This passage from Nisargadatta Maharaj is pointing very directly at a core idea in non-dual teachings: what you really are is not the changing identity you عادة take yourself to be.
Let’s unpack it in plain terms.
“The manifestation is eternal… but ‘I am so-and-so’ does not last”
“Manifestation” here refers to the total play of existence—everything appearing and disappearing. It’s “eternal” not in the sense that forms don’t change, but that the fact of appearing never stops.
But your personal identity—your name, roles, story—keeps changing:
- As a child, you had one identity
- As a young adult, another
- In old age, yet another
All of them felt true at the time, but none stayed. So Maharaj is saying: if it comes and goes, how can it be your real nature?
“Can it be understood through austerities? … only through right discrimination”
He’s dismissing the idea that effort alone—fasting, rituals, discipline—will give realization.
“Right discrimination” means clearly seeing:
- What changes vs. what doesn’t
- What is perceived vs. the perceiver
It’s closer to insight than effort.
“To keep in mind what is heard is meditation”
Meditation here isn’t just sitting quietly. It’s:
- Holding onto the truth you’ve understood
- Returning to it again and again
For example: “I am not merely this body-mind” becomes something you live with, not just think about once.
“Everything you did… was true, but finally false”
At each stage of life, your experiences were real relatively. But from a deeper standpoint, they’re all temporary appearances.
So the “truth” of your life story is provisional—not ultimate.
“Liberation means being free… from our own concepts”
This is key.
Liberation isn’t:
- Going somewhere else
- Becoming something special
It’s freedom from mental constructions like:
- “I am this kind of person”
- “I must become enlightened”
- “I am lacking something”
Even the idea “I want to be free” is part of the bondage.
“The Self… requires no liberation”
According to him, your real nature is already free.
It’s not trapped—only misidentified.
Like mistaking yourself for a character in a movie when you’re actually the screen.
“Mind and intellect arise from body-consciousness”
Once you take yourself to be the body:
- Thoughts, fears, desires, and analysis arise
- Then come confusion and “harassment”
If that root identification loosens, the rest loses its grip.
“The Absolute does not belong to any organization”
He’s warning against turning truth into:
- Religions
- Systems
- Ideologies
All of those are conceptual frameworks—and therefore limited.
“Guru-word: You are not the body; you are consciousness in the body”
This is the central pointer.
Not:
But:
- Don’t reduce yourself to the body
You are the awareness in which the body and mind appear.
“Time will end, but you will never end”
Everything measurable—events, bodies, thoughts—exists in time.
But awareness itself:
- Doesn’t come and go in the same way
- Is the constant background of all experiences
If you identify with the body, you feel temporary.
If you recognize yourself as awareness, the fear of ending weakens.
So what does it all mean, simply?
He’s urging a shift from:
- “I am this person living a life”
to:
- “I am the awareness in which this entire life appears”
And that shift doesn’t come from effort alone—it comes from seeing clearly.
If you want, I can translate this into a more practical approach—like how to actually apply “right discrimination” in day-to-day life without getting lost in abstraction.