Thursday 16 October 2014

Destiny 01

Destiny and Free Will
Swami Paramarthanandaji answers one of the most frequently asked questions on destiny and free will at the end of his talks on नारद भक्ति सूत्र - nārada bhakti sūtra.
The question is "Is everything in our lives predetermined? What is the role of free will if everything is destiny?"
Swamiji categorizes this question into three parts and answers them.
Please listen to 12 minutes of Swamiji's audio as per the link below.




Definition of Action - karma
Sanskrit word for action is karma. And destiny = karma phalam - is fruits of our actions. Swami Dayananda defines karma - action is as below.
कर्म - कर्तुं शक्यम् अकर्तुं शक्यम् अन्यथा वा कर्तुं शक्यम्।
karma - kartuṁ śakyam akartuṁ śakyam anyathā vā kartuṁ śakyam |
Action – may be done, may not be done or may be done differently.
We have svatantraṁ - a free will to perform a particular action, not act or act differently.


Q1: Is free will itself because of our destiny?
Answer: Yes
The very possibility of free will in human beings is because of our destiny. Because free will is not available for other living beings. Animals and plants do not have free will. Only human beings have the free will.
So if I should deserve free will, I need to get a human birth. And the human birth itself is because of our pūrva janma karma alone.
So we can say that free will is available to us because of our karma phalam - destiny.
Q2: Are our options for the choices because of destiny or free will?
Answer: Both
We come across very many situations in life. And often we have to choose among many options. The various options in one's life are determined by destiny to a great extent, because we are born in a particular culture.
Even to choose mokṣa, we should be borne in this culture. Because many other cultures do not have a concept of the mokṣa as per our vedic definition.
They have got some kind of salvation like going to eternal heaven etc. But if I have got the option to choose self knowledge, it is mainly because of my birth in this culture. And therefore we can say that to a very great extent the options themselves are determined by destiny.
We have some free will in going to a different country for further studies and settling in that country. Afterwards, we may choose various things from that environment. What is acceptable to one culture may not to be acceptable in vedic culture. Examples would be alcohol, non-vegetarian food and such.
That means free will also determines and changes the type of options available to us.
Both destiny and free will determine the contents and options of our choices.
Q3: Once we have the varieties of choices, is the process of choice is solely determined by destiny?
Answer: No.
Because I have a control over choosing an action. In fact this is the greatest blessing. We have a choice between श्रेयस् - śreyas and प्रेयस् - preyas and we can choose either one of them.
Śreyas is something that is good for all, something that is above dharma and adharma. Whereas preyas is the result of dharma. Any good action produces a result for you, such as prosperity, pleasure, and so on. Śreyas is other than this, more than this; it is mokśa.
We are faced with many choices in our life: Go to Bhagavad Gita class or not; Get married or not. We have got a free will to choose among them.
Because of pūrva karma and because of the upbringing I might have certain tendencies - vāsanas- inclinations. These vāsanas will try to influence my choice.
If the parents have a particular way of life to which a child is exposed, then it is easier for the child to pick up that way of life, because of the influence.
But still our choices are not totally governed by vāsanas. Because we have got a will to learn the śāstras and decide whether I should go by my vāsana, adopt as per dharma or against my vāsana.
I am not totally forced by vāsana. My vāsana tells me to choose what is not right. But vasana can only tell me. Vāsanas of a diabetic tell one to eat sugar. Buddhi - intellect makes that person to avoid sugar.
Vāsanas are only one of the factors of influencing the choice. We have got the option to learn, to understand, to assess and overrule the demand of vāsana .
This has been emphasized by Kṛśṇa in Bhagavad Gīta.
BG 3-34
इन्द्रियस्येन्द्रियस्यार्थे रागद्वेषौ व्यवस्थितौ।
तयोर्न वशमागच्छेत्तौ ह्यस्य परिपन्थिनौ॥
indriyasyendriyasyārthe rāgadveṣau vyavasthitau |
tayorna vaśamāgacchettau hyasya paripanthinau ||
There is attachment and aversion with reference to every sense object. May one not come under the spell of these two because they are one’s enemies.
Everybody has vāsanas. Everybody has rāga and dveśa - likes and dislikes. Mind will keep on asking us to make our choices without consideration to any criteria.
There are many values involved in a moral order - non-injury (ahiṁsā), the absence of deception, speaking the truth, compassion, sharing, the absence of jealousy, the absence of hatred and so on - all of which are connected to each other. With reference to the behaviour of others, we are very clear. Thus, this particular knowledge is with all of us and is gathered by common sense. Duryodhana had this knowledge and so did the Pandavas. However, problems arise because of our priorities, which is why we settle for compromises.
Mind can only produce the desire. Vāsanas influence up to the production of the desire . But whether the desire should be implemented through action or whether I should ignore the desire, is determined by my will.
Krishna says - tayor na vaśam āgacchet - Do not come under the spell of likes and dislikes. May your life be governed by dharma and not by vāsana.
Then what should you do? Censor the vāsana. If they are śuba vāsana- implement it. If they are aśuba vāsana- get rid of it.
Is our choice in life is governed by destiny? The answer is that it is not. It has to be and it can be governed by the free will. Not only it can be governed by free will, all our śāstra tells that it should be.
And if it is not governed by free will, there is no difference between the human beings and animals.
Suresvaracharya scolds such people: buddha dvaita satatvasya yateshtacharanam yadi shunam tattva drisham chaiva ko bedhah ashudhi bakshane.
If the discriminative human beings also live according to the dictates of their vāsanas, without bothering about dharma or adharma what is the difference between the intelligent human being and the road side dog?
Lexicon: Narada Bhakti Sutra, karma, svatantra, phala, free will, destiny, bhagavad gita, vāsana, vasana, kṛśṇa, Krishna, Swami Dayananda Saraswati, Bhagavad Gita Home Study, śreyas, shreyas, preyas,

Sunday 12 October 2014

Ananda 03

Mahā Vākya Vicāra ─ Analysis of the Great Dictum - Part 3 or 3
Ānanda  Mīmāṁsā ─ Inquiry into Happiness

In the third part of the blog on  Ānanda  Mīmāṁsā from Taittriya Upanishad, we shall look at the  mahā vākya - the Great Equation and the benefits of this knowledge.

Taittriya Upanishad - Ananda Valli
स यश्चायं पुरुषे। यश्चासावादित्ये। स एकः।
स य एवंवित्‌। अस्माल्लोकात्प्रेत्य।
एतमन्नमयमात्मानमुपसङ्क्रामति।
एतं प्राणमयमात्मानमुपसङ्क्रामति।
एतं मनोमयमात्मानमुपसङ्क्रामति।
एतं विज्ञानमयमात्मानमुपसङ्क्रामति।
एतमानन्दमयमात्मानमुपसङ्क्रामति।
तदप्येष श्लोको भवति॥ ५।
sa yaścāyaṁ puruṣe | yaścāsāvāditye | sa ekaḥ |
sa ya evaṁvit | asmāllokātpretya |
etamannamayamātmānamupasaṅkrāmati |
etaṁ prāṇamayamātmānamupasaṅkrāmati |
etaṁ manomayamātmānamupasaṅkrāmati |
etaṁ vijñānamayamātmānamupasaṅkrāmati |
etamānandamayamātmānamupasaṅkrāmati |
tadapyeṣa śloko bhavati || 5|

The first three sentences are the mahā vākyaṁ:
sa yaścāyaṁ puruṣe | yaścāsāvāditye | sa ekaḥ |
The mahā vākya here is an equation and that is:
1 Unit of manuṣya ānanda  = Hiraṇyagarbha ānandaḥ. We saw in the part 2 of this blog, that Hiraṇyagarbha ānanda = 100000000000000000000 Units of manuṣya ānanda.
Taittriya Upanishad states that the happiness experienced by a vairagi, a human being with total dispassion is equivalent to the happiness experienced by hiranyagarabha - the creator of this universe.
At the first sight, this looks like a contradictory and illogical statement. Generally all vedic mahā vākyaṁ will appear to be contradictory, irrational and illogical when you see the superficial meaning.
Once you see the contradiction you will understand that you should not take the superficial meaning, but you have to explore a little bit and  arrive at a proper meaning. Superficial meaning is called primary meaning. The real intended meaning in the context is called secondary meaning.
The equation Wave ≡ Ocean

