Yoga Vasishta Sara
Yoga Vasishta Sara
[The Essence Of Yoga Vasishta]
An English Translation from the Sanskrit Original
Published by Sri Ramanasramam
E-Text Source: archive.org
CONTENTS
Preface
Introduction
1. Dispassion
2. Unreality Of The World
3. The Marks Of A Liberated Person
4. Dissolution Of The Mind
5. The Destruction Of Latent Impressions
6. Meditation On The Self
7. Method Of Purification
8. Worship Of The Self
9. Exposition Of The Self
10. Nirvana
PREFACE
This English version of the Yoga Vasishta Sara is based on a
translation made by Swami Sureshananda, an old devotee of
Bhagavan, who has founded an ashram named ‘Vijnana Ramaneeyam’ at
Palghat and has translated several works of Bhagavan as well as
the Yoga Vasishta Sara into Malayalam. This was published serially
in The Mountain Path, the journal published by Sri Ramanasramam,
during 1969 to 1971 and is now issued in the form of a book for
facility of reference.
V. S. Ramanan, President, Sri Ramanasramam
15th July, 1973 [Guru-Poornima]
INTRODUCTION
The Brihat (the great) Yoga Vasishta or Yoga Vasishta Maha
Ramayana as it is also called, is a work of about 32,000 Sanskrit
couplets, traditionally attributed to Valmiki, the author of
Srimad Ramayana. It is a dialogue between Sage Vasishta and Sri
Rama, during which Advaita (the doctrine of non-duality) in its
pure form of ajatavada (theory of nonorigination) is expounded,
with illustrative stories in between.
This vast work was abridged some centuries ago by Abhinanda
Pandita, a Kashmiri scholar, into 6,000 couplets, which go by the
name of Laghu Yoga Vasishta. This is a masterpiece in itself, like
the original Brihat.
Bhagavan Sri Ramana Maharshi used to refer to Yoga Vasishta
frequently and has even incorporated six couplets from it in His
Supplement to Forty Verses (verses 21 to 27). A further
condensation of this work was made long ago, by an unknown author,
into about 230 couplets, divided into ten chapters, as Yoga
Vasishta Sara (Essence of Yoga Vasishta), of which this
translation is presented for the first time. By making this
condensation the author has rendered a great service to all
sadhaks. This is indeed a goldmine fit for repeated reading and
meditation.
Note: An English translation of the Brihat Yoga Vasishta by Vihari
Lal Mitra is out of print. Translation of Laghu Yoga Vasishta by
K. Narayanaswamy Iyer is available from the Theosophical
Publishing House, Madras-20.
Publisher
CHAPTER ONE
DISPASSION
1. Salutations to that calm effulgence which is endless and
unlimited by space, time etc., the pure consciousness which can be
known by experience only.
2. Neither one who is totally ignorant nor one who knows it (i.e.
Truth) is eligible to study this book. Only he who thinks ‘I am
bound; I must become free’ is entitled to study it.
3. Until one is definitely blessed by the Supreme Lord he will not
find either a proper Guru or the right scripture.
4. Just as a steady boat, O Rama, is obtained from a boatman, so
also the method of crossing the ocean of samsara is learnt by
associating with great souls.
5. The great remedy for the long-lasting disease of samsara is the
enquiry, ‘Who am I?, to whom does this samsara belong?,’ which
entirely cures it.
6. Not a day should be spent in a place which does not possess the
tree of a wise knower of Truth with its good fruit and cool shade.
7. The sages are to be approached even if they do not teach. Even
their talks in a light vein contain wisdom.
8. The company of sages converts emptiness into fullness, death
into immortality and adversity into prosperity.
9. If sages were concerned solely with their own happiness with
whom could those tormented by the sorrows of samsara seek refuge?
10. That which is imparted, O good soul, to a worthy disciple who
has become dispassionate, is the real wisdom; it is the real
purport of the sacred texts and is also the comprehensive wisdom.
11. Following the customary method of teaching is only for
preserving the tradition. Pure awareness results solely from the
clarity of the disciple’s understanding.
12. The Lord cannot be seen with the help of the sacred texts or
the Guru. The self is seen by the Self alone with the pure
intellect.
13. All the arts acquired by men are lost by lack of practice, but
this art of wisdom grows steadily once it rises.
14. Just as an ornament worn round the neck is considered lost
through forgetfulness and is gained when the mistake is realized,
so also the Self is attained (when the delusion is removed) by the
words of the Guru.
