I Am That
74. Truth is Here and Now
Questioner: My question is: What is the proof of truth?
Followers of every religion, metaphysical or political,
philosophical or ethical, are convinced that theirs is the only
truth, that all else is false and they take their own unshakable
conviction for the proof of truth. 'I am convinced, so it must
be true', they say. It seems to me, that no philosophy or
religion, no doctrine or ideology, however complete, free from
inner contradictions and emotionally appealing, can be the proof
of its own truth. They are like clothes men put on, which vary
with times and circumstances and follow the fashion trends. Now,
can there be a religion or philosophy which is true and which
does not depend on somebody's conviction? Nor on scriptures,
because they again depend on somebody's faith in them? Is there
a truth which does not depend on trusting, which is not
subjective?
Maharaj: What about science?
Q: Science is circular, it ends where it starts, with the
senses. It deals with experience, and experience is subjective.
No two persons can have the same experience, though they may
express it in the same words.
M: You must look for truth beyond the mind.
Q: Sir, I have had enough of trances. Any drug can induce them
cheaply and quickly. Even the classical samadhis, caused by
breathing or mental exercises, are not much different. There are
oxygen samadhis and carbon dioxide samadhis and self-induced
samadhis, caused by repetition of a formula or a chain of
thoughts. Monotony is soporific. I cannot accept samadhi,
however glorious, as a proof of truth.
M: Samadhi is beyond experience. It is a qualityless state.
Q: The absence of experience is due to inattention. It reappears
with attention. Closing one's eyes does not disprove light.
Attributing reality to negative states will not take us far. The
very negation contains an affirmation.
M: In a way you are right. But don't you see, you are asking for
the proof of truth, without explaining what is the truth you
have in mind and what proof will satisfy you? You can prove
anything, provided you trust your proof. But what will prove
that your proof is true? I can easily drive you into an
admission that you know only that you exist -- that you are the
only proof you can have of anything. But I do not identify mere
existence with reality. Existence is momentary, always in time
and space, while reality is changeless and all-pervading.
Q: Sir, I do not know what is truth and what can prove it. Do
not throw me on my own resources. I have none. Here you are the
truth-knower, not me.
M: You refuse testimony as the proof of truth: the experience of
others is of no use to you, you reject all inference from the
concurring statements of a vast number of independent witnesses;
so it is for you to tell me what is the proof that will satisfy
you, what is your test of a valid proof?
Q: Honestly, I do not know what makes a proof.
M: Not even your own experience?
Q: Neither my experience, nor even existence. They depend on my
being conscious.
M: And your being conscious depends on what?
Q: I do not know. Formerly, I would have said: on my body; now I
can see that the body is secondary, not primary, and cannot be
considered as an evidence of existence.
M: I am glad you have abandoned the l-am-the-body idea, the main
source of error and suffering.
Q: I have abandoned it intellectually, but the sense of being
the particular, a person, is still with me. I can say: 'I am',
but what I am I cannot say. I know I exist, but I do not know
what exists. Whichever way I put it, I face the unknown.
M: Your very being is the real.
Q: Surely, we are not talking of the same thing. I am not some
abstract being. I am a person, limited and aware of its
limitations. I am a fact, but a most unsubstantial fact I am.
There is nothing I can build on my momentary existence as a
person.
M: Your words are wiser than you are! As a person, your
existence is momentary. But are you a person only? Are you a
person at all?
Q: How am I to answer? My sense of being proves only that I am;
it does not prove anything which is independent of me. I am
relative, both creature and creator of the relative. The
absolute proof of the absolute truth -- what is it, where is it?
Can the mere feeling 'I am' be the proof of reality?
M: Of course not. 'I am' and 'the world is' are related and
conditional. They are due to the tendency of the mind to project
names and shapes.
Q: Names and shapes and ideas and convictions, but not truth.
But for you, I would have accepted the relativity of everything,
including truth, and learnt to live by assumptions. But then I
meet you and hear you talking of the Absolute as within my reach
and also as supremely desirable. Words like peace, bliss,
eternity, immortality, catch my attention, as offering freedom
from pain and fear. My inborn instincts: pleasure seeking and
curiosity are roused and I begin to explore the realm you have
opened. All seems most attractive and naturally I ask. Is it
attainable? Is it real?
M: You are like a child that says: Prove that the sugar is sweet
then only I shall have it. The proof of the sweetness is in the
mouth not in the sugar. To know it is sweet, you must taste it,
there is no other way. Of course, you begin by asking: Is it
sugar? Is it sweet? And you accept my assurance until you taste
it. Then only all doubts dissolve and your knowledge becomes
first hand and unshakable.
I do not ask you to believe me. Just trust me enough to begin
with. Every step proves or disproves itself. You seem to want
the proof of truth to precede truth. And what will be the proof
of the proof? You see, you are falling into a regress. To cut it
you must put a stop to asking for proofs and accept, for a
moment only, something as true. It does not really matter what
it is. It may be God, or me, or your own self. In each case you
accept something, or somebody, unknown as true. Now, if you act
on the truth you have accepted, even for a moment, very soon you
will be brought to the next step. It is like climbing a tree in
the dark -- you can get hold of the next branch only when you
are perched on the previous one. In science it is called the
experimental approach. To prove a theory you carry out an
experiment according to the operational instructions, left by
those who have made the experiment before you. In spiritual
search the chain of experiments one has to make is called Yoga.
Q: There are so many Yogas, which to choose?
M: Of course, every jnani will suggest the path of his own
attainment as the one he knows most intimately. But most of them
are very liberal and adapt their advice to the needs of the
enquirer. All the paths take you to the purification of the
mind. The impure mind is opaque to truth; the pure mind is
transparent. Truth can be seen through it easily and clearly.
Q: I am sorry, but I seem unable to convey my difficulty. I and
asking about the proof of truth and am being given the methods
of attaining it. Assuming I follow the methods and attain some
most wonderful and desirable state, how do I come to know that
my state is true? Every religion begins with faith and promises
some ecstasy. Is the ecstasy of the real, or the product of
faith? For, if it is an induced state, I shall have nothing to
do with it. Take Christianity that says: Jesus is your Saviour,
believe and be saved from sin. When I ask a sinning Christian
how is it that he has not been saved from sin in spite of his
faith in Christ, he answers: My faith is not perfect. Again we
are in the vicious circle -- without perfect faith -- no
salvation, without salvation -- no perfect faith, hence no
salvation. Conditions are imposed which are unfulfillable and
then we are blamed for not fulfilling them.
M: You do not realise that your present waking state is one of
ignorance. Your question about the proof of truth is born from
ignorance of reality. You are contacting your sensory and mental
states in consciousness, at the point of 'I am', while reality
is not mediated, not contacted, not experienced. You are taking
duality so much for granted, that you do not even notice it,
while to me variety and diversity do not create separation. You
imagine reality to stand apart from names and forms, while to me
names and forms are the ever changing expressions of reality and
not apart from it. You ask for the proof of truth while to me
all existence is the proof. You separate existence from being
and being from reality, while to me it is all one. However much
you are convinced of the truth of your waking state, you do not
claim it to be permanent and changeless, as I do when I talk of
mine. Yet I see no difference between us, except that you are
imagining things, while I do not.
Q: First you disqualify me from asking about truth, then you
accuse me of imagination! What is imagination to you is reality
to me.
M: Until you investigate. I am not accusing you of anything. I
am only asking you to question wisely. Instead of searching for
the proof of truth, which you do not know, go through the proofs
you have of what you believe to know. You will find you know
nothing for sure -- you trust on hearsay. To know the truth, you
must pass through your own experience.
