Friday, June 28, 2024

Vivekachudamani - Post 32

  Verse 26   


सर्वदा स्थापनं बुद्धेः शुद्धे ब्रह्मणि सर्वदा
तत्समाधानमित्युक्तं तु चित्तस्य लालनम् २६

sarvadā sthāpanaṃ buddheḥ śuddhe brahmaṇi sarvadā |
tatsamādhānamityuktaṃ na tu cittasya lālanam || 26 ||

 

(Samadhana (tranquillity) is that condition when the mind is constantly engaged in the total contemplation of the supreme Reality and it is not gained through any amount of intellectual oscillations.)

Samadhana is concentration of mind. Be attentive always on that which you are seeking.

 

Your eye is always on that, like the consciousness of a target of a bowman who strikes it with an arrow. Concentration is the consciousness inside, fixing itself with its attention on that which it wants. 

 

When you want a thing, why should you not be concentrating on it? 

People say, “I want a thing, but my mind cannot go there”.  The reason is that you are not really wanting it. 

If you really want the thing, the mind must go there; and when the mind is not going there, you are not really wanting it. Thus knowing, concentrate your mind.

 

A commentator while writing on Sri Sankaracharya's 'Atma-Anatma-Viveka' writes: 'Whenever the ears are engaged in sravana - hearing, and the mind wanders to any worldly object or desire, and finding it worthless, returns to the performance of the three exercises (Sravana, Mañana and Nidhidhyasana) - such returning is called Samadhana'.

 

The mind is free from anxiety amid pains. There is indifference amid pleasures. There is stability of mind or mental poise. The aspirant or practitioner lives without attachment. 

 

He neither likes nor dislikes, he has a great deal of strength of mind and inner peace, he has unruffled supreme peace of mind. 

 

Some aspirants have peace of mind when they live in seclusion, when there are no distracting elements or factors. They complain of great tossing of mind - vikshepa - when they come to a city, when they mix with people. They are completely upset. They cannot do any meditation in a crowded place.

This is a weakness. This is not achievement in Samadhana. There is no balance of mind or equanimity in these persons. 

 

Only when a student can keep his balance of mind, even in a battlefield when there is a shower of bullets all around, as he does in a solitary cave in the Himalayas, can he be really said to be fully established in Samadhana.

 


Lord Krishna says in the Gita:

'Perform all actions, O Dhananjaya, dwelling in union with the Divine, renouncing attachments, and balanced evenly in success and failure.'

This is Samadhana. 

Again you will find in the Gita: 

'The disciplined Self, moving among the sense objects with senses freed from attraction and repulsion, Mastered by the Self, goeth to peace.'

This is also Samadhana.

Samadhana, as it is understood today, is an indifferent attitude towards both good and bad, especially towards insults and failures, threats and despairs. It is believed that samadhana is the mental attitude of an individual who has completely hardened himself and has grown to be insensible to the lashes of failures and the arrows of insult. 

 

Love.

 

 


Tuesday, June 25, 2024

Vivekachudamani - Post 31

  Verse 25   


शास्त्रस्य गुरुवाक्यस्य सत्यबुद्ध्यवधारणम्
सा श्रद्धा कथिता सद्भिर्यया वस्तूपलभ्यते २५


śāstrasya guruvākyasya satyabuddhyavadhāraṇam |
sā śraddhā kathitā sadbhiryayā vastūpalabhyate || 25 ||


(That by which one understands the exact import of the scriptures as well as the pregnant words of advice of the preceptor is called 'sraddha ' by the wise, by this alone does Reality become manifestly clear.) 

 

Sraddha is the fifth of the qualifications found necessary in an aspirant. Perhaps no other spiritual term has been so badly mauled by the priest class and so profitably polluted by the laity in Hinduism. 

 

Shraddha is the faith in that which you are asking for. You should not go to God with a doubt whether He is, or He is not. “O God, if you are there, please come”. He is certainly there. “God is certainly there. 

 

It is certain that I am going to attain it. It is certain that the method I am adopting is correct. It is certain that I am progressing every day. I have symptoms and experiences which tell me that I am progressing every day”. 

 

Shraddha is faith in your own self first, faith in the method of practice which you are adopting, faith in your Guru who has initiated you, and faith in the existence of God.

 

Faith in God/SELF is the first step to God/Self-realization. Not an iota of progress is ever possible in the path of spirituality without faith. The faith must be a living faith. It must be unwavering faith. Lack of faith is a stumbling block in the path of realization.

 

Faith is one of the important items in the Shad Sampat or six fold virtues of the four means of salvation or Sadhana Chatushtaya in the path of Jnana.

 

Even Patanjali Maharshi, the exponent of Raja Yoga philosophy lays much stress on faith. He says: 

 

"Shraddha veerya smriti samadhi prajna - purvaka itaresham"

 

To others (this Samadhi) comes through faith, energy, memory, concentration and discrimination of the real.)

 

He has placed Shraddha (faith) in the very beginning of this Sutra. He has given prominence to this. If a man has faith, then energy, memory etc, come by themselves. 

 

Faith can work miracles. Faith can work wonders. Faith can move mountains. Faith can reach a realm where reason dare not enter. There is nothing impossible under the sun for the man of faith to accomplish.

 

In the path of wisdom, Shraddha is faith in our Srutis, faith in the need for acquiring the four qualifications itself, faith and surrender to the Guru who is to impart Brahma Jnana to you and faith in God without whose grace, nothing is possible at all. 


How a disciple/spiritual seeker expresses his Shraddha to Guru, Srutis and God?

