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This commentary is based on the six bardos teachings from a series
of hidden treasure texts known as the Profound Dharma of Natural
Liberation through the Intention of the Peaceful and Wrathful Ones
(Zab chos zhi khro dgongs pa rang grol), discovered by the great
terton Karma Lingpa in the fourteenth century. The word "bardo,"
made popular in the West through the English translation of the
Bardo Thodol or The Tibetan Book of the Dead, which also belongs to
the same series of treasure texts, means an intermediate or
in-between state. The practice of the six bardos, according to the
hermeneutics of the Nyingma school of Tibetan Buddhism, is
essentially the meditative practice of living and dying. Natural
Appearances, Natural Liberation not only contains very practical
advice, but also has many teachings of the Nyingma tantric
tradition embedded in it. The original text is not intended as a
study of spiritualism or psychology. Neither is it intended to be
viewed as handbook for taking care of the deceased, nor as a
treatise on emptiness. The intention is to condense the very deep
and profound tantric teachings of the six bardos into practices
approachable by all sentient beings so that many can swiftly attain
various states of liberation. This book offers a scholarly but
accessible explanation of the ancient wisdom embedded in this
ancient Buddhist classic. Tam Shek-wing (1935-) is a Buddhist
scholar, painter, poet, writer and social critic. He is the founder
of the Vajrayana Buddhism Association and Sino-Tibetan Buddhist
Studies Association in North America. Master Tam was born in
Guangzhou, China. As a young man, he received systematic training
in the Nyingma school of Tibetan Buddhism under the guidance of
H.H. Dudjom Rinpoche. In 1986, Master Tam emigrated from Hong Kong
to Hawaii, and then to Toronto in 1993. As early as the late 1970s,
Master Tam began publishing writings on Buddhism, with an emphasis
on the teachings and meditative practice in Vajrayana Buddhism. To
establish Sino-Tibetan Buddhist studies as a legitimate field in
Buddhology, Master Tam helped organize publication of the Monograph
Series in Sino-Tibetan Buddhist Studies. The published works
sparked interest in establishing new curricula in Buddhist Studies
in a number of universities in China, including Renmin University
of China in Beijing, Zhejiang University in Hangzhou, Sun Yat-Sen
University in Guangzhou, and Nanking University in Nanjin. Since
2008, Master Tam has been a visiting professor at these
universities, where he lectures on the tathagatagarbha doctrine and
its practice.
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