight are:
  
        
a. Right view
            
b. Right
        thought
            
c. Right
        speech
            
d. Right
        conduct
            
e. Right
        livelihood
            
f. Right zeal
            
g. Right
        remembrance
            
h. Right
        meditation
            
        
These eight
        right paths are based upon the ten virtues and identification of all the vinayas, while their opposite eight are caused by the
        twenty-six evils. For instance, one who does not kill animals should not work
        for a restaurant where animals are killed daily. One should choose a good livelihood,
        such as being a teacher, bookseller, doctor, and so on. In this way one follows
        right livelihood.
  
        
Many
        scriptures of the Hinayana and Mahayana teach us all
        these dharmas; we should follow the good ones and
        reject the bad. Thought and action should be identified.
  
        
The above
        stages of virtue may be followed according to the scriptures and the Vinaya without any kind of concentration. However, if one
        wants to control the mind and enable it to sweep away the inner distractions
        and delusions to develop concentration so that one may meditate on the truth
        and discover one's potential, then one has to train the mind through the
        following steps of samatha.
  
        
C. Distinguishing the Concentrated Mind from the
        Disturbed Mind and Training the Sixth Consciousness
              
        
Consciousness
        is said to be of six kinds in the Hinayana, eight in
        Mahayana, and nine in Vajrayana. These divisions are
        like the psychic channel system, which consists of all different kinds of channels,
        yet the system is only one. No matter how many divisions are made of the
        consciousness, the most important function of it is the mind, which is usually
        called "the sixth consciousness."
  
        
Western
        scholars, as well as those in the East, regard the mind as very important.
        
        
Both Western
        and Eastern scholars emphasize that the mind should be brought under control.
        Horace said, "Rule your mind, which, if it is not your servant, is your
        master. Curb it with a bit; bind it with a chain." Publilius Syrus (circa 43 B.C.) said, "A wise man will be
        master of his mind, while a fool will be its slave." Marcus Aurelius said,
  "The mind unmastered by passions is a very
        citadel; for a man, no fortress more impregnable wherein to find refuge and be
        untaken forever." William Hazlitt (1778-1830) said, "The mind of man
        is like a clock that is always running down, and requires to be as constantly
        wound up."
  
        
However,
        Western scholars do not know how to train the mind, nor how to rid it of disturbance, sleepiness, and worldly delusions.
  
        
1. Samatha
            
        
A bit may
        control an entire horse, and a chain may restrain a mad lion, but they could do
        nothing for the mind, which is formless. A clock which has stopped may be wound
        up, but the sleeping mind cannot be "wound up" without awakening. It
        is a matter of religion and yoga, not only of ethics. All religions have some
        degree of methods to train the mind, but Buddhist samatha is the best among them. The following nine steps should be practiced until
        certain achievement is attained.
  
        
a. Inward
        Abiding: to be able to draw back the mind from pursuing outward evil thoughts
        and settle it well on inward sight.
            
b. Continuous
        Abiding: to be able to make the mind continually abide on the inward sight.
            
c. Well
        Abiding: if thought falls away from the inward sight, it is fixed firmly again
        upon it.
            
d. Near the
        Good Abiding: all outward thoughts are on the inward sight.
            
e.
        Overwhelming: the outward thoughts have been overwhelmed by the inward sight.
            
f. Silence:
        the mind has been pacified and resides in silence.
            
g. Deep
        Silence: The sleepy mind and the distracted mind are overwhelmed by the deep
        silence.
            
h.
        One-Pointed Attention: the mind always pays attention to only one
          point; that is, the inward sight, without even moving a little or ceasing
          attention for a short time.
  
i. Equal Abiding:
        the mind itself is always equally abiding everywhere and without forceful
        compulsion.
            
        
Regarding
        inward sight, there are many points along the median channel (between the
        eyebrows, on the tip of the nose, between one's breasts, on the inside of the
        navel, or on the inside of the bladder, etc.) which may be chosen as the focal
        point of inward insight. One whose mind is often sleepy should choose one of
        the upper points; one whose mind is easily distracted should choose a lower
        point. Whichever is chosen, one should keep it steady during the time of
        concentration, without moving the point up or down. Usually the point inside
        the navel is a very good one, often used not only by Buddhists, but also by
        Taoists and Hindus.
            
