Only the absolute clarity of true self-knowledge will put an end to all our dreams
In continuation of my earlier posts Our imaginary sleep of self-forgetfulness or self-ignorance, Are we in this world, or is this world in us? and Our waking life is just another dream, the following is the fourth instalment of the additional matter that I plan to incorporate after the paragraph that ends on the first line of page 127 of my book, Happiness and the Art of Being:
In verse 1 of Ekatma Panchakam, after the first two clauses, "Having forgotten ourself" and "having thought '[this] body indeed is myself'", Sri Ramana adds a third clause, "having [thereby] taken innumerable births". What exactly does he mean by this? How actually do we "take innumerable births"?
As we have discussed earlier, our present waking life is actually just a dream that is occurring in our imaginary sleep of self-forgetfulness or self-ignorance. When we imaginarily ignore or forget our real self, which is infinite being, consciousness and happiness, we seemingly separate ourself from the perfect happiness that is our own self. Therefore until we reunite with our own reality, which is absolute happiness, we cannot rest, except during the brief but necessary interludes that we experience in sleep, death and other such states, in which our mind subsides in a state of temporary abeyance or inactivity.
Because we have imaginarily separated ourself from our own infinite happiness, we feel perpetually dissatisfied, and hence our innate love for happiness impels us to search restlessly for the happiness that we have lost. Thus our natural love for happiness, which is our own true being, is seemingly distorted, manifesting in the form of desire, which impels us to be active, thereby driving ourself further away from our true state of being. Whereas true love is our natural state of just being, desire gives rise to 'doing' or activity, which distracts us from our essential being.
How does our love for happiness become distorted as desire? Having imaginarily separated ourself from our infinite real self, we now feel happiness to be something other than ourself, and therefore we seek it outside ourself in objects and experiences that we imagine to be other than ourself. In our natural state of true self-knowledge, we experience happiness as our own self, and hence our love for happiness impels us just to be ourself. In our imaginary state of self-ignorance, on the other hand, we experience happiness as if it were something other than ourself, and hence our simple love for happiness is distorted as innumerable desires for things other than ourself — for objects and experiences that we imagine will give us the happiness for which we crave.
Because our self-ignorance clouds our natural clarity of discrimination, it deludes us, making us imagine that in order to be happy we must obtain things other than ourself — whether material objects, sensual experiences or intellectual knowledge. We imagine that certain experiences will make us happy, and certain other experiences will make us unhappy, and hence we desire those experiences that we imagine will make us happy, and we fear or feel averse to those experiences that we imagine will make us unhappy.
Thus our self-ignorance inevitably gives rise to our desires and fears, which impel us to be constantly active, striving by mind, speech and body to experience the happiness for which we yearn so intensely. Until we attain the non-dual experience of true self-knowledge, thereby dissolving the illusion of self-ignorance and all its progeny, we will not be able to free ourself from the gripping vice of desire and fear.
Even when our mind subsides temporarily in a state of abeyance such as sleep or death, our deeply rooted desires and fears are not dissolved, because our basic self-ignorance persists in a dormant form. Therefore, as soon as we are sufficiently rested, our dormant desires and fears rouse us from sleep, giving rise either to the experience of this waking state or to the experience of a dream.
All our dreams are caused by our latent desires and fears, and our present waking state is just one of our dreams. Just as all that we experience in a dream is our own thoughts, which are formed by our latent desires and fears, so all that we experience in our present waking state is our own thoughts, which are likewise formed by our latent desires and fears.
Since our present waking life is actually just a dream in our imaginary sleep of self-forgetfulness or self-ignorance, the state that we call death is merely the final termination of this particular dream. The entire life of our present body is one continuous dream, which is interrupted each day by a brief period of rest in sleep, but which resumes as soon as we have recuperated sufficient energy to engage in another period of mental activity. One feature of this dream is that the imaginary body that we now mistake to be ourself appears to grow gradually older and more worn out, until eventually we forsake it permanently. The state in which we thus permanently cease to imagine our present body to be ourself is what we generally call death.
Since death is just the ending of an extended dream, it is merely a state of abeyance or temporary subsidence of our mind, like the sleep that we experience every day. After we have rested for a while in sleep, our latent desires and fears impel our mind to rise and become active once again in another state of dream. Similarly, after we have rested for a while in death, our latent desires and fears impel our mind to rise once again in another state of activity, in which we imagine some other body to be ourself.
