Bhagavad Gita Commentary–Forty-nine–by Swami Nirmalananda Giri
Union With Brahman
Krishna tells us the facts
How can we tell who is an enlightened person? The answer is to be found in the Gita. There the internal state of the perfected yogi is outlined–a state that can only be known to the yogi himself, that cannot be observed or subjected to a checklist, for it is purely internal in character. As Yogananda used to say: “He who knows…he knows. None else knows!” The Kaivalya Upanishad describes the enlightened person as saying: “I know all that is, but no one knows me.”
A truly enlightened person will say what is found in the Kena Upanishad: “I cannot say that I know Brahman fully. Nor can I say that I know him not. He among us knows him best who understands the spirit of the words: ‘Nor do I know that I know him not.’ He truly knows Brahman who knows him as beyond knowledge; he who thinks that he knows, knows not. The ignorant think that Brahman is known, but the wise know him to be beyond knowledge.” Nevertheless, Krishna is able to give us a working idea of enlightenment, one which can be useful to the individual yogi so he will not mistake the goal or mistakenly assume he has attained it before he really has. It is all in the mind
“When can a man be said to have achieved union with Brahman? When his mind is under perfect control and freed from all desires, so that he becomes absorbed in the Atman, and nothing else.”
Here we find three traits of mind necessary for enlightenment: 1) perfect control of the mind, 2) complete freedom from desire, 3) total absorption in the Self. This is a great deal for us to work on! Some or all of these may be managed occasionally in meditation, but that is not enlightenment. For Krishna continues: “‘The light of a lamp does not flicker in a windless place’: that is the simile which describes a yogi of one-pointed mind, who meditates upon the Atman.” Flashes of enlightenment can come to the yogi, but he must not be satisfied with fleeting experiences of the Self, but must strive to become permanently established in consciousness of the Self.
This state cannot be attained by talk and wishful thinking. Rather: “When, through the practice of yoga, the mind ceases its restless movements, and becomes still, he realizes the Atman. It satisfies him entirely.” There is no way to enter into the state of enlightenment except through yoga. Certainly we sometimes hear of rare individuals who entered into perfect knowledge of the self with minimal effort or even upon merely hearing of the Self. But such persons have attained illumination in previous lives. There are no shortcuts to enlightenment.
When the mind ceases its movements and becomes permanently stilled, the Self is known. As long as the surface of water is moving to any degree there is distortion in the reflected image, but once it comes to absolute stillness, the image is perfect (complete) and undistorted. It is the same with the mind. The mind can be likened to a double-sided mirror which reflects both the outer world and the inner Self. Both sides must be stilled through yoga. Then the yogi finds profound peace and rests contented in the Self.
“Then he knows that infinite happiness which can be realized by the purified heart but is beyond the grasp of the senses. He stands firm in this realization. Because of it, he can never again wander from the inmost truth of his being.” Swami Prabhavananda uses the word “heart” in the sense of the center of awareness in the human being. The actual Sanskrit word is buddhi–intelligence or intellect. This is an extremely important point. Infinite consciousness is “beyond the grasp of the senses”–and therefore the (sensory) mind, the manas, but it is not beyond the experience of the buddhi, the higher mind, the intellect. For the word buddhi is derived from the root verb budh, which means “to enlighten, to know.” The buddhi can be illumined by the Self. This is most significant, for it is usually assumed that all levels of the mind are dissolved at the advent of enlightenment, that the liberated yogi “has no mind.” But this is a misunderstanding. As Sri Ramana Maharshi continually pointed out, at the onset of enlightenment the buddhi is not destroyed, but rather is transmuted into the Self–for nothing ever really exists but the Self. As I say, this is important, for those who have no actual experience or realization make all kinds of statements, such as that since the enlightened have no mind they have no subconscious mind, and therefore cannot dream. And they love to challenge a yogi with the question: “Do you dream?” If the answer is Yes, they declare the yogi unenlightened. But when Ramana Maharshi was confronted with this silly question he simply said: “Yes. But not like your dreams.” When asked what his dreams were like, he answered that when asleep (yes, he did sleep) he saw the forms of deities and temples–two nemeses of contemporary “advaitins.”
