What is the Tibetan Book of the Dead?

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  • Опубликовано: 26 сен 2024

Комментарии • 792

  • @ReligionForBreakfast
    @ReligionForBreakfast  Год назад +60

    Thank you to Wondrium for sponsoring today’s video! Signup for your FREE trial to Wondrium here: ow.ly/BBou50N4T0f

    • @christopherp.8868
      @christopherp.8868 Год назад +1

      Can you talk about Jung/Campbell/Peterson on archetypes? FYI I don't agree with those concepts because there is obviously way too much nuance/historical context. That perennialist way of thinking probably hurts religious studies. I'd love more content challenging those ideas they possess.

    • @rogerdodger8415
      @rogerdodger8415 Год назад

      Could you do a review of a fascinating book called "the Passover plot"?? I'd love to hear your take on it. Thanks!

    • @inceldetector6148
      @inceldetector6148 Год назад +1

      this guy doesnt even read the comments

    • @astitvakachiar
      @astitvakachiar Год назад

      It is not for dead or corpses to real aloud.
      It is for practicing death during meditation while living

    • @rogerdodger8415
      @rogerdodger8415 Год назад

      @@astitvakachiar It's always fun to practice death while living. Gets you ready for the real thing.

  • @danielx40
    @danielx40 Год назад +798

    My teacher’s teacher once told him: “when you die, look straight ahead. Do not be distracted by left or right. Or you will be sucked right back to this place.” After you die, things that scares you, disturbs you, attracts you, attached to you, turns you on the most will appear, if you don’t look straight ahead, you will be sucked back and become someone’s child. You will become the child of parents that embodies the qualities that stimulates/disturbs you the most. The only way to not be reborn, is to let go of everything and look straight ahead.

    • @donnafraenkel7852
      @donnafraenkel7852 Год назад +53

      Helpful information
      You are right and I recommend this in life pathways as well.... focus on the finish line and not the people next to you
      It's not for comparison and this is where people fail

    • @uwangchuk90
      @uwangchuk90 Год назад +6

      ❤🙏

    • @ralphhardie7492
      @ralphhardie7492 Год назад +5

      😂😂😂😂

    • @freeyourmind7538
      @freeyourmind7538 Год назад +38

      Meh...if this is the case, just look left/right, the first death, be born again, learn from your first experience and look up straight during the second death 🤷🏾‍♂️
      The issue i find with these rebirths is that you NEVER know your previous events so how can you know, you are being born again,?

    • @LovingRockDoula
      @LovingRockDoula Год назад +8

      Sounds like avoidance.

  • @stephenburgess5710
    @stephenburgess5710 Год назад +470

    I always find a text more interesting when framed in the context of the culture that produced it. The romanticizations of the east from the 60s, from orientalism, from theosophy, and the like are never as interesting as an exploration of those topics that involves the actual people and conditions from which they originated! Great video, thanks.

    • @stevenvaleriojr1177
      @stevenvaleriojr1177 Год назад +5

      I agree. Out of curiosity, though, what is your opinion on western authors who are actually legitimate practitioners of an authentic lineage- I'm thinking along the lines of Robert Thurman, Robert Buswell, Bernie Glassman, or even Brad Warner?

    • @chitwansingh
      @chitwansingh Год назад +1

      +

    • @viljamtheninja
      @viljamtheninja Год назад +14

      What about the context of the culture that produced that romanticization? That is, after all, also a culture with its own context, its own reasoning, its own metaphysic search for truth and meaning which, to me, is just as interesting. And, it IS a way to understand other cultures, it was just a simplified, immature attempt at that. I think the typical presentation of Orientalism as somehow nefarious often rings a little hollow. People in the West, in their search for meaning and grappling with the eternal questions of death and suffering, finding inspiration in and fascination with foreign sources and ideas and somewhat turning them into their own thing is not much different from how cultures have always interacted and taken inspiration from elsewhere while reinterpreting through the context of their own cultural lens.
      The concept of Orientalism seems like a pretty natural result of Weber's demystification of the world through Western science and philosophy; it's an interesting cultural and philosophical phenomenon on its own.
      Now of course a video on the Tibetan Book of the Dead should probably primarily focus on the Tibetan context in which it originated, but I think its role in the West is equally interesting, just in a completely different way. It was, after all, an interest that arose due to some kind of spiritual need, something deeply human, and to present it as something negative just because it doesn't understand the entire context of the origins of its sources of inspiration seems either like academic elitism (but academics research these texts for reasons entirely different from why they become popular in the first place) or some kind of problematic cultural purism.

    • @benardman2665
      @benardman2665 Год назад

      Theosphy is Christian lol

    • @seadawg93
      @seadawg93 Год назад +3

      Absolutely! I love so much the approach nowadays (well, you know, in some circles at least) of approaching texts and ideas IN context. Especially given the western tendency to privilege text over other forms of authority, which may or may not be appropriate to a given culture.

  • @hankinaz
    @hankinaz Год назад +428

    When I first read this book, I was confused by it's imagery (i.e. demons drinking blood from skulls??!!) However, a friend recommended also reading The Tibetan Book of Living and Dying by Sogyal Rinpoche as a way to provide graspable context. In a nutshell, what I took away was the practical learning that when confronted with someone who is dying (i.e. in a hospice or coming upon a very traumatic accident), you should try to put them at ease and let them know it is okay for them to move on ... the mindset with which they leave this world (i.e guilt, fear, calm, etc.) is the mindset with which they will enter the new world (kind of like how waking from a scary or peaceful dream can shape your state of mind for that day.) Just a thought ...

    • @furrycircuitry2378
      @furrycircuitry2378 Год назад +8

      It's ok, Mr.hanikaz, I accept your passing go forth into the light and feel joy and comfort knowing you left this realm and the people in it better than before.

