04/15/2026
Before he became one of Tibet’s most revered yogis, Milarepa was known for something far darker. He was born in western Tibet into a family that, for a time, lived with stability and relative comfort. That stability ended with his father’s death. In its wake, his aunt and uncle seized the family’s property, forcing Milarepa, his mother, and his sister into a life of humiliation and labor. What began as loss gradually hardened into resentment, and resentment into something more dangerous. At his mother’s urging, he left home to learn sorcery—not as a curiosity, but as a means of revenge.
He did not hesitate to use it. Traditional accounts describe him collapsing a house during a wedding, killing many people inside, and later summoning violent hailstorms that destroyed crops across the region. The harm was not symbolic. It was irreversible. Whatever sense of justice or satisfaction he had imagined did not arrive. When it was over, there was no restoration—only absence. The people were still gone. The damage remained. And with it came something that could no longer be directed outward: a sustained and unyielding recognition of what he had done.
That recognition did not free him. It deepened into remorse—not the kind that passes, but the kind that stays and asks a different question. What now? And is there any way to live differently after this? It was this question, more than anything else, that turned him toward the path.
Milarepa eventually sought out the teacher Marpa Lotsawa, who had brought Buddhist teachings from India back to Tibet. Marpa did not greet him with instruction or consolation. Instead, he gave him work. Milarepa was ordered to build a stone tower by hand. When it was finished, Marpa instructed him to dismantle it completely and return each stone to its original place. Then he was told to begin again. Different towers, different locations, the same labor—repeated over years.
To an outside observer, the treatment might appear severe. Within the tradition, it is understood differently. Milarepa had used discipline, focus, and determination to cause harm; now those same qualities were being redirected. The labor offered no refuge in abstraction. Each stone lifted required effort. Each wall raised and undone revealed the limits of will, frustration, and attachment. In time, something shifted—not suddenly, but through endurance. The urgency that had once driven him gave way to the capacity to remain.
Only then did Marpa begin to teach him. And when he did, he sent Milarepa away—not into a monastery, but into solitary retreat in the mountains.
It is in this setting that one of the most enduring stories from his life takes place. Returning to his cave one night, Milarepa found it filled with demons. At first, he responded with the strength he knew. He ran the lesser ones out, and they scattered. Others proved more persistent, and with these he shifted his approach. Instead of resisting, he met them with a kind of openness—offering rather than opposing—and they were gradually banished.
But in the back of the cave, one remained.
This final presence did not react. It did not yield to force, nor to patience, nor even to openness. Everything Milarepa had relied on—his strength, his discipline, even his ability to meet things skillfully—had reached its limit. There was nothing left to apply, no method that made sense.
So he did something else.
He stepped forward, bowed, and—according to the story—placed his head into the demon’s mouth.
There was no resistance, no attempt to control the outcome, no distance left between himself and what he faced.
And the demon dissolved.
The story has been told for generations not as a record of supernatural combat, but as a description of the mind itself—of fear, guilt, memory, and the consequences that remain long after action has passed. Some of these can be pushed aside. Others can be worked with. But some persist, unaffected by either.
For these, there may be no solution in the usual sense.
Only the willingness to face them completely, and to see them clearly for what they are.
By the time Milarepa entered that cave, he had already encountered the weight of his own actions. The final moment was not a sudden breakthrough, but the continuation of a process that had begun much earlier—with loss, with anger, and ultimately with the recognition of what could not be undone.
What followed was not escape, but a different way of meeting what remained. And in that meeting, something changed—not because the problem was defeated, but because it was no longer being resisted.