Unshaken by sorrow or suffering
Standing firm in his realization, the yogi never loses or moves away from his perceptions of Reality. “Now that he holds it he knows this treasure above all others: faith so certain shall never be shaken by heaviest sorrow.” No suffering can overshadow or cloud the yogi’s inner vision, no matter how terrible or prolonged it may be. Two events come to mind that illustrate this.
Sri Ramakrishna was in the final stages of throat cancer. Its ravages were terrible. One day he began pathetically describing the horrible pain to a disciple. After listening a while, the disciple interrupted him, vehemently saying: “No matter what you say, I see you as an ocean of bliss!” Sri Ramakrishna smiled, turned to a disciple standing nearby, and said: “This rascal has found me out!” And that was the end of the subject.
Toward the end of his earthly life, Paramhansa Yogananda had severe trouble with his legs, at times being unable to walk. Sometimes when the pains were so bad that he could not sleep, close disciples would sit with him in his bedroom. Often he asked them to play recordings of Indian devotional music to take his mind to higher levels. Once, though, he fell asleep as his first American disciple, Dr. M. W. Lewis, and his wife kept sad vigil in his room. After some time, Yogananda began to softly moan, and then his groans became increasingly louder and more expressive of the awful pain. Both devoted disciples began to weep in sympathy for his sufferings. Instantly Yogananda stopped groaning and began laughing. Then they understood: the great Master was always immersed in divine bliss, however much the body might suffer. The real yoga
“To achieve this certainty is to know the real meaning of the word yoga. It is the breaking of contact with pain. You must practice this yoga resolutely, without losing heart.” The most important part of this is to realize that cessation of suffering is not a side effect, but can be pursued directly. The Gita uses the tongue-twister dukhasamyogaviyogam–the yoga of the dissolving of union with pain.
How shall we succeed in this yoga? “Renounce all your desires, for ever. They spring from willfulness. Use your discrimination to restrain the whole pack of the scattering senses.” Desires may persist, but we must steadfastly turn from them. We need not even cut them off. Instead we should fix our minds on God. For since all desires are merely aberrations of the primal desire that is in each one of us–the desire to find God–the false desires will melt away. Yet is not enough to just want to cut off desires, for desires are not self-existent entities. Rather, they arise from the senses as a result of contact with sense-objects. So the senses must be thoroughly controlled and restrained, placed under the directorship of our intelligent will.
It will not be an overnight matter of instant success. So Krishna says: “Patiently, little by little, a man must free himself from all mental distractions, with the aid of the intelligent will. He must fix his mind upon the Atman, and never think of anything else.” That is quite clear, but it should be pointed out that the constant practice of yoga in the form of japa and meditation is the only way to fix our mind on the Self and keep it steadily there so that in all the experiences of life we will remain in unbroken awareness of Spirit. It is through the japa and meditation of Om that we can also follow Krishna’s next directive: “No matter where the restless and the unquiet mind wanders, it must be drawn back and made to submit to the Atman only.”
Success
Shankara says at the beginning of his commentary on the Yoga Sutras that unless the aspiring yogi knows the benefits which the practice of yoga will bring it is impractical to think that he will persevere. After all, who would work to gain something he does not really know about? “Some kind of reward” would not be enough of an incentive. Krishna then speaks of the results of the yoga he has been recommending to us:
“Utterly quiet, made clean of passion, the mind of the yogi knows that Brahman: his bliss is the highest.” Still, pure, and blissful–who would not earnestly strive for such a prize? Even more: “Released from evil his mind is constant in contemplation: the way is easy, Brahman has touched him, that bliss is boundless.” He still walks the way–and does so until he attains the highest realm and merges with the Absolute–but it is now easy and anandamayi, filled with bliss.
