Saturday, 31 December 2022

GB OD YR -ONS X HNY HRHK

 As little as two hours less sleep than normal is enough to change people’s emotional experience during the day, a study finds.

People feel fewer positive emotions after just one night of reduced sleep.

However, people did not feel more depressed after getting less sleep than normal.

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MPCB LEVEL

TRANSACTIONAL LEVEL

CONSC LEVEL 

MTC LEVELS -  SCAD  Q -    SC CONSC AND DUST Q 

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NDE- Dr. Sam Parnia estimates the man experienced conscious awareness for three to five minutes in the absence of detectable brain activity, a time, he has said, “when no human experience should be happening whatsoever.”

The case was part of a widely reported study Parnia published in 2014 called AWARE — the awareness during resuscitation trial, the world’s largest study of what happens to the human mind and consciousness in the early period of death.

Evidence from AWARE and other studies, he says, raises the possibility that the mind or consciousness — the psyche, the “self,” the thing that “makes me Sam” and that makes us uniquely who we are —  may not originate in the brain and may be a separate, undiscovered scientific entity, similar in nature to the electromagnetic waves that can carry sound and pictures. Modern science simply lacks the tools to show it. When we die, that entity we call consciousness or the self doesn’t necessarily become “immediately annihilated,” Parnia believes.

COSMIC PANPSY

In a 2019 interview van Lommel declared the medical definition of consciousness shall be discussed another time: "All these patients with this enhanced consciousness, with this near-death experience, with cognition, with emotions, with clear thoughts, with memories, happens during the period of a non-functioning brain. So the concept we had learned should be discussed again. And my opinion now is that consciousness is not localized in the brain and the brain has a facilitating function and not a producing function to experience consciousness.

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In a 2019 interview van Lommel declared the medical definition of consciousness shall be discussed another time: "All these patients with this enhanced consciousness, with this near-death experience, with cognition, with emotions, with clear thoughts, with memories, happens during the period of a non-functioning brain. So the concept we had learned should be discussed again. And my opinion now is that consciousness is not localized in the brain and the brain has a facilitating function and not a producing function to experience consciousness."[8]

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MICROSCOPIC, TRANSACTIONAL, CHETAN LEVELS

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Right Way to Eat Bananas Helps Weight Loss

Matsuike suggests eating two bananas 30 minutes before dinner and then drinking a glass (about 200 ml/6.8 fl.oz.) of water or a sugar-free beverage such as green tea. Then take dinner 30 minutes later and stop eating as soon as you feel full.

Since bananas are a food with relatively low GI (glycemic index), they will not cause blood sugar to rise rapidly, and can avoid excessive insulin secretion, so that blood sugar can drop gradually, which can prolong the feeling of satiety and allow the amount of food intake during dinner to decrease naturally. In this way you will consume fewer calories over time.

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next cold snap 14/1/23? 

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NAMA RUPA - EXISTS IN TRANSIENCE - NREIT 

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NORAD 

NO RAGA DWESA 

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☘️ If one realizes the unity of things everywhere, one always remains tranquil, inwardly  

cool and pure like space without the sense of ' I '.

 

🌿 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.

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“Sit with it. Sit with it. Sit with it. Sit with it. Even though you want to run. Even when it’s heavy and difficult. Even though you’re not quite sure of the way through. Healing happens by feeling.” ~Dr. Rebecca 

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Wednesday, 28 December 2022

CHETAN X STILLNESS

 NDM 

Discover all that you are not: body, feelings, thoughts, time, space, this or that; nothing, concrete or abstract, which you perceive can be you. The very act of perceiving shows that you are not what you perceive.

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Liberosis: The desire to care less about things - to loosen your grip on your life, to stop glancing behind you every few steps, afraid that someone will snatch it from you..

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SAGAN

Science is a way of thinking much more than it is a body of knowledge.”

“If you wish to make an apple pie from scratch, you must first invent the universe.”

“The nitrogen in our DNA, the calcium in our teeth, the iron in our blood, the carbon in our apple pies were made in the interiors of collapsing stars. We are made of starstuff.”

“The beauty of a living thing is not the atoms that go into it, but the way those atoms are put together.”

“Extinction is the rule. Survival is the exception.”

