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Difference between revisions of "How to Invoke the Medicine Buddha"

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(Created page with " BY DAVID MICHIE David Michie teaches us a healing meditation to purify karma and cultivate well-being. It is no coincidence that the words “medication” and “med...")
 
 
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BY DAVID MICHIE
 
BY DAVID MICHIE
  
David Michie teaches us a healing meditation to purify karma and cultivate well-being.
+
David Michie teaches us a [[healing]] [[meditation]] to {{Wiki|purify}} [[karma]] and cultivate well-being.
  
  
It is no coincidence that the words “medication” and “meditation” are only one letter different. They both come from the same Latin root word, medeor, meaning “to heal or to make whole.”
+
It is no coincidence that the words “medication” and “[[meditation]]” are only one [[letter]] different. They both come from the same {{Wiki|Latin}} [[root]] [[word]], medeor, meaning “to heal or to make whole.”
  
In the West, our medical focus is on the external—on the curing of physical symptoms—while Eastern traditions focus more on the internal, that is, addressing the mental causes of illness. It is our good fortune to be living at a time when we can access the best of both worlds.
+
In the [[West]], our {{Wiki|medical}} focus is on the external—on the curing of [[physical]] symptoms—while Eastern [[traditions]] focus more on the internal, that is, addressing the [[mental]] [[causes]] of {{Wiki|illness}}. It is our [[good fortune]] to be living at a time when we can access the best of both [[worlds]].
  
Medicine Buddha meditation is a healing practice treasured by many in the Mahayana Buddhist tradition. We can practice it for ourselves, or for someone we care about who is ill. The oldest Medicine Buddha sutra we know about dates from the seventh century. In that sutra, we are told the story of a bodhisattva, Medicine Buddha, who made twelve vows about how he would help living beings after attaining enlightenment. The holistic healing of mind and body was an important focus of his vows: he promised to help eradicate pain, disease, and disabilities of all kinds, as well as promote good health and optimal flourishing.
+
[[Medicine Buddha]] [[meditation]] is a [[healing]] practice treasured by many in the [[Mahayana Buddhist tradition]]. We can practice it for ourselves, or for someone we [[care]] about who is ill. The oldest [[Medicine Buddha sutra]] we know about dates from the seventh century. In that [[sutra]], we are told the story of a [[bodhisattva]], [[Medicine Buddha]], who made [[twelve vows]] about how he would help [[living beings]] after [[attaining enlightenment]]. The {{Wiki|holistic}} [[healing]] of [[mind and body]] was an important focus of his [[vows]]: he promised to help eradicate [[pain]], {{Wiki|disease}}, and [[disabilities]] of all kinds, as well as promote [[good health]] and optimal flourishing.
  
When we practice Medicine Buddha meditation, we do not do so to replace mainstream medical treatment, but to complement it. The practice purifies and removes the underlying, karmic causes of disease and cultivates the causes for holistic well-being. Such may be the power of our practice that we experience significant improvements in the symptoms, too. But we need to be clear about what we are doing.
+
When we practice [[Medicine Buddha]] [[meditation]], we do not do so to replace {{Wiki|mainstream}} {{Wiki|medical}} treatment, but to complement it. The practice purifies and removes the underlying, [[karmic causes]] of {{Wiki|disease}} and cultivates the [[causes]] for {{Wiki|holistic}} well-being. Such may be the power of our practice that we [[experience]] significant improvements in the symptoms, too. But we need to be clear about what we are doing.
  
Medicine Buddha is as much about mind as it is body. Empirical evidence shows that when we meditate, it triggers a self-repair mechanism in our own bodies. We stop producing cortisol and adrenalin, and instead enhance the production of immune-boosting endorphins and seratonin, arming our body against invasive bacteria, viruses, and other imbalances. These changes also promote positive mental states.
+
[[Medicine Buddha]] is as much about [[mind]] as it is [[body]]. [[Empirical evidence]] shows that when we [[meditate]], it triggers a self-repair {{Wiki|mechanism}} in our [[own]] [[bodies]]. We stop producing cortisol and adrenalin, and instead enhance the production of immune-boosting {{Wiki|endorphins}} and seratonin, arming our [[body]] against invasive {{Wiki|bacteria}}, viruses, and other imbalances. These changes also promote positive [[mental states]].
  
