Dear Ramji,
Here's something I would ask you to
kindly clarify for me, in your inimitable style.
"The Vedic hymns repeatedly proclaim a unity that lies beyond all
categories of opposition, such as being and nonbeing, death and immortality,
knowledge and ignorance. This radical oneness is inexplicable and, by
implication, can only be ‘seen’ in an elevated state of mystical
awareness. The differentiated aspects of this oneness are our everyday
distinct categories - from trees to people to the star studded sky."
When he says ‘seen' in an elevated state of mystical awareness’, how would you
say this 'seeing' differs from knowledge of the oneness or Self
Knowledge?
Ram:
If this statement is an example of yogic language talking about Self
knowledge, there is no difference. But
if it is referring to a special kind of vision belonging to particular individuals
(mystics) or the mind when it is in a certain state there is a difference.
But before we try to determine the
meaning of this statement it contains several words that need to be understood,
the first being the idea that this unity is inexplicable. If this ‘unity’ is the Self, which I think
this statement refers to and is the basis of my argument, it is not
inexplicable. As you are well aware
Vedantic literature (the Upanishads, Brahma Sutras, Gita, Shankara) is full of
precise descriptions of the Self…descriptions meant to aid self inquiry. Chaitanyam, awareness, for example, is one
word that accurately describes the Self.
This statement presupposes, I
believe, the idea that only tangible things can be revealed through words. But we know that many words, love for
instance, indicate intangible realities that are universally known and
experienced.
Be that as it may, do words
accurately describe the things in this world we think they describe? No, because all objects that ideas and words
refer to are neither completely real, nor completely unreal, they are
impossible to accurately describe. For
example, when you say tree, what are you actually referring to? If you do an analysis of a tree, break it
down into its constituents, you will find that what you thought the word
referred to does not exist as an independent object. Its existence depends on a whole complex of
related semi-realities. When you factor
in all the other related realities and try to make a statement about them you
find that they are in turn dependent on another more subtle level of objects
until you suddenly realize that what you were talking about has no independent
existence at all…that it is just a name and form superimposed on the screen of
awareness…you. So it isn’t real,
meaning enduring. True, it is
experienceable, but it is not real.
But it isn’t unreal either. You don’t have the proverbial snake without
the rope. You do not have objects
independent of the subject, the ‘unity,’ the Self. So whatever order of reality the tree enjoys
is borrowed from you, the Seer, awareness.
It enjoys a dependent order of reality.
Real (as the Self appearing in a form)…but not real
(self-shining, independent in its own right).
Secondly, this awareness is not
‘radical’ either, unless radical means uncomplicated. It is the most simple, common ordinary
thing. It is just awareness, or if you
prefer an experiential term, ‘seeing.’
It is what is. And it is the
only thing that will not break down on analysis. So it is the only thing that can be
accurately described. Sat, Chit,
Anandam, Sakshi, Chaitanyam, etc. are words that describe the Self. You can analyze anything out of
existence…except the analyzer and the words that refer to the analyzer. The analyzer, you, is indestructible
awareness. The words can’t be destroyed
either because they are not separate from the Self, the I.
Finally, just to be thorough,
‘unity’ is not a good word to describe the Self because it implies something
connecting many different things. The
Self doesn’t connect separate things because it is the things it seems to connect. Nonetheless, people who have limited
experience/knowledge of the Self often think of it as a unifying factor, the
glue holding everything together. This
is reasonable because although there is no connection there seems to be a
connection when one accepts the way the senses present the world…as if it were
something other than us.
One problem I have with this
statement, however, is the idea that the Self can only be perceived in ‘an elevated state of mystical
awareness.” Is it untrue or true?
It is untrue. How is it untrue? It is untrue by virtue of the fact that if
the experience/knowledge of the Self is dependent on an ‘elevated state’ then
the Self would not be available in an unelevated
state…meaning in our everyday state of consciousness.
But we know that the Self is
available all the time, omnipresent is the word used in scripture. It is there when the mind is elevated, seeing
it, and it is there when the mind is unelevated, not
seeing it. It is the reason you know that ‘you’ are not seeing it. For example, You say
that sometimes you see it and sometimes you don’t. So I ask, “How do you know that you are not
seeing it?” And you can only answer,
because I am aware that I am not seeing it.
So I ask, “Who is aware that you are not seeing it?” And you inquire and you understand that the ‘it’ that you were not seeing is right there as
you, as the awareness of the not seeing.