15. He is indeed an unfortunate person who, not knowing his own
Self, takes pleasure in sense-objects, like one who realizes too
late that the food eaten by him was poisonous.
16. That perverted man who, even after knowing that worldly
objects are deceptive, still thinks of them, is an ass not a man.
17. Even the slightest thought immerses a man in sorrow; when
devoid of all thoughts he enjoys imperishable bliss.
18. Just as we experience the delusion of hundreds of years in a
dream lasting an hour, so also we experience the sport of maya in
our waking state.
19. He is a happy man whose mind is inwardly cool and free from
attachment and hatred and who looks upon this (world) like a mere
spectator.
20. He who has understood well how to abandon all ideas of
acceptance and rejection and who has realized the consciousness
which is within the innermost heart — his life is illustrious.
21. On the dissolution of the body, the ether (consciousness)
limited by the heart (hridayam) alone ceases to exist. People
lament needlessly that the Self is extinct.
22. When pots, etc. are broken the space within them becomes
unlimited. So also when bodies cease to exist the Self remains
eternal and unattached.
23. Nothing whatever is born or dies anywhere at any time. It is
Brahman alone appearing illusorily in the form of the world.
24. The Self is more extensive than space; it is pure, subtle,
undecaying and auspicious. As such how could it be born and how
can it die?
25. All this is the tranquil, One without beginning, middle or
end, which cannot be said to be existent or non-existent. Know
this and be happy.
26. O Rama, it is indeed nobler to wander begging about the
streets of the outcasts (chandalas), an earthen bowl in hand, than
to live a life steeped in ignorance. 27. Neither disease nor
poison nor adversity nor any other thing in the world causes more
suffering to men than such stupidity engendered in their bodies.
CHAPTER TWO
UNREALITY OF THE WORLD
1. Just as the great ocean of milk became still when the Mandara
Mountain (with which it was churned by the Devas and the Asuras)
became still, even so the illusion of samsara comes to an end when
the mind is stilled.
2. Samsara rises when the mind becomes active and ceases when it
is still. Still the mind, therefore, by controlling the breath and
the latent desires (vasanas).
3. This worthless (lit. burnt out) samsara is born of one’s
imagination and vanishes in the absence of imagination. It is
certain that it is absolutely unsubstantial.
4. The idea of a (live) snake in a picture of a snake ceases to be
entertained when the truth is known. Similarly samsara ceases to
exist (when the Truth is realized), even if it continues to
appear.
5. This long-living ghost of a samsara which is the creation of
the deluded mind of man and the cause of his sufferings disappears
when one ponders over it.
6. O Rama, maya is such that it brings delight through its own
destruction; its nature is inscrutable; it ceases to exist even
while it is being observed.
7. Dear boy, wonderful indeed is this maya which deludes the
entire world. It is on account of it that the Self is not
perceived even though it pervades all the limbs of the body.
8. Whatever is seen does not truly exist. It is like the mythical
city of Gandharvas (fata morgana) or a mirage.
9. That which is not seen, though within us, is called the eternal
and indestructible Self.
10. Just as the trees on the bank of a lake are reflected in the
water, so also all these varied objects are reflected in the vast
mirror of our consciousness.
11. This creation, which is a mere play of consciousness, rises
up, like the delusion of a snake in a rope (when there is
ignorance) and comes to an end when there is right knowledge.
12. Even though bondage does not really exist, it becomes strong
through desire for worldly enjoyments; when this desire subsides
bondage becomes weak.
13. Like waves rising up from the ocean the unstable mind rises
out of the vast and stable expanse of the Supreme Self.
14. It is because of that which always, of its own accord,
imagines (everything) quickly and freely that this magical show
(of the world) is projected in the waking state.
15. This world, though unreal, appears to exist and is the cause
of life-long suffering to an ignorant person, just as a
(non-existent) ghost (is the cause of fear) to a boy.
16. One who has no idea of gold sees only the bracelet. He does
not at all have the idea that it is merely gold.
17. Similarly towns, houses, mountains, serpents, etc. are all in
the eyes of the ignorant man, separate objects. From the absolute
point of view; this objective (world) is the subject (the Self)
itself; it is not separate (from the Self).
18. The world is full of misery to an ignorant man and full of
bliss to a wise man. The world is dark to a blind man and bright
to one who has eyes.
