Six yogas of Naropa
The six yogas of Naropa describe a set of advanced Tibetan Buddhisttantricmeditationpractices compiled in and around the time of the Indian monk and mystic Naropa(1016-1100C.E.), and conveyed to his student Marpathe translator. The six yogas were intended in part to help in the attainment of enlightenmentin an accelerated manner.
Though variously translated, the six yogas generally conform to the following conceptual list:
- Tumo (or Tummo)—the Yoga of Psychic Heat
- Karmamudra—the Yoga of the four Mudras
- Jangwa, Gyurwa, Pelwa—the Yoga of Dream Time (Bardo)
- Ösel—the Yoga of the Clear Light Mind
- Gyulu—the Yoga of the Illusory Body (Dream Yoga or Resurrection)
- Powa—the Yoga of the transference of consciousness (expulsion of the mind from the body)
As Naropa is a Kagyulineage holder, the six meditative practices are strongly associated with the Kagyu lineage of Tibetan Buddhism. Naropa's student Marpataught the Tibetan Milarepa, renowned for his yogic skills. Milarepa in turn taught Gampopa. Gampopa's student, the future first Karmapa, Düsum Khyenpa, attained enlightenment while practicing the Fifth Yoga (also known as "Dream Yoga").
The Karmapa, the first figure in Tibetan Buddhism to reincarnate, has been strongly associated in certain reincarnationswith particular yogic attributes. Many Gelukpapractitioners, including the Dalai Lama, are expert in the six yogas of Naropa.
See also
Topicsin Yoga
| Yogas:
| Agni Yoga- Anahata Yoga- Anusara Yoga- Arhatic Yoga- Ashtanga Vinyasa Yoga(Ashtanga Yoga) - Bikram Yoga- Hatha yoga- Integral yoga- Iyengar Yoga- Kriya yoga- Kundalini yoga- Natya Yoga- Sahaj Marg- Sahaja Yoga- Siddha Yoga- Six yogas of Naropa (Tumo) - Surat Shabd Yoga- Viniyoga- Yoga in Daily Life- Yoga Nidra
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| Texts:
| Hatha Yoga Pradipika- Yoga Sutra
|
| Hinduismpaths:
| Bhakti yoga- Karma Yoga- Jnana Yoga- Raja Yoga(Ashtanga Yoga)
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| Raja Yoga limbs:
| Yama- Niyama- Asana- Pranayama- Pratyahara- Dharana- Dhyana- Samadhi
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| Lists:
| Yoga schools and their gurus- Hatha yoga postures
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| Related topics:
| Ayurveda- Chakra- Tantra- Vedanta- Yoga as exercise
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vi:Na-l?c l?c pháp
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Six+yogas+of+Naropa Wikipedia article Six yogas of Naropa.
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