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Tantra

Webpages concerning "Tantra"

Dr. Jonn Mumford (Swami Anandakapila Saraswati): The official site for distance learning and consultations with Dr. Jonn Mumford (Swami Anandakapila Saraswati) Authentic traditional Tantra and divinations from a Western master.
http://www.jonnmumfordconsult.com
Keywords:
Tantra, Dr., Jonn, Mumford, chakra, sutra, yantra, kundalini, karma, eastern, Indian, yoga, Swami Anandakapila Saraswati, Om Kara Kriya, Traditional, lineage, divination, hinduism, Tantric, Tantrik, Mantra, Mudra, Tattwa, Esoteric, Occult, Dharma, Meditation

http://www.jonnmumfordconsult.com

Contains techniques and information on Hatha Yoga, Asana, Tantra, Yantra and Karma Yoga.
http://sivasakti.com/
Keywords:
tantra, tantric, consecration, art of blessing, benediction, karma, yoga, love, yang spiral, MISA, NATHA, tantramag, maha vidya, siva, Kali, Tara, Tripura Sundari, Bhuvaneshvari, Chinnamasta, Tripura Bhairavi, Dhumavati, Bagalamukhi, Bagala, Matangi Kamalatmika, Kamala, yantra, asana, Sahaj Agnisara Dhauti, Trikonsana, Ardha Matsyendrasana, Dhanurasana, Gomukhasana, Vatayanasana, ...

http://sivasakti.com/

Connecting consciousness, meditation and environmentalism via transpersonal experiences.
http://www.geocities.com/RainForest/Vines/1320
Keywords:
Gaia, Maya, Tantra, meditation, consciousness, transpersonal, near-death, Hinduism, Buddhism, nirvana, ecstatic sex, noetic, enlightenment, mandalas, zen

http://www.geocities.com/RainForest/Vines/1320

Tantra - Ancient Teachings of Tantra and Kundalini Yoga
http://www.tantra-kundalini.com
Keywords:
tantra, kundalini, tantra kundalini, kundalini tantra, tantric, tantras, tantrism, shiva, shakti, yoga, kundalini yoga

http://www.tantra-kundalini.com

Tantratŭn´tre, in both Hinduism and Buddhism, esoteric tradition of ritual and yoga known for elaborate use of mantra, or symbolic speech, and mandala, or symbolic diagrams; the importance of female d
http://www.encyclopedia.com/html/t/tantra.asp
Keywords:
Tantra, ENCYCLOPEDIA, REFERENCE, RESEARCH

http://www.encyclopedia.com/html/t/tantra.asp

International Ashram for Vedic Tantric Divine Meditations, Goddess Shree Sundari Bhagawati Kula Devi Kundalini Yogini Shakti Mantra Dhyan Deeksha Sadhana, ultimate self-realization spiritual awakenings, truth energy bliss beauty love enlightenment Siddhi
http://www.ashram.com.au/
Keywords:
vedic, tantric, divine, meditations, goddess, shree, sundari, bhagawati, kula, devi, kundalini, yogini, shakti, mantra, dhyan, deeksha, sadhana, ultimate self-realization, spiritual awakenings, truth, energy, bliss, beauty, love enlightenment siddhi, sat-guru, swami, krishna, gautam, the ashram inc.

http://www.ashram.com.au/

The spiritual writings of Shri Gurudev Mahendranath
http://www.mahendranath.org/
Keywords:
adi nath, adinath, adinatha, adi-nath, amookos, dadaji, international nath order, kaula, kaula tantra, lokanath, lokanatha, magikos, mahendranath, mahendranatha, nath, nath order, nath society, nath tantra, natha, pagala baba, tantra, uttara kaula, uttarakaula, western nath order

