Who am I by Bhagwan Ramana Maharishi
'Who am I?' The
physical body, composed of the seven dhatus, is not 'I'. The five sense
organs… and the five types of perception known through the senses… are not 'I'.
The five parts of the body which act… and their functions… are not 'I'. The
five vital airs such as prana, which perform the five vital functions
such as respiration, are not 'I'. Even the mind that thinks is not 'I'. In the
state of deep sleep vishaya vasanas remain. Devoid of sensory
knowledge and activity, even this [state] is not 'I'. After negating all of the
above as 'not I, not I', the knowledge that alone remains is itself 'I'. The
nature of knowledge is sat-chit-ananda
[being-consciousness-bliss].
Vasanas
is a key word in Who am I? It can be defined as, 'the impressions of
anything remaining unconsciously in the mind; the present consciousness of past
perceptions; knowledge derived from memory; latent tendencies formed by former
actions, thoughts and speech.' It is usually rendered in English as 'latent
tendencies'. Vishaya vasanas are those latent mental tendencies that
impel one to indulge in knowledge or perceptions derived from the five senses.
In a broader context it may also include indulging in any mental activity such
as daydreaming or fantasizing, where the content of the thoughts is derived
from past habits or desires.
The seven dhatus are chyle, blood, flesh, fat, marrow, bone and semen.
The five sense organs are the ears, skin, eyes, tongue and nose, and the five
types of perception or knowledge, called vishayas, are sound, touch,
sight, taste and smell. The five parts of the body that act are the mouth, the
legs, the hands, the anus, and the genitals and their functions are speaking,
walking, giving, excreting and enjoying. All the items on these lists are included
in the original text. I have relegated them to this explanatory note to
facilitate easy reading.
The five vital airs (prana vayus) are not listed in the original text.
They are responsible for maintaining the health of the body. They convert inhaled
air and ingested food into the energy required for the healthy and harmonious
functioning of the body.
This paragraph of Who am I? has an interesting history. Sivaprakasam
Pillai's original question was 'Who am I?', the first three words of the paragraph.
Bhagavan's reply, which can be found at the end of the paragraph, was
'Knowledge itself is ''I''. The nature of knowledge is sat-chit-ananda.'
Everything else in this paragraph was interpolated later by Sivaprakasam Pillai
prior to the first publication of the question-and-answer version of the text
in 1923. The word that is translated as 'knowledge' is the Tamil equivalent of
'jnana'. So, the answer to that original question 'Who am I?' is, 'Jnana
is ''I'' and the nature of jnana is sat-chit-ananda'.
When Bhagavan saw the printed text he exclaimed, 'I did not give this extra
portion. How did it find a place here?'
He was told that Sivaprakasam Pillai had added the additional information,
including all the long lists of physical organs and their functions, in order
to help him understand the answer more clearly. When Bhagavan wrote the Who
Am I? answers in an essay form, he retained these interpolations but had
the printer mark the original answer in bold type so that devotees could distinguish
between the two.
This interpolation does not give a correct rendering of Bhagavan's teachings on
self-enquiry. In the following exchange(1) Bhagavan explains how
self-enquiry should be done, and why the 'not I, not I' approach is an
unproductive one:
Q: I begin to ask
myself 'Who am I?', eliminate the body as not 'I', the breath as not 'I', and I
am not able to proceed further.
B: Well, that is as
far as the intellect can go. Your process is only intellectual. Indeed, all the
scriptures mention the process only to guide the seeker to know the truth. The
truth cannot be directly pointed at. Hence, this intellectual process.
You see, the one who eliminates the 'not I' cannot eliminate the 'I'. To say 'I
am not this' or 'I am that' there must be an 'I'. This 'I' is only the ego or
the 'I'-thought. After the rising up of this 'I'-thought, all other thoughts
arise. The 'I'-thought is therefore the root thought. If the root is pulled out
all others are at the same time uprooted. Therefore, seek the root 'I',
question yourself 'Who am I?' Find the source and then all these other ideas
will vanish and the pure Self will remain.
Question: Will
there be realization of the Self even while the world is there, and taken to be
real?
If the mind, which is the cause of all knowledge and all actions, subsides, the
perception of the world will cease. [If one perceives a rope, imagining it to
be a snake] perception of the rope, which is the substratum, will not occur
unless the perception of the snake, which has been superimposed on it, goes.
