Guru Padma  Jungné
The seventh emanation of Guru Rinpoche is called Guru Padma  Jungné. According to Guru Rinpoche's biography, six emanations occurred  outside of Tibet. Again, it is difficult to organize these stories into a  linear time-frame because Guru Rinpoche's wisdom activities are not  limited by time and space; but traditionally, this emanation and the  last one I described, appeared within the borders of Tibet.
First,  I would like to give you some background on the introduction of the  Buddhadharma to Tibet. Buddhism originally came to Tibet around the end  of the fourth and the beginning of the fifth century. Tibetan histories  recount that around that time, some Mahayana scriptures, a golden stupa  and a tsa-tsa mold were found on the roof of the royal palace of Yum-bu  bla-sgang in Yarlung. Tsa-tsa molds are used to make small dough stupas,  eight of which can be stacked together to make a bigger stupa.
Some  accounts say that the twenty-eighth ancestral king of Tibet,  lHa-tho-tho-ri was sixty years old and walking on the palace roof when  these things descended from the sky. This was early in the fifth century  and the palace is considered the first actual building in Tibet. Before  that, most people lived in tents and caves. There is still a monument  there, although the remaining ruins were completely destroyed during the  Chinese cultural revolution. Recently, I heard it has been restored in  the ancient style.
Another history states that an Indian  monk brought these teachings to the twenty-eighth ancestral king and  told him that in five generations they would be understood and that  meanwhile, they should be kept safe. In the fourth century, Tibetans  still didn't have a written language so neither the king nor anyone else  could comprehend their meaning, but lHa-tho-tho-ri just knew they were  something special and auspicious. So he guarded and venerated these  precious treasures and as a result of his faith, his body was  rejuvenated and his life was extended for sixty more years. After a long  and prosperous reign, he died at one hundred and twenty without knowing  anything more about these objects. This was the dawn of Dharma in  Tibet.
Five generations later, in the sixth century, the  thirty-third dynastic king was the renowned Srong-btsam sgan-gam-po, who  is considered an emanation of Avalokitesvara. Srong-btsam sgan-gam-po  built the city of Lhasa which has been the capital ever since. He also  sent his minister Thon-mi Sambhota and a group of young Tibetans to  study Sanskrit in India. After returning, they created a systematic  grammar and alphabet for the Tibetan language and began the translation  and study of about twenty-one dharma texts from India, as well as other  countries.
Besides his Tibetan queens, Srong-btsam  sgan-gam-po was married to Wen-ch'eng, a princess from Chinese T'ang  dynasty as well as Bhrkuti, daughter of King Amsuvarman from Nepal. In  those days, Tibet was expanding and intermarrying with these families  helped consolidate his empire. The Buddhadharma was already well  established in China and Nepal, so both of his foreign wives were devout  Buddhists and brought a lot of Buddha's teachings and two famous  statues to Tibet, but outside of the royal court and a few select  Tibetans, there were hardly any practitioners.
The  thirty-eighth king in the dynasty was Trisrong Deutsen, who was born  around 740. At this time, Tibetan kings had grown powerful and extended  their domain through military conquest, so Tibet was much larger than  the area we now call Tibet. It stretched from the Bay of Bengal to  Nepal, east to China, including Sikkim and Bhutan and then northwest up  to Khotan. Trisrong Deutsen's father, Mes-ag-tshom, had died when the  prince was only twelve. So young Trisrong Deutsen came to the throne at  age thirteen and served as a military general, leading the Tibetan  armies on various campaigns. For eight years he remained dedicated to  waging war, although at seventeen his mind began to change and he was  moved to look a little deeper. He already knew that his father and  grandfathers had valued the Dharma but now it began to be meaningful to  him. Although he continued to lead his troops into battle for four more  years, he began reading a lot of Buddhist texts, and the happiness he  felt in doing this made it clear to him that the Dharma was something  very special. He was very inspired and moved by the Buddha's teachings.
Among  his ministers there were some Buddhist practitioners who were more than  happy to provide the king with Dharma texts. Historically, three are  named; the Diamond Sutra, a text on moral conduct and the Grain of Rice  Sutra. Buddha had originally given this last teaching to a farmer in a  rice field. As a King, Trisrong Deutsen could appreciate the wisdom of  the teaching on good conduct. Upon reading The Grain of Rice Sutra, he  understood that good conduct was not simply an end in itself, but that  it was even more valuable because it resulted in good contemplation. By  the time he'd finished reading the Diamond Sutra, he understood that the  Buddha's teachings were not merely concerned with morality or  contemplation, but that their wisdom went very, very deep, to the heart  of things. Having comprehended some of the profundity and implications  of these teachings, he resolved to take significant action to firmly  establish Dharma in Tibet.
