There is a word in the Dzogchen tradition of Tibetan Buddhism — Rigpa.
It is more than a word; it is a pointing finger, a lantern in the dark, a whisper that says: “Look, here, now.”
Rigpa is not something gained.
It is not polished, not fabricated, not earned by effort.
It is the naked awareness that has always been.
Like a mirror unstained by the dust it reflects, Rigpa remains untouched by the dramas it reveals.
To speak of Rigpa is already to veil it.
Language makes ripples in the still pond, but the pond itself does not move.
Rigpa is that stillness — yet alive, awake, unshakable.
It is the ground of being before we call it “self” or “world.”
Imagine a sky, vast and unending.
Clouds may roll in — thoughts, fears, longings, grief.
Storms may rage, winds may scream.
But the sky itself never fractures, never diminishes.
This sky is Rigpa.
And within it, a radiant clarity:
awareness that sees without judging,
knows without grasping,
shines without trying.
Rigpa is not escape.
It is not detachment that turns cold or indifferent.
It is intimacy with reality,
an openness so complete that nothing is excluded.
Even pain, even sorrow, even the pulse of desire — all arise within Rigpa’s embrace.
When a practitioner tastes Rigpa,
it is like remembering a song they have always known,
or opening their eyes to find they were never closed.
No effort, no distance, no journey home —
only the gentle recognition of what has never left.
Teachers say Rigpa cannot be understood but only recognized.
A moment of stopping, of resting,
and suddenly —
awareness recognizes itself.
And then the world, once heavy with striving and fear,
shimmers with new light.
Every sound is clear.
Every breath is holy.
Every step is already the path.
Rigpa is the open secret,
closer than thought,
deeper than time,
as intimate as your own heartbeat.
It waits, patient,
like the sky behind your eyes,
like silence beneath the song.
To rest in Rigpa is to rest in truth —
the unborn, the deathless,
the boundless ground of all.






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