        
A disturbed,
        sleepy, or low-spirited mind can never meditate on any kind of truth. In the
        history of thought of all mankind, in philosophy, science, or literature, no
        one, not even Socrates, Plato,
        
        
After one
        succeeds in the training of samatha, all kinds of
        truth may be meditated upon with this clear and pure mind which is the real samapatti. Although Hinduism and Taoism have something more
        or less like samapatti, they are not free from
        egoism, egotism, and the prejudices that go along with them, which are like a
        snake in the grass. Each of them told a great lie: Jesus said, "I am the
        king of
  
        
The following
        truths, which the practitioner should gradually know, are the teachings only of
        Buddha's experience.
            
        
D. How to Know the Consciousness Thoroughly and
        Distinguish its True Nature from the False Ones
              
        
First of all,
        one should know the consciousness in its whole system, which has been divided
        into nine parts according to its different functions.
            
        
1. The ninth
        consciousness, emphasized in the Tantra, contains all
        the virtues and potentialities of Buddhahood. When
        one is Fully Enlightened, this consciousness becomes the totality of wisdom,
        without any sense of consciousness.
  
        
2. The eighth
        consciousness, emphasized in the Mahayana, contains all seeds, good or bad,
        from which the other seven kinds of consciousness are formed.
            
        
3. The
        seventh consciousness, which holds the eighth consciousness as one's self, is
        an object to be meditated away by sunyata samadhi.
  
        
4. The sixth
        consciousness is equivalent to the scientific term "mind." In Hinayana this is the main consciousness and contains the
        seventh and eighth; thus Hinayana does not admit any
        other consciousness.
  
        
5. The first
        five consciousnesses are the eye-consciousness and that of the ear, nose,
        tongue, and body respectively.
            
        
Usually in
        the Idealist school there are three transformations of consciousness, but the
        word "transformation" is actually here a wrong term. It is just as
        the auditory nerve or optic nerve is not "transformed" from the
        plexus. They all belong to one nervous system. The consciousness is not a form,
        and so it cannot have a transformation. However, it has different functions,
        and those are thus divided in the three yanas into
        six, eight, or nine, all for the sake of convenience.
  
        
6. Delusions
        of the Consciousness
            
        
In the
        Idealist school, it is said that one's false delusions are made by the
        consciousness according to the following processes:
            
        
a. The eight
        consciousnesses are called the kings of consciousness, from which one thinks of
        subordinate dharmas. The consciousness is subjective
        and the dharmas are objective. Human beings usually
        cling to the objective dharmas, whether loving them
        or hating them, but forget subjectivity. Hence many sorrows occur.
  
 
        
b. All the
        outside objects are held by subjective views, becoming very confined. The dharmas of form, called "material objects,"
        appear to the human being as outward things. Actually, without mentality, there
        is nothing at all. It is as Confucius said: "When the mind is not present,
        we look and do not see; we hear and do not understand; we eat and do not know
        the taste of what we eat."
  
        
c. When forms
        are pursued and the beloved object cannot be acquired, or the disliked object
        cannot be abandoned, humans not only feel sorrow, but also take action. This
        sows seeds of good or evil into the field of consciousness. When those seeds
        mature and sprout, they become either good or evil conduct, bringing
        appropriate karmic results—thus the seeds of transmigration have no end.
  
        
7. The
        Fivefold Samapatti
  
        
It must be
        emphasized that the only cure for the bad seeds and the only way to stop the
        cycle of transmigration is the practice of the fivefold samapatti of the real nature of consciousness, which destroys the delusion.
  
        
a. The first
        stage of this fivefold meditation is getting rid of the delusions from outside
        objects and keeping the real consciousness inside. When delusion occurs from
        any outside objects such as a lovely woman, beautiful flowers, enchanting
        music, or delicious foods, one should think only that without one's mentalization through one's real consciousness, they are
        nothing. One should not pursue them. Let them pass.
  
        
b. The second
        stage of this meditation is to rid oneself of the mentalizations within one's mind, keeping the view that the consciousness is the master who
        creates the mentalizations. If one's view always
        keeps to this right truth, such mentalizations will
        vanish. For example, when one remembers the taste of good food, this event is
        only the mentalization, which may cause the person to
        again pursue the good food. When one retains one's view of the truth, one will
        not again pursue the good food.
  