A group of younger, spiritually  oriented ministers were instructed by the King to find out who was the  most highly qualified Buddhist teacher in the world. Three groups were  sent to three different places: to China, India and to an area which is  now in Afghanistan. One minister travelled with three attendants to each  destination, so altogether, twelve people embarked. Upon returning,  they all agreed that the abbot of Nalanda University, an Indian monk  named Shantarakshita, was widely considered to be the supreme teacher of  his day. So the King decided to invite this great Khenpo to Tibet.
King  Trisrong Deutsen sent a team of twelve messengers employing redundancy  and other safeguards to insure that his invitation to Shantarakshita  would get through.
When Shantarakshita received it, he was  truly overjoyed and said, "I have waited for this opportunity for a long  time. There is nothing preventing me from going so I will not delay.  The time has arrived. I must depart immediately." Travel between Tibet  and India was even more difficult and dangerous in those days than it is  now. It is always nice and warm in the Indian lowlands, while Tibet is  at a high altitude and gets very, very cold. While aware of these  hardships, Shantarakshita did not hesitate. He made the journey to Tibet  and stayed in the royal palace for four months. During that time, the  King and Queen took refuge vows along with a small group of ministers.  He gave teachings on the ten virtues, the twelve links of interdependent  origination, and the eighteen dhatus. He taught in a very basic way  during those four months.
Meanwhile, a number of natural  disasters occurred. Tibetans were suffering from earthquakes, floods and  the outbreak of an epidemic. Many people blamed these troubles on  Shantarakshita's presence. They complained that his teachings were alien  and blamed the King and Queen for inviting this strange person into the  royal palace. They said the old monk's teachings were at the root of  all the current misfortune and that he should be sent back over the  mountain where he came from.
In ancient Tibet, as in every  country, the natives considered themselves to be the best of all people  and to occupy the central land while the rest of the world was referred  to as wild frontier or border regions. So they wanted to send the  stranger who had brought these terrible disasters back across the  border. They made a strong statement to the King that he would have to  get rid of his foreign guest.
Trisrong Deutsen heard this  but would not change his mind. He courageously held to his commitment to  bring the Buddhadharma to Tibet. He was very sad to see all this  happening, but his resolve was never shaken. One day he came to  Shantarakshita and began crying. After explaining the nature of his  problems, the King said, "I sincerely wish that I could bring the  Buddhadharma to my country. How can we pacify this situation?"  Shantarakshita said, "Don't worry about it. There are some natural  imbalances and negative spirits in Tibet. They will not accept the  Dharma easily and that is why these things have occurred. In order to  subdue these negative forces you should invite the renowned teacher,  Guru Padmasambhava. He is the greatest master on earth at this time and  can easily pacify all of these obstacles." And then the King asked, "If I  invite him, will he come?" Shantarakshita replied that Guru  Padmasambhava would definitely come. "You see," he explained, "You and I  and Guru Padmasambhava, the three of us together, have a special  connection, a commitment from previous lives to bring the Buddhadharma  to this land where there is no Buddhadharma. The time is right. If you  invite him, you can be sure he will come. In the meantime, I will go to  Nepal. When Guru Padmasambhava comes, I will return and we can all work  together. We will make some good changes." And so the king sent  Shantarakshita back across the border. When he was ready to leave, the  King offered the abbot a big bowl of gold dust and Shantarakshita said,  "I don't need all of this, but I will take a handful as a gift to the  king of Nepal," and he gave the rest back. King Trisrong Deutsen sent  three attendants to accompany Shantarakshita to Nepal, and at the same  time he dispatched another twelve messengers to invite Guru  Padmasambhava to Tibet.
Now Guru Rinpoche, being totally  omniscient, already knew the whole situation, so instead of staying in  India to wait for them, he went to the Nepali-Tibetan frontier.
He  was sitting right by the border when the Tibetans came walking along.  They didn't know who he was, but the moment they saw him, they felt very  calm and peaceful. Guru Padmasambhava asked them, "Where are you  fellows going?" "To India," they answered. It was still a long way to  India. His presence was overwhelming and glorious. They began to feel  very happy and blissful. Their bodies began shaking.
"Why are you all going to India?" he asked.