Therefore when Sri Ramana said, "having taken innumerable births", he was referring to this repeated process of forsaking one dream body and imagining another dream body to be ourself. Rebirth or reincarnation is therefore not real, but is just a dream — an imaginary event that occurs repeatedly in our seemingly long sleep of imaginary self-ignorance.
Though rebirth is merely a figment of our imagination — a dream created by our own desires and fears — it is as real as our present life in this world, which is itself just as real as our mind, the limited and distorted form of consciousness that experiences this and so many other dreams. Until we know what we really are, thereby putting an end to our imaginary sleep of self-forgetfulness or self-ignorance, we will continue to experience one dream after another, and in each of those dreams we will mistake ourself to be a body that we have created by our own imagination.
Since the fundamental cause of all the suffering and lack of perfect happiness that we experience in this dream-life and so many other dream-lives is our imaginary self-forgetfulness or self-ignorance, we can end all our suffering and attain perfect happiness only by experiencing the absolute clarity of true self-knowledge. Since the illusion of duality is caused by our self-forgetfulness — our forgetfulness of our fundamental non-dual consciousness of our own infinite and absolute being — it will be dissolved only when we experience perfectly clear non-dual self-knowledge or self-consciousness.
By seemingly forgetting our real self, we enable ourself to imagine that we have become a body. Therefore though we have never really ceased to be our infinite real self, we do appear to have become something else. Hence in this first verse of Ekatma Panchakam Sri Ramana says that having forgotten our real self, having repeatedly imagined ourself to be a body, and having thereby seemingly taken birth in innumerable different bodies, when we finally know ourself we become ourself once again.
Though he says, "… finally knowing ourself [and thereby] becoming ourself …", he does not mean to imply that the attainment of true self-knowledge is really a process of becoming. Relative to our present state of self-forgetfulness, in which we seem to have become a body and mind, the state of self-knowledge may appear to be a state in which we will once again become our real self, but in reality it is just our natural state of being, in which we remain as we always have been — that is, as our immutable real self.
The word that Sri Ramana actually uses in this verse is adal, which is a gerund that primarily means 'becoming' but can also mean 'being'. Therefore, though the words "irudi tannai unarndu tan adal", which form the subject of this verse, could be translated as "finally knowing ourself [and thereby] becoming ourself", they can be translated more accurately as "finally knowing ourself [and thereby just] being ourself".
The state of true self-knowledge is our natural, eternal, immutable and non-dual state of self-conscious being. Since it is the absolute reality, which underlies the appearance of all relativity, it can never undergo any form of change or becoming. It never has become anything, and it never will become anything. It just is.
When we imagine that we know anything other than ourself, we seem to become something limited. However, such becoming is only imaginary. In reality, we always remain as we really are — that is, as infinite and absolute being, consciousness and happiness. Hence when we know ourself as we really are, we do not become anything, but simply remain as the infinite and absolute reality that we always have been and always will be. Therefore in verse 26 of Upadesa Undiyar Sri Ramana says:
Being [our real] self is indeed knowing [our real] self, because [our real] self is that which is devoid of two. …Since we are the absolute reality, we are in truth devoid of any form of duality, and hence we can know ourself only by being ourself, which is what we always are. Therefore the state that we call self-knowledge is not a state in which we know anything new, but is only the state in which we shed all knowledge of everything other than ourself.
When we wake up from a dream, we do not become anything new or know anything new. We merely shed the imaginary experience of our dream, and remain as we previously were. Similarly, when we wake up from our imaginary sleep of self-forgetfulness, in which we have experienced innumerable dreams, we will not become anything new or know anything new. We will merely shed the imaginary experience of our self-forgetfulness and all our resulting dreams, and remain as the infinite and absolutely non-dual self-consciousness that we always have been.
Therefore Sri Ramana concludes this first verse of Ekatma Panchakam by saying:
… finally knowing ourself [and] being ourself is just [like] waking from a dream of wandering about the world. See [thus].When we wake up from a dream, we know that everything that we experienced in that dream was merely our own imagination, and was therefore entirely unreal. Similarly, when we attain the non-dual experience of true self-knowledge, we will know that everything that we experienced in this state of self-forgetfulness (including our self-forgetfulness itself) is merely our own imagination, and is therefore entirely unreal.
