Thursday, November 30, 2017





രമണ ദർശനം
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"നിന്നിലെ 'നീ' യും, എന്നിലെ 'ഞാനും', രണ്ടല്ലെന്നതിനാൽ; എവിടെയിരുന്നാലും, നീയെന്നിൽത്തന്നെയാണ് - നിനക്കൊരിക്കലുമെന്നെ വിട്ടുപിരിയാനാവില്ല"

വിവർത്തനം : ഡോ . ഗോപിനാഥൻ മാറഞ്ചേരി



രമണ ദർശനം
********************
"ഒരു നാസ്തികനും തൻെറ സ്വന്തം 'അസ്തിത്വം' അഥവാ 'തൻതനിത്തന്മ' യെ നിഷേധിക്കാനാകില്ല. അത് തന്നെയാണ് 'സ്വാത്മാവ്', 'ബ്രഹ്മം' അഥവാ ഈശ്വരൻ എന്നു വിവക്ഷിക്കപ്പെടുന്നതും. അതുകൊണ്ടുതന്നെ ഇവിടെ 'നാസ്തികരാ' യി ആരുമില്ല; 'ആസ്തികർ' മാത്രം"


വിവർത്തനം : ഡോ . ഗോപിനാഥൻ മാറഞ്ചേരി












രമണ ദർശനം
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"പ്രാതിഭാസിക പ്രപഞ്ചം, 'ആത്മവിസ്‌മൃതി' യിലുദിക്കുകയും, 'ആത്മസ്‌മൃതി' യിലസ്തമിക്കുകയുംചെയ്യുന്നു"

വിവർത്തനം : ഡോ . ഗോപിനാഥൻ മാറഞ്ചേരി












രമണ ദർശനം
********************"

"ഭക്ഷണം, ഭാഷണം, നിദ്ര ; ഇത്യാദികളിൽ പാലിക്കപ്പെടേണ്ടുന്ന മിതത്വം, ഒരുത്തമസാധകനുണ്ടായിരിക്കേണ്ട, അഭിലഷണീയമായ ഗുണഗണങ്ങളിലൊന്നാണ്"

വിവർത്തനം : ഡോ . ഗോപിനാഥൻ മാറഞ്ചേരി

Wednesday, November 29, 2017

രമണ ദർശനം
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"ലക്ഷ്യബോധമുള്ള ഒരുത്തമസാധകന്; 'അഹം ഗ്രഹ' സാധനകൊണ്ടു, അന്തര്യാമിയായ ആത്മപ്രകാശത്തെ തിരിച്ചറിഞ്ഞു, സ്വാത്മാരാമനായിരിക്കലല്ലാതെ; ഈ ജന്മത്തിൽ മറ്റൊന്നും തന്നെ ചെയ്യേണ്ടതായിട്ടില്ല"

വിവർത്തനം : ഡോ . ഗോപിനാഥൻ മാറഞ്ചേരി
രമണ ദർശനം
********************
"ഒരു നാസ്തികനും തൻെറ സ്വന്തം 'അസ്തിത്വം' അഥവാ 'തൻതനിത്തന്മ' യെ നിഷേധിക്കാനാകില്ല. അത് തന്നെയാണ് 'സ്വാത്മാവ്', 'ബ്രഹ്മം' അഥവാ ഈശ്വരൻ എന്നു വിവക്ഷിക്കപ്പെടുന്നതും. അതുകൊണ്ടുതന്നെ ഇവിടെ 'നാസ്തികരാ' യി ആരുമില്ല; 'ആസ്തികർ' മാത്രം"

വിവർത്തനം : ഡോ . ഗോപിനാഥൻ മാറഞ്ചേരി

Sunday, November 26, 2017

രമണ ദർശനം
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"ഈശ്വര ദർശനമെന്നാൽ, സ്വാത്മദർശനം തന്നെ. തൻ്റെ വിശ്വാസപ്രമാണങ്ങളനുസരിച്ചു, താൻ തന്നെ സൃഷ്ടിച്ചെടുത്ത ഈശ്വരൻ; സ്വാത്മാവിൽനിന്നഭിന്ന മാണെന്നുള്ള, തിരിച്ചറിവുകൂടിയാണത്. അതെ! ഈശ്വരനെന്നാൽ സ്വാത്മാവുതന്നെ"


വിവർത്തനം : ഡോ . ഗോപിനാഥൻ മാറഞ്ചേരി
രമണ ദർശനം
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"ദൃശ്യമാകുന്ന പ്രാതിഭാസികപ്രപഞ്ചത്തെ യനുഭവിക്കുന്ന; ദ്രഷ്ടാവാകുന്ന ഈശ്വരൻ അഥവാ സ്വാത്മാവ് , നശ്വരമായ പ്രതിഭാസങ്ങളാൽ ബാധിക്കപ്പെടുന്നില്ല"