Q: I am mortally afraid of samadhis and other trances, whatever
their cause. A drink, a smoke, a fever, a drug, breathing,
singing, shaking, dancing, whirling, praying, sex or fasting,
mantras or some vertiginous abstraction can dislodge me from my
waking state and give me some experience, extraordinary because
unfamiliar. But when the cause ceases, the effect dissolves and
only a memory remains, haunting but fading. Let us give up all
means and their results, for the results are bound by the means;
let us put the question anew; can truth be found?
M: Where is the dwelling place of truth where you could go in
search of it? And how will you know that you have found it? What
touchstone do you bring with you to test it? You are back at
your initial question: What is the proof of truth? There must be
something wrong with the question itself, for you tend to repeat
it again and again. Why do you ask what are the proofs of truth?
Is it not because you do not know truth first hand and you are
afraid that you may be deceived? You imagine that truth is a
thing which carries the name 'truth' and that it is advantageous
to have it, provided it is genuine. Hence your fear of being
cheated. You are shopping for truth, but you do not trust the
merchants. You are afraid of forgeries and imitations.
Q: I am not afraid of being cheated. I am afraid of cheating
myself.
M: But you are cheating yourself in your ignorance of your true
motives. You are asking for truth, but in fact you merely seek
comfort, which you want to last for ever. Now, nothing, no state
of mind, can last for ever. In time and space there is always a
limit, because time and space themselves are limited. And in the
timeless the words 'for ever' have no meaning. The same with the
'proof of truth'. In the realm of non-duality everything is
complete, its own proof, meaning and purpose. Where all is one,
no supports are needed. You imagine that permanence is the proof
of truth, that what lasts longer is somehow more true. Time
becomes the measure of truth. And since time is in the mind, the
mind becomes the arbiter and searches within itself for the
proof of truth -- a task altogether impossible and hopeless!
Q: Sir, were you to say: Nothing is true, all is relative, I
would agree with you. But you maintain there is truth, reality,
perfect knowledge, therefore I ask: What is it and how do you
know? And what will make me say: Yes, Maharaj was right?
M: You are holding on to the need for a proof, a testimony, an
authority. You still imagine that truth needs pointing at and
telling you: 'Look, here is truth'. It is not so. Truth is not
the result of an effort, the end of a road. It is here and now,
in the very longing and the search for it. It is nearer than the
mind and the body, nearer than the sense 'I am'. You do not see
it because you look too far away from yourself, outside your
innermost being. You have objectified truth and insist on your
standard proofs and tests, which apply only to things and
thoughts.
Q: All I can make out from what you say is that truth is beyond
me and I am not qualified to talk about it.
M: You are not only qualified, but you are truth itself. Only
you mistake the false for the true.
Q: You seem to say: Don't ask for proofs of truth. Concern
yourself with untruth only.
M: The discovery of truth is in the discernment of the false.
You can know what is not. What is -- you can only be. Knowledge
is relative to the known. In a way it is the counterpart of
ignorance. Where ignorance is not, where is the need of
knowledge? By themselves neither ignorance nor knowledge have
being. They are only states of mind, which again is but an
appearance of movement in consciousness which is in its essence
immutable.
Q: Is truth within the realm of the mind or beyond?
M: It is neither, it is both. It cannot be put into words.
Q: This is what I hear all the time -- inexpressible
(anirvachaniya). It does not make me wiser.
M: It is true that it often covers sheer ignorance. The mind can
operate with terms of its own making, it just cannot go beyond
itself. That which is neither sensory nor mental, and yet
without which neither sensory nor the mental can exist, cannot
be contained in them. Do understand that the mind has its
limits; to go beyond, you must consent to silence.
Q: Can we say that action is the proof of truth? It may not be
verbalised, but it may be demonstrated.
M: Neither action nor inaction. It is beyond both.
Q: Can a man ever say: 'Yes, this is true'? Or is he limited to
the denial of the false? In other words, is truth pure negation?
Or, does a moment come when it becomes assertion?
M: Truth cannot be described, but it can be experienced.
Q: Experience is subjective, it cannot be shared. Your
experience leaves me where I am.
M: Truth can be experienced, but it is not mere experience. I
know it and I can convey it, but only if you are open to it. To
be open means to want nothing else.
Q: I am full of desires and fears. Does it mean that I am not
eligible for truth?
M: Truth is not a reward for good behaviour, nor a prize for
passing some tests. It cannot be brought about. It is the
primary, the unborn, the ancient source of all that is. You are
eligible because you are. You need not merit truth. It is your
own. Just stop running away by running after. Stand still, be
quiet.
Q: Sir, if you want the body to be still and the mind -- quiet,
tell me how it is done. In self- awareness I see the body and
the mind moved by causes beyond my control. Heredity and
environment dominate me absolutely. The mighty 'I am', the
creator of the universe, can be wiped out by a drug temporarily,
or a drop of poison -- permanently.
M: Again, you take yourself to be the body.
Q: Even if I dismiss this body of bones, flesh and blood as
not-me, still I remain with the subtle body made up of thoughts
and feelings, memories and imaginations. If I dismiss these also
as not- me, I still remain with consciousness, which also is a
kind of body.
M: You are quite right, but you need not stop there. Go beyond.
Neither consciousness, nor the 'I am' at the centre of it are
you. Your true being is entirely un-self-conscious, completely
free from all self-identification with whatever it may be,
gross, subtle or transcendental.
Q: I can imagine myself to be beyond. But what proof have l? To
be, I must be somebody.
M: It is the other way round. To be, you must be nobody. To
think yourself to be something, or somebody, is death and hell.
Q: I have read that in ancient Egypt people were admitted to
some mysteries where, under the influence of drugs or
incantations, they would be expelled from their bodies and could
actually experience standing outside and looking at their own
prostrate forms. This was intended to convince them of the
reality of the after-death existence and create in them a deep
concern with their ultimate destiny, so profitable to the state
and temple. The self-identification with the person owning the
body remained.
M: The body is made of food, as the mind is made of thoughts.
See them as they are. Non- identification, when natural and
spontaneous, is liberation. You need not know what you are.
Enough to know what you are not. What you are you will never
know, for every discovery reveals new dimensions to conquer. The
unknown has no limits.
Q: Does it imply ignorance for ever?
M: It means that ignorance never was. Truth is in the discovery
not in the discovered. And to discovery there is no beginning
and no end. Question the limits, go beyond, set yourself tasks
apparently impossible -- this is the way.
75. In Peace and Silence you Grow
Questioner: The Indian tradition tells us that the Guru is
indispensable. What is he indispensable for? A mother is
indispensable for giving the child a body. But the soul she does
not give. Her role is limited. How is it with the Guru? Is his
role also limited, and if so, to what? Or is he indispensable
generally, even absolutely?
Maharaj: The innermost light, shining peacefully and timelessly
in the heart, is the real Guru. All others merely show the way.
Q: I am not concerned with the inner Guru. Only with the one
that shows the way. There are people who believe that without a
Guru Yoga is inaccessible. They are ever in search of the right
Guru, changing one for another. Of what value are such Gurus?
M: They are temporary, time-bound Gurus. You find them in every
walk of life. You need them for acquiring any knowledge or
skill.
Q: A mother is only for a lifetime, she begins at birth and ends
at death. She is not for ever.
M: Similarly, the time-bound Guru is not for ever. He fulfils
his purpose and yields his place to the next. It is quite
natural and there is no blame attached to it.
Q: For every kind of knowledge, or skill, do I need a separate
Guru?
M: There can be no rule in these matters, except one 'the outer
is transient, the innermost -- permanent and changeless', though
ever new in appearance and action.