The problem with the view expressed
in this statement is that enlightenment then boils down to a person having his
or her mind in an elevated state. But we
know from a study of the mind that it is incapable of a permanently elevated
state. It is anitya, impermanent by its
very nature. It cycles through the
gunas.
But the statement is partially
true. It is true because when the mind
is predominately sattvic one may, although not necessarily, see the ‘unity,’
the Self. Actually what is seen is not
the unity, the Self, but the reflection of the Self in the clear lake of the
mind…but this is good enough for Self knowledge to arise…and set you free.
The instrument of experience (mystic
vision in this case) is the mind. So
when the mind is tamasic you cannot ‘experience unity.’ In the tamasic mode the mind is a huge dark
cloud. It absorbs but does not reflect the light
of awareness. So there is no bliss and
no understanding of the Self. The same
is true when the mind is rajasic...but for a different reason. In rajas the mind is so active attention is
continually distracted by the agitations so that it can’t perceive the Self shining behind it.
And even if it does get glimpses, as often happens in a rajasic mind,
and which are just fine in themselves, there is no retention of the knowledge
that “I am the Self and not this person perceiving it.”
The reason questing for unity doesn’t work is because you already are
that ‘unity.’ Why do you need to experience something that
you are already experiencing twenty four hours a day three hundred and sixty
five days a year? How can you get what
you already have? I just received an
e-mail from a person who can explain better than I what needs to happen.
“Dearest Ram
Thank you for lifting the lid on my heart and mind.
It (Self Realization) felt all so
close the last years and now I just understood that I can´t
gain what I am. It seems so easy and practical and useful and makes life very
much easier. Since August 15th (my ascension day!!!) my mind is clearer than it
ever was. I understand koans I was pondering over for
eight years with my zen
teacher and laugh about knots in the mind.”
Was this person in an ‘elevated
state of mystical awareness?’ No. There was a sense of euphoria (my ascension
day!!!) after the realization but the experience was simply an understanding of
the nature of the Self that had been prevented by a belief in enlightenment
through karma, practice. In other words
ignorance about the Self was removed by the teaching. The person ‘got it’. There was nothing
mystical about it.
You can’t obtain it through karma
because you are it. You can only attain
something through karma that you don’t have.
So there is no need to cultivate a particular kind of ‘seeing’ because
you are already what you want to see.
There is nothing ‘mystical’ (whatever that means) about
enlightenment. So this ‘unity’ that one wants to ‘see’ is seen by removing one’s
ignorance about who one is, an ignorance that is very often kept alive by the
experiential/mystical belief in a special kind of perception.
Awareness or ‘mystical awareness’ is
not something that you use to see unity, the Self. It is the Self. It is you.
If this is true, why try to elevate the mind to experience it? What a lot of bother that would be. Particularly since the mind is going to have
to eventually unexperience it when it inevitably
becomes rajasic or tamasic once again. And, if this is a non-dual reality, everyone every where every
minute is experiencing it, in the words of your quotation, as “the
differentiated aspects of this oneness…” in short the world around. So the way to access the Self then is to
understand that the world is the Self.
This can come about during an epiphany (a state of mystical awareness)
but it can also come about through reason.
People often tell me that they have
realized that they are the Self but they haven’t realized that the world is the
Self. So I give them a teaching that can
remove the doubt. Understanding the
teaching does not require a ‘state of mystical awareness.’ It only requires a clear mind and the ability
to follow a train of thought. And once
the teaching is grasped the notion that the ‘I’ is not the world
disappears.
Do you need a particular kind of
yogic or mystical state of mind to understand that everything you are
experiencing all the time is you, the Self?
Not necessarily, although it can’t hurt…if this perception results in
the knowledge “I am what I see.” One
would want it to result in Self knowledge because that knowledge should be in
operation when the mind in not in an elevated state of mystical awareness. Why?
To negate the belief that what one was seeing was something other than
the Self when the mind tries to trick you into seeing duality…which is its
tendency. If you think what you are
experiencing every day isn’t the Self then you will need to invoke a ‘state of
mystical awareness’ to see that it is.
You will have to try to meditate or do some practice that puts
your mind in an altered state. The
problem with this is that states of mystical awareness are not under the
control of the conscious mind. They come
and go according to unconscious factors…the gunas. So what are you going to be doing while you
wait for your mystical state of awareness to return? You are going to be frustrated because you
will be dealing with a universe that seems to be separate from you.
