Preparatory Guidelines for Meditation in Pre-Modern Sino-Tibetan Buddhist Traditions
Abstract
:1. Role of the Body in Buddhist Meditation Traditions
1.1. Buddhist Meditative Experience
1.2. Comparative Studies of Chinese and Tibetan Meditation Traditions
1.3. Somatic Preparation Prior to Meditation
1.4. Theories of Cultural Embodiment
2. Meditation Treatises from Sixth-Century China
2.1. The Significance of the Body in Meditation
In order to protect and preserve the Dharma, I seek to extend my life while avoiding rebirth in celestial realms or other existences. I call upon the aid of virtuous saints to procure exceptional medicinal herbs and elixirs, which may cure ailments and alleviate physical needs such as hunger and thirst. This will allow me to engage in continuous meditation and remain steadfast in the pursuit of the spiritual path. May I find a secluded retreat in the remote mountains, with ample divine elixirs to fulfill this aspiration. By utilizing external remedies to refine my inner being, I aspire to achieve personal tranquility as a prerequisite for alleviating the suffering of others. It is essential to first free oneself from bondage in order to assist others; there is no alternative path to this liberation.為護法故求長壽命,不願生天及餘趣。願諸賢聖佐助我,得好芝草及神丹,療治眾病除饑渴,常得經行修諸禪。願得深山寂靜處,足神丹藥修此願。藉外丹力修內丹,欲安眾生先自安。己身有縛能解他縛,無有是處。
Such techniques are considered superficial and largely illusory, making them unnecessary for monks and best avoided. However, given the impermanence and fragility of the body, it is acceptable to use them for the purpose of healing illness and maintaining physical well-being, provided that one engages in the practices associated with the four kinds of samādhi.術事淺近,體多貢幻,非出家人所須,元不須學,學須急棄。若修四三昧,泡脆之身損增無定,借用治病,身安道存,亦應無嫌。
2.2. Overview of the Twenty-Five Preliminary Practices
Practitioners should engage with the precepts according to their own capacities, gradually refining and purifying their practice; without this, a stable meditative foundation cannot be established. Moreover, a sharp-minded Bodhisattvas who employ wisdom spontaneously embrace the complete set of ten precepts at the moment of generating bodhicitta.持戒者但隨分隨力而修習,令增進漸漸清淨;若不爾者,不能生諸禪定。復次,頓行菩薩能以慧方便,從初發心一念之中即具持十種戒。
First, there are the external caretakers who provide support and protection for the meditators. Second, spiritual companions engage in practice together, fostering encouragement while ensuring a harmonious environment. Lastly, spiritual friends employ both internal and external skillful means of meditation, offering guidance through demonstration, instruction, benefit, and inspiration.一、外護善知識,經營供養,善能將護行人,不相惱亂;二者、同行善知識,共修一道,互相勸發,不相擾亂;三者、教授善知識,以內、外方便禪定法門,示教利喜。
The path to progress is not solitary; it relies on the collective efforts of individuals. People advance the supreme Dharma through conditional means, underscoring the importance of the five conditions. Once fulfilled, all desires must be eliminated, allowing for internal purification of the mind. With a calm mind, practitioners should adjust the five factors, and following the five methods will lead to inevitable success.夫道不孤運,弘之在人;人弘勝法,假緣進道,所以須具五緣。緣力既具,當割諸嗜欲。嗜欲外屏,當內淨其心。其心若寂,當調試五事。五事調已,行於五法,必至所在。
2.3. Harmonizing Body and Mind Prior to Meditation
In the context of dietary adjustment, food plays a crucial role in sustaining the body and supporting progress in meditative practice. Overconsumption can lead to bloating, which impedes the flow of vital energy, resulting in mental obstruction and restlessness. Conversely, insufficient intake of food can weaken the body and disturb mental stability, thereby hindering meditation and concentration. Both extremes represent significant barriers to achieving focused attention. Additionally, the consumption of impure or contaminated food may induce mental confusion, while improper dietary choices can exacerbate chronic conditions and disrupt the equilibrium of the four elements within the body. As such, careful attention to diet is imperative during the initial stages of meditation practice.第一、調食者,夫食之為法本,欲資身進道,食若過飽,則氣急身滿,百脈不通,令心閉塞,坐念不安;若食過少,則身羸心懸,意慮不固,此皆非得定之道。復次,若食穢濁之物,令人心識惛迷;若食不宜身物,則動宿疾,使四大違反。此為修定之初,深須慎之。
Next, open the mouth to expel impure air from the chest. The technique for expulsion involves exhaling through the mouth, allowing the breath to flow out naturally, while visualizing the release of obstructed energy from the body’s channels. Following this, close the mouth and inhale clean air through the nose.次開口吐胸中穢氣。吐法開口放氣,自恣而出,想身分中百脈不通處,教悉隨氣而出盡。閉口,鼻中內清氣。
3. Meditation Texts of Tenth Century Tibet
3.1. Preparations Before Meditation
if one fails to realize that true tranquility lies within the mind itself, then even in a physically quiet environment, the mind will remain unbridled, wandering freely throughout the vast expanse of the universe. In contrast, while the mind roams, the body remains physically confined to its immediate surroundings, akin to a marmot resting within its burrow.
