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berzinarchives-Vajrasattva Practice
berzinarchives-Vajrasattva Practice
Alexander Berzin
Introduction
Vajrasattva (rDo-rje sems-dpa') practice is a tantric meditation done for the purification of
karma. As a Mahayana practice, it is undertaken with a bodhichitta aim to purify all our karma
in order to reach enlightenment as quickly as possible in order to be best able to help all
limited beings (sentient beings). On an ultimate level, Vajrasattva practice is nonconceptual
meditation on voidness (emptiness). On a provisional level, it entails repeated recitation of a
hundred-syllable mantra (yig-rgya), accompanied by opponent states of mind and complex
visualizations.
Vajrasattva mantra recitation and visualization may be undertaken merely within the context
of sutra practice, before beginning any practice of tantra. In such cases, it may be done either
with or without being part of a set of formal "preliminary practices" (sngon-'gro; "ngondro")
for tantra, during which we would repeat the mantra 100,000 times. The recitation and
visualization may also constitute part of a formal tantric "sadhana" (sgrub-thabs) practice for
actualizing ourselves as a Buddha-figure (yi-dam). Such sadhana practice may be within the
context of any class of tantra.
When we commit karmic actions, this leaves "karmic aftermath," such as karmic tendencies
(seeds), on our mental continuum. Later, usually in a future rebirth, these karmic aftermaths
ripen into or bring about our experience of "karmic results" that accord in some way with
those karmic actions. "Ripen," then, does not refer to the arising of immediate man-made
results (skyes-bu byed-pa'i 'bras-bu, Skt. purushakaraphalam), like the pain from stubbing our
toe, or to the immediate effects of our actions on others.
Only Mahayana asserts the possibility of purification of karma before it finishes ripening.
According to the Hinayana schools, all our karmic aftermaths must ripen, even if only into the
experience of a very minor result, before we pass away in the lifetime in which we become
liberated as an arhat or enlightened as a Buddha.
True Sufferings
True sufferings refer to experiencing the results that ripen from karma. These may be tainted
feelings of some level of happiness or unhappiness or they may be tainted aggregate factors of
experience (phung-po, Skt. skandha). In general, "tainted" (zag-bcas, contaminated) refers to
something that derives from unawareness (ma-rig-pa, Skt. avidya; ignorance) of reality,
namely either not knowing how all phenomena exist or having an inverted understanding of
how they exist.
• The experience of the aggregate factors of a rebirth itself - the life form,
physical and mental features, and instincts with which we are born. These
factors constitute the ripened results (rnam-smin-gyi 'bras-bu, Skt.
vipakaphalam) of karma and are ethically neutral - neither constructive nor
destructive.
• The experience of the place and situation into which we are born. This arises as
the dominating result (bdag-po'i 'bras-bu, Skt. adhipatiphalam, overriding
[See: Basic Scheme of the Five Aggregate Factors of Experience {3}. See also: Causes,
Conditions, and Results {4}.]
True Causes
The true causes of these three types of suffering are karma and disturbing emotions and
attitudes (nyon-mongs, Skt. klesha; afflictive emotions). "Disturbing emotions and attitudes"
are mental factors that, when they accompany any moment of our experience, cause us to lose
peace of mind and self-control. They motivate karmic actions as well as serve as the
conditions for bringing about the ripening of the karmic aftermaths from those actions.
Ultimately, however, both karma and disturbing emotions and attitudes derive from
unawareness of reality or, more specifically, from grasping for truly established existence
(bden-'dzin).
According to the law of certainty of karma, when we experience unhappiness, it is certain that
this unhappiness has ripened from the karmic aftermaths of destructive actions. When we
experience tainted happiness, it is certain that this tainted happiness has ripened from the
karmic aftermaths of constructive actions. Both constructive and destructive karmic actions,
however, are motivated and carried out with unawareness of reality.
Three conditions bring about the ripening of karmic aftermaths into the third type of true
suffering - the experience of tainted aggregates - which forms the basis for experiencing the
first two types of true sufferings - the experiences of unhappiness and of tainted happiness.
The first two conditions are types of disturbing emotions or attitudes, while the third is a
karmic urge. All three conditions arise within the context of experiencing some level of
tainted happiness, unhappiness, or a neutral feeling. Those three types of tainted feelings, in
turn, are what have already ripened from other karmic aftermaths.
