The Vajra Regent (Photograph by Michael
Wood) The Vajra Regent Ösel Tendzin
was born in Passaic, New Jersey, in 1943. Initially a
student of Swami Satchidananda, he met the Vidyadhara–then
referred to as the Vajracarya–in 1971 in Boulder, Colorado,
as described in the writing below. His formal empowerment as
Vajra Regent took place on August 22, 1976. The Vajra Regent
passed away on August 25, 1990. He is survived by his wife,
Lila Rich, and their four children. From the all-encompassing
vajradhatu, Indestructible nonthought beyond
description, From the vast
dharmadhatu, The unceasing play of energy and
light, The dharmakaya Vajradhara takes
form As the incomparable root guru,
Chokyi Gyatso. The five poisons and the eight
worldly dharmas Are tansformed into wisdom and
skillful means. Look! The aspirations and desire of
sentient beings are fulfilled. With unceasing devotion I prostrate
to the only father guru. I offer all that is worthwhile and
pleasing, The wealth of all the
universes. I confess to lingering in the grip
of samsara. I rejoice in your boundless
generosity. Please continue to turn the wheel of
the dharma. Remain with us in your undefiled
splendor. May all sentient beings attain
enlightenment, And may I never rest until samsara
is thoroughly emptied. For a long time I have thought about
recording the events that have shaped my life over the past
nine years, the time in which I have been under the
protection and guidance of the vajra master. Although my
experiences are personal to my journey, I feel it would be
useful for my fellow students in the dharma to hear about
them, not so much because these experiences happened to me,
but because I think they illuminate the special power of the
lineage in its continuity. I remember these events as direct
teaching situations, from which I have benefited greatly in
practice and understanding. When I met the vajra master, I had
been a student of the Hindu teacher, Swami Satchidananda,
for some four and a half years. From him I learned a basic
positiveness about myself and the world, and also (and quite
central to my meeting the guru), through him, I made my
initial relationship to the discipline of devotion. In the
fall of 1970, Swami Satchidananda sent me to Boulder from
Los Angeles to fill in temporarily for the director of the
local Integral Yoga Institute. It was then that I met
several students of Chögyam Trungpa, Rinpoche, who told
me about him and informed me that he would be moving to
Boulder. I returned to Los Angeles, and in February of 1971,
I had a chance to go back to Boulder to visit some of my
friends and to convey a message to the Tibetan lama,
inviting him to what was called “the world enlightenment
festival.” At that time I had little concern for meeting
more teachers, but I agreed to convey the message just the
same. I met the Vajracarya on a Sunday
afternoon at his home in Four Mile Canyon. I was wearing a
red ruffled shirt and red velvet pants, a la L.A., and I was
sporting long hair and a beard. I was ushered into the
sitting room, where I was confronted by a person much
younger than I had expected, surrounded by several students,
some of whom I had known from my previous stay in Boulder.
With a piercing gaze, which seemed to comprehend my entire
history, he greeted me courteously. We had a conversation in
the company of his students, which lasted perhaps twenty
minutes. He asked about Swami Satchidananda’s whereabouts
and inquired as to his health. I invited the Vajracarya to
the so-called world enlightenment festival. He said that he
would have to check his schedule, and I departed, not
failing to notice a bottle of Johnny Walker Red Label and a
glass jar of orange juice beneath the table in front of
him. I recall driving down from Four Mile
Canyon in a quizzical mood, which began to expand as the
evening wore on. This particular mood concretized in the
form of a question, which itself described the experience of
meeting the Vajracarya, and described my first taste of
buddhism as well. I had met many teachers, but none had ever
evoked this question. I thought to myself, over and over:
“How could anybody be solidly there like a rock, like a
monument, and yet be empty at the same time?” Those were my
exact thoughts. Back in Los Angeles, I thought again
and again about this man and the way I had experienced his
state of being. A month later I had the opportunity
to return again to Boulder. I had been talking about my
experience with Chime Heller, who had been a student of
Swami Satchidananda and was now a student of the Vajracarya.
When she found out I was going back to Boulder, she said,
“Let’s call him and tell him you’re coming back.” I was too
shy to talk to him, but she said she would talk to him first
and then put me on the phone. She cautioned me, saying,
“Don’t say you want an interview. Say you want to hang out.”
(That was the expression for spending time with the
Vajracarya in those days. ) When Chime handed me the phone
and the Vajracarya greeted me with an unabashed “Hello!” I
almost immediately blurted out, “I’m coming back to Boulder.
