Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › BardoBardo - Wikipedia

    Milam bardo (rmi lam bar do) is the second bardo of the dream state. The Milam Bardo is a subset of the first Bardo. Dream Yoga develops practices to integrate the dream state into Buddhist sadhana. Samten bardo (bsam gtan bar do) is the third bardo of meditation. This bardo is generally only experienced by meditators, though individuals may ...

  2. The bardo of meditation, or “meditative concentration bardo,” refers to the period when a practitioner’s mind is fully immersed in a meditative state. In this bardo, when we are free from the usual distractions and illusions of daily life,.the mind can potentially gain a degree of control over its experiences and perceptions.

  3. This Tibetan word “Bardo” is translated as “gap, interval, intermediate state, transitional process, or in between” and usually refers to the gap between lives. According to the Tibetan teachings, there are three death bardos: the painful bardo of dying, the luminous bardo of dharmata, and the karmic bardo of becoming.

    • The Meanings of "Bardo"
    • Explanation of The Four Bardos
    • Sources
    • Further Reading

    When the term bardo is used without qualification, it typically refers to the intermediate or transitional state between death and rebirth (antarābhava); however, the term is also used in a more expanded sense to included additional states of transition that cover the whole cycle of life, death and rebirth. Francesca Fremantlestates: 1. Originally ...

    Erik Pema Kunsangstates: 1. The Buddha taught that the physical body is only a temporary abode, an excellent dwelling in fact, but nevertheless not so important as the inhabitant, the consciousness, which is the continual stream of cognition. 1. At present our consciousness is temporarily in a human body. However, this condition of being embodied l...

    Tsele Natsok Rangdrol (1987), The Mirror of Mindfulness, translated by Pema Kunsang, Erik, Rangjung Yeshe Publications
    The Tibetan Book of the Dead: Awakening Upon Dying. 2013. by Padmasambhava (Author), Chögyal Namkhai Norbu(Commentary), Karma Lingpa (Author), Elio Guarisco (Translator). Shang Shung Publications &...
    Abhidharma Kośa Bhāṣyām. 1991. de la Vallèe Poussin, L.; translated by Pruden, L. Vols. I, II, III & IV. Asian Humanities Press.
    Death, Intermediate State, and Rebirth. 1981. Lati Rinpoche. Snow Lion Publications.
    Natural Liberation. 1998. Padmasambhava. The text is translated by B. Alan Wallace, with a commentary by Gyatrul Rinpoche. Somerville, Wisdom Publications.
  4. The term bardo is a general term which literally means "in-between" and in this context denotes a transitional state, or what Victor Turner calls a liminal situation. The bardo concept is an umbrella term which includes the transitional states of birth, death, dream, transmigration or afterlife, meditation, and spiritual luminosity.

  5. A bardo is a state that is “neither here nor there”: by definition it is something that comes “in between,” an intermediate state. the six bardos are: the natural bardo of the present life. the hallucinatory bardo of dreaming. the bardo of meditative absorption. the painful bardo of dying.

  6. People also ask

  7. bardo on our experience, the 'Bardo between Birth and Death' ('che shi bar do'). The bardo of the dream state, which lasts from the moment we go to sleep at night until the moment we wake in the morning is another example. The state of consciousness that obtains during that interval is termed the 'Dream Bardo' ('mi lam bar do').

  1. People also search for