• craving (sred-pa),
• an obtainer (len-pa).
• a karmic urge for further existence (srid-pa).
"Craving" is the disturbing emotion of longing to be rid of unhappiness, not to be parted from
tainted happiness, or to maintain a neutral feeling. As a disturbing emotion, craving
exaggerates the positive or negative qualities of the feeling on which it focuses, while the
grasping for truly established existence that accompanies the craving projects truly established
existence onto that feeling and its qualities.
True Sufferings 3
Vajrasattva Purification: The Basics
An "obtainer" may be the disturbing emotion of desire for some desirable sensory object -
either attachment to one that we are currently experiencing or longing desire for one that we
do not have. Similar to craving, this obtainer longing desire or attachment exaggerates the
good qualities of the desirable sensory object on which it focuses, while the grasping for truly
established existence that accompanies the obtainer emotion projects truly established
existence onto that sensory object.
Alternatively, an obtainer may be one of several disturbing attitudes. The main one is a
deluded outlook toward a transitory network ('jig-lta), which in this case refers to grasping for
the tainted aggregates, which are the basis for these tainted feelings, to constitute a truly
existent "me." Note that these tainted aggregates to which this disturbing attitude grasps have
also ripened previously from karmic aftermaths. These obtainer attitudes are accompanied by
the grasping for truly established existence that focuses on the tainted aggregates and projects
truly established existence onto them and onto the conventional "me" imputed on them.
Thus, both craving and an obtainer disturbing emotion or attitude arise because of
unawareness of reality - more specifically, because of grasping for truly established existence
- and are accompanied by that unawareness and grasping. The craving and obtainer then cause
a karmic urge for further existence to arise. This karmic urge activates the karmic aftermaths
of the types of karmic actions that have the power to bring about a further rebirth. The
activated karmic aftermaths consist of both the karmic urge that will hurl our mental
continuum into the experience of its next rebirth and the karmic urges that will bring about its
experience of the conditions of that rebirth. These karmic urges are known, respectively, as
"throwing karma" ('phen-byed-kyi las) and "completing karma" (rdzogs-byed-kyi las).
In short:
Ultimately, then, the true cause of sufferings is unawareness of reality, or more specifically,
grasping for truly established existence.
True Causes 4
Vajrasattva Purification: The Basics
True Stoppings
A true stopping of sufferings can only be brought about by a true stopping of their causes.
Thus, true stoppings refer to an absolute absence of karma and disturbing emotions and
attitudes as true causes, and an absolute absence of what ripens from them: tainted feelings
and tainted aggregates as true sufferings. An "absolute absence" means a stopping of
something such that it never arises again.
A true pathway of mind that brings about a true stopping is a nonconceptual cognition of
voidness (emptiness), based on safe direction (refuge), with either simply renunciation or also
a bodhichitta aim.
• "Renunciation" is the strong determination to be free from all true sufferings and to rid
ourselves of all their true causes.
• "Bodhichitta" is a mind focused on our own individual enlightenment that has not yet
happened, but which can be validly imputed on our mental continuum and which can
happen, on the basis of our Buddha-nature factors. This focus is accompanied by the
intentions to attain that enlightenment and to benefit all limited beings by means of
that attainment.
• In the context of anuttarayoga tantra, this nonconceptual cognition is with clear light
awareness ('od-gsal) having a blissful realization of voidness. "Clear light awareness"
is the subtlest level of consciousness that all beings have. In the context of dzogchen
practice, this blissful nonconceptual cognition of voidness is with pure awareness
(rig-pa, "rigpa). For the sake of simplicity of discussion, let us limit our presentation to
clear light awareness, since most relevant points about it pertain to pure awareness as
well.
Vajrasattva represents fully realized clear light awareness in its two aspects:
• Its third noble truth aspect of double purity (dag-pa gnyis-ldan) - it has (1) the natural
purity of its nature having never been stained by karma or by the disturbing emotions
and attitudes and (2) the purity achieved through having removed those fleeting stains
such that they never recur.
• Its fourth noble truth aspect as that which rids us of true sufferings and their true
causes.
Vajrasattva meditation is practiced with the focus on purifying karma. When, with clear light
awareness Vajrasattva, we achieve final purification of all karma, we attain enlightenment.