Similarly, the perception of one's real nature, the substratum, will not be
obtained unless the perception of the world, which is a superimposition,
ceases.
Question: What is
the nature of the mind?
That which is called 'mind', which projects all thoughts, is an awesome power
existing within the Self, one's real nature. If we discard all thoughts and
look [to see what remains when there are no thoughts, it will be found that]
there is no such entity as mind remaining separate [from those thoughts].
Therefore, thought itself is the nature of the mind. There is no such thing as
'the world' independent of thoughts. There are no thoughts in deep sleep, and
there is no world. In waking and dream there are thoughts, and there is also
the world. Just as a spider emits the thread of a web from within itself and
withdraws it again into itself, in the same way the mind projects the world
from within itself and later reabsorbs it into itself. When the mind emanates
from the Self, the world appears. Consequently, when the world appears, the
Self is not seen, and when the Self appears or shines, the world will not
appear.
If one goes on examining the nature of the mind, it will finally be discovered
that [what was taken to be] the mind is really only one's self. That which is
called one's self is really Atman, one's real nature. The mind always
depends for its existence on something tangible. It cannot subsist by itself.
It is the mind that is called sukshma sarira [the subtle body] or jiva
[the soul].
Question: What is
the path of enquiry for understanding the nature of the mind?
That which arises in the physical body as 'I' is the mind. If one enquires, 'In
what place in the body does this ''I'' first arise?' it will be known to be in
the hridayam. That is the birthplace of the mind. Even if one
incessantly thinks 'I, I', it will lead to that place. Of all thoughts that
arise in the mind, the thought 'I' is the first one. It is only after the rise
of this [thought] that other thoughts arise. It is only after the first
personal pronoun arises that the second and third personal pronouns appear.
Without the first person, the second and third persons cannot exist.
Hridayam is usually translated as 'Heart', but it has no connection with
the physical heart. Bhagavan used it as a synonym for the Self, pointing out on
several occasions that it could be split up into two parts, hrit and ayam,
which together mean, 'this is the centre'. Sometimes he would say that the
'I'-thought arises from the hridayam and eventually subsides there
again. He would also sometimes indicate that the spiritual Heart was inside the
body on the right aside of the chest, but he would often qualify this by saying
that this was only true from the standpoint of those who identified themselves
with a body. For a jnani, one who has realised the Self, the hridayam
or Heart is not located anywhere, or even everywhere, because it is beyond all
spatial concepts. The following answer (2) summarises Bhagavan's
views on this matter:
I ask you to see
where the 'I' arises in your body, but it is not really quite true to say that
the 'I' rises from and merges on the right side of the chest. The Heart is
another name for the reality, and it is neither inside nor outside the body.
There can be no in or out for it since it alone is… so long as one identifies
with the body and thinks that he is in the body, he is advised to see where in
the body the 'I'-thought rises and merges again.
A hint of this can also be found in this paragraph of Who am I? in the
sentence in which Bhagavan asks devotees to enquire 'In what place in the body
does this ''I'' first arise?'
Ordinarily, idam, which is translated here as 'place', means only that,
but Bhagavan often gave it a broader meaning by using it to signify the state
of the Self. Later in the essay, for example, he writes, 'The place [idam]
where even the slightest trace of ''I'' does not exist is swarupa [one's
real nature]'.
Sadhu Natanananda, on the flyleaf of his Tamil work Sri Ramana Darshanam,
records a similar statement from Bhagavan: 'Those who resort to this place [idam]
will obtain Atma-jnana automatically.' Clearly, he cannot be speaking of
the physical environment of his ashram because paying a visit there didn't
necessarily result in enlightenment.
So, when Bhagavan writes 'In what place…' he is not necessarily indicating that
one should look for the 'I' in a particular location. He is instead saying that
that the 'I' rises from the dimensionless Self, and that one should seek its
source there.
As he once told Kapali Sastri, (3) 'You should try to
have rather than locate the experience'.
Question: How will
the mind become quiescent?
The mind will only subside by means of the enquiry 'Who am I?' The thought 'Who
am I?', destroying all other thoughts, will itself be finally destroyed like
the stick used for stirring the funeral pyre.
Question: What is
the means for constantly holding on to the thought 'Who am I?' And what is jnana
drishti?
