Friday, July 29, 2016

The former (the false 'I') cannot exist apart from the latter (the real 'I').

Devotee:  I meditate neti-neti (not this - not this).

Ramana Maharishi:  No - that is not meditation. Find the source. You must reach the source without fail. The false ‘I’ will disappear and the real ‘I’ will be realised. The former cannot exist apart from the latter.

Thursday, July 28, 2016

When awareness is found in jagrat (waking) it must also be in sleep.

Devotee:  What is prajnana (Absolute Knowledge)?

Ramana Maharishi:  Prajnana (Absolute Knowledge) is that from which vijnana (relative knowledge) proceeds.

Devotee:  In the state of vijnana one becomes aware of the samvit (cosmic intelligence). But is that suddha samvit aware by itself without the aid of antahkaranas (inner organs)?

Ramana Maharishi:  It is so, even logically.

Devotee:  Becoming aware of samvit in jagrat by vijnana, prajnana is not found self-shining. If so, it must be found in sleep.

Ramana Maharishi:  The awareness is at present through antahkaranas. Prajnana is always shining even in sleep. If one is continuously aware in jagrat the awareness will continue in sleep also
Moreover, it is illustrated thus: A king comes into the hall, sits there and then leaves the place. He did not go into the kitchen. Can one in the kitchen for that reason say, “The king did not come here”? When awareness is found in jagrat it must also be in sleep.

Tuesday, July 26, 2016

Goodness is only relative. Good always implies bad also; they always co-exist. The one is the obverse of the other.

Devotee:  How could God Himself wake up the asura element and bring about constant warfare? Is not Pure Goodness the nature of God?

Ramana Maharishi:  Goodness is only relative. Good always implies bad also; they always co-exist. The one is the obverse of the other.

Monday, July 25, 2016

If that (mind) is turned within, it becomes still in course of time and that “I-AM” alone prevails. “I-AM” is the whole Truth.

Devotee:  I have been interesting myself in metaphysics for over twenty years. But I have not gained any novel experience as so many others claim to do. I have no powers of clairvoyance, clairaudience, etc. I feel myself locked up in this body and nothing more.

Ramana Maharishi:  It is right. Reality is only one and that is the self. All the rest are mere Phenomena in it, of it and by it. The seer, the objects and the sight, all are the self only. Can anyone see or hear, leaving the self aside? What difference does it make to see or hear anyone in close proximity or over enormous distance? The organs of sight and hearing are needed in both cases; so also the mind is required. None of them can be dispensed with in either case. There is dependence one way or another. Why then should there be a glamour about clairvoyance or clairaudience? Moreover, what is acquired will also be lost in due course. They can never be permanent. The only permanent thing is Reality; and that is the Self. You say “I am”, “I am going”, “I am speaking”, “I am working”, etc. Hyphenate “I am” in all of them. Thus I - AM. That is the abiding and fundamental Reality. This truth was taught by God to Moses: “I AM that I-AM”. “Be still and know that I-AM God.” so “I-AM” is God. You know that you are. You cannot deny your existence at any
moment of time. For you must be there in order to deny it. This (Pure Existence) is understood by stilling your mind. The mind is the outgoing faculty of the individual. If that is turned within, it becomes still in course of time and that “I-AM” alone prevails. “I-AM” is the whole Truth.

Sunday, July 24, 2016

Self-Realisation is only a euphemism for elimination of ignorance.

Devotee:  Is there anything like pratyakshabhava in the state of realisation or is realisation merely felt or experienced as the very Being or Sthiti of the soul?

Ramana Maharishi:  Pratyaksha is very being and it is not feeling, etc.

Devotee:   Until the seeker realizes that he is the sought, the above questions arise for him (the former).