“Extinction is the rule. Survival is the exception.”- ? COSMIC PANPSYCHISM 

The brain is like a muscle. When it is in use we feel very good. Understanding is joyous.”

Science is not only compatible with spirituality; it is a profound source of spirituality.”

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RBBT LV 8 YRS 

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GOULD 

"We pass through this world but once."
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B The 29th of every month is Protector Day. 

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Awareful Witness of Vrittis. Perceptions. Thoughts. Emotions

Tuesday, 27 December 2022

A ladder can always be reversed. Advaita to Dvaita

SRK. Jari Nitya Tari Lila

All encompassing Awareness is Brahman

Shri Ram v Htlr

Freud. Normal. Can work. Can relate

 1. “The more we want certain situations, the more we find ourselves stuck in situations we do not want.” ~ Kelsang Gyatso

2. “There should not be any particular teaching. Teaching is in each moment.” ~ Shunryu Suzuki

3. “What’s recommended is that if you have a good experience, don’t get too excited. And if you have a bad experience, don’t mistake it for a serious deviation or a sidetrack that you have to find your way back from. If you have a bad experience, just continue practicing as you were. In other words, whatever happens, just keep looking at your mind.” ~ Thrangu Rinpoche

4. “If it’s painful, you become willing not just to endure it but also to let it awaken your heart and soften you. You learn to embrace it.” ~ Pema Chödrön


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5. “According to Shakyamuni Buddha, it’s normal for human beings to be anxious, because it’s normal for human beings not to understand themselves. When you don’t understand yourself, you’re uncomfortable and scared. When you realize that you’re anxious, Buddha’s teaching is to practice being patient with it.” ~ Reb Anderson

6. “When we seek happiness through accumulation, either outside of ourselves—from other people, relationships, or material goods—or from our own self-development, we are missing the essential point. In either case we are trying to find completion. But according to Buddhism, such a strategy is doomed. Completion comes not from adding another piece to ourselves but from surrendering our ideas of perfection.” ~ Mark Epstein

7. “The only way to make sense out of change is to plunge into it, move with it, and join the dance.” ~ Alan Watts

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8. “You ought to know how to rise above the trivialities of life, in which most people are found drowning themselves.” ~ D. T. Suzuki

9. “We must be willing to be completely ordinary people, which means accepting ourselves as we are without trying to become greater, purer, more spiritual, more insightful. If we can accept our imperfections as they are, quite ordinarily, then we can use them as part of the path. But if we try to get rid of our imperfections, then they will be enemies, obstacles on the road to our ‘self-improvement.'” ~ Chögyam Trungpa

10. “Mindfulness, by helping us notice our impulses before we act, gives us the opportunity to decide whether to act and how to act.” ~ Gil Fronsdal

11. “If one understands that the only thing that remains timeless is the richness of one’s own buddha nature, one can relax even with regard to death.” ~ Lama Ole Nydahl

12. “Learning how to love is the goal and the purpose of spiritual life—not learning how to develop psychic powers, not learning how to bow, chant, do yoga, or even meditate, but learning to love. Love is the truth. Love is the light.” ~ Surya Das

13. “We’re never called on to do what hurts. We just do what hurts out of ignorance and habit. Once we see what we’re doing, we can stop.” ~ Steve Hagen

14. “We all have the ability to study the causes of suffering and gradually to free ourselves from them…it is not the magnitude of the task that matters, it’s the magnitude of our courage.” ~ Matthieu Ricard

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Sunday, 25 December 2022

Brahman is Higher Truth. Jagat is Lower Truth

Awareness is the Pure Subject which cannot be objectified

Universe is wreckage of Infinity on the shores of Space Time and Causation

Everything is in Awareness

XMS 58

 As they get older, many people become more emotionally stable, more agreeable and more conscientious, research finds.

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AVATAR  X JSS AS AVATAR












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“I’ve learned that people will forget what you said, people will forget what you did, but people will never forget how you made them feel.” ~Maya Angelou

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CHITTASUDDHI 

"Nothing is at last sacred but the integrity of your own mind

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ELITOCRACY 
Masses recognize elites, who oversee experts, who pick details.