To experience the ultimate truth, one should be like a solitary lion, free from disturbances, seeking alms a short distance from sources of attachment, and then gazing into the mirror of the mind.
3.2. Conditions Required for Meditation
3.3. Principles of Practice and the Valuation of the Physical Body
4. Toward the Ideal Body
4.1. Psychophysical Adjustment in Sino-Tibetan Meditation Practice
If a demonic affliction endures for many years and continues to cause significant distress, the practitioner should maintain mental fortitude and right intention, remaining resolute and unaffected by concerns for personal safety or fear. Under such conditions, it is recommended that practitioners recite the Mahāyāna Sūtras, along with other relevant mantras, to counteract the demonic influence. These recitations should be conducted silently, with a concentrated focus on invoking the Three Jewels. Furthermore, when not engaged in meditation, practitioners should continue reciting mantras for self-protection, engage in repentance, cultivate humility, and recite the prātimokṣa as part of their ongoing spiritual practice.若諸魔境惱亂行人,或經年月不去,但當端心正念堅固,不惜身命,莫懷憂懼,當誦大乘方等諸經治魔呪,默念誦之,存念三寶。若出禪定,亦當誦呪自防,懺悔慚愧,及誦波羅提木叉。
4.2. The Somatic Significance of Preliminary Practice
5. Conclusions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
Abbreviations
SPC | Shichan boluomi cidi famen 釋禪波羅蜜次第法門 |
GSV | Mohe zhiguan 摩訶止觀 |
BSV | Xiao zhiguan 小止觀/童蒙止觀/修習止觀坐禪法要 |
T | Taishō 大正新修大藏經 |
X | Xuzang jing 卍 新纂續藏經 |
bSam gtan mig sgron | rNal ‘byor mig gi bsam gtan |
1. | The translation of ānāpānasati as “mindfulness of breathing” has gained wide currency, particularly through its adoption in clinical contexts such as Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction (MBSR), developed by Jon Kabat-Zinn in 1979. While this program draws on basic Buddhist techniques like breath observation and body scanning, its secular framing has prompted criticism from scholars such as Sharf (2015), who argue that such appropriations often strip these practices of their historical and soteriological significance. Acknowledging the complexity of this issue, I employ the conventional translation “mindfulness of breathing” as a provisional measure, deferring a fuller engagement with its interpretive challenges. |
2. | Due to limitations of space, it is not possible to review the relevant scholarship on this debate here. For further details, see e.g., (Bretfeld 2004, pp. 15–56). |
3. | For a detailed account of the editions and titles of this work, see Section 3. Hereafter, this text will be referred to as bSam gtan mig sgron. Nupchen Sangye Yeshe will be referred to as Nupchen. |
4. | Representative studies on this topic include Eric Greene’s doctoral dissertation, which offers an in-depth analysis of meditative and visionary phenomena, with extended discussions spanning (Greene 2012, pp. 109–27, 342–613). Li Silong has contributed significantly to the study of Tiantai views on illness, most notably in these articles (Li 2019, pp. 62–71; 2022). Lin Peiying has further expanded the discourse on meditative illness through her comparative analysis of two early Chan texts—The Essential Methods for Treating Meditative Illnesses (T. 620) and Scripture on the Essential Methods for Chan Practice (T. 613) (Lin 2020, pp. 177–207). |
5. | 病起因緣有六:一、四大不順故病,二、飲食不節故病,三、坐禪不調故病,四、鬼神得便、五、魔所為,六、業起故病 GSV, T no.1911, 46: 106c. |
6. | Li shiyuan wen T no.1933, 46:791. |
7. | Further discussion see (Salguero 2018, pp. 237–60). |
8. | 身安道隆,道隆則本立 GSV, T no.1911, 46: 41c. |
9. | GSV, T no.1911, 46: 109a. |
10. | 就明外方便,自有五種:第一、具五緣;第二、訶五欲;第三、棄五蓋;第四、調五法;第五、行五法。此五五凡有二十五法,並是未得禪時初修心方便之相。第一、具五緣者:一、持戒清淨;二、衣食具足;三、閑居靜處;四、息諸緣務;五、得善知識。此是修禪五緣也 SPC, T no.1911, 46: 484a. |
11. | SPC, T no.1916, 46: 485a. |
12. | SPC, T no.1916, 46: 487b. |
13. | GSV, T no.1911, 46: 35c. |