If other thoughts arise, one should, without attempting to complete them,
enquire, 'To whom did they occur?' What does it matter if ever so many thoughts
arise? At the very moment that each thought rises, if one vigilantly enquires
'To whom did this appear?' it will be known 'To me'. If one then enquires 'Who
am I?' the mind will turn back to its source and the thought that had arisen
will also subside. By repeatedly practising in this way, the mind will
increasingly acquire the power to abide at its source. When the mind, which is
subtle, is externalised via the brain and the sense organs, names and forms,
which are material, appear. When it abides in the Heart, names and forms
disappear. Keeping the mind in the Heart, not allowing it to go out, is called
'facing the Self' or 'facing inwards'. Allowing it to go out from the Heart is
termed 'facing outwards' When the mind abides in the Heart in this way, the
'I', the root of all thoughts, [vanishes]. Having vanished, the ever-existing
Self alone will shine. The state where not even the slightest trace of the
thought 'I' remains is alone swarupa [one's real nature]. This alone is
called mauna [silence]. Being still in this way can alone be called jnana
drishti [seeing through true knowledge]. Making the mind subside into the
Self is 'being still'. On the other hand, knowing the thoughts of others,
knowing the three times [past present and future] and knowing events in distant
places - these can never be jnana drishti.
The word swarupa is another key word in the text. It means 'one's real
nature' or 'one's real form'. Each time the phrase 'one's real nature' appears
in this text, it is a translation of swarupa. Bhagavan's repeated use of
the word as a synonym for the Self indicates that the Self is not something
that is reached or attained. Rather, it is what one really is, and what one
always has been.
Mauna is another of the synonyms Bhagavan used to describe the
Self:
Q: What is mauna
[silence]?
A: That state which
transcends speech and thought is mauna…. That which is, is mauna.
Sages say that the state in which the thought 'I' does not rise even in the
least, alone is swarupa, which means mauna. That silent Self is
alone God…(4)
In jnana, the state of Self-knowledge or Self-realisation, there is no
one who sees, nor are there objects that are seen. There is only seeing. The
seeing that takes place in this state, called jnana drishti, is both
true seeing and true knowing. It is therefore called 'seeing through true
knowledge'.
In Day by Day with Bhagavan (17.10.46) Bhagavan points out that this
seeing is really being and should not be confused with or limited to the
sensory activity that goes under the same name: 'You are the Self. You exist
always. Nothing more can be predicated of the Self than it exists. Seeing God
or the Self is only being God or your Self. Seeing is being.' The same concept
was elegantly formulated by Meister Eckart, the medieval German mystic, when he
remarked, during one of his sermons, 'The eye by which I see God is the same
eye by which God sees me. My eye and God's eye are one and the same, one in
seeing, one in knowing…'
Question: What is
the nature of the Self?
The Self, one's real nature, alone exists and is real. The world, the soul and
God are superimpositions on it like [the illusory appearance of] silver in
mother-of-pearl. These three appear and disappear simultaneously. Self itself
is the world; Self itself is the 'I'; Self itself is God; all is Siva, the
Self.
At the beginning of this paragraph Bhagavan says, in effect, that the world,
the soul and God are illusory appearances. Later he says that all three are the
Self, and therefore real. This should be seen as a paradox rather than a
contradiction. The following answer (5) clarifies Bhagavan's
views:
Sankara was
criticised for his views on maya [illusion] without understanding him.
He said that (1) Brahman [the Self] is real (2) the universe is unreal,
and (3) Brahman is the universe. He did not stop at the second because
the third explains the other two. It signifies that the universe is real if
perceived as the Self and unreal if perceived as apart from the Self. Hence maya
and reality are one and the same.
The seeing of names
and forms is a misperception because, in the Self, the one reality, none exist.
Therefore, if a world of names and forms is seen, it must necessarily be an
illusory one. Bhagavan explains this in verse 49 of Guru Vachaka Kovai:
Just as fire is
obscured by smoke, the shining light of consciousness is obscured by the
assemblage of names and forms. When, by compassionate divine grace, the mind
becomes clear, the nature of the world will be known to be not illusory forms,
but only the reality.
Question: Are there
any other means for making the mind quiescent?