True Stoppings 5
Vajrasattva Purification: The Basics
Karmic forces include both negative karmic force (sdig-pa, "sins") and positive karmic force
(bsod-nams, "merit"). Only the Mahayana tenet systems assert karmic constant habits; the
Hinayana tenet systems do not assert them.
Karmic forces, but not karmic tendencies, ripen into experiencing tainted aggregates. Both
karmic forces and karmic tendencies, however, ripen into:
Karmic forces and karmic tendencies are also similar in the sense that both ripen
intermittently, not continuously. Once they have finished giving rise to their results, they are
exhausted and are no longer present on our mental continuum. Karmic forces, however, are
either constructive or destructive phenomena, whereas karmic tendencies are unspecified
phenomena, ethically neutral.
Karmic constant habits, on the other hand, give rise to their effects continuously. They give
rise to limited awareness in each moment of our experience and the inability to cognize the
two truths simultaneously - what exists and how each thing exists. Like karmic tendencies,
they are unspecified phenomena. The manner in which karmic constant habits give rise to
limited awareness and this inability is not called "ripening." A ripening (smin-pa) is a natural
ending of something when it exhausts and is no longer able to give further results. Karmic
constant habits never exhaust; they never end naturally.
To understand how purification is possible, we need to understand the type of phenomena that
karmic aftermaths are. Although there are more complex presentations of the types of
phenomena that some of them are, let us look at the least complicated explanation.
[See: Logical Pervasions of the Technical Terms for the Different Types of Karmic Aftermath
{9}.]
According to this explanation, the three types of karmic aftermath are all nonstatic
abstractions imputed on a mental continuum. In technical terminology, they are noncongruent
affecting variables (ldan-min 'du-byed), which means they are nonstatic phenomena that are
neither forms of physical phenomena, nor ways of being aware of something. They do not
share five congruent features in common with the primary consciousness of the moment of
"Nonstatic" (impermanent) means that the karmic aftermaths arise dependently on and are
thus affected by causes and conditions. Moreover, because they are further affected by
conditions, they change from moment to moment. As the karmic aftermaths produce effects,
they affect our experience.
"Imputed" means that the three types of karmic aftermath are imputed on individual mental
continuums that are constituted by sequential moments of experiencing karmic actions and
their karmic results. More specifically, we may validly impute or label the presence of karmic
aftermaths on a mental continuum that contains the experience of their causal karmic actions
and that have the possibility of containing future moments of experiencing the karmic results
that can arise from them.
The three karmic aftermaths exist imputably on a mental continuum only so long as they are
still able to produce an effect. In the case of karmic forces and karmic tendencies, although we
may no longer validly impute the existence of specific examples of them on a mental
continuum once they have finished ripening and have exhausted themselves, we do not call
this manner of elimination of them "purification."
The production of an effect can only happen dependently on causes and conditions. When we
eliminate the causes and conditions that are capable of causing the karmic aftermaths to
produce their effects, their production of an effect is no longer possible. When their
production of an effect is no longer possible, we may no longer validly impute the existence of
the karmic aftermaths that could have produced an effect. After all, the three types of karmic
aftermaths are not truly existent as findable "things" on a mental continuum.
This is the way we purify karmic aftermaths. Through nonconceptual cognition of voidness,
we eliminate grasping for truly established existence, and thus the craving and obtainer
disturbing emotions or attitudes that could act as the conditions for the karmic aftermaths to
activate and give rise to their effects.
During the rest of the lifetime in which we have attained liberation, we still experience the
tainted aggregates with which we were born. In addition, we still experience things happening
to us similar to our past karmic actions. However, we no longer experience tainted feelings of
happiness or unhappiness, and we no longer experience feeling like repeating our past karmic
behavior.
Upon rebirth in a pure land after that lifetime, we no longer experience tainted aggregates
either, or things happening to us similar to our past karmic actions. However, we still have
limited awareness.
[See: Fine Points Concerning the Physical Bodies of Buddhas and Arhats {11}.]
We rid ourselves of karmic constant habits only with the attainment of enlightenment. With
such an attainment, we become omniscient Buddhas.
At first, we may engage in Vajrasattva mantra and visualization practice with the aim of
avoiding gross suffering. We would undertake such practice because we are filled with dread
at the prospect of experiencing any unhappiness or pain at all. Such practice is on a level
shared in common with the initial scope motivation outlined in the lam-rim teachings.