Consider an equation stating that wave and the ocean are one and the same.
We may express this as Wave ≡ Ocean. Meaning that wave and the ocean are congruent. The symbol ≡ is being used to mean that the wave and the ocean are matching or in agreement with something.
We see a contradiction in the primary meaning because wave is small, and ocean is big.
Wave is the product - kāryam, ocean is the cause - kāraṇaṁ. Wave is short lived, and ocean is long lived. There is a contradiction in this statement and the LHS - left hand side and RHS - right hand side of this equation have opposite features.
Difference is in the name and form only 
Wave is water with an incidental nāma, rūpa - name and form. Ocean is also water with an incidental nāma, rūpa as the ocean.
Nāma rūpa is not the intrinsic nature. Wave = water = ocean. Both being one and the same water, there is nothing wrong in saying that wave and the ocean are one and the same. We can thus say that Wave ≡ Ocean.
In wave and the ocean, there is a superficial difference, but essential oneness. Every equation will have superficial difference, but essential oneness.
If superficial difference is not there, equation is not required. Why? Because everybody understands it. And there cannot be a hidden meaning.
For example, the equation 8 = 8 is not required. Because it is evident.
Nobody will write 8 = 7. Why? Because it is wrong. The equation 8 = 8 is not required. And 8 = 7 is incorrect.
Consider the equation 5+3 = 9-1. This equation is meaningful because superficially both sides do not look to be the same. Eyes report differences in LHS and RHS. 
If I know simple arithmetic, then 5+3 = 8 which is not visible to the eye. I understand the invisible 8 through my ज्ञान दृष्टि - jñāna dṛṣṭi.
While my eyes see 5+3 on LHS, I preceive 8 through my eyes of mathematical wisdom - ज्ञान चक्षु - jñāna cakṣu.
Similarly on RHS, eyes perceive 9 - 1. But buddhi understands again the invisible 8. Having seen 8 on the left side and the right side, I understand the equation.
In the same way the upanishad is giving an equation which is superficially a contradiction.

Mahā Vākya Vicāra ─ Analysis of the Great Dictum
Taittriya Upanishad gives the following maha vakyam.
yaḥ ayaṁ puruṣe ānandaḥ = yaḥ asau ānandaḥ āditye
1 Unit of manuṣya ānanda  = Hiraṇyagarbha ānandaḥ. We saw in the part 2 of this blog, that Hiraṇyagarbha ānanda = 100000000000000000000 Units of manuṣya ānanda.
Taittriya Upanishad states that the happiness enjoyed by a vairagi, a human being with total dispassion is equivalent to the happiness enjoyed by hiranyagarabha - the creator of this universe.
LHS of the equation is yaḥ ayaṁ puruṣe ānandaḥ. We need to supply the word  ānandaḥ which is not in the mantra.
LHS is ānandaḥ which is experienced by a manuṣyaḥ. Puruṣe denotes the manuṣyaḥ.
A human being can experience 1 unit of mānuṣa ānanda as we saw in Part 2 of this blog on Ānanda  Mīmāṁsā.
RHS of this equation is yaḥ asau ānandaḥ āditye  - ānanda which is in aditya - brahma - hiraṇyagarbhaḥ - the highest 10th level. We saw that it is equal to 10 power 20 of mānuṣa ānanda.
saḥ ekaḥ - Both manuśya ānanda (of a vairāgi) and hiraṇyagarbha ānanda are one and the same.
This one is a very big contradiction. Similar to wave and ocean being equal.
Manuśya ānanda and hiraṇyagharba ānanda are equated even though Manuśya ānanda is 1 unit and hiraṇyagharba ānanda is 100000000000000000000 units.
This statement is made by veda pramāṇaṁ. I cannot reject this statement saying that veda is wrong. Because veda is अपौरुषेय प्रमाणं - apauruṣeya pramāṇaṁ. Vedas are revealed texts and not written by human beings.
The primary meaning of ānanda is pratibimba ānanda. We use the word happiness only for experiential happiness, since we are sad when experiential happiness is absent.
Therefore the primary meaning of ānanda is experiential pratibimba ānanda.
Now Swamiji asks us not to take the वाच्यार्थ - vācyārtha - direct meaning. You take the indirecty expressed meaning लक्ष्यार्थ - lakṣyārtha, the essential nature of pratibimbānanda.
Just as essential nature of wave is water, the essential nature of pratibimbānanda is bimbānanda the original happiness, which is myself.
Because the nature of any reflection is the original. Because only the original appears as the reflection.
Therefore vācyārtham for Manuśyānanda is pratibimbānanda. Lakṣyārtham for  Manuśyānanda - the implied or contextual  meaning is bimbānanda - which is the original ānanda ātma in the manuśyaḥ.
Reference: ānanda ātmā | brahma pucchaṁ pratiṣṭhā |
Similarly when you talk about hiraṇyagharbānanda, which is the highest graded ānanda, theoretical maximum of experiential ānanda, that is also pratibimbānanda when you are taking the direct primary meaning. One experiences the maximum possible pleasure, because of a very fine reflecting medium. But in the case of hiraṇyagharbānanda also we do not mean the pratibimba ānanda but we refer to the essential nature of  hiraṇyagharbānanda - bimba ānanda -original happiness which is the nature of hiraṇyagharba. Hiraṇyagharba atmānanda - atmānanda of hiraṇyagharba.

Original Atmānanda can never be experienced
So sa yaścāyaṁ puruṣe refers to atmānanda of manushya is the lakṣyārthaḥ.
And yaścāsāvāditye refers to atmānanda of hiraṇyagharba.
In the equation, yaḥ ayaṁ puruṣe ānandaḥ = yaḥ asau ānandaḥ āditye which we interpreted as manushya ānanda ≡ hiraṇyagarnha ānanda
Atmānanda on LHS is bimbānanda. Atmānanda on RHS is also bimbānanda.
And upaniśad says that the original happiness in hiraṇyagharba and original happiness in me, original happiness in the ants, elephant when it is eating the sugar cane is nothing but one brahmānanda.
In brahmānanda there are no gradations.
And when will we get brahmānanda? When will it come?
It will never come. It ever is.
How to experience the original brahmānanda?
The original atmānanda can never be experienced because the moment you experience it becomes pratibimbānanda - a reflection in the mind.
Even the highest mystical ānanda experience by a yogi in nirvikalpaka samādhi- even that mystic ānanda is only pratibimba because it is there only at the time of samādhi. The moment the yogi comes out of nirvikalpaka samādhi, there will be a samādhi to that experiential ānanda !
Therefore bimbānanda is not a matter to be experienced. It is something to be claimed as I am.

Analogy of Mirror and Reflection
When you want to see your face, you need to use a mirror. You have the reflection of your face in the mirror - pratibimba mukham and your original face sitting
on your shoulder. Which one can you see and which one you cannot?
You can see the pratibimba mukham. But bimba mukham - your original face is not a matter to be experienced but it is a matter to be claimed as myself.
Similarly that eka atmānanda is myself - thus the wise person claims the infinite ānanda as I am.
When pratibimbānanda comes, he will enjoy . There is no hatred for experiential pleasures. But when the experiential pleasure goes that person is not disappointed because of the knowledge that when the experiential ananda goes, only the reflection has gone, and I need not cry for that loss.
When the mirror is removed, you do not see your face. You do not sit and cry that my face has disappeared.
I do not see (my face). But I have. Similarly even when the experiential pleasure goes away a jñāni never says I do not have ānanda.
He only says that my ānanda is now not reflected. But I am always ānanda.
And whether you are jñāni or ajñāni experiential pleasure is subject to arrival and departure. We have to accept this fact, which actually works out well.
Suppose you need to go to some place who has lost something and where empathy is needed. You cannot express levity or frivolity at that place.
Mind should not have experiential pleasure all the time.  Mind is a versatile instrument which should have different emotions according to the context.
A jñāni acts as per the situation
Bhagavan has given a mind which is capable of expressing nava rasa - sringara (love), veeram (courage), karunam (compassion), raudra (anger), hasyam (laughter), bhayanakam (fear), bhipasta (disgust), adbutam (wonder), shantam (peaceful).
If necessary, we need to show our disapproval according to the context. We should show compassion at the right time. Therefore it is a blessing that pratibimbānanda comes and goes, which is nothing but the glory of bhagavan.
We should go through these emotions, with the understanding that my nature is ānanda.
saḥ ekaḥ - saḥ bimbānandaḥ ekaḥ.