To make the mind subside, there is no adequate means except enquiry. If
controlled by other means, the mind will remain in an apparent state of
subsidence, but will rise again. For example, through pranayama [breath
control] the mind will subside. However, the mind will remain controlled only
as long as the prana [see the following note] is controlled. When the prana
comes out, the mind will also come out and wander under the influence of vasanas.
The source of the mind and the prana is one and the same. Thought itself
is the nature of the mind, and the thought 'I' which indeed is the mind's
primal thought, is itself the ahankara [the ego]. From where the ego
originates, from there alone the breath also rises. Therefore, when the mind
subsides, the prana will also subside, and when prana subsides,
the mind will also subside. However, although the mind subsides in deep sleep,
the prana does not subside. It is arranged in this way as a divine plan
for the protection of the body and so that others do not take the body to be
dead. When the mind subsides in the waking state and in samadhi, the prana
also subsides. The prana is the gross form of the mind. Until the time
of death, the mind retains the prana in the body. When the body dies,
the mind forcibly carries away the prana. Therefore, pranayama is
only an aid for controlling the mind; it will not bring about its
destruction.
According to the Upanishads, prana is the principle of life and
consciousness. It is the life breath of all the beings in the universe. They
are born through it, live by it, and when they die, their individual prana
dissolves into the cosmic prana. Prana is usually translated as
'breath' or 'vital breath', but this is only one of many of its manifestations
in the human body. It is absorbed by both breathing and eating and by the prana
vayus (mentioned earlier) into energy that sustains the body. Since it is
assimilated through breathing, it is widely held that one can control the prana
in the body by controlling the breathing.
According to yoga philosophy, and other schools of thought agree, mind and prana
are intimately connected. The collective name for all the mental faculties is chitta,
which is divided into:
(a) manas
(the mind), which has the faculties of attention and choosing.
(b) buddhi
(the intellect), which reasons and determines distinctions.
(c) ahankara,
the individual feeling of 'I', sometimes merely translated as ego.
Chitta, according to yoga philosophy, is propelled by prana and vasanas
and moves in the direction of whichever force is more powerful. Thus, the yogis
maintain that by controlling the breath, which indirectly controls the flow of pranas,
the chitta can be controlled. Bhagavan gives his own views on this later
in the essay.
The reference to samadhi needs some explanation. According to Bhagavan,(6) 'Samadhi is the
state in which the unbroken experience of existence is attained by the still
mind.'
Elsewhere he has said, more simply, 'Holding onto reality is samadhi.' (7)
Though Bhagavan would sometimes say that a person in samadhi is
experiencing the Self, these samadhis do not constitute permanent
realisation. They are temporary states in which the mind is either completely
still or in abeyance.
'Are there any
other means for making the mind quiescent?'
Like breath control, meditation on a form of God, repetition of sacred words
and regulation of diet are mere aids for controlling the mind. Through
meditation on a form of God and through the repetition of sacred words the mind
becomes focused on one point. An elephant's trunk is always moving around, but
when a chain is given to it to hold in its trunk, that elephant will go on its
way, holding onto the chain instead of trying to catch other things with it.
Similarly, when the mind, which is always wandering, is trained to hold onto
any name or form of God, it will only cling to that. Because the mind branches
out into innumerable thoughts, each thought becomes very weak. As thoughts
subside more and more, one-pointedness [of mind] is gained. A mind that has
gained strength in this way will easily succeed in self-enquiry. Of all
regulations taking sattvic food in moderate quantities is the best. Through
[this], the sattvic quality of the mind gets enhanced and becomes an aid to
self-enquiry.
A sattvic diet is one which is vegetarian and which also excludes stimulating
substances - such as chillies, tobacco, alcohol - and food that is excessively
sour, salty or pungent.
Some Indian systems of thought maintain that the mind is composed of three
fluctuating components called gunas:
(a) sattva,
purity or harmony.
(b) rajas,
activity.
(c) tamas,
inertia or sluggishness.
Since the type of food eaten affects the quality of the mind, non-sattvic foods
promote rajas and tamas. The sattvic mind is the most desirable.
One of the aims of spiritual practice is to increase the sattvic component at
the expense of rajas and tamas.
Question: Is it
possible for the vishaya vasanas, which come from beginningless time, to
be resolved, and for one to remain as the pure Self?