Ramana Maharishi:  True. See if you are the seeker. The Self is often mistaken for the knower. Is there not the Self in deep sleep, i.e., nescience? Therefore the Self is beyond knower and knowledge. These doubts are in the realm of mind. To speak from this point of view, the advice is to keep the mind clear, and when rajas and tamas are wiped off, then the satva mind alone exists. So the ‘I’ vanishes in the satva (oonadhal kan). Jnana chakshus does not mean that it is an organ of perception like the other sense-organs. Jnanameva chakshuh. Television,  etc., are not functions of jnana chakshus. So long as there is a subject and also an object it is only relative knowledge. Jnana lies beyond relative knowledge. It is absolute.
The Self is the source of subject and object. Now ignorance prevailing, the subject is taken to be the source. The subject is the knower and forms one of the triads whose  components cannot exist independent of one another. So the subject or the knower cannot be the ultimate Reality. Reality lies beyond subject and object. When realised there will be no room for doubt.
“Bhidyate hridayagranthih
chhidyante sarvasamsayah.”
The heart knot is snapped; doubts are set at rest. That is called pratyaksha and not what you are thinking of. Avidya nasa is alone Self-Realisation. Self-Realisation is only  owpacharika. Self-Realisation is only a euphemism for elimination of ignorance.

Saturday, July 23, 2016

Effort is needed so long as there is mind.

D.: If no effort is needed, can the perpetuated state of emptiness of mind be called the state of realisation?

M.: Effort is needed so long as there is mind. The state of emptiness has been the bone of contention in all philosophies

Friday, July 22, 2016

There is indriya pratyaksha (directly perceived by senses), manasa pratyaksha (directly perceived by the mind) and sakshat pratyaksha (realised as the very Being). The last alone is true.

Devotee:  When all the thoughts are banished and the mind is still or enters into a state of nothingness or emptiness, what is the nature of effort needed on the part of the ‘seeker’ to have a pratyakshabhava of the ‘sought’ (e.g., seeing a mango as a mango)?

Ramana Maharishi:  Who sees nothingness or emptiness? What is pratyaksha? Do you call perception of mango pratyaksha? It involves the play of karma, karta, and karya (action, doer and deed). So it is relative and not absolute. Because you see a thing now you say there is nothing afterwards (i.e., when you no longer see it). Both are functions of the mind. What lies behind both these assertions is pratyaksha. There is indriya pratyaksha (directly perceived by senses), manasa pratyaksha (directly perceived by the mind) and sakshat pratyaksha (realised as the very Being). The last alone is true. The others are relative and untrue.

Thursday, July 21, 2016

Be the Self; there will be no second thing to cause you fear.

Devotee:  I do not have fear in sleep whereas I have it now.

Ramana Maharishi:  Because dwiteeyadvai bhayam bhavati - fear is always of a second one. Of what are you afraid?

Devotee:  By reason of the perception of the body, the senses, the world, Isvara, doership, enjoyment etc.

Ramana Maharishi:  Why do you see them if they cause fear?

Devotee:  Because they are inescapable.

Ramana Maharishi:  But it is you who sees them. For whom is the fear? Is it for them?

Devotee:  No, it is for me.

Ramana Maharishi:  Because you see them, you fear them. Do not see them and there will be no fear.

Devotee:  What then should I do in the waking state?

Ramana Maharishi:  Be the Self; there will be no second thing to cause you fear.

Wednesday, July 20, 2016

Find out who does not realise and what he does not realise. Then it will be clear that there is no avidya (ignorance).

Devotee:  Having heard the truth, why does not one remain content?

Ramana Maharishi:   Because samskaras have not been destroyed. Unless the samskaras cease to exist, there will always be doubt and confusion (sandeha, viparita). All efforts are directed to destroying doubt and confusion. To do so their roots must be cut. Their roots are the samskaras. These are rendered ineffective by practice as prescribed by the Guru. The Guru leaves it to the seeker to do this much so that he might himself find out that there is no ignorance. This truth mentioned is in the stage of the hearing of the Truth (sravana). That is not drdha (firm). For making it unshaken, one has to practise reflection (manana) and one-pointedness (nididhyasana). These two processes scorch the seeds of vasanas so that they are rendered ineffective. Some extraordinary persons get drdha jnana (unshaken knowledge) even on hearing the Truth only once (sakrchhravana matrena). Because they are krthopasakah (advanced seekers), whereas the akrthopasakah (raw seekers) take longer to gain drdha jnana (unshaken knowledge). People ask: “How did ignorance (avidya) arise at all?” We have to say to them: “Ignorance never arose. It has no real being. That which is, is only vidya (knowledge).”

