Guru Rinpoche Day
Beloved Friends Near and Far,
I
 hope you and your loved ones have been happy and healthy. I am at the 
moment in a small Malaysian city of Batu Pahat leading a Mahamudra 
retreat. And all is well here!
For
 today’s Guru Rinpoche Day, I thought of extracting few pith 
instructions by Padmasambhava to his close student, Trisong Detsen and a
 brief overview of how it all started.
How Padmakara came to the Snowy Land of Tibet.
It
 all started with Samye! The Great Lopon, Padmasambhava came to Tibet on
 the invitation of the Great King, Trisong Detsen under the guidance of 
the Great Abbot, Shantarakshita to built the first ever Buddhist 
monastery of the country.
When
 King Trisong Detsen, the thirty-eighth king of Tibet, was twenty-one 
years of age he formed a strong aspiration to spread the sacred 
teachings of the Dharma. He invited the Great Abbot; Shantarakshita from
 India who helped laid the foundation of the great temple. Whatever was 
build during the day was dismantled at night by the local spirits 
creating much obstacle which eventually lead the Abbot to make the 
prediction to invite the great master Padmasambhava to come to Tibet.
At
 the Tamarisk Forest at Red Rock, Padmakara met the king of Tibet and 
then proceeded to the top of Mount Hepori to bring the gods and demons 
of the country under his command. He laid the foundation for Samye and 
saw it through to completion, employing also the gods and demons who had
 earlier hindered the building. In five years the work was completed for
 the temple complex of Glorious Samye, the Unchanging and Spontaneously 
Accomplished Temple.
After
 the completion Samye, the King requested empowerment and instruction 
from Padmakara. At Chimphu, the hermitage above Samye, the great master 
gave profound teachings to many destined students headed by the king and
 his sons and the twenty-five disciples.
Guru
 Rinpoche remained in Tibet for 55 years and six months; 48 years while 
the king was alive and seven years and six months afterwards. He arrived
 when the king was 21 (810 A.D.). The king passed away at the age of 69.
 Padmakara stayed for a few years after that before leaving for Ngayab 
Ling by liberating the king of the Rakshasas and assuming his form at 
the Glorious Copper Colored Mountain of Glory.
Below is an excerpt of the extraordinary teachings given by the Master to the King.
Guru Rinpoche said this to Trisong Detsen:  
To
 condense all into a single sentence:  the view is to be free from 
convictions, meditation is to not place the mind on anything, experience
 is to be free from savoring the taste and fruition is beyond 
attainment.  The Buddhas of the three times have not taught, are not 
teaching, and will not teach it to be any other than this!  
(Advice from the Lotus Born pg. 38)
Guru Rinpoche to the King:
The
 awakened mind of bodhichitta is not created through causes nor 
destroyed through circumstances.  It is not made by ingenious Buddhas 
nor manufactured by clever sentient beings.  It is originally present in
 you as your natural possession.  When you recognize it through your 
master's oral instructions, since mind is the forefather of the Buddhas,
 it is like the analogy of recognizing someone you already know.  
(Advice from the Lotus Born pg. 38)
King:  What does it mean to 'clear away the faults of conviction'?
Guru
 Rinpoche:  Even though you have realized that your mind is the Buddha, 
don't forsake your master!  Even though you have realized appearances to
 be mind, don't interrupt conditioned roots of virtue!  Even though you 
don't hope for Buddhahood, honor the sublime Three Jewels! Even though 
you don't fear samsara, avoid even the minutest misdeed!  Even though 
you have gained the unchanging confidence of your innate nature, don't 
belittle any spiritual teaching!  Even though you experience the 
qualities of samadhi, higher perceptions and the like, give up conceit 
and pretentiousness!  Even though you have realized that samsara and 
nirvana are nondual, don't cease to have compassion for sentient beings!
(Advice from the Lotus Born pg. 39)
King:  What does it mean to 'gain certainty'?
Guru
 Rinpoche:  Gain certainty in the fact that since the very beginning 
your own mind is the awakened state of Buddhahood.  Gain certainty in 
the fact that all phenomena are the magical display of your mind.  Gain 
certainty in the fact that the fruition is present in yourself and is 
not to be sought elsewhere.  Gain certainty in the fact that your master
 is the Buddha is person.  Gain certainty in the fact that the nature of
 view and meditation is the realization of the Buddhas. Practice by 
means of such confidence.                                                
                             (Advice from the Lotus Born pg. 39)
Sarva Mangalam,
Phakchok Rinpoche 