The aim of this initial level of Vajrasattva practice is to purify our mental continuums merely
of negative karmic forces and negative karmic tendencies, which together would ripen into the
first of the three kinds of true sufferings - worse rebirths and gross unhappiness in even a
human rebirth. We work to purify our mental continuums of these negative forces and
tendencies that we have built up not only during this lifetime, but also throughout all our
previous lives, without beginning. We strive for one of the better rebirth states as a human or
as a divine being, a "god."
On this level, we work to purify ourselves of having to experience the negative karmic effects
from:
• Having transgressed and thus weakened our safe direction (refuge) in each of the three
Precious Gems.
• Having behaved inappropriately with each of our spiritual mentors and thus weakened
our close bond (dam-tshig, Skt. samaya) with each of them.
• Having transgressed or weakened each of our pratimoksha vows for individual
liberation, each of our bodhisattva vows, and each of the eighteen close-bonding
practices and twenty-two points to train in for cleansing our attitudes (lojong;
attitude-training; mind-training).
[See: General Explanation of Seven-Point Attitude-Training, Part 2 {15} and Part 3 {16}. See
also: Root Bodhisattva Vows {17}.]
If Vajrasattva meditation were practiced like this as an end in itself, however, it could be
equivalent to a non-Buddhist practice for being cleansed of our sins by the grace of Jesus
Christ so that we can go to heaven. Buddhist purification must be based on safe direction -
aiming for the third and fourth noble truths: true stoppings and true pathways of mind - and
seeing the elimination of negative karmic forces and negative karmic tendencies as just a
steppingstone on the way to liberation and enlightenment.
For Vajrasattva meditation on this level to constitute a Mahayana practice, it must also be
based on a bodhichitta aim and seeing the elimination of the future ripening of negative
karmic forces and tendencies into gross suffering as essential for being better able to help
others. Attaining better rebirth states, specifically with precious human rebirths fully endowed
with all the respites and enrichments enabling optimal Dharma practice, is with the aim of
taking advantage of such rebirths to reach enlightenment for the benefit of all.
With renunciation as our motivation, we would practice Vajrasattva meditation with the aim
of achieving liberation from all sufferings. Such practice is on a level shared in common with
the intermediate lam-rim scope of motivation. The aim in this case is to purify our mental
continuums of their networks of both positive and negative karmic forces and both positive
negative karmic tendencies. By accomplishing that, we will avoid experiencing all three kinds
of true sufferings: unhappiness, tainted happiness, and uncontrollably recurring rebirth with
tainted aggregates. We will attain liberation from samsara.
Vajrasattva meditation with this intermediate scope of motivation, however, needs also to be
based on having a bodhichitta aim. We need to see that in order to be best able to help others,
we need to rid ourselves forever of uncontrollably recurring rebirth with its ups and downs of
happiness and unhappiness and its sufferings of birth, sickness, old age and death. Otherwise,
we will be severely hampered in our work to benefit others.
We do not need to wait until we have accomplished purifying our mental continuums of all
negative karmic force and negative karmic tendencies before we focus our Vajrasattva
practice on purifying our mental continuums of the positive ones as well. As our motivation
evolves from the initial to the intermediate level, we naturally expand the scope of what we
are striving to purify.
With a bodhichitta aim as our single motivation, our Vajrasattva practice expands to purify
our mental continuums of not only all karmic forces and karmic tendencies, but also all
karmic constant habits. To benefit all others as much as is possible, we need to attain the
omniscient state of a Buddha. That means we need to rid ourselves of limited awareness,
which is what results in each moment from our constant karmic habits. Without knowing full
skillful means, without being all-loving, and so on, how will we be able to help everyone?
In short, initial and intermediate lam-rim scopes of motivation are for purifying our mental
continuums of the problems associated with the extreme of compulsive samsara (srid-mtha').
The advanced scope is for purifying them of the problems associated with the extreme of the
tranquil peace of nirvana (zhi-mtha').
When we engage in Vajrasattva mantra and visualization practice within the context of strictly
Mahayana sutra practice, the lam-rim scope of motivation with which we do it makes no
difference. With all three scopes, we need to regard our level of practice as a steppingstone for
eventual engagement in tantra. When we are actually ready to advance to tantra, we practice
Vajrasattva meditation as part of our "ngondro," our set of formal preliminary practices. This
entails repeating the hundred-syllable mantra 100,000 times, in four, three, two, or one session
each day, without missing a day, until we complete the number. We undertake this in order to
purify ourselves of at least the grossest obstacles that could hinder our success in tantra
practice to attain enlightenment for the benefit of all.