Although vishaya vasanas, which have been recurring down the ages, rise
in countless numbers like the waves of an ocean, they will all perish as
meditation on one's real nature becomes more and more intense. Without giving
room even to the doubting thought, 'Is it possible to destroy all these vasanas
and remain as Self alone?' one should persistently and tightly hold onto
meditation on one's real nature. However great a sinner one may be, one should,
instead of lamenting, 'Oh, I am a sinner! How can I attain liberation?'
completely give up even the thought of being a sinner. One steadfast in meditation
on one's real nature will surely be saved.
Question: How long
should enquiry be practised? What is non-attachment?
As long as there are vishaya vasanas in the mind, the enquiry 'Who am
I?' is necessary. As and when thoughts arise, one should, then and there,
annihilate them all through self-enquiry in the very place of their origin. Not
giving attention to anything other than oneself is non-attachment or
desirelessness; not leaving the Self is jnana [true knowledge]. In
truth, these two [non-attachment and desirelessness] are one and the same. Just
as a pearl diver, tying a stone to his waist, dives into the sea and takes the
pearl lying on the bottom, so everyone, diving deeply within himself in a
detached way can obtain the pearl of the Self. If one resorts uninterruptedly
to remembrance of one's real nature until one attains the Self, that alone will
be sufficient. As long as there are enemies within the fort, they will continue
to come out. If one continues to cut all of them down as and when they emerge,
the fort will fall into our hands.
Question: Is it not
possible for God or the Guru to effect the release of the soul?
God and Guru are, in truth, not different. Just as the prey that has fallen
into the jaws of the tiger cannot escape, so those who have come under the
glance of the Guru's grace will never be forsaken. Nevertheless, one should
follow without fail the path shown by the Guru.
Remaining firmly in Self-abidance, without giving the least scope for the
rising of any thought other than the thought of the Self, is surrendering
oneself to God. However much of a burden we throw on God, He bears it all.
Since the one supreme ruling power is performing all activities, why should we,
instead of yielding ourselves to it, think, 'I should not act in this way; I
should act in that way'? When we know that the train is carrying all the
freight, why should we, who travel in it, suffer by keeping our own small
luggage on our heads instead of putting it down and remaining happily at
ease?
In the last three sections Bhagavan has used three terms, swarupa dhyanam
(meditation on one's real nature), swarupa smaranai (remembrance of
one's real nature), and atma chintanai (the thought of the Self) to
indicate the process by which one becomes aware of the Self. They should not be
understood to mean that one should try to focus one's attention on the Self,
for the real Self can never be an object of thought. The benedictory verse of Ulladu
Narpadu explains what Bhagavan meant by such terms. It asks the question,
'How to meditate on that reality which is called the Heart?' since that reality
alone exists, and it answers by saying, 'To abide in the Heart as it really is,
is truly meditating.' That is to say, one can be the Heart by 'abiding as it
is', but one cannot experience it as an object of attention.
This interpretation is confirmed by the sentence in the last extract from Who
Am I? in which Bhagavan equates atma chintanai (the thought of the
Self) with atma nishta (Self-abidance).
In a similar vein Bhagavan remarks later in the essay that 'always keeping the
mind fixed in the Self alone can be called self-enquiry'.
Question: What is
happiness?
What is called happiness is merely the nature of the Self. Happiness and the
Self are not different. The happiness of the Self alone exists; that alone is
real. There is no happiness at all in even a single one of the [many] things in
the world. We believe that we derive happiness from them on account of aviveka
[a lack of discrimination, an inability to ascertain what is correct]. When the
mind is externalised, it experiences misery. The truth is, whenever our
thoughts [that is, our desires] get fulfilled, the mind turns back to its
source and experiences Self-happiness alone. In this way the mind wanders
without rest, emerging and abandoning the Self and [later] returning within.
The shade under a tree is very pleasant. Away from it the sun's heat is
scorching. A person who is wandering around outside reaches the shade and is
cooled. After a while he goes out again, but unable to bear the scorching heat,
returns to the tree. In this way he is engaged in going from the shade into the
hot sunshine and in coming back from the hot sunshine into the shade. A person
who acts like this is an aviveki [someone who lacks discrimination], for
a discriminating person would never leave the shade. By analogy, the mind of a jnani
never leaves Brahman, whereas the mind of someone who has not realised
the Self is such that it suffers by wandering in the world before turning back
to Brahman for a while to enjoy happiness. What is called 'the world' is
only thoughts. When the world disappears, that is, when there are no thoughts,
the mind experiences bliss; when the world appears, it experiences suffering.
