Sunday, December 20, 2020

Understanding who is a sanyasi

 


Write down a heading 'Who I am’.

Under that make two columns titled ‘With reference to the body’ and ‘With reference to the mind'.

Write below the columns respectively all the labels including roles you give to your self.

After that, write down another heading titled ‘What I own or possess or have'

Under that make two columns again titled ‘External to the body'  and  ‘Within me’.

Write below the columns respectively all that you think you possess either externally or within yourself.

The fire of knowledge, the teaching of Vedanta, requires you to be very honest, and ask yourself a couple of questions about all the items you have written under these columns

1. Are they objects of your knowledge/ consciousness?

2. Are they dependent or independent?

3. Are they temporary?

Now imagine this roaring fire of knowledge – offer into it  all that you have written down which fits into the category of ‘object of knowledge’, ‘dependent’, ‘temporary’. Visualize them burning to ashes and being blown away by some huge wind of understanding.

What remains? Maybe some items still remain. If so, again put the three questions to them...if any of the categories pertain to them, offer them into that roaring fire of knowledge and see them burnt to ashes and blown away.

Is there anything remaining? 

Who knows what remains? What is the essence of the knower? The one who recognizes this and remains as this, is a sanyasi.


Saturday, December 19, 2020

Vedanta’s perspective on physical pain/ physical limitations....an introspection

 



Usually our attention is focussed on something we can objectify...our thoughts, feelings, memories, sensations, breath, the external world.

However, for now, let’s just close our eyes and allow our awareness to be vast and spacious in front of us, boundless behind, infinite on the sides, immeasurable below and limitless above.

Let your heart be as vast and spacious as the sky ...a vast open sky of all acceptance.

It is in this vast spacious, self-evident awareness that you are, that all perception takes place.... hearing takes place....seeing takes place, tasting, smelling, sensation takes place, even action takes place....breathing, eating, walking, bathing, writing, reading ...all of this takes place... They are all objects of your consciousness ....

The consciousness that you are illuminates and enlivens them all. They are perceived to change ...the consciousness that you are does not change ...ever. They are not really separate from your consciousness ....they arise and fall like waves in the ocean of Consciousness that you are.

Physical pain, physical discomfort is a sensation that is illumined and enlivened in the Consciousness you are. You can be totally present to it, without resistance, totally accepting of it ...when you are totally present to anything ....without any resistance, in total acceptance, what you discover is that you are there as a stillness, a witness to the discomfort ...you discover there is some dimension of you ...your consciousness, that is not really touched by it. This is a very exhilarating discovery....painful, uncomfortable at level of body-mind, yet exhilarating for you at another level.

And when you stop equating physical discomfort, physical pain or physical limitations with your self, you enjoy freedom...freedom from dislike and fear ....it’s a huge freedom.

The teaching of Vedanta points out that the consciousness you are is SATYA – and anything that is an object of consciousness is MITHYA....including physical pain and discomfort. Physical pain and discomfort are objects of our consciousness ...they have no power to affect the consciousness we are.  

The secret to owning up this truth in our own being, is our non-resistance to life, our acceptance of both the ups and downs of life situations. What initially helps us to accept life as it is, is our understanding of Ishvara as the abhinna-nimmita-upadana karana, the karma-phala daataa....and our non-resistance to Ishvara....that’s the emotional evolution, the transformation that truly liberates.


Om Tat Sat


Friday, December 18, 2020

Stillness - some thoughts

 



The reflection of consciousness in the mind, is the awareness that we are familiar with, usually engaged in thinking, remembering, feeling, imagining, perceiving, visualizing....always engaged in objectifying in some form or the other.

When we are advised, be present, live consciously ...we are still engaged in objectifying ... very consciously ...free of imagination and visualization, free of thoughts of the past, free of thoughts of the future...we just engage with the immediate present...it is a type of meditation you can say.

When the mind is fully present there is a stillness experienced ..true. Is there a division between the experiencer of stillness and the stillness? It is not that the mind has stopped. Perception is taking place, action is taking place ...and yet there is this still infinite presence. The experienced stillness is an expression of the motionless self. 