Practice of yoga tantra and anuttarayoga tantra in the Sakya, Kagyu, and Gelug traditions -
and, likewise, practice of yoga tantra, mahayoga, anuyoga, and atiyoga in the Nyingma
tradition - entail taking the tantric vows with any empowerment (initiation). In such cases, we
may also practice Vajrasattva mantra and visualization meditation for purification of
weakened tantric vows or weakened close bonding practices (dam-tshig, Skt. samaya). If we
lose the tantric vows by fully transgressing them, we may purify the negative force of the
action through 100,000 hundred-syllable repetitions and then retaking the vows.
In all of these tantra contexts for Vajrasattva practice as well, our motivation needs to be
bodhichitta. We wish to avoid experiencing the negative consequences of our actions that
would hinder or delay our ability to help others and our attainment of enlightenment. The
motivation is not simply an initial scope non-Mahayana one, simply to avoid worse rebirth
situations and the suffering of pain and unhappiness.
• sincere regret,
• the firm decision to try not to repeat the action,
• reaffirmation of our foundation, namely safe direction and the bodhichitta aim,
• application of counteracting constructive actions, such as Vajrasattva mantra and
visualization meditation.
According to Mahayana, even after we have committed karmic actions, we can weaken the
strength of their karmic aftermath by prayer and other means. Even if others offer the prayers
after we have died and while we are still experiencing the bardo period in between rebirths,
the strength of their aftermath can be weakened. This is because their prayers affect the arising
of the conditions that can ripen the aftermath. Similarly, open admission and the four
opponent forces diminish the heaviness of karmic ripening, since they counter the factors that
make the ripening heavy.
• Open admission of the mistake opposes not regarding the transgression as detrimental.
• Regret opposes feeling no regret, delighting in the negative karmic action, and having
undertaken it with joy.
• Trying not to repeat the action opposes having no wish or intention to stop repeating
the transgression.
• Reaffirming our safe direction and bodhichitta aim opposes having no moral
self-dignity and no care for how our actions reflect on others.
• Applying counteracting constructive actions opposes not thinking to repair the
damage.
[See: The Ten Far-Reaching Attitudes in Theravada, Mahayana, and Bon {20}.]
Note that application of the four opponent forces brings about a shift from incorrect
consideration (tshul-min yid-la byed-pa) of our previously committed karmic actions to
correct consideration.
• Seeing the karmic action as detrimental indicates changing our consideration of it from
being happiness to being suffering, and from being pure to impure.
• Regretting the action, rather than delighting in it, follows from this shift of how we
consider it.
• Promising to try not to repeat the action indicates changing our consideration of the
mode of behavior from being permanent to being impermanent.
• Impermanent or nonstatic means that it can be affected by other phenomena, and thus
reaffirming our safe direction and bodhichitta and applying counteracting constructive
actions indicates understanding this.
• Accompanying the counteracting constructive action with some understanding of
voidness also indicates changing our consideration of the karmic action from having a
truly established identity to lacking one.
For viewing all as an illusion, we need to have analyzed and then focused first on the "three
gateways to liberation" (rnam-par thar-pa'i sgo gsum) with regard to the karmic action and to
the purification of its karmic aftermath. The three gateways are:
• the phenomena themselves - namely, the karmic actions and their aftermaths.
• the causes of the karmic actions and the causes that will bring about the purification of
their karmic aftermaths,
• the results that will arise from the karmic aftermaths and the results that will arise from
the purification of the karmic aftermaths.
We may also analyze in terms of the "four gateways to liberation," in which case the fourth
gateway is:
• the act of meditating on voidness that brings about the purification and the act itself of
purifying.
There are many emotionally painful consequences that we experience from projecting and
believing in truly established existence. For example, we might grasp at
• the existence of a destructive karmic action that we have committed as being truly
established as "bad," independently of the mental label "bad,"
• the existence of ourselves as being truly established as "bad" for having committed it,
• the existence of the karmic results of that action as being truly established as
"unavoidable eternal punishment."
Such grasping for truly established existence underlies the disturbing attitude of guilt.