Q: What is the relation between the inner and the outer Gurus?
M: The outer represent the inner, the inner accepts the outer --
for a time.
Q: Whose is the effort?
M: The disciple's, of course. The outer Guru gives the
instructions, the inner sends the strength; the alert
application is the disciple's. Without will, intelligence and
energy on the part of the disciple the outer Guru is helpless.
The inner Guru bids his chance. Obtuseness and wrong pursuits
bring about a crisis and the disciple wakes up to his own
plight. Wise is he who does not wait for a shock, which can be
quite rude.
Q: Is it a threat?
M: Not a threat, a warning. The inner Guru is not committed to
non-violence. He can be quite violent at times, to the point of
destroying the obtuse or perverted personality. Suffering and
death, as life and happiness, are his tools of work. It is only
in duality that non-violence becomes the unifying law.
Q: Has one to be afraid of his own self?
M: Not afraid, for the self means well. But it must be taken
seriously. It calls for attention and obedience; when it is not
listened to, it turns from persuasion to compulsion, for while
it can wait, it shall not be denied. The difficulty lies not
with the Guru, inner or outer. The Guru is always available. It
is the ripe disciple that is lacking. When a person is not
ready, what can be done?
Q: Ready or willing?
M: Both. It comes to the same. In India we call it adhikari. It
means both capable and entitled.
Q: Can the outer Guru grant initiation (diksha)?
M: He can give all kinds of initiations, but the initiation into
Reality must come from within.
Q: Who gives the ultimate initiation?
M: It is self-given.
Q: I feel we are running in circles. After all, I know one self
only, the present, empirical self. The inner or higher self is
but an idea conceived to explain and encourage. We talk of it as
having independent existence. It hasn't.
M: The outer self and the inner both are imagined. The obsession
of being an 'I' needs another obsession with a 'super-l' to get
cured, as one needs another thorn to remove a thorn, or another
poison to neutralise a poison. All assertion calls for a denial,
but this is the first step only. The next is to go beyond both.
Q: I do understand that the outer Guru is needed to call my
attention to myself and to the urgent need of doing something
about myself. I also understand how helpless he is when it comes
to any deep change in me. But here you bring in the sadguru, the
inner Guru, beginningless, changeless, the root of being, the
standing promise, the certain goal. Is he a concept or a
reality?
M: He is the only reality. All else is shadow, cast by the body
mind (deha-buddhi) on the face of time. Of course, even a shadow
is related to reality, but by itself it is not real.
Q: I am the only reality I know. The sadguru is there as long as
I think of him. What do I gain by shifting reality to him?
M: Your loss is your gain. When the shadow is seen to be a
shadow only, you stop following it. You turn round and discover
the sun which was there all the time -- behind your back!
Q: Does the inner Guru also teach?
M: He grants the conviction that you are the eternal,
changeless, reality-consciousness-love, within and beyond all
appearances.
Q: A conviction is not enough. There must be certainty.
M: Quite right. But in this case certainty takes the shape of
courage. Fear ceases absolutely. This state of fearlessness is
so unmistakably new, yet felt deeply as one's own, that it
cannot be denied. It is like loving one's own child. Who can
doubt it?
Q: We hear of progress in our spiritual endeavours. What kind of
progress do you have in mind?
M: When you go beyond progress, you will know what is progress.
Q: What makes us progress?
M: Silence is the main factor. In peace and silence you grow.
Q: The mind is so absolutely restless. For quieting it what is
the way?
M: Trust the teacher. Take my own case. My Guru ordered me to
attend to the sense 'I am' and to give attention to nothing
else. I just obeyed. I did not follow any particular course of
breathing, or meditation, or study of scriptures. Whatever
happened, I would turn away my attention from it and remain with
the sense ‘I am', it may look too simple, even crude. My only
reason for doing it was that my Guru told me so. Yet it worked!
Obedience is a powerful solvent of all desires and fears. Just
turn away from all that occupies the mind; do whatever work you
have to complete, but avoid new obligations; keep empty, keep
available, resist not what comes uninvited. In the end you reach
a state of non-grasping, of joyful non-attachment, of inner ease
and freedom indescribable, yet wonderfully real.
Q: When a truth-seeker earnestly practices his Yogas, does his
inner Guru guide and help him or does he leave him to his own
resources, just waiting for the outcome?
M: All happens by itself. Neither the seeker. nor the Guru do
anything. Things happen as they happen; blame or praise are
apportioned later, after the sense of doership appearing.
Q: How strange! Surely the doer comes before the deed.
M: It is the other way round; the deed is a fact, the doer a
mere concept. Your very language shows that while the deed is
certain, the doer is dubious; shifting responsibility is a game
peculiarly human. Considering the endless list of factors
required for anything to happen, one can only admit that
everything is responsible for everything, however remote.
Doership is a myth born from the illusion of 'me' and 'the
mine'.
Q: How powerful the illusion?
M: No doubt, because based on reality.
Q: What is real in it?
M: Find out, by discerning and rejecting all that is unreal.
Q: I have not understood well the role of the inner self in
spiritual endeavour. Who makes the effort? Is it the outer self,
or the inner?
M: You have invented words like effort, inner, outer, self, etc.
and seek to impose them on reality. Things just happen to be as
they are, but we want to build them into a pattern, laid down by
the structure of our language. So strong is this habit, that we
tend to deny reality to what cannot be verbalised. We just
refuse to see that words are mere symbols, related by convention
and habit to repeated experiences.
Q: What is the value of spiritual books?
M: They help in dispelling ignorance. They are useful in the
beginning, but become a hindrance in the end. One must know when
to discard them.
Q: What is the link between atma and sattva, between the self
and the universal harmony?
M: As between the sun and its rays. Harmony and beauty,
understanding and affection are all expressions of reality. It
is reality in action, the impact of the spirit on matter. Tamas
obscures, rajas distorts, sattva harmonises. With the maturing
of the sattva all desires and fears come to an end. The real
being is reflected in the mind undistorted. Matter is redeemed,
spirit -- revealed. The two are seen as one. They were always
one, but the imperfect mind saw them as two. Perfection of the
mind is the human task, for matter and spirit meet in the mind.
Q: I feel like a man before a door. I know the door is open but
it is guarded by the dogs of desire and fear. What am I to do?
M: Obey the teacher and brave the dogs. Behave as if they were
not there. Again, obedience is the golden rule. Freedom is won
by obedience. To escape from prison one must unquestioningly
obey instructions sent by those who work for one's release.
Q: The words of the Guru, when merely heard, have little power.
One must have faith to obey them. What creates such faith?
M: When the time comes, faith comes. Everything comes in time.
The Guru is always ready to share, but there are no takers.
Q: Yes, Sri Ramana Maharshi used to say: Gurus there are many,
but where are the disciples?
M: Well, in the course of time everything happens. All will come
through, not a single soul (jiva) shall be lost.
Q: I am very much afraid of taking intellectual understanding
for realisation. I may talk of truth without knowing it, and may
know it without a single word said. I understand these
conversations are going to be published. What will be their
effect on the reader?
M: In the attentive and thoughtful reader they will ripen and
bring out flowers and fruits. Words based on truth, if fully
tested, have their own power.
76. To Know that You do not Know, is True Knowledge
Maharaj: There is the body. Inside the body appears to be an
observer and outside -- a world under observation. The observer
and his observation as well as the world observed all appear and
disappear together. Beyond it all, there is void. This void is
one for all.
Questioner: What you say appears simple, but not everyone would
say it. It is you, and you alone, who talks of the three and the
void beyond. I see the world only, which includes all.
