In the
Nyingma school (originating around 760), karma can be taught at the third of four thoughts that turn the mind to dharma in the outer preliminaries. It is taught within the
pre-liminary practices of the
Longchen Nyingthig, "The Heart-essence of the Vast Expanse". This is a
terma or "spiritual discovery", a hidden teaching from
Padmasambhava which was revealed by
Jigme Lingpa (1729–1798). It is one of the most widely practiced teachings in the Nyingmapa school.
The Heart-essence of the Vast Expanse teaching cycle has the following structure: • Pre-liminary practices (''sngon 'gro''): • Outer or external preliminaries: • the freedoms and advantages of precious human rebirth; • the truth of impermanence and change; • the workings of karma; • the suffering of living beings within
samsara • Inner preliminaries: taking refuge, arousing
bodhicitta, Vajrasattva, mandala offering, and
Guru Yoga • Main practice (
dngos gzhi):
generation phase,
perfection phase, and the
Great Perfection Jigme Lingpa In Jigme Lingpa's
Mindfulness Application: Unique Great Perfection Preliminary Instructions, karma arises to produce
samsara, which should be abandoned. All the ten virtues and non-virtues will give results similar to the cause and can proliferate. With this understanding, cultivating a stable mind can avoid non-virtuous acts and appreciation for virtuous acts.
Patrul Rinpoche Patrul Rinpoche wrote down Jigme Lingpa's pre-liminary practices from his teacher Jikmé Gyalwé Nyugu. These were translated into a book called
The Words of My Perfect Teacher. It describes ten negative actions which are to be avoided, and
positive actions to be adopted. According to Patrul Rinpoche, each negative act produces four kinds of karmic effects: • The fully ripened effect: rebirth in one of the lower realms of samsara; • The effect similar to the cause: rebirth in a human form, in which we have a predisposition for the same negative actions, or undergo the same negative actions being afflicted on us; • The conditioning effect: the negative act shapes our environment; • The proliferating effect: a continuous repetition of former negative actions, which keeps us wandering endlessly in samsara. Positive actions comprise the vow never to commit any of the negative actions. According to Patrul Rinpoche, the quality of our actions determine all the pleasures and miseries that an individual experiences.
Khenpo Ngawang Pelzang Khenpo Ngawang Pelzang, a qualified
Longchen Nyingthig commentator, explained harmful karma’s remedy is to first meet the spiritual friend, then listen to teachings and reflect on them. When karmic obstacles arise, the student may generate confidence in karmic laws; regret past actions and the student may apply other appropriate remedies. Continuing harmful karma may lead to lower rebirth. Lessening past results with meritorious activity results in higher rebirths. Students achieving pure karma will be welcomed to go directly to liberation in any instant. Since harmful actions are rooted in negative emotions and these are rooted in the self-belief, some realize no-self to believe and then end both karma and the emotions. Students may then attain the
Arhat’s
nirvana result, with and without residue, similar to the
no more learning path.
Bodhisattvas may pray for all karma to ripen upon them to purify its effect most beneficially for the student.
Chagdud Tulku Rinpoche Chagdud Tulku Rinpoche’s student Jane Tromge compiled his Dudjom Tersar Ngondro teachings from
Dudjom Lingpa’s
terma revelation. Karma weaves experienced patterns as the inevitable results from outflowing causes. Understanding karma and purifications can establish a spiritual compass to direct conduct in positive accord until enlightenment’s threshold. An enlightened Buddha has passed beyond karmic dualism to an infinite reflecting radiance awakening. Karma is created in the mind source, with speech and body following the mind’s lead. Buddhist ten non-virtues and ten virtues delineate what to abandon and accept. Proliferating virtuous actions carries repetitions forward into future lifetimes.