http://www.mahendranath.org/

Yoga resource on the Yoga tradition, practices, philosophy, home for Traditional Yoga Studies members featuring forums, downloads, encyclopedia and latest news around the world.
http://www.yrec.info/contentid-188.html
Keywords:
Yoga, Tradition, Georg, Feuerstein, Ashtanga, Raja, Kriya, Tantra, Mantra, Patanjali, Hatha, Hinduism, Jnana, Bhakti, Karma, Sutra, Samkhya, Sankhya

http://www.yrec.info/contentid-188.html

What Is Tantra? Articles and books on Tantra
http://newfrontier.com/nepal/whatis.htm
Keywords:
Tantra, Tantric, Tantrika, ecstasy, virato

http://newfrontier.com/nepal/whatis.htm

In this paper a connection between theChristian Liturgy and Hindu Tantrik rites are explored. This paper waspresented in an International liturgical conference held in Kottayam,Kerala, India by Prof. O. M. Mathew of School of Indian Legal Thought,Mahatma Gandhi University, Kottayam, Kerala, India
http://www.geocities.com/o_m_mathew/om.htm
Keywords:
Tantrik, Christian, Liturgy, Hindu, Temple, O. M. Mathew

http://www.geocities.com/o_m_mathew/om.htm

Bindu is the acknowledge magazine on yoga, tantra and meditation. It is published twice a year in english, german, danish and swedish by Scandinavian Yoga and Meditation School.
http://www.scand-yoga.org/english/bindu/index.html
Keywords:
bindu, yoga magazine, yoga, tantra, meditation, Kriya Yoga, Antar Mouna, Yoga Nidra, Ajapa Japa, Tratak, asana, yoga courses

http://www.scand-yoga.org/english/bindu/index.html

Asiatica Association: a NGO for professional and amateurs in Asian Studies and Women Studies.
http://www.asiatica.org/ijts/

http://www.asiatica.org/ijts/

Summary of tantra, kundalini, and sacred sex methods and rituals combined with science and physical actions to bring forth highest energy, healing and attainment. Tantra yoga is the only yoga that contains techniques which involve the lower circuits and does not isolate them. Tantra uses the full power of the human physical, emotional, mental, and spiritual bodies. Make no mistake: the spirit...
http://www.kundalini-tantra.com/
Keywords:
kundalini, tantra, tree of life, sexual, ritual, spiritual, shakti, kali, science, health, energy, sacred sex, attainment, esoteric, sex, polarity.

http://www.kundalini-tantra.com/

This web site is aimed to bring into light Visions & Experiences of some of the great spiritual masters. The information would provide an insight into many hidden aspects and may be useful to all sincere aspirants
http://geocities.com/amvaranasi/
Keywords:
Yoga, Tantra, Akhand Mahayoga, Philosophy, Spiritual Visions, Sadhaks, Shakta, Navmundi, Hindu, Religion

http://geocities.com/amvaranasi/

http://www-personal.umich.edu/~dalef/tantra.html

http://www-personal.umich.edu/~dalef/tantra.html

http://www.accessnewage.com/articles/mystic/Serpent1.htm
Keywords:
Kundalini, Chakras, Serpent Power, Tantra, Sexuality, Healing, Divination, Greek Mythology, Hindu Mythology, Jivanmukta

http://www.accessnewage.com/articles/mystic/Serpent1.htm

http://www.alchemywebsite.com/tamil_si.html

http://www.alchemywebsite.com/tamil_si.html

http://shaivism.net/article9.html

http://shaivism.net/article9.html

http://www.clas.ufl.edu/users/gthursby/tantra/
Keywords:
tantra, tantrism, tantrika, sexuality, adinatha, turiya, mahaturiya, tabyssinians, last, of, the, tabyssinians, tabyssinian, means, cross, between, tabby, and, abyssinian, cat, natha sampradaya, adinatha, zen, sahaja, sama, samarasa, vashikaran, surya, chandra, shani, kali, durga, ganesha, shiva, ganapati, india, hinduism, tara, devi, deva, chinnamasta, yantra, mantra, nyasa, tripura, ...