Benefits of this knowledge
What will jñāni do after gaining this knowldege?
saḥ aḥ evam vit
A jñāni who has understood that I am the bimba ānanda svarūpaḥ and this bimba ānanda alone is called sākṣi caitanyaṁ - witness consciousness. This sākṣi caitanyaṁ is sat or existence and therefore bimbānanda is sat chit ānanda ātma.
iti evam vit - in short I am satchitaānanda ātma.
evam vit - one who knows this.
Pañca kośa viveka
asmāt lokāt pretya - Jñāni practices a very important nididhyāsanam called disidentification from all the anātma.
He practices disidentification from all the anātma, which he was identifying with before. And the anātma identification is experienced in the form of mamakāra and ahaṅkāra.
The meaning of anātma identification is - claiming anātma as myself. Identification is superimposed adyāsaḥ - tādātmyam - qualitative equality or abhimānaḥ.
Sankara's advises in Viveka Chudamani to drop ahaṅkāra and mamakāra and start internal renunciation.
We need to start with the external anātma.
asmāt lokāt pretya - the external anātma where I have got strong mamakāra abhimāna - 1 my profession, 2 my possession, 3. third and most powerfuly abhimāna - my family abhimāna. Keep your family outside your head when you are practising vedantic meditation.
The preoccupation with anātma is the indication of abhimāna. A jnani in nididyāsanam deliberately practices handing over the anātma to viśvarūpa īśvara.
A gift to bhagavan. Thereafter I become the managing trustee. I will do my duties to my family. But I will never claim ownership.
asmāt lokāt pretya - he withdraws his abhimānam - his mamakāra from the external world.
asmāt lokāt pretya - mamakāra tyāgaḥ.
  1. etamannamayam ātmānam upasaṅkrāmati | - annamaya kośa vivekam
    Discrimination of the covering of food sheath.
    Then he comes to his own body - annamaya kosha. Deha abhimana is very powerful. Our natural tendency is to own our body. We have to strip the pancakoshas one by one and hand over to bhagavan.
    upasaṅkrāmati  - crosses over. Crossing over is dropping abhimana. abhimana tyagah is upasaṅkrāmaṇam.
    upasaṅkrāmati - He declares that I am the user of this body. I am not the owner of this body. Bhagavan is the owner and Bhagavan can take this body at any time without even an SMS message.
    Immediate benefit is that maraṇa bhayam goes away. I am not afraid of death anymore. I am grateful to bhagavan for giving me this body, because only in this body I could claim aham brahmāsmi. I cannot study sastra and gain this knowledge without this body.
    A jñāni is ready to give up his body whenever bhagavan wants. This mental preparedness, freedom from the fear of death, is annamaya kośa abhimāna tyāgaḥ.
    Annamayam is kāryam, anātma, nāma rūpa, mithya. Because it is mithya, it does not have an existence separate from me. Just as ornaments do not exist separate from gold.
    Whatever that does not exist separately you should not count as a second thing. Once the wood is counted, you cannot count the desk as to have an independent existence.
  2. etaṁ prāṇamayam ātmānam upasaṅkrāmati |- prāṇamaya kośa vivekam
    Discrimination of the covering of prana sheath.
    You are the user and not the owner of prāṇamaya kosha also.
    Continue to use, give up the abhimana, become the managing trustee. Become the managing trustee means that you have to take care of the body, not as an owner but with the attitude that Bhagavan has given to me for safe-keeping and maintenance.
  3. etaṁ manomayam ātmānam upasaṅkrāmati | - manomaya kośa vivekam
    Discrimination of the covering of mental sheath.
    upasaṅkrāmati means abhimanam tyajati. Become the managing trustee and maintain the mind properly. Because for worldly vyavahāra I should have a calm mind. I keep my mind in a good condition, remembering that it has nothing to do with me. It belongs to bhagavan.
  4. etaṁ vijñānamayam ātmānam upasaṅkrāmati- vijñānamaya kośa vivekam
    Discrimination of the covering of the sheath of buddhi - intelect.
    Even ātma jñānam which happens in my intellect does not belong to me. I am the user of the jñānam. And not the owner of the jñānam. Because jñānam belongs to vijñānamaya kośa, which belongs to bhagavan.
  5. etam ānandamayam ātmānam upasaṅkrāmati | - ānandamaya kośa vivekam
    Discrimination of the covering of sheath of bliss.
    Ānandamaya ātmā is experiential happiness. Do not get attached to even experiential happiness. When it is available, thoroughly enjoy.
    When the experiential happiness goes, and it has to, because it is subject to arrival and departure.
    Be the user of experiential happiness. Do not try to be the owner. Do not get attached. Attachment to experiential happiness is ānandamaya kosha abhimāna.
    Note: The five pancha koshas (as though) cover the true nature (atma) of one's self. These sheaths are described in Tattva Bodha, Viveka Chudamani and many other vedanta texts.
After disidentifying with pañca kośa, he finally comes to ātma. You should not say ātmānam upasaṅkrāmati - he crosses over ātma also.
Ānandamaya is reflected happiness. Ānanda ātma is original happiness. That original ānanda ātma which is brahma puccam pratishta - brahman which is the athishtanam of the entire universe which is defined as satyam jnanam anantam - jnani abides in that brahman.
Thus the wise man claims aham brahma asmi.
This is figuratavely presented as merging into brahman. This is not a physical event, like sugar merging into coffee. It is understanding that I alone is brahman.
We have to add a sentence brahma niśṭā bhavati - That jñāni abides in brahman.

Question:
Will a wise person merge into brahman? Will an ignorant person merge into brahman?
Will a jnani attain brahman? What happens to every one who has not attained brahman?
Neither a wise person - jñāni or otherwise person - ajñāni will merge into brahman. When I AM brahman, where is the question of anyone merging into brahman?
The usage of word 'attain' implies something that is to be achieved. We saw in a previous blog that mokṣa is an already accomplished fact. A jnani reclaims the original identity which was covered by avidya. Both a jnani and everyone else are already brahman. A jnani knows that fact, whereas the others suffer samsara, because of self ignorance.

This concludes the three parts blog on  Ānanda  Mīmāṁsā from Taitrīya Upaniśad.
Om Tat Sat.

Lexicon: ātmā, atma, vairāgyam, vairagyam, ānanda, ananda, brahman, annamaya, prāṇamaya, pranamaya, manomaya,  vijñānamaya, vijnanamaya, ānandamaya, anandamaya, kośa, kosha, jñāni, jnani, ajñāni, ajnani, hiraṇyagarbha, hiranyagarbha, vyavahāra, vyavahara, sākṣi, sakshi,  nirvikalpaka samādhi, nirvikalpaka samadhi, nirvikalpa samadhi, nididyāsanam, nididyasanam, apauruṣeya, apaurusheya, pramāṇaṁ, pramanam, vācyārtha, vacyartha, lakṣyārtha, lakshyartha, bimbānanda, bimbananda, pratibimbānanda, pratibimbananda,  tādātmyam, tadatmyam,  adyāsa, adyasa, asura, rākṣasa, rakshasa, viṣayānanda, vishayananda, viṣaya, vishaya,  Bṛhaspatii, vācaspati, Brhaspati, vacaspati, prajāpati, prajapati, virāt, virat, samaṣṭi, sthūla, prapañca, samashti, sthula, prapanca, sūkṣma, sukshma, mahā vākya, maha vakya, mīmāṁsā, mimamsa, taitriya, taittriya, taittrīya, upaniaṣad, upanishad,

Thursday 9 October 2014

Ananda 02

Levels of Happiness - Part 2 of 3
Ānanda  Mīmāṁsā Inquiry into Happiness
In part 2 of this blog, we shall list 11 levels of ānanda that can be attained by human beings and devas - the celestial beings in the heaven.
Please listen to Swami Paramarthanandaji's talk on Taittriya Upanishad here.