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‘Descriptions are merely devices, skilful means for awakening, but they're not reality itself.’ Diana St Ruth

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OFFER RESULTS TO GD 
But how can we work if we do not care for results? Where is the motive for work in that case? ‘Make Me your motive,’ says Bhagavan. ‘If you want results, good and well, but offer the results to Me. Do not hold them; do not be attached to them. Make it a practice to offer all to Me.’ That is the yoga of renunciation, which leads to freedom. All actions good and bad lose their binding effect when done as an offering to Me. We cannot live without doing acts all the time. Every act binds. Every act forges a new link in our chain of karma, unless it is done unselfishly, unless it is performed as a sacrifice, an offering, to Bhagavan.

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HNMN CHLISHA

even reciting it?

जो यह पढ़ै हनुमान चालीसा । होय सिद्धि साखी गैरीसा ॥ ३९ ॥

One who recites this Hanuman Chalisa regularly gains success which Gauri's lord is witness to.


level 2

Advaita

also the previous line

जो सत बार पाठ कर कोई । छूतहि बन्दि महा सुख होई ॥३८॥

One who recites this Chalisa a hundred times is released from all bondages and will attain great bliss.


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LEC "All is in the hands of man. Therefore wash them often."

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𝗪𝗛𝗬 𝗱𝗼 𝗼𝘂𝗿 𝗳𝗶𝗻𝗴𝗲𝗿𝘀 𝗻𝗮𝘁𝘂𝗿𝗮𝗹𝗹𝘆 𝗰𝘂𝗿𝗹 𝘂𝗽 𝘄𝗵𝗶𝗹𝗲 𝘀𝗹𝗲𝗲𝗽𝗶𝗻𝗴❓

✅Everyone sleeps in a unique sleeping position.if you pay close attention to a sleeping person, you’ll see one thing common among them all—curled fingers.Our muscles relax when we sleep, but the rest of our body parts don’t curl up. Why do only our fingers curl❓

📌Fingers may not have muscles, but the phalanges (bones of the fingers) are well connected with tendons. These tendons are attached to many muscles in the palm and forearm. Most movement in the hand is initiated through the muscles in the forearm.Your fingers curl inwards when you sleep because of the way the muscles in your arms relax, and due to the length of the tendons that connect the bones in the finger to the muscles in the arm.

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𝗪𝗛𝗬 𝗔𝗿𝗲 𝗠𝗮𝗻𝗵𝗼𝗹𝗲 𝗖𝗼𝘃𝗲𝗿𝘀 𝗥𝗼𝘂𝗻𝗱❓

✅I didn’t know how popular this question actually was, but once I started to do some research about it online, I realised that it’s actually a very common question to be asked during job interviews for corporate positions.You’ve also seen countless manhole covers while strolling along the street, but have you ever asked yourself why they are that shape?

📌circular shape of the cover ensures that the cover doesn’t fall through the opening itself. This actually makes sense, since rectangular/square covers would fall through the opening if inserted diagonally into the hole.

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𝗪𝗛𝗬 𝗗𝗼𝗲𝘀 𝗢𝗶𝗹 𝗦𝗽𝗹𝗮𝘁𝘁𝗲𝗿 𝗪𝗵𝗲𝗻 𝗜’𝗺 𝗙𝗿𝘆𝗶𝗻𝗴❓

✅Are you wondering, “Why does oil splatter when I’m frying?”You know, that pop, pop, pop, spit, spit, spit and “Ouch, that hit my face!” splattering.Well, there is a reason for the popping and spitting and spattering.So, let’s find out what it is.

📌Oil splatters when frying because tiny water droplets from the food turn to steam and need to escape. Because water is heavier than oil, the water droplets get trapped below. And since oil burns hotter than water when it’s boiling, the water quickly turns to steam. And that’s when it needs to escape. So the steam rises to the surface and, at the same time, spits and pops, bringing the oil with it.

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𝗪𝗛𝗬 𝗱𝗼 𝘀𝗼𝗺𝗲 𝗽𝗲𝗼𝗽𝗹𝗲 𝗽𝗶𝗰𝗸 𝘁𝗵𝗲𝗶𝗿 𝗻𝗼𝘀𝗲❓

✅Not everyone is ready to admit this, but we all pick our noses sometimes, but why do we have a tendency to do this? And more importantly, is it safe to pick our nose?Is it a grooming behavior or something more???