http://www.clas.ufl.edu/users/gthursby/tantra/

Sriyantra - Sacred Art and Geometry of Tantra
http://alumni.cse.ucsc.edu/~mikel/sriyantra/sriyantra.html

http://alumni.cse.ucsc.edu/~mikel/sriyantra/sriyantra.html

http://www.tantramagazine.com/mainmenu.htm

http://www.tantramagazine.com/mainmenu.htm

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Wikipedia-Article "Tantra"

Tantra (Sanskrit: loom), tantric yoga or tantrism is any of several esoteric traditions rooted in the religions of India. It exists in Hindu, Buddhist, Jain, Bönpo, and New Age forms. Tantra's roots are in the village life of ancient India. The word "tantra" first appears in the written record in the middle of the first millennium CE. Tantra has persisted and often thrived throughout Asian history. Its practitioners have lived in India, China, Japan, Tibet, Nepal, Bhutan, Pakistan, Sri Lanka, Korea, Cambodia, Burma, Indonesia and Mongolia. No form of medieval Hinduism, Buddhism, or Jainism has been without a Tantric component. Some South-Asian Islamic traditions have also borne a tantric stamp.

David Gordon White while cautioning us about attempting a rigorous definition of what for centuries has defied such attempts, offers the following working definition

" [It] is that Asian body of beliefs and practices which, working from the principle that the universe we experience is nothing other than the concrete manifestation of the divine energy of the godhead that creates and maintains that universe, seeks to ritually appropriate and channel that energy,within the human microcosm in creative and emancipatory ways."

In its Indian forms, tantra can be summarized as a family of voluntary rituals modeled on those of the Vedas, together with their attendant texts and lineages. These rituals typically involve the visualization of a deity, offerings (real or visualized), and the chanting of his or her mantra. These practices are usually said to require permission from a qualified teacher or guru who belongs to a legitimate guruparampara or teacher-student lineage. Thus tantra shares some similarities with yoga. (See the "Yoga" entry for a fuller discussion of their relationship.)

Common variations include visualizing the deity in the act of sexual union with a consort; visualizing oneself as the deity; and/or "transgressive" acts such as token consumption of meat or alcohol. Occasionally ritualized sex may be undertaken in imitation of the divine model. This accounts for tantra's mixed reputation, and its reception in the West primarily as a collection of sexual practices.

Contents

History of Tantra

Legend ascribes the origin of Tantra to Dattatreya, a semi-mythical Hindu yogi and the assumed author of the Jivanmukta Gita ("Song of the liberated soul"). Others see Lord Adinath, or Shiva, as the first Guru of Tantra. Things become a little more clear with Matsyendranath ("Master of fish" - so-called either because he was a fisherman, or, less probably, because he discovered a tantra inside a fish). He is accredited with authorship of the Kaulajnana-nirnaya, a voluminous ninth-century tantra dealing with a host of mystical and magical subjects, and occupies an important position in the Hindu tantric lineage, as well as in Tibetan Vajrayana Buddhism. His disciple, Gorakhnath, founded laya yoga. Hatha Yoga was penned by Swami Swatamarama as the secrets of Lord Adinath (another name for Shiva) in the 15th century.

Tantra evolved into a number of orders (sampradaya) and with a primary classification of either "left-hand tantra" (vaama marg), in which sexual yoga and other antinomian practices occurred or "right-hand tantra", in which such practices were merely visualised. Both groups, but in particular the left-hand tantrists, opposed many features of orthodox Hindu culture, particularly the caste system and patriarchy. Despite this, Tantra was accepted by some high-caste Hindus, most notably the Rajput princes. Hindu tantra even briefly enabled a yogic/sufi synthesis among some Indian Muslims. Nowadays Tantra has a large, though not always well-informed, following worldwide.