An element of confidence in the practice is helpful. The placebo effect is said to account for more than a third of all healing. Medicine Buddha meditation has been practiced for thousands of years. If we have confidence that it can work for us, then we’re off to a very good start.
+
An [[element]] of [[confidence]] in the practice is helpful. The placebo effect is said to account for more than a third of all [[healing]]. [[Medicine Buddha]] [[meditation]] has been practiced for thousands of years. If we have [[confidence]] that it can work for us, then we’re off to a very good start.
  
  
Resonance may also account for the powerful impact of Medicine Buddha practice. On one level, we may be sitting alone in a room meditating, but in a different way we are resonating with the many hundreds of thousands of people who have done exactly the same thing before us. We’re benefiting from their experience and contributing to the experience of those who follow.
+
Resonance may also account for the powerful impact of [[Medicine Buddha practice]]. On one level, we may be sitting alone in a room [[meditating]], but in a different way we are resonating with the many hundreds of thousands of [[people]] who have done exactly the same thing before us. We’re benefiting from their [[experience]] and contributing to the [[experience]] of those who follow.
  
When doing this practice, it’s important to retain an awareness that you are not an inherently existent person asking an inherently existent buddha to get rid of an inherently existent illness. This would be little different from a theistic or shamanistic approach. It is precisely because nothing has any true, separate, or independent existence—including illness—that practices like this have power.
+
When doing this practice, it’s important to retain an [[awareness]] that you are not an [[inherently existent]] [[person]] asking an [[inherently existent]] [[buddha]] to get rid of an [[inherently existent]] {{Wiki|illness}}. This would be little different from a {{Wiki|theistic}} or {{Wiki|shamanistic}} approach. It is precisely because nothing has any true, separate, or {{Wiki|independent}} existence—including illness—that practices like this have power.
  
We invoke Medicine Buddha through the use of specific imagery and sound, reaching out to the consciousness of those numberless beings who have already attained enlightenment and who have chosen to manifest Medicine Buddha’s qualities.
+
We invoke [[Medicine Buddha]] through the use of specific [[imagery]] and [[sound]], reaching out to the [[consciousness]] of those numberless [[beings]] who have already [[attained enlightenment]] and who have chosen to [[manifest]] [[Medicine Buddha’s]] qualities.
  
The minds of buddhas are understood to be all-seeing and all-knowing. Buddhas react to their mantra in the same way we react when we hear our name mentioned, so we pretty much have a buddha on speed dial when we use their mantra. To borrow a metaphor from the late Tibetan teacher Gelek Rinpoche, when we recite a buddha’s mantra we are providing a hoop through which they can hook us into their energetic influence.
+
The [[minds]] of [[buddhas]] are understood to be {{Wiki|all-seeing}} and all-knowing. [[Buddhas]] react to their [[mantra]] in the same way we react when we hear our [[name]] mentioned, so we pretty much have a [[buddha]] on {{Wiki|speed}} dial when we use their [[mantra]]. To borrow a {{Wiki|metaphor}} from the late [[Tibetan]] [[teacher]] [[Gelek Rinpoche]], when we recite a [[buddha’s]] [[mantra]] we are providing a hoop through which they can hook us into their energetic influence.
  
Note that Medicine Buddha is a Kriya tantra practice. As such, it is helpful that you first have some familiarity with the sutra tradition, as well as receive proper initiations and teachings from a properly qualified teacher, if you wish to fully embody the precious Medicine Buddha lineage.
+
Note that [[Medicine Buddha]] is a [[Kriya tantra]] practice. As such, it is helpful that you first have some familiarity with the [[sutra]] [[tradition]], as well as receive proper [[initiations]] and teachings from a properly [[qualified teacher]], if you wish to fully embody the [[precious]] [[Medicine Buddha]] [[lineage]].
  
How to Practice Medicine Buddha Meditation
+
How to Practice [[Medicine Buddha]] [[Meditation]]
  
  
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Find a quiet place to meditate and assume the optimal meditation posture for you. Take refuge in the Buddha, dharma, and sangha, and then spend a short time establishing your motivation in a heartfelt way. You may think or say: “By this practice of Medicine Buddha, may I (or the being for whom I am practicing) be purified of all disease, pain, and suffering, and enjoy robust good health, and attain complete and perfect enlightenment to lead all other beings to this same state.”
+
Find a quiet place to [[meditate]] and assume the optimal [[meditation posture]] for you. [[Take refuge]] in the [[Buddha]], [[dharma]], and [[sangha]], and then spend a short time establishing your [[motivation]] in a heartfelt way. You may think or say: “By this practice of [[Medicine Buddha]], may I (or the being for whom I am practicing) be [[purified]] of all {{Wiki|disease}}, [[pain]], and [[suffering]], and enjoy robust [[good health]], and attain complete and [[perfect enlightenment]] to lead all other [[beings]] to this same [[state]].”
  