    • @illsed
      @illsed Год назад +1

      Is just symbol n avatar

    • @bb9a
      @bb9a Год назад +5

      They're not demons, but they are entities of spirit

    • @LoahKiLynKd87
      @LoahKiLynKd87 Год назад

      Perfectly sumadup

    • @hellboundtruck123
      @hellboundtruck123 Год назад +2

      You’ve unlocked the gross level meaning, now you may delve deeper 🙏🏼

  • @SudoSkitz
    @SudoSkitz Год назад +372

    Dude, your channel is awesome. You're always so succinct and on point. Keep these up. To me, your channel sets the standard for anyone speaking on religion.

    • @joshgwin8820
      @joshgwin8820 Год назад +5

      Agreed

    • @skarrven
      @skarrven Год назад +5

      💯 Same

    • @contempris2383
      @contempris2383 Год назад +11

      He's a breath of fresh air. The internet discourse on religion is so toxic and not very academic. I can not stand Bible beaters or Debate Bro Atheists.

    • @samgamgee7384
      @samgamgee7384 Год назад +2

      What I like best is how eclectically agnostic he is. He can talk about Kabbalah, Chinese folk religion or the roots of anime with the same objectivity.

    • @Chamelionroses
      @Chamelionroses Год назад +2

      I just like that he is honest

  • @simonpaterson9648
    @simonpaterson9648 Год назад +89

    5 months ago, I was lingering between life and death on life support with a usually lethal pneumonia. I was having these incredible mental projections for 13 days on life support. There were many projections, but one was of possessing a very small mental body, and others had very small mental bodies. I went searching, and after not being impressed with Christian experiences, I was finally in shock to find how similar these Bardos in Buddhism were to my direct experience. I have a psychiatrist, for post ICU,'' PTSD'', and he was fascinated with my description of what I experienced. Usually, he would diagnose someone as psychotic.

    • @altverse1
      @altverse1 6 месяцев назад

      So good to hear brother.The deity in the bardos are similar to Hindhu text such as yama which we call him as yamaraj, so for me religion has been more like derived from each other since padmasambahava took the teaching from india.Anyway may the god bless you to an eternity.

    • @DavidAKZ
      @DavidAKZ 6 месяцев назад +1

      Psychotic or awakening ?

  • @eyeofgnosis558
    @eyeofgnosis558 Год назад +106

    Weird thing: before I knew anything about Buddhism, Jung or theosophy, I had (unknowingly) been drawing 'mandalas' to help organise my mind when I was going through chronic depression and suicidal ideation. Then I had an experience not too dissimilar to that in the Tibetan Book of the Dead (which I only encountered a year after the experience) that completely turned my life around for the better ^_^

    • @L3onking
      @L3onking Год назад +11

      It's no coincidence, these are the signs of the lama mass awakening.

    • @donnafraenkel7852
      @donnafraenkel7852 Год назад +6

      I've also had such experience. God greets you 😊

  • @seadawg93
    @seadawg93 Год назад +293

    Excellent. Another American/western aspect of the “Tibetan Book of the Dead,” is the idea that it is for anyone or everyone. While some modern teachers would accept that, the traditional view is that this is a text specifically for vajrayana practitioners who have received the specific teachings while alive.
    I have specifically been warned against using it for non-initiated people, because things like the descriptions of the wrathful deities would be very upsetting. There are other funerary practices, such as phowa, Shitro or Chang Chod.
    John Reynolds has a large section in his book “self liberation through seeing with naked awareness” (from the same cycle as the bardo thodrol) describing how deeply wrong Wentz’s and Jung’s understanding of Tibetan Buddhism were.

    • @meesalikeu
      @meesalikeu Год назад +8

      they were not “deeply wrong” lol, that is just hyperbole - they were just misguided as it was a partial text pulled out of context that they felt was enough and ran with for their western audience.

    • @seadawg93
      @seadawg93 Год назад +60

      @@meesalikeu they were misguided, took texts out there historical context and opined on the meaning, sometimes even the “true” meaning (ie. Allegedly truer than actual Buddhist teachers), of Buddhism and influenced how westerners viewed Buddhism, Tibetan Buddhism specifically, to this day.
      If you don’t think that that is deeply wrong, so be it. But they were pretty wrong, and pretty sure of themselves as well.

    • @bushit123456
      @bushit123456 Год назад

      could yoo quote some of his criticism?

    • @RJ-we1me
      @RJ-we1me Год назад +1

      What did jung got wrong?

    • @yrobtsvt
      @yrobtsvt Год назад +3

      "phowa" is a scary term to me as Aum Shinrikyo used that word as a euphemism for murdering their enemies

  • @marykayryan7891
    @marykayryan7891 Год назад +44

    You never cease to amaze me. Such high quality videos. Succinct. Clear. Accurate. Accessible. Respectful. Just fantastic. Thank you.

  • @Jaz-ml5jv
    @Jaz-ml5jv Год назад +22

    Love all the videos on Buddhism! I’m currently reading through the Tibetan Book of the Dead and it has been great to watch your videos to get a deeper understanding of it all 🌸

  • @justinspicyrhino3075
    @justinspicyrhino3075 Год назад +16

    I take the Tibeten book of the Dead literally. There are a lot of parallels to people with near death experiences. I try to prepare my mind for death as often as possible.

    • @catherinegrimes2308
      @catherinegrimes2308 Год назад +1

      I noticed the similarity as well, maybe that is where the ideas come from?

  • @Yourmomsassstinks
    @Yourmomsassstinks Год назад +283

    No way, this is freaking scary.
    I was literally looking this up LAST NIGHT and I was like “damn I wish RFB had a video about this, I know he would explain better. All well, I’m sure he’d do it eventually”

    • @ReligionForBreakfast
      @ReligionForBreakfast  Год назад +179

      This is why the RFB audience is so great. The type of people that research Buddhist texts in their spare time.

