Meditation Techniques of the Buddhist and Taoist Masters
By Daniel Odier
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About this ebook
* An insider's view of specific meditation techniques and the steps necessary for a wide variety of * Buddhist and Taoist meditation practices.
* By the author of Tantric Quest (15,000 sold) and Desire: The Tantric Path to Awakening.
The esoteric practices followed in the quest for divinity generally remain a secret to the world--kept cloistered away for only the most ascetic practitioners. Now Daniel Odier, having immersed himself in the life and spiritual practices of Buddhist and Taoist monasteries throughout India, Nepal, Sri Lanka, Thailand, and Japan, reveals actual teachings passed on by the sages who are living expressions of their tradition.
Looking beyond doctrine, dogma, and philosophical treatises that ignore direct experiences of the practice, Odier provides a direct path to the heart of the religious experience that can be discovered through meditation. Beginning with the simple and fundamental steps necessary to prepare for meditation, Odier guides the reader through the specifics of the mental disciplines and visualizations that Buddhist and Taoist masters have used for ages in their quest for illumination. To devote oneself to meditation, in the sense understood by Buddhists and Taoists, is to realize the understanding of how every fiber of our being converges with all creation. Meditation Techniques of the Buddhist and Taoist Masters is a valuable guide to all who are in search of that realization.
Daniel Odier
Daniel Odier began his studies with Kalu Rinpoche in 1968 and remained his disciple until his passing in 1989. In 2004 Odier received the Ch'an ordination in the Lin t'si and Caodong schools in China as well as permission to teach the Zhao Zhou Ch'an lineage in the West. He gives workshops in Europe, Canada, and the United States and is the author of Tantric Quest: An Encounter with Absolute Love and many other books, including Yoga Spandakarika: The Sacred Texts at the Heart of Tantra. He lives in Switzerland.
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Meditation Techniques of the Buddhist and Taoist Masters - Daniel Odier
TO KHEMPO KALO RINPOCHE
Khempo Kato Rinpoche of the Kagyupa Order, one of the great sages who continue the teachings and oral tradition of Milarepa
Contents
Cover Image
Title Page
Dedication
Introduction
Part 1: Buddhism
Chapter 1: The Lives of the Buddha
THE LEGENDARY LIFE
Chapter 2: The Foundations of Buddhism
SUFFERING
THE FOUR NOBLE TRUTHS
THE SELF AND THE FIVE SKANDHAS
THE SELF
THE TWELVE HINDRANCES TO LIBERATION
THE DESTRUCTION OF IGNORANCE
CORRECT MEDITATION
NIRVANA
Chapter 3: Preparation for Meditation
THE STUDY OF THE WAY AND THE CLEAR COMPREHENSION
THE REFUGE
THE FIVE PRECEPTS
THE TEN PARAMITA
THE RENUNCIATION
SOLITUDE AND PLACES OF MEDITATION
THE HERMIT AGE
THE CONDITION OF RETREAT
DIET
SLEEP
PHYSICAL AND MENTAL CALM
FOR THE WESTERNERS
THE WESTERN HERMIT AGE
Chapter 4: Contemplative Techniques of Hinayana
HINAYANA
THE FOUR STAGES OF CONCENTRATION
THE PRACTICE OF MINDFULNESS
THE FORTY KASINA
THE FOUR MEDITATIONS OF FORM
THE REALIZATIONS OF THE MEDITATIONS OF FORM
THE FOUR MEDITATIONS WITHOUT FORM
OBSTACLES AND HINDRANCES
INSIGHT INTO THE SOURCE OR THE INNER VISION
THE METHOD INCLUDES THE TEN FOLLOWING INSIGHTS
THE TECHNIQUE IN DETAIL
Chapter 5: Contemplative Techniques of Mahayana
