Tuesday, January 8, 2019

Upadesa Saram - Post 17

Verse 14

प्राणबन्धनाल्लीनमानसम् |
एकचिन्तनान्नाशमेत्यदः ||

prāabandhanāllīnamānasam |
ekacintanānnāśametyada ||

From the binding of the prana, the mind is dissolved.
From one thought, that reaches destruction.

The state of Mano-Laya is not to be criticized. It is a good thing to have attained a quiet mind; it is no joke to achieve this. Most people find that impossible. 

They are perpetually subjected to the captivity of the mind, except for the brief relief they get during sleep. So to be freed from the mind’s captivity may in itself be a victory of some sort for most people. However, having done that, the important thing is the next step. 

We cannot waste the opportunity of having a quiet mind in our hands. We rarely get this chance. Sri Ramana Maharshi tells us that such a mind is put to its best use by making it contemplate on the Self. A quiet mind is meant for knowledge, so we must give it that. 

The Laya mind does not possess the impulse to seek knowledge. It is an inert state. The impulse comes from one’s desire to know and to realize God. 

“Eka Chintanam”– The Contemplation on the One: 

Pranayama is the basis for and laya is samadhi. However, once you come out of this samadhi, you are not enlightened. 

Just as the example of “Our Self being clouded by our ignorance”given by the author in a series of the messages to few last week, here, it has to be observed in the context of this Laya and the experience after coming out of this temporary samadhi that “TRUTH OR SELF IS COVERED BY VRITTIS OR THOUGHT PATTERNS”.

Remove these thought patterns and SELF is revealed. Thus, sage Patanjali advocated that “the atma is covered by thoughts and you uncover Atman by chitta vritti nirodha, i.e., restraint or stoppage of thoughts.

Thoughts are like continuous flow of a river and due to the same, you are not able to see the ground under / beneath the flowing river, which is SELF.

So, how to use this laya state / practice to progress further in Spiritual Sadhana?

Let the Laya mind be used to reflect upon the Self. It is quiet. It has no disturbance. That is the best time to do Self-contemplation. The instrument of the mind is as we would want it to be – sharp and focused, with no distractions. What better use can we put it to? 

The snake and the rope example is very famous in Vedanta.


Even while one mistakes a rope to be a snake, the fact remains that rope and snake are two different entities and are not the same.

Problem is there only when we seriously mistake a rope to be a snake and in such a situation, rope verily becomes a snake due to our misapprehension.

Let us suppose this snake to be our thoughts and our pure SELF, the ATMAN to be Rope and see the following

Snake is there (notion)
Rope is there.
Snake is not there (notion is removed)
Rope is there.

Similarly,

Thoughts come
SELF is there.
Thoughts go
SELF is there.

Thus, we conclude atleast intellectually that “I AM THE SELF and Not the thoughts that come and go”

Thus, we keep the mind thus engaged and reflecting on the Self within. By prolonged practice the individuality is bound to crack, dissolve and get destroyed. 

This is what the verse holds out to us. Destruction of the mind should not alarm us; it is not something to be feared. The aim is to destroy the restlessness of the mind, which has ever been the bane of all human drama. 

The Maharshi is quite firm on the matter that there is no other way to destroy the mind but the contemplation of the Self. This happens in all of the Yogas in their advanced stage. 

Anything else we do with the mind in Laya would return us to the same old ‘fool’s paradise that we are already in. That is not worth it. 

Love.