19. The bliss of a man of discrimination, who has rejected samsara
and discarded all mental concepts, constantly increases.
20. Like clouds which suddenly appear in a clear sky and as
suddenly dissolve, the entire universe (appears) in the Self and
(dissolves in it).
21. He who reckons the rays as non-different from the sun and
realizes that they are the sun itself is stated to be nirvikalpa
(the undifferentiating man).
22. Just as the cloth, when investigated, is seen to be nothing
but thread, so also this world, when enquired into, is (seen to
be) merely the Self.
23. This fascinating world rises like a wave in the ambrosial
ocean of consciousness and dissolves in it. How then can it be
different from it (i.e. consciousness) in the middle (i.e. when it
appears)?
24. Just as the foam, the waves, the dew and the bubbles are not
different from water, even so this world which has come out of the
Self is not different from the Self.
25. Just as a tree consisting of fruits, leaves, creepers,
flowers, branches, twigs and roots, exists in the seed of the
tree, even so this manifest world exists in Brahman.
26. Just as the pot (ultimately) goes back to mud, waves into
water and ornaments into gold, so also this world which has come
out of the Self (ultimately) goes back to the Self.
27. The snake appears when one does not recognise the rope; it
disappears when one recognises the rope. Even so this world
appears when the Self is not recognised; it disappears when the
Self is recognised.
28. It is only our forgetfulness of the invisible Self which
causes the world to appear just as (the ignorance of the) rope
(causes the) snake to appear.
29. Just as the dream becomes unreal in the waking state and the
waking state in the dream, so also death becomes unreal in birth
and birth in death.
30. All these are thus neither real nor unreal. They are the
effect of delusion, mere impressions arising out of some past
experiences.
CHAPTER THREE
THE MARKS OF A LIBERATED PERSON (JIVAN MUKTA)
1. The knowledge of the Self is the fire that burns up the dry
grass of desire. This indeed is what is called samadhi, not mere
abstention from speech.
2. He who realizes that the whole universe is really nothing but
consciousness and remains quite calm is protected by the armour of
Brahman; he is happy.
3. The yogi who has attained the state which is beyond everything
and remains always cool as the full moon is truly the Supreme
Lord.
4. He who reflects in his innermost heart upon the purport of the
Upanishads dealing with Brahman and is not moved by joy and
sorrow, is not tormented by samsara.
5. Just as birds and beasts do not take shelter on a mountain on
fire, so also evil (thoughts) never occur to a knower of Brahman.
6. Wise men also, like foolish men, (occasionally) make others
angry, (but they do so only) in order to test their ability to
control their innate feelings (that is to say to see how far the
anger of other persons will affect them).
7. Just as the trembling (of the body) caused by the (imaginary)
snake persists (for some time) even after realising that there is
no snake, so also the effect of delusion persists (for some time)
even after getting rid of all delusions.
8. Just as a crystal is not stained by what is reflected in it, so
also a knower of truth is not really affected by the result of his
acts.
9. Even while he is intent on outward actions (the knower of
Truth) always remains introverted and extremely calm like one
asleep.
10. Firmly convinced of non-duality and enjoying perfect mental
peace, yogis go about their work seeing the world as if it were a
dream.
11. Let death come to him (the knower of truth) today or at the
end of aeons; he remains untarnished like gold buried in mire.
12. He may cast off his body at Kashi or in the house of an
outcaste (lit. one who cooks dog’s flesh). He, the desireless one,
is liberated at the very moment he attains knowledge (of Brahman).
13. To one who is desireless, the earth, O Rama, is (as
insignificant as) the hoof-print of a cow, Mount Meru, a mound,
space as much as contained in a casket and the three worlds a
blade of grass.
14. Like an empty vessel in space (the knower of Truth) is empty
both within and without, while at the same time he is full within
and without like a vessel immersed in the ocean.
15. He who neither likes nor dislikes the objects seen by him and
who acts (in the world) like one asleep, is said to be a liberated
person.
16. He who is free from the knots (of desires) and whose doubts
have been set at rest is liberated even when he is in the body
(jivan mukta). Although he may seem to be bound, he is free. He
remains like a lamp in a picture.
17. He who has easily (lit. as if in sport) cast off all his
egoistic tendencies and has abandoned even the object of
meditation, is said to be liberated even when he is in the body.