    • @stevemcgroob4446
      @stevemcgroob4446 Год назад +17

      ​ @ReligionForBreakfast I'm currently reading the Tenchi Hajimari no Koto, or the Beginning of Heaven and Earth in English. It was made by Japanese Christians from the Tokugawa period and although it doesn't seem to be an important text to them, I find it to be a fascinating mix of Buddhist, Shinto, and Catholic beliefs.

    • @the_neutral_container
      @the_neutral_container Год назад +4

      Hah! Carl Jung approves 😁

    • @schorpioen7466
      @schorpioen7466 Год назад +9

      ​@@the_neutral_container synchronicity?

    • @mldouglasjr
      @mldouglasjr Год назад +3

      @@stevemcgroob4446 Wow. Never heard of it, but you've certainly piqued my interest in finding this text.

  • @fraktaalimuoto
    @fraktaalimuoto Год назад +23

    A practitioner of a Buddhist terma tradition here: there are various bardo practices in various practice lineages - many of them practiced while alive.

    • @hexane8
      @hexane8 Год назад +2

      ICU psychosis happens a lot it doesn't mean that you're schizophrenic

    • @justjoe4390
      @justjoe4390 Год назад +1

      Can you name some of the ones that are practiced while alive? I'd be very grateful.

    • @DavidAKZ
      @DavidAKZ 6 месяцев назад

      ​@@hexane8you could be wakening and this society cannot handle it.

  • @luridus584
    @luridus584 Год назад +17

    Yet again You provide some of the best mythological/cultural lectures on this platform, thank You for Your hard work, i could listen to You for hours

  • @iguanajoe9329
    @iguanajoe9329 Год назад +46

    I read the Bardo Thodol as a teenager because I was fascinated by eastern "mysticism", but little did I know how much it carried on with me. I partake in psychedellic use, and DMT once brought me to a place of pure blackness, and in it, I forgot everything that made me, "me". I instantly felt terror, because I could not fathom the idea of "me" disappearing, but deep in the blackness I remembered some of the lines, and I was able to let go of everything as it pleased. That was the only way I could achieve peace of mind deep where I was, and I inmediately understood that everything is connected. This book is severely underrated and everyone should get to know it.

    • @theopenmouth9695
      @theopenmouth9695 Год назад

      U just did drugs.

    • @Suzume-Shimmer
      @Suzume-Shimmer Год назад +3

      Thats great you had such a tool to guide you at rhe right moment. 👍
      Yeah, Timothy Leary , the original LSD 'guru' of the 60s acid experiments, recommends 2 books to understand and help with the psychedelic terrain . And one of them is The Tibetan Book of rhe Dead

    • @Badficwriter
      @Badficwriter 11 месяцев назад

      You were better prepared than I was. During an acid trip, I got amnesia. It was terrifying and only a kind person in the house with me constantly reassuring me kept me calm. Telling me my memories had no effect, because my brain deleted them as soon as I heard the information. It wore off as the drug did. I have heard many stories of hallucinations in bad trips, but never knew you could get temporary amnesia.

  • @driphella4080
    @driphella4080 Год назад +47

    I never knew the Tibetan Book of the Dead was such a small part of such a large tradition, though it makes sense in hindsight
    Your commentary on the relationship between Western spiritualism and Eastern religions is highly insightful, especially so in this video
    I'm always happy I subscribed every time you show up in my feed. Always high quality stuff.

  • @ShadyCharacter97
    @ShadyCharacter97 Год назад +44

    Thanks for more Vajrayana & general Highland Mahayana Buddhist content! So underexplored in this RUclips space.

  • @NullStaticVoid
    @NullStaticVoid Год назад +41

    I started my journey into Buddhism with some books on Japanese Zen (Chan) Buddhism.
    Later when I was in college I realized that everything I read on Buddhism was written by European intellectuals. So I'd basically learned European existentialism with Buddhist window dressing.
    I moved on to Tibetan Buddhism, but again I messed up and read the "Book of the Dead" and a few other such texts which came to the west from European orientalists, who were were putting quite a lot of their own philosophy into their interpretation of Buddhism.
    Eventually I found a few books written by Tibetans with help from westerners. These were less sullied by the imposition of dualistic frameworks and philosophical baggage of Plato and the enlightenment (irony no?). The Dalai Lama has a few really good books on mindfulness meditation. And his discursive style is easy to follow.
    More recently I've been studying Theravada through the translations of Bhikku Bodhi. Though I got there strangely through Thích Nhất Hạnh. After I read a few of his books I mistakenly assumed he was Theravadan, though he is actually from the Vietnamese branch of Chan/Zen. Nevertheless I find Theravada more straightforward and less reliant on supernaturalism and deity worship.
    It's been pointed out that I am not the first westerner to find a home in Theravada for these reasons. A western preference for the secular I suppose?

    • @yrobtsvt
      @yrobtsvt Год назад +5

      @Lex Waldorf This would have to be translations of sutras. It's impossible to have a modern text *about* Buddhism without Western influence, although academic scholars do their best....

    • @yaoliang1580
      @yaoliang1580 Год назад +1

      The road to better understanding of spirituality is long, difficult n filled with many pitfalls.
      Most important is understanding of the basics of life n keep our feet firmly on the ground n not be carried away with too much theories n philosophies, which is good for references but often do not work in real life n has cause many who seek such pursuits to fall into a state of disillusion, disenchantment, confusion n separation.