Dzonsar Jamyag Khentse Dzonsar Jamyag Khentse’s Longchen Nyingthig commentary explains that forgetting about death and karma is shown when we complain about everyone else. The sutras say
Mara's third arrow is directed to those with wrong views, such as not believing in cause condition and effect (karma). Protection may be achieved with discipline, meditation, and wisdom. Exhausting karma leads to enlightenment and it's impossible to be independent and in control of anything having so many causes. Scientific people may believe in karma and not in reincarnation as its effects from virtue and non-virtue. This may corrode the
ultimate truth beliefs in an interdependent reality,
shunyata, and the
triple gem, which request Buddhas and Bodhisattvas to not pass into Parinirvana. Karma is synonymous with reincarnation. Karmic debts pass from each lifetime. Merit produces good karma.
Khenpo Tenzin Norgay Khenpo Tenzin Norgay's
Nam Cho Ngöndro (preliminary practice) teachings emphasize karma purification importance in relation to proceeding to Dzogchen practices. There are 10 Steps in Ngöndro to quick enlightenment and karma is at Step 3. Karma follows the mind's wandering in samsara and may propel to the
six realms. Only the student can purge and manage conduct and outcomes. Advancing to Dzogchen and skipping Ngöndro practices could lead to wrong karma views, where avoiding karma causes dangerous
nihilistic (bodhicitta voided) views, the antidotes may become poisons. For example, the
Heart Sutra, which explains no suffering, no cause of suffering, no path and no fruition could lead to a paradox asking why even practice. Understanding karma in the Ngöndro context helps answer the paradox. Karma is in the foundation for all Buddhist practices and requires both logic and faith for acceptance. Karma necessitates accepting beyond what the senses can materially perceive. Karmic law is not legislated, it is buddha nature and unavoidable. It is a way of expressing how the mind functions and can be trained. The
Abhidharma explains karma in detail as karma is seen in the four noble truths. Dharma works out in nondiscrimination for everyone when there are shared karmic beliefs.
Khenpo Tsultrim Lodro Khenpo Tsultrim Lodro interprets karma to mean cause, whenever karma is committed the seed will be planted in the
alaya consciousness and the effect ripens. There are four types of ripening; the first ripes in this lifetime. While the other three types may ripen in the next lifetime. Infailabe karma, a weak cause may encounter a strong antidote, and causality may be broken. Immutable karma and mutable karma may have indefinite fruition. Virtuous karma can ripen slowly, and it's possible when undergoing suffering. Some illnesses result from previous lives. The
Abhidharma-kosha-shastra clearly explains the workings of cause and effect. According to the
Mahayanabhiddharma-sangiti-shastra, repenting from beginningless time and vowing to never commit evil again mutes evil karma which is suffering's cause. With Merit dedication, the seed of happiness is planted and may save virtuous karma and prevent it from becoming mutable. Children may inherit their parents' karma. From the relative truth perspective, when there is cause there is an effect.
Lopon Natsok Zugchek Lopon Natsok Zugchen's
100-Day Ngondro Retreat, based on the Longchn Nyingtik and the
Words of My Perfect Teacher, follows Khenpo Ngawang Pelzang's Guide and has karma teachings on the 46-55th day. The quality and benefits of cause & effect have the general meaning that virtuous action will give happiness and non-virtuous deads result in suffering. Cause or karma has a selection of virtue, non-virtue or, equanimity, which is also called common karma and special karma (with equanimity). Thinking is mind karma, and so forth with body or voice action which is revealing. Contaminated action in samsara causes either happiness or suffering. When karma causes an effect in nirvana, the truth of the path then is called uncontaminated action. In a single life, it is the seeing karma, resulting in ripening in the current life. In the next lifetime, it's called seeing the result in future life. Causes in a future life, see the results in another time. Purification to reduce karma has the uncertainty of its result. Completing the karma is with the six branches: • complete it purposefully, • do it completely, • have no regret, • rejoice for having done it, • not being purified, and • having potentiality from the result ripening. This is the karma of creation and non-accumulation. Karma that results in the six realms is referred to as impelling karma. Karma resulting in the same life perfects the result. ==Purification of karma==