Buddha Tantra Techniques
Buddha Tantra Techniques
Buddha Tantra Techniques
(Vajrayana)
Tantra
The use of ritual objects such as the vajra and bell (ghanta), phurba, hand
drum (damaru), and many other symbolic tools and musical instruments.
Ganachakra feasts with ritual consumption of meat and alcohol.
Deity yoga
Deity yoga (Tibetan: lha'i rnal 'byor; Sanskrit: Devata-yoga) is the
fundamental Vajrayana practice, involving a sadhana practice in which the practitioner
visualizes himself or herself as the meditation Buddha or yidam of the sadhana.
Purpose
The purpose of Deity yoga is to bring the meditator to the realization that the deity and
the practitioner are in essence the same, non-dual. The yidam generally appears in
a mandala and the practitioner visualizes himself or herself and their environment as the
yidam and mandala of their Deity Yoga practice. This visualization method undermines
a habitual belief that views of reality and self are solid and fixed, enabling the
practitioner to purify spiritual obscurations (Sanskrit: klesha) and to practice compassion
and wisdom simultaneously:
Deity Yoga employs highly refined techniques of creative imagination, visualisation, and
photism in order to self-identify with the divine form and qualities of a particular deity as
the union of method or skilful means and wisdom. As His Holiness the Dalai Lama says,
"In brief, the body of a Buddha is attained through meditating on it". [4]
Visualisation