  
INVITE MEDICINE BUDDHA TO YOUR PRESENCE
+
INVITE MEDICINE [[BUDDHA]] TO YOUR PRESENCE
  
  
Visualize Medicine Buddha sitting, looking at you. He is depicted as having a dark blue (lapis lazuli) body, this being an archetypal color of healing. With his left hand he holds a bowl of healing nectars, and with his right a medicine plant. In your visualization, he is at about the height of your forehead, a few feet in front of you, gazing at you with as much love as a mother for her only child. He is everything beautiful gathered into one.
+
[[Visualize]] [[Medicine Buddha]] sitting, [[looking at]] you. He is depicted as having a [[dark blue]] ([[lapis lazuli]]) [[body]], this being an [[archetypal]] {{Wiki|color}} of [[healing]]. With his left hand he holds a [[bowl]] of [[healing]] nectars, and with his right a [[medicine]] plant. In your [[visualization]], he is at about the height of your {{Wiki|forehead}}, a few feet in front of you, gazing at you with as much [[love]] as a mother for her only child. He is everything beautiful [[gathered]] into one.
  
I recommend having an image of Medicine Buddha in a place where you’ll see it frequently throughout the day. That will make it easier for you to “see” Medicine Buddha when your eyes are shut. After all, the more familiar you are with anything, the easier it is for you to picture it in your mind. (You can easily picture your front door, right?) Even if your visualization is not great initially, just picturing a blob of blue light is sufficient.
+
I recommend having an image of [[Medicine Buddha]] in a place where you’ll see it frequently throughout the day. That will make it easier for you to “see” [[Medicine Buddha]] when your [[eyes]] are shut. After all, the more familiar you are with anything, the easier it is for you to picture it in your [[mind]]. (You can easily picture your front door, right?) Even if your [[visualization]] is not great initially, just picturing a blob of blue {{Wiki|light}} is sufficient.
  
What’s really important is to have a very real sense that Medicine Buddha is actually there. That if you looked up, or opened your eyes, you would see him. Try and cultivate the feeling that you are in the presence of a truly amazing being. If you’ve ever had the privilege of being in an audience with someone such as the Dalai Lama, you will know that there is a palpable sensation to his being there. Try to imagine this same energetic presence with Medicine Buddha.
+
What’s really important is to have a very real [[sense]] that [[Medicine Buddha]] is actually there. That if you looked up, or opened your [[eyes]], you would see him. Try and cultivate the [[feeling]] that you are in the presence of a truly amazing being. If you’ve ever had the privilege of being in an audience with someone such as the [[Dalai Lama]], you will know that there is a palpable [[sensation]] to his being there. Try to [[imagine]] this same energetic presence with [[Medicine Buddha]].
  
  
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Ask Medicine Buddha to eliminate pain, purify disease, and/or rebalance or restore your health (or that of the being for whom you are practicing). You don’t need precise knowledge of the anatomical changes required. What matters here is intention.
+
Ask [[Medicine Buddha]] to eliminate [[pain]], {{Wiki|purify}} {{Wiki|disease}}, and/or rebalance or restore your [[health]] (or that of the being for whom you are practicing). You don’t need precise [[knowledge]] of the anatomical changes required. What matters here is [[intention]].
  
Visualize that Medicine Buddha willingly responds to your request. Instantly, healing blue lights and nectars emanate from the bowl in his lap, come to the crown of your head, and flow down, filling your body, or that of the being for whom you are practicing. You can direct the lights and nectars to specific parts of the body, but there is such an abundance of them, that they will fill your whole being anyway.
+
[[Visualize]] that [[Medicine Buddha]] willingly responds to your request. Instantly, [[healing]] blue lights and nectars [[emanate]] from the [[bowl]] in his lap, come to the {{Wiki|crown}} of your head, and flow down, filling your [[body]], or that of the being for whom you are practicing. You can direct the lights and nectars to specific parts of the [[body]], but there is such an abundance of them, that they will fill your whole being anyway.
  