Buddhist and Hindu Tantra, though having many similarities from the outside, do have some clear distinctions. Scholars are unable to determine whether the Hindu or the Buddhist version of Tantra appeared first in history. Buddhist Tantra is always part of the Mahayana school of Buddhism, which has as main aim to help all sentient beings becoming free from problems (Dukkha), in order to achieve this aim, one should try to achieve Buddhahood oneself, in order to be the most profound teacher for others.

Hindu tantra

Tantra exists in Vaisnava, Shaiva, and Shakta forms, among others. Extolled as a short-cut to self-realization and spiritual enlightenment by some, left-hand tantric rites are often rejected as dangerous by most orthodox Hindus. The popular perception of tantra among Hindus, for example as expressed in Indian journalism, makes it more or less synonymous with black magic. This sentiment has also influenced the self-perception of tantrikas themselves.

Some distinguish between two "paths" in Hindu Tantra: dakshinachara (also known as samayachara), the "Right-Hand Path", and vamachara, the "Left-Hand Path". The terms Left-Hand Path and Right-Hand Path have been adopted by Western occultists.

According to another popular view, Hindu Tantra is classified as either red (rajas or heat, fire, restlessness, anger), black (tamas or darkness, ignorance, stagnation) or white (sattva pure, moderate, divine). These correspond to three Hindu conceptions of the qualities of existence (the three gunas) first posited in Samkhya.

Some tantric aspirants simply feel the union is accomplished internally and with spiritual entities of various kinds. For this reason, almost all tantric writing has a gross, higher and subtle meaning. This tripartite system of understanding readily obscures the true purport of many passages for those without the necessary background or deeper understandings so crucial to tantra. Thus, a 'union' could mean the actual act of sexual intercourse, ritual uniting of concepts through chanting and sacrifice, or realisation of one's true self in the cosmic joining of the divine principles of Shiva and Shakti in Para Shiva.

According to John Woodroffe, one of the foremost Western scholars on Tantra, and translator of its greatest works (including the Mahanirvana Tantra):

"The Indian Tantras, which are numerous, constitute the Scripture (Shastra) of the Kaliyuga, and as such are the voluminous source of present and practical orthodox "Hinduism." The Tantra Shastra is, in fact, and whatever be its historical origin, a development of the Vaidika Karmakanda, promulgated to meet the needs of that age. Shiva says: "For the benefit of men of the Kali age, men bereft of energy and dependent for existence on the food they eat, the Kaula doctrine, O auspicious one! is given" (Chap. IX., verse 12). To the Tantra we must therefore look if we would understand aright both ritual, yoga, and sadhana of all kinds, as also the general principles of which these practices are but the objective expression."
- Introduction to Sir John Woodroffe's translation of "Mahanirvana Tantra.."

While Hinduism is typically viewed as being Vedic, the Tantras are not considered part of the orthodox Hindu/Vedic scriptures. They are said to run alongside each other, The Vedas of orthodox Hinduism on one side and the Agamas of Tantra on the other. However, the practices, mantras and ideas of the Atharva Veda are markedly different from those of the prior three and show signs of powerful non-Aryan influence. Indeed, the Atharva Veda is cited by many Tantra texts as a source of great knowledge. it is notable that throughout the Tantras, such as the Mahanirvana Tantra, they align themselves as being natural progressions of the Vedas. Tantra exists for spiritual seekers in the age of Kaliyuga, when Vedic practices no longer apply to the current state of morality and Tantra is the most direct means to realization. Thus, aside from Vajrayana Buddhism, much of Tantric thought is Hindu Tantra, most notably those that council worship of Lord Shiva and the Divine Mother, Kali.

A tantra typically takes the form of a dialogue between the Hindu gods Shiva and Shakti/Parvati, being that Shiva is known in Hinduism as being 'Yogiraj' or 'Yogeshwara,' 'The King of Yoga' or 'God of Yoga' and that his consort is known to be his perfect feminine equal. Each explains to the other a particular group of techniques or philosophies for attaining moksha (liberation/ enlightenment), or for attaining a certain practical result. (Agamas are Shiva to Shakti, and Nigamas are Shakti to Shiva.)

