Verse 15
In the brief exposition of Drik Drsya viveka 1st verse, we learnt various steps in the seer - seen, thus:-
Sarvendriyagunaabhaasam
Sarvendriyavivarjitam;
Asaktam
sarvabhricchaiva
Nirgunam
gunabhoktru cha.
Shining by the functions of all the senses, yet
without the senses; unattached, yet supporting all; devoid of qualities, yet
their experiencer.
Sarva indriya guṇā bhāsaṁ sarva indriya vivarjitam
That which we
cognize through the sense organs as objects of sense is also a manifestation of
this Brahman, conditioned by the sense organs.
But it is free
from all sense organs. It can be cast into the mold of sensory perception in
the form of objects, but it is not an object, because it has no relationship
with any sense organ.
Asaktaṁ: It has no relation to anything in the world.
Transcendent is the Reality.
Sarvabhṛc caiva: Though it is transcendent, it supports everything by also being
immanent at the same time.
Nirguṇaṁ guṇabhoktṛ ca: It has no quality by itself, because to say that a thing has quality
would be to compare it to something else.
It is blue, it is
red, it is tall, it is short—we cannot say anything about it because all these
definitions, all these descriptions, require a comparison of it with something
else; and because something else external to it does not exist, it cannot be
regarded as having any quality at all. Therefore, it is called nirguna.
Guṇabhoktṛ ca: But all qualities reside in it. Though it has no quality by itself,
whatever beauty we see, whatever color we see, whatever sound we hear, whatever
sensations we have, everything is on account of its existence.
Every kind of
statue can be found inside a block of stone, but actually there is no statue at
all inside a block of stone.
In the brief exposition of Drik Drsya viveka 1st verse, we learnt various steps in the seer - seen, thus:-
Seer/Illuminor Seen/illumined
|
Eyes/
senses - Objects
of world
|
Mind/Intellect - Eyes/senses
|
Consciousness - Mind/Intellect
|
And, consciousness is not illumined by any other
illumining power.
Thus, in the above flow, it can be understood
that it is consciousness, through intellect/mind, illumines senses.
However, Brahman/Consciousness is just a witness
and is not involved in any of the sense perceptions. This is what is emphasized
in this verse.
Verse 16
Bahirantashcha
bhootaanaam
Acharam
charameva cha;
Sookshmatwaat
tadavijneyam
Doorastham
chaantike cha tat.
Without and within (all) beings, the unmoving
and also the moving; because of His subtlety, unknowable; and near and far away
is That.
It is
everywhere—outside us, as well as inside us, like a pot that is sunk in the
ocean has water outside it as well as inside it.
This Brahman is
flooding us: inwardly as the Atman, and outwardly as Brahman.
Bahir antaś ca bhūtānām: Everywhere it is, outside and inside.
Acaraṁ: It does not shake or move; and it does not
fluctuate like the world of the three gunas.
Caram eva ca: It moves, and nobody can move faster than it;
and yet it is totally immovable. These are the tremendous contradictory
qualities of God. Nobody can be faster than He, nobody can be quicker in action
than He, and yet He does nothing; He is stable, remaining in His own
abode.
Sūkṣmatvāt tad avijñeyaṁ: Because of its subtlety, because it is subtler than even the mind,
subtler than even the intellect, it is impossible to know it through these
instruments of mind and intellect.
Dūrasthaṁ: It is very far. It looks as if it is
infinitely far away from us, beyond the stars, because we cannot see it
anywhere. We always imagine that the Supreme Being is very far away—many
millions of light years away—yet it is very near, in our throat itself.
Dūrasthaṁ cāntike ca tat: Nothing can be farther than That, because of its vastness and
infinitude; and nothing can be nearer than That, because it is the Selfhood of
all beings.
Love.
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