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    • Period of sleep when dreams occur

      • The bardo of dreaming refers to the period of sleep when dreams occur. During this period, the mind is less constrained by the physical body and sensory inputs, and using certain techniques, we can experience a more liberated state of consciousness.
      www.lionsroar.com/buddhism/bardo/
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  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › BardoBardo - Wikipedia

    Kyenay bardo (skye gnas bar do) is the first bardo of birth and life. This bardo commences from conception until the last breath, when the mindstream withdraws from the body. Milam bardo ( rmi lam bar do ) is the second bardo of the dream state.

  3. The bardo concept is an umbrella term which includes the transitional states of birth, death, dream, transmigration or afterlife, meditation, and spiritual luminosity. We focus, in this essay, on the bardos of death and transmigration.

  4. The bardo of dreaming refers to the period of sleep when dreams occur. During this period, the mind is less constrained by the physical body and sensory inputs, and using certain techniques, we can experience a more liberated state of consciousness.

  5. Since they appear between the phenomena of yesterday and those of today we speak of an intermediate existence, the bardo of dream. Similarly our perceptions during dreams are not truly existent. If we dream for instance of a huge, blazing fire, what is the cause of the fire? Wood. This wood is, however, not present.

    • - By Dorje Chang Kalu Rinpoche
    • The Six Bardos
    • The Five Elements and the Nature of Mind
    • wind (air).
    • The Five Elements and the Physical Body
    • The Five Elements in the Bardo
    • The Mandalas of the Peaceful and Wrathful Deities
    • The Possibility of Enlightenment in the Bardo
    • The Bardo of Becoming
    • The Symbolism of the Mandala of Deities
    • Questions and Answers

    The word bardo literally means "an interval between two things." Bar means 'interval' and do means 'two'. We can think of this interval in a spatial or temporal way. If there are two houses, the space between them is a bardo. The period between sunrise and sunset, the interval of daylight, is a bardo. A bardo can be of long or short duration, of wi...

    Certain aspects of bardo are more important than others. One of the most crucial is our waking existence, from the moment of birth to the time we die. This waking existence is the first great 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 n...

    Our present unenlightened state is based on a fundamental state of ignorance, a fundamental discursive consciousness, 'kun shi nam she'. It is the fundamental consciousness which is distorted and confused. There is, however, a possibility of experiencing the true nature of mind, and when that pure awareness is present we no longer have 'kun shi nam...

    Mind with these four elemental qualities has always been so and always will be. This very continuity, and the fact that mind adapts itself to different situations, corresponds to the element of water*. Just as water sustains its continuity and adapts itself to every contour as it flows, the mind too is fluent, continuous, and adaptable.

    The origin or basis of all experiences is mind, characterized by the five elemental qualities. Our particular situation at the moment is that of physical waking existence, in which we experience what is termed the body of 'Completely Ripened Karma' ('nam min ji lü'). The meaning here is that completely ripened karmic tendencies have given rise to t...

    Right now we are at a pivotal point between impure, unenlightened states of existence and the possibility of enlightenment. For ordinary beings the 'chö nyi' bardo is experienced as a period of deep unconsciousness following the moment of death. There is no mental activity or perception, only a blank state of fundamental unconsciousness. This bardo...

    From an absolute level, the mind that perceives a deity and the deity itself are not two separate things, but are essentially the same. As long as we have no direct realization, however, the mind has the impression of being an "I" which experiences and takes as "other" that which is experienced. During the after-death experience, this split results...

    The cycle of teachings known in Tibetan as the 'Bardo Tödrul‘ and the empowerments connected with it are designed to help practitioners receive the blessing and develop the understanding that will benefit them in the after-death experience. With this support, when the pure forms are perceived, they will be seen for what they are - projections of mi...

    The experience of confronting the mandalas of the deities takes place only briefly and if the opportunity is lost, then the mind enters the 'Bardo of Becoming'. Here the situation becomes roughly analogous to what we experience now - many varied impressions continually arise in the mind and we cling to them, taking them all to be ultimately real. T...

    The purity of enlightenment is embodied by the mandala of deities. For example, what we normally experience as the five Skandhas (the aggregates of the mind/body complex) we recognize on the pure level as the Buddhas of the Five Families. The mind's elemental qualities, which we experience as the elements in our physical body and the outer universe...

    Q: Are the mandalas of the peaceful and wrathful deities related to one particular cultural tradition? How do those schooled in other traditions perceive them? A: In the tradition of these teachings it doesn't matter whether you're a Buddhist or not: you will still have the experience of the wrathful and peaceful deities. The advantage of bein...

  6. What is bardo ? Bardo refers here to the mind in the intermediate state after death or when the consciousness is separated from the previous body. It is the state between the past life and the next coming life. The mind born in Bardo gets a mental dream-like body, which can leave and reach anyplace any time without any obstacles.

  7. 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.

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