Property:Gloss-def

From Buddha-Nature

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T
*''enjoyments, seven'' (Tib. nyer spyod bdun). The seven offerings of water for drinking, water for bathing the feet, flowers, incense, light, perfume, and food.   +
A Vajrayāna system of practice, corresponding to anuyoga, which is based upon the practice of the stage of generation.  +
Latent tendencies or habitual propensities underlying the manifestations of consciousness.  +
Lit. "heroic being," one who shows great courage in not succumbing to mental afflictions and in striving diligently in spiritual practice. A highly realized male bodhisattva who manifests in the world in order to serve sentient beings.  +
A meditative practice designed to bring forth realization of emptiness, with a side effect of generating intense heat arising from the navel cakra. Great, empty awareness, devoid of activity, the fire of primordial consciousness, the union of bliss and emptiness, which blazes as a display of the power of the five facets of primordial consciousness. See VE183-90.  +
The spiritual vehicle of the "Great Yoga," which is perfected by realizing the nondual reality of the deity and one's own appearances.  +
The third of the four stages on the path of direct crossing over, in which the entire universe appears to be totally pervaded with rainbow light and blazing fire, and everything appears as bindus in which the five families of male and female peaceful and wrathful deities appear in union. This sage of spontaneous manifestation corresponds to the attainment of the eighth āryabodhisattva stage, known as Immovable.  +
The second of the four stages on the path of direct crossing over, in which all appearances during and after meditation transform into displays of light and rainbow bindus with ever-increasing clarity, until finally all ordinary appearances vanish and dissolve into continuous, omnipresent displays of visions of light. This stage corresponds to the attainment of the fifth āryabodhisattva stage, known as Difficult to Cultivate.  +
A highly realized being who reveals Dharma teachings concealed in the physical world or in the nature of mind.  +
A thread or continuum. An esoteric scripture belonging to the class of Vajrayāna Buddhism, as opposed to the exoteric teachings of the sūtras.  +
A meditator takes birth as a rūdra, a type of demon, by firmly and clearly visualizing himself or herself as a wrathful deity— while having no realization of emptiness and no motivation of compasion. It can also mean the conceptual grasping by which one reifies the distinctions of outer, inner, and secret phenomena.  +