18. He who does not, like one blind, recognise (lit. leaves far
behind) his relatives, who dreads attachment as he would a
serpent, who looks upon sense-enjoyments and diseases alike, who
disregards the company of women as he would a blade of grass and
who finds no distinction between a friend and a foe, experiences
happiness in this world and the next.
19. He who casts away from his mind all objects of perception and,
attaining perfect quiescence, remains still as space, unaffected
by sorrow, is a liberated man; he is the Supreme Lord.
20. The noble-hearted man whose desires of the heart have come to
an end is a liberated man; it does not matter whether he does or
does not practise meditation or perform action.
21. The idea of Self in the non-Self is bondage. Abandonment of it
is liberation. There is neither bondage nor liberation for the
ever-free Self.
22. If, by perceiving that the objects of perception do not really
exist, the mind is completely freed (from those objects) there
ensues the supreme bliss of liberation.
23. Abandonment of all latent tendencies is said to be the best
(i.e. real) liberation by the wise; that is also the faultless
method (of attaining liberation).
24. Liberation is not on the other side of the sky, nor is it in
the nether world, nor on the earth; the extinction of the mind
resulting from the eradication of all desires is regarded as
liberation.
25. O Rama, there is no intellect, no nescience, no mind and no
individual soul (jiva). They are all imagined in Brahman.
26. To one who is established in what is infinite, pure
consciousness, bliss and unqualified non-duality, where is the
question of bondage or liberation, seeing that there is no second
entity?
27. O Rama, the mind has, by its own activity, bound itself; when
it is calm it is free.
CHAPTER FOUR
DISSOLUTION OF THE MIND
1. Consciousness which is undivided imagines to itself desirable
objects and runs after them. It is then known as the mind.
2. From this omnipresent and omnipotent Supreme Lord arose, like
ripples in water, the power of imagining separate objects.
3. Just as fire born out of wind (fanned into a flame) is
extinguished by the same wind, so also that which is born of
imagination is destroyed by imagination itself.
4. The mind has come into existence through this (imagination) on
account of forgetfulness. Like the experience of one’s own death
in a dream it ceases to exist when scrutinised.
5. The idea of Self in what is not the Self is due to incorrect
understanding. The idea of reality in what is unreal, O Rama, know
that to be the mind (chittam).
6. ‘This is he’, ‘I am this’, ‘That is mine’, such (ideas)
constitute the mind; it disappears when one ponders over these
false ideas.
7. It is the nature of the mind to accept certain things and to
reject others; this is bondage, nothing else.
8. The mind is the creator of the world, the mind is the
individual (purusha); only that which is done by the mind is
regarded as done, not that which is done by the body. The arm with
which one embraces the wife is the very arm with which one
embraces the daughter.
9. The mind is the cause of (i.e. produces) the objects of
perception. The three worlds depend upon it. When it is dissolved
the world is also dissolved. It is to be cured (i.e. purified)
with effort.
10. The mind is bound by the latent impressions (vasanas). When
there are no impressions it is free. Therefore, O Rama, bring
about quickly, through discrimination, the state in which there
are no impressions.
11. Just as a streak of cloud stains (i.e. appears to stain) the
moon or a blotch of ink a lime-plastered wall, so also the evil
spirit of desire stains the inner man.
12. O Rama, he who, with in-turned mind, offers all the three
worlds, like dried-grass, as an oblation in the fire of knowledge,
becomes free from the illusions of the mind.
13. When one knows the real truth about acceptance and rejection
and does not think of anything but abides in himself, abandoning
everything, (his) mind does not come into existence.
14. The mind is terrible (ghoram) in the waking state, gentle
(santam) in the dream state, dull (mudham) in deep sleep and dead
when not in any of these three states.
15. Just as the powder of the kataka seed, after precipitating the
dirt in water, becomes merged in the water, so also the mind
(after removing all impressions) itself becomes merged (in the
Self ).
16. The mind is samsara; the mind is also said to be bondage; the
body is activated by the mind just as a tree is shaken by the
wind.
17. Conquer your mind first, by pressing the palm with the palm,
grinding the teeth with the teeth and twisting the limbs with the
limbs.
18. Does not the fool feel ashamed to move about in the world as
he pleases and talk about meditation when he is not able to
conquer even the mind?
19. The only god to be conquered is the mind. Its conquest leads
to the attainment of everything. Without its conquest all other
efforts are fruitless.
20. To be unperturbed is the foundation of blessedness (Sri). One
attains liberation by it. To human beings even the conquest of the
three worlds, without the conquest of the mind, is as
insignificant as a blade of grass.