Devotee:  Why then do I not realise it?

Ramana Maharishi:  Because of the samskaras. However, find out who does not realise and what he does not realise. Then it will be clear that there is no avidya (ignorance).

Tuesday, July 19, 2016

To know that there never was ignorance is the goal of all the spiritual teachings.

A visitor had been speaking of the Self having forgotten its true nature.

Sri Bhagavan after some time said: “People speak of memory and oblivion of the Fullness of the Self. Oblivion and memory are only thought-forms. They will alternate so long as there are thoughts. But Reality lies beyond these. Memory or oblivion must be dependent on something. That something must be foreign too; otherwise there cannot be oblivion. It is called ‘I’ by everyone. When one looks for it, it is not found because it is not real. Hence ‘I’ is synonymous with illusion or ignorance (maya, avidya or ajnana). To know that there never was ignorance is the goal of all the spiritual teachings. Ignorance must be of one who is aware. Awareness is jnana. Jnana is eternal and natural. Ajnana is unnatural and unreal.

Monday, July 18, 2016

The tiny hole in the Heart is opened by vichara with the result that ‘I-I’ consciousness shines forth.

Devotee:  There arose a doubt if ‘I-I’ consciousness be the same as nirvikalpa samadhi or anything anterior to it.

Ramana Maharishi:  The tiny hole in the Heart remains always closed, but it is opened by vichara with the result that ‘I-I’ consciousness shines forth. It is the same as samadhi.

Sunday, July 17, 2016

If you attain the state of wakeful sleep which is the same as samadhi, while still awake, doubts will not arise.

Devotee:  “I have an impression that in deep sleep I have something akin to samadhi. Is it so?”

Ramana Maharishi:   It is the waking ‘I’ that asks the questions - not the ‘I’ in sleep. If you attain the state of wakeful sleep which is the same as samadhi, while still awake, doubts will not arise.

Thursday, July 14, 2016

Is there no samadhi now?

Devotee:  Do not men go into samadhi?

Ramana Maharishi:  Is there no samadhi now?


Devotee:  Is it eternal?


Ramana Maharishi:  If not, how can it be real?


Devotee:  Then?


Ramana Maharishi:  There is no then, no now.


Devotee:  It appears so.


Ramana Maharishi: To whom?


Devotee:  To the mind.


Ramana Maharishi: What is mind? Who am I?


Devotee:  (Silence).

Wednesday, July 13, 2016

Change of outlook is all that is necessary

Devotee:  I think of Arunachala, but still I am not a mukta.


Ramana Maharishi:  Change of outlook is all that is necessary. See what such a change did for Arjuna. He had the vision, of the Cosmic Self. Sri Krishna says: “Gods and saints are eager to see my Cosmic Form. I have not fulfilled their desire. Yet I endow divine sight by which you can see that Form.” Well, having said so, does He show what He is? No. He asks Arjuna to see in Him all that he desires to see. If that were His real form it must be changeless and known for what it is worth. Instead, Arjuna is commanded to see whatever he desires. So where is the Cosmic Form? It must be in Arjuna. Furthermore, Arjuna finds Gods and saints in that form and they are praising the Lord. If the form be withheld from the Gods and saints as said by Krishna, who are they of Arjuna’s vision?


Devotee: They must be in his imagination.


Ramana Maharishi:  They are there because of Arjuna’s outlook.


Devotee: Then the outlook must be changed by God’s Grace.


Ramana Maharishi:  Yes. That happens to bhaktas.

Tuesday, July 12, 2016

Realise the Self or the Divine. All these differences will disappear.

A visitor asked Sri Bhagavan about the ‘over-mind’, and ‘super-mind’, the ‘Psychic’, the ‘Divine’ of Sri Aurobindo’s terminology.


Ramana Maharishi:  Realise the Self or the Divine. All these differences will disappear.

Monday, July 11, 2016

When practice remains unshaken it becomes sahaja (natural).

Ramana Maharishi:  Practice is power. If thoughts are reduced to a single thought the mind is said to have grown strong. When practice remains unshaken it becomes sahaja (natural).

Sunday, July 10, 2016

Pratyabhijna is used for realising the ever-present Reality and recognising it.