The eye of the yogi
“His heart is with Brahman, his eye in all things sees only Brahman equally present, knows his own Atman in every creature, and all creation within that Atman.” What a glorious vision! Since the Self and Brahman are one, the Self being the microcosm and the Brahman the macrocosm, everything that exists can be found in either one, though in the individual Self it is only a kind of seed-reflection.
It is essential for us to comprehend the fact that the illumined yogi never confuses himself with Brahman the Absolute. Even if he says: “I am Brahman,” he means it in the way that Brahman is his essential nature. For example, we can say of a gold statue that it is gold, but we will not mean that it is all the gold in the world–only that it is made from gold. In the same way our Self is of the substance of Brahman, but it is not the totality of Brahman.
So the yogi does not see that he, personally, is in all things and all things within him in the same way that Brahman experiences unity with all. The yogi does experience a unity with all things, and as I say he experiences all things within himself as seed-reflections. I once described this kind of experience in an autobiographical writing in this way:
“While meditating one day all ordinary physical sensation vanished. Spatial relation ceased to exist and I found myself keenly aware of being beyond dimension, neither large nor small, but infinite (for infinity is beyond size). Although the terminology is inappropriate to such a state, to make it somewhat understandable I have to say that I perceived an infinity of worlds ‘within’ me. Suns–some solo and others surrounded by planets–glimmered inside my spaceless space. Not that I saw the light, but I felt or intuited it. Actually, I did not ‘see’ anything–and yet I did. It is not expressible in terms of ordinary sense experience, yet I must use those terms. I experienced myself as everything that existed within the relative material universe. Or so it seemed, for the human body is a miniature universe, a microcosmic model of the macrocosm. The physical human body is a reflection of the universal womb that conceived it. I had experienced the subtle level of the physical body that is its ideational (i.e., causal) blueprint. On that level it can be experienced as a map of the material creation.”
Such an experience as mine is not what is meant by Cosmic Consciousness, but rather is consciousness of the (inner reflected) cosmos. Nevertheless, it has value. However, the perfected yogi has the same experience in a much more profound and practical manner, and actually knows and perceives all things in an incomprehensible manner. I have told my experience so those who have similar events will not assume they are the Infinite!
Now here is the really important part of the matter. Ignorant people experiencing momentarily what the yoga adept sees always, will be keenly aware of the What of their seeing. But the enlightened yogi sees the Who, as Krishna points out, saying: “That yogi sees me in all things, and all things within me. He never loses sight of me, nor I of him.” The yogi sees Brahman at all times, understanding that all “things” are but waves in the ocean of Brahmic Consciousness, including himself. This is depicted in Swami Sivananda’s thrilling poem, Only God I Saw:
When I surveyed from Ananda Kutir, Rishikesh,
By the side of the Tehri Hills, only God I saw.
In the Ganges and the Kailas peak,
In the famous Chakra Tirtha of Naimisar also, only God I saw.
In the Dedhichi Kand of Misrik,
In the sacred Triveni of Prayag Raj too, only God I saw.
In the Maya Kund of Rishikesh
and
In the springs of Badri, Yamunotri and Gauri-Kund to boot, only God I saw.
In tribulation and in grief, in joy and in glee,
In sickness and in sorrow, only God I saw.
In birds and dogs, in stones and trees,
In flowers and fruits, in the sun, moon and stars, only God I saw.
In the rosy cheeks of Kashmiri ladies,
In the dark faces of African negroes, only God I saw.
In filth and scents, in poison and dainties,
In the market and in society, only God I saw.
In trains and cars, in aeroplanes and steamers,
In Jutkas and dandies, in tumtums and landan, only God I saw.
I talked to the flowers, they smiled and nodded,
I conversed with the running brooks, they verily responded, only God I saw.
