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Dzogchen (Great Perfection)master


Mipham Rinpoche (Ju Mipham Gyatso)

Tradition: Dzogchen (Great Perfection) | Era: 19th Century (1846–1912) | Lineage: Nyingma (Rime movement)
Episodes analyzed: 1 | Average depth: 9.0/10

Compiled Truth

Sustaining the recognized nature of awareness through three progressive stages: recognizing the essence, training to stabilize it against conceptual interruption, and attaining full stability where all phenomena arise as the realm of Dharmakaya.

Key Teachings

1. Sustaining the recognized nature of awareness through three progressive stages: recognizing the essence, training to stabilize it against conceptual interruption, and attaining full stability where all phenomena arise as the realm of Dharmakaya.

Key Concepts

  • Three Stages of Practice -- Recognizing the nature of awareness, training to sustain it without distraction, and attaining stability where no effort is required.

  • Self-Liberation of Thoughts -- The process where thoughts dissolve naturally without antidotes, likened to a snake's knot untying itself or a drawing on water vanishing.

  • Day and Night Continuity -- The integration of practice such that the recognition of awareness persists through waking states, dream states, and deep sleep.
  • Paradoxes

  • One must recognize awareness to practice, yet mere recognition is insufficient without sustained training.

  • Thoughts are obstacles when unrecognized, but become the fuel for liberation when seen as the play of awareness.

  • Effort is required to reach the state of effortlessness.
  • Cross-References

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  • Timeline

  • [2026-04-11] 1 episodes imported from Wisdom of Masters analysis