In
two comments on one of my recent articles,
Since we always experience ‘I’, we do not need to find ‘I’, but only need to experience it as it actually is, Palaniappan Chidambaram asked me some questions about
ahaṁ-sphuraṇa, and I replied in
a series of three comments. These questions asked by Palaniappan also started a discussion about
ahaṁ-sphuraṇa in
a long series of comments on another more recent article,
Why do we not experience the existence of any body or world in sleep?, and I replied to some of the points raised in that discussion in
several comments towards the end of it. Since in
another comment Sanjay Lohia suggested that I should gather together all the comments I have recently been writing in reply to comments written by others and make them available as an article, I will compile and post here all my recent comments regarding
ahaṁ-sphuraṇa (perhaps with some additional explanations to link them all together) as my next article:
Self-awareness: ‘I’-thought, ‘I’-feeling and ahaṁ-sphuraṇa.
Another friend, R Viswanathan, suggested in
one of his recent comments that in the context of this discussion about
ahaṁ-sphuraṇa it would useful if I were to reproduce here an article entitled ‘Demystifying the Term
Sphuraṇa’, which I wrote last year for the Autumn 2013 newsletter of the
Ramana Maharshi Foundation UK. The editor of this newsletter, Alasdair Black, had asked me to write an article for it, so since I am often asked questions about
ahaṁ-sphuraṇa, and since a lot of confusion has been created about this term in English books and articles, I decided to write an article to try to clarify what this term actually means. However, when I read that article again in the light of our recent discussions about
ahaṁ-sphuraṇa and thought more about this subject, I began developing some of the ideas that I had expressed in it, so this present article is a much enlarged version of that original article.