14. | SPC, T no.1916, 46: 489. A similar passage can also be found in BSV, T no.1915, 46: 465. This analogy is used in GSV to explain the overall relationship of the twenty-five preliminary practices, as mentioned in the previous note. |
15. | SPC, T no.1916, 46: 489b. |
16. | 飯食知節量,常樂在閑處,心靜樂精進,是名諸佛教 SPC, T no.1916, 46: 489b. |
17. | SPC, T no.1916, 46: 489c. |
18. | 欲調之,當依三法:一者下著安心;二者寬身體;三者想氣遍毛孔,出入通同無障 SPC, T no.1916, 46:489a. |
19. | 不澁不滑,是息調相 SPC, T no.1916, 46: 489a. |
20. | 欲出定時,應前放心異緣,開口放氣,想息從百脈隨意而散,然後微微動身。次動肩胛及頭頸,次動兩足,悉令柔軟,然後以手遍摩諸毛孔,次摩手令暖,以掩兩眼。却手,然後開目,待身熱汗稍歇,方可隨意出入 SPC, T no.1916, 46: 490b. |
21. | 三事合調者,三事相依不得相離,如初受胎:一、煗,二、命,三、識。煗是遺體之色;命是氣息,報風連持;識是一期心主。託胎即有三事。三事增長,七日一變,三十八七日竟,三事出生,名「嬰兒」;三事停住,名「壯年」;三事衰微,名為「老」;三事滅壞,名為「死」。三事始終不得相離,須合調也 GSV, T no.1911, 46: 47b. |
22. | 色為發戒之由,息為入定之門,心為生慧之因 GSV, T no.1911, 46: 47. |
23. | 行者善調三事,令託聖胎。如即行,心未有所屬,應當勤心,和會方便,智度父母,託於聖胎。豈可託地獄三途、人天之胎耶, GSV, T no.1911, 46: 48a. |
24. | It emphasizes more on explaining the treatment of disease caused by meditation. Tiantai zhizhe dashi chanmen koujue, T no.1919, 46: 581–584. |
25. | See CBETA, X no. 908, 55: 666c03-668b9. |
26. | Qixin lunshu T no.1844, 44; Yuan jue jing daochang xiu zheng yi, X no.1475, 74 and the Yuanjue jing da shu X no.243, 9. The latter two texts contain extensive references to the guidelines of BSV. |
27. | Its full Tibetan title, gNub chen Sangs rgyas ye shes rin po che’i mdzad pa’i sgom gyi gnad gsal bar phye ba bsam gtan mig sgron, may be rendered as The Lamp of Meditation: A Clarification of the Essential Points of Practice, Composed by the Precious Nubchen Sanggye Yeshe. It is also known by alternative titles, including rDzogs chen gyi man ngag bsam gtan mig sgron (“Oral Instructions on Great Perfection”) and rNal ‘byor mig gi bsam gtan (“Meditative Concentration for the Eye of Yogic Practice”). The version consulted in this study is the digital edition (2009) preserved in the Expanded Collection of the Nyingma Kama (rNying ma bka’ ma rgyas pa), which offers a comparatively legible and accessible textual base. |
28. | |
29. | “Phyogs bcu stong khams ye nas dben”, bSam gtan mig sgron, pp. 7–8. |
30. | “sTong gsum gyi stong chen po’i ’jig rten gyi khams ’di dag nga nyid kyi yul lo/bzhugs gnas so/gzhal yas khang ngo/”, bSam gtan mig sgron, p. 8. |
31. | “Sems la dben par ma rtogs na/dgon pai dben par sus phyin kyang/sems ni rmu rgod stong khams nyul/lus po nyal khang gnas stong bsrung/spang phug phyi ba nyel ba ‘dra/”, bSam gtan mig sgron, p. 8. |
32. | “Gnas su sems nyid rtogs pa bzang/ting ‘dzin ye shes mchog gu gnas”, bSam gtan mig sgron, p. 8. |
33. | “Don nyid nyams su myong ‘dod pas/gcig pu seng ge bzhin ‘dug nas/g.yeng ba’i yul rnams thag bcad de/‘brel yul dpag tshad du mas bshug/de nas yid kyi le long blta”, bSam gtan mig sgron, p. 10. |
34. | bSam gtan mig sgron, pp. 22–23. |
35. | bSam gtan mig sgron, pp. 23–25. |
36. | bSam gtan mig sgron, p. 26. |
37. | bSam gtan mig sgron, pp. 27–31. |
38. | bSam gtan mig sgron, pp. 31–33. |
39. | bSam gtan mig sgron, pp. 37–42. |
40. | BSV, T no.1915, 46: 471a14-18. |
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Mei, C.-H. Preparatory Guidelines for Meditation in Pre-Modern Sino-Tibetan Buddhist Traditions. Religions 2025, 16, 636. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel16050636
Mei C-H. Preparatory Guidelines for Meditation in Pre-Modern Sino-Tibetan Buddhist Traditions. Religions. 2025; 16(5):636. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel16050636
Chicago/Turabian StyleMei, Ching-Hsuan. 2025. "Preparatory Guidelines for Meditation in Pre-Modern Sino-Tibetan Buddhist Traditions" Religions 16, no. 5: 636. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel16050636
APA StyleMei, C.-H. (2025). Preparatory Guidelines for Meditation in Pre-Modern Sino-Tibetan Buddhist Traditions. Religions, 16(5), 636. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel16050636