📌The mucus, once it dries up, forms tiny clumps (“boogers”) inside our nose, which we often try to remove by “going digging”.When our nasal cavities get filled by boogers, it can cause mild discomfort and make breathing quite difficult, so we try to get rid of it. When blowing your nose doesn’t dislodge the booger, your fingers certainly will. When this booger-obstruction is removed, breathing becomes easier. This is the simplest reason behind this behavior.

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𝗪𝗛𝗬 𝗱𝗼 𝘀𝗼𝗺𝗲 𝗽𝗲𝗼𝗽𝗹𝗲 𝗵𝗮𝘃𝗲 𝘀𝗶𝘅 𝗳𝗶𝗻𝗴𝗲𝗿𝘀❓

✅1 in roughly 500-1,000 children have more than five fingers on each hand. This condition, called polydactyly.One of the ancient myths in South America concerns the Ugha Mongulala tribe of the Amazon jungle, often considered as people “chosen by the Gods”. It was said that gods with 6 fingers used to visit them, linking the scenario of having 6 fingers to divinity.

📌Some research has shown that an extra finger can provide advantages to individuals, like better coordination. Polydactyly is not limited to humans – aye-aye lemurs and giant pandas also have an extra thumb. The brain of individuals with an extra finger has a specific dedicated region that controls the activity of the extra finger.

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What you
You long
To be
Free from,
And what
You fear
To lose
Most of all,
Are one
And the same
Illusion;
Your self.

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Here monks, are the roots of trees!
Here are lonely places! Meditate monks.
Do not be slothful, have no subsequent regrets.’

The Buddha
Samyutta
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Wednesday, 21 December 2022

Winter solstice. Sunrise and sunset HW. Just crosses 8am and 4Pm barrier

Antakaranatadvritti Sakshi

Awareness v Attention. Floodlight v Spotlight. Knower aware of mind focussing on Breath

 And your name is...?" That usually gets some cooperation.

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Drop conditioning. Drop attachment. Just do LKM to each person

 "If you look to others for fulfillment, you will never truly be fulfilled. If your happiness depends on money, you will never be happy with yourself. Be content with what you have; rejoice in the way things are. When you realize there is nothing lacking, the whole world belongs to you."


-- Lao Tzu

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I would unite with anybody to do right and with nobody to do wrong.
FREDERICK DOUGLASS

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DRAIG WF ONS

Sunday, 18 December 2022

am walk to sm bsda


 

LUCID DTH STUDY 

In addition to hearing the patients’ experiences, the researchers observed spikes in brain activity – specifically, in so-called gamma, delta, theta, alpha and beta waves.

In some cases, these activity spikes were observed when CPR had been going on for up to an hour.

“These recalled experiences and brain wave changes may be the first signs of the so-called near-death experience, and we have captured them for the first time in a large study,” says lead investigator Dr Sam Parnia, an intensive care physician and associate professor in the Department of Medicine at New York University Langone Health, US.

“Our results offer evidence that while on the brink of death and in a coma, people undergo a unique inner conscious experience, including awareness without distress.”

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SANDILYA VIDYA

SWAMI KRISHNANDA 

om āpyāyantu mamāṅgāni vāk prāṇaś cakśuḥ śrotram atho balam indriyāṇi ca sarvāṇi.
sarvaṁ brahmaupaniṣadam mā'haṁ brahma nirākuryāṁ mā mā brahma nirākarot anirākaraṇam astu anirākaraṇam me'stu.
tad ātmani nirate ya upaniṣatsu dharmās te mayi santu te mayi santu. Aum śāntiḥ śāntiḥ śāntiḥ. (Kena Invocation)

Sandilya, the great Rishi, had this revelation of the Supreme Being. Vidya is a meditation, an art of thinking on the Supreme goal. This meditation begins with the proclamation of the all-comprehensiveness of Brahman: “Sarvam khalvidam brahma – All this is verily Brahman.” This vidya is contained in Section 14 of Chapter Three of the Upanishad.

sarvaṁ khalvidaṁ brahma tajjalāniti śānta upāsīta | atha khalu kratumayaḥ puruṣo yathākraturasmipuruṣo bhavati tathetaḥ pretya bhavati sa kratuṁ kurvīta ||3.14.1||

