Thursday, 11 June 2026

BG 13.27

 Bhagavad Gita 13.27 states that all beings, whether moving or unmoving, are a combination of the field of activities (the body) and the knower of the field (the soul).

 * **The Field of Activities (*Kshetra*):** This refers to the material body, which is composed of insentient material energy.

 * **The Knower of the Field (*Kshetrajna*):** This refers to the eternal soul, which is the source of consciousness.

According to these teachings, consciousness serves as the evidence of the soul's presence; therefore, wherever consciousness is found, the soul must also be present. This explains how even non-moving entities, such as plants, are considered to have life.

Would you like to explore more about the concept of the "knower of the field" in other chapters of the Bhagavad Gita?


A EB bks

 

Books from Gnyana Sangha range from Beginner level to Renunciation [Sannyasa] level

by  | Jun 10, 2026 | AdvaitaBuddhaDirect PathGuruKnowledgeScriptures

Question:

Hello Didi, I understand better when I read rather than when I listen. Are there different books for different levels of Seekers in Gnyana Sangha? If you could tell me which books a beginner should start with, and then which are intermediate and which are very high-level, it will help my journey. I have all your books, including journals, but don’t know where to dive in first. Please shed some light, Didi.

 

Answer:

All teachings in Gnyana Sangha are based on Self-Inquiry; every book emphasizes Direct Seeing only. Direct Seeing teachings are pointers towards the discovery of who I truly am.

 

BEGINNER LEVEL:

An absolute beginner who doesn’t even know what the path is about can find the map in the book, ‘365 Insights That Liberate: Advaita Drishti: Volume 1: Direct Seeing of Non-Duality’.

A beginner who has a strong inclination for finding that which lies beyond the mundane has a strong belief, ‘I am the body’ or ‘I am the mind’ or both. The pointers that can dissolve this assumption to allow room for seeing what lies beyond can be found in the book, ‘I: Ko’Ham Drishti: Direct Seeing of Ramana Maharshi’s Who Am I [Nan Yar]’.

A beginner who has realized that, beyond the body-mind beliefs, there lies the assumption, ‘I am the doer’ or ‘I am the experiencer’ or both, can benefit from the book, ‘Black Hole of Equanimity: Rama Drishti: Direct Seeing of Rama Gita’.

Beginners who have attended an Advaita Beginners retreat can continue to journal post-retreat in the ‘Viveka Journal Level 1′.

Beginners who have attended a Buddha Beginners retreat can continue to journal post-retreat in the ‘Buddha Journal Level 1′.

 

INTERMEDIATE LEVEL:

Seekers who are serious about recognizing their true selves beyond the limited body-mind identities of the Waker, Dreamer, and Sleeper can benefit from the book, ‘Spiraling Avenues: Waking, Dreaming, Sleeping, Being: Swapna Nidra Gnyana Sadhana Volume 1’.

As the Wake-Dream-Sleep exploration deepens, the deeper pointers from the book, ‘Beyond the Veil of Sleep and Dream: Swapna Nidra Gnyana Sadhana’, can help reveal the reality of Nobodyness.

When the interest develops in figuring out how the Waker-Dreamer-Sleeper superimposes on Nobodyness, and WakingWorld-DreamWorld-SleepWorld superimposes on Nothingness, then the book ‘It’s A Rope Not A Snake: Adhyaasa Drishti: Volume 1: Direct Seeing Of Adhyaasa’ can help.

Intermediate Advaita Samadhi retreat and online weekly Samadhi attendees can benefit from ‘I Am That Retreat Samadhi Journal Level 1: Direct Seeing pointers from Nisargadatta Maharaj’s I Am That.

Intermediate Buddha Samadhi retreat attendees can benefit from ‘Buddha Journal Level 2′ and ‘Buddha Journal Level 3.’

Buddha online Samadhi and weekly session attendees can benefit from the ‘Dependent Origination’ Journal [will be published soon].

 

ADVANCED LEVEL:

Those moving higher in Ajaata Vaada can benefit from the book, ‘Guru Tattva Drishti: Be Spiritually Independent Because There Is No External Guru’.

When Viveka or the power of discernment has blossomed, then the Viveka Level 2 Journal might prove beneficial.

Buddha Jhana journals will benefit those who have learnt the respective Deep Jhanas in the Buddha retreats.

 

EXPERT LEVEL:

Ajaata Vaadins who have recognized spontaneous Dispassion arising within can benefit from the book, ‘Insight of Dispassion: Vairagya Drishti: Direct Seeing of Vairagya Shatakam by Bharthruhari.’

Ajaata Vaadins, whose Samadhi has matured from closed-eyed to open-eyed, can benefit from the book, ‘I – I: Direct Seeing of Ramana Maharshi’s Teachings on the Self: Aham Sphurana Drishti’.

When Open-Eyed Samadhi starts happening, the ‘I – I Journal Level 1: Ramana Maharshi’s Deep Sleep and Closed-Eyed Samadhi’.

When Open-Eyed Samadhi starts maturing, the ‘I – I Journal Level 2: Ramana Maharshi’s Awakened Sleep and Open-Eyed Samadhi’.

Buddha expert-level journals will benefit the experienced Long-Samadhi practitioners:

    • If Cessation has been spontaneously attained in Jhana Samadhi, then the Cessation of Perception and Feeling Journal will be beneficial.
    • When Metta Jhanas mature to abidance in Voidness or Shunyata, then the Shunyata Journal will be beneficial [To be published].