• the existence of a constructive karmic action that we have committed as being truly
established as "good,"
• the existence of ourselves as being truly established as "good" for having committed it,
• the existence of the karmic results of that action as being truly established as
"unavoidable reward."
The understanding of voidness that accompanies our Vajrasattva mantra practice may be not
so precise or sophisticated and thus would be unable to purify our karmic aftermaths
completely. Nevertheless, some meditation on the voidness of our karmic actions, ourselves,
and so on, is not only appropriate, but essential. By so doing, we may rid ourselves, at least on
a provisional level, of guilt or pride, and the problems that come from both.
Nyingma and Sakya practice Vajrasattva as a Buddha-figure (yidam) as well, in which case
there is also the possibility of receiving a Vajrasattva empowerment. If we have received such
empowerment, we may visualize ourselves as Vajrasattva during the practice, with ourselves
in ordinary form, surrounded by all beings, with all sitting on a moon disc at our heart. We
may also visualize all beings around us, and after we achieve purification, that we ourselves,
as Vajrasattvas, emit rays of light and purify all of them. Gelug and Kagyu do not practice
Vajrasattva as a yidam. Thus, there is no Vajrasattva empowerment, no visualization of
ourselves as Vajrasattva, and no visualization of lights coming from ourselves and purifying
all beings around us.
Preliminaries
For Vajrasattva mantra and visualization meditation, the preliminaries begin with quieting
down by focusing on the breath, while breathing normally through the nose. If we have much
mental wandering, we count the breaths. If our minds are already fairly quiet, we merely focus
on the sensation of the breath coming in and out the nostrils. We can then visualize
Vajrasattva before us as incorporating all objects that indicate a safe direction. We then
reaffirm our motivation of safe direction and the bodhichitta aim.
We then make the conscious decision to meditate with concentration and then focus on the
point between the eyebrows to correct dullness and on the navel to correct flightiness.
If we do not do the seven-limb practice, we simply recall and openly admit as mistaken
whatever we have done that we wish to purify and apply the four opponent forces. For the
fourth opponent, we do the main part of the Vajrasattva practice, with the conscious decision
to concentrate.
Visualization of Vajrasattva
In conjunction with the context within which we are practicing, we visualize the appropriate
form of Vajrasattva seated on top of our heads. If we have difficulty in visualizing the detail,
we can visualize merely a ball of white light. The aspect of holding the pride of the deity - in
this case, the feeling of a Vajrasattva actually seated on our heads - is more important than the
clarity aspect of making something appear in our imaginations. One method for learning how
to visualize something on our heads is to put our hand on our head and then take it off. We can
still feel the spot on our head where our hand was and it still feels as if something is there.
Hundred-Syllable Mantra
The Tibetan pronunciation of the mantra differs from the original Sanskrit one. Some Tibetan
masters instruct their non-Tibetan students to pronounce the mantra in the way that the
Tibetans do; some recommend pronouncing it in the Sanskrit style. His Holiness the Dalai
Lama recommends that non-Tibetans follow the original Sanskrit manner:
Preliminaries 15
Vajrasattva Purification: The Basics
Om Vajrasattva,
Uphold your close bond.
Bring it about that I remain closely with this Vajrasattva-hood.
Bring it about that I am stable.
Bring it about that I am happy.
Bring it about that I am joyous.
Bring it about that I am safeguarded.
Bestow on me all actual attainments.
Make all my actions excellent.
Make the mind supreme - HUM.
HA HA HA HA HO, Vanquishing Master Surpassing All,
Vajra state of all Thusly Gone Ones.
Do not let me loose,
O Vajra Being, being with the great bond.
AH, HUM, PHAT.
Although there are several ways of explaining each phrase of the mantra, one way is:
• Uphold the close bond - namely, the close bond or promise that through clear light
blissful awareness of voidness, I will be able to purify away all karmic aftermaths.
• Bring it about that I remain closely with this state of Vajrasattva - in other words, the
state of clear light awareness.
Hundred-Syllable Mantra 16
Vajrasattva Purification: The Basics
• Bring it about that I am happy - through my eliminating the networks of all karmic
forces and all the karmic tendencies from my mental continuum, so that I attain
liberation, with its untainted happiness.
• Bring it about that I am joyous - through my eliminating all karmic constant habits, so
that I attain enlightenment, with its everlasting bliss.