May I hang out with you?” He told me, “Come right along,” as
the story goes. When I returned to Boulder in March
of 1971, I rang up the Four Mile Canyon house, said I had
been invited to visit and asked when I could come up. The
voice on the other end seemed rather sharp, and said that I
could come by tomorrow. I did, and when I arrived I was
seated in the breakfast area off the kitchen and told to
wait. As I sat there by myself feeling completely out of
place, as if I had a gigantic head, arms and legs, various
students walked by without saying hello or inquiring who I
was. Needless to say, that made me even more apprehensive
and unsettled. After about an hour or more, I
suddenly looked toward the doorway leading to the kitchen,
and at that point the Vajracarya appeared. He walked slowly
but directly to the table and sat down next to me. “Hello.
So you’re here,” he said, after which he said nothing for
what seemed to be fifteen minutes. He had an eight-ounce
glass of scotch in his hand. When it had been refilled, he
turned to me, lifted it, and said, “Here.” I had not had a drink of liquor in
five years, and I said to him, “Is this prasad?” which,
loosely translated, means “the guru’s grace.” “Yes,” he said. “That means you have
to take three big sips”–which I did. After a while, he said, “Three
more.” And then, still later, “Three more.” Years later, he
remarked that the incident was like the first meeting of
Gampopa and Milarepa. I stayed two weeks in Boulder.
During that time many memorable things happened, including
the birth of Tagtrug Tendzin, Rinpoche, the Vajracarya’s
son. One incident particularly stands out in my memory, less
for what was said than for the directness of the
communication between two human beings. I was to see the
Vajracarya again one night at Four Mile Canyon, and I
arrived while he was in a meeting that lasted three or four
hours. While I waited, I managed to finish off a bottle of
red wine with Polly Monner. When I was finally escorted to
the Vajracarya’s bedroom, I found him sitting bare-chested
in a chair and not having much to say. After a short
conversation, which was inconsequential, I asked him a
question that had been prompted by my friends in Los
Angeles. They had been calling me and imploring me to ask
the Vajracarya why he drank. Coming from a tradition where
drinking liquor was contrary to the discipline, I could
understand the motive of their question, but I was
embarrassed to ask. Nevertheless, as I was about to leave, I
asked him, “Why do you drink?” “Sometimes it is necessary to insult
in order to communicate,” he said. Then I said directly, “In that case,
what about the body?” And he said, “Let the body be as it
is.” Finally I said, “If that is so, what
about the thought of the body?” “We have to cut through,” he said.
That ended our interview. In the late spring of 1971, the
Vajracarya came to Los Angeles to give a seminar. At that
time I introduced him to my wife and to my oldest friend in
the dharma, Mr. Ken Green. The seminar, which was called
“The Battle of Ego,” took place in Hollywood, and Mr. Green,
my wife, and I were the cooks. Ken and I had decided to leave the
Integral Yoga Institute even before we had met the
Vajracarya, but the events that I have described cast a
particular color on that departure. We had great hopes and
dreams. We would find a retreat place and do a pardo
retreat, which we had heard about from some of the
Vajracarya’s students. We were flushed with the idea of
retreat. For myself, I was personally pained about being a
teacher without having had any real experience. This was not
the fault of my previous teacher as much as it was my own
naiveté regarding spiritual practice. Nevertheless, I
was feeling hypocritical and resentful and eager to start
out on a new journey, with the promise and excitement of
studying with Chögyam Trungpa. In a final interview during the
Vajracarya’s stay in Los Angeles, Ken and I presented our
case: we wanted to leave the Integral Yoga Institute, and we
wanted to go on retreat. The interview took place in Bel
Air, on the balcony of a comfortable house, which had been
lent to the Vajracarya for his stay. At that time he said,
“It is necessary for you both to receive the blessings of
the guru. Otherwise, we can’t go any further.” He exhorted
us to go back to Swami Satchidananda and request that we
might leave. We traveled across country to New
York, my wife pregnant with our first son, Vajra. We had our
final interview with Swami Satchidananda. That wonderful
gentleman said farewell with great dignity and openness. I
am indebted to him for that. The Vajracarya had also instructed
us perhaps to forget about the pardo retreat for the time
being, and to move to Vermont to take up residence near Tail
of the Tiger (now Karmê Chöling). He said it was
necessary for us to settle down and relate to the earth.
This was an interesting proposition for us, coming from the
somewhat glamorous pseudo-spiritual world of Los
Angeles. We arrived at Tail of the Tiger in
the summer of 1971, and spent two weeks there before renting
a house in Kirby, Vermont, about a half-hour drive from the
community. Relating to a domestic situation for the first
time was indeed earthy, to say the least. In considering the
question of livelihood, we came up with the notion of
starting an organic bakery in the house. Helen Green had
some bread recipes, and so we launched the Trikaya Baking
Company. Our main customer was Tail of the Tiger, which was
obliged to buy our bread at the Vajracarya’s request. There
was a singular fact about our bread that irritated the
residents of Tail of the Tiger, who delighted in snacking on
bread and peanut butter throughout the day. The truth about
our bread was that it crumbled when you tried to slice it.
