Mark Dyczkowski and Trika Journal March 2015 Vol.1.No.1.
Mark Dyczkowski and Trika Journal March 2015 Vol.1.No.1.
Mark Dyczkowski and Trika Journal March 2015 Vol.1.No.1.
Mark
Dyczkowski
Contents
1.
Announcement
of
Immersions
to
be
conducted
by
Mark
Dyczkowski
4
Sarah
Louise
Gates
and
Raphael
Wlterlin
2.
Essay
5
Mark
Dyczkowski
and
the
Poetic
Logic
of
Hinduism
Oluwatoyin
Vincent
Adepoju
3.
Dialogue
Indian
Tantra
and
Service
to
Others
6
Raphael
Wlterlin
and
Oluwatoyin
Vincent
Adepoju
4.
Dialogue
The
Three
Goddesses
of
Trika
as
a
Tantric
Paradigm
7-8
Oluwatoyin
Vincent
Adepoju
and
Raphael
Wlterlin
5.
Dialogue
The
Mantra
Sauh
9-10
Sacha
Vaca
and
Arjun
Serneels
1.
Announcement
of
Immersions
to
be
Conducted
by
Mark
Dyczkowski
Sarah
Louise
Gates:
19
February
at
11:55
In
late
September
2015,
Dr
Mark
Dyczkowski
will
be
conducting
a
7
day
immersion
in
Fremantle,
Western
Australia.
It
is
an
awe
inspiring
chance
to
host
him
here.
It
will
be
an
all
inclusive
residential.
Raphael
Wlterlin
:
There
will
be
an
immersion
at
Mark
Dyczkowski's
home
in
Italy
around
the
end
of
June,
beginning
of
July,
exact
timeframe
yet
to
be
announced.
3.
Indian
Tantra
and
Service
to
Others
Raphael
Wlterlin
:
22
February
at
19:34
In
my
limited
studies
of
Indian
tantrism,
I
have
not
come
across
many
sources
mentioning
working
for
the
benefit
of
others.
The
more
struck
I
was
by
the
following
profoundly
beautiful
verses
from
Abhinavagupta
in
his
Tantralokah
chapter
II
(as
translated
by
Mark
in
his
MBT,
Vol.
1,
p.
444):
"Abandon
all
application!
What
are
you
applying
yourself
to?
Try
to
understand
this
for
yourself:
Application
to
that
which
is
full
and
perfect
makes
no
sense,
nor
can
that
which
is
not
full
and
perfect
ever
attain
to
authentic
existence.
Those
who
sanctified
thus
by
the
supremely
real
consciousness
firmly
affirmed
(within
them),
and
who
are
established
on
the
path
of
the
Absolute,
are
independent
of
all
means.
The
people
of
this
world,
intent
as
they
are
on
their
own
affairs,
do
not
exert
themselves
to
act
for
the
benefit
of
others;
while
he
in
whom
all
the
impurity
of
phenomenal
existence
has
been
destroyed
and
who
is
identified
with
Bhairava
by
virtue
of
which
he
is
full
and
perfect
has
clearly
only
this
(left)
to
do,
namely,
to
attend
to
the
well-being
of
the
world.
Such
is
the
extent
of
his
graciousness
that
those
whose
consciousness
is
pure
by
following
that
same
course
of
development
and
who
behold
such
a
one
also
become
of
his
same
nature."
-
TAA
2/12,
34,
39-40
Oluwatoyin
Vincent
Adepoju
:
A
great
vision,
correlative
with
the
Buddhist
vision
of
the
Boddhisatva,
immortally
summed
up
by
Santiideva
in
the
Boddhicaryavatra-
"As
long
as
space
abides,
as
long
as
the
world
abides,
so
long
shall
I
abide,
destroying
the
sufferings
of
the
world".
Raphael
Wlterlin
:
Wonderful.
I
think
the
Hindu
tantras,
in
their
highest
and
most
profound
sense
as
expounded
in
the
mystic-
monistic
streams
of
Kashmiri
Saivism,
repeatedly
indicate
compassion,
but
in
my
perception
rather
implicitly;
that's
why
I
was
kinda
surprised
to
read
these
lines.
The
three
Goddesses
of
Trika
From
the
Sri
Tantraloka
:
Translation
&
Explanation
Facebook
page
Raphael
Wlterlin
:
The
Sakti-trinity,
which
is
of
course
basic
and
central
to
all
Hindu-Tantric
traditions,
is
a
typical
Trika
feature
when
presented
and
labelled
in
terms
of
Para/Apara.
If
I
am
not
mistaken,
the
scriptural
origin
of
such
labelling
goes
back
to
the
MVT
which
is
a
central
Trika
tantram.
Oluwatoyin
Vincent
Adepoju
:
Thanks,
Raphael
Wlterlin.
What's
the
full
meaning
of
MVT?
I'm
struck
by
your
stating
the
'Sakti-trinity
is
central
to
all
Hindu-Tantric
traditions
as
I
am
yet
to
encounter
it
in
Sri
Vidya.
Raphael
Wlterlin
:
I
am
not
too
familiar
with
the
Srividya
tradition,
but
I
think
yes.
"The
dii
explains
the
triplicity
of
the
sricakra
mentioned
in
these
three
stanzas
[22-24
ofYoginihrdaya]
as
linked
to
the
three
forms
of
energy-goddesses,
each
being
present
in
a
group
of
three
chakras
[...]"
Andre
Padoux
in
his
translation
of
the
Yoginihrdaya,
p.
34.
Further
down,
the
triad
is
explicitly
identified
as
the
classic
triad
of
iccha,
jnana
and
kriya.
Also
Mark
in
the
First
Volume
of
his
MBT-translation
gives
evidence
that
the
Srividya
tradition
has
been
influenced
by
the
Trika
School
(via
the
Kubjika
tradition),
especially
concerning
the
triangle/yoni
which
is
triadic
as
well...
MVT
=
Malinivijayottaratantram,
which
Abhinavagupta
refers
to
as
the
most
central
trika
tantra
in
Tantralokah
Chapter
1.
I
think
not
only
the
Trika
goddesses,
but
also
the
three
upayas
and
various
other
concepts
present
in
Kashmiri
Shaivism
are
grounded
in
that
text.
Lalana
expounds
on
the
image
above
of
the
three
Goddesses
of
Trika
at
her
blog
post
"Para,
Apara
and
Parapara".
Also
see
the
note
on
page
203
regarding
"a
technical
sense"
of
uccara
Paratrisika
(Jaideva
Singh
translation).
Arjun
Serneels
:
The
same
thing,
the
same
energy
practiced
in
different
upayas
does
not
make
it
into
something
different.
The
meaning
of
sauh
you
are
quoting
from
Silburn
is
sauh
in
shaktopaya,
its
recitation
is
happening
in
anavopaya.
Both
are
recognised
as
valid
paths
to
the
absolute,
to
direct
recognition
of
one's
own
essential
nature.
Also,
in
its
recitation
there
is
an
entire
yoga
which
takes
place
because
the
resonance
of
the
recited
mantra
travels
up
to
dvadashanta
via
nada,
bindu,
nirodhika,
nadanta
etc,
as
ardhamatra.
This
kind
of
nadayoga
may
not
even
include
vocal
utterance
of
the
mantra
but
a
concentration,
at
times
even
pranayama,
on
the
energy
movement
during
manasik
japa.
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