BaguaKicksAss Posted September 30, 2014 (edited) . Edited September 30, 2014 by BaguaKicksAss Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Wells Posted September 30, 2014 (edited) . Edited October 29, 2014 by ZOOM 3 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
thelerner Posted September 30, 2014 (edited) Do you know how much it costs to spend a whole life in retreat? Or how to arrange one? Short answer. Everything. Give away or donate then join a monastery <choose wisely>. Just beware retreat ain't Vegas, no free lunch, it can be a very hard life, unless you have an egoless temperament. Â Â On the third hand you can have a very spiritual time at a yoga ashram, for a few weeks or months. Some get pretty extreme. The Sivananda ashram on Paradise island is a nice middle ground. <maybe a bit further from the ascetic side depending on where you stay and how you conduct yourself> Edited September 30, 2014 by thelerner 3 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
soaring crane Posted September 30, 2014 In Germany, however, things are rather as I told you above. Â and here I was, thinking Dzogchen is a German word, meaning 'little dzog' :-) Â http://www.dzogchen.de/ Â Gibt's sogar an der VHS 3 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
C T Posted September 30, 2014 no free lunch, it can be a very hard life, unless you have an egoless temperament. That may be helpful for retreats found in other traditions, but in Vajrayana, those with an oversized ego can actually benefit greatly. 1 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
BaguaKicksAss Posted September 30, 2014 Zoom, all you need is love, compassion, and to want to train to benefit all sentient beings . 2 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Wells Posted September 30, 2014 (edited) . Edited October 29, 2014 by ZOOM Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Wells Posted September 30, 2014 (edited) . Edited October 29, 2014 by ZOOM 2 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
BaguaKicksAss Posted September 30, 2014 (edited) . Edited September 30, 2014 by BaguaKicksAss Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Wells Posted September 30, 2014 (edited) . Edited October 29, 2014 by ZOOM Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Wells Posted September 30, 2014 (edited) . Edited October 29, 2014 by ZOOM Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
ralis Posted September 30, 2014 Well, you need the right teaching and several hours of daily training. There are enough reports of "hidden yogins" achieving rainbow body who had a normal family & working lifestyle and were not members of monasteries. Â You have to find another hidden yogin who got the right teaching who does not look for money but for the right personality in a person and who is willing to share his knowledge with you. Â Â Norbu has two Uncles that achieved the 'rainbow body'. One of them was just a regular person who was an artist/stone sculptor. No one knew he was a high practitioner until he asked to be sealed in a tent and in seven days he was gone. Only hair and nails remained. 2 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
BaguaKicksAss Posted September 30, 2014 (edited) . Edited September 30, 2014 by BaguaKicksAss 1 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
ralis Posted September 30, 2014 Many of the current Dzogchen teachers here in the West require that students complete the Ngondro preliminaries before the Dzogchen teachings are given. Those practices take years to complete and are incapable of leading one to realization. 1 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
BaguaKicksAss Posted September 30, 2014 100,000 prostrations are excellent strength training! 1 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
ralis Posted September 30, 2014 100,000 prostrations are excellent strength training!  I agree. I could use more muscle tone. Then the other 300,000 practices need completing. The Vajrasattva recitations are usually the 100 syllable mantra, but the three syllable mantra is a shortcut which I would use which does the same thing.  http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ngöndro 2 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
BaguaKicksAss Posted September 30, 2014 (edited) . Edited September 30, 2014 by BaguaKicksAss Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Wells Posted September 30, 2014 (edited) . Edited October 29, 2014 by ZOOM Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
asunthatneversets Posted September 30, 2014 This thread... what a mess. A word to the wise - take what is being shared with a grain of salt. 3 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
BaguaKicksAss Posted September 30, 2014 (edited) Zoom: http://www.milareparetreat.org/index.php/en/2012-07-19-17-39-29/aufruf-zum-retreat  or  http://garchen.de/dokumente/Vorschau_Juli_Dez2014.pdf  Just 2 examples.  Sir, your google-fu needs work . Edited September 30, 2014 by BaguaKicksAss Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
ralis Posted September 30, 2014 (edited) This thread... what a mess. A word to the wise - take what is being shared with a grain of salt. To reiterate, one liners with no input to backup your narrative is trolling. I guess you have appointed yourself as the supreme dharma judge. Â Your narrative is a legalistic/fundamentalist letter of the law ideology which seeks to oppress free thinking. Edited September 30, 2014 by ralis 1 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
katsura Posted October 1, 2014 Sitting in front of your computer at home you can find and evaluate enough resources for Dzogchen teachings to get the informations you need to be able to practice valid forms of shamata, trekcho and thodgal if you are willing to invest the necessary time and work. Â After that, you need to invest the necessary time and work for several hours of intense daily training until you got the result you were seeking. Â This is hard to explain, and I can't speak for dzogchen specifically, but in my experience with other practices, certain technical dimensions will not be open to you unless you cultivate broader virtues, even if you're getting all the right instructions. At a mundane level, love and devotion will give you a level of constancy that sheer willpower will not, but I think there's also subtler and more profound reasons as well. Â I have a friend who recently told me that what was driving much of his meditation practice was the hindrance of ill-will towards himself. That's interesting, isn't it? That a hindrance to meditation could drive us to meditate, and then further feed a hindrance to meditation. Vipassana is the kind of practice that throws a light back on whatever you're experiencing, so he was able to observe what was going on and make a breakthrough, but not all wisdom traditions work like that, especially not the vajrayana ones that spend a lot of time honing the mind's ability to shape reality before one even begins the process of seeing through it. You could make a real mess of yourself. Â Purification of karma is a major aspect of the path to enlightenment, and I suspect that it's the ngondro that ensures you've reached a baseline purity (not to mention humility and dedication) to truly begin in earnest. If one took the ngondro as seriously as the dzogchen, there's no reason to think that it wouldn't also take one through the stages of meditation, and even enlightenment as well. 4 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites