This document provides instructions for the Tummo meditation practice of focusing wind and mind energies at the navel chakra through breath control and visualization. The practice involves visualizing the central channel and a flame at the navel, then reciting the syllables "Om Ah Hum" while drawing wind energy up the central channel during inhalation and down during exhalation. With regular practice, warmth and blissful feelings will arise at the navel as the winds and mind merge. This leads to stillness of mind and various physical and mental health benefits.
This document provides instructions for the Tummo meditation practice of focusing wind and mind energies at the navel chakra through breath control and visualization. The practice involves visualizing the central channel and a flame at the navel, then reciting the syllables "Om Ah Hum" while drawing wind energy up the central channel during inhalation and down during exhalation. With regular practice, warmth and blissful feelings will arise at the navel as the winds and mind merge. This leads to stillness of mind and various physical and mental health benefits.
Original Description:
Instructions on how to do the Om Ah Hung Tummo practice.
This document provides instructions for the Tummo meditation practice of focusing wind and mind energies at the navel chakra through breath control and visualization. The practice involves visualizing the central channel and a flame at the navel, then reciting the syllables "Om Ah Hum" while drawing wind energy up the central channel during inhalation and down during exhalation. With regular practice, warmth and blissful feelings will arise at the navel as the winds and mind merge. This leads to stillness of mind and various physical and mental health benefits.
This document provides instructions for the Tummo meditation practice of focusing wind and mind energies at the navel chakra through breath control and visualization. The practice involves visualizing the central channel and a flame at the navel, then reciting the syllables "Om Ah Hum" while drawing wind energy up the central channel during inhalation and down during exhalation. With regular practice, warmth and blissful feelings will arise at the navel as the winds and mind merge. This leads to stillness of mind and various physical and mental health benefits.
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The key takeaways are focusing the mind and wind energies at the navel through the recitation of syllables and visualization in order to merge them as one and achieve various physical and mental benefits.
The three principal winds are the navel wind, located at the navel, and the left and right winds, located in the respective channels. The navel wind is considered the most important.
The steps are: 1) Inhale while mentally reciting 'Om' 2) Retain the breath while mentally reciting 'Ah' and contracting muscles 3) Exhale while mentally reciting 'Hum'
Tummo
Om Ah Hum Vajra Recitation with Wind and Channel
Practice. By Garchen Rinpoche
Among the myriad wind energies of the body, there
are five principal winds. The navel, where the fire- equalizing wind abides, is like the royal seat of all the winds. The practice of vase breathing is to hold awareness there.
In general, there are three principal channels, the
left and right channel and, between them, the central channel. The central channel, or wisdom channel, is the principal among all the channels. When we draw the wind and mind energies into the central channel at the navel, we practice the methods for merging mind and wind energies into one point.
There are two modes of practice for focusing on the
energies at the navel, with visualization, and without meditating on any visualization. The latter involves the vajra recitation of the syllables Om Ah Hum. This recitation is combined with focus on the subtle wind energies.
The spine should be straight. The three channels,
left, right, and central, are visualized. There is no need to think about the gross physical body at all. At the level of the navel is a flame the size of a lentil. As you breathe in through the nostrils, mentally recite the syllable Om. The wind energies descend the right and left channels and then enter the central channel below the navel chakra. Then hold the breath for a short period of time, mentally reciting the syllable Ah. Bind the lower wind upward, contracting the muscles at the perineum, and press the upper wind downward with the diaphragm. This is called the union of the winds, the vase breath, and it forms a sealed, spherical reliquary. When pressing the breath downward, hold the belly in at the navel a bit - do not expand the belly. The wind energies enter and naturally abide at the navel chakra while doing the contractions and reciting Ah. Imagine that the winds slightly fan the ball of flame that is abiding at the navel, causing it to burn brighter. The flame gets stronger and starts crackling, because the wind is meeting with the flame. The breath and muscle contractions should be held gently, and we should remain in meditative equipoise for a few moments while retaining the breath. Then breathe out, mentally reciting the syllable Hum. As you breathe in, you can also think that as the Hum is merging with the Ah, you receive the blessings of all the enlightened beings. Within this exercise, look at the empty nature of mind itself.
When the wind energies are abiding at the navel,
and you leave the mind in its unfabricated, natural state, sometimes warmth will instantaneously arise in the navel. Stay with the flame continually, train your mind in it. If you meditate in this way for a while, say one week, warmth will arise. You will actually feel heat arising. At that time, the wind is merging with the fire, that the winds and mind are connecting and merging. The mind does not get lost, does not get distracted. The mind is focused together with the winds. Then, without needing to hold the breath again and again, awareness will naturally abide at the navel because of the warmth. That is to say, on the basis of warmth, mind abides in stillness. This method of causing the mind to abide on the basis of warmth and bliss is extremely beneficial. As for the time, one should train in this each morning at daybreak.
Although we are aware of the natural flow of the
breath in and out, we are not following it with the mind. In this practice, we maintain the focus of concentration at all times on the ball of flame at the navel. Only a small fraction of our awareness is diverted to the breath, the left and right channels, and so forth. And although there are various visualizations that can be done with the wind energies, in this practice there is no special emphasis put on visualizing. It is only a method to merge wind energies with mind as we recall the syllables Om Ah Hum, and to cause the mind to abide at the navel. Also, it is not necessary to be concerned with the exact locations of the channels and the chakras, since they are immaterial and cannot be found in the gross physical body. The channels and chakras are created through the power of meditation; thus, they abide wherever you imagine them.
And although diverse experiences, thoughts and
sensations can arise in the practice, you should not be distracted by them. Again and again return to the flame of awareness at the navel, thus liberating mental and physical arisings through awareness.
If, in this way, the winds abide through mindful
awareness, later there will be no need to hold the breath, and there will be no need to hold onto the visualization. Through mindfulness, the winds will remain at the navel. Then, even though we breathe in and out, the place where the wind energies will stay is the navel. There, you will accumulate the vital essences of wind, or prana, which will abide together with the wind energies.
When you conjoin the in and out breath with the Om
Ah Hum recitation, the wind and mind will always be mingled. Thus, you will be free of obstacles - that is, obstacles arisen from distraction. At present, the winds and mind are separate. The winds naturally go where they will. The consciousness wanders elsewhere. But, through training in this way, we bring mind and wind energies together as one.
When you experience bliss from this practice, you
need to look directly at its nature. It is a mental arising. When we look at the nature of bliss, we will recognize its emptiness. It isn't necessary to meditate on emptiness. Rather, just leave the mind in the nature of bliss itself. The experience of bliss becomes empty; thus, there is no fixation on it.
When you begin the meditation, focus on the three
channels: the left, right and central. But once you have become habituated to this, and particularly habituated to the central channel, you should understand that this is the single root of all of the other channels; this is the basis from which all of the other channels arise. So to focus your attention completely on the central channel will suffice, as it encompasses all the other channels. It is like the single trunk of a great tree.
Now, in the same way that a tree has many
branches that spread out, so too the central channel has limbs that branch out at the level of the five chakras. These then further branch out into subsidiary and further subsidiary channels, into countless fine subtle channels which reach out to all of the pores of the skin. Now you should not be visualizing all of this. It is just important to understand it. So as you focus on the central channel, you should also have just a general, approximate awareness that from this central channel branch off countless others that pervade the entire body.
Then when you engage in the practice of tummo
through the mantra recitation, the warmth that is generated at the navel will spontaneously arise and pervade the body. You don't need to cause it to pervade the body, rather you should understand that it naturally does so. If you water a tree, all of the tiny roots, all of the branches, twigs, leaves, and so forth are naturally pervaded by that water. By meditating in this way on the warmth at the navel, the seed essence is regenerated.