This is a very famous passage in the Upanishad. This is how we have to meditate, calmly, quietly and peacefully. We have to meditate that everything comes from That, everything is sustained in That, and everything returns to That. That which is the origination, the sustenance and the dissolution of all things is this Brahman. Inasmuch as it is the cause of all things, naturally, every effect in the form of this creation is contained there. We too are effects of creation. So, we too are contained in it. There is a great justification in the assertion that everything is the Supreme Being. Logically and naturally, when the effects are all contained in the cause, one should be able to appreciate the all-comprehensiveness of the ultimate cause. This cause only is, inasmuch as no effect can be separated from the cause. There is an undifferentiated relationship between the effect and the cause. There is no gap between the one and the other. We are, therefore, not isolated from the cause. There is no vital cut or gulf between this universe of effect and its cause which is Brahman. This means to say that even now we are vitally connected with the Absolute. We are maintaining even at this moment an organic relationship. The difficult part of this meditation is that we ourselves, as thinkers, are associated vitally and organically with the Supreme Being on whom we have to meditate. We cannot think like this, for the mind refuses to think. We can think something outside us and we can think of the whole universe practically, but we cannot think something in which we ourselves are involved, because there it is that the mind finds itself incapable of functioning. There is no such thing as mind thinking itself.

Aristotle said that God is thought thinking itself. It is very difficult to understand what it means. How can thought think itself? It always thinks something else. So, Brahman cannot be thought by the mind, and yet this is the injunction of the Upanishad. The highest kind of meditation is sarvam khalvidam brahma. All this manifestation which you see in the form of individuality, whether organic or inorganic, visible or invisible, wherever it be, is That. Nothing but That is.

Again to reiterate, the most difficult thing to swallow here is that we ourselves are a part of That. The meditator is part of that which is meditated on. How is one to even think? It requires a tremendous psychological preparation and an extraordinary type of purity of mind to appreciate what this instruction is. This is not an ordinary type of meditation. It is most extraordinary in the sense that you are contemplating yourself, as it were, and not something or somebody else. That is implied in the statement that everything is included in That, not excluding oneself who meditates.

Thus should you meditate: “Sarvam khalvidam brahma – all this verily is the Supreme Absolute Brahman.” How do you contemplate Brahman? The whole universe – you can imagine what the universe could be – has come from That. It has not come from That as something different from That. The very substance of this creation is the substance of the Absolute. That is one aspect of the matter. The other aspect is that there is no disconnection between the effect and the cause. So you can imagine how hard it is to entertain this thought.Everything is That because of the effect being non-disassociated from the cause. It is connected with the cause. It is sustained, even now at the time of the apparent creation, in That only – and it will go back to That. So there is no place for anything to exist except That. Also, there is nothing other than That. Thus, one should meditate.

 The word kratuhas several meanings. It means an effort of the will, an action of the mind, a determination of the understanding and a meditation that you practise. All this meaning is comprehended by the word kratu. The whole of one's life is nothing but a determination or willing in this manner. Throughout our life we will in some way or other. The individual is an embodiment of action performed through his will. And whatever we will, that we become, because of the intensity of the will. As we affirm, so we experience – and that we become. Our experiences are nothing but our affirmations through will. We have affirmed something very intensely in our previous lives, and the reward of those affirmations is the present series of experiences we are passing through here. So this is a caution, again administered to us. Inasmuch as whatever we think intensely and continuously, and that we are going to become, what should we think throughout our life if we want to become Brahman? We want to become the Absolute Itself. What should be the kind of thought that we should entertain? What should be the type of affirmation that we should make? How should our will work? This need not be explained further, because it is obvious. Therefore, my dear readers, spend your time in absorption of your thought in Brahman. This should be your meditation throughout your life. The Upanishad gives some further details as to how we should conduct this meditation in our life.

manomayaḥ prāṇaśarīro bhārūpaḥ satyasaṁkalpa ākāśātmā sarvakarmā sarvakāmaḥ sarvagandhaḥ sarvarasaḥ sarvamidamabhyatto'vākyanādaraḥ ||3.14.2||

The whole mental world is permeated by this Being. The light of the mind, the light of understanding, the light of intelligence, is the light of Brahman. It appears to be embodied through these pranas and the body. They are a vehicle, an embodiment to particularise this infinite consciousness. And as I have mentioned already, even these as effects are not different from consciousness, the cause. So, this mental body or vital body of ours is not to be regarded as distinct from the Absolute. They are only occasions for the meditation on Brahman. From the particular we have to go to the universal. Though the particular is limited in comparison with the expanse of the universal, qualitatively it cannot be different from the universal. Just as from a drop you can know the ocean, from the particular we can reach the universal. Thus is the meditation. It is effulgence in its nature and light is its character. It is the glory of consciousness that is effulgence.