This stillness is an expression of myself in the mind. I can use it to understand my timeless nature. Does the stillness have any boundaries? Is it not of the nature of infinite timeless consciousness in whose vast, spacious ever-presence, every perception takes place, every action takes place,  every perception and action is illumined and enlivened.

Sat – timeless existence of the nature of cit – consciousness that is Ananta – infinite ...that alone I am ...

Infinite in time is ever-present, changeless, indestructible

Infinite in space is everywhere, indivisible

Infinite in object is  formless, no dual or plural

Never an object of thought – but the very essence of thought, from where thought emerges, is sustained and goes back

Never the knowing ego

Totally free of the mind, even the Cosmic mind

Recognizing as oneself, pure infinite presence ...there is nothing to do, nothing to learn, nothing to achieve, nothing to succeed, nothing to fail, nothing to be....no object whatsoever ...soham..citsvarupoham...cinmayoham.... satcit-ananda-svarupoham ...soham


Thursday, December 17, 2020

What is there in any moment?

 


What is there in any present moment?

The very isness, beingness of the moment which is the awareness of it, which is oneself .....and whatever one is aware of.

This beingness of the moment ..any moment ..is a vastness, a spaciousness, a stillness, an awareness, Consciousness ...the very womb or essence of every changing perception, in whose ever unchanging presence, every perception, every thought, feeling, sensation, breath takes place and is illumined and enlivened.

This beingness of any moment is called Om and it is oneself ...OM.....OM....OM ..infinite, indivisible, indestructible Consciousness.

Om Tat Sat


Wednesday, December 16, 2020

Do physical limitations have to cause emotional suffering?

 


There is poverty, sickness, physical pain ....all kinds of physical limitations. Do physical limitations have to cause emotional suffering?

We are conditioned to believe that physical limitations must cause emotional suffering. Does the discomfort and physical pain that is felt have to cause emotional suffering?

Emotional suffering is caused when there is identification with the physical discomfort as ‘I am the discomfort’ or ‘my discomfort or pain’. If there is clear assimilation of the fact revealed by Vedanta, that I is just pure consciousness, infinite, indestructible, unchanging, in whose ever-presence, different ever-changing energy states which appear and disappear,  are illumined and recognized to be projections only ...then physical limitations and physical pain will not cause emotional suffering. गुणा गुणेषु वर्तन्ते इति मत्वा न सज्जते।

Before this kind of firm assimilation can happen a lot of emotional cleansing needs to take place. All the buried stuff in the unconscious needs to be aired, accepted, forgiven and let go off. 

To understand Vedanta is not difficult. To own it up can be extremely difficult, if the stored emotional garbage is not compassionately processed and let go of. 

Om Tat Sat



Tuesday, December 15, 2020

Unconscious pain an obstacle to effective nididhyasana

 



Basically, we are scared to feel uncomfortable feelings like fear, anger, grief, hurt, guilt, shame etc. So they stay in the unconscious and get triggered and come out in present day situations. Not only that, also based on some uncomfortable experiences certain  limiting conclusions were formed – and they too remain in the unconscious and govern our lives.

Purifying the inner instrument, the mind involves not only becoming aware of the uncomfortable emotions that are stored in the unconscious, it involves letting them go, without clinging onto them....without clinging onto the storyline attached to them. We also need to become aware of the limiting beliefs and let them go too...without clinging onto them. 

Healing emotional pain thus involves both becoming aware and letting go. 

Becoming aware of the feelings lurking in the unconscious needs lot of Grace in form of a safe environment ...because we are scared to face them and allow ourselves to feel them, without clinging to the story line, without acting on them. Letting go is possible only when we have forgiven -others and ourselves.

Nididhyasana can be effective only after getting past the kashaya. Usually in attempting nididhyasana, if heavy unconscious is there, one knocks against kashaya, and can’t proceed ahead ...it is too scary and painful. Or the mind finds a way of dodging/denying the kashaya and stays in just words. 

So learning to process the kashaya in the form of traumatic memories, feelings and getting past the limiting beliefs is very important to be able to successfully sit for nididhyasana.