Viṣayānand
We shall use the term  viṣayānanda to include all pleasures and some are listed in the following.
  • Ānanda that one can get in this world by getting some object, such as a toy, balloon, car or money.
  • Ānanda that one can get in the heaven by enjoying a heavenly feast and such.
  • Ānanda - happy moments that you get due to someone's love and affection either in this world or in the heaven.
  • Ānanda that one enjoys with the human or celestial body, mind and intellect. This includes the intellectual pleasure that you get in listening to music, solving a puzzle and so on. 
  • Satisfaction that one gets by doing any dharmic action such as charity, helping others, relieving somebody's pain is also viṣayānanda.
  • Ānanda that we enjoy by academic and scholarly achievements either in this world or in the heaven.
  • The basis of this teaching is dharma. While technically ānanda experienced by asura, rākṣasa and adharmic actions are also viṣayānanda, any pleasure through actions which are against dharma or sāśtra is out of scope.
We are terming viṣayānanda as any experiential ānanda. We are including any kind of ānanda that one can experience under the single broad category of viṣayānanda.
Instead of translating viṣayaḥ as worldly sense-object, we are expanding the scope of the word viṣayānanda to include every possible pleasure - ānanda that any sentient being can get. Viṣayānanda is called as prati bimba ānanda.
Ātmāndanda
We were introduced to brahman and ātmāndanda in In Search of Happiness ─ Part 1 of 3.
Ātmāndanda also called as bimba ānanda or brahmānanda is the original and the only source of any ānanda.
Ātmāndanda can never be experienced. And viṣayānanda is always finite and never long lasting.
When ātmāndanda is reflected in our mind due to favourable and conducive conditions, we get viṣayānanda- experiential ānanda. Viṣayānanda is called as prati bimba ānanda, because it is a reflection of the original source.

Taitrīya Upaniśad
ते ये शतं मानुषा आनन्दाः॥ स एको मनुष्यगन्धर्वाणामानन्दः।
श्रोत्रियस्य चाकामहतस्य। ते ये शतं मनुष्यगन्धर्वाणामानन्दाः।
स एको देवगन्धर्वाणामानन्दः। श्रोत्रियस्य चाकामहतस्य।
ते ये शतं देवगन्धर्वाणामानन्दाः। स एकः पितृणां चिरलोकलोकानामानन्दः।
श्रोत्रियस्य चाकामहतस्य। ते ये शतं पितृणां चिरलोकलोकानामानन्दाः।
स एक आजानजानां देवानामानन्दः॥ श्रोत्रियस्य चाकामहतस्य।
ते ये शतं आजानजानां देवानामानन्दाः। स एकः कर्मदेवानां देवानामानन्दः।
ये कर्मणा देवानपियन्ति। श्रोत्रियस्य चाकामहतस्य।
ते ये शतं कर्मदेवानां देवानामानन्दाः। स एको देवानामानन्दः। श्रोत्रियस्य चाकामहतस्य।
ते ये शतं देवानामानन्दाः। स एक इन्द्रस्याऽऽनन्दः॥ श्रोत्रियस्य चाकामहतस्य। ते ये शतमिन्द्रस्याऽऽनन्दाः। स एको बृहस्पतेरानन्दः। श्रोत्रियस्य चाकामहतस्य।
ते ये शतं बृहस्पतेरानन्दाः। स एकः प्रजापतेरानन्दः। श्रोत्रियस्य चाकामहतस्य।
ते ये शतं प्रजापतेरानन्दाः। स एको ब्रह्मण आनन्दः। श्रोत्रियस्य चाकामहतस्य॥ 

te ye śataṁ mānuṣā ānandāḥ || sa eko manuṣyagandharvāṇāmānandaḥ | 
śrotriyasya cākāmahatasya | te ye śataṁ manuṣyagandharvāṇāmānandāḥ |
sa eko devagandharvāṇāmānandaḥ | śrotriyasya cākāmahatasya |
te ye śataṁ devagandharvāṇāmānandāḥ | sa ekaḥ pitṛṇāṁ ciralokalokānāmānandaḥ |
śrotriyasya cākāmahatasya | te ye śataṁ pitṛṇāṁ ciralokalokānāmānandāḥ |
sa eka ājānajānāṁ devānāmānandaḥ || śrotriyasya cākāmahatasya |
te ye śataṁ ājānajānāṁ devānāmānandāḥ | sa ekaḥ karmadevānāṁ devānāmānandaḥ |
ye karmaṇā devānapiyanti | śrotriyasya cākāmahatasya |
te ye śataṁ karmadevānāṁ devānāmānandāḥ | sa eko devānāmānandaḥ | 

śrotriyasya cākāmahatasya |
te ye śataṁ devānāmānandāḥ | sa eka indrasyā(a)nandaḥ || śrotriyasya cākāmahatasya | 

te ye śatamindrasyā(a)nandāḥ | sa eko bṛhaspaterānandaḥ | śrotriyasya cākāmahatasya |
te ye śataṁ bṛhaspaterānandāḥ | sa ekaḥ prajāpaterānandaḥ | śrotriyasya cākāmahatasya |
te ye śataṁ prajāpaterānandāḥ | sa eko brahmaṇa ānandaḥ | śrotriyasya cākāmahatasya ||

Nature of Viṣayānanda
Viṣayānanda is never long lasting. It is always finite in terms of time, space and the measure. On the first day of purchasing an expensive toy, we are thrilled. In due course, the charm fades away. Experiential ānanda is āgamāpāyi - comes and goes and has gradations. Because any reflection will have gradation depending upon the surface of the reflecting medium. When the reflecting medium is very bright and clean, the reflection is intense, meaning that when the mind is relaxed and more contented, the level of pleasure is higher.
Vairāgya Ānanda
Upaniśad says that there are two methods to get experiential ānanda. Both methods make the mind conducive enough to reflect ātmāndanda in varying degrees.
  1. Happiness through acquisition: Get contentment by acquiring the sense objects.
    Make the mind is relaxed and contented by providing favourable external conditions. The conditions are made favourable, by acquiring viśaya - objects. We do not want many items in this world either because we do not know about it or it is beyond our means. Suppose we come to know of an expensive toy through an advertisement or from somebody. The moment I decide that it is worthy of possession its absence will cause disturbance. Because I do not have something that I consider worthy. That was my decision. I am missing that object or person. I am dissatisfied with myself as long as that object or person is not available to me.
    This discontentment, self-dissatisfaction is generated by me because of my intellectual conclusion that a particular object is worthy of possession. The fact that I do not have so many other things does not affect me. The absence of that particular object or person starts corroding the mind. This leads to desperation by dwelling upon that absence. When I get that object, the discontentment which I suffered for long gets released. And I jump with joy, attributing happiness to that particular object.
    All this started with my intellectual conclusion that a particular object is worthy of possession. Me minus that object = I am apūrnah. Me plus that object = I am pūrnah.
    Swamiji narrates the story of a person who always wore ill fitting, very tight shoes. He wore it during the whole day with pain and got immense pleasure when he went home and removed those shoes. Our lot is exactly like this. We generate discontentment by wrong thinking. Then we struggle to fulfill the desire and the discontentment. When the discontentment goes away we are happy.
  2. Happiness through vairāgya: Get contentment through viveka - discrimination.
    Vedanta says if you can start feeling discontentment by a particular type  of thinking, by changing the pattern of thinking you can avoid the discontentment. If the discontentment is generated by a particular way  of thinking, Vedanta calls it mohaḥ. By right thinking called vivekaḥ, the moha can be avoided or eliminated.
Samsāri chooses viśaya. Jnani chooses vairāgyam. Vairāgyam is born out of vivekam. Both viveka and viśaya give contentment. Both viveka and viśaya give pratibimba ānanda.
That is why jñāni also have experiential ānanda because of their contentment, even though they do not have any of the external sources of happiness.