"We  have been sent by the King of Tibet to invite a very famous master  known as Guru Padmasambhava to come and give teachings in our country."  So Guru Padmasambhava asked, "I see. So what do you have to offer him?"  In spite of the good feelings that they were having, this question made  them nervous; who was this man and what were his intentions? One of them  ventured to ask, "Well, are you Guru Padmasambhava?" He then began  telling them the contents of their minds and thoughts in such detail  that they all knew without a doubt that this was the very person they  sought, Guru Padmasambhava. They did many full prostrations and offered  him the king's gold along with a long letter.
Guru  Padmasambhava looked at the gold and said, "This is a gift? But it is so  tiny! What is this, a gift from the king of the hungry ghost realm?  Don't you have anything else?" They went through the rest of their  things and offered him all of their personal belongings. Guru  Padmasambhava asked again, "Do you have anything else to offer me? "We  have nothing more to give than this gold from the King," they said, "but  we sincerely offer you our bodies, speech and minds." Upon hearing  this, Guru Padmasambhava was very pleased and said, "That is wonderful."  By the devotion of these messengers he could see that Tibetans were  ready to practice the Dharma, and in particular, the Vajrayana  teachings. This heart-felt response communicated the basic attitude  necessary for Vajrayana practice.
Then Guru Padmasambhava  made a closer inspection of the primary offering. It was actually quite a  big sack of gold. He looked at it for a moment and then said, "I don't  need this!" and he began throwing gold dust into the air, scattering  most of it in the direction of Tibet.
The messengers  thought, "He shouldn't be doing this. This is precious gold." Guru  Rinpoche immediately read their worried minds and told the messengers to  hold out their chubas, the sash which is part their robes. When they  did this, he started picking up handfuls of dirt from the ground and  threw it in their laps where it was instantly transformed into gold.
"Don't  worry about gold," he said. "Keep what you have now and take it back  with you. I will come to Tibet, but I will be traveling slowly and  subduing negative forces on the way. We cannot travel together. You must  go ahead of me. I will arrive in central Tibet in about three weeks.  Tell your King I am coming." So the messengers returned to Tibet and  told King Trisrong Deutsen what had happened on their journey. For the  most part, the King was overjoyed, but a doubtful thought crossed his  mind. He did not know whether to believe that Guru Padmasambhava would  actually come.
Two days walk from Lhasa is a place called  Todlung pleasure park. At the head of that valley is the place where the  Karmapa's Monastery was eventually built. At this site they prepared a  big reception to welcome the great teacher. The King sent five hundred  cavalrymen along with his ambassadors Lha-sang and Lupe Gyalpo to  welcome Guru Padmasambhava. Lha-sang was the prime minister and the  King's right hand man. Guru Padma Jungné arrived on foot, holding a  walking stick.
I am sure you are all aware that Tibetans  love to drink tea. It being customary to make tea for guests, the  reception party was preparing to do just that when they discovered that  there was no water available nearby. Guru Rinpoche walked up on this and  saw what was happening. He poked his walking stick into the ground and  instantly, water began to flow from that spot. This spring still exists  and has become a popular place of pilgrimage. People still go there to  drink the water or bathe.
As Guru Padma Jungné approached  the castle which Trisrong Deutsen had built near the future site of  Samyé monastery, he walked a path between the King, who was surrounded  by a great gathering of Tibetan males, and the queens on the opposite  side of the road, surrounded by a great host of Tibetan ladies. There  were musicians and acrobats performing. It was quite an elaborate  reception. As Padma Jungné approached the king, he could see that the  young monarch was somewhat arrogant and proud.
Trisrong  Deutsen was thinking, "The Guru should honor me with greetings before I  acknowledge him. After all, I am a powerful king, ruler of three fourths  of the world," referring to Tibet's dominance over most of Asia at the  time. The King had been spoiled by Shantarakshita when the Khenpo had  originally arrived. The great abbot had humbly introduced himself and  praised the King, who now expected Guru Padmasambhava to follow suit.
As  the King stood there and hesitated, Guru Rinpoche read his mind and  started singing. This is considered the first religious song in Tibet  and it has around nineteen verses with lines like, "I am the great Guru  Padmasambhava, I am King Padmasambhava, I am the Prince, Padmasambhava, I  am the strong young man, I am the Princess Padmasambhava, I am the  beautiful young girl, I am the great astrologer, I am the skilled  physician," and so on. After each title, he gives a few lines saying  something more about that aspect of himself. He begins his song saying,  "Oh great King of Tibet listen to me now. In all six realms beings are  subject to death. But I am one who has reached the immortal state free  from both death and birth. I possess the secret instructions on  immortality. I see this entire universe as a display of mind.