Whatever is willed through this consciousness is materialised at once – satyasamkalpa. This is what we studied in the last chapter of this Upanishad.

The Self of this Being is as vast as space. It is not a limited individual self. The whole space itself is the Self – akasatma. As vast as space is, so wide is this Self which is Brahman. It is, therefore, all-comprehensive.

All actions are its actions – sarvakarma. It performs everything. Whatever I do, whatever you do, whatever anyone does, whatever happens anywhere in all the levels of creation – all these are activities of that Being. It is the fingers of God working through all these phenomena of nature. All the ways in which the mind thinks are the ways He thinks.

Sarvakarma – all the wishes in your mind, all the desires, are the desires of the Self ultimately in some way or other. Every kind of desire, whatever the nature of the desire be, is nothing but a movement of consciousness towards universality in some way or other. This subject is discussed in some detail in the Brihadaranyaka Upanishad, which describes how every desire is universal desire ultimately. Anything that you smell through the nose is again an activity of That Being only – sarvagandhah. This again has been mentioned earlier, in the last chapter of the Upanishad. The objects as well as the means of cognition are both Itself only appearing objectively on one side in one aspect, and subjectively in another. All the tastes, anything that you contact through the organ of taste, is nothing but Its activity – sarvarasah.

Everything is enveloped by That – sarvamidamabhyatto. What further can we speak of It? It is enveloping all – isavasyam idam sarvam as the Isavasya Upanishad puts it. Inside and outside It is there as the antaryamin. It does not speak, but It can convey Its message and It is free from agitation and eagerness – avaki adarah. It has no desires in the ordinary sense. It is not eager to grasp things, grab things and have things, because It is all things. This is not merely a teaching giving some information, but it is instruction about meditation, the way in which a mind has to be organised in daily meditation so that it may not wander from place to place and may not think of many things. The many things do not exist. What will the mind think when it knows this truth!

eṣa ma ātmāntarhṛdaye'ṇīyānvrīhervā yavādvā sarṣapādvā śyāmākādvā śyāmākataṇḍulādvaiṣa ma ātmāntarhṛdaye jyāyānpṛthivyā jyāyānantarikśājjyāyāndivo jyāyānebhyo lokebhyaḥ ||3.14.3||

This great Being, the Supreme Brahman is in one's own heart as fine and subtle as one can conceive of. It is the subtlest. It is most subtle even among those that we regard as very subtle in this world. Subtler than a grain of rice or paddy, subtler than a grain of millet, subtler than the kernel of this grain, so small, subtler than a mustard seed is this great Being who is seated in one's heart. But does it mean it is as small as a mustard seed? No, it is at the same time as vast as the whole of creation. So, objectively also it has to be contemplated, in the same way as we contemplate it subjectively as our own deepest Self inseparable from the whole cosmos. This little thing referred to as one's own Self here is bigger than this vast earth. It is not merely as fine as a millet seed, but also vaster than this whole earth and this entire atmosphere. It is vaster than all the worlds, not merely this one atmosphere. It is larger than even the sky and the heavens. It is vaster than all the fourteen worlds of creation which cannot comprehend its magnitude. So vast is its objectivity and magnitude, being infinite in its expanse, and yet it is in me, in you, and in every one of us, as if it is so little like a small flame of light!

This symbology is given only for the purpose of contemplation, because it has to be taught to us that it is not merely an infinite expanse outside us, unconnected with us as a transcendent something, but is identical with our own Being also. The Upanishads are never tired of hammering this idea into us – that the Supreme Being is both objectively infinite and subjectively the Self of everyone. This is the principal meditation of almost every part of any Upanishad. It is the vast infinitude, incomprehensible to the mind, and yet nothing can be so near to us as That. It is so distant as the distant horizons themselves because of its infinitude and vastness, and yet so near as to be well nigh inseparable from us because it is the Atman itself.

sarvakarmā sarvakāmaḥ sarvagandhaḥ sarvarasaḥ sarvamidamabhyātto'vākyanādara eṣa ma ātmāntarhṛdaya etadbrahmaitamitaḥ pretyābhisaṁbhavitāsmīti yasya syādaddhā na vicikitsāstīti ha smāha śāṇḍilyaḥ śāṇḍilyaḥ ||3.14.4||

Sandilya, who was a great sage, proclaims this great knowledge: “This great Being whose actions are all actions, whose desires are all desires, whose functions are all functions through the senses, is inside me and It is that which is inside everything.”