This crumbling tended to lengthen the time it took for
snackers to successfully peanut-butter their bread and go on
about their business. The result was irritation. We lived in Kirby for a year, during
which time we tried to make ends meet, so to speak,
depending a great deal on food stamps. During that year, two
events occurred that had profound significance for my life.
One was the birth of my first son, and the other was
learning that I would be the Vajracarya’s successor and his
regent. The first occurred in September 1971. The story of
the attempted home delivery is poignant and comic, looking
at it in retrospect. In any case, the boy was born in St.
Johnsbury Hospital. The other event is more meaningful to us
now, and so I should recount it in some detail. While the Vajracarya was visiting
Tail of the Tiger that fall, Ken Green and I had a joint
interview. After a few minutes, the Vajracarya asked Ken if
he would leave. When Ken had gone, the Vajracarya turned to
me. “I have something to ask you,” he
said. “Do you know what it is?” I was slightly dumbfounded and made
some vague stab at it. “Well, you want to send Ken somewhere
and keep me here in Vermont. “ “Well, somewhat,” he said, and
laughed. “This is slightly embarrassing, somewhat like
proposing marriage. Can you guess?” My mind was blank. “No,” I
said. “Then I’ll tell you. I want you to
be my Gampopa, my successor.” I was utterly shocked. “Me? Are you
sure?” “Quite sure. Do you
accept?” “Yes,” I said. “Just like that?” he
said. “Just like that,” I said. “Good. From now on there is no
turning back. If you do, you will be destroyed by the dakas,
dakinis, and dharmapalas.” The Vajracarya talked about his
eventual death. I made some feeble remarks about how awful
that would be, and he laughed. “For me that is no problem at
all,” he said. When I was about to leave, he beckoned me
closer and gave me a copy of Gampopa’ s Jewel Ornament of
Liberation, in which he inscribed, “To my son, with love for
Kagyu family.” He placed the traditional white scarf around
my neck and told me not to take it off until I got home. He
cautioned me to keep what he had said secret, except for my
wife and Ken and Helen Green. Then he said, “Come back
tomorrow and tell me your dreams,” and I left. I came down the stairs with eyes
wide open and the scarf around my neck. All I could say to
my wife, or to Ken and Helen and Chuck Lief, who was driving
us home, was “Let’s go.” I didn’t say a word all the way
back to Kirby, and they didn’t say a word to me. I was
stunned. That night I told my wife and Ken and Helen what
had happened. I could hardly sleep. Each time I fell asleep,
I dreamed I was dreaming and woke up. This continued well
into the early morning, when I fell into a deep sleep. At
that time I dreamed that I awoke in the same house in Kirby
and heard the voices of my friends and relatives of the past
and present all congregated in the kitchen downstairs. I
walked down the stairs and said that I was hungry and wanted
an egg. At that point all my friends and relatives
protested, saying I couldn’t have an egg. And I said, “Of
course I can,” and proceeded to swallow an egg whole. Then I
woke up from my dream. The next day I told the Vajracarya
my dream, and he said, “That is good. The egg symbolizes the
unborn wisdom within, like the garuda’s egg. When it
hatches, the garuda is fully formed.” After that day, the Vajracarya made
no reference to what had happened between us for nearly six
months. I went through a period of elation, pride, fear,
doubt, and bewilderment. I would say to my wife, “He must
have made a mistake.” I would say to myself, “He does this
to his students just to test them.” I would think, “This is
absurd. I have no qualifications to join that lineage.” When
I thought of Telo, Naro, Marpa, and Mila, I felt like a
fool. In fact, I didn’t know which way to go. The Vajracarya
said nothing further, and nobody else knew, except the
people I have mentioned. I tried to keep myself to myself.
At the same time, I could not forget what had happened. It
seemed as if life had become a dream of that particular
evening. In order to be a good student, it is
necessary to forget about your self-importance. How to proceed is to consider
everything that emanates from the guru as definite
instruction, whether it seems mundane or profound. How to
continue is to act on instruction immediately, without
self-conscious deliberation or analysis. How to sustain
one’s effort is to have undiminished faith in the power of
the lineage as the real expression of truth. This is my
advice according to my own experience. I wish you all great
success.
Source: Chronicle
Project