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Sora wrote:If you know, please let me know what are the Ngagpa/Ngagmo vows and how to become one!
Sora wrote:If you know, please let me know what are the Ngagpa/Ngagmo vows and how to become one!
heart wrote:To add a few things.
To become a Ngakpa you have to have certain things. A Guru. The necessary empowerment's. Capacity to keep the Samaya by continuously practicing whatever your Guru ask of you. The capacity and the great fortune to learn how to do the various rituals belonging to your practices. The capacity to find and get transmission and instruction on the various commentaries of your practice, this often include sponsoring translations. The capacity to practice joyfully and never give up with great courage no matter what happens day after day, month, weeks, years and decades until we die.
So in a sense it all boils down to devotion, compassion and recognition of the natural state.
So this is not like taking monk vows where the vows in a sense is the practice of being a monk. Being a Ngakpa is means integrating the practice of the three inner tantras with an ordinary life, meaning a partner, children and a full time work or however your particular circumstances are.
So, if you want to become a Ngakpa the most important thing is finding a qualified Guru and being accepted as his/her disciple.
/magnus
Sora wrote:By the way, my Lama is a monk. I thought a monk-lama can still give a Nagpa vow but am I wrong?
Any thoughts are welcome, thanks very much!
Sora wrote:
By the way, my Lama is a monk. I thought a monk-lama can still give a Nagpa vow but am I wrong?
Any thoughts are welcome, thanks very much!
Heruka wrote:many vow takers, few vow keepers.
ngodrup wrote: --snip--
Likewise, Ngakpas, since they are not monks do not give monastic ordination, but can give bodhisattva vows.
--snip--
byamspa wrote:ngodrup wrote: --snip--
Likewise, Ngakpas, since they are not monks do not give monastic ordination, but can give bodhisattva vows.
--snip--
We can? None of my teachers ever said this, then again, I never asked about it.
I would not feel comfortable that I'm qualified to do this.
conebeckham wrote:Frankly speaking, I think many people see "Ngagpa vows" more as a form of self-identification, a "status," if you will, than as a sign that one really
holds mantra," which is what "Ngakpa" really means.
If one's chief focus in life is the practice of secret mantra, and one knows and understands the samayas of the Inner Tantras, and one has actually committed onself to the continuous practice of some form of secret mantra practice, for one's lifetime, that is the chief thing. The "bestowal of vows," the clothes and the hair, all that stuff is really secondary, and should be an outward sign of an internal condition.
But perhaps I'm just talking to myself, here.
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