Question: Is not
everything the work of God?
In the mere presence of the sun, which rises without desire, intention or
effort, the magnifying glass emits hot light, the lotus blossoms and people
begin, perform and cease their work. In front of a magnet a needle moves.
Likewise, through the mere influence of the presence of God, who has no sankalpa
[intention to accomplish anything], souls, who are governed by the three or
five divine functions, perform and cease their activities in accordance with
their respective karmas. Even so, He [God] is not someone who has sankalpa,
nor will a single act ever touch him. This [untouchability] can be compared to
the actions of the world not touching the sun, or to the good and bad qualities
of the elements [earth, water, fire and air] not affecting the immanent
space.
Sankalpa means 'resolve', 'will', or 'intention'. God has no personal sankalpa.
That is to say, He does not decide or even think about what he should do. Though
mature devotees 'bloom' on account of his presence, it is not because He has
decided to bestow His grace on these fortunate few. His presence is available
to all, but only the mature convert it into realisation.
The three divine functions are creation, sustenance and destruction. The five
divine functions are these three plus veiling and grace. According to many
Hindu scriptures, God creates, preserves and eventually destroys the world.
While it exists, He hides His true nature from the people in it through the
veiling power of maya, illusion, while simultaneously emanating grace so
that mature devotees can lift the veils of illusion and become aware of Him as
He really is.
Question: For those
who long for release, is it useful to read books?
It is said in all the scriptures that to attain liberation one should make the
mind subside. After realising that mind control is the ultimate injunction of
the scriptures, it is pointless to read scriptures endlessly. In order to know
the mind, it is necessary to know who one is. How [can one know who one is] by
researching instead in the scriptures? One should know oneself through one's
own eye of knowledge. For [a man called] Rama to know himself to be Rama, is a
mirror necessary? One's self exists within the five sheaths, whereas the
scriptures are outside them. This self is the one to be enquired into.
Therefore, researching in the scriptures, ignoring even the five sheaths, is
futile. Enquiring 'Who am I that am in bondage?' and knowing one's real nature
is alone liberation.
In self-enquiry one is enquiring into the nature and origin of the individual
self, not the all-pervasive Atman. When Self appears in capitals, it
denotes Atman, the real Self. When self it appears in lower case, it
refers to the individual.
The five sheaths or kosas envelop and contain the individual self. They
are:
(1) annamayakosa,
the food sheath, which corresponds to the physical body.
(2) pranamayakosa,
the sheath made of prana.
(3) manomayakosa,
the sheath of the mind.
(4) vijnanmayakosa,
the sheath of the intellect.
(5) anandamayakosa,
the sheath of bliss.
Sheaths two, three and four comprise the subtle body (sukshma sarira)
while the fifth sheath, called the causal body, corresponds to the state of the
individual self during sleep.
The individual 'I' functions through the five sheaths. Practitioners of the neti-neti
'(not this, not this') type of sadhana reject their association with the
five sheaths in the way described in the second paragraph of Who Am I?
The idea behind this practice is that if one rejects all thoughts, feelings and
sensations as 'not I', the real 'I' will eventually shine in a form that is
unlimited by or to the sheaths.
Keeping the mind fixed in the Self at all times is called self-enquiry, whereas
thinking oneself to be Brahman, which is sat-chit-ananda
[being-consciousness-bliss], is meditation. Eventually, all that one has learnt
will have to be forgotten.
One can distinguish different levels of experience in the practice of
self-enquiry. In the beginning one attempts to eliminate all transient thoughts
by concentrating on or looking for the primal 'I'-thought. This corresponds to
the stage Bhagavan described earlier in the essay when one cuts down all the
enemies, the thoughts, as they emerge from the fortress of the mind. If one
achieves success in this for any length of time, the 'I'-thought, deprived of
new thoughts to attach itself to, begins to subside, and one then moves to a
deeper level of experience. The 'I'-thought descends into the Heart and remains
there temporarily until the residual vasanas cause it to rise again. It
is this second stage that Bhagavan refers to when he says that 'keeping the
mind fixed in the Self alone can be called self-enquiry'. Most practitioners of
self-enquiry will readily admit that this rarely happens to them, but
nevertheless, according to Bhagavan's teachings, fixing the mind in the Self
should be regarded as an intermediate goal on the path to full
realisation.
