Abstract

Chülen (bcud len), the practice of “taking the essence”, is an important practice within the Tibetan medical tradition. Through nourishing the body with the so-called depleted “essence”, not only can one extend their lifespan but the practitioner can also restore their physical vitality. In recent years, this practice seems to be shifting away from the traditional religious mode of chülen involving tantric practices and rituals. Among the Tibetan medical literature, chülen is much emphasized in its religious aspects in the two important 17th century Tibetan medical commentaries on the Four Tantras (Rgyud bzhi) by the regent of the Fifth Dalai Lama, Desi Sangye Gyatso (Sde srid sangs rgyas rgya mtsho, 1653–1705): the Blue Beryl (Vaiḍūrya sngon po) and the Extended Commentary on the Instructional Tantra of the Four Tantras (Man ngag lhan thabs). Both texts are considered to be the most significant commentaries to the Four Tantras and have exerted a momentous impact on the interpretation of the Four Tantras even up to recent times. In their chapters on chülen, an assortment of chülen practices can be found. While there are some methods solely involving the extraction of essence in the material sense, there are also some in the spiritual-alchemical sense which are not observed in the Four Tantras. In this paper, I focus on the elaboration of the Four Tantras by Sangye Gyatso via his portrayal of ritualistic chülen in his two commentaries, where the tantric mode of promoting longevity and rekindling vitality is made efficacious by the operative socio-religious factors of his era, and which still exert their effect on our perception of chülen today.

Highlights

  • Rejuvenation, the art and science of restoring youthful vitality and promoting longevity, has been sought after over the course of human civilization

  • This paper explore the Buddhist approach to extracting the essence in influencing the medical conception of chülen by comparing the chapters of chülen in the commentaries to the Four Tantras: the Blue Beryl, and the Extended Commentary by Sangye Gyatso

  • When it comes to the first ritual in the Greater Elixir, the original ritual in the Four Tantras is preceded by an elaboration Sangye Gyatso referred to as the practice of the deity Vajra Armor (Rdo rje khrab ring) of the Nectar Vase (Bdud rtsis bum pa)

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Summary

Background

Rejuvenation, the art and science of restoring youthful vitality and promoting longevity, has been sought after over the course of human civilization. Chülen (bcud len) is an important practice according to both Tibetan religious and medical traditions and are deemed to be effective for rejuvenation. 214–15); as it restores the essence of one’s exhausted body, it is marketed by them as a “rejuvenation tonic” in the form of Precious Pills Despite these facts, in the Tibetan medical text Four Tantras (Rgyud bzhi), this extraction of essence can occur solely at the material level, without necessarily involving ritual or alchemical processes. Commentary on the Instructional Tantra of the Four Tantras (Man ngag lhan thabs) As both commentaries are considered to be the most “orthodox” interpretation of the Four Tantras, they exert their impact on how we perceive the Tibetan medical tradition even to the present day. This paper examines how the notion of chülen in the medical context has evolved, re-conceptualized, and connected with ritualistic elements in the works of Sangye Gyatso (Sangs rgyas rgya mtsho, 1653–1705), under the theocratic agenda of the Fifth Dalai Lama Ngawang Lozang Gyatso (Ngag dbang blo bzang rgya mtsho, 1617–1682) in the 17th century

Etymology of Chülen in the Tibetan Medical Context
Chülen in the Four Tantras—Chülen with Buddhist Spirituality
Theocratic Medicine—The Two Commentaries as Ritualization of Medical Practice
The Blue Beryl—Chülen Accentuated by Rituals
The Extended Commentary—Chülen is Further Tantricized
Sangye Gyatso’s Orthodox Interpretation of Chülen Still Holds Today
Concluding Remarks
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