Returning to this person’s
realization, it is interesting to note, however, that the practice that
delivered the goods was not ‘mystical awareness’ or meditation or another
physical practice like the Chod. It was the practice of inquiry. The person was ‘pondering koans’
for eight years. Pondering
koans means trying to figure it out. This shows that inquiry works. It may take time but it works. At some point you are ready to hear the truth
and when you hear it, it goes in and is automatically assimilated. Finally the person notes that life is easier
when you are free of this notion of being the doer, the enjoyer, the
experiencer.
Barbara: It is also said that the greatest jnani
(apparently there are degrees of jnani-ism even according to Swami
Chinmayananda) abides in this 'seeing' state all the time. What does this
mean?
Ram:
It is true and it is not true. If
jnanam is the knowledge “I am limitless actionlesss awareness” then how can
there be degrees of it? You either know
that you are it or you don’t. Just as
you cannot be a little bit pregnant you cannot know who you are to a certain
degree. So from the Self’s point of view
there are no degrees. There are also no
‘jnanis’ if by a jnani you mean an embodied somebody who knows the Self. When
you know “I am the Self’ that ends your identity as a knower of the Self. You are not left with a knower and an object
of knowledge either. They are the
same. The ‘I’ that
knows is identical with what it knows.
But it is true that there are
degrees of jnanam if you accept the dualistic Self realization view that there
is someone who is knowing or experiencing something
called the Self. Or put another way, that Self experience,
as discrete from other experiences, is something worth striving for. There are basically two degrees, although
clever gurus who seem more interested in coming across as brilliant mystics
than as teachers of the Self have broken them up into many stages. It is one of those things you need to do if
you are interested in setting up a religion because religions is for doers and you
need to keep people busy striving for ‘the next level.’
The two stages are ‘I experience the
Self’ and “I am the Self.’ In ‘I
experience the Self’ the experience can vary depending on the nature of the
mind…so the knowledge will vary because it is based on experience garnered through a changeable
instrument. In the back of Tripura
Rahasya you will find a discussion of the different classes of jnanis. It
describes them in terms of the purification of the vasanas. And it makes a very strange statement. It says that the best class
of jnanis don’t purify their vasanas; they just let the vasanas be as
they are.
You would think that the best class
would be those who had purified the vasanas and were saints, like Ramana. But no, not according to the text. Why does it say that? Because the jnani who knows
‘I am actionless awareness’ knows that the vasanas, if there are such things,
are only the Self. So nothing
can be done about it. You can purify
something that isn’t real, but you can’t purify something that is. This idea addresses the doubts you had about
me, I believe. In fact from the Self’s
point of view (and ‘a jnani’ is just a synonym for the Self) the vasanas have
no power to bind.
Barbara: For example, I know all is
one, all is in me. I am Self-Knowledge. Does this make me a lesser
jnani (this is in a manner of speaking of course) than the one who 'sees'
oneness all the time?
Ram:
Absolutely not. In fact, if your understanding is “I am the Self. Period.’ then you are at the second level
(which is not a level) that is, you are enlightened and not merely Self realized…like the person who ‘sees’ oneness all the
time, assuming that the statement ‘sees oneness all the time implies a seer
that is different from what it being seen.
The statement ‘sees oneness all the time’ is suspect because it seems to
not only imply a distinction between the seer and the seen but it puts the idea
of knowledge in terms of time; it implies that there are times when one could
not see oneness…which is the experiential view…and which is impossible if you
know you are the Self.
Finally, what would be the advantage to ‘seeing oneness all the time’ if the one
who sees is already one? If I’m one
indivisible being then it does not bother me at all to see multiplicity,
duality, plurality or any other ‘ity’ The worry that people have about what
happens in the world is pointless because experience does not change the
Self. If it does the person is
identified with the wrong self, i.e. the mind/ego.
Barbara: For me, 'seeing' occurs but
very rarely - it comes and goes. But knowledge is firm and
unshakeable.
Ram:
‘Seeing’ as you are using it simply refers to kind of ‘heightened
awareness’ brought on when the mind is exceptionally sattvic. But as you note, this kind of seeing comes and
goes. So is it real? Should you strive for it? Should you spend twenty four hours a day in
meditation to produce this kind of mind? I don’t think so. Why? Because this kind of
mind is held together by karma and will dissipate when the karmas that create
it cease. In other words you have
to be continually ‘doing’ to maintain it.
