Kyerim (Skt. utpattikrama; Tib. བསྐྱེད་རིམ་, Wyl. bskyed rim) is the ‘generation stage’ or ‘development phase’ of practice — otherwise known as visualization practice — the goal of which is to purify our perception into the purity of our inherent nature.
Sogyal Rinpoche writes:
:The development stage consists of three phases, known as ‘the three samadhis’:
Dilgo Khyentse Rinpoche says:
:“To practise the Inner Tantra one should realize that everything is primordially pure. Accordingly all outer elements are not perceived as ordinary, but as the five female buddhas. The five aggregates within the body are also not perceived as ordinary, but as the five male buddhas. In the same way, the eight consciousnesses as well as their eight objects are perceived as the eight great bodhisattvas | eight male and eight female bodhisattvas. In this way one will not only see the purity of all phenomena, but one will also perceive the ‘great evenness of samsara and nirvana’. So samsara is not considered to be something to be discarded and nirvana something to be achieved, but as the Great Union of purity and evenness. Such a state is not something which has to be fabricated anew; it has been there since the very beginning.
:The essence of kyerim, or Mahayoga is to recognize all appearances as the deity, all sounds as the mantra, and all thoughts as the dharmakaya. This is the most profound path, through which one can actualize all of the qualities of the body, speech and mind of the Buddha.”<ref>Dzogchen and Padmasambhava, Rigpa Fellowship, 1989, pages 62-63.</ref>
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