11 Levels of  Ānanda
Experiential ānanda gained through viśaya has gradations. Experiential ānanda gained through vairāgya also has gradations. These gradations are listed and compared in the ānanda mīmāmsā portion of taittrīya upaniśad.
Chart showing levels of pratibimba ānanda
Note: Start from the bottom in this chart.
  1. mānuṣa ānanda (1 Unit)
    Ānanda experienced by a human being, who "has everything" is 1 unit of ānanda in the above chart. It is mānuṣa ānanda. For that person everything is going right, and the external conditions such as wealth, family, friends are abundant and the internal resources such as health, youth, mind are in a very good condition.
    1 Unit of mānuṣa ānanda will also include all pleasures and satisfaction which are derived through dharmic actions such as scriptural study, scriptural teaching, charity, pilgrimage, social service and such performed by this ideal person.
    Scriptures tell about various higher lokas - where the setup is superior and the body is also better. We are going to see 10 levels where each level is better than the previous level.
  2. manuṣyagandharvāṇām ānandaḥ (100 Units)
    Manuṣyagandharva ānanda is available in manuṣyagandharva loka. It is the experiential ānanda enjoyed by a manuṣyagandharva.
    1 unit of manuṣyagandharva ānanda = 100 units of manusha ananda.
    śrotriyasya ca akāmahatasya - A śrotriya with sufficient dispassion for mānuṣa ānanda can get this 100 units of mānuṣa ānanda.
    This ānanda is not available in this bhū loka. Even though it is not available in bhū loka, a human being can attain the same level of manuṣyagandharva ānanda, through vairāgya for mānuṣa ānanda. That vairāgi whose vairāgya is born out of viveka, rejects the entire mānuṣa ānanda. This rejection is not because of frustration, inability or not knowing about mānuṣa ānanda. This person has mānuṣa ānanda available, but chooses not to pursue and obtain them. An example is Nachiketas of Katopaniśad. That person is called shrotriyah - indicating that the dispassion is out of maturity - viveka. That viveki knows that all objects of mānuṣa ānanda are subject to destruction and the level of joy diminishes with repeated usage. That person does not seek kama, artha and dharma which has the three fold defects - dośa as we saw in another blog.
    śrotriya - smart person. akāmahatasya - He is not disturbed by discontentment.  He is not afflicted by desire or craving. Not because of his incapacity. Even when it is available he can say no to them.
    śrotriyasya ca akāmahatasya
    A person who has vairāgya for mānuṣa ānanda enjoys the same level of manuṣyagandharva ānanda.
  3. devagandharvāṇām ānandaḥ (10000 Units)
    1 Unit of deva gandharva ānanda = 100 X manushya gandharva ananda.
    Deva gandharva ānanda is available for Deva gandharva. Sankara says - Manushya Gandarva is one who migrated to Gandarva Loka by doing punya karma. Deva Ganadrva is a native of Gandarva Loka from śṛśti kāla itself. Upansihad says that Deva Gandarva Ananda is available for human beings.
    How? śrotriyasya cākāmahatasya. A śrotriya with sufficient dispassion will also get Deva Gandarva Ananda provided he has a greater vairagyam. He will get this Deva Gandarva Ananda in bhū loka itself. Measured by rejecting Manushya Ananda as well as rejecting Manushya Gandarva Ananda because of greater vairagyam.
    śrotriyasya ca akāmahatasya
    A person who has vairāgya for 1. mānuṣa ānanda + 2. manuṣyagandharva ānanda enjoys the same level of devagandharvāṇām ānanda.
  4. pitṛṇāṁ ciraloka lokānāmānandaḥ (1000000 Units)
    1 Unit of Chira Loka Loka Ananda = 100 X deva gandarva ananda
    People in Pitr Loka have a longer period of existence. Chira Loka and Pitr Loka are synonymous. The environment is still superior.
    I reject out of maturity and my contentment level is higher.
    śrotriyasya ca akāmahatasya
    A person who has vairāgya for 1. mānuṣa ānanda + 2. manuṣyagandharva ānanda + 3. devagandharvāṇām ānanda enjoys the same level of ciraloka lokānāmānanda.
  5. ājānajānāṁ devānāmānandaḥ (100000000 Units)
    1 Unit of ājānajānā deva loka ananda = 100 X chira loka ananda.
    Their ananda comes because of sense pleasures and not by contentment.
    Deva Loka - svarga loka.  ājānajānāḥ - residents of svarga loka. Ajana - Name of the loka. Ajanaja - name of people. Celestials of the heavenly world
    śrotriyasya cākāmahatasya
    A person who has vairāgya for 1. mānuṣa ānanda + 2. manuṣyagandharva ānanda + 3. devagandharvāṇām ānanda + 4. ciraloka lokānāmānanda enjoys the same level of ājānajānāṁ devānāmānandaḥ.
  6. karmadevānāṁ devānāmānandah (10000000000 Units)
    1 Unit of karmadevānāṁ devānāmānanda = 100 X ajanajana deva loka ananda
    Karma Deva. Previous ones are Ajanaja devas (like Lower Income Group). Karma Devas have better facilities (like Middle Income Group). There are radation in heaven as well.
    Sankara - Ajanaja devas became devas by smartha karmani. Religious activities based on smritis - puranas, itihasas etc. An example is Chandi Homa, which is a smartha karma.
    Karma Devas became devas by shrouta karmani. Religious activities prescribed by vedas. Examples are agnihotram, vaaja seya yaaga etc.
    Karma devas enjoy better facilities. Like different classes in the train. Some have no curtain. Some have curtain. In some classes in the train, you can close the door and lock.
    śrotriyasya kāmahatasya
    A person who has vairāgya for 1. mānuṣa ānanda + 2. manuṣyagandharva ānanda + 3. devagandharvāṇām ānanda + 4. ciraloka lokānāmānanda + 5. ājānajānāṁ devānāmānanda enjoys the same level of karmadevānāṁ devānāmānanda.
  7.  devānāmānandāḥ (1000000000000 Units)
    1 Unit of devānāmānanda = 100 X karmadevanam devanamananda
    Devas are superior to even karma deva. bṛhadāraṇyaka upaniśad (1-9-2) mentions 33 Devas - who have the right in receiving oblations in yaaga. They are called havir bukh devas.
    They are 8 vasu. 11 rudra  12 aditya, Indra and Prajapati
    śrotriyasya cākāmahatasya
    A person who has vairāgya for 1. mānuṣa ānanda + 2. manuṣyagandharva ānanda + 3. devagandharvāṇām ānanda + 4. ciraloka lokānāmānanda + 5. ājānajānāṁ devānāmānanda + 6. karmadevānāṁ devānāmānanda enjoys the same level of devānāmānanda.
  8. indrasyā(a)nandaḥ (100000000000000 Units)
    1 Unit of indrasyā(a)nanda = 100 X devanamananda
    Indra is the ruler of the heaven who has - airaavatham - extraordinary elephant as his personal vehicle.
    śrotriyasya cākāmahatasya
    A person who has vairāgya for 1. mānuṣa ānanda + 2. manuṣyagandharva ānanda + 3. devagandharvāṇām ānanda + 4. ciraloka lokānāmānanda + 5. ājānajānāṁ devānāmānanda + 6. karmadevānāṁ devānāmānanda + 7. devānāmānandā enjoys the same level of indrasyā(a)nandaḥ.
    Number of things I want is decreasing in spirituality. In materialism it is increasing.
  9. bṛhaspaterānandaḥ (10000000000000000 Units)
    1 Unit of bṛhaspaterānanda = 100 X indrasyananda
    Bṛhaspatii is Indra's guru. Indra will give all the best facilities to his guru.
    Bṛhati means vedaḥ. Bṛhaspatii  is vācaspati - the lord of all scriptures.
    śrotriyasya cākāmahatasya
    A person who has vairāgya for 1. mānuṣa ānanda + 2. manuṣyagandharva ānanda + 3. devagandharvāṇām ānanda + 4. ciraloka lokānāmānanda + 5. ājānajānāṁ devānāmānanda + 6. karmadevānāṁ devānāmānanda + 7. devānāmānandā + 8. indrasyā(a)nanda enjoys the same level of bṛhaspaterānandaḥ.
  10. prajāpaterānandaḥ (1000000000000000000 Units)
    1 Unit of prajāpaterānanda = 100 X brihaspaterananda
    prajāpatih - virāt. samaṣṭi sthūla prapañca abhimāni caitanyam virāt
    śrotriyasya cākāmahatasya
    A person who has vairāgya for 1. mānuṣa ānanda + 2. manuṣyagandharva ānanda + 3. devagandharvāṇām ānanda + 4. ciraloka lokānāmānanda + 5. ājānajānāṁ devānāmānanda + 6. karmadevānāṁ devānāmānanda + 7. devānāmānandā + 8. indrasyā(a)nanda + 9. bṛhaspaterānandaḥ enjoys the same level of prajāpaterānanda.
  11. brahmaṇa ānandaḥ (100000000000000000000 Units)
    1 Unit of brahmaṇa ānanda = 100 X prajapaterananda
    brahma (not brahman) - father of virat. Hiraṇyagarbhaḥ - samaṣṭi sūkṣma prapañcaḥ.
    This is the highest possible pratibimbananda. The theoretical maximum experiential pleasure is hiranyagarbanandah.
    śrotriyasya cākāmahatasya
    A person who has vairāgya for 1. mānuṣa ānanda + 2. manuṣyagandharva ānanda + 3. devagandharvāṇām ānanda + 4. ciraloka lokānāmānanda + 5. ājānajānāṁ devānāmānanda + 6. karmadevānāṁ devānāmānanda + 7. devānāmānandā + 8. indrasyā(a)nanda + 9. bṛhaspaterānandaḥ + 10. prajāpaterānandaḥ enjoys the same level of brahmana ānandaḥ.
    You can get this ananda by doing karma and travelling through the lokas or alternatively use your viveka and develop vairagya.
    Note: These are only indicative and not exact mathematical equations. Chart shows very large, but finite numbers to emphasize that this theoretical maximum happiness is also finite.
    The purport is that a vairagi - person of dispassion gains the theoretical maximum happiness in this world itself.  Atmananda is infinte, but you cannot experience it.