വിവർത്തനം : ഡോ . ഗോപിനാഥൻ മാറഞ്ചേരി

Thursday, October 26, 2017



രമണ ദർശനം
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"വീട്ടിൽ നിന്നും പുറത്തിറങ്ങിയിട്ടില്ലാത്ത മദ്യപൻ , തൻെറ വീട്ടിലേക്കുള്ള വഴി തേടിയലയുന്നതുപോലെ; എത്രയോ കാലമായി നീ, നിന്നിൽ നിന്നും ഒരിക്കലും വേറിട്ടിട്ടില്ലാത്ത, വേറിടാനാകാത്ത, നിന്നിലെ നിന്നെ ത്തേടിയലയുന്നു. നിൻെറ ലക്ഷ്യവും , മാർഗ്ഗവും നീ തന്നെ" 

വിവർത്തനം : ഡോ.  ഗോപിനാഥൻ മാറഞ്ചേരി



രമണ ദർശനം
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"മനസ്സെന്നൊന്നില്ലെന്നറിയുന്നവനു മാത്രമേ, മനസ്സിനെ ജയിക്കാനാകൂ"


വിവർത്തനം :
 ഡോ . ഗോപിനാഥൻ മാറഞ്ചേരി




Image may contain: 1 person, night

Tuesday, October 24, 2017

രമണ ദർശനം
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"അന്തർമുഖനായി 'അഹം ഗ്രഹ സാധന' അനുഷ്ഠിക്കുന്ന യോഗി; തന്നിൽ അന്തർലീനമായ വാസനകളെ ത്യജിച്ചുകൊണ്ടു , ശുദ്ധമനസ്കനായി , അന്തര്യാമിയായ ആത്മപ്രകാശത്തിൽ രമിക്കാൻ തുടങ്ങുന്നു. ഒരുത്തമ സാധകനറിയേണ്ടതിത്രമാത്രം ; പിന്നെ ചെയ്യാനുള്ളതോ , 'അഹംവൃത്തി' യുടെ മൂലാന്വേഷണവും"

വിവർത്തനം : ഡോ . ഗോപിനാഥൻ മാറഞ്ചേരി

Thursday, October 5, 2017

രമണ ദർശനം
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"നിർവികല്പസമാധിയിൽ, എങ്ങും നിറഞ്ഞുനിൽക്കുന്ന ആ മഹാ മൗന സന്നിധിയെന്തെന്നു നാമറിയുന്നു"

വിവർത്തനം : ഡോ . ഗോപിനാഥൻ മാറഞ്ചേരി
രമണ ദർശനം
********************
"അനാത്മാവിൽനിന്നു സ്വമനസ്സിനെ പിൻവലിച്ചു, സ്വാത്മാവിൽ പ്രതിഷ്ഠിച്ചു, സ്വാത്മാരാമനായിരിക്കൽ തന്നെ, സ്വാത്മവിചാരമാർഗ്ഗത്തിൻ്റെ ലക്ഷ്യം"

വിവർത്തനം : ഡോ . ഗോപിനാഥൻ മാറഞ്ചേരി

Tuesday, September 19, 2017

രമണ ദർശനം
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"ആത്മാവിനെ പുസ്തകങ്ങളിൽ കണ്ടെത്താനാവില്ല . അതു നീ നിനക്കുവേണ്ടി നിന്നിൽ തന്നെ കണ്ടെത്തണം"

വിവർത്തനം: ഡോ . ഗോപിനാഥൻ മാറഞ്ചേരി

Monday, September 18, 2017

രമണ ദർശനം
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"എങ്ങും നിറഞ്ഞുനിൽക്കുന്ന ആ മഹാമൗനസന്നിധിയുടെ കേവലാനുഭവം അഥവാ ബ്രഹ്മാനുഭവം തന്നെ ജ്ഞാന വിജ്ഞാനങ്ങളുടെ പരമകാഷ്ഠ . മറ്ററിവുകളെല്ലാം കേവലം ഉപരിപ്ലവങ്ങളും ശുഷ്‌കങ്ങളുമാകുന്നു"

വിവർത്തനം: ഡോ . ഗോപിനാഥൻ മാറഞ്ചേരി

Tuesday, August 29, 2017

രമണ ദർശനം
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"മനശ്ചാഞ്ചല്യം കർത്തൃത്വ , ഭോക്തൃത്വ ഭാവങ്ങൾക്കും , വ്യക്തി ബോധത്തിനും, ബഹുവിധ കാമനകൾക്കും ഹേതുവാകുന്നു . എന്നാൽ മനോനിശ്ചലത , ജീവന്മുക്തിക്കും , സഹജശാന്തിക്കും നമ്മെ അർഹരാക്കുന്നു"