THE LIFE OF MILAREPA
BIRTH
YOUTH
MISDEEDS
THE CONVERSION
THE TESTS
THE MEDITATION
THE HERMIT AGES
NIRVANA
THE IDEAL OF BODHISATTVA AND THE EMPTINESS OF PHENOMENA
CONCENTRATION ON ONE UNIQUE OBJECT
CONCENTRATION WITHOUT OBJECT
CUTTING THE ROOT OF THOUGHT
NOT REACTING TO THOUGHTS
REACHING THE NATURAL STATE OF THE SPIRIT
THE SIX EXERCISES OF NAROPA
THE MEDITATIONS ON EMPTINESS
THE MEDITATION ON THE FOUR PHASES OF THE MAHAPARANIRVANA SUTRA
THE MEDITATION ON THE EIGHT OPPOSED NEGATIVES
THE MEDITATION ON THE FOUR VOIDS
EMPTINESS ACCORDING TO THE DIAMOND SUTRA
THE MEDITATION ON CAUSALITY
THE MEDITATION ON THE GREAT COMPASSION COMING FROM EMPTINESS
THE MEDITATION ON THREEFOLD EMPTINESS
THE MEDITATION ON RESPIRATION
THE NON-MEDITATION ON RESPIRATION
THE SEVENTEEN KINDS OF EMPTINESS
DISCOURSE ON THE ESSENCE OF THE PRAJNAPARAMITA
Chapter 6: Contemplative Techniques of Vajrayana
VAJRAYANA OR THE WAY OF TANTRICISM
THE MASTER INVAJRAYANA
THE PANTHEON OF DIVINITIES
THE MEDITATION OF CHENREZIG
Chapter 7: Contemplative Techniques of Ch'an (Zen)
THE CHARACTERISTICS OF THE CH'AN, OR ZEN, SCHOOL
THE PURIFICATION OF THOUGHT
THE SITTING MEDITATION, ZAZEN
PHYSICAL WORK
BEING A SIMPLE MAN
THE ONE HUNDRED AND TWELVE WAYS OF MEDITATION
Map of the Spread of Buddhism
Part 2: Taoism
Chapter 8: The Foundations of Taoism
LAO-TZU
CREATION BORN FROM NOTHINGNESS
THE CHANGES OF THE UNIVERSE
FORM AND THE LOSS OF THE TAO
THE RETURN TO THE TAO
SIMPLE LIFE, SPONTANEITY, NON-ACTION
Chapter 9: Taoist Contemplative Techniques
FORGETTING WHAT ONE KNOWS
THE PREPARATION FOR MEDITATION
IMMORTALITY AND THE TAOIST BODY
THE INTERIOR VISION
THE ART OF HARMONIZING THE BREATH
RETENTION AND CIRCULATION OF THE EXTERNAL BREATH
THE GREAT CIRCULATION OF BREATH THROUGH THE BODY
THE ABSORPTION AND THE UTILIZATION OF THE INTERNAL BREATH
THE ART OF YIN AND YANG THAT PROLONGS LIFE
Endnotes
Selected Bibliography
Source of Illustrations
About the Author
About Inner Traditions • Bear & Company
Books of Related Interest
Copyright & Permissions
INTRODUCTION
In limiting this work to the contemplative techniques of Buddhism and Taoism, I intend to go directly to the essential and leave aside everything that does not have a direct relationship with the Way that leads to Nirvana and to the Tao.
Most books dedicated to Buddhism single out a particular school. They then expose the doctrines in detail, often stopping before treating the essential: the different techniques of meditation.
In the course of my many trips to the Orient, in the monasteries of each school, I strove to understand and to live what the books rarely describe in detail for the good reason that Orientalists often prefer philosophical studies to direct experience.
In order to restore the essence of this experience, I have chosen to treat this subject with the greatest scrutiny and clarity possible, while at the same time preserving the integrity of my research.
The whole interest of a direct physical experience is that it allows the setting aside of books and teachings in order to encounter men or sages who are the realization of a complete doctrine and whose presence is irreplaceable. This alone can open a mind burdened with knowledge to the realization of the void.
To meet a master, a man who says everything by his simple presence, is to open oneself to an intense and profound upheaval that passes like a tidal wave over all the ideas that one might make of a doctrine.