        
c. The third
        stage of this meditation is to rid oneself of both parts: mentalization-objects
        within the consciousness, and also the view of the subjective master. One keeps
        only the entity of consciousness in its natural totality, without the functions
        of the two parts. When the mental objects inside the consciousness are
        meditated away and the view of the master is absorbed into the entity of
        consciousness, one attains self-witness to the true consciousness. One then has
        no obstacles caused by false function of the mind.
  
        
d. The fourth
        stage of this meditation is to get rid of the self-witness and keep only the
  "king of consciousness" in its pure nature, without any self-witness
        or thought arising from the pure consciousness. In the third stage, one still
        has some doubt concerning existence—one is troubled by the self-witness. One
        has to get rid of it by keeping only the pure "king of
        consciousness."
  
        
e. The fifth
        and last stage is to rid oneself of both imaginary nature and independent
        nature and keep only the ultimate nature of pure consciousness in its perfect
        attainment. The self-witness and the proof of self-witness both lose their
        functions. Only the pure and perfect nature of consciousness remains. Hence the
        Idealist school's meditation is fully achieved. The only work that remains is
        to know that this pure consciousness itself is sunyata,
        so one comes to the sunyata school meditation.
        Without meditating on sunyata the wisdom of Buddhahood is not available.
  
        
E. Distinguishing the Truth of Non-egoism in sunyata from the Ego of Possession
              
        
All religions
        emphasize that there is a soul, higher self, or spirit which is the master of a
        being who may descend into hell or ascend into heaven. It does not die and on
        it depends transmigration when it descends (in some religions), though it may
        unite with the god when it ascends. Buddhism admits this only as the eighth
        consciousness. Above this eighth consciousness, when it is sublimated through
        meditation upon non-ego (sunyata) there is no soul at
        all. Thus when Buddhists say, "there is no soul,"
        it means that in Buddhahood there is no soul, but for
        common persons there are "changeable souls" which carry their lives
        wandering in transmigration. This "soul" is the eighth consciousness,
        which should be meditated away by sunyata samadhi to eventually become the wisdom of Buddhahood. Hence when one skillfully destroys delusions and discovers the true nature of consciousness, one should
        make practical progress in sunyata meditation. This
        is the fifth important stage of transmutation.
  
        
Regarding the
        characteristics of sunyata, there are two aspects:
        one is its nature, like a mirror. The second is its manifestations, which are
        like reflections in the mirror. To accomplished bodhisattvas and to Buddhas, they are two in oneness, like two sides of one
        paper. However, to novices who do not have any realization of sunyata oneness, they should be considered and practiced
        separately.
  
        
1. Meditating
        on Sunyata
  
        
One should
        use the following methods. One should not worry about one's consciousness or
        mind or the objects outside the mind. Everything inside the mind or outside the
        consciousness is sunyata itself. It needs neither mentalization nor physical analysis. By this method, the
        consciousness is sublimated into Buddha-wisdom in one's nature. After this
        sublimation is meditated upon, only some functions of wisdom follow. One has to
        lay the most stress on knowing the truth of sunyata theoretically and to practice these methods diligently until the abstract sunyata becomes concrete realization.
  
        
a. Meditation
        on the Four Negatives. In the Mahaparinirvana Sutra,
        the Buddha taught the four negative phrases. One should only use mind
        well-trained in samatha in its right attitude, and
        carefully meditate clearly upon the following negatives:
  
        
"Not
        born from a self,
            
Not born from
        another,
            
Not born from
        both,
            
Not born
        without conditions."
  
        
Take any
        thing or being and examine its ego or origin—a flower, for example. Does this
        flower have a self or ego or an origin? If so, in which part
          of it? In the seed? When the flower is opened
        we cannot see its seeds until it begins to fade. Is it
        the bud or the calyx before the bud—what is its ego? The flower has no self at
        all. Does the flower have its origin in the earth? Why do other parts of the
        earth have no flowers? Thus the flower is not born from things other than
        itself. Is the flower born from both—itself and the other? If each of the two
        cannot produce a flower, how can their totality produce one? Zero plus zero
        equals zero.
  