വിവർത്തനം : ഡോ.ഗോപിനാഥൻ മാറഞ്ചേരി
രമണ ദർശനം
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'ഇഷ്ടാനിഷ്ടങ്ങളും', 'രാഗദ്വേഷങ്ങളും' ഒരേ നാണയത്തിനിരുപുറവുമാകയാൽ , താദൃശമായ ദ്വന്ദങ്ങളെല്ലാം ഒന്നിച്ചുപേക്ഷിക്കപ്പെടേണ്ടവയാണ് .

വിവർത്തനം : ഡോ.ഗോപിനാഥൻ മാറഞ്ചേരി
രമണ ദർശനം 
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"നമുക്കു ബാഹ്യമായുള്ളവയെ നമുക്ക് നമ്മിൽ നിന്ന് വേർപ്പെടുത്താം ; എന്നാൽ നമുക്ക് നമ്മെ നമ്മിൽനിന്നുവേർപ്പെടുത്താനാവില്ല"

വിവർത്തനം : ഡോ.ഗോപിനാഥൻ മാറഞ്ചേരി
രമണ ദർശനം
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"കർമ്മങ്ങളല്ല ; 'കർത്തൃത്വ' മാണ് ബന്ധകാരണം"

വിവർത്തനം : ഡോ.ഗോപിനാഥൻ മാറഞ്ചേരി
രമണ ദർശനം
********************

'കർമ്മകാണ്ഡ' പരിസമാപ്തിയിൽ , 'ജ്ഞാനകാണ്ഡം' ഉദയം ചെയ്യുമ്പോൾ ; ജ്ഞാനിക്ക് ഒന്നും ചെയ്യാനോ , പറയാനോ ഇല്ലെന്നു വരുന്നു .

വിവർത്തനം : ഡോ.ഗോപിനാഥൻ മാറഞ്ചേരി

Saturday, March 11, 2017

Ribu Gita




  • The Ribu Gita
  • *****************
     Preface  


  • The Ribhu Gita forms the sixth section of the Sanskrit work known as Siva Rahasya.