4 comments:
My confusion is with regard to death, where you have interpreted as "Similarly, after we have rested for a while in death, our latent desires and fears impel our mind to rise once again in another state of activity, in which we imagine some other body to be ourself." My understanding is that after death of this body, where is the mind, which should also be dead. How are the two successive minds the same. Does this not imply that the mind survives, to imagine another body, because of the latent desires. I am unable to comprehend this, as I understand that there is no mind after death.
Does it also mean that Sri Ramana's mind has/had imagined taking on his body for the final ocassion and since He had realised his true self [so to say], would not take any further bodies?
In reply to the questions asked by Raghunath in his above comment:
If our mind died along with our body, then all our problems would be solved. But unfortunately it is not as simple as that.
Though our mind cannot rise without imagining itself to be a body, it does not depend upon this present body or any other particular body, because when it ceases to imagine one body as 'I' it begins to imagine another body as 'I', as it does in dream.
Neither this body nor any other body has any existence independent of our mind, in whose view alone it appears to exist. Just like our body in dream, this body and all other bodies that we may mistake ourself to be are merely mental images, which our mind has created by its power of imagination — as also is everything else other than our real self or essential being, 'I am'.
Even now our mind persists because of its vasanas or deeply rooted desires — the attachments, fears, likes and dislikes that impel it to be constantly active, imagining itself to be a body and thinking of innumerable other things. Therefore our mind will not die until it gives up all its desires and surrenders itself to the absolute clarity of our natural thought-free self-conscious being.
We have desires for things other than ourself because we wrongly imagine that those other things can give us happiness, and we imagine thus because we mistake ourself to be this finite object-knowing consciousness that we call our 'mind'. Thus the root cause of all our desires is our present self-ignorance.
Since self-ignorance is the cause of the appearance of our mind — the background darkness in which it appears — our mind will be destroyed only by the clear light of true self-knowledge.
The truth is that even now our mind is unreal — a mere illusion or imagination, like the snake a rope is imagined to be — but we will experience its non-existence only when we know ourself as we really are.
Regarding Sri Ramana, we can say that, viewed from our ignorant perspective, his mind had imagined itself to be his body until he was sixteen-years-old, when he experienced himself as he really is. However the truth is that he was never either the mind or the body, but was always only the one non-dual self-conscious being, 'I am', which is the real self of each one of us.
Just as he knew himself to be the one eternal absolute reality, 'I am', when we know ourself as we really are, we will know that we have always been only that same eternal absolute reality.
It is very interesting that the mind survives. Does it imply that the mind while being present in one dying body is in the process of imagining the birth of another new body, or else the continuity would be lost. Is it not this way otherwise where else would the mind reside after the death of the body? I think, I am dwelling here more on the mechanism of reincarnation.
What is the mind, apart from our understanding that thoughts form it? Is it the soul? Why did it at all come into existence in the first place, if there is nothing apart from our true self? Is it creation? If not, why does this illusion happen at all?
In reply to the questions asked by Raghunath in his second comment above:
Truly speaking, our mind is not in our body, but only appears to be in our body, because our body is a mere thought or mental image that arises in our mind.
After the 'death' of one body (that is, after the dream of one bodily lifetime has come to an end) our mind resides temporarily in a bodiless state like sleep. After resting thus for a while, it begins to dream again, and that dream appears to us to be the life of a new body.
The important point to understand is that this "mechanism of reincarnation", as you call it, is all merely a process of imagination. Except in our own imagination, it does not happen at all, just as a dream does not happen except in our imagination.
However, while a dream is happening in our imagination, it appears to us to be quite real. Likewise, so long as we imagine this or any other body to be ourself, all that we experience through the medium of that imaginary body and its five senses is for all practical purposes perfectly real.
Our mind (which is also that which is called our 'soul') is just a thought, a product of our own imagination. It has come into existence because we have chosen to ignore our real self, which is thought-free and therefore perfectly non-dual self-conscious being.
Thus as a result of our self-inflicted self-ignorance, we now imagine ourself to be this body-bound mind. Therefore all that we need do in order to remove this illusion is to turn our attention selfwards in order to know ourself as we really are.
If you read Happiness and the Art of Being, you will find in it detailed and comprehensive answers to all these questions that you have asked, and also to many other questions that you are likely to ask.
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