In prayer and fasting, in praise and meditation,
In Japa and Asana, in Tratak and concentration, only God I saw.
In Pranayama and Nauli, in Bhasti and Neti,
In Dhouti and Vajroli, in Bhastrika and Kundalini, only God I saw.
In Brahmakara Vritti and Vedantic Nididhyasana,
In Atmic Vichara and Atmic Chintana, only God I saw.
In Kirtan and Nama Smaran, in Sravana and Vandana,
In Archana and Padasevana, in Dasya and Atmanivedana, only God I saw.
Like camphor I was melting in His fire of knowledge,
Amidst the flames outflashing, only God I saw.
My Prana entered the Brahmarandhra at the Moordha,
Then I looked with God’s eyes, only God I saw.
I passed away into nothingness, I vanished,
And lo, I was the all-living, only God I saw.
I enjoyed the Divine Aisvarya, all God’s Vibhutis,
I had Visvaroopa Darshan, the Cosmic Consciousness, only God I saw.
Glory, glory unto the Lord, hail! hail! hail! O sweet Ram.
Let me sing once more Thy Name—Ram Ram Ram, Om, Om, Om, only God I saw.
What better comment could there be on Sivananda’s attainment expressed in this poem than Krishna’s next words: “He is established in union with me, and worships me devoutly in all beings. That yogi abides in me, no matter what his mode of life.”
The main characteristic of Sivananda was his love of all humanity and indeed of all sentient beings. Daily I saw his compassion for all he encountered. So Krishna’s next words describe his state of mind and heart as well as that of all who truly know Brahman:
“Who burns with the bliss and suffers the sorrow of every creature within his own heart, making his own each bliss and each sorrow: him I hold highest of all the yogis.” Krishna has in these verses given the real facts about the interior state of those who know Brahman. It is wisdom to ever keep these in mind when encountering those who are thought to be enlightened, and even more wisdom to keep applying them to ourselves so we will press onward to the fruition of yoga: Brahman, and Brahman alone.
Read the Bhagavad Gita online: The English text of the Gita posted on this Web Site is arranged according to the meter of the original Sanskrit text so it can be sung–as it is done every morning in our ashram and in most of the ashrams of India.
1) Kaivalya Upanishad 21 [Go back]
2) Kena Upanishad 2:2, 3 [Go back]
3) Bhagavad Gita 6:18 [Go back]
4) Bhagavad Gita 6:19 [Go back]
5) Bhagavad Gita 6:20 [Go back]
6) Bhagavad Gita 6:21 [Go back]
7) Bhagavad Gita 6:22 [Go back]
8) Bhagavad Gita 6:23 [Go back]
9) Bhagavad Gita 6:24 [Go back]
10) Bhagavad Gita 6:25 [Go back]
11) Bhagavad Gita 6:26 [Go back]
12) Bhagavad Gita 6:27 [Go back]
13) Bhagavad Gita 6:28 [Go back]
14) Bhagavad Gita 6:29 [Go back]
15) Saint Teresa of Avila wrote about what she called “intellectual visions”–visions in which things are not seen as with the physical eyes, but which are perceived intellectually as concepts or ideas of visual appearances. That is, even though a visionary might be able to draw what was “seen” and could certainly speak of form, color, and all the traits of ordinary visual experience it would all have been perceived by the intellect rather than the inner senses. Actually, she was speaking of the difference between astral vision and causal vision. This latter is much higher than the former–as she also affirmed. Evelyn Underhill discusses intellectual vision extensively in her book Mysticism. [Go back]
16) Dr. Judith Tyberg, director of the East-West Cultural Center in Los Angeles, told me that she had attended a lecture at Benares Hindu University in which a map of the universe and charts from Gray’s Anatomy were compared and seen to be strikingly alike. [Go back]
17) Bhagavad Gita 6:30 [Go back]
18) Bhagavad Gita 6:31 [Go back]
19) Bhagavad Gita 6:32 [Go back]
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