  • It is the teachings of Lord Siva in Mount Kailas to His devotee RIBHU, from whom the Gita derives its
  • name.
  • The Ribhu Gita was translated into Tamil verse by a Brahmin Vedic scholar of high repute, by name
  • Bikshu Sastri who was also an accomplished scholar in Tamil. He translated the work under the name
  • of Ulaganatha Swami, and because of his efforts attained renowned fame among the Tamil-devotees
  • of Siva.
  • The Tamil version is a free translation of the original Sanskrit text, consisting of 1924 verses of
  • such scintillating brilliance that Bhagavan Sri Ramana Maharshi re-commended its recital as a
  • strong support for spiritual sadhana. He used to say that the recital itself leads to spontaneous
  • abidance in the SELF.
  • The book presented herewith consists of 122 verses from the original Tamil work, being a free
  • translation into English prose, conveying the essence of the original, rather than a mere mechanical
  • word for word translation.
  • Reading of this English text alone will not be complete unless it is supported by vigorous sadhana
  • with the help of a realised teacher, who has obtained firm abidance in Siva-Self by a life of devotion to
  • Lord Siva. This aspect is stressed in some of the verses selected.
  • It is the earnest hope and prayer of the translator that after reading this English text, devotees all over
  • the world would make the pilgrimage to Tiruvannamalai, and complete their sadhana in the immediate
  • presence of Lord Arunachala-Siva and Sat-Guru Ramana enshrined in His Samadhi in Sri
  • Ramanasramam.
  • Prof. N. R. KRISHNAMOORTHI AIYER.
  • (Translator)
  • Sri Ramanasramam,
  • Tiruvannamalai-606 603
  • Dated: 15th August, 1984.
  • 3
  • OM SRI GANESAYA NAMAH
  • THE ESSENCE OF RIBHU GITA
  • Benedictory verses
  • To Siva
  • 1. Salutations to the Supreme Lord Siva, the pure Awareness in the sky of consciousness in the
  • Heart, by meditation on whom, Ganesa, Guha, Mother – Sakti who is the embodiment of Siva's
  • Grace, and myriads of Devas, saints and devotees have attajned their cherished goals. (Chapter 1,
  • Verse 1).
  • To Nataraja
  • 2. From the sky of consciousness of the Heart springs forth the dancer Nataraja with his blissful
  • consort, Freedom, to the delectation of his devotees who are thus liberated forever. Unto that Ananda
  • Natesa we do render our devout salutations. (Chapter 1, Verse 2)
  • To Ardha – Nareeswara
  • 3. Unto that Form whose left half is the Mother of all manifestation and whose right half is the Father
  • of the same, the jingle of the gems enclosed within the hollow golden anklet of whose foot is the
  • source of all scriptures, and whose three eyes (Fire, Sun and Moon) are the illuminants of the
  • universe, to that Form be our devout salutations. May that divine Form ever be our protection.
  • (Chapter 1, Verse 3)
  • To Siva, Sakti, Vinayaka and Shanmukha
  • 4. Salutations to Siva, the Lord of the universe of infinite power, to Sat-Chit-Ananda-Sakti, the Mother
  • of the universe, to Vinayaka the dispeller of all impediments to freedom, and to Shanmukha, the SatGuru,
  • who dispenses to his worthy devotees the divine wisdom of Siva-Self leading to salvation.
  • (Chapter 1, Verse 4)
  • THE ESSENCE OF RIBHU GITA
  • The following verses constitute the teachings of Siva to Ribhu. who in turn transmits those
  • teachings to his disciple Nidaga - Rishi. The treatise goes by the name Ribhu Gita.
  • 5 The universe was neither born, nor maintained, nor dissolved; this is the plain truth.
  • The basic screen of pure Being-Awareness- Stillness devoid of all the moving shadow
  • pictures of name and form of the universe is the sole, eternal Existance.
  • (Chapter 2 Verse 33)
  • 6 Some may argue that this universe of duality (multiple existences) is a factual second reality
  • clearly seen by the senses operated by the mind. But then, are the senses anything apart
  • from the mind? Can they function without the support of the mind in which they are
  • imbedded? What is this mind except a bundle of thoughts? What are thoughts except
  • evanescent ripples in the still, limitless ocean of pure Being – Awareness – Self which
  • is the sole Existence without a second? (Ch. 2, v. 34)
  • 7 The existence of the illusion of silver in the mother of pearl is not a reality apart from the
  • reality of the mother of pearl which is the basic reality. The illusion of the universe is based
  • on the mind, which again is an illusion base on the still Awareness - Being Self. (Ch. 2,
  • v.35)
  • 8 In the unitary, undifferentiated still ocean of Existance-Awareness-Self, body, senses, mind,
  • intellect and jives (embodied souls) are nothing but evanescent ripples not apart from that
  • sole Self. (Ch.4, v.6)
  • 9 The universe of name and form, the embodied creatures and their creator, mind, desire,
  • Karma (action) and misery and everything other than the Self are merely thought formations
  • projected by the power of the Self on its screen – Self. (Ch. 5, v.25)
  • 10 The state of firm abidance in that thought-free alert Awareness - Self, constitutes
  • integral perfection, yoga, wisdom, Moksha, Sahaja - Samadhi, the state of Siva, and the