Both types of ananda, (1) enjoyed in various lokas by the residents and rulers of these lokas and (2) a human being with sufficient vairagya are pratibimbananda.
Advantages of vairagya ananda over vishaya ananda is listed below. One should evaluate the advantages and choose vairagya ananda over vishaya ananda.
  1. You need to use only your intellect: Vairagya ananda is inexpensive and better because you have to use only your buddhi. Viṣayānanda is expensive in terms of resource needs and maintenance. Viṣayānanda  is very competitive. Whereas each one of us can have our own vairagyam without competing with others.
  2. Under our control and predictable: Vishayananda depends on external factors over which we do not have much control. Some old prarabdha can spoil things. Vishayananda is unpredictable. Vairagya depends on my own viveka only.
  3. Conducive for atma jnanam: Vairagya is one of the essential qualifications for atma jnanam. Viveka leads to vairagya. Vairagya needs to be repeatedly practiced as we saw in the previous blog. Vairagyam will directly help one in getting pratibimbananda and Vairagyam will indirectly help later in gaining bimbananda - one's own nature. Atmananda is gained later because only a spiritual person will come to vedanta. There is no bonus in vishayananda, which will not lead to atmanana. Vishayananda is subject to loss later - காதற்ற ஊசியும் கூட வராது. You cannot carry even a broken needle at the time of death. Vishyananda makes one an extrovert and a materialistic person who will never come to vedanta.
Second chapter of Taittriya Upanishad contains the statement - सोऽश्नुते सर्वान्‌ कामान्सह so(a)śnute sarvān kāmānsaha. Jnani acquires all ananda - saha aśnute sarvān kāmān saha.  Jnani will get bimbananda because of jnanam and pratibimbananda because of vairagyam. So jnani will have sarva ananda - both kinds of ananda.


Part 1 and Part 2 of the blog on Ananda Mimamsa deals with pratibimbananda - which is subject to gradation.
Part 3 of the blog on Ananda Mimamsa deals with the mahā vākyam part of ānanda mīmāmsā.

Wednesday 8 October 2014

Ananda 01

In Search of Happiness ─ Part 1 of 3
Ānanda  Mīmāṁsā Inquiry into Happiness
We have all heard the phrase "Happiness is within you".
  • Where exactly is the happiness hidden within us?
  • Why am I not happy all the time?
  • Can I become happy by going to the heaven?
Taittrīya Upaniśad states that "Happiness is you". Ānanda is the sanskrit word for happiness. Let us examine the source of ānanda, various degrees of ānanda, how to experience the maximum possible happiness and how "Happiness is yourself".
Brahman is satchitananta
Taittrīya Upaniśad defines brahman as satyam, jnanam and anantam.
सत्यं ज्ञानमनन्तं ब्रह्म।
satyaṁ jñānamanantaṁ brahma |
Let us introduce an entity named brahman at this point and define that term.
Brahman is satchitananta swarūpam. Sat - existence, Chit - consciousness and Anantam - limitless is Brahman. Anantam means limitless - infinite.
Anantam is limitless in terms of all factors that cause limitation, namely, time, space and object. In other words, it is fullness or pūrnatvam in every sense. Śruti  often uses the word ānanda in the place of anantam since what is ananta is ānanda.
Chandogya Upaniśad 7-23-1 says: That is ānanda which indeed is the infinite. There is no ānanda in the finite. The infinite alone is ānandam. When something is infinite and lacks nothing, there is no want and so there is no unhappiness.
Status of Our Happiness
The happiness that we experience is of various degrees. The words priyam, moda and pramoda are used to describe happy, happier and the happiest.
Vedanta says that whatever ānanda that we experience is a reflection of original ānanda in our mind. Experiential ānanda is called Reflected Ānanda - Pratibimba Ānanda in vedanta. Whereas the original ānanda is called Bimba Ānanda.


Sun - Principle of Light represents Original Bimba Ananda. 
Relection in the Water represents Pratibimba Ananda.

As in the picture above when the original  ānanda is reflected in our mind, we experience ānanda - happiness. When the mind is contented, it is able to reflect ānanda brightly and we experience a better degree of happiness. When the mind is disturbed the reflection of ānanda is dull and we feel unhappy.

Please listen to five minutes of Swami Paramarthananda's commentary on dṛg dṛśya viveka Verse 20 as per the link below.



Brahman is  ātmānanda
दृग् दृश्य विवेक dṛg dṛśya viveka Verse 20
अस्ति भाति प्रियं रूपं नाम चेत्यंशपञ्चकम्‌।
आद्यं त्रयं ब्रह्मरूपं जगद्रूपं ततो द्व्यम्‌॥
asti bhāti priyaṁ rūpaṁ nāma cetyaṁśapañcakam |
ādyaṁ trayaṁ brahmarūpaṁ jagadrūpaṁ tato dvyam ||

Every entity has five characteristics: existence, consciousness, ānanda, form and name. Of these the first three belongs to Brahman and the other two belong to the world.
The above verse restates the definition of brahman as asti - existence, bhāti - consciousness and priyaṁ - pleasing. Brahman is infinite, so the original ānanda is changeless and infinite. This original source of ānanda is called ātmanānda or bimbānanda. The original source of ānanda is without any limits. Whereas ānanda that is experienced by us - experiential ānanda is always finite. When our mind fluctuates, the pratibimbānanda - reflected ānanda also fluctuates. The mind can be sātvic, rājasic or tāmasic. So the reflection varies and we get various degrees of ānanda. The ānanda which manifests in our mind is never uniform and always changing.

Fruits of Vairāgya 
Vairāgya is the only way leading to fearlessness. Vairāgya also enables a person to enjoy the very same level of pratibimbānanda- experiential ānanda as experienced by the residents and the ruler of the heaven. A human being can experience the very maximum happiness that is practically possible, in this world itself by developing sufficient vairāgya.
Taittrīya Upaniśad lists eleven levels of experiential ānanda. Part 2 of Ananda Mimasa will cover that and we shall see how a person of vairāgya attains the same degrees of ānanda as celestial beings. 



Saturday 4 October 2014

Samsara 01

What is Life?
Let us ponder on the most profound question ─ What is Life?
Hinduism has an one word answer ─ Saṃsāra. We are all Saṃsāri, the one who is in Saṃsāra.
Saṃsāra is the repeating cycle of birth and death. In Tibet, Saṃsāra is called as ─ khor ba which means continuous flow, cyclic existence, perpetual wandering and transmigration.
If the continuous flow is one of happiness, we have no problems being a Saṃsāri. But it is mixed with pain and pleasure as shown below.