• Bring it about that I am safeguarded - so that my mind never leaves clear light blissful
awareness of voidness.
HUM = seed syllable for mind; HA = represents a building-up pathway mind (path of
accumulation); HA = represents an applying pathway mind (path of preparation); HA =
represents a seeing pathway mind (path of seeing); HA = represents an accustoming pathway
mind (path of meditation); HOH = represents a pathway mind needing no further training
(path of no more learning).
[See: The Five Pathway Minds (Five Paths): Basic Presentation {24}.]
Hundred-Syllable Mantra 17
Vajrasattva Purification: The Basics
• And thus may I become one who has vanquished and purified away all karmic
aftermaths and mastered and thus gained all good qualities, surpassing all other beings.
In other words, may I attain the diamond-strong state of all those who have gone to
enlightenment thusly.
• Do not let me lose - in other words, do not let me lose or leave clear light blissful
awareness of voidness.
• O you, whose mind has the great bond - in other words, O clear light blissful
awareness of voidness which has the great bond to bring about complete purification.
AH - seed syllable for speech; HUM = seed syllable for mind; PHAT = stabilizing syllable.
• The AH and HUM for speech and mind complete the OM at the start of the mantra for
body. May all interferences to body, speech, and mind be turned away and may the
purification remain stable.
There is also a shorter version of the Vajrasattva mantra that may also be repeated for
purification, but it is not as commonly used as is the hundred-syllable one:
Visualizations of Purification
Various texts and teachers present different sets of visualizations to apply in conjunction with
Vajrasattva mantra meditation. Let us outline one such multistep scheme.
As a first step in the purification process needed for attaining enlightenment, we work on
purifying ourselves of negative karmic force and negative karmic tendencies. Since these
types of negative karmic aftermath ripen into gross suffering and the worst rebirth states, the
scope of practice is in accord with the initial scope motivation of lam-rim. They focus on the
purification of the first of the three types of true suffering.
For purifying the negative karmic aftermaths that would ripen into terrible experiences
affecting our body or speech, we apply the following set of three visualizations - one complete
set for body, followed by one complete set for speech. We do this while reciting over and
again any of the Vajrasattva mantras. As we recite the mantra in conjunction with practice of
sutra or any of the first three classes of tantra, we imagine lights leaving the right big toe of
Vajrasattva, entering through the crown of our head and filling our body. When practiced in
conjunction with anuttarayoga tantra, we imagine both light and nectars flowing from the
place of union of the Vajrasattva couple and similarly entering us and filling our body.
In relation to our body, we imagine the light or the light and nectars filling our body from the
top downwards and the relevant defilements leaving us through our lower orifices for
excreting solid and liquid waste. In relation to our speech, we imagine the light or the light
and nectars filling our body from the bottom upwards and a similar set of defilements leaving
us through our upper orifices, namely the mouth, nose, eye sockets, and ear passages.
• The negative karmic aftermaths for experiencing (1) the gross sufferings of
unhappiness and pain and (2) things happening to us, similar to our past karmic
actions, leave through these orifices in the form of soot, tar, and black ink.
• Those for experiencing (1) karmic obstacles, blocks, and stains in the aggregates and
environment of future worse rebirths or (2) physical or verbal impediments in a future
human rebirth, as well as (3) moments of feeling like doing, saying, or thinking in
ways resembling our past karmic actions, leave us in the form of snot, mucous, pus,
feces, and urine.
• Those for experiencing sicknesses and any other interference, such as from harmful
forces, in the future, leave us in the form of whatever creatures we are most afraid of,
for instance as scorpions, spiders, rats, or snakes.
For purification of our mind, we employ just one visualization and we apply it three times,
one for each of the three above types of defilement. Thus, we imagine at our hearts each of
Visualizations of Purification 20
Vajrasattva Purification: The Basics
these three types of defilement, one at a time, in the form of a black lump. While reciting the
Vajrasattva mantra, we imagine that a flash of lightning bolts from Vajrasattva's heart to ours
and disintegrates each lump.
For purifying any defilement left that would affect our body, speech, and mind all together,
we apply the visualizations for body, speech, and mind together, simultaneously, for each of
the three sets of defilement.
