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Calendar |
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The Tibetan calendar is divided into major cycles of sixty years duration.
These sixty-year cycles are divided into five minor twelve-year cycles, each year of which is
identified by the name of an animal:
1. Rabbit
2. Dragon
3. Snake
4. Horse
5. Sheep
6. Monkey
7. Bird
8. Dog
9. Pig
10. Mouse
11. Ox
12. Tiger.
Two consecutive years are paired with one of the five elements. As there are: 1. Fire
2. Earth
3. Iron
4. Water
5. Wood
So one gets i.e. an Earth Dragon Year, followed by an Earth Snake Year, followed
by an Iron Horse Year and so on. After 60 years the combinations are repeated and the cycle is
closed.
The Tibetan year is based on twelve lunar months and lasts 360 days.
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Chagya Chenpo |
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Chakrasamvara |
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Changchub Dorje |
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[1703-1732] The twelfth Karmapa, Changchub Dorje was born at Chile Chakhor in
Derge province in east Tibet. Shamarpa heard talk of the doings of a remarkable child, and sent a
party to investigate. His envoys brought the child to Karma Gon, one of Karmapa's principal
monasteries, where he met Shamarpa Palchen Chokyi Dondrub. The two were to spend the rest of their
lives together, travelling and teaching in Nepal, Sikkim, Bhutan, India and China. Only one day
separated their deaths. Both gave Kagyu transmission to the eighth Situpa, and declared him to be
the next lineage holder.
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Chang Chub Kyi Sem |
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Channa Dorje |
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Chenrezi |
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Cho |
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Chodrag Gyamtso |
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[1454 - 1506] The seventh Karmapa, Chodrag Gyamtso, was from Kyilha in
Northern Tibet. Wiping his face immediately after birth, he is reported to have said "AH", the
Sanskrit syllable symbolising the ultimate nature of reality. The nearby Nyewo Ngarteng Monastery
was headed by one Cho Paljor, a student of the sixth Karmapa, who had a dream that his teacher had
taken rebirth at Kyilha. He searched, and found the week-old child. The baby immediately recognised
the possessions of the sixth Karmapa, and placed his hands in blessing on Cho Paljor's head. Seven
weeks later, Chodrag Gyamtso was brought to Arik Thang, where Tongwa Donden had taught, and where
there was a vast seat, like a throne, made of stone slabs. He blessed the ten thousand who had come
to welcome him. At four, he was given a series of empowerments by Goshir Paljor Dondrup, and at
eight, at Karma Gon, he was given the Kagyu teachings from Bengar Jampal Zangpo and Goshir Paljor
Dondrub.
He was invited to teach and give empowerments throughout Tibet; during his travels he wrote many texts and commentaries, and attended to the development of the many students who travelled with him. These tent-dwelling nomads - said to be several thousand strong - led a rigorous life, following a strict schedule of study and meditation laid down by the Karmapa. While at Nyriro Dong Tse, he met the fourth Shamarpa, to whom he gave the full teachings. Another of his students, Denma Drubchen Tashi Paljor, was to become the next lineage holder. |
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Chokhor Duchen |
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Name of the day where Buddha started his teachings.
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Chokyi Drakpa Yeshe Pal Zangpo |
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[1453 - 1524] The Fourth Shamarpa was born in the Treshö province of Kham in
eastern Tibet. Wondrous signs manifested at his birthplace in Tre Kangmar, with wide ranging
interpretations by the local communities. The Seventh Karmapa
Chodrag
Gyamtso was seven years old when he set up camp near Kangmar and remained in retreat while he
sent his attendant to invite the Shamarpa. This learned monk was Paljor Döndrup - the first
Gyaltsab Rinpoche, a man of exceptional realisation. He was later to become a Guru to the Shamarpa.
When the Karmapa and the Shamarpa met it was the renewal of a very close bond, comparable to the
joyful reunion of father and son. The Karmapa enthroned the young Shamarpa under the name of Chökyi
Drakpa Yeshe Pal Zangpo and returned the red crown to him. The Karmapa proposed that from then on
they both propagate the Dharma, but in different parts of the country. The Shamarpa would remain in
the Kongpo area of southern Tibet, while the Karmapa continued towards eastern Kham. Some years
later, they were together again at Treshö Kangmar. The Shamarpa arrived laden with offerings and
the Karmapa imparted to him the empowerments of Mahamudra, the Six Yogas of Naropa and many other
important instructions of the Kagyu lineage.