The reason why the Atman is called Brahman is because it is the Self of all. As the Self of each one, it is called the Atman. As the all-comprehensive Self, it is called Brahman. The doubt that may arise in the mind as to the localisation of the Atman is removed by the assertion that it is the Self of all. It is a contemplation on the all-pervading Self, the universal Self. Therefore, the Atman in one is the Brahman everywhere.

”This Brahman is what I am” – thus we should meditate. The moment we get up in the morning this thought should come to the mind. The progress of our life in spirituality can be judged from the first thought that occurs to the mind in the early morning when we get up. What is the first thought that comes to our mind the moment we wake up from sleep? That will give us an idea as to what we have been thinking throughout the day. The conscious mind remains suppressed and the impulses alone work in the deep sleep state, and these impulses will thrust up certain ideas the moment we get up. It may be something which is connected with this world or something which is related to our sadhana. It may be a thought of anxiety or it may be a thought of freedom. It may be a thought of anything, depending upon the thoughts during the waking state. From this we can have an idea, an inkling as to how we have been conducting our thoughts.

The Upanishad tells us that we have to meditate in this manner throughout the day. As much time as we can spare for this purpose, we must utilise. We have to grow gradually, stage by stage, to that state of Being, when we will be able to give all our time for meditation. Many a time we have difficulties in finding time for meditation, because of the vocations of life. So, in the earlier stages, the advice is that as much time as you can spare should be set apart for the purpose of meditation, even if it be only for half an hour or forty-five minutes, or even less than that because it is not easy for the mind of the neophyte to accept that everything that it thinks can somehow or other be reconciled with spirituality. It always regards the ordinary life of the body and the senses and social existence as different from spirituality. This is the habit of the mind, although it is not correct. This is what it believes. In the beginning, therefore, it is necessary to give some time to meditation – conveniently, of course, not with great effort and hardship on oneself. The life of the spirit is not one of suffocation or stifling of the mind. It is a gradual growth of the mind spontaneously, like the growth of a baby into an adult without any kind of stifling of functions. We should give as much time as is conveniently possible, with satisfaction to the mind. Then the time has to be increased by reduction of external activities, sleep, and the unnecessary things that we do in life which are not actually essential. You may be going to a club or to a picture, or you may be having a chat with some friends. All these can be gradually curtailed, because they are not essential. Essentials alone should be maintained. And still later on, in a more advanced stage, we must learn the art of seeing no distinction between our ordinary life and spiritual life. That is what is actually expected of us as spiritual seekers.

There is no such thing as an unspiritual life, finally. This has been told to us again and again in the Upanishad. Things look unspiritual on account of our peculiar way of evaluation. The idea of ‘I-ness' and ‘my-ness' is the cause of this peculiar notion in the mind, of there being a distinction between the ordinary life and spiritual life. We should not however do things which we regard as wholly unspiritual, or irreconcilable with our ultimate aim. We should not do also that which is wholly irrelevant to our life. We should not have any kind of despondency or diffidence in our heart that the most part of our life is spent in unnecessary work. There is always some connection between our work and the spiritual purpose that we are having in our mind. But the wisdom lies in understanding what this connection is. The connection is one of non-distinction. Though this connection is there, we are not able to keep its awareness. When this awareness arises we enter into a flood of an all-comprehensiveness of approach through every aspect of our life.

So meditation should be a continued practice. How long should we continue the meditation? We must continue until we attain Self-realisation or until we die, whichever is earlier. Whoever has such intense faith, as is mentioned here, shall get it. If we have intense faith, we will get it! You should not have a shaking mood of the mind. There should not be any doubt or suspicion. “Am I fit for it?” “Will I get it?” “What is the good of it?” – this kind of doubt should not arise in the mind. “I must get it.” “I am doing the best possible thing.” “I am putting forth all my effort to the extent of my possibility.” “I am doing my duty.” Such a doubtless attitude should be maintained throughout life. If one has faith of this kind, one should certainly attain it. There is no doubt about it. This is what the whole Upanishad is teaching, which is compressed in this vidya called Sandilya Vidya.Though it is very short, yet it contains everything.