21. Association with the wise, abandonment of latent impressions,
self-enquiry, control of breathing — these are the means of
conquering the mind.
22. To one who is shod with leather the earth is as good as
covered with leather. Even so to the mind which is full (i.e.
undivided) the world overflows with nectar.
23. The mind becomes bound by thinking ‘I am not Brahman’; it
becomes completely released by thinking ‘I am Brahman’.
24. When the mind is abandoned (i.e. dissolves), everything that
is dual or single is dissolved. What remains after that is the
Supreme Brahman, peaceful, eternal and free from misery.
25. There is nothing to equal the supreme joy felt by a person of
pure mind who has attained the state of pure consciousness and
overcome death.
CHAPTER FIVE
THE DESTRUCTION OF LATENT IMPRESSIONS
1. O Rama, this enquiry into the Self of the nature or ‘Who am I?’
is the fire which burns up the seeds of the evil tree which is the
mind.
2. Just as the wind does not affect the creepers in a picture, so
also afflictions do not affect one whose understanding is
fortified by firmness and (always) reflected in the mirror of
enquiry.
3. The knowers of truth declare that enquiry into the truth of the
Self is knowledge. What is to be known is contained in it like
sweetness in milk.
4. To one who has realized the Self by enquiry Brahma, Vishnu and
Shiva are objects of compassion.
5. To one who is fond of enquiring (constantly), ‘What is this
vast universe?’ and ‘Who am I?’ this world becomes quite unreal.
6. Just as in a mirage the idea of water does not occur to one who
knows (that it is a mirage), even so latent impressions do not
rise in one whose ignorance has been destroyed by realizing that
everything is Brahman.
7. By the abandonment of latent impressions or by the control of
breathing, mind ceases to be the mind. Practise whichever you
like.
8. O pure soul, cherish the association of sages and the true
scriptures; you will attain the state of Supreme Consciousness not
in the course of months but days.
9. Latent impressions cease to be active when one associates with
sages, discards all thoughts of samsara and remembers that the
body has to die.
10. O Raghava, even ignorant persons convert, by the firmness of
their conviction, poison into nectar and nectar into poison.
11. When this body is taken to be real it serves the purpose of a
body, but when it is seen to be unreal it becomes like space (i.e.
unsubstantial).
12. O Rama, while lying on a soft bed you wander about in all
directions with a dream body; but now (in this waking state) where
is that body?
13. Just as a respectable man avoids contact with an outcast woman
carrying dog’s flesh, so also one should discard the thought
‘I-am-the-body’, even if everything were to be lost.
14. When the aspirant (sadhu) thinks only of Brahman and remains
calm and free from sorrows his egoity dies of itself.
15. If one realizes the unity of things everywhere, one always
remains tranquil, inwardly cool and pure like space without the
sense of ‘I’.
16. If inwardly one is cool the whole world will be cool, but if
inwardly one is hot (i.e. agitated) the whole world will be a
burning mass.
CHAPTER SIX
MEDITATION ON THE SELF
1. I, the pure, stainless and infinite Consciousness beyond maya,
look upon this body in action like the body of another.
2. The mind, the intellect, the senses, etc. are all the play of
Consciousness. They are unreal and seem to exist only due to lack
of insight.
3. Unmoved by adversity, a friend of all the world in prosperity,
without ideas of existence and nonexistence, I live free from
misery.
4. Inactive am I, desireless, clear as the sky, free from
hankering, tranquil, formless, everlasting and unmoving.
5. I have now clearly understood that the five elements, the three
worlds and I myself are pure Consciousness.
6. I am above everything; I am present everywhere; I am like
space; I am that which (really) exists; I am unable to say
anything beyond this.
7. Let imaginary waves of universe rise or fall in me who am the
ocean of infinite Consciousness; there is no increase or decrease
in me.
8. How wonderful that in me, the infinite ocean of consciousness,
waves of jivas (individual souls) rise, sport for a while and
disappear according to their nature.
9. The world which has come into existence on account of my
ignorance has dissolved likewise in me. I now directly experience
the world as supreme bliss of consciousness.
10. I prostrate to myself who am within all beings, the ever-free
Self abiding as inner Consciousness.
CHAPTER SEVEN
METHOD OF PURIFICATION
1. O Raghava, be outwardly active but inwardly inactive, outwardly
a doer but inwardly a non-doer, and thus play your part in the
world.