"Negative  spirits and obstacles are my sport and faithful assistants. Everything  is mine. I am king of the universe and have the ability to control all  phenomena." When Padma Jungné moved to join his palms, wisdom flames  shot out from his fingertips, scorching the royal robes. Trisrong  Deutsen and his whole entourage immediately fell to the ground and began  doing prostrations. The inner interpretation of this event has to do  with establishing the appropriate relationship between student and  teacher. Guru Pama Jugne's actions clearly defined the nature of this  connection, so vital to the spread of Buddhism in Tibet.
Soon  Master Shantarakshita returned. A few days later, Guru Padma Jungné  climbed a small mountain above Samyé, sang a song to subdue negative  energies associated with both visible and invisible beings, and  performed consecration ceremonies for the land and monastery, at the end  of which he levitated and danced across the sky.
This  celestial Dharma dance contained the design or ground plan of Samyé  Monastery and was the first religious dance in Tibet. Of course, Guru  Padma Jungné was quite an unusual person, so unlike the typical lama  dance, this one was performed in the sky, not on the ground. This song  was also the first song Guru Rinpoche sang to subdue disruptive forces.
Guru  Rinpoche and many other realized beings love dancing in space. The vast  openness of space is a wondrous place because all the elements are  present and everything fits together perfectly, yet there is always room  for a lot more. The four elements will never crowd space. And in more  spacious states of mind, all sorts of conceptions can be accommodated;  gods, demons and everything else can be directly experienced and  understood. There is room to infinitely expand and deepen your  exploration and appreciation of these special, open states.
The  song to subdue negative spirits says, "Listen mighty demons of the  world. I am Padma Jungné. And I came to this world miraculously. I am  free from sickness, old-age and death. I have accomplished immortality.  My body, speech and mind are completely enlightened. I have the power to  subdue all demons and negativity.
Knowing all conceptions  and thoughts to be nothing other than one's own mind, I am beyond hope  and fear. Nothing can injure me, nobody can harm me. Clearly knowing  that in the true nature of primordial openness there are no gods and no  demons, what ever you might try to do can never affect my realization  and understanding. You cannot change one atom. In trying to harm me, you  only reveal that your mind is deluded." At this point, Guru Padma  Jungné offered torma. Again, this was the first time such a ceremony was  performed in Tibet. He held up the tormas and said, "I am offering  these tormas to the host of demons and malicious spirits. Though this is  a small offering, I am multiplying it through the power of my  meditation so that everyone of you will have a huge feast and can feel  satisfied. In giving you this, I am offering you everything you desire,  so you must all be very happy, and enjoy this supreme meal. By the power  of my meditation and mantra, I offer you this gift. Please come, accept  it and be content. Help promote peace and harmony throughout the land  and help me bring the Dharma here. Bless this effort to use the land to  build a monastery and accomplish the wishes of the King. Come together  and join with us in this work. Don't ever ignore the speech of any  tantric practitioner, such as my self. Hurry now, please bless this  land! From then on, there were not too many obstacles to establishing  the Dharma in Tibet. It is said that during the construction of Samyé,  human beings labored in the daytime and the local deities would work at  night. Within five years, they completed all the buildings in the  monastery.
In constructing Samyé there was a lot of  discussion about how large to make it. King Trisrong Deutsen was a very  strong man and a good archer. They say an arrow shot from his bow in  Tibet could reach Nalanda University on the plains of India. The final  decision was to delineate the boundaries by having the King shoot arrows  from east to west and from north to south, and then build the wall for  Samyé around these cardinal points.
Now some of the  ministers who weren't too enthusiastic about this whole project and knew  the King's strength, thought that rather than trying to argue against  such a big plan, it would be easier to trick the King by weighting his  arrows with mercury. That is how Samyé Monastery ended up being fairly  large, but not quite as big as it would have been. Of course, King  Trisrong Deutsen often had to deceive these same ministers because they  did not welcome or value the Dharma and did want any monastery at all!  Like the mandalas of the inner tantras, the buildings at Samyé are laid  out according to the configuration of four continents and eight  sub-continents clustered around the central Mount Sumeru. The mandala  was geomantically executed in architecture, reflecting the Buddhist  cosmology symbolizing the inner structure of the universe.