This extract from the beginning of the Yoni Tantra (translated by Mike Magee) gives an idea of the style.

Seated upon the peak of Mount Kailasa the God of Gods, the Guru of all creation was questioned by Durga-of-the-smiling-face, Naganandini.
Sixty-four tantras have been created O Lord, tell me, O Ocean of Compassion, about the chief of these.

Mahadeva (Shiva) said:

Listen, Parvati, to this highly secret one, Dearest. Ten million times have you wanted to hear this. Beauteous One, it is from your feminine nature that you continually ask me. You should conceal this by every effort. Parvati, there is mantra-pitha, yantra-pitha and yoni-pitha. Of these, the chief is certainly the yoni-pitha, revealed to you from affection.

Tibetan tantra

In Tibetan Buddhism tantra (also known as Vajrayana) plays a central role, and is universally acknowledged as constituting the highest teachings of that religion. Tibetan lineages disagree as to whether tantric practice ought to be reserved for senior monks (which policy distinguishes the Gelugpa), or extended to laypeople and junior clergy (as in the other monastic lineages, notably the Nyingmapa). The suggested motivation for practicing tantra is no different from that of Mahayana Buddhism in general--the bodhisattva ideal, in which the practitioner aspires to liberate not only him/herself but also all sentient beings throughout the universe. The difference is one of technique, tantra being a "quick path" to enlightenment for those capable of following it. Thus esoteric tantric practice is tightly integrated with the exoteric (non-esoteric) tradition so that the two work together as a unified system.

Within Vajrayana Buddhist circles, sexual tantra is apparently rare but not unknown, even among theoretically celibate monks. June Campbell's book "Traveller in Space" tells the story of her recruitment as a tantric consort by Kalu Rinpoche, who also strongly urged her silence. Vajrayana principles might justify the resulting violation of his monastic vows with an appeal to the bodhisattva principle, on the theory (which is by no means universally accepted) that even a monk ought to have sex if that will help him attain enlightenment sooner. Nevertheless, a more typical example of Tibetan tantra would be the chanting of the well-known mantra of Avalokiteshvara Aum Mani Padme Hum.

Japan's Shingon sect

Buddhist tantrism is also practiced to a lesser extent in East Asia. Japan's Shingon sect, for example, practices tantric veneration of the deity Vairocana.

New Age tantra or Neo Tantra

New Age appropriations of tantra usually disregard requirements involving guruparampara and ritual conduct, though they otherwise adopt many of the terms and concepts of Indian tantra. In these circles, "tantra" is often a synonym for sacred sexuality, i.e. a belief that sex ought to be recognized as a sacred act which is capable of elevating its participants to a higher spiritual plane. At other times "tantra" comes to mean a set of techniques for cultivating a more fulfilling sexual or love relationship, like the otherwise unrelated Kama Sutra, regardless of its metaphysical import.

Bhagwan Shree Rajneesh later known as Osho, used tantra in combination with breathing technique, bioenergetic, yoga and massage in some of his groups, his students continued this concept and developed it. One of his successful and well known students is Margot Anand.

Many other teachers have pioneered their modern understanding of tantra as its relates to its ancient roots. Another way of looking at is a top-down approach. In other words, tantric knowledge or teachings can be directly transmitted from teacher to student through the modalities of eye contact, playful conversation, touch and sexual intercourse.

Tantric practices

Because of the wide range of groups covered by the term "tantra", it is hard to describe tantric practices definitively. The basic practice, the Hindu image-worship known as "puja" may include any of the elements below.

Mantra and Yantra: As in all of Hindu and Buddhist yogas, mantras plays an important part in Tantra, not only for focusing the mind, often through the conduit of specific Hindu gods like Shiva, Ma Kali (mother Kali, another form of Shakti) and even Ganesh, the elephant-headed god of wisdom (refer to the Ganesha Upanishad). Similarly, puja will often involve concentrating on a yantra or mandala.