Imagine that this process instantly, completely, and permanently eliminates and purifies all disease, pain, and suffering and—importantly—the causes of disease, pain, and suffering. In addition, the causes of holistic well-being of mind and body stream in with limitless abundance.
+
[[Imagine]] that this process instantly, completely, and permanently eliminates and purifies all {{Wiki|disease}}, [[pain]], and [[suffering]] and—importantly—the [[causes]] of {{Wiki|disease}}, [[pain]], and [[suffering]]. In addition, the [[causes]] of {{Wiki|holistic}} well-being of [[mind and body]] {{Wiki|stream}} in with [[limitless]] abundance.
  
While visualizing this process, recite Medicine Buddha’s mantra. There are a few variants of the mantra, depending on lineage. This is one version of the mantra, which is in Sanskrit:
+
While [[visualizing]] this process, recite [[Medicine Buddha’s]] [[mantra]]. There are a few variants of the [[mantra]], depending on [[lineage]]. This is one version of the [[mantra]], which is in [[Sanskrit]]:
  
TAYATA, OM BEKADZE BEKADZE
+
TAYATA, [[OM]] BEKADZE BEKADZE
  
 
MAHA BEKADZE BEKADZE,
 
MAHA BEKADZE BEKADZE,
Line 78: Line 78:
 
ma-ha beck-and-zay beck-and-zay
 
ma-ha beck-and-zay beck-and-zay
 
run-zuh sum-oon-gut-eh
 
run-zuh sum-oon-gut-eh
so-ha.
+
[[so-ha]].
  
  
Continue the visualization and mantra recitation for at least ten minutes if you are new to the practice. If you are a seasoned meditator, you will probably wish to go on for longer.
+
Continue the [[visualization]] and [[mantra recitation]] for at least ten minutes if you are new to the practice. If you are a seasoned [[meditator]], you will probably wish to go on for longer.
  
  
Line 87: Line 87:
  
  
Conclude your session with a dedication, such as, “By this practice of Medicine Buddha, may I (or the being for whom I am practicing), and all beings, be free from pain, disease, and suffering, and quickly achieve complete and perfect enlightenment.”
+
Conclude your session with a [[dedication]], such as, “By this practice of [[Medicine Buddha]], may I (or the being for whom I am practicing), and all [[beings]], be free from [[pain]], {{Wiki|disease}}, and [[suffering]], and quickly achieve complete and [[perfect enlightenment]].”
  
  

Latest revision as of 16:56, 4 February 2020




BY DAVID MICHIE

David Michie teaches us a healing meditation to purify karma and cultivate well-being.


It is no coincidence that the words “medication” and “meditation” are only one letter different. They both come from the same Latin root word, medeor, meaning “to heal or to make whole.”

In the West, our medical focus is on the external—on the curing of physical symptoms—while Eastern traditions focus more on the internal, that is, addressing the mental causes of illness. It is our good fortune to be living at a time when we can access the best of both worlds.

Medicine Buddha meditation is a healing practice treasured by many in the Mahayana Buddhist tradition. We can practice it for ourselves, or for someone we care about who is ill. The oldest Medicine Buddha sutra we know about dates from the seventh century. In that sutra, we are told the story of a bodhisattva, Medicine Buddha, who made twelve vows about how he would help living beings after attaining enlightenment. The holistic healing of mind and body was an important focus of his vows: he promised to help eradicate pain, disease, and disabilities of all kinds, as well as promote good health and optimal flourishing.

When we practice Medicine Buddha meditation, we do not do so to replace mainstream medical treatment, but to complement it. The practice purifies and removes the underlying, karmic causes of disease and cultivates the causes for holistic well-being. Such may be the power of our practice that we experience significant improvements in the symptoms, too. But we need to be clear about what we are doing.

Medicine Buddha is as much about mind as it is body. Empirical evidence shows that when we meditate, it triggers a self-repair mechanism in our own bodies. We stop producing cortisol and adrenalin, and instead enhance the production of immune-boosting endorphins and seratonin, arming our body against invasive bacteria, viruses, and other imbalances. These changes also promote positive mental states.

An element of confidence in the practice is helpful. The placebo effect is said to account for more than a third of all healing. Medicine Buddha meditation has been practiced for thousands of years. If we have confidence that it can work for us, then we’re off to a very good start.


Resonance may also account for the powerful impact of Medicine Buddha practice. On one level, we may be sitting alone in a room meditating, but in a different way we are resonating with the many hundreds of thousands of people who have done exactly the same thing before us. We’re benefiting from their experience and contributing to the experience of those who follow.