There are a few rare people who can
produce ‘the state of mystical awareness’ more or less at will, our mutual
acquaintance Ruby, for example. But
these people have been cultivating sattva for a very long time, in her case
over thirty years…so the sattvic vasana is entrenched. While you were smoking to calm your mind for
scores of years…and thus produce a lot of tamas…she was meditating to gain
extraordinary inner experiences…producing a lot of sattva. She still meditates today even though she
knows who she is…for pleasure. The other
morning I woke up early and felt an interesting vibration in the flat. I peered in her room and saw her sitting in
bed surrounded by a pure white halo. But when it is time to go to work she switches off the mystical
state and gears up for work. So
the statement that we are talking about may be referring to this
phenomenon.
But what does the condition of the
mind matter because, although your minds are quite different, there is no
difference between you…She is the Self and knows it and you are the Self and
know it.
The development of
a mind capable of states of ‘mystical awareness’ is not a guarantee that one
will attain enlightenment, although it certainly can be helpful.
The problem with it, particularly if it evolves outside a teaching
tradition, is that one can think that the ‘state of mystical awareness’ is the
ultimate state. Without self knowledge
states of mystical awareness are at best therapeutic and at worst terrible
frustrations. Even if you have it, it in
no way keeps the vasanas from sprouting and creating a samsaric life. Ruby went through the same kind of hellish
life you did before she woke up. But it
can be a relief, a haven, to which you return over and over when your life is
challenging. The upside is that when you
have this kind of mind you will definitely stumble on the Self…but you may have
no idea what it is.
For example, she came to me last
year and said, “You know, Ram, when I go to all these different lokas and
planetary systems and have all these mystic experiences there is always
something watching me. What is that?”
And I said, “The Self.”
When I said it I saw the lights go
on. So I taught her about the Self. About a month later she came and stood in
front of me and said, “I am finished. I
am the Self.” So in this case, like the
European woman, inquiry was going on all along.
And when her intellect could connect the idea of the Self with something
she experienced regularly, the inquiry intensified and after a short while she
gained what she already had…the Self…through knowledge born of inquiry. So the state of mystical
awareness…which is just a fancy term for sattva…was an aid to enlightenment.
Sankara, as you know, says that you
need a mind that is capable of seeing the truth but he does not call it a
‘mystic’ mind. He just describes the
qualities of that type of mind; discrimination, dispassion, clarity of mind,
desire for freedom, faith, and devotion.
So no, a state of mystical awareness is not required for Self
realization.
Barbara: Some yogis may say I am deluded, that
experience is the truest way of knowing the Self. Well, of course, the
Self is the experience, there is no experience apart
from the Self. I experience myself eternally. But I don't know what
this 'seeing' is.
Ram:
Well, these yogis would not be correct.
As you say you experience yourself eternally. What they mean is some kind of ‘mystical
experience’ perhaps and this cannot be discounted but it is only a secondary
means. If it doesn’t lead to the
understanding ‘I am the Self’ what use is it?
This ‘seeing’ is identical with
knowing from the Self’s point of view.
Are you the Self? For someone who
thinks he or she isn’t the Self, ‘seeing’ is a way of speaking about the
experience of the reflection of awareness in a sattvic mind, often referred to
as the ‘third eye’ and by many other terms: epiphany, satori, insight,
etc.
Maybe this will put the nail in the
coffin of this debate. The word ‘see’
refers to a particular kind of experience but it is also a symbol of knowledge
because when you see something you know it.
Barbara: My knowledge of the Self is firm and
unshakeable, though.
Ram:
Please think carefully about this statement. Is your knowledge ‘of the Self?’ By that I mean is there a ‘you’ that is
different from the Self? Or is the ‘you’
that has knowledge of the Self…the Self?
Or, to formulate it in another way, do you actually mean that your
knowledge is “I am the Self?”
Barbara: I'm sure you explain this quite succinctly in
your knowledge/experience
sections in various places, but please answer it in the light of the above 'seeing'.
Ram: It’s true I do explain it
elsewhere, but it is important to clear it up as your mind formulates it. Hang in there on this one because this is
the last possible doubt you could have.
I think you’re about to leave the ‘spiritual’ world.
Barbara: Thanks a lot.
Ram:
As always, my pleasure.