2. O Raghava, abandon all desires inwardly, be free from
attachments and latent impressions, do everything outwardly and
thus play your part in the world.
3. O Raghava, adopt a comprehensive view, characterised by the
abandonment of all objects of contemplation, live in your innate
Self, liberated even while alive (jivan-mukta), and thus play your
part in the world.
4. Burn the forest of duality with the fire of the conviction, ‘I
am the one pure Consciousness’ and remain happy.
5. You are bound firmly on all sides by the idea, I am the body’.
Cut that bond by the sword of knowledge ‘I am Consciousness’ and
be happy.
6. Discarding the attachment to non-Self, regarding the world as a
partless (whole), concentrated and with attention turned inward,
remain as pure Consciousness.
7. Remain always as pure Consciousness which is your constant
(i.e. true) nature beyond the states of waking, dream and deep
sleep.
8. O mighty-armed, be always free from mental concepts like the
heart of a rock though not insentient like it.
9. Do not be that which is understood, nor the one who
understands. Abandon all concepts and remain what you are.
10. Eliminate one concept by another and the mind by the mind and
abide in the Self. Is this so difficult, O holy man?
11. Sever the mind, which has on account of its cares become red
hot, with the mind which is like iron sharpened by the study of
scriptures.
12. O Raghava, what have you to do with this inert and dumb body?
Why do you feel helpless and miserable by joys and sorrows on
account of it?
13. What a vast difference between the flesh, blood, etc.
(composing the body) and you, the embodiment of consciousness!
Even after knowing this why do you not abandon the idea of Self in
this body?
14. The mere knowledge that this body is like a piece of wood or a
clod of earth enables one to realize the Supreme Self.
15. How strange that, while the real Brahman is forgotten by men,
the unreal called avidya (nescience) appears very real to them
(lit. struts about before them).
16. It is again strange that while the Supreme Brahman is
forgotten by men, the idea ‘this is mine’ called avidya is firmly
held by them (lit. strongly confronts them).
17. When you do your work do it without attachment even as a
crystal which reflects the objects before it (but is not affected
by them).
18. The conviction that everything is Brahman leads one to
Liberation. Therefore reject entirely the idea of duality which is
ignorance. Reject it entirely.
CHAPTER EIGHT
WORSHIP OF THE SELF
1. If you separate yourself from the body and abide at ease in
Consciousness you will become one (the sole Reality), everything
else appearing (insignificant) like grass.
2. After knowing that by which you know this (world) turn the mind
inward and then you will see clearly (i.e. realize) the effulgence
of the Self.
3. O Raghava, that by which you recognise sound, taste, form and
smell, know that as your Self, the Supreme Brahman, the Lord of
lords.
4. O Raghava, that in which beings vibrate, that which creates
them, know that Self to be your real Self.
5. After rejecting, through reasoning, all that can be known as
‘non-truth’ what remains as pure Consciousness — regard that as
your real Self.
6. Knowledge is not separate from you and that which is known is
not separate from knowledge. Hence there is nothing other than the
Self, nothing separate (from it).
7. ‘All that Brahma, Vishnu, Shiva, Indra and others always do is
done by me, the embodiment of Consciousness’ — think in this
manner.
8. ‘I am the whole universe. I am the undecaying Supreme Self.
There is neither past nor future apart from me’ — reflect in this
manner.
9. ‘Everything is the One Brahman, pure Consciousness, the Self of
all, indivisible and immutable’ reflect in this manner.
10. ‘There is neither I nor any other thing. Only Brahman exists
always full of bliss everywhere.’ — meditate on this calmly.
11. The sense of perceiver and perceived is common to all embodied
beings, but the Yogi worships the One Self.
CHAPTER NINE
EXPOSITION OF THE SELF
1. When this assemblage of body, senses, etc. acts of its own
accord there arises an idea ‘I am this.’ This is the jiva (ego)
stained by the dirt of ignorance.
2. When the conviction that everything is the space-like (i.e. all
pervasive) Consciousness becomes firm the jiva comes to an end
like a lamp without oil.
3. Like a misguided Brahmin, who abandons his own nobility, and
adopts the life of a Sudra, the Lord assumes the role of the jiva.
4. Just as a child sees an apparition (created by its own fancy),
so also the stupid jiva creates, on account of delusion, this
unreal body and sees it (as separate from him).