        
However, a
        flower is produced—this is a matter of fact. There may be some conditions which
        make its life possible. Thus everything is generated by the gathering of some
        conditions. When it is destroyed, this is also according to conditions. Thus
        the flower is born from the seed, earth, water, sunshine, and is helped by the
        gardener. If one of these conditions is lacking, the flower could not exist.
        The conclusion, therefore, is that nothing has a self. Non-ego is the truth of sunyata, and its meaning. When one knows the nature of
        everything as sunyata, one does not love or hate
        anything, because both oneself and the objects formerly loved or hated are sunyata.
  
        
In an
        uninterrupted time of meditation, one should carefully think over this truth in samatha concentration. Whenever it seems some
        realization of truth is appearing and the flow of meditation seems to stop, one
        should just clearly perceive it; do not think it over until a delusion alien to
        the samapatti arises. If that happens, bring the mind
        back to the truth again. If one's samatha has been
        well developed, such an event will not happen frequently. If it does, one has
        to leave off meditating and perform some other good practice, such as worship
        or confession, and try at a later time.
  
        
b. Meditation
        on the Eight Negatives. To make the four negatives surer and more elaborate,
        there are eight negatives taught by the great saint Nagarjuna:
  
        
"No
        production, no extinction;
            
No
        annihilation, no permanence;
            
No unity, no
        diversity;
            
No coming, no
        going."
  
        
After one
        meditates on the first pair, one knows that the original nature of every dharma
        is sunyata. One then meditates on the appearance of a
        dharma—it seems to exist stably, but actually changes every moment. There is no
        permanent dharma, and since each dharma is impermanent, it is also not
        annihilated (second pair).
  
        
After one
        meditates on a single dharma, as above, then one should try to meditate on two.
        Are they united or diverse? As the nature of them both is sunyata,
        their totality, taken together, is also sunyata.
        Unity and diversity, then, are both impossible (third pair).
  
        
For instance,
        the birth and death of a woman is neither the production of her parents nor an extinction caused by yama, for
        if her consciousness did not enter the womb of her mother, she could not have
        been conceived, even if the father's semen had met the mother's ovum. Yama is always waiting there, but the woman's life might be
        maintained by some other conditions; before the conditions vanish, Yama cannot take her life away.
  
        
A woman's
        beauty changes daily, and she will grow old and lose
        it. Many examples of such change may be seen in one's surroundings. When a
        woman marries, she seems to be united with her husband; but when they are
        divorced, they seem to be diverse. Even on a couple's honeymoon, at times they
        seem to love each other completely, but sometimes fight with each other. There
        are no couples who totally love each other at every moment and place.
  
        
When a woman
        is beloved and her lover waits for her outside, even the shadow of a tree moved
        by the wind seem to cause her lover to think that she is coming. After they
        marry, however, they forget their love, even when they are in the same room.
        Does the reflection in the mirror enter the mirror? When it disappears does it
        go out from the mirror? Both are delusions. Hence no action of any dharma either
        comes or goes.
            
        
2. Meditating
        on Sunyata Conditions
  
        
a. The Ten
        Mystic Gates. There are ten gates with wonderful manifestations taught by the
        
        
i. The mystic
        gate of perfect yoga of the co-relation and coexistence of all things in space
        and time. Since the nature of all dharmas is sunyata, every condition of every dharma is freely related,
        moves freely. This is like a great plain which does not belong to anyone—every
        person may amuse himself or herself there. Hence the "mystic circus"
        brings its lions, elephants, horses, monkeys, bears, dogs, and male and female
        performers; all may play there freely. Thus is it in the great Dharmadhatu, which, in great sunyata,
        allows all dharmas to play there together. The space
        of four or ten directions and the three periods of time may be united or
        separated, interlocked or interwoven at the meditator's will, due to his mind's being sublimated in sunyata.
  
        
ii. The
        mystic gate of sovereign power in connection with all the dharmas.
        As oneself is sunyata, so
        are others; as one lacks self, others also lack it. Whenever the self is avoided,
        the power of the mystic gate is opened: one is in all; all may be in one, also;
        one is behind all; all may be behind one, also; the small is in the great; the
        great may be in the small, also; the low is in the high; the high may be in the
        low, also. Thus all elements, beings, and things are identified together. A
        universal identification forms an unlimited and ultimate freedom.
  