  • state of Atman - Self, which scriptures proclaim by the title of Brahman. (Ch. 5, v. 26)
  • 11 There never was a mind nor any of its countless forms like world, jivas etc. There isn't
  • the least doubt that all these are the form of the eternally undifferentiable Supreme
  • Brahman Self. This is the Truth. The one who hears this great secret diligently and
  • understands completely, abides as Brahman-Self (Ch. 5, v. 28)
  • Greatness of Videha Mukta
  • 12 With all objective knowledge banished, with no trace of thought or nescience, with all
  • the three states of waking, dream and sleep wiped out, with all thought of death and
  • birth abolished, and ever established in the spontaneous blissful state of brahman-Self
  • the condition of the Videha-Mukta cannot be conceived, and much less expressed in
  • words. (Ch. 5, v.39)
  • 5
  • 13 The continued repetition of “I am self-Brahman" constitutes the sole mantra-japa leading to
  • Mukti (Liberation). All other mantra-japas connected with diverse gods should be firmly
  • eschewed as they aim at mundane objectives, other than the self. All other mantra-japas
  • always entangle one inextricably in the bondage of worldly enjoyments only. (Ch. 6, v. 37)
  • Sat-Chit-Ananda-Self-Siva and His worship
  • 14 On the eternal and infinite screen of Sat-Chit-Ananda-Self-Siva, by his own power,
  • Sakti is projected as the moving shadow picture of the universe in manifestation and
  • into that again it is absorbed in dissolution.
  • All luminaries like Sun, Moon, Fire, Stars and lightning derive their luminosity as a gracious
  • gift from the Sakti in herent in that screen of Self-Siva only. Though bright in themselves, they
  • can only obscure and cannot reveal the Siva-Screen that they cover up.
  • Out of fear of that Siva, their creator, Devas and Asuras (Spirits of the upper and nether
  • worlds) are ever a1ertly engaged in their ordained duties.
  • That Siva must be meditated upon and realised to be the Self by making the restless mind to
  • stay still and alert after it has been adequately restrainted and completely prevented from the
  • pursuit of sense objects, namely, the shadow pictures on the screen of the Self. All shadow
  • pictures removed, what remains is pure Awareness, the spotlessly effulgent screen.
  • Thus, Siva reveals Himself spontaneously as the sole eternal Sat-Chit-Ananda-Self, the
  • very essence of the nature of the worshipper. (Ch. 7, v.35)
  • The Jivan-Mukta
  • 15 The Jivan-Mukta is a person liberated during his life-time who continues to have
  • consciousness of the body and world along with his firm abidance in his Siva-Self. He
  • ever abides in the blissful peace of Sat-Chit- Ananda. He is poised rock firm in the conviction
  • that he is not the body, and that his being is the sole existence, the sole alert-awareness-bliss
  • of Siva-Self Supreme. (Ch. 8, v. 1)
  • 16 The Jivan-Mukta has his consciousness completely dissolved beyond recognition in
  • his Brahman – Self. Eternally alone in his self, he is ever lost in the enjoyment of the
  • bliss of his Brahman – Self. (Ch. 8, v. 25)
  • The Videha-Mukta
  • 17 The Videha-Mukta* is free from the least trace of thought; he abides all along in his
  • effulgent pure-Awareness-Self in intense unbroken bliss, totally oblivious of his body
  • and environments, in a state of Maha-Mounam (stillness of body, speech and mind).
  • (Ch. 9, v. 1)
  • * The term, means, the Disembodied - liberated person. He is the matured liberated adept,
  • uJho, while still alive, abides as pure Sat-Chit-Ananda-Self without awareness of body and
  • the world around him.
  • 6
  • 18 He is the pure embodiment of Sat-Chit-Ananda, all pervasive as ether, infinite as the sky, all
  • alert with Awareness, spontaneously abiding as the perfect Brahman- Self in a state of still,
  • unbroken, peaceful bliss. (Ch. 9, v. 15)
  • 19 There is not an atom part from the Self which is the integral undifferentiated perfection
  • of whole being Soule, world and Creator are impartible from the Self. The reality of
  • these is the reality of the Self only. (Ch. 10, v. 34)
  • 20 All ignorance and illusion, all objects inert and living, all beings and non-beings, all the five
  • elements, all the diverse worlds, all bodies and the lives that arise in them, not being apart
  • from Brahman-Self, are Brahman-Self only. Existance alone is, for even non-existance
  • acquiresmeaning only in Existance. Simply put, everything exists always as Brahman-Self
  • only. (Ch. 12, v. 2)
  • 21 All objective knowledge, all thought forms, all visible objects, all things heard; all questions
  • and answers, all the food consumed and all other illusions, not being apart from the Self,
  • should be regarded as Brahman-Self only. (Ch. 13, v. 2)
  • 22 Therefore one should practise the habit of regarding everything as Brahman-Self only; until all
  • thought of things other than the Self is lost. This condition once achieved, one should not give
  • room for any thought and should ever abide in Maha-Mounam (peace of total stillness). (Ch.
  • 14, v. 38)
  • 23 Anything seen as other than Brahman-Self is bound to cause fear and trouble. Therefore, it