In order to attain liberation, which is the aim of the lam-rim intermediate scope of motivation,
we need to rid ourselves of not only the emotional obscurations (nyon-sgrib), but also all
karmic forces and karmic tendencies - both the negative and the positive ones. The focus,
then, is purification of all three types of true suffering. In order to attain enlightenment, which
is the aim of the advanced scope, we need to rid ourselves of not only the cognitive
obscurations (shes-sgrib), but also the karmic constant habits that limit our body, speech, and
mind from functioning like those of a Buddha.
In this second step of Vajrasattva mantra meditation, then, we repeat the same visualizations
as we did in the first step. However, regarding purification of body and speech, we imagine:
• the soot, tar, and black ink that leave us represent the karmic forces;
• the snot, mucous, pus, feces, and urine represent the karmic tendencies;
• the creatures we are most afraid of represent the karmic constant tendencies.
Regarding purification of our mind, we imagine the black lump at our hearts as representing
each of the three types of karmic aftermath, one at a time.
Note that in both steps of this purification scheme, the three visualizations of soot, snot, and
frightful creatures are the same as the three visualizations employed in the practice of giving
and taking (gtong-len, "tonglen"). In that practice, we imagine taking on from others what
these three things represent, visualized in these three forms. The point is that most people wish
progressively more strongly to get these three types of things off their skin and to clean
themselves if they were soiled by them.
If we repeat the mantra 100,000 times purely - with a bodhichitta aim, proper concentration,
and, optimally, also with a conceptual understanding of voidness - we achieve a "provisional
purification" of the built-up negative karmic forces and negative karmic tendencies. With
For this reason, the purification accomplished by mantra recitation is provisional: it is only a
temporary respite from the ripening of our previously built-up negative karmic forces and
negative karmic tendencies. It gives us breathing space to work on the path in a less hindered
way, like achieving a fortunate fully endowed human rebirth does. Nevertheless, we still have
karmic constant habits, as well as positive karmic forces and positive karmic tendencies.
The karmic constant habits give rise to limited awareness in each moment of our experience
and the inability to cognize the two truths simultaneously. This means that our minds still give
rise to appearances of truly established existence and cognition of them when we are not
totally absorbed nonconceptually on voidness. Moreover, when we are without nonconceptual
cognition of voidness, grasping for true existence also arises, as do disturbing emotions and
attitudes, namely craving and grasping. The craving and grasping act as the conditions and
causes not only for ripening our positive karmic aftermaths, but also for further karmic urges
to arise. These may be either positive or negative impulses, leading to further karmic actions
and thus further karmic aftermaths. Thus, we may build up a new network of negative karmic
forces and negative karmic legacies.
If the negative karmic actions become sufficiently strong in their heaviness, the previously
weakened negative karmic forces and negative tendencies may be revitalized such that the
probability of their ripening increases. The mechanism is similar to that which Asanga and
other Mahayana masters explained for reconnecting so-called "severed roots of positive forces
(roots of virtue)."
To purify both positive and negative karmic forces and both positive and negative karmic
tendencies, in the sense of achieving a true stopping of them such that they never return, we
need the nonconceptual cognition of voidness. To achieve a true stopping of karmic constant
habits, we need this nonconceptual cognition of voidness with the force of a bodhichitta aim.
In both cases, we may achieve this nonconceptual cognition with either bare yogic cognition
(rnal-sbyor mngon-sum) or with clear light awareness.
• Bare yogic cognition is used on the sutra path and with the first three classes of tantra.
It employs subtle mental consciousness, which is the level of consciousness on which
appearance-making of truly established existence can recur and which is incapable of
simultaneous cognition of the two truths.
• Clear light awareness is used exclusively on the anuttarayoga tantra path. It employs
the subtlest level of consciousness - the level of consciousness that does not make
appearances of truly established existence and which is capable of simultaneous
cognition of the two truths.
[See: The Validity and Accuracy of Cognition of the Two Truths in Gelug Prasangika {28}.
See also: Ridding Oneself of the Two Sets of Obscuration in Sutra and Highest Tantra
According to Nyingma and Sakya {29}.]
With bare yogic cognition of voidness and a bodhichitta aim, we may progress as far as the
attainment of a tenth-level bhumi-mind. However, to attain the full true stopping of karmic
constant habits and thus enlightenment, we need to attain nonconceptual cognition of voidness
with blissful clear light awareness. Vajrasattva represents that nonconceptual cognition.
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