Monday, February 6, 2017

Manas Buddhi Chitta Ahamkara - Part 7

ASMITA


Yoga sutra 2.6
Drig Darshana Shaktyoh Ekatmata Iva Asmita

The coloring (klesha) of I-ness or egoism (asmita), which arises from the ignorance, occurs due to the mistake of taking the intellect (buddhi, which knows, decides, judges, and discriminates) to itself be pure consciousness (purusha/drig).


The above literal translation may sound difficult.

So,  let us understand in a more simpler way- Asmita occurs when pure non-dual Consciousness (the divinity that we are)  forgets it is non-dual due to avidya or ignorance and  it plays in a human being  as an individual (asmita), this second coloring comes almost simultaneous with avidya, this is a very subtle veil of I-ness, it has not yet have any characteristic, it now appears as an individual entity, that has the four functions of mind; manas, chitta, ahamkara, and buddhi.

Finest form of individualityAsmita is the finest form of individuality. It is not I-am-ness, as when we say, "I am a man or woman" or "I am a person from this or that country." Rather, it is I-ness that has not taken on any of those identities.

I-ness is necessary for the others: In relation to individual thought patterns, the coloring of I-ness is necessary for attractionaversion, and fear to have any power. Thus, the I-ness itself is seen as a coloring process of the thoughts. The practice is that of witnessing this Asmita (I-ness), and how it comes into relation with though patterns.

Like the filament confusing itself with the electricity: The klesha of asmita is like the filament of a light bulb confusing itself with electricity. The filament is the finest, most essential part of the light bulb, but it still pales in comparison to the electricity that is the true source of the light coming out of the bulb.

The image in the mind is not neutral: Imagine some thought that it is not colored by I-ness. Such an un-colored thought would have no ability to distract your mind during meditation, nor to control your actions. Actually, there are many such neutral thought patterns.

For example, we encounter many people in daily life whom we may recognize, but have never met, and for whom their memory in our mind is neither colored with attraction nor aversion. It simply means that the image of those people is stored in the mind, but that it is neutral, not colored.

In the post on Avidya, we understood that ignorance of man makes him incapable of knowing that he is SELF/ DIVINE.

From this Avidya, certain other beliefs emerge, as under:-

Ø Instead, man saw himself as his body, mind and intellect and thought, that was his true identity.

Ø Once he believed that his body was his true identity, then obviously, he has to take up all actions to glorify his physical identity which he believes as real.

Ø With this, the second ignorance ASMITA, taking the non-self Body, Mind, Intellect as SELF, all other ignorance flowed in a perfect sequence, as a chain.

An exercise to track our Asmita:

Here is a fun exercise to track down your Ego and make friends with it, so it can soften and quiet down. I like to call it the Labels exercise.

Observe and take note on the following:

Ø  Labels, you tag onto yourself

ØLabels, that your mind tags on to people/ things/ foods/events/ actions/dress codes/behaviors…

Ø Comparative labels (how you compare your labels with those of others)

Take a deep breath.

Settle into your seat and look over the collection of labels you have jotted down.

Recognize the space they hold in your mind.

Keep breathing, and see if you can find a space in your mind that allows you to drop the need to constantly label, tag, judge. Just be for a moment, be here, present in the space where there are no labels.

A label is a judgment. Often we mistake the labels we give ourselves for who we are. This exercise allows us to step out of the small, limited picture, we often get stuck in.

When you take a step back you are able to see the larger picture, and that is when you can find a sense of ease; because it is ok, you are only a small part of a very big picture…


Love.




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