The results that will be attained, and the length of
time that it takes will correspond to the degree of effort that one puts into the practice. The student of highest capacity will give rise to the experience of warmth within a week. Others will give rise to signs of accomplishment within one month, six months, and so forth. In general, heat that is experienced immediately is unstable, changeable and not particularly blissful. In this practice we are cultivating a stable, consistent experience of bliss- warmth that gradually develops together with clear awareness of mind's nature.
In any case, once the warmth has been generated,
eventually you will reach the point where it is not necessary to engage in the practice in order to give rise to the experience. The warmth will naturally abide as the mind abides. Then, during daily activities, as you naturally breathe in and out, awareness of the continual cycle of Om Ah Hum will pervade our minds.
You can always do the Om Ah Hum breathing
wherever you are, at all times. As you are walking, you can practice it. You don't have to say Om Ah Hum, just think the sound. When you lay down at night, as you fall asleep, think Om Ah Hum. Then after some time, even in your dreams you will be able to remind yourself of Om Ah Hum. When you wake up in the morning, do this practice at dawn, just before the sun rises. You will be aware of the natural Om sound of the inhalation. The sound of Ah will immediately be recalled at the navel. The Hum sound will accompany exhalation. Each time you breathe in, the flame will be renewed, as when one blows on live coals. At all times, when you are speaking, or doing other things, always collect the winds together with your mind, have them focused together. There are great qualities in that. The principle aspect of this practice is that one's mind and one's winds are gathered together as a method to be undistracted. Later, when this has been habituated, the mind will abide without effort. Then, warmth will be achieved in the body; the mind will abide in stillness; awareness will be clear; cold-based illnesses will be cleared away. Thus, there are many great benefits from this practice. Various concepts, negative emotions such as attachment and aversion, and suffering are all thoughts. Thoughts themselves are obstacles. What this really means is interruptions in practice. For example, if we are trying to cultivate love and compassion, anger is an obstacle, an interruption in the continuity of love.
When you are engaging this practice of tummo and
focus on the Ah syllable, all thoughts and negative emotions of attachment and aversion and so forth are transformed into the fire. They are burnt by the fire. Likewise, all of your illness, pain, and suffering are burnt away. This is of great benefit. It is suitable to burn all bad dreams and diverse thoughts with the flame of awareness.
Through the strength of the flame, one's whole body
becomes like big masses of heat and flames, and the body becomes like a butter lamp. When this happens over and over again, it will decrease self- clinging. We all cling to our body strongly, and think the body is me. But it is just like a little cotton cloth; when you look through it, it has no essence, and is full of holes inside. So there is no real essence. The inner and the outer merge. So through practice, we realize it has become one. The inner mind and the outer space, they are essentially one, just like a cloud appearing in the sky, having no essence or reality to it. In the same way, one's body doesn't have any reality, or essence to it. So that concept, that my body is me, that this is my body, will decrease.
At some point the wind will enter the central
channel, and that will bring great qualities, great benefits. When one is doing the practice, naturally one's concepts, physical illnesses, and afflictive emotions will decrease, and great qualities will arise. One gains some independence over them. All the impurities and so forth, will be purified, cleansed through the training of the channels and winds. So always keep the winds at the navel chakra, so that they really will enter the central channel at some point, and that really gives rise to inconceivable benefits.
This breathing instruction is a very abbreviated
mode of practicing the yoga of tummo, or inner fire, that was taught by Lord Jigten Sumgon. Having practiced this myself, I have personally experienced its benefit. You will not hear this instruction from others who teach many elaborate key points of channels and winds. I am offering it based on my own experience.
For somebody whose visualization does not become
very clear, something that would help is to visualize a flower, the stem of a flower meeting with one's central channel at the crown of one's head. And then you can visualize that the stem acts like a pipe that is making the nectar in the water flow through your body. And as the water is flowing through the body, you imagine all the channels are being purified. The wind is exiting, emerging from your body, even through your nails; together with the water is coming out from your body, and you visualize that over and over again, and your body will become very pliant.