M: Even the 'I am'?
Q: Even the 'I am'. The 'I am' is there because the world is
there.
M: And the world is there because the 'I am' is there.
Q: Yes, it goes both ways. I cannot separate the two, nor go
beyond, I cannot say something is, unless I experience it, as I
cannot say something is not, because I do not experience it.
What is it that you experience that makes you speak with such
assurance?
M: I know myself as I am -- timeless, spaceless, causeless. You
happen not to know, being engrossed as you are in other things.
Q: Why am I so engrossed?
M: Because you are interested.
Q: What makes me interested?
M: Fear of pain, desire for pleasure. Pleasant is the ending of
pain and painful the end of pleasure. They just rotate in
endless succession. Investigate the vicious circle till you find
yourself beyond it.
Q: Don't I need your grace to take me beyond?
M: The grace of your Inner Reality is timelessly with you. Your
very asking for grace is a sign of it. Do not worry about my
grace, but do what you are told. The doing is the proof of
earnestness, not the expecting of grace.
Q: What am I to be earnest about?
M: Assiduously investigate everything that crosses your field of
attention. With practice the field will broaden and
investigation deepens, until they become spontaneous and
limitless.
Q: Are you not making realisation the result of practice?
Practice operates within the limitations of physical existence.
How can it give birth to the unlimited?
M: Of course, there can be no causal connection between practice
and wisdom. But the obstacles to wisdom are deeply affected by
practice.
Q: What are the obstacles?
M: Wrong ideas and desires leading to wrong actions, causing
dissipation and weakness of mind and body. The discovery and
abandonment of the false remove what prevents the real entering
the mind.
Q: I can distinguish two states of mind: 'I am' and 'the world
is’; they arise and subside together. People say: 'I am, because
the world is'. You seem to say: 'The world is, because I am'.
Which is true?
M: Neither. The two are one and the same state, in space and
time. Beyond, there is the timeless.
Q: What is the connection between time and the timeless?
M: The timeless knows the time, the time does not know the
timeless. All consciousness is in time and to it the timeless
appears unconscious. Yet, it is what makes consciousness
possible. Light shines in darkness. In light darkness is not
visible. Or, you can put it the other way -- in the endless
ocean of light, clouds of consciousness appear -- dark and
limited, perceivable by contrast. These are mere attempts to
express in words something very simple, yet altogether
inexpressible.
Q: Words should serve as a bridge to cross over.
M: Word refers to a state of mind, not to reality. The river,
the two banks, the bridge across -- these are all in the mind.
Words alone cannot take you beyond the mind. There must be the
immense longing for truth, or absolute faith in the Guru.
Believe me, there is no goal, nor a way to reach it. You are the
way and the goal, there is nothing else to reach except
yourself. All you need is to understand and understanding is the
flowering of the mind. The tree is perennial, but the flowering
and the fruit bearing come in season. The seasons change, but
not the tree. You are the tree. You have grown numberless
branches and leaves in the past and you may grow them also in
the future -- yet you remain. Not what was, or shall be, must
you know, but what is. Yours is the desire that creates the
universe. Know the world as your own creation and be free.
Q: You say the world is the child of love. When I know the
horrors the world is full of, the wars, the concentration camps,
the inhuman exploitations, how can I own it as my own creation?
However limited I am, I could not have created so cruel a world.
M: Find to whom this cruel world appears and you will know why
it appears so cruel. Your questions are perfectly legitimate,
but just cannot be answered unless you know whose is the world.
To find out the meaning of a thing you must ask its maker. I am
telling you: You are the maker of the world in which you live --
you alone can change it, or unmake it.
Q: How can you say I have made the world? I hardly know it.
M: There is nothing in the world that you cannot know, when you
know yourself. Thinking yourself to be the body you know the
world as a collection of material things. When you know yourself
as a centre of consciousness, the world appears as the ocean of
the mind. When you know yourself as you are in reality, you know
the world as yourself.
Q: It all sounds very beautiful, but does not answer my
question. Why is there so much suffering in the world?
M: If you stand aloof as observer only, you will not suffer. You
will see the world as a show. a most entertaining show indeed.
Q: Oh, no! This lila theory I shall not have. The suffering is
too acute and all-pervading. What a perversion to be entertained
by a spectacle of suffering! What a cruel God are you offering
me!
M: The cause of suffering is in the identification of the
perceiver with the perceived. Out of it desire is born and with
desire blind action, unmindful of results. Look round and you
will see -- suffering is a man-made thing.
Q: Were a man to create his own sorrow only, I would agree with
you. But in his folly he makes others suffer. A dreamer has his
own private nightmare and none suffers but himself. But what
kind of dream is it that plays havoc in the lives of others?
M: Descriptions are many and contradictory. Reality is simple --
all is one, harmony is the eternal law, none compels to suffer.
It is only when you try to describe and explain, that the words
fail you.
Q: I remember Gandhiji telling me once that the Self is not
bound by the law of non-violence (ahimsa). The Self has the
freedom to impose suffering on its expressions in order to set
them right.
M: On the level of duality it may be so, but in reality there is
only the source, dark in itself, making everything shine.
Unperceived, it causes perception. Unfelt, it causes feeling.
Unthinkable, it causes thought. Non-being, it gives birth to
being. It is the immovable background of motion. Once you are
there you are at home everywhere.
Q: If I am that, then what causes me to be born?
M: The memory of the past unfulfilled desires traps energy,
which manifests itself as a person. When its charge gets
exhausted, the person dies. Unfulfilled desires are carried over
into the next birth. Self-identification with the body creates
ever fresh desires and there is no end to them, unless this
mechanism of bondage is clearly seen. It is clarity that is
liberating, for you cannot abandon desire, unless its causes and
effects are clearly seen. I do not say that the same person is
reborn. It dies and dies for good. But its memories remain and
their desires and fears. They supply the energy for a new
person. The real takes no part in it, but makes it possible by
giving it, the light.
Q: My difficulty is this. As I can see, every experience is its
own reality. It is there -- experienced. The moment I question
it and ask to whom it happens, who is the observer and so on,
the experience is over and all I can investigate is only the
memory of it. I just cannot investigate the living moment -- the
now. My awareness is of the past, not of the present. When I am
aware, I do not really live in the now, but only in the past.
Can there really be an awareness of the present?
M: What you are describing is not awareness at all, but only
thinking about the experience. True awareness (samvid) is a
state of pure witnessing, without the least attempt to do
anything about the event witnessed. Your thoughts and feelings,
words and actions may also be a part of the event; you watch all
unconcerned in the full light of clarity and understanding. You
understand precisely what is going on, because it does not
affect you. It may seem to be an attitude of cold aloofness, but
it is not really so. Once you are in it, you will find that you
love what you see, whatever may be its nature. This choiceless
love is the touchstone of awareness. If it is not there, you are
merely interested -- for some personal reasons.
Q: As long as there are pain and pleasure, one is bound to be
interested.
M: And as long as one is conscious, there will be pain and
pleasure. You cannot fight pain and pleasure on the level of
consciousness. To go beyond them you must go beyond
consciousness, which is possible only when you look at
consciousness as something that happens to you and not in you,
as something external, alien, superimposed. Then, suddenly you
are free of consciousness, really alone, with nothing to
intrude. And that is your true state. Consciousness is an
itching rash that makes you scratch. Of course, you cannot step
out of consciousness for the very idea of stepping out is in
consciousness. But if you learn to look at your consciousness as
a sort of fever, personal and private, in which you are enclosed
like a chick in its shell, out of this very attitude will come
the crisis which will break the shell.
Q: Buddha said that life is suffering.