Samsara ─ Wheel of Life

We make an assessment of ourselves and conclude that we are inherently alpajñaḥ ─ alpam ─ we are a limited person. Everything that we have is smaller when compared to somebody else. In order to get rid of this apūrṇa bhāvaḥ ─ sense of smallness and insecurity, we seek money, love, security, heaven and so on. We want to complete ourselves by acquiring these worldly things.
We saw that this seeking of human goals is termed as puruśārthaḥ - which are classified as 1. kāma 2. artha 3. dharma and 4. mokṣa
We constantly seek and attain a relative degree of success, achievements, wealth, family relationships, friends, love and so on. Our sense of incompleteness never goes away, though we have moments of satisfaction. These moments do not last long, forcing us to seek more. We do not know how to handle a failure or a disaster. We live in a constant fear of losing these possessions.
What is the nature of our seeking?
Every one of the material objects and human relationships that we have suffer from the following three defects.

Vedanta points out these defects for you to be better prepared while facing the problems in life. You want to go to Bhadrinath, where it is very cold. You protect yourself adequately and then go to Bhadrinath. Similarly, you need to be ambitious and pursue things in a dharmic way.
The knowledge of Vedanta provides you with an armour from getting hurt when things go wrong. The purpose of Vedanta is not be make you lazy or unmotivated.
You do not run away from the world. You need not run away from the family. You face it with the correct perspective. Your expectations are objective and realistic.

1. Dukha Mishritatvam: दुख मिश्र तत्त्वं dukha miśra tattvaṁ ─ Mixed with pain.
Every one of the material objects and human relationships can result in pain when we lose them. The more we love an object, more the pain is likely to be. The effort required in acquiring and preserving also is painful. When our goal is higher, more effort is required for getting and then keeping it.
Vedanta is only stating a fact here. Vedanta is not asking you to be unambitious. When somebody has gained so many things after so much of painful effort and still not happy, that is when Vedanta points out these three fundamental defects in our kāma, artha  and dharma puruśārtha.
2.  Athrupthikaratvam: अतृप्ति करत्वं atṛpti karatvaṁ ─ Never fulfilling.
We are never fully satisfied with what we have. There is no contentment. We want situations to be different. I am always aware of what I do not have. This is due to the nature of kāma, artha  and dharma puruśārtha. The material objects and human relationships are always finite. Heaven is finite. The duration of stay in heaven is finite. As per your own assessment you are finite and limited.
Finite + Finite is still Finite. This is the law of this universe. Adding and gaining any amount of finite things can never make you infinite.
3. Bandhakatvam: बन्धकत्वं bandhakatvaṁ ─ Causes bondage.
The material objects and human relationships bind us. We depend upon them for our security and support. We can never lose our crutches, because of apūrṇa bhāvaḥ ─ sense of incompleteness and insecurity. The more we love the material objects and human relationships, the more our bondage is. Any small disturbance in our possessions causes us immense pain.
Swami Paramarthananda ─ Mundaka Upanisad. Mantra 12
Karma phala and upasana phala have the above three dośā. Swamiji says that the results of good actions and the results of our prayers have the defects as above. Which means that Jnanam is the only way out.

What should one do? A person understands the futility of the pursuit of kāma, artha  and dharma, meaning futility in the pursuit of material things, human relationships and the heaven. By the grace of Isvara, that person comes to know about mokṣa. This person now becomes a mumukṣu ─ a person who has mokṣa as the most desired goal. That person has puruśārtha niścayam. With further grace of Isvara this person starts a systematic study of vedanta sastra under a competent live teacher.


Friday 3 October 2014

Vairagya 02

Vairagyam
Repeated Practice of Dispassion
Bhagavan Sri Krishna prescribes abhyasa and vairagya to gain mastery over the mind in Bhagavad Gita Verse 6-35. The word abhyasa means repeated practice. Repeated practice is necessary to gain mastery on anything, especially in the case of vairagya. Vairagya is a very important virtue for vedanta and yoga. Patanjali Yoga Sutra 1-15 defines vairagya.

श्रीभगवानुवाच।
असंशयं महाबाहो मनो दुर्निग्रहं चलम्।
अभ्यासेन तु कौन्तेय वैराग्येण च गृह्यते॥
śrībhagavānuvāca |
asaṁśayaṁ mahābāho mano durnigrahaṁ calam |
abhyāsena tu kaunteya vairāgyeṇa ca gṛhyate ||
sribhagavan - Lord Krsna; uvaca - said;
mahabaho - O Mighty-armed! (Arjuna); asamsayam - no doubt; manah - mind; durnigraham - very difficult to control; calam - agitated; tu - but; kounteya - O Son of Kunti! (Arjuna); abhyasena - by practice; ca - and; vairagyena - by objectivity; grhyate - is mastered
Sri Bhagavan said:
No doubt, O Mighty-armed (Arjuna), the agitated mind is very difficult to control. But, O Son of Kunti, by practice and objectivity, it is mastered.

Sankara defined vairagya here as the capacity to repeatedly see the limitations in both the seen and unseen objects of enjoyment, meaning in this world and in the heaven - vairagyam nama drsta-adrsta-bhogesu dosa-darsana-abhyasat vaitrsnyam.
Limitations here refer to what a given object can and cannot give. Any object has some virtues, gunas, and some defects, dosas, or limitations. Therefore, one must see these limitations clearly. For example, money can buy, but it cannot make you enjoy.

Viveka Phalam is Vairagyam
Vairagya is the end result of Nitya Anitya Vastu Vivekam. Clinging to the world for security and support is passion. Psychological dependancy towards the world for security and support is called passion.
Using the world for entertainment, learning and serving the world is not passion. You need not run away from the world. You need not reject the world.  Psychologically when I need security and support I change the (TV) channel to God. When I need entertainment and education then I change the (TV) channel to world. Dispassion is borne out of viveka – discrimination.
Viveka phalam is vairagyam. Discrimination between permanent and impermanent objects of pursuit is vivekaha.
புடிச்சா புளியங் கொம்பைப் பிடி If you are falling down, catch hold of Tamarind branch, which is strong though thin. Mango branch appears solid, but will break.

Sobhanadyasa
Sobhanadyasa is superimposing pleasing attributes upon various objects in the world, and then think these will bring you happiness and security. Then here is a certain enchantment and infatuation towards the object.
The attraction to sense-objects is a type of superimposition (adhyāsa) known as śobhanādhyāsa - śrutisārasamuddharaṇam by Toṭakācārya 
A sense-object is not intrinsically attractive because everybody does not find the same object equally attractive. What is most attractive to one person may not be attractive to somebody else. This shows that a person superimposes own subjective ideas of what is attractive or unattractive upon things of the world.
Please see the example of shell-silver in the link below.
http://knswamy.blogspot.com.au/2014/09/avidya-01.html
Objectivity is the meaning of Vairagya:
Vairagya is the absence of sobhanadhyasa. Vairagya means to be free of the longing that implies superimposition, sobhanadhyasa. And this is accomplished by neutralising the sobhanadhyasa, thereby judging situations properly.
Any object of liking can become an object of obsession. To neutralise a sobhanadhyasa, one has to understand the difference between the objective value and the subjective imposition of values upon the object. And how is it possible to see this difference?
Seeing things as they are:
The capacity to look at things as they are is called objectivity. Doing this again and again is abhyasa and seeing the limitations of the objects is vairagya. Repetition is essential because the subjective value does not go away just like that.
Vairagya is nothing but the emotional growth of the person. Growth is strictly in terms of understanding the limitations of an object or situation, again and again, until the superimposition falls apart. Then the world does not have a hold over you. Otherwise, the mind runs towards certain objects naturally because they have been given such importance by the society.
By abhyasa and vairagya, then, the mind can be mastered, manah grhyate.
We are balloon sannyasis:
As we grow old from childhood, with reference to balloons we all have vairagya. We do not become ecstatic by getting balloons or despair if the balloon bursts. A grahasta - a person who has not taken up sannyasa needs to develop the same balloon attitude towards everything. This is internal renunciation.
While vairāgyaṁ and saṁnyāsa are synonymous, it is entirely possible for a grahasta - house holder to develop sufficient vairāgyaṁ without having to take up saṁnyāsa.