        
(Some of the
        hippies who ask for "freedom" are lazy—unshaven, unwashed, unmarried
        (though enjoying sex), taking drugs, etc. Such "freedom" is a kind of
        suicide only. One who really wants true freedom should lay great stress upon
        this meditation.)
  
        
iii. The
        mystic gate of the performance of manifestation, either appearance or
        disappearance. When something appears, it appears in sunyata,
        and when it disappears, it disappears in the same sunyata.
        For example, ancient scientists treated the atom as a superstition, but
        Buddhists knew it quite well almost 2,500 years ago. It is not a thing newly
        coming to Buddhists that the atom can be made into an atomic bomb. The atom is
        a potentiality in its disappearance when the bomb is in appearance. Both form
        the complementarity of the whole entity of truth.
  
        
iv. The
        mystic gate of sovereign power in different and opposite forms. Wide or narrow (second
        gate); one or many (third gate); subtle or gross (sixth gate) may
        interpenetrate one another and are freely commutable. The finger is more narrow than a mountain, it may hide the mountain in the
        distance. The atomic bomb is a destructive, gross matter, but the atom itself
        is invisible and almost as subtle as spirit when not broken. The lungs may
        occupy 600 square feet when extended, but they fit inside the body as a part of
        it. There are about 200,000,000,000 nerve cells in one brain. These are common
        examples.
  
        
By the power
        of sunyata, the mysterious and super-natural maya, though inconceivable, may actually be realized
        through this meditation.
  
        
v. The mystic
        gate of the various performances of separated dharmas in the ten periods. The past, present, and future each contain three periods.
        Added to them all considered as a whole they make up the ten periods. By the gnostic light, Buddha sees the future and remembers the
        past. Time may go in reverse, known today through Einstein's theories, but the
        Buddha knew it nearly 2,500 years ago. Such vertical connections interconnect
        and interlock the separate beings along the nine periods into one period. The
        five gates are mutually penetrated in the horizontal plane. When adding the
        vertical connection of time, we get four dimensions, known only very recently
        by Einstein. However, there is a fifth dimension added by mystic penetration,
        symbolized by the crossed vajra and unlimited by time
        and space. Length, width, height, duration, and sunyata emergence form the five dimensions. (This "sunyata emergence" is a term I have devised.)
  
        
vi. The
        mystic gate of completion of virtues of the master and the family working
        together harmoniously and brightly. If any one of the dharmas or persons are taken as chief, all the others would work agreeably as his
        retinue. For instance, when the meditator is
        practicing ahimsa, all the neighbors follow his good
        example, and, out of great compassion, free birds or fish from their prisons.
        The far neighbors follow the close neighbor; the village follows the far neighbor;
        the town follows the village; the city, the whole nation, and the whole globe
        will follow one by one, and then there will be no Third World War. No matter
        how the facts appear, one should meditate like this, as if it is emerging as
        the truth. By adding the time dimension, the three periods unite as one, so
        that in the here and now, all persons of the whole world eventually become
        kind, merciful, and peaceful at one time.
  
        
Furthermore,
        since sunyata is egoless, it enables one to be
        connected with all others. When one meditator,
          Mr. A, takes a person as the master, all other persons of the ten Dharmadhatus may be his family. At the same time,
        any other meditator, Mr. B, C, etc., takes another in
        the family of Mr. A as the master, and all persons other than him may be his
        family. Thus, master yet family, family yet master—they all are in sunyata emergence. Again, one master has his inner family,
        outer family, small family, big family, appeared family, disappeared family,
        small family in the big family, big family in the
        small family. Their transformations are at the will of the master without any
        restriction.
  
        
It is said
        that very few persons know that sunyata is not
        negativism. A philosophic and positive potentiality is within it. Also, few meditators or scholars know the differentiation between the
        ten goodnesses and the six paramitas,
        which I shall deal with below.
  
        
F. Distinguishing the Six Paramitas from the Ten Virtues and Diligently Practicing the Former
              
        
1. Liberated
        Charity
            
        
To give alms
        to the poor frequently and in an amount even greater than the whole world is
        goodness that will bring rebirth in heaven, but to be liberated from heaven and
        earth, one must give alms with the sunyata in which
        there is no giver, no giving, and no object of giving. By this liberated
        charity, one may approach the liberation of Buddhahood.
  