 

When Dispassion matures, leading to liberation from ‘personhood’, then the book, ‘Life Without I: Asanga Drishti: Vaanaprashta for This Age’ will be of great assistance.

When Dispassion matures to natural renunciation or Sannyasa, then the book, ‘Burning the Bridges to Ignorance: Avadhuta Upanishad Drishti‘ will be beneficial

AG

 Here are Āṣṭāvakra Gītā 18.4–7 with Sanskrit, IAST transliteration, and commentary. (Note: minor variations exist across manuscripts; this is the commonly cited recension.)


Verse 18.4

Sanskrit

मृषैव भावो न हि भाव एव
नाभाव एवास्ति न च भाव एव ।
यथार्थतत्त्वं परमार्थसिद्धं
तत्त्वं विदित्वा न पुनर्भवः स्यात् ॥

Transliteration (IAST)

mṛṣaiva bhāvo na hi bhāva eva
nābhāva evāsti na ca bhāva eva |
yathārthatattvaṃ paramārthasiddhaṃ
tattvaṃ viditvā na punarbhavaḥ syāt ||

Commentary

This verse dismantles the ordinary categories of “real” and “unreal.” It says the perceived world (bhāva) is ultimately mṛṣā—a mistaken appearance. Yet it is not absolute non-existence either, because it appears in experience.

The key shift is epistemic: once the true nature (yathārtha tattva) is known as the absolute reality (paramārtha), the cycle of rebirth (punarbhava) ceases—not by changing the world, but by correcting perception.


Verse 18.5

Sanskrit

न दूरं न च संनिधौ तत्त्वमात्मा स्वभावतः ।
अव्ययोऽयमचिन्त्यश्च नित्यशुद्धो निरञ्जनः ॥

Transliteration (IAST)

na dūraṃ na ca saṃnidhau tattvamātmā svabhāvataḥ |
avyayo’yamacintyaś ca nityaśuddho nirañjanaḥ ||

Commentary

The Self (Ātman) is not spatially distant or near—it is not located in space at all. It is ever-present by its very nature (svabhāva).

It is described as:

  • Avyaya: undecaying, unchanging
  • Acintya: beyond conceptual thought
  • Nitya-śuddha: eternally pure
  • Nirañjana: unstained, untouched

This verse directly negates the idea that liberation is a journey. It is a recognition of what is already the case.


Verse 18.6

Sanskrit

सर्वं कल्पनया सृष्टं आत्मा शुद्धोऽसि निर्मलः ।
मोहं त्यक्त्वा सुखी भव न दुःखं किञ्चिदस्ति ते ॥

Transliteration (IAST)

sarvaṃ kalpanayā sṛṣṭaṃ ātmā śuddho’si nirmalaḥ |
mohaṃ tyaktvā sukhī bhava na duḥkhaṃ kiñcid asti te ||

Commentary

Everything experienced is described as kalpanā—mental construction or conceptual superimposition.

The Self is already pure and untouched. The instruction is not to become pure, but to abandon moha (delusion/misidentification). Sorrow exists only within the framework of mistaken identity.

The tone here is practical: freedom is immediate once false identification drops.


Verse 18.7

Sanskrit

यथा मृगतृष्णायां सलिलं नैव दृश्यते ।
तथा विश्वमिदं सर्वं आत्मन्येवावभासते ॥

Transliteration (IAST)

yathā mṛgatṛṣṇāyāṃ salilaṃ naiva dṛśyate |
tathā viśvam idaṃ sarvaṃ ātmanyevāvabhāsate ||

Commentary

This uses the classic analogy of mirage water (mṛgatṛṣṇā): just as water appears in a desert but is not truly there, the universe appears as objective reality but is actually only appearance within consciousness.

Importantly, this is not nihilism. The appearance is not denied; its independent reality is denied. Everything is seen as manifestation within the Self alone.


Overall Essence (18.4–7)

Across these four verses, Ashtavakra is pointing to a single insight:

  • The world is not absolutely real, yet it appears.
  • The Self is not distant, but ever-present.
  • Bondage is not real change, but mistaken identity.
  • Liberation is immediate recognition, not gradual attainment.

If you want, I can also map these verses directly to Advaita Vedānta (Śaṅkara’s terminology like mithyā, adhyāsa, sākṣin) or compare them with Bhagavad Gītā 2.16–2.30, which carries a very different pedagogical tone.


GRS

 50. Self-Realization

21 May, 1996
Bengaluru Ashram, India


Sometimes the question arises: “If there has been no change in someone’s behavior, then what is the benefit of all these meditation camps?”


How much knowledge a person has gained cannot be judged merely by outward behavior. Some people behave as though they have attained complete wisdom, but that does not necessarily mean it is true. The opposite is also possible: someone’s behavior may not have changed at all, yet they may have gained a great deal of knowledge.


An ordinary person sees only external behavior. But a wise person looks beyond it and is amazed by the play of consciousness (Brahman).


Behavior affects emotions.
Emotions affect behavior.
Knowledge or ignorance influences emotions.
Knowledge manifests through blessings and grace.


Be like a tree within yourself—barren in some seasons, and flowering and fruiting at other times.


Become like the evergreen coconut tree that bears fruit throughout the year.


That is self-realization—beyond time!