Dark meditation

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Dark meditation
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Dark Zen Meditation (hereafter, DZM) is a method designed to enter into communion with the superessential light of the Buddha. For those of you who are of pure intent converging with this light is tantamount to directly sensing the Buddha’s true teaching which spontaneously emanates from his most mysterious supernal body. Letting this light dwell within insures that you will eventually reach the far shore of liberation.



The Guidelines

1. Leave desires behind.
2. Visualize your sensory perceptions to be posterior to the Buddha’s light. Accept that sensory perceptions are empty of substantiality.
3. Sit with legs crossed and the spine erect.
4. Recollect that which is most antecedent to the in breath and the out breath during your normal breathing rhythm.
5. Do not follow the breath or try to visualize a point between the in breath and the out breath.


Explanation of the Guidelines

1. To leave your desires behind means to stop grasping after conditioned things since they are finite and subject to endless transformation (i.e., birth and death). If we enter into sympathy with conditioned things we will surely suffer their fate and destiny.

2. What we perceive with our senses, calling such "the world," is a product of finite causes and conditions. Such perceptions are posterior to that which is their absolute source. If we wish to commune with the source of all, then we must come to see all things as coming after the first.

3. To sit with legs crossed and spine erect prepares the body to be offered to the Buddha’s great light; for his light enjoys an immovable posture and a mind without attachment, which sitting with legs crossed and holding the spine erect symbolizes.

4. To recollect that which is most antecedent to the in breath and out breath means that you must tune into that which is prior to the entire breathing cycle itself. Just as the hand which lifts a staff is not part of the staff, likewise the antecedent recollection is not a part of your breathing. As a practical illustration, you must recollect the antecedent as you breathe in and breathe out. If the breathing is long or short, labored or otherwise, you must focus on the antecedent so that breathing follows after it. When you breathe, for example, your normal belief is, "I am breathing." It never dawns on you to retract your attention and look in the opposite direction so as to rise above breathing. Not surprisingly, this is not an easy task (owing to force of habit, all of us still attend to conditions which are always posterior).

5. Those who teach that one must follow the breath are making their very minds breath dependent, thus falling into samsara. On the other hand, if one applies antecedent recollection, they will one day become free of all bodily functions.

Some Practical Points

1. The minimum time for this practice is 20 minutes. Two periods are highly recommended each day. When you feel that your mind is joyous and agile, then it is a good time to begin. Generally, in the morning and in the evening our minds are in such a state.

2. Use some kind of timing device which will not disrupt your attempt to access the Buddha’s light.

3. If you gain access to the Buddha light by recollecting the antecedent it will be present to you throughout your daily life as both a friend and a guide. Hence it is not just limited to formal sitting. Additionally, no kind of suffering can diminish it; it is always present. Why is this? It is because the object of recollection is not within the human body. It exists prior to the body in the realm of Universal Mind.

4. Signs of access

a. Feeling a magnetic-like energy in the head or in the chest region;
b. Feeling a sense of being disembodied when in the presence of the energy;
c. Vitality arises as a result of sensing the energy;
d. Bliss is sensed in differing degrees.


Further comments on DZM

Meditation is never an end in itself. It is for the purpose of gaining access to the Buddha’s mysterious light which discloses the character of the immortal (i.e., the light’s true source). Without access to it there is no possibility that you will comprehend the true path and its true completion. You can only hope to accrue good merit and be reborn in this world when Lord Maitreya is born.

If you intend to practice DZM, be advised that it is not to be used as a tranquilizer or for finite purposes. It is much more than that. In one respect, it is the raft of Dharma which takes us to the other shore of nirvana. By it, your dangerous journey across the waters of samsara will not be one in which you drown in the abyss of materialism.


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