The goddess continued: — Objects seen in a dream prove to be false on being
awaken. Similarly, belief in the reality of the body becomes unfounded upon
dissolution of our desires. As a thing dreamt of disappears upon waking,
so does the waking body disappear in sleep, when desires lie dormant in the
soul.
As our physical bodies awake after dreaming and
desiring, so our spiritual bodies awake after we cease to think of our physical
states. In deep sleep we are devoid of desires. Similarly, in the state of
renunciation, even though we are awake in our physical bodies, we have the
tranquility of liberation. The desire of men liberated while living (jivan mukta) is not properly any desire
at all. It is a pure desire relating to universal wellbeing and happiness.
The embodied man whose life is freed from all
desires in this world is called the liberated while living (jivan mukta), a state unknown to those
who are not liberated. When the mind becomes a pure essence (as in
samadhi) and its desires are weakened, it becomes spiritualized (ativahika) and it glows and flows, like
snow melts to water by application of heat. The spiritualized mind, being awakened,
mixes with the holy spirits of departed souls in the other world.
When the moon of your intellectual knowledge
shines fully with its cooling beams, you shall have to leave your physical body
here in order to see the other worlds. Your fleshy body has no tangible
connection with one that is without flesh, nor can the intellectual body (lingadeha, astral body) perform any
action of the physical system.
I have told you all this according to my
best knowledge and the state of things as they are. Even children know that
what I say is as effective as the curse or blessing of a god.
The habitual reliance of men upon their gross
bodies and their fond attachment to them bind their souls down to the earth.
The weakening of earthly desires serves to clothe them with spiritual bodies.
Nobody believes that he has a spiritual body, even at his death bed, but
everyone thinks a dying man is dead with his body forever. This body however,
neither dies nor is it alive at any time. Both life and death, in all respects,
are mere appearances of aerial dreams and desires. The life and death of beings
here below are as false as the appearances and disappearance of people in
imagination, or dolls in play or puppet shows.
Leela said, “O goddess, the pure knowledge that
you have given me has fallen on my ears acts like a healing balm to the pain
caused by phenomena. Now tell me the name and nature of the practice for
spiritualization. How it is to be perfected and what is the end of such
perfection?”
The goddess replied:— Whatever a man attempts to
do here at anytime, he can hardly ever complete it without painful practice to
the utmost of his power. The wise say that practice consists in the association
of one thing with another, in understanding it thoroughly, and in devoting
oneself solely to his object.
Again, they are called the best practiced in
divine knowledge who, by the light of reasoning and scripture, are employed
preaching the absolute non-existence of any distinction between the knower and
what is known in this world. What some call practical knowledge is knowing that
nothing was produced in the beginning and nothing that is visible, such as this
world or one’s self, is true at any time.
The effect of practicing meditation is a strong
tendency of the soul towards the spirit of God, which results from an
understanding of the nonexistence of the visible world and the subsidence of
passions. But mere knowledge of the nonexistence of the world, without subduing
passions, is known as knowledge without practice, and is of no value to its
possessor. Consciousness of the nonexistence of the visible world is the
true knowledge of the knowable.
Valmiki speaking:— As the sage was lecturing in
this manner, the day departed for its evening service and led the assembled
train to their evening prayers. After the rising beams of the sun dispelled the
darkness of night, they met again with mutual greetings.
Love.
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