Identification with deities: Tantra, being a development of early Hindu-Vedic thought, embraced the Hindu gods and goddesses, especially Shiva and Shakti, along the Advaita (nondualist Vedic) philosophy that each represents an aspect of the ultimate Para Shiva, or Brahman. These deities may be worshiped externally (with flowers, incense etc.) but, more importantly, are used as objects of meditation, where the practitioner imagines him- or herself to be experiencing the darshan or 'vision' of the deity in question. The ancient devadasi tradition of sacred temple-dance, seen in the contemporary Bharata Natyam is the example of such meditation in movement. The divine love is expressed in Sringara and Bhakti.

Tantric chakras

Sahasrara
Ajna
Vishuddha
Anahata
Manipura
Swadhisthana
Muladhara
Bindu

Concentration on the body: Tantrikas generally see the body as a microcosm; thus in the Kaulajnana-nirnaya, for example, the practitioner meditates on the head as the moon, the heart as the sun and the genitals as fire. Many groups hold that the body contains a series of energy centres (chakra - "wheel"), which may be associated with elements, planets or occult powers (siddhi). The phenomenon of kundalini, a flow of energy through the chakras, is controversial; most writers see it as essential to Tantra, while others regard it as unimportant or as an abreaction. As it is, kundalini is nothing but the flow of the central sushumna nadi, a spiritual current, that, when moving, opens chakras, and is fundamental to the siddhi concept that forms a part of all tantra, including hatha yoga.

Tantra and sex: As stated before, actual sexual intercourse is not a part of every form of tantric practice, but it is the definitive feature of left-hand Tantra. Contrary to popular belief, "Tantric sex" is not always slow and sustained, and may end in orgasm. For example, the Yoni Tantra states: "there should be vigorous copulation". However, all tantra states that there were certain groups of personalities who were not fit for certain practices. Tantra was personality specific and insisted that those with pashu-bhava (animal disposition), which are people of dishonest, promiscuous, greedy or violent natures who ate meat and indulged in intoxication, would only incur bad karma by following Tantric paths without the aid of a Guru who could instruct them on the correct path.

In Buddhist tantra, actual ejaculation is very much a taboo, as the main goal of the sexual practice is to use the sexual energy towards achieving full enlightenment, rather than ordinary pleasure.

Taboo-breaking: Sexual intercourse, preferably with a low-caste partner, was one method by which traditional left-hand practice forced practitioners to confront their conditioned responses. Others include the eating of meat (particularly beef and pork) and drinking of alcohol. Fear has also been used as a method to break down conditioning; rites would often take place in a cremation ground amidst decomposing corpses. This, of course, also falls under the prerequisite of the practitioner's nature, in such cases demanding a vir- (heroic) or even devya- (godlike) -bhava (disposition of purity, suppression of pride, respect to parents and guru and often celibacy).

In the Kaula and Vamachara schools of tantra the Panchamakara (i.e. "five things") the five taboos ritually/sacramentally broken in order to free the practitioner from binding convention:

  • maithuna (sex)
  • madya (liquor)
  • mudra (money)
  • mamsa (flesh)
  • matsya (fish)

The "sacramental" or ritual breaking was only for the "heroic"/vira- practitioner, not the "godly"/divya- or "beastly"/pashu- levels. The "beastly" would misunderstand and get caught up in the literal act while the "godly" will have already progressed beyond and not need the literal act to understand the inner meaning.

There are tantric schools that substitute innocuous items for the taboo substances and acts, claiming that literal interpretations of the Panchamakara miss the real inner truth of the rite.

Tantra in the modern world

Tantra is used in the West, as a general term which relates to sexual practice as a spiritual evolutionary scheme. There are in fact many different approaches as to how this manifests in American society - and also examples of the same development in Europe, see further down. There have been many civilizations which have deified sexuality as the most approximate expression of cosmic love or God. Regardless, the point is that tantra is moldable. It changes with each moment and environment. It especially depends on the nature of the practitioner.