M: He must have meant that all consciousness is painful, which
is obvious.
Q: And does death offer delivery?
M: One who believes himself as having been born is very much
afraid of death. On the other hand, to him who knows himself
truly, death is a happy event.
Q: The Hindu tradition says that suffering is brought by destiny
and destiny is merited. Look at the immense calamities, natural
or man-made, floods and earthquakes, wars and revolutions. Can
we dare to think that each suffers for his own sins, of which he
can have no idea? The billions who suffer, are they all
criminals justly punished?
M: Must one suffer only for one's own sins? Are we really
separate? In this vast ocean of life we suffer for the sins of
others, and make others suffer for our sins. Of course, the law
of balance rules Supreme and accounts are squared in the end.
But while life lasts, we affect each other deeply.
Q: Yes, as the poet says: 'No man is an island'.
M: At the back of every experience is the Self and its interest
in the experience. Call it desire, call it love -- words do not
matter.
Q: Can I desire suffering? Can I deliberately ask for pain? Am I
not like a man who made for himself a downy bed hoping for a
good night of sleep and then he is visited by a nightmare and he
tosses and screams in his dream? Surely, it is not the love that
produces nightmares.
M: All suffering is caused by selfish isolation, by insularity
and greed. When the cause of suffering is seen and removed,
suffering ceases.
Q: I may remove my causes of sorrow, but others will be left to
suffer.
M: To understand suffering, you must go beyond pain and
pleasure. Your own desires and fears prevent you from
understanding and thereby helping others. In reality there are
no others, and by helping yourself you help everybody else. If
you are serious about the sufferings of mankind, you must
perfect the only means of help you have -- Yourself.
Q: You keep on saying that I am the creator, preserver and
destroyer of this world, omnipresent, omniscient, omnipotent.
When I ponder over what you say, I ask myself: 'How is it that
there is so much evil in my world'.
M: There is no evil, there is no suffering; the joy of living is
paramount. Look, how everything clings to life, how dear the
existence is.
Q: On the screen of my mind images follow each other in endless
succession. There is nothing permanent about me.
M: Have a better look at yourself. The screen is there -- it
does not change. The light shines steadily. Only the film in
between keeps moving and causes pictures to appear. You may call
the film -- destiny (prarabdha).
Q: What creates destiny?
M: Ignorance is the cause of inevitability.
Q: Ignorance of what?
M: Ignorance of yourself primarily. Also, ignorance of the true
nature of things, of their causes and effects. You look round
without understanding and take appearances for reality. You
believe you know the world and yourself -- but it is only your
ignorance that makes you say: I know. Begin with the admission
that you do not know and start from there. There is nothing that
can help the world more than your putting an end to ignorance.
Then, you need not do anything in particular to help the world.
Your very being is a help, action or no action.
Q: How can ignorance be known? To know ignorance presupposes
knowledge.
M: Quite right. The very admission: 'I am ignorant' is the dawn
of knowledge. An ignorant man is ignorant of his ignorance. You
can say that ignorance does not exist, for the moment it is seen
it is no more. Therefore, you may call it unconsciousness or
blindness. All you see around and within you is what you do not
know and do not understand, without even knowing that you do not
know and do not understand. To know that you do not know and do
not understand is true knowledge, the knowledge of an humble
heart.
Q: Yes, Christ said: Blessed are the poor in spirit...
M: Put it as you like; the fact is that knowledge is of
ignorance only. You know that you do not know.
Q: Will ignorance ever end?
M: What is wrong with not knowing? You need not know all. Enough
to know what you need to know. The rest can look after itself,
without your knowing how it does it. What is important is that
your unconscious does not work against the conscious, that there
is integration on all levels. To know is not so very important.
Q: What you say is correct psychologically. But when it comes to
knowing others, knowing the world, my knowing that I do not know
does not help much.
M: Once you are inwardly integrated, outer knowledge comes to
you spontaneously. At every moment of your life you know what
you need to know. In the ocean of the universal mind all
knowledge is contained; it is yours on demand. Most of it you
may never need to know -- but it is yours all the same. As with
knowledge, so it is with power. Whatever you feel needs be done
happens unfailingly. No doubt, God attends to this business of
managing the universe; but He is glad to have some help. When
the helper is selfless and intelligent, all the powers of the
universe are for him to command.
Q: Even the blind powers of nature?
M: There are no blind powers. Consciousness is power. Be aware
of what needs be done and it will be done. Only keep alert --
and quiet. Once you reach your destination and know your real
nature, your existence becomes a blessing to all. You may not
know, nor will the world know, yet the help radiates. There are
people in the world who do more good than all the statesmen and
philanthropists put together. They radiate light and peace with
no intention or knowledge. When others tell them about the
miracles they worked, they also are wonder struck. Yet, taking
nothing as their own, they are neither proud, nor do they crave
for reputation. They are just unable to desire anything for
themselves, not even the joy of helping others knowing that God
is good they are at peace.
77. 'I' and 'Mine' are False Ideas
Questioner: I am very much attached to my family and
possessions. How can I conquer this attachment?
Maharaj: This attachment is born along with the sense of 'me'
and 'mine'. Find the true meaning of these words and you will be
free of all bondage. You have a mind which is spread in time.
One after another all things happen to you and the memory
remains. There is nothing wrong in it. The problem arises only
when the memory of past pains and pleasures -- which are
essential to all organic life -- remains as a reflex, dominating
behaviour. This reflex takes the shape of 'I' and uses the body
and the mind for its purposes, which are invariably in search
for pleasure or flight from pain. When you recognise the 'I' as
it is, a bundle of desires and fears, and the sense of 'mine',
as embracing all things and people needed for the purpose of
avoiding pain and securing pleasure, you will see that the 'I'
and the 'mine' are false ideas, having no foundation in reality.
Created by the mind, they rule their creator as long as it takes
them to be true; when questioned, they dissolve. The 'I' and
'mine', having no existence in themselves, need a support which
they find in the body. The body becomes their point of
reference. When you talk of 'my' husband and 'my' children, you
mean the body's husband and the body's children. Give up the
idea of being the body and face the question: Who am l? At once
a process will be set in motion which will bring back reality,
or, rather, will take the mind to reality. Only, you must not be
afraid.
Q: What am I to be afraid of?
M: For reality to be, the ideas of 'me' and 'mine' must go. They
will go if you let them. Then your normal natural state
reappears, in which you are neither the body nor the mind,
neither the 'me’ nor the 'mine', but in a different state of
being altogether. It is pure awareness of being, without being
this or that, without any self-identification with anything in
particular, or in general. In that pure light of consciousness
there is nothing, not even the idea of nothing. There is only
light.
Q: There are people whom I love. Must I give them up?
M: You only let go your hold on them. The rest is up to them.
They may lose interest in you, or may not.
Q: How could they? Are they not my own?
M: They are your body's, not your own. Or, better, there is none
who is not your own.
Q: And what about my possessions?
M: When the 'mine' is no more, where are your possessions?
Q: Please tell me, must I lose all by losing the 'I'?
M: You may or you may not. It will be all the same to you. Your
loss will be somebody's gain. You will not mind.
Q: If I do not mind, I shall lose all!
M: Once you have nothing you have no problems.
Q: I am left with the problem of survival.
M: It is the body's problem and it will solve it by eating,
drinking and sleeping. There is enough for all, provided all
share.
Q: Our society is based on grabbing, not on sharing.
M: By sharing you will change it.
Q: I do not feel like sharing. Anyhow, I am being taxed out of
my possessions.
M: This is not the same as voluntary sharing. Society will not
change by compulsion. It requires a change of heart. Understand
that nothing is your own, that all belongs to all. Then only
society will change.