After  the creation of glorious Samyé, Trisrong Deutsen said, "We have  finished building the monastery but this is not enough to fulfill my  aspirations. The main purpose of all this work is to actually bring the  Dharma here." King Trisrong Deutsen then asked Guru Padma Jungné and  Khenpo Shantarakshita for their assistance. Both agreed to help and  after discussing plans, the King personally selected a group of 108  young Tibetans from ages eight to seventeen to learn Sanskrit and other  languages. Many of these youths became adept translators, rendering  texts from India, China, Turkestan, Kashmir and many other places, into  Tibetan. Working closely with other great Buddhist masters to insure a  high standard for the quality of the translations, all of the Buddha's  teachings, from the Hinayana to the Vajrayana, became available in  Tibetan editions.
The Tibetan canon currently consists of  105 large volumes of the Buddha's teachings as well as another 253  volumes of commentaries written by the great Indian masters. Most of  these were translated during the reign of Trisrong Deutsen. This is why  he is remembered as the king who brought the Buddhadharma to Tibet. He  established thirteen Buddhist monastic colleges throughout the country  and twelve major retreat centers, supporting these activities with his  royal treasures.
Guru Padma Jungné journeyed all over Tibet,  and it is said that there is not one square inch of Tibetan soil that  he did not bless with his presence. With the help of wisdom dakini Yeshe  Ts'ogyal and other students, Guru Rinpoche hid teachings throughout the  land to be revealed to future generations at the appropriate moment. He  remained in Tibet for a long time, giving inner tantra teachings to  nine heart students and afterward to the 25 disciples, the 35 ngakpas,  the 37 yoginis and others. Many of these people attained enlightenment  within that life, some within a very short period of time. The whole  Buddhadharma, from the Hinayana to Dzogchen, quickly became well  established, illuminating the entire land of Tibet like bright sunshine.  Thanks to the power and aspirational prayers of Guru Padma Jungné,  Shantarakshita and the Dharma King Trisrong Deutsen, Tibet became the  blessed home of thousands of highly realized beings.
The  subduing of demons and negative forces obstructing the Dharma and the  establishment of Samyé Monastery brought great blessings to all of  Tibet. This was the external work of the emanation known as Guru Padma  Jungné.
On the inner level, Padma Jungné is associated with  the practice of meditation. The inner tantras describe two aspects of  the path; the creation stage and the completion stage, also know as the  visualization and perfection practices. Guru Padma Jungné confers  special abilities to help us integrate these two stages and accomplish  both the ordinary and extraordinary siddhis. The tantric refuge invokes  the three roots of guru, deva and dakini. The root of blessings is Guru  Padma Jungné. He fulfills all wishes and helps his devotees actualize  and transcend all the stages of practice. The Buddha Padma Jungné  removes ignorance and lets us discover primordial wisdom. This is very  profound because there is no separation between wisdom and the skillful  means of its realization. Guru Padma Jungné is a powerful symbol of the  union of wisdom and skillful means. Through this technique we can  approach enlightenment very quickly.
Guru Padma Jungné is  visualized with one face, two arms, and two legs, sitting in the posture  of royal ease with a katvanga leaning on his left shoulder. He holds a  vajra in his right hand and in his left, a skull bowl with a small vase  in it. In another form, as Tso kyi Dorje, his skin is dark blue, he has  three eyes and instead of a katvanga, he is embracing the wisdom dakini  Yeshe Ts'ogyal.
Guru Padma Jungné is considered the  simultaneous embodiment of all eight emanations and is therefore  associated with the four actions of pacifying, increasing, magnetizing  and subjugating. He is also a long-life Buddha and can help balance the  elements of our physiology. The physical body consists of five elements;  earth, water, fire, air, and space. When our vitality decreases it can  bring imbalances causing us to get sick. Practicing on Guru Padma Jungné  is a very effective technique to help you remove obstacles, recharge  the life force and restore balance. In a more general sense, he is  associated with accomplishing the four enlightened actions.
Begin  by generating bodhicitta and visualizing a small sphere radiating light  of five colors, white, blue, yellow, red and green. Concentrate on that  for a moment and transform it into the transcendent wisdom body of Guru  Padma Jungné. Recite the Vajra Guru Mantra with devotion while the  rainbow rays continue to stream out from his heart center in all  directions. Then recollect the light as the luminous essence of all the  elements, returning it back to the flask in Guru Jungné's skull cup,  until it overflows and floats toward you. The light enters your crown  chakra or heart center and dissolves, correcting any imbalances and  returning us to the peace, clarity and freshness of perfect equanimity.  Meditate like this for a short time and then dedicate the merit to all  beings. That is the way to practice on Guru Padma Jungné, the seventh  emanation.