When doing this practice, it’s important to retain an awareness that you are not an inherently existent person asking an inherently existent buddha to get rid of an inherently existent illness. This would be little different from a theistic or shamanistic approach. It is precisely because nothing has any true, separate, or independent existence—including illness—that practices like this have power.

We invoke Medicine Buddha through the use of specific imagery and sound, reaching out to the consciousness of those numberless beings who have already attained enlightenment and who have chosen to manifest Medicine Buddha’s qualities.

The minds of buddhas are understood to be all-seeing and all-knowing. Buddhas react to their mantra in the same way we react when we hear our name mentioned, so we pretty much have a buddha on speed dial when we use their mantra. To borrow a metaphor from the late Tibetan teacher Gelek Rinpoche, when we recite a buddha’s mantra we are providing a hoop through which they can hook us into their energetic influence.

Note that Medicine Buddha is a Kriya tantra practice. As such, it is helpful that you first have some familiarity with the sutra tradition, as well as receive proper initiations and teachings from a properly qualified teacher, if you wish to fully embody the precious Medicine Buddha lineage.

How to Practice Medicine Buddha Meditation


GETTING STARTED


Find a quiet place to meditate and assume the optimal meditation posture for you. Take refuge in the Buddha, dharma, and sangha, and then spend a short time establishing your motivation in a heartfelt way. You may think or say: “By this practice of Medicine Buddha, may I (or the being for whom I am practicing) be purified of all disease, pain, and suffering, and enjoy robust good health, and attain complete and perfect enlightenment to lead all other beings to this same state.”


INVITE MEDICINE BUDDHA TO YOUR PRESENCE


Visualize Medicine Buddha sitting, looking at you. He is depicted as having a dark blue (lapis lazuli) body, this being an archetypal color of healing. With his left hand he holds a bowl of healing nectars, and with his right a medicine plant. In your visualization, he is at about the height of your forehead, a few feet in front of you, gazing at you with as much love as a mother for her only child. He is everything beautiful gathered into one.

I recommend having an image of Medicine Buddha in a place where you’ll see it frequently throughout the day. That will make it easier for you to “see” Medicine Buddha when your eyes are shut. After all, the more familiar you are with anything, the easier it is for you to picture it in your mind. (You can easily picture your front door, right?) Even if your visualization is not great initially, just picturing a blob of blue light is sufficient.

What’s really important is to have a very real sense that Medicine Buddha is actually there. That if you looked up, or opened your eyes, you would see him. Try and cultivate the feeling that you are in the presence of a truly amazing being. If you’ve ever had the privilege of being in an audience with someone such as the Dalai Lama, you will know that there is a palpable sensation to his being there. Try to imagine this same energetic presence with Medicine Buddha.


MAKE YOUR REQUEST


Ask Medicine Buddha to eliminate pain, purify disease, and/or rebalance or restore your health (or that of the being for whom you are practicing). You don’t need precise knowledge of the anatomical changes required. What matters here is intention.

Visualize that Medicine Buddha willingly responds to your request. Instantly, healing blue lights and nectars emanate from the bowl in his lap, come to the crown of your head, and flow down, filling your body, or that of the being for whom you are practicing. You can direct the lights and nectars to specific parts of the body, but there is such an abundance of them, that they will fill your whole being anyway.

Imagine that this process instantly, completely, and permanently eliminates and purifies all disease, pain, and suffering and—importantly—the causes of disease, pain, and suffering. In addition, the causes of holistic well-being of mind and body stream in with limitless abundance.

While visualizing this process, recite Medicine Buddha’s mantra. There are a few variants of the mantra, depending on lineage. This is one version of the mantra, which is in Sanskrit:

TAYATA, OM BEKADZE BEKADZE

MAHA BEKADZE BEKADZE,

RADZA SAMUNGATE

SOHA


This is pronounced:


Tie-ya-tar, om beck-and-zay beck-and-zay ma-ha beck-and-zay beck-and-zay run-zuh sum-oon-gut-eh so-ha.


Continue the visualization and mantra recitation for at least ten minutes if you are new to the practice. If you are a seasoned meditator, you will probably wish to go on for longer.


DEDICATION


Conclude your session with a dedication, such as, “By this practice of Medicine Buddha, may I (or the being for whom I am practicing), and all beings, be free from pain, disease, and suffering, and quickly achieve complete and perfect enlightenment.”



Source

[1]