Q: One man's understanding will not take the world far.
M: The world in which you live will be affected deeply. it will
be a healthy and happy world, which will radiate and
communicate, increase and spread. The power of a true heart is
immense.
Q: Please tell us more.
M: Talking is not my hobby. Sometimes I talk, sometimes I do
not. My talking, or not talking, is a part of a given situation
and does not depend on me. When there is a situation in which I
have to talk, I hear myself talking. In some other situation I
may not hear myself talking. It is all the same to me. Whether I
talk or not, the light and love of being what I am are not
affected, nor are they under my control. They are, and I know
they are. There is a glad awareness, but nobody who is glad. Of
course, there is a sense of identity, but it is the identity of
a memory track, like the identity of a sequence of pictures on
the ever-present screen. Without the light and the screen there
can be no picture. To know the picture as the play of light on
the screen, gives freedom from the idea that the picture is
real. All you have to do is to understand that you love the self
and the self loves you and that the sense 'I am' is the link
between you both, a token of identity in spite of apparent
diversity. Look at the 'I am' as a sign of love between the
inner and the outer, the real and the appearance. Just like in a
dream all is different, except the sense of 'I', which enables
you to say 'I dreamt', so does the sense of 'I am' enable you to
say 'I am my real Self again’. I do nothing, nor is anything
done to me. I am what I am and nothing can affect me. I appear
to depend on everything, but in fact all depends on me.
Q: How can you say you do nothing? Are you not talking to me?
M: I do not have the feeling that I am talking. There is talking
going on, that is all.
Q: I talk.
M: Do you? You hear yourself talking and you say: I talk.
Q: Everybody says: 'I work, I come, I go'.
M: I have no objection to the conventions of your language, but
they distort and destroy reality. A more accurate way of saying
would have been: 'There is talking, working, coming, going'. For
anything to happen, the entire universe must coincide. It is
wrong to believe that anything in particular can cause an event.
Every cause is universal. Your very body would not exist without
the entire universe contributing to its creation and survival. I
am fully aware that things happen as they happen because the
world is as it is. To affect the course of events I must bring a
new factor into the world and such factor can only be myself,
the power of love and understanding focussed in me. When the
body is born, all kinds of things happen to it and you take part
in them, because you take yourself to be the body. You are like
the man in the cinema house, laughing and crying with the
picture, though knowing fully well that he is all the time in
his seat and the picture is but the play of light. It is enough
to shift attention from the screen to oneself to break the
spell. When the body dies, the kind of life you live now --
succession of physical and mental events -- comes to an end. It
can end even now -- without waiting for the death of the body --
it is enough to shift attention to the Self and keep it there.
All happens as if there is a mysterious power that creates and
moves everything. Realise that you are not the mover, only the
observer, and you will be at peace.
Q: Is that power separate from me?
M: Of course not. But you must begin by being the dispassionate
observer. Then only will you realise your full being as the
universal lover and actor. As long as you are enmeshed in the
tribulations of a particular personality, you can see nothing
beyond it. But ultimately you will come to see that you are
neither the particular nor the universal, you are beyond both.
As the tiny point of a pencil can draw innumerable pictures, so
does the dimensionless point of awareness draw the contents of
the vast universe. Find that point and be free.
Q: Out of what do I create this world?
M: Out of your own memories. As long as you are ignorant of
yourself as the creator, your world is limited and repetitive.
Once you go beyond yourself-identification with your past, you
are free to create a new world of harmony and beauty. Or you
just remain -- beyond being and non-being.
Q: What will remain with me if I let go my memories?
M: Nothing will remain.
Q: I am afraid.
M: You will be afraid until you experience freedom and its
blessings. Of course, some memories are needed to identify and
guide the body and such memories do remain, but there is no
attachment left to the body as such; it is no longer the ground
for desire or fear. All this is not very difficult to understand
and practice, but you must be interested. Without interest
nothing can be done. Having seen that you are a bundle of
memories held together by attachment, step out and look from the
outside. You may perceive for the first time something which is
not memory. You cease to be a Mr. so-and-so, busy about his own
affairs. You are at last at peace. You realise that nothing was
ever wrong with the world -- you alone were wrong and now it is
all over. Never again will you be caught in the meshes of desire
born of ignorance.
78. All Knowledge is Ignorance
Questioner: Are we permitted to request you to tell us the
manner of your realisation?
Maharaj: Somehow it was very simple and easy in my case. My
Guru, before he died, told me: Believe me, you are the Supreme
Reality. Don't doubt my words, don't disbelieve me. I am telling
you the truth -- act on it. I could not forget his words and by
not forgetting -- I have realised.
Q: But what were you actually doing?
M: Nothing special. I lived my life, plied my trade, looked
after my family, and every free moment I would spend just
remembering my Guru and his words. He died soon after and I had
only the memory to fall back on. It was enough.
Q: It must have been the grace and power of your Guru.
M: His words were true and so they came true. True words always
come true. My Guru did nothing; his words acted because they
were true. Whatever I did, came from within, un-asked and
unexpected.
Q: The Guru started a process without taking any part in it?
M: Put it as you like. Things happen as they happen -- who can
tell why and how? I did nothing deliberately. All came by itself
-- the desire to let go, to be alone, to go within.
Q: You made no efforts whatsoever?
M: None. Believe it or not, I was not even anxious to realise.
He only told me that I am the Supreme and then died. I just
could not disbelieve him. The rest happened by itself. I found
myself changing -- that is all. As a matter of fact, I was
astonished. But a desire arose in me to verify his words. I was
so sure that he could not possibly have told a lie, that I felt
I shall either realise the full meaning of his words or die. I
was feeling quite determined, but did not know what to do. I
would spend hours thinking of him and his assurance, not
arguing, but just remembering what he told me.
Q: What happened to you then? How did you know that you are the
Supreme?
M: Nobody came to tell me. Nor was I told so inwardly. In fact,
it was only in the beginning when I was making efforts, that I
was passing through some strange experiences; seeing lights,
hearing voices, meeting gods and goddesses and conversing with
them. Once the Guru told me: 'You are the Supreme Reality', I
ceased having visions and trances and became very quiet and
simple. I found myself desiring and knowing less and less, until
I could say in utter astonishment: 'I know nothing, I want
nothing.'
Q: Were you genuinely free of desire and knowledge, or did you
impersonate a jnani according to the image given to you by your
Guru?
M: I was not given any image, nor did I have one. My Guru never
told me what to expect.
Q: More things may happen to you. Are you at the end of your
journey?
M: There was never any journey. I am, as I always was.
Q: What was the Supreme Reality you were supposed to reach?
M: I was undeceived, that is all. I used to create a world and
populate it -- now I don't do it any more.
Q: Where do you live, then?
M: In the void beyond being and non-being, beyond consciousness.
This void is also fullness; do not pity me. It is like a man
saying: 'I have done my work, there is nothing left to do'.
Q: You are giving a certain date to your realisation. It means
something did happen to you at that date. What happened?
M: The mind ceased producing events. The ancient and ceaseless
search stopped -- l wanted nothing, expected nothing -- accepted
nothing as my own. There was no 'me' left to strive for. Even
the bare 'I am' faded away. The other thing that I noticed was
that I lost all my habitual certainties. Earlier I was sure of
so many things, now I am sure of nothing. But I feel that I have
lost nothing by not knowing, because all my knowledge was false.
My not knowing was in itself knowledge of the fact that all
knowledge is ignorance, that 'I do not know' is the only true
statement the mind can make. Take the idea 'I was born'. You may
take it to be true. It is not. You were never born, nor will you
ever die. It is the idea that was born and shall die, not you.
