VASISTHA:
O'Rama, this house known as the
body has not been made by anyone in fact! Dreams are real during the
dream-state; even so the body is real when it is experienced as a
real substance. The notion of 'I am this body' arises in relation
to what is truly a piece of flesh with bones because of a mental predisposition;
it is an illusion. Abandon this illusion.
There are thousands of such bodies
which have been brought into being by your thought-force. When you
are asleep and dreaming, you experience a body in the dream. Where
does that body arise or exist?
'This is wealth.' 'This is body'
and 'This is a nation' - all these are notions (conceptual thoughts),
O Rama. Know this to be a long dream, or a long-standing hallucination,
or day-dreaming or wishful thinking. When, by the grace of God or
the Self (both are one and the same), you attain awakening, you will
then see all this clearly.
I remarked that I was born of
the mind of the Creator: even so the world arises in the mind as a
notion. In fact, even the Creator is but a notion in the cosmic mind;
the world-appearance too, is a notion in the mind.
If a man resolutely seeks the
source of the notions, he realizes consciousness; otherwise he experiences
the illusory world-appearance again and again. For by continually
entertaining notions such as 'This is it', 'This is mine' and 'This
is my world', they assume the appearance of substantiality.
The permanency of the world is
also an illusion: in the dream-state, what is really a brief moment
is experienced by the dreamer as a life-time. In a mirage only the
illusory 'water' is seen and not the substratum: even so, in a state
of ignorance one sees only the illusory world-appearance but not the
substratum (the infinite consciousness).
However, when one has shed that
ignorance, the illusory appearance vanishes. Even the man who is normally
subject to fear is not afraid of an imaginary tiger; the wise man
who knows tat this world is nothing but a notion or imagination is
unafraid of anything. When one knows that the world is nothing but
the appearance of one's Self (infinite consciousness), of whom need
one be afraid? When one's vision is purified by inquiry, one's deluded
understanding concerning the world vanishes.
When one realizes that death is
inevitable to all, why will he grieve over the death of relatives
or the approach of one's own end? When one realizes that everyone
is sometimes prosperous and otherwise at other times, why will he
be elated or depressed? When one sees that living beings appear and
disappear like ripples on the surface of consciousness, where is the
cause for sorrow? What is true is always true (what exists always
exists), and what is unreal is ever unreal; where is the cause for
sorrow?
Hence, one should not pin one's
faith, hope and aspiration on that which is unreal; for such hope
is bondage. O Rama, do thou live in this world without entertaining
any hope. What has to be done has to be done, and what is inappropriate
should be given up.
Live happily and playfully in
this world without considerations of desirable and undesirable. The
infinite consciousness alone exists everywhere at all times.
What appears to be is but an appearance.
When the appearance is realized as appearance, that which is, is realized.
Either realize 'I am not and these experiences are not mine' or know
that 'I am everything': you will be free from the lure of world-appearance.
Both these attitudes are good. You will be freed form attraction and
aversion (raga-dvesa).
Whatever there is in the world,
in the firmament and in heaven is attained by one who has destroyed
the twin forces of attraction and aversion. Whatever the ignorant
man does, prompted by these forces, leads him to instant sorrow. One
who has not overcome these forces, even if he is learned in the scriptures
is indeed pitiable and despicable.
O Rama, for your spiritual awakening
I declare again and again that this world-appearance is like a long
dream. Wake-up, wake-up. Behold the Self which shines like the sun.