Verse 7
In all stages such as
childhood, etc; in all states such as waking, etc; and in all other conditions
also;
Through all these
constantly changing manifestations the feeling of “I am” persists,
Remaining ever as the
illuminating Presence within,
To that “Silent
Teacher”, the Revered Form of the Guru, do I offer my salutation; He is the
Revered Form of Sri Dakshinamurti!
This verse focuses
attention on the Atman, the Pure Consciousness within the individual, whose
Presence is there within us under all the varying conditions through which we
pass. It is present within from birth till death, and is there even beyond
them.
The Different Passing
States
Baalya Aadishu: “in childhood, etc”.
The states referred to here, occur over the whole life cycle. As we move on in
age, we pass certain identifiable stages.
The Charvakas, specialists as they are on the body, identify these as
babyhood (0-3 years), childhood (4-15 years), youth (16-30 years), adulthood
(31-45 years), middle age (46-60 years), seniors (61- 75 years) and old age
(76+ years). All these modifications are included under this category.
In each of these we feel
that we are the same person who has experienced all the stages. It does not change.
Through all changes in life, the Atman remains changeless.
Jaagrat Aadishu: “in waking, etc”.
The three states mentioned here – waking, dream and deep sleep – occur over a
daily time-cycle. There are some other states which we pass through as well. Moorcha (unconsciousness or coma) is one
of them.
Then we have sub-states
for each of these three states. In the waking state, there are walking,
talking, eating, drinking, working, playing, etc. In dream we can include day-dreaming
and ruminating. All these states are falsified because they come and go – i.e.
they are subject to Vyavrittan. As
one state passes, the next one is ushered in automatically.
Vyaavrittan: This is the constant change from one state to another that has just been described so thoroughly above. In the midst of all this change, there is something that remains ever constant. That is now described.
Aham Iti: “I am”. The sense of “I am” was mentioned in the last Pada under deep sleep to prove a point.
However, it is there in the other two states as well. This Pada cuts across the trend of the previous verse by introducing the
constant element in all our experiences, the “I”-sense in us.
Life gives us a clue as
to who we are in reality; the clue is available at every moment in life. If we
only pause and ponder over our past we will pick up the clue: No matter what
has changed in our life, no matter how old we have grown, no matter whether we
are waking, dreaming or fast asleep, it is the same person who is experiencing
all this.
And we can safely say
that it was the same person even in the previous life and the life before that;
and it will be the same person for the rest of this life and in all future
lives, too. There is no change in the real “I”; everything else may change, but
the sense of “I-ness” never changes at all, birth after birth.
This is the Truth being
held out in this verse. The Atman is birthless and deathless.
Here is another aspect
of Vyaavrittan. The mind can hold one
thing only at a time. As we call the name of one object, all others recede from
our conscious mind and only that one object comes forward.
Similarly, the three
states are also mutually exclusive; we can experience them only one at a time.
It is the same with childhood, youth, etc; again, we experience them in the
right sequence one at a time. So, they all fall into the same category – as
temporary states. However, the “I” is the same in them all.
This “I” is not the ego.
It is referring to the true self – Consciousness. It refers to the conscious
being.
The one who knows your
mind, your experiences now and the one who knew when you were one month old is
same. However, there seems to be discontinuity in life.
Your picture at the time
of one month old and now are quite different. Not just the body, but your mind,
emotions are all different. Yet you say that was you at the time of one month
old.
Body is not the same.
Mind is not the same. But you are the same person. What is it that persists
between one month old and who you are today?
The Consciousness by
which your one-month-old experience was known and the Consciousness by which
today’s experience is known, is the same.
There is experience even
in pre-natal state. It is still the same Consciousness due to which you know
the experience before and after the birth. Your memory would not recollect your
experience. But experience is present and because of Consciousness it is known
to you.
The three states of
consciousness and then the turiya,
the fourth state or in fact, the one state which illumines all the other three
states, is the core subject of Mandukya Upanishad.
A sage makes it
crystal clear when He says about the three states of consciousness in simple
equation
Waking state
= waker + Aham (Turiya)
Dream state = dreamer + Aham (Turiya)
Deep sleep state = Deep sleeper + Aham (Turiya)
Turiya = Transcendental state upon transcending the earlier 3
states.
Waker can never be a
dreamer or a sleeper at the same time, dreamer can never be a waker and/or a
deep sleeper at the same time, Deep sleeper can never be a waker and/or a dreamer
at the same time. But the one witness of all the three states exists in
all the three states.
Aham or Atman is the eternal witness in all three states of
consciousness, the one which is changeless, which is pure Chaitanya even when all the three states of consciousness
keep changing in a day/in all days.
Love.