Guru Dorje Drolo 
The eighth  emanation is another wrathful form, Guru Dorje Drolo. Guru Dorje Drolo  is the crazy wrathful Buddha of the degenerate era. He has no regular  pattern to his wrath. He is completely out of order! Guru Dorje Drolo  emanated right before Guru Rinpoche's departure from Tibet as a way of  confirming his legacy of words and actions. Some historians say that  Guru Rinpoche stayed in Tibet for fifty-five years. This emanation  happened about five years before he left. During this time, he gave many  teachings which wisdom dakini Yeshe Ts'ogyal transcribed. Following her  guru's instructions, she hid many of these texts throughout the land.  As he was preparing to leave to convert the rakshasas in the southwest,  Guru Rinpoche again blessed the entire land of Tibet and multiplied the  hidden Dharma treasures through his meditative powers.
In  order to preserve the practice of Dharma in Tibet, and secure the  commitment of the local spirits to extend their protection across  generations, Guru Padmasambhava emanated as Guru Dorje Drolo. In this  form, he reconfirmed the power of his realization and insured the  support and submission of the invisible beings. Dorje Drolo is the  Buddha dedicated to the awakening of all those who have appeared since  Guru Rinpoche left Tibet. Also at this time, he made many prophecies and  predictions for future generations of Tibetans and the world in  general. These prophecies are very accurate and clear. Many of them are  quite detailed and concern events at the level of counties or states.  Their truth has been observed by the Tibetans from generation to  generation across the centuries.
There are thirteen  different caves in Tibet which are named "Tiger's Nest." Just before  Guru Rinpoche's departure, he emanated thirteen Dorje Drolos, one in  each of these thirteen caves, all at the same time. In Tibetan Buddhism,  the number thirteen is associated with a list of thirteen habitual  obstacles. It was in order to subdue and pacify these, that he did this.  The original transformations happened in central Tibet and as they  occurred, each emanation of Dorje Drolo would fly off to a different  cave on the back of a tigress.
The most renowned Tiger's  Nest of all was in southern Tibet in a place which is now in Bhutan. The  cave is called Taktsang which means Tigers Nest. It is very beautiful.
Maybe  you have seen photos of it. There is a big mountain with a steep rocky  face that has a cave in it. I don't know how they did it, but they built  a small monastery on the ledge out in front of that cave. Although it  is very difficult to get to, many tourists go there. They have to be  carried in one at a time by a local person because it is so steep and  high that you can easily get dizzy. They say that nobody has ever fallen  from there, but it looks frightening.
According to both  Buddha and the Guru Padmasambhava, this degenerative era is  characterized by strong forms of desire and anger. These are the major  obstacles confronting practitioners nowadays. Dorje Drolo is the  emanation related to the transformation of these situations. Of course  anger and attachment existed in ancient times as well, but they pervade  the modern world in a deeper way. People's minds are continually  disturbed and upset due to their influence, which give rise to even more  emotional problems. Dorje Drolo is the best practice for removing  mental and emotional obstacles. Guru Rinpoche appeared in this form to  liberate sentient beings from anger and attachment.
Anger  and attachment are qualities of mind which make it difficult to relax.  People can become so disturbed by clinging to these emotions that their  own perceptions turn against them and they begin seeing enemies  everywhere. Guru Padmasambhava taught that when there is doubt and  hesitation, the mind can't relax and is plagued by worry and  restlessness. The long-term result of this is that you become more and  more afraid. This disturbs your sense of well being, which affects the  channels and the winds. Of course when the subtle physics of life is  disturbed, there will be imbalances experienced in the external  situation as well. This pattern is typical of the neuroses and troubles  which arise continually in this degenerative era.
Along  these lines, Guru Rinpoche said that in the future, all Tibetan men  would be influenced by a demonic force called Gyal-po, the Tibetan women  would be possessed by a demon called Sen-mo, and all the young Tibetans  would be affected by an evil spirit called Ti-mug. Gyal-po symbolizes  anger and jealousy and Sen-mo represents attachment. Ti-mug is an  unclear, confused mind, without the ability to focus, center or direct  attention. It mixes up everything. These three demons are metaphors. He  didn't mean that only men or only Tibetans would be influenced by  Gyal-po or women by Sen-mo, but that anger, jealousy and attachment  usually arise together, and depend on each other, like a family. Dorje  Drolo is a very special and powerful influence to help clear away and  dispel complex loops of mental and emotional obstacles.