The meaning of this vidya, meditation, is very profound. The more we think about it, the greater and deeper are the meanings that we will discover in it. And these meanings will be discovered as we go deeper and deeper into meditation. So here, we have got in the Sandilya Vidya the whole subject of the Upanishad clinched, as it were – kept inside our fist for the purpose of daily habituation of the mind to spirituality and God-awareness.

This vidya contains the art of adjusting the mind inwardly as well as outwardly in the beginning by alternate processes, and then finally grasping the comprehensiveness of Brahman, the Reality in its simultaneously dual aspect of universality and individuality.

Dādau brahmāhamasmītyanubhava udite khalvidah brahma pascat, is a passage from Acharya Sankara's ‘Satasloki' wherein he makes a reference to this vidya. He mentions how the consciousness rises gradually from the level of individual perspective to the universal one. It is not easy to understand the meaning of what Acharya Sankara is saying here because of the fact that we cannot distinguish between our personality or individuality and the Atman, to which reference is being made. We always mix up the two. The Atman is myself, and we know very well what we understand by the word ‘myself'. It is an inveterate habit of the mind to think in terms of the body. So, whatever be the thing that is associated with individuality is at once identified in meditation. The kernel that is within us, the essence that we are, is to be separated from the body that we appear to be in this technique of meditation. In the beginning, there is consciousness that one's own self is all. Now, this is not merely a statement that is to be studied grammatically or linguistically, but is a matter of experience. One's location in all things in addition to one's own body becomes a revealed truth in the advanced stages of this meditation. There are some examples to show how this happens.

It is something like the space within a vessel realising that it is everywhere. Just compare yourself to a little space that is contained in a small glass tumbler which has got obsessed with a notion that it is inside the glass tumbler only and that what is outside as space is not itself, but an object of itself – something external to itself. It has to elevate itself to the awareness of the non-distinguishability between itself and the external space. That is the real meaning perhaps of what is in the mind of Acharya Sankara. I am the all! The space within the vessel realises that it is all-space. It does not mean that it has become all-space by any effort of its imagination or activity. It is just a rising to the awareness that the wall around it, namely, the tumbler or the glass, is not going to limit its all-pervasive nature.

Then the realisation comes – khalvidah brahma pascat. It is not merely the ‘I' that has become all, but every one is the same all. The Self that is in me is not in me only. The assertion, aham brahmasmi  I am Brahman” can be made by each centre of individuality in a similar manner. This is a larger realisation, says Sankara. It is a rise from the limitation of one's individuality upto the cosmic Reality of one's essence, with a simultaneous awareness of the identity of every self, the so-called multiplicity of selves, with this single Self. So it is the total of all the selves in an indistinguishable mass rising to a single comprehension of the great Absolute Brahman. This is the actual inner import of the meditation which is called Sandilya Vidya.


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From ~~~ Kaivalya Navaneetam (The Cream of Emancipation)
8.
The sages say that there are four prerequisites
for realisation of the Truth:
(1) viveka:
discrimination between the temporary
(therefore unreal phenomena)
and the permanent
(therefore the reality, i.e., the noumenal);
(2) indifference to the enjoyment of pleasures here or hereafter;
(3) the group of six qualities
(4) the longing for liberation.
~~
9 &10.
The six qualities are sama, dama, uparati,
titiksha, samādhāna and śrāddha.
Of these,
sama is control of mind;
dama is control of the senses;
uparati is cessation of activities (relating to caste, creed, family, etc)
titiksha is control of passions, and includes endurance;
samādhāna is, according to the sages,
the settling down of the mind to reflect on the Truth
as revealed (by the scriptures and the sages);
śrāddha denotes faith in the Master and the scriptures.
Such are the meanings of the six terms of this category.
~~
11.
No one can achieve anything in the world
without being properly equipped for the task.
For the same reason,
only those who are qualified with these four categories
of prerequisites can gain illumination.
A novice cannot get it so readily.
If so gained,
it follows that the person has been successively purified
in countless incarnations in the past.

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