Monday, July 2, 2018

Atma Bodha - Post 48


Verse 38

विविक्तदेश आसीनो विरागो विजितेन्द्रियः
भावयेदेकमात्मानं तमनन्तमनन्यधीः ३८॥

VIVIKTA-DESHE AASEENAH
VIRAAGAH VIJITA INDRIYAH
BHAAVAYET EKAM AATMAANAM
TAM ANANTAM ANANYADHEEH

[Sitting in a solitary place, freeing the mind from desires, controlling the senses, meditate upon the One Self without a second, that boundless Being, with unswerving attention.]

This is the final lap of the journey. There is a fine distinction drawn between the various states of consciousness reached upon the end of Nididhyasana. If we take a magnifying glass and look at the actual ‘map’ of the area that is travelled, we will see in finer detail what is broadly termed Samadhi.

An acharya from Chinmaya mission takes an easy example to describe this verse, thus:-

There are distinct levels of Samadhi which may be identifiable to one who is a serious practitioner.  If we look at a map showing India, Mumbai may be represented only as a dot called ‘Mumbai’. If we magnify this map many times and look at Mumbai closely, we will see all the main routes into the city, the suburbs as we approach the city, and then finally the main railway station at which one has to get off. The word Samadhi is like Mumbai, and taking a closer look at it we identify many more details within the topic of Samadhi.

The two main distinctions are Savikalpa Samadhi and Nirvikalpa Samadhi. The former is a ‘suburb’ that we reach before the main station. It is the stage when the thoughts in the mind have been thinned out to a single thought. In Yoga this could be any thought, as long as it is a single thought. In Vedanta that single thought is called the Brahmakara Vritti, “I am Brahman”.

Savikalpa is also described as absorption of the mind while in meditation. It is like getting our first foot into the room of enlightenment. As one progresses further through the suburbs, one gets closer to the main Terminus which in Yoga is called Nirvikalpa Samadhi.

In this stage, the single thought is maintained without any effort even out of meditation, and continuously. It becomes the natural or Sahaja state in which one dwells at all times, without a break. That is the state of realization. 

Here in this verse, more advanced practice of meditation is prescribed for the person who wants to advance from the suburban station of Savikalpa Samadhi to the final main station of Nirvikalpa Samadhi.

More advanced practice means more intense and prolonged meditation with more concentration. At this stage, all actions have to be given up, and the senses have to be brought under 100% control. There should be zero disturbance. This is the zero-tolerance zone of perfection. Only under these conditions can one enter the non-dual state. The Four Obstacles in this Stage: 4 Ananyadheeh: “unswerving attention”.

An acharya identified four obstacles that arise to obstruct the meditator at this very advanced stage. They are, in the order that they appear as one gets closer to the goal:

i)           LayaSleep: the mind feels an irresistible urge to slip into sleep while meditating.
ii)        VikshepaRestlessness: the mind develops a tendency to suddenly revolt and become restless, despite all the Abhyasa up to this point. It is just its nature.
iii)    KashayaVeiling: the meditator confronts a ‘block’ of nothingness or darkness or a block of dirt Vasanas, beyond which he finds it impossible to go. It just stands there before him like an impenetrable wall. 
iv)     RasaswadaTaste of Bliss: when he does pierce this veil, the taste of the bliss is so great that he simply remains ‘locked’ in the enjoyment of that taste, and refuses to go further. The bliss of the state becomes an obstacle to move forward. This is just to give us, as students of Vedanta, some idea of what one is faced with at this penultimate stage of realization.

Love.



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