It is interesting to note that Bhagavan restricts the term 'self-enquiry' to
this phase of the practice. This unusual definition was more or less repeated
in an answer he gave to Kapali Sastri:
Q: If I go on
rejecting thoughts, can I call it vichara [self-enquiry]?
A: It may be a
stepping stone. But real vichara begins when you cling to yourself and
are already off the mental movements, the thought waves.(8)
The following optimistic answers by Bhagavan, on keeping the mind in the Heart,
may provide encouragement to those practitioners who often feel that such
experiences may never come their way:
Q: How long can the
mind stay or be kept in the Heart?
A: The period
extends by practice.
Q: What will happen
at the end of that period?
A: The mind returns
to the present normal state. Unity in the Heart is replaced by a variety of
perceived phenomena. This is called the outgoing mind. The Heart-going mind is
called the resting mind.
When one daily practises more and more in this manner, the mind will become
extremely pure due to the removal of its defects and the practice will become
so easy that the purified mind will plunge into the Heart as soon as the
enquiry is commenced. (9)
Bhagavan noted that 'thinking oneself to be Brahman… is meditation', not
enquiry. Traditional advaitic sadhana follows the path of negation and
affirmation. In the negative approach, one continuously rejects all thoughts,
feelings and sensations as 'not I'. On the affirmative route one attempts to
cultivate the attitude 'I am Brahman' or 'I am the Self'. Bhagavan
called this latter approach, and all other techniques in which one concentrates
on an idea or a form, 'meditation', and regarded all such methods as being
indirect and inferior to self-enquiry.
Q: Is not
affirmation of God more effective than the quest 'Who am I?' Affirmation is
positive, whereas the other is negation. Moreover, it indicates
separateness.
A: So long as you
seek to know how to realise, this advice is given to find your Self. Your
seeking the method denotes your separateness.
Q: Is it not better
to say 'I am the Supreme Being' than ask 'Who am I?'
A: Who affirms?
There must be one to do it. Find that one. Q: Is not meditation better than
investigation?
A: Meditation
implies mental imagery, whereas investigation is for the reality. The former is
objective, whereas the latter is subjective.
Q: There must be a
scientific approach to this subject.
A: To eschew
unreality and seek the reality is scientific.(10)
Question: Is it
necessary for one who longs for release to enquire into the nature of the tattvas?
Just as it is futile to examine the garbage that has to be collectively thrown
away, so it is fruitless for one who is to know himself to count the numbers
and scrutinise the properties of the tattvas that are veiling the Self,
instead of collectively throwing them all away.
Indian philosophers have split the phenomenal world up into many different
entities or categories which are called tattvas. Different schools of
thought have different lists of tattvas, some being inordinately long
and complicated. Bhagavan encouraged his devotees to disregard all such
classifications on the grounds that, since the appearance of the world is
itself an illusion, examining its component parts one by one is an exercise in
futility.
Question: Is there
no difference between waking and dream?
One should consider
the universe to be like a dream. Except that waking is long and dreams are
short, there is no difference [between the two states]. To the extent to which
all the events which happen while one is awake appear to be real, to that same
extent even the events that happen in dreams appear at that time to be real. In
dreams, the mind assumes another body. In both the dream and the waking
[states] thoughts and names-and-forms come into existence simultaneously.
The final two paragraphs of the essay are taken from an answer to a question
that has already been given:
Question: Is it
possible for the vishaya vasanas, which come from beginningless time, to
be resolved, and for one to remain as the pure Self?
There are not two minds, one good and another evil. The mind is only one. It is
only the vasanas that are either auspicious or inauspicious. When the
mind is under the influence of auspicious tendencies, it is called a good mind,
and when it is under the influence of inauspicious tendencies, a bad mind.
However evil people may appear, one should not hate them. Likes and dislikes
are both to be disliked. One should not allow the mind to dwell much on worldly
matters. As far as possible, one should not interfere in the affairs of others.
All that one gives to others, one gives only to oneself. If this truth is
known, who indeed will not give to others? If the individual self rises, all
will rise.
If the individual self subsides, all will subside. To the extent that we behave
with humility, to that extent will good result. If one can continuously control
the mind, one can live anywhere.
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