Saturday, January 12, 2019

Upadesa Saram - Post 20


Verse 17

मानसं तु किं मार्गणे कृते |
नैव मानसं मार्ग आर्जवात् ||

mānasa tu ki mārgae kte |
naiva mānasa mārga ārjavāt ||

What, then, is the mind? Upon seeking, there is not, indeed, the mind. This is the direct path.

The path of Jnana Yoga as described by Sri Ramana Maharshi is characterized by its directness of approach. To the great Maharshi, the straight route, being the shortest, was the preferred route. Here, in His characteristic fashion, He introduces and concludes the enquiry into the mind in the same sentence! 

All three paths discussed so far bring the mind into the focal point sooner or later during the progress of Sadhana. 

In Karma Yoga, Sadhana starts by performing actions with the right attitude so that clarity and purity of mind are brought about and eventually the Sadhaka has a clear and clean mind to deal with. 



In Bhakti Yoga, the starting point is external Pooja of an idol, which soon develops and brings the devotee to mental worship which we call Dhyana or meditation. Once in the mind, the Sadhana takes the course of going to subtler levels of the mind. 


And in Ashtanga Yoga, we see how the Yogi starts by attempting to bring his mind to the Laya state of blankness through control of the breath, so that from that state he can launch his practice of nullifying his negative tendencies (Vasanas) and begin to spend more time in Self-abidance. 

All three, in different ways, do more or less the same thing – they bring the mind to the centre stage of the Sadhana process. In Jnana Yoga, there is a completely different approach. It bears no resemblance to what has been attempted in these earlier Yogas. 



There is one very important precondition to this Yoga, and it is very significant. The seeker that starts this enquiry into Truth has to be a qualified person. 


He has to have that special quality of detachment, that spirit of bold enquiry which comes from courage to face oneself, a high degree of purity and capacity to remain an independent observer of himself.

Also, the student must approach a qualified Acharya, who has realized SELF and who can also teach the student clearly on enquiry of SELF. 

Enquiry about the mind

If the existence of mind is accepted, we get involved in a full-pronged attack on it. The mind is then seen as an ‘enemy’. Much effort goes in taming, inducing and coaxing it to change its ways; in quietening, purifying and subduing it to change its inherent nature. 

In Jnana Yoga, we do not question the mind. We only ask, “What is the mind?” We enquire deeply into its nature, its form, its status and its very existence. “Is it there?” 

In all other paths which we have covered, the existence of Mind is very much there. 

In Bhakti, we channelized our mind to God.

In Yoga, we destroyed our mind, though only temporarily. (Laya).

In Buddhism, mind is considered as unreal, Mithya but it does not reveal a reality clearly, if Mind is a Mithya. 

Now, let us see what Jnana yoga reveals to us about “Mind”.

Mind cannot be taken as real, because, it depends for its existence upon I, Awareness.

Nor can it be dispensed off totally as unreal because we know that it does exist. 

Therefore, Mind is an apparent mithya, available for various functions.

But is there anything prior to mind?? Is there anything that illumines the mind?? From where does this mind derive its “awareness” so as to function?

What causes this mind to function without which, the mind is as dead as a dead body??

With this thought, this enquiry, the mind disappears and the SELF, the I, the one who illumines the mind, stays and shines!!!

What remains is REAL. What disappears on enquiry is only APPARENT but not eternally real.

This is the discovery out of straight, direct enquiry into the nature of mind. Indirect enquiry does not help in this discovery.

In the path of Bhakti, you are channelizing your mind, which has been taken as so real, towards God. Please remember, unless you have become a Meera or a Tulsidas or a Kabir or a Tyagaraja and has dissolved yourself and merged in God, the mind, which was considered real and dangerous, is bound to bounce back with even more strength!!!

Whereas, in this royal path of Jnana yoga, by the direct enquiry as explained earlier and with a series of spiritual sessions rendered by a qualified Guru who has realized SELF, one gets into the depth of contemplation and then, as he advances in his spiritual sadhana, he is free from the agitations caused by the mind, he is free from the Vasanas which rules his mind, he is free from Raga and Dvesha, the monsters who rule the mind. 

So, in nutshell, he has conquered his mind and the mind can no more be a master, as he has mastered his mind, not for a day, not for a month, not for a year, but for eternity hereafter!

Let us conclude this verse with gem of wisdom emerging from Swami, during one of His discourses.

Swami says,


"Consider a cloth which has been made into a handkerchief. Its basis is cotton, which does not have any specific form. It may be considered as pure and unlimited. From this cotton, has come the threads. By joining the threads together a cloth has emerged. In the same way, from the pure and unlimited Atma the I-thought has emerged. From this, in turn, has come the mind. Therefore, your mind and the I have both originated from the pure, unlimited Divinity, the One Reality which is your true Self."


Love.