Category Archives: Tibetan Lamas
Modern Day Female Treasure Revealer

Kongpo Bonri, the Bon Mountain where Khandro Dechen Wangmo stayed in retreat and had many spiritual experiences.
In 1918 at the age of fifty one, Khandro (Sanskrit: dakini) Dechen Wangmo revealed a terma, or hidden religious treasure, that contained the hagiographies of sixteen female realized practitioners. This was only one of many treasures that she revealed during her lifetime. Born in Nyarong Tibet in 1868, Dechen Wangmo began having clear revelatory dreams by the young age of seven. These dreams continued throughout her lifetime and often contained the location as well as the key to revealing many terma. A non-sectarian practitioner, she was a disciple of both Bön and Buddhist lamas including the greatly esteemed and realized Shardza Tashi Gyaltsen. Her main practice was Dzogchen accompanied by long life practices. She compiled a chöd text and composed spiritual songs, including a song of revelation while she was practicing at the sacred site of Kongpo Bönri. (See previous article: https://ravencypresswood.com/2015/08/29/pilgrimage-kongpo-bonri/ )
Consort and spiritual companion to the tertön Sang Ngak Lingpa, it was Dechen Wangmo’s dreams that alerted him to the location of many terma as well as giving the key for opening them. While traveling to the kingdom of Hor, the couple stopped by a lake whereby Khandro Dechen Wangmo retrieved a terma of a statue of Ludrup Yeshe Nyingpo as well as a sacred text from the water spirits guarding the lake. Having arrived in Hor, the king requested that she herself give teachings in addition to those given by Tertön Lingpa.
She had her own disciples, some of whom compiled a hagiography of her which details her many pilgrimages, terma revelations, dreams, and sacred visions. Her importance and realization was recognized by many lamas who wrote long life invocations for her. She and Tertön Lingpa traveled extensively but their activities were mainly focused in the Amdo area of Eastern Tibet.
Khandro Khachö Wangmo (1940-1987 CE ) was considered an incarnation of Khandro Dechen Wangmo. She was the daughter of Kündrol Drakpa, who was also known as Kündrol Humchen Drodül Lingpa, and was a lineage lama and tertön of the New Bön tradition. She was a realized practitioner and tertön who in 1986 CE discovered a small statue of Amitayus, a nine-pointed dorje, and blessed khandro dust from the sacred mountain Kongpo Bönri in south-eastern Tibet. Her discovery was witnessed by the public and documented in an essay by Span Hanna entitled Vast as the Sky, the Terma Tradition in Modern Tibet which is included in the book Tantra and Popular Religion in Tibet by Geoffrey Samuel and Hamish Gregor, edited by Elisabeth Stutchbury.
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Long Life to HE Menri Lopon Yangton Thrinley Nyima Rinpoche
“EMAHO! Master of the path of Renunciation, you oversee the four kinds of discipline,
Leader of the Path of Transformation, you guide along the path of the four levels of rikdzin,
Lord of the Path of Liberation, you clarify the meaning of the four visions,
Through the four kinds of sacred activity, may you sustain the doctrine and migrating beings!”
~Written by HE Yongdzin Tenzin Namdak Rinpoche. Translated by Raven Cypress Wood©