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Chopal Yeshe |
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[1406 - 1452] The Third Shamarpa was only five months old and had no
difficulty recognizing many of the monks who were close to him in his previous incarnations, which
suggested that he was the incarnate for whom they all anxiously awaited. A year later he visited
Takse monastery at the invitation of its monks. It had been one of the Shamarpa's monasteries in
previous centuries. He studied there under the tutelage of two great Scholars - Paly�¼l Chözang and
Wön Drakpa. At the age of eight, he met with the Fifth Karmapa
Deshin
Shegpa and stayed with him while he received all the Kagyu teachings including numerous
empowerments and ritual readings. At this time, the Karmapa gave the Shamarpa full authorization to
instruct.
As his extraordinary clairvoyant abilities emerged, the fame of the Third Shamarpa spread rapidly into China. The Shamarpa could see his own past lives in vivid detail and this intrigued the Chinese Emperor. The fact that the Shamarpa had been the Guru of the Fifth Karmapa in his previous incarnation also fueled the wish for a closer relationship. The Emperor sent a minister to a distant part of Tibet bearing gifts for the Shamarpa. Statues of the Buddha and Dorje Chang arrived made of the finest bell metal and the Shamarpa communicated the importance of generosity in a letter of thanks. When the Shamarpa later ruled as the Karmapa's representative in Kong-Po and other provinces in southern Tibet, he kept this basic Buddhist principle in mind when attending to the needs of the people. |
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Chorten |
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Choying Dorje |
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[1604-1674] The tenth Karmapa, Choying Dorje, was born at Khaytri Tang inGolok
province, in the far north-east of Tibet. He was identified as the reincarnation and enthroned by
the sixth Shamarpa, Chokyi Wangchuk, who also gave him the full Kagyu transmission. The Karmapa
travelled throughout Tibet, teaching and promoting the welfare of the people, until certain
political difficulties arose. Ngawang Lozang Gyamtso, the fifth Dalai Lama, had become the official
ruler of Tibet, a role that would continue to be filled by his successive incarnations. He
established a pact with the Mongol ruler Goshir Khan; the ensuing sectarian persecution severely
weakened Kagyu doctrine in Tibet, and placed the Karmapa in such a difficult position that he was
forced to leave the country. Travelling through Nepal and Burma to Yunnan in China, Choying Dorje
made virtue of necessity and founded monasteries along his route. Twenty years were to pass before
he could return to his homeland. He identified the seventh Shamarpa,
Yeshe
Nyingpo, and with the transmission of the Kagyu teachings, selected him as lineage
holder.
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Cho Ku |
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Cho Nyi Bardo |
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Clear Light |
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Expression of the not conditioned nature of phenomena, pervading
Samsara and
Nirvana. Appears during
the death process and can then, especially as a result of former experiences in
meditation, be
recognized as the own nature.
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Clear Light Meditation |
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Compassion |
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It denotes the attitude that the benefit of other beings is more important to
us than our own. Compassion is always paired with love. While compassion stands for the wish that
other beings may be free from suffering and free from the cause of suffering, love stands for the
wish that all beings may be happy.
There are several means to develop compassion (Enlightened Mind). In Mahayana and Diamond Way Buddhism the development of compassion is very important. Wisdom and compassion are inseparable in Mahayana Buddhism. The development of wisdom leads us to the realization of emptiness. The 16th Karmapa Rangjung Rigpe Dorje said: "The true nature of emptiness is compassion. Without experiencing the wealth of compassion it means nothing, when somebody claims to have recognized emptiness." |
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Completion Phase |
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[Tib. dzog rim]:
Meditation phase in
Diamondway-Buddhism
where the
Buddha aspect melts into
us. It is a direct meditation on the
nature of mind to
accomplish deep insights.
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Conditioned Existence |
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Synonym for the cycle of existence or
Samsara
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Consciousness |
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Operation mode of
mind when it is geared to
an object. This means that someone is conscious of something or conscious of an aspect of mind. In
the
Great Way usually eight
types of consciousness are taught: Consciousness of seeing, hearing, smelling, tasting, touching,
thinking, ego and the all-base consciousness.
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Consciousness, Stream of |
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Consort |
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[Tib. yum] Female
Buddha aspect in
union with a male aspect (Tib. yab). She expresses
wisdom which is
inseparable from method or
compassion.
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Cosmology |
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There are different cosmologies in Buddhism.
Theravada,
Mahayana,
Kalachakra
and
Mahamudra got
different ways to view and explain the world. The extent of the world is different, too. All those
explanations are quite different from today's astrophysical point of view.
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Creation Phase |
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Creation of the inner imagination of a
Buddha aspect in
Diamondway Buddhism.
Used mainly to develop a calm mind and clarity.
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Crown Ceremony |
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