        
Buddha taught
        it in the Dragon-palace with the following stanza:
            
        
"Give
        all things till the ego remains;
            
Give the ego
        till others remain;
            
Give others
        till dharmas remain;
  
Give dharmas till Buddha you attain."
            
        
2. Liberated
        Holding of the Precepts
            
        
All silas, vinayas, or commandments
        should be kept with wisdom, as Buddha once taught:
            
        
"Holding
        the silas, do not depend upon
  
Body, speech,
        or mind; or depend upon
            
Three
        periods, two sides; or depend upon
            
Delusion or
        awareness; depend on none."
  
        
3. Liberated
        Patience
            
        
To be patient
        on the occasion of misery, with harmful persons, or in difficult situations is
        good, but not sufficient to be liberated by the paramita.
        One who practices this should follow the main meaning of the stanza taught by
        Buddha on the same occasion:
  
        
"Patience:
        never know there is I or you;
            
Neither keep the idea of mine and yours.
            
All beings,
        things, and views should be purified—
  
When
        all dharmas become pure 'tis patience."
  
        
4. Liberated
        Diligence
            
        
To exert
        one's energies to do good and to make every possible effort to stop evil are
        worldly merits by which one does not reach the other shore of nirvana, but if
        one follows the teaching below, it will lead there:
            
        
"As men
        are in their nature, so am I;
            
As dharmas are in nature, so is my Lord—
        
Knowing there
        is nothing to gain
            
Is the real
        diligence, so high."
  
        
5. Liberated
        Concentration
            
        
Sitting straight,
        thinking of nothing, neither sleepy nor disturbed in mind—this is a common
        attitude of religious persons. It does not abide in the truth unless one can
        follow correctly the stanza taught by the Buddha:
  
        
"Mind is
        not inside
            
Nor outside,
        nor abides—
  
Holds nothing
        but a void
            
Dhyana cannot
        hide."
  
        
6. Liberated
        wisdom
            
        
Even if one
        is wise as Solomon and can see as far through a brick wall as no body could,
        but sees no sunyata, that person has no realization,
        and is not liberated at all. Hence, the ultimate prajna paramita should be practiced according to the
        guidance of the following stanza:
  
        
"All dharmas are so plain,
            
Have neither
        goal nor vain.
            
There is view
        without sight
            
But one
        should not view it as light
            
No request or
        volition:
            
Pity on fools
        is real wit."
  
        
G. Distinguishing the Sunyata Identified with Bodhicitta from "Dry" Sunyata without It
              
        
The wise
        person knows that sunyata does not stand alone. The
        ancients called such a person, who mistakenly thought of sunyata as separate from everything else, "people of 'dry' wisdom." Hence one
        should develop the five kinds of bodhicitta.
  
        
1. Bodhicitta of Will
            
        
When one is
        still in Hinayana of the cause-position, one is in
        transmigration and suffers many kinds of pains, though one has pity on those
        who suffer with the same pains. A strong sympathy arises in such a person's
        mind, such as the thought that if one were a Buddha one could save them.
        Therefore, the good will to be a Buddha is kept for the sake of saving mankind
        and every sentient being in transmigration. Every day one should frequently
        think like this, even writing down one's special feelings of good will in a
        list. Every day they should be repeated, and every good Dharma practiced for
        their accomplishment until the aim is reached.
  
        
2. Bodhicitta of Deeds
            
        
When the will
        is developed, one must act on it with the six paramitas.
        In this way one performs myriad deeds of virtue and actually benefits sentient
        beings. Thus, the eight right paths in Hinayana, the
        six paramitas of Mahayana, and all the virtues of Vajrayana will be fulfilled in this way.
  
        
3. Bodhicitta of Victorious Significance
            
        
To get rid of
        the volition of bodhicitta, and flee from the "demon
        of compassion," one has to develop the bodhicitta of victorious significance, which is fixed thoroughly by the sunyata of nature. One of the stanzas I have written on bodhicitta may be quoted here:
  
        
The best
        significant bodhicitta
  
Has no kind
        of work or date;
            
There is no
        real mind from which it arises,
            
Nor is there
        volition to hold it.
            