    • @dreamadventure8220
      @dreamadventure8220 Год назад +3

      Woo, I thought thic nan to be thereavada too, thanks for clearing

    • @alex434343
      @alex434343 Год назад +3

      I find secularism to be appealing to Western students in large part as a reaction to what we don't/didn't like in our own native religions (the many flavors of Christianity, mainly). Almost exclusively we've found our native religions to be wanting in some way and gone looking to the East for something that suits us better. Personally I think we can go too far in rejecting anything that even kinda-sorta-maybe looks like something Judeo-Christian. However to each his own, Theravada is wonderful as are Vajrajana/Mahayana which I personally prefer :)

    • @fannyalbi9040
      @fannyalbi9040 Год назад +1

      u sounds like finding some sort attachments or comfort of certain buddhist sect than finding buddhahood within.

  • @MultiWeb23
    @MultiWeb23 Год назад +25

    As a zen buddhism practitioner, it is amazing to see how incredibly different tibetan buddhism is and how much it diverged and innovated in comparison to other schools! It's beautiful!

    • @Prasad_California
      @Prasad_California Год назад +1

      This definitely can not be true Buddha’s teachings. This is pure hallucination and imaginary. Funny enough to package it under name of Buddha who didn’t at all believe in deities like Yamdharma ( described here as drinking brain lol)

    • @i_love_tibet7001
      @i_love_tibet7001 Год назад

      @@Prasad_California
      You are quite the Ignorant and delusional one..... get the fact check right, even all informations are there.

    • @khayon4364
      @khayon4364 4 месяца назад

      @@Prasad_California Or perhaps your lineage lost something important, eh?

  • @SunsetHoney615
    @SunsetHoney615 Год назад +15

    It is also a remarkable commentary on the modern idea of near death experiences. The parallels are remarkable indicating a rich tradition within Tibetan history of discussing the NDE experience.

    • @Tinil0
      @Tinil0 Год назад +2

      But this has nothing to do with NDE, this is intended to be read to the already dead. This isn't revealed information from people who have had near-death experiences.

    • @SunsetHoney615
      @SunsetHoney615 Год назад +5

      @@Tinil0 most likely the tradition that created this text is very much based on the stories told by people who “returned from death”. They are called Delogs.

  • @freemanacount5609
    @freemanacount5609 Год назад +64

    If you want to read about Tibetan religious views on death and rebirth that's very accessible to a western audience, The Tibetan Book of Living and Dying is a great modern read written by a Tibetan.

    • @BornR3STLESS
      @BornR3STLESS Год назад +8

      That book radically changed my perspective on life, death and spirituality. It is quite a thought provoking book.

    • @amberevol
      @amberevol Год назад

      I bought these at the same time bc I was under the impression they went together. I feel like they do even tho they weren't written that way to my knowledge

    • @facebookmary7502
      @facebookmary7502 Год назад

      ​@@BornR3STLESSthe author is a creepy guy that rapes women

    • @Jack-fs2im
      @Jack-fs2im Год назад

      Bhuddism is not a religion its a philosophy

    • @siddarth3955
      @siddarth3955 Год назад +4

      ​@@Jack-fs2im Buddhism is literally a religion with elaborate myths and after life. Saying it's just a philosophy is done by non Buddhists especially abrahamics adherents to not feel guilty for following another faith when their god especially prohibited them from doing so.

  • @robertpenny7180
    @robertpenny7180 Год назад +10

    Thank you. I appreciate the time you spend on these videos.
    I've also heard the translation as "Oh child of noble family." It's interesting how a few words makes a huge difference.

    • @QuasarEE
      @QuasarEE Год назад

      That could probably be understood to refer to the Five Buddha families if it were accurate, and not a worldly lineage.

  • @LangThoughts
    @LangThoughts Год назад +82

    I'm a linguistics student studying Tibetan, and in the Modern Language "Bardo" is pronounced "Pardo" The full name "Bardo Thodol" is pronounced something like "Pardo Toejoel"

    • @celsus7979
      @celsus7979 Год назад +16

      That reminds me of a fun video by NativLang - The Hardest Language to Spell
      A video about Tibetan by a language lover, who had quite a difficult time with it

    • @LangThoughts
      @LangThoughts Год назад +4

      @@celsus7979 Actually "Bardo Thodol" is a fusion of the modern pronunciation and the Classical Spelling "Bar-do Thos-grol"

    • @LangThoughts
      @LangThoughts Год назад +3

      Note that the "oe" in "Toejoel" represents the sound that German spells as "ö" ie. o-umlaut.

    • @Iskbest
      @Iskbest Год назад +2

      @@LangThoughts That's not how everyone says it! I personally haven't heard the Bardo spelled with "P". Can imagine a regional Kham (east Tibet) people saying it but have never heard that myself.

    • @LangThoughts
      @LangThoughts Год назад

      @@Iskbest Not in Khams, no, but if someone from the Western World mentions "Modern Tibetan", most of the time, we mean Lhasa Dialect, as that is the most studied Modern Dialect and IIRC, in that dialect བ་ is pronounced like ཕ་, unless there is a pre-initial consonant. Also, I made a mistake, I should have said "Perto" or "Peto", because in Lhasa Dialect, བར is pronounced as if it were ཕེར་ཐོ་ or ཕཻ་ཐོ་, except the tone is different.

  • @3mindgame
    @3mindgame Год назад +7

    Tibetan book of the Dead is one of the most profound book I ever read. It’s almost like it’s referring to everyday life on one level while simultaneously referring to a actual physical death process. Great read. Then check out the “ American Book of the Dead”

  • @vk3act
    @vk3act Год назад +6

    I m. Student of Sogyal Rinpoche. Thank you for this video.

  • @mjr_schneider
    @mjr_schneider Год назад +30

    I went to Tibet for about two weeks back in 2017 and learned so much about Tibetan religion and culture just from being there a short time, but was never able to learn about it in the depth that you go into in this video. I would be very interested in seeing you do a video on the Bon religion, because I haven't yet seen anyone do a really thorough explanation of it.