In traditional pockets of Tantric practice in India, such as in Assam near the venerated Hindu temple of Kali, Kammakha, in parts of West Bengal, in Siddhanta temples of South India, and in Kasmiri Shiva temples up north, Tantra has retained its true form. Its variance in practice is seen, where many tantrics are known to frequent cremation grounds in attempts to transcend their worldly attachment to life, and others are assuredly performing still more arcane acts. But what is common to them all is the intense secrecy in which their secrets are kept and the almost godlike reverence paid to the Guru, who is seen as the pinnacle of Tantra. It would be safe to say that every single Hindu Tantra Yogin in India is a Shiva and/or Shakti worshipper, and the more wide-spread practices to which all Hindus commit themselves, like pooja and worship through devotion, are maintained while more occult yogic practices involving sacred rites continue. Tibet too has a very strong Buddhist Tantric background which continues, albeit many have been transplanted to monasteries in India, and claims to be a right-hand path, in contrast to the more varied Hindu counterparts (that include both left and right-hand practices).

Tibetan Tantra or Vajrayana, on the other hand, flourishes in America and other countries in a relatively pure and genuine, if somewhat attenuated form, under the guidance of many Tibetan teachers of the first generation to escape from Tibet or the next generation. There are hundreds of Tibetan Buddhist centers outside Tibet and India, primarily in the Americas and Europe, but also in eastern countries such as Malaysia, Taiwan, Russia and others. Practices in these centers, with Tibetan gurus or those trained directly by them, emphasize the true Mahayana ideal of rapidly gaining the enlightenment that characterizes a Buddha entirely for the purpose of relieving the suffering of others. This is claimed to be the Bodhisattva ideal of Mahayana Buddhism represented historically and mythologically by Avaloketishvara, Tara and others, as well as today in the person of the Dalai Lama and other Tibetan teachers. In the Tantric or Vajrayana aspects of this system, harnessing the energies of the body, emotions and mind, including, joy, wrath and sexual energy, is not an end in itself but a potent means to the ultimate goal of realizing the true nature of reality, emptiness or Shunyata, thus attaining complete spiritual enlightenment and relief from the endless dissatisfaction of life, and using the power thus gained exclusively to help others do so as well.

Modern Tantra may be divided into practices based on Hinduism and Buddhism, Indian and Tibetan, traditions. The form of Hindu Tantra popularly practiced In America is said by Hindu Tantra traditionalists to represent a mutilated and extremely narrow-minded, sensationalist approach encompassing only a misguided thinking about "sacred sexuality," with little reference to its true practice. Traditional Tantrists say their practise involves much more than mere wizardy or sexual titillation: like the rest of Yoga (Hindu), it requires self-analysis and conquering of material ignorance, often through the body, but always through a pure outlook of the mind. 'Real Tantra' is about transforming one's sexual energy into spiritual progress, and has nothing to do with 'sex just for fun'. Those without a guru or lacking in discipline of the mind and body are unfit. It is telling that a Tantrica in West Bengal, a devotee of the Hindu goddess Kali, once said that "those most fit for Tantra almost never take it up, and those least fit pursue it with zeal."


See also

Hindu tantra

Buddhist tantra

References

  • Bagchi, P.C. (ed.), Magee, Michael (trans.) Kaulajnana-nirnaya of the School of Matsyendranath. Varanasi: Prachya Prakashan, 1986.
  • Feuerstein, Georg. Tantra: The Path of Ecstasy. Boston: Shambhala, 1998.
  • Geshe Kelsang Gyatso. Tantric Grounds and Paths. Glen Spey: Tharpa Publications, 2003.
  • Mookerji, Ajit. The Tantric Way: art, science, ritual. London: Thames and Hudson, 1977. A general introduction.
  • Woodroffe, John. Mahanirvana Tantra (Tantra of the Great Liberation). Available online at [1]. A late Hindu tantra, but one of the best known.

External links

General Resources


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