PART I
*
BUDDHISM
Buddha, guardian of the entrance to Swayambunath, one of the great places of pilgrimage in Nepal
His skull will show a protrusion. His hair braided over the right shoulder will be azure. On his wide, smooth forehead between His eyebrows there will be a small, raised circle of silver hairs. His eyes, shaded by long eyelashes like those of a heifer, will be large, white and black. His ear lobes will be three times longer than normal. He will have forty solid identical teeth, which will shelter a long and slim tongue, giving him an excellent sense of taste. His jaw will have the strength of a lion's. Along with a fine, golden-colored skin, He will have a limber and firm body like the stalk of the arum, a large chest like the breast of a bull, round shoulders, solid thighs, gazelle legs and seven well-distributed protruding contours. His hands will be large. His arms, hanging, will touch his knees. His extremely long fingers and toes will be joined by a thin membrane. His hair will grow strand by strand, and the hair on His arms will grow upward. What needs to be hidden will remain so. His heels will be thick, and His palms will be united. Under each of His feet a thousand-spoked wheel will be traced, and He will stand perfectly upright on symmetrically equal feet And His speech will have the sound of that of Brahma.¹
CHAPTER ONE
THE LIVES OF THE BUDDHA
Some definite statements can be made concerning the life of the Buddha through careful research, in-depth study, comparison of original texts, and information obtained from archaeological research.
The Buddha was born in 556 B.C. in a small village of Nepal in the region of Tirai, Kapilavastu. He belonged to a tribe named Shakya of which his father was king. There is no information that tells us whether Buddha was an Aryan or of the yellow race. When he was about twenty-seven years old, he left Kapilavastu and became a wandering ascetic. Near the hamlet of Uruvela, in India, about a hundred kilometers from Patna, he entered a cave and practiced an extremely rigorous meditative asceticism. When he was about thirty-seven years old, he achieved Illumination and left for Benares, where he found five ascetics who became his first disciples. There he gave his first sermon, in which he exposed the Four Truths and the Way of Deliverance, the Noble Way of the Eight Paths. Buddha continued to spread his teaching to an increasing number of disciples and founded the Sangha, the congregation of monks. In the area of Patna, rich lay people allowed through their donations the development of several centers where Buddha and his disciples lived during the period of the monsoons, which made travel impossible. After a life of teaching, Buddha died at the age of eighty-one following a sickness or poisoning. The teachings of the Buddha were transmitted orally for about 400 years before being written down with commentaries in the course of the following centuries.
THE LEGENDARY LIFE
Although the lives of the great initiators of humanity were more internal than external, their disciples were able to give a fairly accurate account of their teachings. However, their imagination had to compensate for the unknown details of the masters' lives.
Buddha did not escape from this any more than jesus did. Everything begins with a virginal birth and culminates by a promise of a future return.
Maya-Devi, pure and radiant, marries King Shuddhodana, after a foreboding dream and a series of miraculous omens, and finds herself transported by the gods to the top of the Himalayas, where a tree shoots forth. Led into a golden palace by celestial attendants, Maya-Devi sees a yellow elephant possessing six tusks of ivory and a rosy head. After offering to the queen a lotus that he holds in his trunk, the miraculous animal stabs one of his tusks into the right side of the queen, who feels nothing.
Ten months later, the queen, hidden by a thicket of leaves, lies down at the foot of a fig tree. Instantaneously the soil is covered with thick grass from which ten thousand lotuses spring forth. Without her experiencing the least pain, the Buddha emerges from her right side. A giant lotus provides a bed for him. The Buddha rises, takes seven steps toward the north, south, east and west and takes possession of the world. He announces his last incarnation and says that he will free man from suffering brought on by birth, old age and death. As soon as the infant finishes speaking, he becomes similar to others.