  • @InquisitorThomas
    @InquisitorThomas Год назад +488

    Haven’t watched the video yet but that name sounds like the Maguffin that the Nazis would be looking for in some unreleased Indiana Jones movies.

    • @jayasuryangoral-maanyan3901
      @jayasuryangoral-maanyan3901 Год назад +37

      This kinda reminds me of a comic book I saw where the nazis established a buddhist deathcult in tibet after they lost WW2 and they return to end samsara for every human being once and for all or something.

    • @chendaforest
      @chendaforest Год назад +14

      ​@@jayasuryangoral-maanyan3901 sounds like something ripe for a Steven Seagull film.

    • @stephanieparker1250
      @stephanieparker1250 Год назад +6

      Or Nicolas Cage

    • @giovannicolpani3345
      @giovannicolpani3345 Год назад +9

      Don't google Ahnenerbe and Ossendowski

    • @siddhartacrowley8759
      @siddhartacrowley8759 Год назад +12

      @@giovannicolpani3345 Ok
      I won't.

  • @SnackPack913
    @SnackPack913 Год назад +4

    It always blows my mind how deep and complex various religions are. Centuries of refinement, analysis, religious experiences, all build this extremely deep and mystical lore. Pretty wild what humans can transcribe onto paper

  • @lethemyrsmith2847
    @lethemyrsmith2847 Год назад +8

    This is one of the best series on Buddhism on the internet! Keep it up! Very few popular videos on Buddhism portray the religion like it really is because of how many misconceptions there are.
    I’m excited for the Zen video you teased in another comment.

  • @stevenvaleriojr1177
    @stevenvaleriojr1177 Год назад +34

    I've really been enjoying this series on Buddhism.
    Are you planning to do one on the Zen sects (or have you done one and I somwhow missed it)? As a Zen (well, technically Soen, it's a Korean lineage) teacher and amateur scholar, I'm very interested to hear your take on it.

    • @ReligionForBreakfast
      @ReligionForBreakfast  Год назад +29

      Yes, a video on Zen is in the works.

    • @stevenvaleriojr1177
      @stevenvaleriojr1177 Год назад +4

      @@ReligionForBreakfast Awesome!

    • @tenzin4997
      @tenzin4997 Год назад +1

      a tibetan monk helped create the written language script for koreans in the court of kublai the phags-pa script

    • @술톤윤돼지탄핵
      @술톤윤돼지탄핵 Год назад

      What a pleasure to see a fellow Seon Buddhist here! 🌷

    • @fannyalbi9040
      @fannyalbi9040 Год назад +1

      i found a lot of people rather finding attachments or comfort for certain buddhist sect than achieving buddha hood within

  • @PaulHaesler
    @PaulHaesler Год назад +9

    As far as I know, John Lennon only had access to Timothy Leary's "The Psychedelic Experience" which was loosely based on the Tibetan Book of the Dead - not the Bardo Thodol itself.
    (Certainly the opening line "Turn off your mind, relax and float downstream" is a quote from Leary's book)

    • @JunguianPhantom
      @JunguianPhantom Год назад

      It reminded me of "wade into the quiet of the stream" said by Hannibal in the eponymous series

  • @mldouglasjr
    @mldouglasjr Год назад +8

    Profoundly interesting. I just happen to be in a seminar that's discussing Westernization, Orientalism, and Buddhism this week. Thanks!

    • @trevorjennings720
      @trevorjennings720 Год назад +1

      Hello Mel, how are you doing today, hope you’re fine and safe from the COVID-19 virus??

  • @jcfal1708
    @jcfal1708 Год назад +4

    I love your style. Your presentation is clinical, factual, but very engaging, making stupidly complicated texts and concepts understandable by far lesser minds ;)

  • @flamephlegm
    @flamephlegm Год назад +7

    I love your videos but especially the ones on Buddhism. Wish there was a whole course on here lol. Thanks for all of the videos. I deeply appreciate your labor.

  • @thelostone6981
    @thelostone6981 Год назад +26

    Another thorough, objective, and well-stated video!
    In my philosophical journey, I really latched on to Zen Buddhism as I had visited Japan back in the day. As I tried to read everything I could, I came across this in the early 90s so I bought it and it’s the Wentz version. Still on my bookshelf today. It was a very different feel to my familiarity to Zen and made me feel uncomfortable. But being uncomfortable in one’s skin can help us grow and I’m glad to have read it. (I was drawn to Buddhism because of the focus on one’s self and actions, not out of fear of a deity)
    So yeah, I was one of the people born in the US who looked into this and viewed it through a western lens. 😂

    • @sidmarx7276
      @sidmarx7276 Год назад

      Then you're maybe familiar with Ph. Kapleau's Three Pillars of Zen, in which he accredits the Bardo Thodol's origin to two tracts of Vasubindhu: the Vijnaptimatrasiddhi Shastra and the Abidharmakosa Shastra. (the only readable versions i could find were translations of De La Valee Poussin's, which were heavily edited and hence unsatisfactory)

  • @tapishatrey6098
    @tapishatrey6098 Год назад +3

    I'm gonna start my tibetian book of dead study soon. This video definitely build a overview and info was very descriptive.

  • @shamanic_nostalgia
    @shamanic_nostalgia Год назад +9

    Coincidentally been listening to a lot of James Low talks on this and Vajrayana/Dzogchen in general...your videos on Buddhism are some of the best out there in my opinion and incredibly timely

  • @badsmilesorrisocattivo
    @badsmilesorrisocattivo Год назад +5

    "They have weapon of fire, but have no fear"
    "Easy to say!"