5. A child superimposes a (real) elephant on a clay elephant and
plays with it; even so, an ignorant man superimposes the body,
etc., on the Self and carries on his activities.
6. The picture of a snake does not cause fear of a snake when it
is realised to be only a picture. Similarly when the jiva-snake is
clearly understood there is neither misery nor the cause of
misery.
7. The snake superimposed on a garland merges in it; so also the
sense of separateness rising from the Self merges in the Self.
8. Although bracelets, etc. appear to be many, as gold they are
one. Similarly although the adjuncts are many, the Self is really
one.
9. Like the organs of the body and modifications of clay (i.e.
vessels of clay) non-duality appears as duality (i.e.
multiplicity) in the form of the moving and unmoving objects.
10. Just as a single face is reflected as many in a crystal, in
water, or in ghee or in a mirror; so also the (one) Self is
reflected in the (many) intellects (or minds).
11. Just as the sky is (i.e. appears to be) stained by dust, smoke
and clouds, so also the pure Self in contact with the qualities of
maya is (i.e. appears to be) soiled by them.
12. Just as metal in contact with fire acquires the quality of
fire (namely heat), so also the senses, etc. in contact with the
Self acquire the quality of the Self.
13. Just as the invisible Rahu becomes visible when it is seized
by the moon (i.e., comes in contact with the moon), even so the
Self is known by experiencing objects of perception.
14. When water and fire come together they acquire the qualities
of each other. Even so when the Self and the inert body come
together the Self looks like the non-Self and the non-Self looks
like the Self.
15. Just as fire thrown into a large sheet of water loses its
quality, so also Consciousness in contact with the unreal and the
inert seems to lose its real nature and becomes inert.
16. The Self is realised in the body only with effort, like sugar
from the sugarcane, oil from sesame seeds, fire from wood, butter
from a cow and iron from stones (i.e. ore).
17. Like the sky seen in an unbroken crystal, the Supreme Lord of
the nature of consciousness is seen (i.e. exists) in all objects.
18. Just as a big lamp kept inside a vessel made of precious
stones illumines by its light both outside and inside, so also the
one Self illumines (everything).
19. Just as the sun’s reflection in a mirror illumines (other
things), so also the reflection of the Self in pure intellects
illumines (other things).
20. That in which this wonderful universe appears like a snake in
a rope is the eternal luminous Self.
21. The Self is without beginning or end. It is immutable
Existence and Consciousness. It manifests space, it is the source
of the jiva and higher than the highest.
22. The Self is pure Consciousness, eternal, omnipresent,
immutable and self-effulgent like the light of the sun.
23. The omnipresent Self, the substratum of all, is non-different
from the effulgent Consciousness like heat from fire. It can only
be experienced (not known).
24. Pure Consciousness without intellect, the Supreme Self, the
illuminator of all, the indivisible, pervading (everything) within
and without, is the firm support (of all).
25. The Self is absolute Consciousness. It is pure awareness,
undecaying, free from all ideas of acceptance or rejection and not
limited by space, time or genus.
26. Just as the air in the universe pervades everything, so also
the Self, the Lord, abides bodiless (in everything).
27. The Consciousness which exists in the expanse of earth, in the
ornaments, in the sky and in the sun, exists also inside the worms
lying in their shells under the earth.
28. There is neither bondage nor liberation, neither duality nor
non-duality. There is only Brahman always shining as
Consciousness.
29. Awareness is Brahman; the world is Brahman; the various
elements are Brahman; I am Brahman; my enemy is Brahman; my
friends and relatives are Brahman.
30. The idea of a consciousness and an object of consciousness is
bondage; freedom from it is liberation. Consciousness, the object
of consciousness and everything else is the Self; this is the gist
of all systems of philosophy.
31. There is only consciousness here; this universe is nothing but
consciousness; you are consciousness; I am consciousness; the
worlds are consciousness - that is the conclusion.
32. That which exists and that which shines (i.e. is known to
exist) are all the Self; anything else which seems to shine does
not (really) exist. Consciousness alone shines by itself. Ideas of
knower and known are idle postulates.
CHAPTER TEN
NIRVANA
1. Supreme Bliss cannot be experienced through contact of the
senses with their objects. The supreme state is that in which the
mind is annihilated through one-pointed enquiry.
2. The bliss arising from the contact of the senses with their
objects is inferior. Contact with the senseobjects is bondage;
freedom from it is liberation.
