- Bardo - Wikipedia
Used without qualification, "bardo" is the state of existence intermediate between two lives on earth According to Tibetan tradition, after death and before one's next birth, when one's consciousness is not connected with a physical body, one experiences a variety of phenomena
- Bardo - Encyclopedia of Buddhism
bardo (T bar do བར་དོ་) is the Tibetan translation for the Sanskrit term antarābhava, which refers to the "intermediate state" between death and rebirth
- The Six Bardos - Osho News
The bardo teachings help individuals recognize the futility of striving for an ideal self and the challenge of maintaining outer images during moments of crisis, such as facing death or giving birth
- The Six Bardos: A Guide to Conscious Living and Dying
Explore the concept of the six bardo, transitional states between life, death, and rebirth, and learn how meditation and understanding karma can guide you
- Bardo: Overview, Context Key Ideas — Key Facts — Key Facts
Used somewhat loosely, the term “bardo” refers to the state of existence intermediate between two lives on earth According to Tibetan tradition, after death and before one’s next birth, when one’s consciousness is not connected with a physical body, one experiences a variety of phenomena
- What Is the Bardo in Buddhism - Tricycle: The Buddhist Review
The bardo is the Tibetan Buddhist term for the transitional state between death and rebirth The Sanskrit term for bardo is antarābhava, and the concept has come to represent the space between states, like our lives that exist between the past and the future
- What is the Bardo? - verticaltimeyoga. com
In Buddhism, bardo generally refers to the time following death and preceding rebirth, a time of disembodied passage and vivid encounter with both one's enlightened nature and one's karmic accumulations and psychological projections, some blissful, others disturbing if not terrifying
- Bardo - Rigpa Wiki
Bardo (Skt antarābhava, Tib བར་དོ་, Wyl bar do) — commonly used to denote the intermediate state between death and rebirth, but in reality bardos are occurring continuously, throughout both life and death, and are junctures at which the possibility of liberation, or enlightenment, is heightened
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