  • @hunterpicker
    @hunterpicker Год назад +10

    Seems pretty similar to the buddhists chants at my Chinese grandpapa’s buddhist funeral.

  • @praporbarton3961
    @praporbarton3961 Месяц назад +1

    Came here right after Reading P. K. Dick's 'Ubik'. He did a great job incorporating themes from the Book and his psychedelic experiences into that novel

  • @cloipto
    @cloipto Год назад +5

    This is exactly what my dmt experience was like. Full awareness, being controlled, then being helped, bright beautiful colours, the entities are good and bad. Still can't wrap my head around it.

    • @paragon215
      @paragon215 Год назад +2

      The entities are not good nor bad but only an illusion of your own perspective in the mind. Also the entities are not separate from you, they are you. A reflection of the internal working of consciousness.

    • @cloipto
      @cloipto Год назад

      @@paragon215 I agree with you 💯, does leave a very big question. The tree root blocks THIS illusion. Imagine 6000 years ago and people did dmt, did they see a digital event, and how did they persevere it. I'm out the matrix, but don't know what to do with the information.

  • @dgeraldrunkle9304
    @dgeraldrunkle9304 Год назад +3

    I have to say this is one of your best videos on this channel, nice job

  • @milascave2
    @milascave2 Год назад +8

    A guy walks into a bardo---.

  • @aimeemorgado8715
    @aimeemorgado8715 Год назад +3

    Thank you for your scholarly, yet kind and human , analysis

  • @donnafraenkel7852
    @donnafraenkel7852 Год назад +5

    I did the walk of the bardo....true story
    Every person should know these scripts

    • @donnafraenkel7852
      @donnafraenkel7852 Год назад +2

      The five wisdoms is very similar as each direction is a different realm and links to character

    • @trevorjennings720
      @trevorjennings720 Год назад

      @@donnafraenkel7852 Hello Donna, how are you doing today, hope you’re fine and safe from the COVID-19 virus??

  • @skatman339
    @skatman339 Год назад +10

    Loved this video, thank you!
    Any chance we can get a video on The All-Pervading Melodious Drumbeat(or just on Ra Lotsawa in general)?
    It shows a side of Tibetan Buddhism rarely discussed in the west, and I think it would make for a great video

  • @MSHNKTRL
    @MSHNKTRL Год назад +4

    *TERMA: "oh, of course I couldn't have made this up; it was like this when I found it"*

  • @briankleinschmidt3664
    @briankleinschmidt3664 Год назад +4

    It's not a guide to the dead. It is a description of the dying process. I read it (many years ago). It's not a life changing experience, but you can get some good out of it.

  • @JohnVance
    @JohnVance Год назад +4

    This was a lot less traumatic than watching Enter The Void.

  • @DTPoe
    @DTPoe Год назад +3

    Fun fact, in Spanish, Bardo means singer, poet, troubadour.

  • @LoudWaffle
    @LoudWaffle Год назад +4

    Very cool video! Fascinating to learn not only the "book's" contents, but its history as well. I also didn't even realise its significance in the West.

  • @TheRealShadowX
    @TheRealShadowX Год назад +3

    Great Tibetan Buddhism videos lately.

  • @Thescrubsliker
    @Thescrubsliker Год назад +3

    I think I experienced this when I was on lsd, even tho I didn’t know much to anything about these concepts except for maybe the name of the book. On one hand I find this really scary, on the other hand I’m relived that I found something that describes my expirence, so I don’t feel alone with it anymore.

  • @robertschlesinger1342
    @robertschlesinger1342 Год назад +3

    Excellent video. Very interesting, informative and worthwhile video.

  • @RoboJules
    @RoboJules Год назад +4

    Bardo is the state that occurs when your glands release all of your endogenous DMT at once. Often times the brain releases a bit of DMT when we enter REM sleep, which is why dreams occur in that state. But say a person enters some severe trauma, they take a large enough dose of DMT to have a "breakthrough" experience, or dies and it can trigger the brain to release it all at once, and it lowers all the barriers of cognition. All experience, conscious and unconscious is suspended in a divine superposition that builds a new reality within the mind. If you want to experience Bardo before you die, learn to meditate really well, have a near-death experience, or fly to Peru and do Ayahuasca (translated from Incan as "the vine of the dead").

    • @chickensalad3535
      @chickensalad3535 9 месяцев назад +1

      There is very little scientific evidence to support this hypothesis.

  • @kevinnielsen1356
    @kevinnielsen1356 Год назад +6

    Bardo Thodol is only one of six methods to escape ignorance this is within the Terma left by Padmasmbhava. Liberation on seeing is my favorite.

  • @chronikhiles
    @chronikhiles Год назад +1

    Gotta say, you're the first Westerner I've heard pronounce guru correctly. Appreciate it.

  • @MattBellzminion
    @MattBellzminion Год назад +5

    Another pop cultural reference: in Art Spiegelman's iconic graphic novel "Maus", IIRC, Art reads the text (or tries to; I don't remember how far he got through it, & he may not have been specific about that; my recollection is that if anything, Art was reading the text for his own peace of mind as much as for a literal metaphysical benefit for his mother -- after all, he and his parents were all at least nominally Jewish) after his mother died by suicide. Mother and son had had an extremely fraught relationship, and it seems that Art largely hated his mother, but he also felt guilty for doing so, in large measure because she had survived the Holocaust in Auschwitz, and Art understood that much of the tension in their relationship stemmed from her constant torment as a survivor of the unimaginable and unbearable.

  • @Slapsista
    @Slapsista Год назад +1

    Thanks for the critical angle and placing this in the historical context of how the text was published.

  • @secretshaman189
    @secretshaman189 Год назад

    This review of the "Tibetan Book of the Dead" was great, and to the point. The narration material and delivery was so professional! Loved it!

