Wednesday, February 6, 2019

Tattva Bodha - Post 7

UPARATI - SELF WITHDRAWAL


Uparati is satiety; it is resolutely turning the mind away from the desire for sensual enjoyment. Rather, it is cessation for worldly longings. 

Some define Uparati as renunciation of all works and taking up Sannyasa.

This state of mind comes naturally when one has practiced Viveka, Vairagya, Sama and Dama.

Sri Sankara defines Uparati in His Viveka Chudamani as follows:  

"The best Uparati, self-withdrawal, consists in the mind function ceasing to act by means of external objects".

Uparati implies an inner satisfaction gained through constant discrimination and unshaken faith in the spiritual fact that the experience of true bliss and plenitude is to be had only in the Atman. 

The mind of the student who is established in Uparati will never be agitated when he sees a beautiful object. There will be no attraction. He will have the same feeling when he sees a woman as when he looks at a tree or a log of wood. 

When he looks at delicious fruits or palatable dishes he will not be tempted. He will have no craving for any particular object or dish and will never say "I want such and such food".

He will be satisfied with anything that is placed before him. This is due to the strength of mind he has developed by the practice of Viveka, Vairagya, Sama and Dama. 

Further, the mind experiences a wonderful calmness and transcendental spiritual bliss by the above practices. 

It does not want these little illusory pleasures. If you have got sugar-candy, your mind will never run after black sugar. 

You can wean the mind from the object to which it is attached by training it to taste a superior kind of bliss.  


Continued.....

Love.

1 comment:

  1. When one can clearly discriminates between the real and unreal;

    With such discrimination, when one becomes detached from the unreal;

    With such discrimination and detachment, when one is able to channelize all desires and craving towards attaining THAT State and also is able to tune the senses to be the servant of the heart where the heart resides;

    One reaches the state of uparati, where there ceases the want for more satisfaction because one starts to experience THAT within as well without. The SELF of one, the SELF of all. When one starts to have this feeling how can there be any incremental or ever changing satisfaction emerging from anything...

    Pranams.

    ReplyDelete