By identifying yourself with it you became mortal. Just like in
a cinema all is light, so does consciousness become the vast
world. Look closely, and you will see that all names and forms
are but transitory waves on the ocean of consciousness, that
only consciousness can be said to be, not its transformations.
In the immensity of consciousness a light appears, a tiny point
that moves rapidly and traces shapes, thoughts and feelings,
concepts and ideas, like the pen writing on paper. And the ink
that leaves a trace is memory. You are that tiny point and by
your movement the world is ever re- created. Stop moving, and
there will be no world. Look within and you will find that the
point of light is the reflection of the immensity of light in
the body, as the sense 'I am'. There is only light, all else
appears.
Q: Do you know that light? Have you seen it?
M: To the mind it appears as darkness. It can be known only
through its reflections. All is seen in daylight -- except
daylight.
Q: Have I to understand that our minds are similar?
M: How can it be? You have your own private mind, woven with
memories, held together by desires and fears. I have no mind of
my own; what I need to know the universe brings before me, as it
supplies the food I eat.
Q: Do you know all you want to know?
M: There is nothing I want to know. But what I need to know, I
come to know.
Q: Does this knowledge come to you from within or from outside?
M: It does not apply. My inner is outside and my outer is
inside. I may get from you the knowledge needed at the moment,
but you are not apart from me.
Q: What is turiya, the fourth state we hear about?
M: To be the point of light tracing the world is turiya. To be
the light itself is turiyatita. But of what use are names when
reality is so near?
Q: Is there any progress in your condition? When you compare
yourself yesterday with yourself today, do you find yourself
changing, making progress? Does your vision of reality grow in
width and depth?
M: Reality is immovable and yet in constant movement. It is like
a mighty river -- it flows and yet it is there -- eternally.
What flows is not the river with its bed and banks, but its
water, so does the sattva guna, the universal harmony, play its
games against tamas and rajas, the forces of darkness and
despair. In sattva there is always change and progress, in rajas
there is change and regress, while tamas stands for chaos. The
three Gunas play eternally against each other -- it is a fact
and there can be no quarrel with a fact.
Q: Must I always go dull with tamas and desperate with rajas?
What about sattva?
M: Sattva is the radiance of your real nature. You can always
find it beyond the mind and its many worlds. But if you want a
world, you must accept the three gunas as inseparable -- matter
-- energy -- life -- one in essence, distinct in appearance.
They mix and flow -- in consciousness. In time and space there
is eternal flow, birth and death again, advance, retreat,
another advance, again retreat -- apparently without a beginning
and without end; reality being timeless, changeless, bodyless,
mindless awareness is bliss.
Q: I understand that, according to you, everything is a state of
consciousness. The world is full of things -- a grain of sand is
a thing, a planet is a thing. How are they related to
consciousness?
M: Where consciousness does not reach, matter begins. A thing is
a form of being which we have not understood. It does not change
-- it is always the same -- it appears to be there on its own --
something strange and alien. Of course it is in the chit,
consciousness, but appears to be outside because of its apparent
changelessness. The foundation of things is in memory -- without
memory there would be no recognition. Creation -- reflection --
rejection: Brahma -- Vishnu -- Shiva: this is the eternal
process. All things are governed by it.
Q: Is there no escape?
M: I am doing nothing else, but showing the escape. Understand
that the One includes the Three and that you are the One and you
shall be free of the world process.
Q: What happens then to my consciousness?
M: After the stage of creation, comes the stage of examination
and reflection and, finally, the stage of abandonment and
forgetting. The consciousness remains, but in a latent, quiet
state.
Q: Does the state of identity remain?
M: The state of identity is inherent in reality and never fades.
But identity is neither the transient personality (vyakti), nor
the karma-bound individuality (vyakta). It is what remains when
all self- identification is given up as false -- pure
consciousness, the sense of being all there is, or could be.
Consciousness is pure in the beginning and pure in the end; in
between it gets contaminated by imagination which is at the root
of creation. At all times consciousness remains the same. To
know it as it is, is realisation and timeless peace.
Q: Is the sense 'I am' real or unreal?
M: Both. It is unreal when we say: 'I am this, I am that'. It is
real when we mean 'I am not this, nor that'. The knower comes
and goes with the known, and is transient; but that which knows
that it does not know, which is free of memory and anticipation,
is timeless.
Q: Is 'I am' itself the witness, or are they separate?
M: Without one the other cannot be. Yet they are not one. It is
like the flower and its colour. Without flower -- no colours;
without colour -- the flower remains unseen. Beyond is the light
which on contact with the flower creates the colour. Realise
that your true nature is that of pure light only, and both the
perceived and the perceiver come and go together. That which
makes both possible, and yet is neither, is your real being,
which means not being a 'this' or 'that', but pure awareness of
being and not-being. When awareness is turned on itself, the
feeling is of not knowing. When it is turned outward, the
knowables come into being. To say: 'I know myself' is a
contradiction in terms for what is 'known' cannot be 'myself'.
Q: If the self is for ever the unknown, what then is realised in
self-realisation?
M: To know that the known cannot be me nor mine, is liberation
enough. Freedom from self- identification with a set of memories
and habits, the state of wonder at the infinite reaches of the
being, its inexhaustible creativity and total transcendence, the
absolute fearlessness born from the realisation of the
illusoriness and transiency of every mode of consciousness --
flow from a deep and inexhaustible source. To know the source as
source and appearance as appearance, and oneself as the source
only is self-realisation.
Q: On what side is the witness? Is it real or unreal?
M: Nobody can say: ‘I am the witness'. The ‘I am' is always
witnessed. The state of detached awareness is the
witness-consciousness, the 'mirror-mind'. It rises and sets with
its object and thus it is not quite the real. Whatever its
object, it remains the same, hence it is also real. It partakes
of both the real and the unreal and is therefore a bridge
between the two.
Q: If all happens only to the 'I am', if the 'I am' is the known
and the knower and the knowledge itself, what does the witness
do? Of what use is it?
M: It does nothing and is of no use whatsoever.
Q: Then why do we talk of it?
M: Because it is there. The bridge serves one purpose only -- to
cross over. You don't build houses on a bridge. The 'I am' looks
at things, the witness sees through them. It sees them as they
are -- unreal and transient. To say 'not me, not mine' is the
task of the witness.
Q: Is it the manifested (saguna) by which the unmanifested
(nirguna) is represented?
M: The unmanifested is not represented. Nothing manifested can
represent the unmanifested.
Q: Then why do you talk of it?
M: Because it is my birthplace.
79. Person, Witness and the Supreme
Questioner: We have a long history of drug-taking behind us,
mostly drugs of the consciousness- expanding variety. They gave
us the experience of other states of consciousness, high and
low, and also the conviction, that drugs are unreliable and, at
best, transitory and, at worst, destructive of organism and
personality. We are in search of better means for developing
consciousness and transcendence. We want the fruits of our
search to stay with us and enrich our lives, instead of turning
to pale memories and helpless regrets. If by the spiritual we
mean self-investigation and development, our purpose in coming
to India is definitely spiritual. The happy hippy stage is
behind us; we are serious now and on the move. We know there is
reality to be found, but we do not know how to find and hold on
to it. We need no convincing, only guidance. Can you help us?
Maharaj: You do not need help, only advice. What you seek is
already in you. Take my own case. I did nothing for my
realisation. My teacher told me that the reality is within me; I
looked within and found it there, exactly as my teacher told me.
To see reality is as simple as to see one's face in a mirror.