  • @chrisrichardson8988
    @chrisrichardson8988 Год назад +4

    There is a real connection to the ABHIDHAMMA that similarly describes the transmigration to rebirth linking. The Tibetan text is more poetic and personal, whereas the ABHIDAMMA is technical.
    Of course it’s always encouraging to see these teachings supported among various schools of Buddhist Teachings. Even Shinran Shonin of the Japanese school of Jodo Shinshu writes about ‘Transformed Lands’ which seemingly has to do with the descriptions of transmigration and rebirth linking.

  • @jeffreysousa1104
    @jeffreysousa1104 Год назад +4

    You provided so much necessary context to something I've been trying to understand for a while now, thank you so much

  • @rabbitazteca23
    @rabbitazteca23 Год назад +2

    Tobetan culture and philosophy is so interesting to me

  • @Eclipti_Faith
    @Eclipti_Faith Год назад +3

    Thank you for all the work you put into your videos, they are always so informative!

  • @billpetersen298
    @billpetersen298 Год назад +5

    One day, a free Tibet.
    Hiding the texts, was very wise.

    • @bb9a
      @bb9a Год назад +3

      Free Tibet

    • @i_love_tibet7001
      @i_love_tibet7001 Год назад

      Thats the foresee of our most precious Master- Guru Padmasambhava. Our second Buddha, you should read or look for his stories and teachings..... the most fascinating being ever exist in this World.

  • @KingfisherTalkingPictures
    @KingfisherTalkingPictures Год назад +5

    There is a tendency to say, “Oh, look how the West has misinterpreted another culture’s religious practices.” But as shown is the episodes on Voudun, and the focus in African Christianity on the section of the Bible which discuss witches and exorcisms, it’s a human foible. We want to interpret the mysteries in our culture in a new way, that makes sense within our culture. The show, The Book of Mormon, ends with a historical misunderstanding which shows how new religions come into being. I always appreciate the takeoff line of W.C. Fields, from The Firesign Theater, “There’s a seeker born every minute.”

  • @rrezonkrasniqi
    @rrezonkrasniqi Год назад +3

    Hey I am suggesting a series of videos about the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn, you could do it in three parts, firstly the Masonic and the allegedly Rosicrucian origins, then in a second video you could talk about the prime of the Order, and lastly, you could talk about the downfall and the falling out with many schools being form from there.
    I think it would be in your style of work, and it would be very beneficial for the audience.
    I would really appreciate it if you would consider this!

  • @taidelek9994
    @taidelek9994 Год назад +5

    Tibet is under thread now. Such precious teachings are strickly controlled and watched by the ccp government.
    Peaceful tibetan movement is the way forward for the world and to support and to encourage .

  • @mikecaetano
    @mikecaetano Год назад +2

    "Turn off your mind, relax and float downstream \ It is not dying, it is not dying ..." I have a copy of the Leary book. Lennon leans on it pretty good.

  • @jgn1989
    @jgn1989 Год назад +3

    This channel has been making me think a bit differently about religions, especially on how they work in practice for those who believe in it. I'd love to watch an essay on spiritualism under Allan Kardec's tradition since it's mostly seen as religion but fundamentally positioned itself as a science amidst the positivism of the 19th century.

  • @zorgius
    @zorgius Год назад +2

    Thank you! What a work of scholarship!!

  • @seanpatrick4155
    @seanpatrick4155 Год назад +1

    I have seen many videos on this subject. I appreciate how concise and to the point your presentation was. ;)

  • @Chase_Istre
    @Chase_Istre Год назад +2

    I think what gets me from time to time is that Buddhist principles and ideas are not followed by many Western spiritualist or ignored for the sake of what I call “spiritual entertainment”. What I’m talking about is the use of intoxicants and drugs which breaks one of the most basic teachings of the five noble truths. Yet they do so because they equate Eastern religion to a spiritual mysticism of hallucinogens. When more often than not, the teachings are more orthodox than it seems. Amituofo❤️🙏🏼😁

  • @_ClearConscious
    @_ClearConscious Год назад +2

    We are truly limitless! Don’t let your mind rule you! Love yourself and keep moving forward! ❤

  • @phillylifer
    @phillylifer Год назад +2

    So well explained

  • @jibranelbazi
    @jibranelbazi Год назад +6

    First step sounds exactly like an ego death/awakening experience. The dying “person” is the ego dying, and this text helps the Self (capital S) to “pass through” and be “reborn.” Realizing the ego is nonexistent and thus leaving samsara.

  • @blixten2928
    @blixten2928 Год назад +1

    So much fun, so interesting, so well done. THANK YOU!

  • @gibrannicholau3447
    @gibrannicholau3447 Год назад +3

    Texts simillar to The Tibetan Book of The Dead were found in Merapi-Merbabu scriptorium, Central Java and dozens of copies in Bali. I read a copy in my university's library and found one key difference from this video: many cantos end with "rahasya nemen, aywa wera" or 'this is an esoteric truth, keep it secret," instead of being read aloud.

    • @kamenraidajoseph1894
      @kamenraidajoseph1894 Год назад +4

      The Bardo Thodol is also intended to be kept completely secret - it's only modern interference that has broken this lineage

    • @gibrannicholau3447
      @gibrannicholau3447 Год назад +1

      @@kamenraidajoseph1894 ah I see thanks for this info!
      In Java and Bali these texts go with many titles, many of them were actually without a title but were given by later scholars. The copy I read was called Dharmasunya.
      To a certain degree the secrecy of these texts - Dharmasunya and related texts- were still kept, even families inheriting ancient copies would ask for a university student wanting to read it for a simple offering of flowers, benzoid incense, rice cakes and traditional cigars. Research books covering these texts would also be distributed sparringly, albeit for free.