  • behoves one to stick to the single attitude that everything sensed is Brahman-Self alone. In
  • due course even this one thought must be given up in order to abide firmly in the free
  • undisturbed blissful state of the sole Brahman-Self. (Ch. 15, v. 5)
  • 24 The total discarding of the mind is alone victory, achievement, bliss, yoga, wisdom and
  • liberation. The sacrifice of mind is, in fact, the totality of all sacred sacrifices. (Ch. 15, v.
  • 7)
  • 25 The firm denial of the existence of the mind and the firm belief in the existence of BrahmanSelf
  • is the sure way to the conquest of mind leading to the experience of the sole effulgent
  • Self. (Ch. 15, v. 11)
  • 26 If one gives the slightest room for the thought that the mind exists, pure-Awareness itself will
  • vibrate as the ruffled mind which is the parent of all trouble and illusions. Therefore, one
  • should ever abide in the conviction that there is no mind, and that the pure AwarenessSelf
  • is the sole Existence. This is easy way to conquer the mind with all its vagaries.
  • (Ch. 15, v. 12)
  • 27 There is no such thing as the troublesome mind, no world of names and forms, not the least
  • bit of ego. All these are nothing but the perfect Brahman-Self that I am. In this conviction one
  • should abide firmly until one achieves the state of Sleepless-sleep that is alert peace eternal.
  • (Ch. 16, v. 7)
  • 7
  • The True Samadhi
  • 28 To hold on to the conviction born of Self-Enquiry that "I am no doubt the Screen - BrahmanSelf,
  • and, the world picture thereon, though evanescent, is no doubt I - am self only", and to
  • abide still and blissful in that conviction is the acme of all sadhanas like divine worship
  • charitable gifts, spiritual austerities, mantra-japa and samadhi as well. (Ch. 16, v. 41)
  • 29 The Self alone is the spontaneous self effulgent Awareness; that alone is eternal bliss;
  • that alone is Existence everlasting; that alone is all embracing perfection; the sole
  • God-head without a rival and the sole primordial stuff of the Universe. In the conviction
  • born of this experience, one should ever abide, as the sole I-AM, the Supreme Self. (Ch.
  • 17, v. 29)
  • Sahaja-Samadhi
  • 30 Remaining alertly aware and thought-free with a still mind devoid of differentiation of
  • self and non-self even while being engaged in the activities of worldly life is called the
  • state of Sahaja Nirvikalpa - Samadhi (the natural state of abidance in the Self when all
  • differentiation has ceased). This is called Akhanda-Akara-Vritti, the I of infinite perfection as
  • contrasted with the "I am the body" notion of those who have not realised the Self). (Ch. 18, v.
  • 40)
  • Maturing of Sahaja-Samadhi
  • 31 Abidance in Sahaja-Samadhi is the hallmark of Jivan Mukti. With the progressive
  • development of this state, the intensity of blissful peace is attained, leading on to the four
  • successive stages of perfection in Mukti. Nothing short of this technique of Self-Enquiry will
  • be of any avail in destroying the fearsome cycle of birth and deaths. (Ch. 18, v. 41)
  • 32 Realised person who abides in the Brahman-Self and has lost all feelings of
  • differentiation of self and non-self is the jnani or Mukta-Purusha. Such a jnani is rare to
  • find through searching, among millions of people. If one has the lucky opportunity of getting
  • his Darshan (personal view and contact) one attains purification from all his sins, and what is
  • more, such a person's ego gets well set on the road to its liquidation. (Ch.19, v. 10)
  • 33 Darshan of the matured jnani constitutes the acme of purification of baths taken in sacred
  • waters, divine worship, mantra-japa, spiritual austerities, charitable acts, and devotional
  • worship of Lord Siva-Himself. To find and to gain access to the sacred presence of such a
  • jnani is the luckiest of opportunities that one could ever obtain in this world. (Ch. 19, v. 11)
  • 34 Worshipful service rendered unto such a jnani-Sat-Guru quickens one's spiritual wisdom to
  • attain the bliss of Jivan-Mukti. If continued further, it bestows on the disciple even the status
  • of Videha-Mukti. Therefore, if one is keen on being released from bondage into the freedom
  • of Mukti, the one infallible means of achieving that aim is the loving and worshipful service of
  • the jnani-.Sat-Guru. (Ch. 19, v. 13)
  • 35 Firmly established in the Self, undisturbed by the least ripple of thought, still as an effigy of
  • stone or wood, dissolved completely in Brahman-Self even as water and milk, with awareness
  • devoid of all impurities of thought and drowsiness, standing clear as the pure sky, the
  • 8
  • grandeur of the jnani's nishta (firm stance in the Self) defies thought and expression. (Ch. 19,
  • v. 21)
  • The sine-qua-non of Mukti is Siva's grace
  • 36 That in which the whole universe is born and into which it is absorbed in dissolution is
  • the Siva-Self. Devoted worship of and meditation on that Siva-Self of pure consciousness
  • alone will attract Siva's Grace which is indispensable for liberation. (Ch. 19, v. 60)
  • 37 Those engaged in the pursuit of knowledge of the Brahman-Self happening to get involved in