3. Attain the pure state between existence and nonexistence and
hold on to it; do not accept or reject the inner or the outer
world.
4. Depend always on that true reality between the sentient and the
inert which is the infinite space-like heart.
5. The belief in a knower and the known is called bondage. The
knower is bound by the known; he is liberated when there is
nothing to know.
6. Abandoning the ideas of seer, seen and sight along with latent
desires (vasanas) of the past, we meditate on that Self which is
the primal light that is the basis of sight.
7. We meditate on the eternal Self, the light of lights which lies
between the two ideas of existence and non-existence.
8. We meditate on that Self of consciousness, the bestower of the
fruits of all our thoughts, the illuminator of all radiant objects
and the farthest limit of all accepted objects.
9. We meditate on that immutable Self, our reality, the bliss of
which arises in the mind on account of the close contact between
the seer and the seen.
10. If one meditates on that state which comes at the end of the
waking state and the beginning of sleep, he will directly
experience undecaying bliss.
11. The rock-like state in which all thoughts are still and which
is different from the waking and dream states, is one’s supreme
state.
12. Like mud in a mud pot the Supreme Lord who is existence and
space-like consciousness and bliss exists everywhere non-separate
(from things).
13. The Self shines by itself as the one boundless ocean of
consciousness agitated by waves of thought.
14. Just as the ocean is nothing but water the entire world of
things is nothing but consciousness filling all the quarters like
the infinite space.
15. Brahman and space are alike as to their invisibility,
all-pervasiveness and indestructibility, but Brahman is also
consciousness.
16. There is only the one waveless and profound ocean of pure
nectar, sweet through and through (i.e. blissful) everywhere.
17. All this is truly Brahman; all this is Atman. Do not cut up
Brahman into ‘I am one thing’ and ‘this is another.’
18. As soon as it is realised that Brahman is allpervasive and
indivisible this vast samsara is found to be the Supreme Lord.
19. One who realises that everything is Brahman truly becomes
Brahman; who would not become immortal if he were to drink nectar?
20. If you are wise you would become this (Brahman) by such
conviction; if not, even if you are repeatedly told it would be
(useless like offerings) thrown on ashes.
21. Even if you have known the real truth you have to practise
always. Water will not become clear by merely uttering the word
kataka fruit.
22. If one has the firm conviction ‘I am the Supreme Self called
the undecaying Vasudeva’ he is liberated; otherwise he remains
bound.
23. After eliminating everything as ‘not this’, ‘not this’, the
Supreme Being (lit. state) which cannot be eliminated remains.
Think ‘I am That’ and be happy.
24. Know always that the Self is Brahman, one and whole. How can
that which is indivisible be divided into ‘I am the meditator’ and
‘the other is the object of meditation’?
25. When one thinks ‘I am pure consciousness’ it is called
meditation and when even the idea of meditation is forgotten it is
samadhi.
26. The constant flow of mental concepts relating to Brahman
without the sense of ‘I’ achieved through intense practice of Self
Enquiry (jnana) is what is called samprajnata samadhi (meditation
with concepts).
27. Let violent winds which characterise the end of aeons (kalpas)
blow; let all the oceans unite, let the twelve suns burn
(simultaneously), still no harm befalls one whose mind is extinct.
28. That consciousness which is the witness of the rise and fall
of all beings, know that to be the immortal state of supreme
bliss.
29. Every moving or unmoving thing whatsoever is only an object
visualised by the mind. When the mind is annihilated duality (i.e.
multiplicity) is not perceived.
30. That which is immutable, auspicious and tranquil, that in
which this world exists, that which manifests itself as the
mutable and immutable objects - that is the sole consciousness.
31. Before discarding the slough the snake regards it as itself,
but when once it has discarded it in its hole it does not look
upon it as itself any longer.
32. He who has transcended both good and evil does not, like a
child, refrain from prohibited acts from a sense of sin, nor does
he do what is prescribed from a sense of merit.
33. Just as a statue is contained in a pillar (i.e. block) even if
it is not actually carved out, so also the world exists in
Brahman. Therefore the Supreme State is not a void.
34. Just as a pillar is said to be devoid of the statue when it
has not actually been carved out, so also Brahman is said to be
void when it is devoid of the impression of the world.
35. Just as still water may be said to contain or not contain
ripples, so also Brahman may be said to contain or not contain the
world. It is neither void nor existence.