    • @nickdavila94
      @nickdavila94 Год назад

      In Tibet secret went out the window lol

  • @prismgems
    @prismgems Год назад +4

    People comment as if the appropriation of the scriptures is bad. But this is how religions spread. Think of true religions as open source intellectual property. Indian buddhism became chan in China after Bodhidharma, and zen in Japan, and son in Korea. The teachings are adapted to the new culture. Teachings for a society of subsistence agriculture in 500 BC have to be made meaningful for a post industrial culture in 2100 AD, without losing the essence. Historically, this happened when an enlightened teacher either went to the new venue (e.g. Padmasambhava, Bodhidharma), or brought a native of that venue to enlightenment (e.g. Dogen).

  • @prismgems
    @prismgems Год назад +2

    The part I like is a verse at the end, sort of in an appendix. It goes,
    O procrastinating one, who thinketh not of the coming of death,
    Spending your time in the useless doings of this world,
    Improvident art thou in dissipating thy great opportunity,
    If thou returneth empty handed from this life.
    That's more for someone who wants to prepare for death, than someone who hasn't prepared as you described.
    Lucid dreaming, meditation, both great ways to prepare for the after death experience.

  • @HyperKyle
    @HyperKyle 11 месяцев назад +1

    Yeah. It’s true. During one of my near death experiences there was a tunnel of light that I felt attracted to, it was warm, but I pulled away at the last moment because I didn’t want to start over yet.

  • @jessequimpo7354
    @jessequimpo7354 Год назад +2

    That helped so much! Thank you 🙏

  • @taidelek9994
    @taidelek9994 Год назад +3

    The continuity of consciousness.

  • @paulhoffmann3405
    @paulhoffmann3405 Год назад +3

    "...the deities are manifestations of their own mind." - Wow. Very, very true.

  • @LilFL117
    @LilFL117 Год назад +2

    Love your content!

  • @bewg
    @bewg Год назад +2

    I remember this one time while on liquid lsd, stoned and inhaling no2. Directly after I took a huge no2 hit (lacking oxygen to brain) everything went dark and then in an instant it was bright again but brighter than usual, I had entered into what felt like a pocket of reality entirely adjacent to ours but only containing the room and people I was with within. My two friends turned to me in synchronicity while we were in there and told me something which I will never be able to recall exactly, but the feeling I got from what I was being told was the most completely profound thing I had ever heard or felt as though I had just received some secret truth that entwined myself and everything in existence together in one simple idea. And the next moment I was back in the room asking my friends to repeat what they had just told me, meanwhile they're giggling and cackling at something else completely unaware of the experience I just had.
    Perhaps this is a similar source for the inspiration of luminous mind.

  • @videosefilmes22
    @videosefilmes22 Год назад +4

    I had only known of this book because of Lennon's tomorrow never knows. It's good to have some more context

  • @m.fazlurrahman5854
    @m.fazlurrahman5854 Год назад +1

    Tibetan Book of Death was written to visit Tibet and spend the “hare Rama” for a while before one gets back to the civilian society again. Some could take the experience and forgot and could move on. However, a number of recurring tourists kept the demand for such books high.

  • @wilhelmseleorningcniht9410
    @wilhelmseleorningcniht9410 Год назад +2

    I would honestly be fascinated to watch a video about Theosophy. With how influential they've been on western occultism, and subsequently on new religious movements, it's a fascinating subject

  • @canisronis2753
    @canisronis2753 Год назад +1

    Worth a cup of coffee for sure, very useful!

  • @mortalclown3812
    @mortalclown3812 Год назад +2

    So many afterlife accounts overlap thru different faiths. Those who insist that there is a damning Creator are often the ones who have scary/negative NDEs. It never hurts to size up when it comes to the loving force that exists when we all cross over...
    ...or in this life.
    Sending light and hugs to other beings from this stranger across the miles.
    🌏🔭✨🌙💙🍃

  • @Jack-fs2im
    @Jack-fs2im Год назад +2

    BHUDDISM IS NOT A RELIGION ITS A PHILOSOPHY

  • @ralphhardie7492
    @ralphhardie7492 Год назад +1

    🎉 thank you for your hard work. Informative and surprisingly revelatory. I tried to read this decades ago and found it awful but wondered why it had such an awesome reputation. The Egyptian book of the dead, I managed to see one in Tokyo some years ago was far more interesting and instructive for anyone interested in the foundations of religious thought, ideas, philosophy or marketing tools for a rip off zero product. Thanks again for your effort 😊.

  • @Grace-fb7jk
    @Grace-fb7jk 5 месяцев назад

    This video was amazing. Concise and highly informative. Thank you.

  • @ElsieDreamWorld
    @ElsieDreamWorld Год назад +3

    Have you done any video about Hinduism? It would be so interesting . Thanks for your teachings.

  • @aaliyahs6600
    @aaliyahs6600 Год назад +1

    Beautiful knowledge thank you ❤

  • @hannahtunks411
    @hannahtunks411 Год назад +1

    Great video, pumping out hits left and right

  • @kylefenrick9168
    @kylefenrick9168 Год назад +2

    Fascinating to meditate upon.

  • @lordofchaosinc.261
    @lordofchaosinc.261 Год назад +1

    The text goes against much we take for granted. There are several Buddhas featured in the book and not all of them play nice, some offer "tough love", everything in your interest of course.
    Then there's the notion that the state of your mind after death matters to your spiritual journey. While your actions in life offer some guidance on which realm you incarnate next, all of your good or bad deeds might not matter if you make right or wrong choices after death.
    It's a fascinating read confronting the reader with an almost eternity of reincarnations on the wheel to bring death into perspective.

  • @JonathanDavisKookaburra
    @JonathanDavisKookaburra Год назад +2

    great summary