Soon the young Prince Siddhartha amazes teachers and sages with the extent of his knowledge. No one is equal to him in athletics, such as horseback riding and archery. Still, the young Prince spends long hours in the marvelous gardens of the palace where, near ponds covered with lotuses, he falls into delicious contemplations. One day Siddhartha goes into the fields with his father, who has him admire the thick furrows of earth raised by the plow. The young Prince sees the beauty of the spectacle, but he also sees the suffering of the buffalo, the hardship of the laborer and the death of the worms cut by the plowshare. He sees in nature that the struggle for life means the law of the survival of the fittest. His love for each breath of life is so strong that he asks his father if he can remain where he is in order to meditate. In spite of the movement of the sun, the shadow of the tree that shelters him does not move, and Siddhartha knows his first ecstasy.
The king, impressed by the attitude of his son, remembers the predictions of a brahman: 'Choosing the life of a wandering ascetic, he will attain Illumination after my death and will save the world!' Had he seen the first signs of this force that would propel his son from his realm?
Upon the king's return, he gives orders that no similar sights that could provoke such contemplation be allowed around the young prince. He constructs three palaces in which Siddhartha enjoys the most refined pleasures. Sometimes, however, fleeing his rich surroundings, Siddhartha goes into the gardens, and in a hut made from branches he enters ecstasy.
One day, he goes to the edge of the parks and sees beyond the ordered flower beds the wild abundance of the jungle. There, for the first time, he meets some ascetics. What force dwells in these beings with a look more luminous than precious jewels?
The king, aware of the melancholy of his son, thinks that it is time to find him a wife. He seeks out the most beautiful young women of his caste, who are presented to the Prince during a feast. Among the 108 candidates, each more beautiful than the other, only the last, Gopa Yasodhara, attracts the attention of Siddhartha.
'As the hidden seed springs up from the soil after a long dryness, their former love awoke immediately. They had already been united so many times, man and woman, tiger and tigress, vine and orchid, wind and feather, mountain and river ....
'A meeting of the minds: no need for him to remember the fawn, which for her sake, he had caught in the forest, and no need for her to remember the storm, which for thirty-three days had detained them, drunk with love, in a cave overhanging the swollen river. As long as the wheel of rebirth kept turning, that which had been would continue to live in them.'² After conquering his rivals in the different tests of running, the bow, the sword and contests of learning, Siddhartha marries the beautiful Gopa. In three months, the king builds a palace even more beautiful than the preceding ones so that Gopa and the Prince can taste the most intense sensual pleasures. At night, the craftsmen construct a wall around the paradise so that the Prince is surrounded by a vortex where everything is youth and beauty. The king gives these orders: everything that can be perceived as sickness, aging and death must be kept from his son. As soon as a dancer shows the least sign of fatigue, she must be immediately replaced. There is neither withering flower, dead leaf, nor flickering lamp within the walls of the palace.
Soon Gopa learns that she is going to give birth to a son. Siddhartha himself, in the midst of a vision, sees the meaning of his mission on earth. The Prince orders his carriage to be harnessed and asks to depart into the city, which is then garlanded with flowers. Old people and slaves are hidden from him, and the entire realm is transformed into a place of happiness and beauty. Then, all of a sudden, in front of his carriage, appears a repulsively ugly human being at the threshold of death.
During the night, Siddhartha, by disguising himself, escapes into the village and sees it in its usual condition. He sees a funeral convoy that he follows to the place of cremation. The body rises up in the middle of the flames and firewood, and the skull explodes in the stench of burnt flesh. When the Prince returns, the entire palace is seized by weariness: flowers do not open, musical instruments are silent and the women seem exhausted.
Siddhartha meditates on what he has seen. He keeps Gopa at a distance from his bed, and the women, in spite of all the sensuous distractions that they are displaying in front of their beloved Prince, are not able to move him from his deep contemplation.
One evening, after having been entertained by the musicians and dancers, Siddhartha falls asleep. Toward the middle of the night, he awakes suddenly to a frightening scene. The half-asleep women look like cadavers, and the precious silks that cover their decrepit bodies are no longer anything but shreds of colorless fabric. Their mouths are open showing their rotted teeth, their skulls are bald, and a terrible odor comes from their bodies. Siddhartha rushes toward Gopa's room. She hasn't changed. Her body and face are as resplendent as ever.
At night, under the starry sky, Siddhartha leaves the palace on