  • mundane pleasures like sex, should regard such pleasures as merely faint shadows of the
  • bliss of the Self. They should never even dream of worldly pleasures. (Ch. 20, v. 45)
  • 38 As the Self is Sat, meditative contact with the Self is the true Sat-Sanga (association
  • with Sadhus who abide in Being-Self). As Brahman-Self is the highest, association with
  • the Self is Mahat-Sanga (highest association). (Ch. 21, v. 28)
  • 39 The Sadhaka practising meditation on the Self should always think firmly that all diversities of
  • soul, world and creator are the undifferentiated Brahman-Self only. By practice his
  • consciousness is freed from thoughts after which he should give up the above thought also
  • and abide always in the thought-free state of the Self. (Ch. 21, v: 39)
  • 40 Abidance in the state of thought-free alert Awareness is the state of Mukti beyond
  • thought and expression. The emergence of thought is the bondage on untold suffering.
  • Abidance in the Self is the true non-dual Samadhi, and that alone could lead one to the
  • eternal bliss of Mukti. (Ch. 21, v. 41)
  • 41 The great illusions: Maya (associated with God Iswara), avidya (associated with individual
  • souls), mind and jivas (souls), world and its creator, all names and forms, and all mental
  • conceptions are nothing but the Self. One should ever abide in this conviction. (Ch. 22, v.23)
  • 42 All worlds and creatures are only thought forms. They are nothing but the mind which
  • is a bundle of thoughts, which again are nothing more than ripples in the still ocean of
  • Awareness-Self, and certainly nothing apart from that Self. Therefore, one should abide
  • in the firm conviction that all objects are only I am Self-Brahman. (Ch. 22, v. 24)
  • 43 There are no such things as achieved objectives and the efforts ]eading to them, association
  • with the wise or the ignorant, efforts of learning and knowledge acquired, acts of enquiry and
  • practice, the learner or the learned, and any goals achieved. What exists is only
  • Brahman, the effulgent Awareness - Self. (Ch. 22, v. 10)
  • 44 One should be firm in the conviction that there are no charitable acts, sacred waters and
  • kshetras (pilgrim centres), no loss or gain and no loser or gainer, no Karma, Bhakti and
  • wisdom, and no knower or known. All these thought forms are bound to be dissolved and lost
  • in the Brahman-Self which is the sole existence. (Ch. 23, v. 11)
  • * (In verses 45 to 50 the word " Bhavana " means faith based on the word of the teacher and
  • the scriptures and in the unremitting abidance in the belief thereof.)
  • 9
  • 45 The Bhavana "I am Brahman-Self" swiftly takes one to Mukti. As the continued reading
  • of the texts 'generating that bhavana takes the aspirant unerringly to the goal, he should
  • always dwell on the, written words dealing with the Brahman-Self: (Ch. 24, v. 27)
  • 46 The illusion that one is the body and that the world is the basic reality has remained soaked
  • over a Iong long time and cannot be got rid of by by the casual reading and mere
  • understanding of the truth. The basic illusion can be effaced only by a long and
  • unremitting practice of the bhavana that all this is “I am Brahman-Self. (Ch. 24, v. 28)
  • 47 Everything is a concoction of time, space and energy only and else is the trite talk of people
  • who dislike the effort of Sadhana which takes them to the Self. This talk is based on their
  • dense ignorance of the Self. Only by persistent practice and experience of Sadhana can one
  • arrive at the truth that all concepts of souls, world, and the cause thereof are just evanescent
  • shadows on the screen of Siva-Self-Brahman. (Ch. 24, v. 31)
  • 48 There is never such a thing as conception of names and forms, no such thing as the
  • conceiving mind, no such thing as a person lost in samsara and no such things as the
  • world and its creator. Everything that is seen to exist must be realised to be no other
  • than the sole, pure Awareness - Being - Brahman-Self. (Ch. 25, v. 8)
  • Everything is Sat-Chit-Ananda-Self only
  • 49 Whatever is found to exist is Sat (Existence) only. Whatever is pleasurable is Ananda (Bliss)
  • only. One should ever abide firmly in the above bed-rock of bhavana of Sat-Chit-Ananda.
  • Never for once should one slip, even inadvertently, into the disastrous bhavana that one is the
  • body and that the world is real. (Ch. 25, v. 12)
  • 50 One should abide in the rock-firm bhavana that “Everything is only Brahman-Self and I
  • am that brahman-Self.” By this bhavana all thought movements and nescience will
  • disappear, resulting in the eternal abidance in the sole Sat-Chit-Ananda-Self. (Ch. 25, v.14)
  • * Verses 51 to 60 herein deal with practice of “Atma-Nishta" or abidance in the Self.
  • 51 By abiding in the Self "the wandering mind is reduced to perfect stillness after being
  • freed from all nescience and thought currents. It gets lost in the Sat-Chit--Ananda-Self
  • in the same way that water is lost when intimately mixed up with milk. This unitary state
  • of abidance in the Self is called Atma-Nistha by the wise who have attained perfection. (Ch.
  • 26, v. 2)
