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Geshe Dakpa Topgyal: Death and Dying (Part 2)
Dateline: Columbia: February 2, 2001

Death and Dying (Part 2)

In Buddhism there is special emphasis on the process of death.
Meditating on death helps the individual handle death when it comes.
In Yoga Tantra, there are two levels of practice: creation stage and
completion stage. In creation stage, meditation techniques are used to
consciously go through the stages of dissolution that lead to death. The
practitioner learns to temporarily stop the gross functions of the body
then remains at the seventh stage, experiencing clear light.
While an adept practitioner can experience the clear light of the mind,
ninety-nine percent of us miss that opportunity. We only see the clear
light manifest naturally at the last moment of death.
The last three stages of death are radiant white, in which a radiant
white light is experienced; red increase, in which a red light is
experienced; and near black attainment, in which the light becomes
black.
In the sixth and seventh stages, essences that merged at conception now
separate.
During conception, the subtle consciousness enters the egg and the sperm
as they unite. At that point, the new being’s heart forms. XXXThe bindu,
or semen essence, then moves to the crown chakra. The rada, or blood or
egg essence, then moves to the naval chakra.XXX
But at death, subtle consciousness leaves the heart. In the sixth stage,
radiant white, the bindu from the father, sinks from the crown to the
heart. The dying person experiences a radiant white light similar to
strong moonlight.
In the seventh stage, red increase, the essence of rada, or the red
drop, from the mother moves toward the heart. The dying person
experiences a radiant red light.
In the eighth stage, near black attainment, the two reunite at the heart
chakra. The dying person then experiences a radiant blackness.
At this moment ordinary beings become unconscious; their subtle
consciousness leaves the body. In Buddhism, this is considered the
moment of death.
However, the highly realized meditator can remain in the blackness for
many days. This is exactly what the eighth tutor of His Holiness the
Dalai Lama did. He stayed in this stage for 21 days, and during that
time his body did not decompose. Scientists who came to investigate
recorded an intense heat around the heart.
In this state, the meditator’s awareness exists, but not through the
five senses. Awareness exists through subtle mental consciousness. This
technique is used to accelerate spiritual realization.

Subtle and gross consciousness

It is difficult to explain subtle consciousness at this point in your
studies.
There are two types of consciousness. Gross mind or ordinary
consciousness is based on the five senses and the functions of the body.
So, when the body stops functioning, so does gross consciousness. This
kind of consciousness is like energy, so once the body ceases, this
consciousness ceases.
In shamata meditation, you can experience subtle consciousness and
differentiate it from gross consciousness. If you try doing this without
enough skills, there’s a chance you might not come back. A thorough
understanding of emptiness is necessary, so that you don’t experience
the ordinary self or the "I" that must be dissolved.

Bardo

When subtle consciousness leaves the body, but before it finds a new
body, it resides in bardo. Bardo is the intermediate stage, the stage
between death and rebirth. The moment subtle consciousness leaves the
body, it exists in bardo.
During bardo, the subtle consciousness exists in subtle air or wind, not
in a gross body. The only sense available is the sense of smell. (In the
newborn, smell is the strongest of the five senses.) The nickname of the
bardo being is "smell eater. Buddhists believe the body is nourished by
food, smell, meditation and sleep. But the bardo being is nourished only
by smell.
Bardo lasts a minimum of seven days and a maximum of forty-nine days. In
this transitional place, the subtle consciousness experiences illusions
and hallucinations. Bardo is a very busy, restless place; at every
moment every effort is made to find a new life, a new body. Bardo is
like the Atlanta airport: Everyone is trying to leave, but you don’t
know others or where they are going.
Bardo beings are searching for rebirth, not reincarnation. In rebirth,
you are forced to come back. It is out of your control. In
reincarnation, you come back by choice.
Bardo beings may experience many "small deaths." If a bardo being
doesn’t find a new life in the first week, it becomes unconscious again,
experiencing a "small death," then begins another seven days in bardo.
These recurring small deaths, every seven days, are connected to the
state of the mind of the dying person. A highly disturbed state of mind
during death can lead to a lengthy stay in bardo. Ordinary people feel
fear, anger and frustration at death. Four kinds of fear are common, the
fear of leaving friends and family, the fear of separating from
possessions, the fear of not remaining in the world and the fear of
losing the self or "I." Each fear brings its own particular delusions.
If the bardo being will be reborn as human, it will hallucinate human
beings and long to see them and play with them. At the moment a bardo
being arrives at the site of two humans engaged in sexual intercourse,
it focuses on their sexual organs, becomes upset, experiences another
small death and is within the womb in conception.
Throughout this process, subtle consciousness remains. While subtle
consciousness does not carry memories from one life to another, it does
carry information, the good and bad deeds of past lives.

Source: South Carolina Dharma Group
Contact: Claudia Smith Brinson
Phone: 803-799-4901
E-mail: csbrin@infi.net