Verse 7:
To transcend duality is the Kingly View.
To conquer distractions is the Royal Practice.
The Path of No-practice is the Way of all Buddhas.
He who treads that Path reaches Buddhahood.
Transient is this world, like phantoms and dreams,
Substance it has none. Renounce it and forsake your kin,
Cut the strings of lust and hatred, and meditate in woods and mountains.
If, without effort, you remain loosely in the "natural state", soon Mahamudra
you will win, and attain the Non-attainment.
Verse 8:
Cut the root of a tree and the leaves will wither;
Cut the root of your mind and Samsara falls.
The light of any lamps dispels in a moment the darkness of long kalpas;
The strong light of the mind in but a flash will burn the veil of ignorance.
Whoever clings to the mind sees not the truth of what's beyond the mind.
Whoever strives to practice Dharma finds not the truth of Beyond-practice.
One should cut cleanly through the root of the mind and stare naked.
One should thus break away from all distinctions and remain at ease.
Verse 9:
One should not give or take, but remain natural—for Mahamudra is beyond all
acceptance and rejection.
Since the consciousness is not born, no one can obstruct or soil it;
Staying in the "Unborn" realm, all appearance will dissolve into
dharmata,
All self-will and pride will vanish into naught.
Verse 10:
The supreme understanding transcends all this and that.
The supreme action embraces great resourcefulness without attachment.
The supreme accomplishment is to realize immanence without hope.
At first a yogi feels his mind is tumbling like a waterfall;
In mid-course, like the Ganges, it flows on slow and gentle;
In the end, it is a great vast ocean
Where the lights of Son and Mother merge in one.