        
There is neither pleasure nor pain, sufferer nor enjoyer, disagreement nor
        sympathy, I nor he. If one knows this well, one develops bodhicitta through pity for those who do not know it.
        However, the bodhicitta and the person whom one
        pities are both sunyata. One remains in sunyata.
  
        
4. Bodhicitta of Samadhi
            
        
When one has
        completed study of the exoteric doctrines and begins to learn the Vajrayana, one's bodhicitta is no
        longer confined to mentality, because the mind is always identified with
        materiality. Thus bodhicitta is symbolized by the
        moon: visualize bodhicitta as a bright moon, on a
        lotus in the center of your heart. From the moon are
        emitted many rays of great compassion for all the sentient beings in all of
        transmigration.
  
        
5. Bodhicitta of Kundalini
            
        
When one
        studies Tantra and progresses to the anuttarayoga, one may practice vajra-love,
        for which one must develop kundalini bodhicitta. This refers to the psychic semen which contains
        the sunyata of nature, the great compassion, and
        great pleasure. Through the good karmas held in the lotus of the dakini, the ultimate salvation may be reached. This is the
        highest, deepest, and the final bodhicitta.
  
        
The first
        three kinds of bodhicitta are widely known to
        scholars of the exoteric doctrines, but the last two are only known to those
        who study Tantra, and they have never been
        systematically emphasized as they are above.
  
        
In practicing
        the first two kinds of bodhicitta, with thoughts of
        impermanence and the sorrows of transmigration, one may practice great compassion
        toward sentient beings and dharmas; through the third bodhicitta, sunyata meditation is added, and one practices the great compassion of the same entity
        with all sentient beings and dharmas. This kind of bodhicitta is not conditional, and one has equal compassion
        toward every being and thing.
  
        
Thus the
        human mind, which previously acted in a self-centered psychic sphere, is sublimated by bodhicitta and great
        compassion and becomes the mind of a bodhisattva, a prince of the Buddha. In
        this state one accumulates many holy karmas.
  
        
H. Distinguishing Esoteric from Exoteric
        Doctrines
              
        
In order to
        make this distinction between causal methods (exoteric) and consequential ones (esoteric),
        one must be motivated to practice Vajrayana meditations with the highest right view: that of non-dualism.
  
        
From the
        above five bodhicittas, one should know that the last
        two belong to the Tantra, guided by the highest right
        view of the non-duality of mind and matter. For example, the physical heart is
        matter, but it may be visualized as a lotus by the mind. The moon is matter,
        but it may be visualized as a mental symbol of bodhicitta.
        Anger is mind, but the reddening of the face which accompanies it is matter.
        Through ignorant human nature, the two have been separated in studying them, a
        fundamental error frequently made by scientists.
  
        
For the
        accomplished meditator, everything is connected with
        the total truth, which is harmonized by the nature of everything. Without the
        elements of matter, consciousness could not function alone. Consciousness is
        not purely mental, and everything apart from consciousness is not purely
        material. Everything is mind and matter; there is no difference between the two
        at all.
  
        
1. Tantra
            
        
Through
        Tantric initiation, one's consciousness is no longer connected with the egoism
        of ignorance, but only with the wisdom of Buddhahood.
  
        
When one
        receives the initiation from Guru Vajradhara, one's
        potential for Buddha-wisdom is awakened, and there is no longer any room for
        human consciousness. The body of a Buddha is not flesh, but wisdom; similarly,
        the mind of a Buddha is not ordinary spirit, but is wisdom.
  
        
If one has
        passed through the Hinayana and Mahayana and has
        begun practice of the evolutionary yoga and of the perfect yoga of the anuttara Tantra, one is bound to
        become immersed in the deepest and highest right view, identifying body and
        consciousness. All the methods in the position of consequence of the Buddha or heruka (See Appendix IV on the transformation of the body)
        may be practiced along with this method of transmuting the consciousness. The
        entire scheme of Vajrayana may be compared to a
        crystal ball; from any side, one can see the opposite side clearly. When one
        practices forming the vajra body on one
  "side," one can accomplish the vajra-consciousness
        of wisdom on the other "side."
  