People  who are aware of feeling mentally unstable or unhappy for no apparent  reason would do well to practice on Dorje Drolo. Even though everything  is together, sometimes the mind doesn't feel comfortable, relaxed or at  peace. This is when such practice is really relevant. When there are  unsettled feelings, it is particularly useful to meditate on Dorje  Drolo. This will help calm and balance the mind.
As with all  the other emanations of Guru Rinpoche, Dorje Drolo is a wisdom form, a  rainbow body, not a solid or concrete object. Transforming from a sphere  of bright red light, he is visualized with one face, two arms and two  legs. His body color is dark red. His right hand holds a nine-pointed  vajra and his left a phurba, a mystic dagger made of meteoric iron or  sky metal. Dorje Drolo is very wrathful, displaying fangs, an overbite  and three eyes. He is wearing Tibetan boots, a chuba and monk's robes,  two white conch shell earrings and a garland of severed heads. His hair  is bright red and curly, giving off sparks. To show how truly crazy he  is, he dances on the back of a tigress, surrounded by wisdom flames. The  tigress is also dancing, so that everything is in motion.
The  tigress is actually Tashi Kyedin, a student of Guru Padmasambhava and  Yeshe Ts'ogyal, and one of the five wisdom dakinis. The five wisdom  dakinis are no other than incarnations of the five female Buddhas  representing the Vajra, Ratna, Padma, Karma and Buddha families. And  these are no other than the pure form of the five elements. Along with  Mandarava, Yeshe Ts'ogyal, Kalasiddhi and Shakyadevi, Tashi Kyedin  helped Guru Rinpoche carry out his wisdom activities. When Guru  Padmasambhava emanated as Dorje Drolo, she was immediately transformed  into a tigress. Visualize male and female demons representing anger and  attachment, being crushed under her paws as she stands on a lotus, moon  and sun discs.
Visualize this scene either above your head  or out in front of you. Recite the Vajra Guru Mantra and imagine Dorje  Drolo's wisdom flames radiating through you, removing restlessness,  confusion, stress and any emotional imbalances. When such troubles  arise, practice on Guru Dorje Drolo. Feel the flames as powerful  blessings which destroy all psychological problems. Relax as they  consume you and all sentient beings as well. Finally, let Guru Dorje  Drolo dissolve as a red light into your heart center and continue to  meditate in the openness of the true nature without any discrimination  or particular focus. Remain that way for as long as you have time. Then  dedicate the merit to all sentient beings. That is how to practice on  Guru Dorje Drolo.
CONCLUSION 
These are  the eight emanations of Guru Padmasambhava. Believe it or not. Look  into the special meaning associated with each emanation. Understand them  and follow in their footsteps. Of course, Guru Padmasambhava is totally  enlightened and can dance in the sky, and you might not have the  ability to do that just yet, but have courage as you walk on the ground.  Remain firmly committed to this practice.
Meditate on the  blessings and teachings of Guru Padmasambhava, on his active  demonstrations for all sentient beings, and on his endless commitment to  the performance of bodhicitta activities. All eight emanations can be  summarized in one simple word: bodhicitta. All this activity we have  been discussing is directed toward the realization of benefits for all  sentient beings and awakening them to their true nature.
If  you don't know any other way, simply express bodhicitta through acts of  loving-kindness and compassion and practice meditation. This unites the  activities of all eight emanations in one simple state. Loving-kindness  and compassion are naturally arising qualities of the mind which become  unceasing activities. Allow all ego-clinging, even holdingto limited  ideas of loving-kindness and compassion, to dissolve back into the  expanse of the primordial nature, and the energy will reappear in wiser,  more flexible and skillful forms. To meditate like this is a very  simple and powerful practice.
From a conventional viewpoint,  the eight emanations of Guru Padmasambhava are strange and incredible.  You might think these are all just stories. But if we realize equanimity  and understand the truth of Madhyamika, Mahamudra or Dzogchen, the  activities of Guru Padmasambhava are perfectly and completely natural.  There is nothing odd or unusual about them. To understand the eight  emanations, we should realize that they are given to us to break down  our fixed conceptions and help rid us of habitual clinging to narrow  categories of thought and feeling. That is the essential point of this  whole teaching.