 

To the Guru: “O Guru, I trust your nobility; I see your nobility; I see your utter selflessness, the compassion with which you share your knowledge. I am eternally indebted to you, and forever I shall serve you. I do not know whether I deserve this or not – I don’t know... probably I don’t, but still, somehow, in your heart has come compassion for me. I know not why. I am eternally grateful to you, my Guru. I know that you will take me to the Supreme Truth. Please do use me forever.” 

 

Towards the Scriptures: “O Mother Sruti! How many people you have liberated by your blessed words! By your pure wisdom, how many saints have crossed the ocean of Samsara!

 

As my Guru remains yours, won’t you help me? Aren’t you my Mother? You protect those who follow you. Help me follow you implicitly. There are many things what you say that I don’t understand, but I know that a mother cooks food and gives it to her child, and the child takes that food without a doubt, feeling, “Yes, what my mother has given is good for me.” 

 

In the same way, let me take your words, relish them in my heart, live my life according to your dictates, and let me be blessed like how the saints of yore have been blessed.” 

 

Towards Easwara: “O Lord, the Master of the whole Universe! O Lord, the Governor of the whole Cosmos, whom I do not see, but, Lord, who in every instant of my life comes forward and guides me, helps me and takes me forward!


 

Forever clear my path that I may walk in peace. Show me my way. Give me faith in my Guru, and give me faith in the Shastras, for it is you who gives faith. Make my heart pure, so that I may receive the knowledge that my Guru gives. Make me adorned with Sadhana Chatushtaya. Please ensure that my Guru forgives my trespasses.”


Indeed, this is an essential requisite for anyone trying to master the truths of the scriptures. The scriptures give us, through a technique of suggestions, as clear a description of the infinite Truth as is possible through finite sounds and words. 


As such, the pure Consciousness which is the core of Reality cannot be defined or expressed in words and this supreme point of human evolution can only be indicated by the scriptures. 


So, an honest and sincere effort on the part of the readers and students is absolutely necessary if the words indicating the Truth are to be correctly interpreted, understood and efficiently made use of. This capacity through effort to realize the words of the scriptures in all their suggestiveness is termed as 'sraddha'. 

 

Love.

 

 


Saturday, June 22, 2024

Vivekachudamani - Post 30

  Verse 24     

सहनं सर्वदुःखानामप्रतीकारपूर्वकम्
चिन्ताविलापरहितं सा तितिक्षा निगद्यते २४

sahanaṃ sarvaduḥkhānāmapratīkārapūrvakam |
cintāvilāparahitaṃ sā titikṣā nigadyate || 24 ||

 

(Titiksa is the capacity to endure all sorrows and sufferings without struggling for redress or for revenge, being always free from anxiety or lament over them).

 


Describing the fourth psychological qualification in a man of true spiritual stamina, Sankara gives a full and scientific definition of the quality of silent endurance which is glorified in all the religions of the world. 


Meek surrender and silent suffering are the watchwords in all religious disciplines. This quality to endure and to suffer for a cause which has been accepted by the individual as the ideal and the perfect, finds a place in every great philosophy whether it is religious or secular. 

 

In Tatva Bodha, titika was defined as Sheeta ushna sukha dukhadi sahisnutvam. In simple language, titika means endurance power; the capacity to endure pain without breaking down. That endurance, physical; more than physical, it is mental is called titika; sarva dukhanam sahanam. 

 

Sahanam means endurance; endurance of all kinds of discomfort caused by adyatimikam, adiboudikam; the surrounding, caused by adidevikam, like the rain; how you all have got the endurance power to come in spite of rains; that is called titika.

 

At the body level, the content of the hardship is predominantly bodily discomfort and pain. The cause of this discomfort and pain is largely some external factor which we have little control over. It may be unbearable weather, either too hot or too cold; 

 

It may be deprivation of basic creature comforts due to poverty or natural calamities; it may even be living in unavoidable conditions of squalor, imprisonment or rampant crime. Whatever it may be, there is little we can do about it other than “bite our teeth and bear it”.

 

Physically, it is not possible to have all the ideal conditions. Nature gives us a “package deal” of mixed conditions, both favorable and unfavorable, wherever we may be. We can safely say that there isn’t a place on earth where everything will be perfect.

 

“What cannot be cured, has to be endured.” We should not run after ideal conditions. The conditions we live in are determined by our Karma, our Paapa and Punya. So we just have to be stoical and bear external hardships.

When Krishna displayed His divine Resplendence to Arjuna, He speaks of Himself as the Creator, the Preserver, the Gods and Seers, the illumination, strength, fame, prosperity, intelligence, receptivity, firmness, determination, the imperishable Time, all the positive forces in manifestation, 

 



He also made it clear that He also is the rod that chastises, Vasuki among serpents, Ananta among the nagas, Prahlada among the daityas, deceit in gambling, the terminator and destroyer, the rod that chastises, the all-devouring death and the World destroying Time, with terrible form touching sky, blazing with colours, with eyes glowing bight, with mouth wide open, terrible with tusks, where hosts of warriors seem to enter, some even caught between the teeth, the three worlds tremble, lack of receptivity, the illusion that conceals, bewilders, deceives, as gambling. There is nothing in creation which does not have stamp of his authority and control. 

 

Therefore, for one who is aware of the universal and all-pervading nature of the Divinity there is nothing that needs to be rejected and everything to be understood in the right perspective. He accepts things without preferring or denying, without liking or disliking without choosing and selecting as the sign of detachment from duality in samsara. 

 

In awareness, there is neither good nor bad, neither noble nor ignoble. 

 

Therefore, Krishna tells that the one who is equal to friends and foes, to honor and dishonor, to cold and the heat, who free from attachment is same in pleasure and pains, silent in speech content with everything, having no fixed attachment to any abiding place, firm in mind, that man being devoted is dear to Him.

 

Love.