        
One should be
        able to see, or at least try to see, every man as the yidam;
        every woman as the dakini; every sound as a mantra;
        all foods as nectars of samadhi; every smell as a
        sacred and secret fragrance; every touch as the smooth, soft feeling of samatha; every phenomenon as a cloud in the sky; every
        object of Great Love as the Dharmadhatu; Great Anger
        as the only enemy of one's own self or egoism; Great Ignorance as vidya; Great Pride as the characteristic of Buddhahood; Great Doubt as the Hua Tou of Chan. In the field of one's consciousness,
        there is no thought of profane, mortal, humanity.
  
        
At least, one
        should try to see every form as the appearance of sunyata,
        thus approaching the wisdom of profound insight; to feel every sensation as a
        manifestation of the truth, thus approaching the wisdom of equality; to think
        every conception in the awareness of Full Enlightenment, thus approaching the
        wisdom of the great round and perfect mirror; and to perform only actions of
        the holy karma of salvation, thus approaching the wisdom of fulfilment.
        Finally, one's consciousness may be thoroughly transmuted into the wisdom of
        the vast universe.
  
        
The yoga of
        transmutation of the consciousness lays most stress on mentality. The deepest
        and fastest path of mentality should be practiced as follows:
            
        
2. Mahamudra
            
        
Entering the
        practice of Mahamudra, one discovers the Enlightened
        Entity in realization when one receives the fourth initiation. Then the sunyata of one's meditation is no longer thought of, but
        realized. Based upon the realization of the Enlightened Entity, one meditates
        on it and thus practices the first stage of Mahamudra,
        called "concentric yoga." When one discovers some volition in the
        concentration upon the Enlightened Entity, one must leave it and practice the
        second stage of Mahamudra, called the "yoga of
        forsaking play-words." When this yoga is matured, "play-words"
        are abandoned not only in meditation, but in every occasion of daily life. Then
        one comes to the third stage, called "the yoga of one taste." Here
        there is no dualism between opposites. One remains in concentration not only in
        sitting, but also in every kind of action. Finally, after attaining much skill
        in the third yoga, so that one practices it without effort, one attains the
        yoga of non-practice, which is the fourth and ultimate yoga of Mahamudra.
  
        
3. The Great
        Perfection
            
        
Through the
        particular profound right view of the practice of the Great Perfection,
        imparted by the
        
        
I. Distinguishing Sacred and Ultimate Fulfilment
        from a Profane or Temporary One
              
        
1. Excellent
        Fulfilment
            
        
When the
        practitioner has attained the realization of the Great Perfection, one sees,
        hears, smells, tastes, and touches everything as sunyata,
        and all are good. The five consciousnesses of one's five organs become wisdom.
        One knows the qualities of good and bad and their amounts in each thing, but
        can never be moved by them. Good things cannot cause lust or stinginess. One's
        five consciousnesses have been transmuted into the wisdom of perfecting holy
        karma.
  
        
2. Sacred
        Fulfilment
            
        
One lives
        with the dakini in a cave or under an old, lone tree,
        and one's mind is occupied with sunyata, so that no
        lustful actions occur between the two. Whenever there is pleasure, there is
        found sunyata. One's sixth consciousness is
        transmuted into the wisdom of profound insight.
  
        
3.
        Enlightened Forbidden Fulfilment
            
        
Always naked
        and accompanied by the dakini, one travels over every
        mountain and village, wearing without shame any kind of skull ornament such as
        those used by the heruka. Everyone he sees or meets
        seems to be not different from himself. To such a
        yogi, there is no "other" or "self' in his mind. His selfish
        ego, or the seventh consciousness, has been transmuted into the wisdom of
        equality.
  
        
4. Mad-Like
        Fulfilment
            
        
This yogi
        appears to be a madman, passing through cities, markets, theaters,
        and brothels, always singing, dancing, playing, laughing,
        without any shame. One treats everyone like a reflection of oneself in the sunyata mirror of brightness. Thus one's eighth
        consciousness is transmuted into the wisdom of the great, round mirror.
  
        
5. Victorious
        Conqueror Fulfilment
            
        
One conquers
        food and can take poison as nectar. Energy has also been conquered, and one may
        fly anywhere. The directions of every opposite are conquered. To this yogi, samsara and nirvana are not differentiated. The ninth
        consciousness has been transmuted into the wisdom of the universe, the Dharmadhatu.