Ramana Maharishi:  Pratyabhijna = Prati + abhijna. abhijna is direct perception; prati is to be reminded of what was already known. “This is an elephant” direct perception “This is that elephant” is pratyabhijna In technical works, pratyabhijna is used for realising the ever-present Reality and recognising it.

Saturday, July 9, 2016

It (pure 'I') can be recognised only if it is consciously attained. Therefore make the effort and gain consciously.

In yesterday’s answers, Sri Bhagavan said that the Self is pure consciousness in deep slumber, and He also indicated the Self of the transition from sleep to the waking state as the ideal for realisation. He was requested to explain the same.

Sri Bhagavan graciously answered:  The Self is pure consciousness in sleep; it evolves as aham (‘I’) without the idam (‘this’) in the transition stage; and manifests as aham (‘I’) and idam (‘this’) in the waking state. The individual’s experience is by means of aham (‘I’) only. So he must aim at realisation in the way indicated (i.e., by means of the transitional ‘I’).  Otherwise the sleep-experience does not matter to him. If the transitional ‘I’ be realised the substratum is found and that leads to the goal. Again, sleep is said to be ajnana (ignorance). That is only in relation to the wrong jnana (knowledge) prevalent in the wakeful state. The waking state is really ajnana (ignorance) and the sleep state is prajnana (full knowledge). Prajnana is Brahman, says the sruti. Brahman is eternal. The sleep-experiencer is called prajna. He is prajnanam in all the three states. Its particular significance in the sleep state is that He is full of knowledge (prajnanaghana). What is ghana? There are jnana and vijnana. Both together operate in all perceptions. Vijnana in the jagrat is viparita jnana (wrong knowledge) i.e., ajnana (ignorance). It always co-exists with the individual. When this becomes vispashta jnana (clear knowledge), It is Brahman. When wrong knowledge is totally absent, as in sleep, He remains pure prajnana only. That is Prajnanaghana.Aitareya Upanishad says prajnana, vijnana, ajnana, samjnana are all names of Brahman. Being made up of knowledge alone how is He to be experienced? Experience is always with vijnana. Therefore the pure ‘I’ of the transitional stage must be held for the experience of the Prajnanaghana. The ‘I’ of the waking state is impure and is not useful for such experience. Hence the use of the transitional ‘I’ or the pure ‘I’. How is this pure ‘I’ to be realised? Viveka Chudamani says, Vijnana kose vilasatyajasram (He is always shining forth in the intellectual sheath, vijnana kosa). Tripura Rahasya and other works point out that the interval between two consecutive sankalpas (ideas or thoughts) represent the pure aham (‘I’). Therefore holding on to the pure ‘I’, one should have the Prajnanaghana for aim, and there is the vritti present in the attempt. All these have their proper and respective places and at the same time lead to realisation. Again the pure Self has been  described in Viveka Chudamani to be beyond asat, i.e., different from asat. Here asat is the contaminated waking ‘I’. Asadvilakshana means sat, i.e., the Self of sleep. He is also described as different from sat and asat. Both mean the same.  He is also asesha sakshi (all-seeing witness). If pure, how is He to be experienced by means of the impure ‘I’? A man says “I slept happily”. Happiness was his experience. If not, how could he speak of what he had not experienced? How did he experience happiness in sleep, if the Self was pure? Who is it that speaks of that experience now? The speaker is the vijnanatma (ignorant self) and he speaks of prajnanatma (pure self). How can that hold? Was this vijnanatma present in sleep? His present statement of the experience of happiness in sleep makes one infer his existence in sleep. How then did he remain? Surely not as in the waking state. He was there very subtle. Exceedingly subtle vijnanatma experiences the happy prajnanatma by means of maya mode. It is like the rays of the moon seen below the branches, twigs and leaves of a tree. The subtle vijnanatma seems apparently a stranger to the obvious vijnanatma of the present moment. Why should we infer his existence in sleep? Should we not deny the experience of happiness and be  done with this inference? No. The fact of the experience of happiness cannot be denied, for everyone courts sleep and prepares a nice bed for the enjoyment of sound sleep. This brings us to the conclusion that the cogniser, cognition and the cognised are present in all the three states, though there are differences in their subtleties. In the transitional state, the aham (‘I’) is suddha (pure), because idam (‘this’) is suppressed. Aham (‘I’) predominates. ‘Why is not that pure ‘I’ realised now or even remembered by us? Because of want of acquaintance (parichaya) with it. It can be recognised only if it is consciously attained. Therefore make the effort and gain consciously.