Everything we see is a display of wisdom,  the luminosity aspect of the true nature. There is no need to cling or  hold onto any particular thing or form. Everything reflects the true  nature, so do not become fixed in your mind and attitude. Stay open. You  will never realize the infinite nature if you attach to one way of  seeing things.
In the Diamond Sutra, Buddha Shakyamuni said,  "Whoever seeks the Buddha in form or sound is going in the wrong  direction. They will never see the real Buddha." We must open our minds  and realize equanimity. The ultimate Buddha is beyond mundane ideas and  conceptions. This is known as the Dharmakaya Buddha.
In a  Mahayana Sutra, the Buddha said, "From the day I was enlightened until I  entered parinirvana, I never taught a single word of Dharma." If we  hold tight to our position within the bounds of common perception, we  would have to conclude that the Buddha was a big liar. But Buddha is  speaking here on the absolute level, leading us beyond duality, drawing  us into practice from the enlightened point of view. If the absolute  truth of the teaching is beyond conception, there are no words existing  in the infinite domain of the primordial nature.
In another  Sutra, Buddha Shakyamuni explains how our universe, even though we think  it is very big, occupies a space no bigger than an atom without the  atom becoming bigger or the universe becoming smaller. The whole  universe is contained in one particle. All discriminatory notions and  contradictions are abstractions and only exist on the conceptual level.  In reality, everything is free of such limitations. It is unbounded  openness and in this sense, is known as the state of great equanimity.
The  eight emanations demonstrate the marvelous flexibility of the true  nature. There is room for everything to appear and ceaselessly  transform, and no point in clinging to exclusive forms or dogmas.
All  these emanations arise within the true nature which is known on the  higher levels of the teaching as Dzogchen. The entire universe is within  the Great Perfection of the Dzogchen state. Everything appears vividly  here and is clearly illuminated within this awareness. Nothing exists  apart from the transcendent qualities of the primordial nature.  Therefore, everything is already in the clear light state. All movement  is unimpeded and translucent. There are no obstacles or blockages to  this freedom.
That is my teaching on the eight emanations of Guru Padmasambhava. 
Khenchen Palden Sherab Rinpoche, 1938 - 2010
COLOPHON 
May  the Guru remain in the world for a long time to come, may the light of  His teachings pervade the sky of mind and bring happiness to all. In  seeking to become better acquainted with the Ways and Means of the Lotus  Born, I requested these teachings on the Eight Manifestations of Guru  Padmasambhava from the compassionate brother Lamas, Khenchen Palden  Sherab Rinpoche and Khenpo Tsewang Dongyal Rinpoche, who responded  energetically with nearly eight hours of inspired talk. The tapes were  transcribed by members of the Turtle Hill Sangha and edited by myself,  Padma Shugchang. The teaching took place at Padma Gochen Ling in  Monterey, Tennessee in the spring of 1992. May these efforts serve to  awaken the absolute reality of Guru Padmasambhava in the hearts of all  beings. Republished as a five-part series in February 2011 by Digital Tibetan Buddhist Altar.
This is a Five-Part Series. The links are as follows:
The Eight Manifestations of Padmasambhava: An Introduction
The Eight Manifestations of Padmasambhava: Part Two (Padma Gyalpo, Loden Chokse)
The Eight Manifestations of Padmasambhava: Part Three (Nyima Ozer, Padmasambhava)
The Eight Manifestations of Padmasambhava: Part Four (Shakya Senge, Senge Dradok)
The Eight Manifestations of Padmasambhava: Part Five (Padma Jungne, Dorje Drollo)
The Eight Manifestations of Padmasambhava: An Introduction
The Eight Manifestations of Padmasambhava: Part Two (Padma Gyalpo, Loden Chokse)
The Eight Manifestations of Padmasambhava: Part Three (Nyima Ozer, Padmasambhava)
The Eight Manifestations of Padmasambhava: Part Four (Shakya Senge, Senge Dradok)
The Eight Manifestations of Padmasambhava: Part Five (Padma Jungne, Dorje Drollo)
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Thank you very much for printing this commentary....Really good.
ReplyDeleteVery, very profound!
ReplyDeleteThank for publishing this and making it available. I feel very connected to this teaching because when I attended a teaching by HHDL in 2005, Khenchen Palden Sherab Rinpoche was there and gave a transmission of the Amitabha Sadhana written by Mipham Rinpoche. I think its that connection of transmission that really brought the words to life.
Mahalo and Many Blessings!
For the benefit of all sentient beings.
Thank You! May these precious Teachings spread and prevail!
ReplyDelete