Only the mirror must be clear and true. A quiet mind,
undistorted by desires and fears, free from ideas and opinions,
clear on all the levels, is needed to reflect the reality. Be
clear and quiet -- alert and detached, all else will happen by
itself.
Q: You had to make your mind clear and quiet before you could
realise the truth. How did you do it?
M: I did nothing. It just happened. I lived my life, attending
to my family's needs. Nor did my Guru do it. It just happened,
as he said it will.
Q: Things do not just happen. There must be a cause for
everything.
M: All that happens is the cause of all that happens. Causes are
numberless; the idea of a sole cause is an illusion.
Q: You must have been doing something specific -- some
meditation or Yoga. How can you say that realisation will happen
on its own?
M: Nothing specific. I just lived my life.
Q: I am amazed!
M: So was I. But what was there to be amazed at? My teacher's
words came true. So what? He knew me better than I knew myself,
that is all. Why search for causes? In the very beginning I was
giving some attention and time to the sense 'I am', but only in
the beginning. Soon after my Guru died, I lived on. His words
proved to be true. That is all. It is all one process. You tend
to separate things in time and then look for causes.
Q: What is your work now? What are you doing?
M: You imagine being and doing as identical. It is not so. The
mind and the body move and change and cause other minds and
bodies to move and change and that is called doing, action. I
see that it is in the nature of action to create further action
like fire that continues by burning. I neither act nor cause
others to act; I am timelessly aware of what is going on.
Q: In your mind, or also in other minds?
M: There is only one mind, which swarms with ideas; 'I am this,
I am that, this is mine, that is mine'. I am not the mind, never
was, nor shall be.
Q: How did the mind come into being?
M: The world consists of matter, energy and intelligence. They
manifest themselves in many ways. Desire and imagination create
the world and intelligence reconciles the two and causes a sense
of harmony and peace To me it all happens; I am aware, yet
unaffected.
Q: You cannot be aware, yet unaffected. There is a contradiction
in terms. Perception is change. Once you have experienced a
sensation, memory will not allow you to return to the former
state.
M: Yes, what is added to memory cannot be erased easily. But it
can surely be done and, in fact, I am doing it all the time.
Like a bird on its wings, I leave no footprints.
Q: Has the witness name and form, or is it beyond these?
M: The witness is merely a point in awareness. It has no name
and form. It is like the reflection of the sun in a drop of dew.
The drop of dew has name and form, but the little point of light
is caused by the sun. The clearness and smoothness of the drop
is a necessary condition but not sufficient by itself. Similarly
clarity and silence of the mind are necessary for the reflection
of reality to appear in the mind, but by themselves they are not
sufficient. There must be reality beyond it. Because reality is
timelessly present, the stress is on the necessary conditions.
Q: Can it happen that the mind is clear and quiet and yet no
reflection appears?
M: There is destiny to consider. The unconscious is in the grip
of destiny, it is destiny, in fact. One may have to wait. But
however heavy may be the hand of destiny, it can be lifted by
patience and self-control. Integrity and purity remove the
obstacles and the vision of reality appears in the mind.
Q: How does one gain self-control? I am so weak-minded!
M: Understand first that you are not the person you believe
yourself to be. What you think yourself to be is mere suggestion
or imagination. You have no parents, you were not born, nor will
you die. Either trust me when I tell you so, or arrive to it by
study and investigation. The way of total faith is quick, the
other is slow but steady. Both must be tested in action. Act on
what you think is true -- this is the way to truth.
Q: Are deserving the truth and destiny one and the same?
M: Yes, both are in the unconscious. Conscious merit is mere
vanity. Consciousness is always of obstacles; when there are no
obstacles, one goes beyond it.
Q: Will the understanding that I am not the body give me the
strength of character needed for self- control?
M: When you know that you are neither body nor mind, you will
not be swayed by them. You will follow truth, wherever it takes
you, and do what needs be done, whatever the price to pay.
Q: Is action essential for self-realisation?
M: For realisation, understanding is essential. Action is only
incidental. A man of steady understanding will not refrain from
action. Action is the test of truth.
Q: Are tests needed?
M: If you do not test yourself all the time, you will not be
able to distinguish between reality and fancy. Observation and
close reasoning help to some extent, but reality is paradoxical.
How do you know that you have realised unless you watch your
thoughts and feelings, words and actions and wonder at the
changes occurring in you without your knowing why and how? It is
exactly because they are so surprising that you know that they
are real. The foreseen and expected is rarely true.
Q: How does the person come into being?
M: Exactly as a shadow appears when light is intercepted by the
body, so does the person arise when pure self-awareness is
obstructed by the 'I-am-the-body' idea. And as the shadow
changes shape and position according to the lay of the land, so
does the person appear to rejoice and suffer, rest and toil,
find and lose according to the pattern of destiny. When the body
is no more, the person disappears completely without return,
only the witness remains and the Great Unknown. The witness is
that which says 'I know'. The person says 'I do'. Now, to say 'I
know' is not untrue -- it is merely limited. But to say 'I do'
is altogether false, because there is nobody who does; all
happens by itself, including the idea of being a doer.
Q: Then what is action?
M: The universe is full of action, but there is no actor. There
are numberless persons small and big and very big, who, through
identification, imagine themselves as acting, but it does not
change the fact that the world of action (mahadakash) is one
single whole in which all depends on, and affects all. The stars
affect us deeply and we affect the stars. Step back from action
to consciousness, leave action to the body and the mind; it is
their domain. Remain as pure witness, till even witnessing
dissolves in the Supreme. Imagine a thick jungle full of heavy
timber. A plank is shaped out of the timber and a small pencil
to write on it. The witness reads the writing and knows that
while the pencil and the plank are distantly related to the
jungle, the writing has nothing to do with it. It is totally
super-imposed and its disappearance just does not matter. The
dissolution of personality is followed always by a sense of
great relief, as if a heavy burden has fallen off.
Q: When you say, I am in the state beyond the witness, what is
the experience that makes you say so? In what way does it differ
from the stage of being a witness only?
M: It is like washing printed cloth. First the design fades,
then the background and in the end the cloth is plain white. The
personality gives place to the witness, then the witness goes
and pure awareness remains. The cloth was white in the beginning
and is white in the end; the patterns and colours just happened
-- for a time.
Q: Can there be awareness without an object of awareness?
M: Awareness with an object we called witnessing. When there is
also self-identification with the object, caused by desire or
fear, such a state is called a person. In reality there is only
one state; when distorted by self-identification it is called a
person, when coloured with the sense of being, it is the
witness; when colourless and limitless, it is called the
Supreme.
Q: I find that I am always restless, longing, hoping, seeking,
finding, enjoying, abandoning, searching again. What is it that
keeps me on the boil?
M: You are really in search of yourself, without knowing it. You
are love-longing for the love-worthy, the perfectly lovable. Due
to ignorance you are looking for it in the world of opposites
and contradictions. When you find it within, your search will be
over.
Q: There will be always this sorrowful world to contend with.
M: Don't anticipate. You do not know. It is true that all
manifestation is in the opposites. Pleasure and pain, good and
bad, high and low, progress and regress, rest and strife they
all come and go together -- and as long as there is a world, its
contradictions will be there. There may also be periods of
perfect harmony, of bliss and beauty, but only for a time. What
is perfect, returns to the source of all perfection and the
opposites play on.
Q: How am I to reach perfection?
M: Keep quiet. Do your work in the world, but inwardly keep
quiet. Then all will come to you. Do not rely on your work for
realisation. It may profit others, but not you. Your hope lies
in keeping silent in your mind and quiet in your heart. Realised
people are very quiet.