Samarasa

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Samarasa (Sanskrit Devanagari: समरास; IAST: samarāsa; synonymous with IAST: ekarāsa;[1] Tibetan: རོ་གཅིག, Wylie: ro gcig;[1] Tibetan: རོ་མཉམ, Wylie: ro mnyam[2]) is literally "one-taste"[3] "one-flavour"[1] or "same-taste" and means equipoise in feelings, non-discriminating or the mind at rest.

Dzogchen

Nalanda Translation Committee (1982: p. 223) render a work on Marpa, the famed Tibetan Yogi and define samarasa as:

...equal taste (S: samarasa; T: ro-mnyam) The yogic practices and visualization exercises of Buddhist tantra are extremely complex, but underlying them is a single experience of things as they are. This realization or state of mind is sometimes called equal taste, meaning that all extremes of good and bad, awake and sleep, and so on have the same fundamental nature of emptiness and mind itself.[4]

Vajranatha (1996: p. 332) in his glossary of The Golden Letters, an annexure to his translation of, and commentary upon, the 'Three Statements' (Wylie: tshig gsum gnad brdeg) of Garab Dorje, defines thus:

  • ro-gcig: single taste, single flavour, the state of being a single taste, ekarasa
  • ro-snyoms: same taste, the process of making everything into the same taste, samarasa[5]

In Hinduism

Notes

Further reading

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