Why Vairagya does not last long?
We get occasional glimpses of vairagya during moments of disappointment, disenchantment and distress.  This mental status goes back to the original condition quickly. A person becomes a vairāgī only as a result of vivekam. Only a viveki - a wise person becomes an established vairāgī. Vivekam is the ability to differentiate between what is long lasting and what is ephemeral. Vairagyam needs to be practiced repeatedly with an intelligent evaluation of the world.
1. Abhava Vairagya. Vairagya is not born of disenchantment. Someone who has failed in his pursuits in life and having lost everything decides to be a sadhu does not have vairagya. Because we cannot get a thing, we have a dispassion for it. நரி எட்டி, எட்டி பறிக்க முயன்று முடியாதலால் சீ, சீ இந்த திராட்சை பழம் புளித்ததென்று சொன்ன கதை.
2. Vairagya is not an aversion to sense objects either, but it is an intelligent evaluation. You need not and should not develop hatred towards anything in the name of vairagya.
3. Smasana-vairagya. When somebody dies and the bereaved goes to the cremation ground, smasana, he develops a vairagya towards his pursuits in life. It was just a temporary vairagya which dissipates quickly. Vairagya is not the state of mind that often arises when someone dies. Glimpsing the transitoriness of life, the distaste for meaningless pursuits that follows is most often not real vairagya. That will usually dissipate as time goes on and regular affairs resume.
4. Prasava vairagya. Life is very hard for an expectent mother due to the agony of the travail, and she makes up her mind that such a sorry state of affairs may not be repeated. But it is temporary, because when the pain goes the vairagya also goes.

Patanjali Yoga Sutras: 1-15
दृष्टानुश्रविकविषयवितृष्णस्य वशीकारसंज्णा वैराग्यम् ॥१५॥
dṛṣṭa-anuśravika-viṣaya-vitṛṣṇasya vaśīkāra-saṁjṇā vairāgyam ||15||
dṛṣṭa=seen; visible;             ānuśravika=heard of from others
viṣaya = entity; object; thing;         tṛṣṇa = desire; thirst
vitṛṣna = adipsy (lack of thirst) ;     vitṛṣṇasya = he who lacks thirst
vaśikāra = balance; the same;         saṁjñā = consciously
vairāgyam = imperturbability;         indifference; non-attachment
Dispassion is a state of mind when one does not hanker after objects seen or heard." (Patanjali's Yoga-Sutras: 1-15)
Dispassion has been regarded as an indispensable prerequisite of yoga.
Abhyasa - repetition and vairagya are often compared to the wings of a bird, and every yoga practice must include equal measures of these two elements to keep it aloft.
The root for the word Vairagya is raga, which means both coloring and passion. Vairagya means growing pale. Our view of the world is colored by our likes and dislikes which are born out of sobhanadhyasa.  Through vairagya, we bleach our vision of the colorings of superimposed values of security and support.
We do not have to abandon our possessions, friends, or beliefs; we just have to recognize their transitory nature and be ready to surrender them at the appropriate time.


Thursday 2 October 2014

Vairagya 01

भर्तृहरि - Bhartṛhari on Vairāgya  and Conquest of Fear

Swami Sivananda has published a booklet titled "Conquest of Fear". A PDF copy of that book is available in the following link.
http://www.dlshq.org/download/conquest_fear.pdf

This book starts with the Verse 31 from वैराग्य शतकं vairāgya śatakaṁ of Bhartṛhari.
भोगे रोगभयं कुले च्युतिभयं वित्त नृपालाद्भयं
माने दैन्यभयं बले रिपुभयं रूपे जराया भयम्‌।
शास्त्रे वादिभयं गुणे खलभयं काये कृतान्ताद्भयं
सर्वं वस्तु भयान्वितं भुवि नृणां वैराग्यमेवाभयम्‌॥ ३१॥

bhoge rogabhayaṁ kule cyutibhayaṁ vitta nṛpālādbhayaṁ
māne dainyabhayaṁ bale ripubhayaṁ rūpe jarāyā bhayam |
śāstre vādibhayaṁ guṇe khalabhayaṁ kāye kṛtāntādbhayaṁ
sarvaṁ vastu bhayānvitaṁ bhuvi nṛṇāṁ vairāgyamevābhayam || 31||

In enjoyment, there is fear of disease; 
In social position, there is fear of falling off; 
In wealth, there is the fear of (hostile) kings; 
In honour, there is the fear of humiliation; 
In power, there is the fear of foes; 
In beauty, there is the fear of old age; 
In scriptural erudition, there is the fear of opponents; 
In virtue, there is the fear of traducers; 
In body, there is the fear of death; 
Everything in this world pertaining to men is attended with fear; renunciation alone leads to fearlessness.


Swami Parmarthanada's talk on vairāgya śatakaṁ verse 31 is available in the link below.




Vairāgya śatakaṁ does not directly deal with mokṣa, but deals with Vairāgya which is one of the qualifications for brahma jñānaṁ. Brahma jñānaṁ is self knowledge that you are pūrṇaṁ - you are brahman - you are complete in all aspects and lack nothing.
Śaṅkara lists the qualifications for jñānaṁ  in Viveka Chudamani Verse 19 and they are - viveka, vairāgya, śamādi ṣaṭka sampattiḥ and mumukṣutvam. Swami Parmarthanada calls them as 4Ds.
1. Discrimination 2. Dispassion 3. Discipline and 4. Desire for freedom
These 4Ds are the prerequisites for atma jnanam.
Out of these 4Ds Bhartṛhari deals exclusively with vairāgyam in his work Vairāgya śatakaṁ.
Vairāgyam is synonymous with संन्यास saṁnyāsa.
संन्यास saṁnyāsa – external renunciation
वैराग्यं vairāgyaṁ – internal detachment
Vairāgyam is a very important qualification for a serious spiritual seeker. 

While vairāgyaṁ and saṁnyāsa are synonymous, it is entirely possible for a house holder to have sufficient vairāgyaṁ to attain jñānaṁ without having to take up saṁnyāsa.


Further Reference: Viveka Chudamani Verse 19
आदौ नित्यानित्यवस्तुविवेकः परिगण्यते।
इहामुत्रफलभोगविरागस्तदनन्तरम्‌।
शमादिषट्‌कसम्पत्तिर्मुमुक्षुत्वमिति स्फुटम्‌॥ १९॥
ādau nityānityavastuvivekaḥ parigaṇyate |
ihāmutraphalabhogavirāgastadanantaram |
śamādiṣaṭkasampattirmumukṣutvamiti sphuṭam || 19||
śamādi ṣaṭka sampattiḥ - Six fold virtues are 1. śama 2. dama 3. uparati 4. samādhāna 5. śraddhā and 6. titikṣā.
Viveka Churdamani and the topic of śamādi ṣaṭka sampattiḥ will be handled separately.


Wednesday 1 October 2014

Rudram 01

Rudram and Chamakam in Tamil
I have uploaded Laghunyasam, Rudram and Chamakam in Tamil for printing, reading on tablets and mobile phones.
This publication contains vedic svara such as udatta, double udatta and anudatta. Publication uses chandrabindhu and virama as appropriate. This uses Tamil grantha letter for 'sha'.

For Printing on A4 Paper:
Please download the PDF file from the following link for printing. This is optimized for A4 paper to be printed in double sided booklet format.
Rudram and Chamakam in Tamil for Printing on A4 Paper


For PDF Display on Tablets:
 Screenshot of PDF on Galaxy Note 8 Android Tablet
Please download the PDF file from the following link to view on tablets. This is optimized for Galaxy Note 8 tablet, and I hope it displays well on all sizes of tablets.
Rudram and Chamakam in Tamil - PDF for Tablets


EPUB for Mobile Phones and Tablets:
 Screenshot of epub on Galaxy Note 8 Android Tablet
Step 1: Install Aldiko Book Reader from Google Play.
Aldiko Book Reader for Android Devices
Step 2: Download the following EPUB file.
Rudram and Chamakam in Tamil - EPUB for Mobile Phones and Tablets
Step 3: Open the above epub file in Aldiko Book Reader
Step 4: Go to Settings. Disable "Check to override publisher formatting" in Advanced Formatting. This EPUB uses embedded fonts and will not display correctly if this is not done.
I will do corrections as necessary and upload corrected files. You may check the date on the filename to get the latest version.

Note: Latest version is dated 2014-10-16 as per above links.

Tags: Rudram and Chamakam with svarams and grantha sha.