Friday, July 8, 2016

What does Bhagavan think of the “lost soul” mentioned by Jesus Christ?

Devotee:  What does Bhagavan think of the “lost soul” mentioned by Jesus Christ?

Ramana Maharishi:  Think what there is to be lost. Is there anything to lose? What matters is only that which is natural. Such must be eternal and cannot be experienced. That which is born must die; that which is acquired must be lost. Were you born? You are ever existent. The Self can never be lost.

Thursday, July 7, 2016

The desire arose in the same way as the body arises to the Self.

Devotee:  “Sri Bhagavan! When I heard of you, a strong desire arose in me to see you. Why should it be so?”


Ramana Maharishi:  The desire arose in the same way as the body arises to the Self.

Wednesday, July 6, 2016

The Self is objectified as God. So also with Guru.

Devotee:  Saiva Siddhanta postulates three fundamentals as being eternal. Is it opposed to Vedanta?

Ramana Maharishi:  The three entities are jiva, God and bondage. Such trinities are common in all religions. They are true so long as the mind is operative. They are mere creations of the mind. One can postulate God only after the mind arises. God is not different from the Self.  The Self is objectified as God. So also with Guru.

Tuesday, July 5, 2016

Monday, July 4, 2016

They (Actions) are not your own. They are God’s activities.

Devotee:  Our work-a-day life is not compatible with such efforts.

Ramana Maharishi:  Why do you think that you are active? Take the gross example of your arrival here. You left home in a cart, took train, alighted at the Railway Station here, got into a cart there and found yourself in this Asramam. When asked, you say that you travelled here all the way from your town. Is it true? Is it not a fact that you remained as you were and there were movements of conveyances all along the way. Just as those movements are confounded with your own, so also the other activities. They are not your own. They are God’s activities.

Saturday, July 2, 2016

Know that the mind promoting them (world / work) is not real but a phantom proceeding from the Self. That is how the mind is destroyed

Devotee:  Without the mind concentrating on it the work cannot be performed satisfactorily. How is the mind to be spiritually disposed and the work kept going as well?

Ramana Maharishi:  The mind is only a projection from the Self, appearing in the waking state. In deep sleep, you do not say whose son you are and so on. As soon as you wake up you say you are so and so, and recognise the world and so on. The world is only lokah, lokah =lokyate iti lokah (what is perceived is the world). That which is seen is lokah or the world. Which is the eye that sees it? That is the ego which rises and sinks periodically. But you exist always. Therefore That which lies beyond the ego is consciousness - the Self. In deep sleep mind is merged and not destroyed. That which merges reappears. It may happen in meditation also. But the mind which is destroyed cannot reappear. The yogi’s aim must be to destroy it and not to sink in laya. In the peace of dhyana, laya ensues but it is not enough. It must be supplemented by other practices for destroying the mind. Some people have gone into samadhi with a trifling thought and after a long time awakened in the trail of the same thought. In the meantime generations have passed away in the world. Such a yogi has not destroyed his mind. Its destruction is the non-recognition of it as being apart from the Self. Even now the mind is not. Recognise it. How can you do it if not in everyday activities. They go on automatically. Know that the mind promoting them is not real but a phantom proceeding from the Self. That is how the mind is destroyed

Friday, July 1, 2016

Loss of lives is wrong anyway. Are wars justified?


Devotee:  Loss of lives is wrong anyway. Are wars justified?


Ramana Maharishi:  For a realised man, the one who remains ever in the Self, the loss of one or several or all lives either in this world or in all the three worlds makes no difference. Even if he happens to destroy them all, no sin can touch such a pure soul. Maharshi quoted the Gita, Chapter 18, Verse 17 - “He who is free from the notion of ego, whose intellect is unattached, though he annihilates all the worlds, he slayeth not, nor is he bound by the results of his actions.”