  • “Sahaja-Nishta" or The natural state
  • 52 Having realised that the world picture on the screen-Self is evanescent and essentially nonexistent,
  • one should ever remain still and blissful in the firm conviction of ever being the sole
  • Brahman-Self only. This conviction should be maintained even while functioning as an
  • individual in the world of name and form. This matured state of abidance in the Self is called
  • Sahaja-Nisftta (the natural state). (Ch. 26, v. 3)
  • 10
  • 53 In that Self wherein there is no action of body, speech and mind, no virtues or sinful Karma
  • (action) and the fruits thereof, in that blissful state of Self one Should remain still, eschewing
  • the least trace of thought. (Oh. 26, v. 7)
  • 54 In that Self wherein there is neither conceiver nor conception of the world of names and
  • forms, one should remain blissfully still, eschewing the least trace of thought. (Ch. 26, v. 8)
  • 55 In that Self wherein desire, anger, covetousness, confusion, bigotry and envy are all absent;
  • in that Self wherein there is no thought of bondage or release, one should abide blissfully still,
  • eschewing the least ripple of thought. (Ch. 26, v. 13)
  • 56 Firmly abiding in the Self, one acquires the totality of all knowledge and achieves the
  • successful completion of all endeavours duties. In that state one should abide blissful and
  • still, eschewing the least ripple of thought. (Ch. 26, v. 25)
  • 57 Mind merged completely in the Self, one becomes a lord without rival steeped in bliss beyond
  • compare. In that state one should abide still, free from the least trace of thought. (Ch. 26, v.
  • 28)
  • 58 I am that Self which is integral existence awareness-bliss, the sole impartite Brahman-Self.
  • Firm in the conviction born of this experience, one should abide still, free from the least trace
  • of thought. (Ch. 26, v. 29)
  • 59 In the the conviction that "I am the Self" in which no thought, ego, desire, mind or
  • confusion can exist one should abide still, free from trace of thought. (Ch. 26, v.31)
  • 60 The firm faith of being the Self is sufficient to dispel all thought and establish one in
  • Brahman-Self. In due course of this practice, even the thought involved in that faith
  • fades away leading to spontaneous effulgence of the self. If a person hearkens to this
  • teaching and practises the faith, even if he is a great sinner, he is washed clean of all his sins
  • and is established in Brahman- Self. (Ch. 26, v. 42)
  • 61 There is certainly no such thing as mind with its constituents of thought and thought
  • forms of objects. In this conviction one should ever abide still and at peace, in the state of
  • thought-free alert Awareness-Self which endures after all Sadhanas and its rigours have
  • exhausted themselves in Brahman-Self. (Ch. 27, v. 29)
  • 62 Having gained the experience that there is no creator, no maya, no duality and that pure
  • Awareness-Self alone exists, one should ever remain still and peaceful in that state of Selfhood.
  • (Ch. 27, v. 34)
  • 63 If a person gives heed to these teachings he would certainly gain the grace of Lord Siva and
  • attain the state of Self-hood even though he is immersed in the dense darkness of nescience
  • which could not be banished by the glare of million suns. (Ch. 27, v. 43)
  • 64 Why waste words? This is the truth in nutshell. Only those who have earned the Grace of
  • our Lord Siva by long devotional worship will get the rare opportunity of reading this scriptural
  • text which leads to the bliss of peace-everlasting in Brahman-Self. (Ch. 27, v. 4:4:)
  • 11
  • 65 Only that jnani who teaches "Thou art the thought-free, alertly aware, absolutely still, ever
  • blissful, intensely peaceful, unqualified Brahman-Self", is the true Sat-Gum, and others are
  • not. (Ch. 28, v. 28)
  • 66 Unbroken abidance in the state of alert awareness, unruffled by thoughts, is SelfRealisation.
  • That is at once the spotless Jivan-Mukti and the magnificent VidehaMukti.
  • This state is easily attainable only for those who have earned the divine Grace of Siva
  • by deep devotion to Him, and not for others. What is stated here is the import in a nutshell of
  • the message of that charming crest jewel of the Vedas known as the Upanishads. (Ch. 29, v.
  • 37)
  • 67 Those who give heed to this message and abide in accordance with it will forthwith attain
  • Mukti (Liberation). They will not suffer from the least particle of affliction; they will enjoy a bliss
  • far greater than the bliss attained from this and all other worlds; they and their environments
  • will be filled with the plenitude of auspicious events. Totally free from all trace of fear, they will
  • never again enter the cycle of births and deaths. They will become the immutable BrahmanSelf.
  • All this we swear is the truth beyond doubt. By our Lord Siva, again and again we swear
  • that this is the fundamental truth. (Ch. 29, v. 40)
  • 68 That state of still, pure, effulgent awareness is Moksha, the state beyond compare.
  • Those who maintain an unbroken abidance in that supreme state will never more be touched
  • by suffering or confusion, and will be absolved from all duties. Such duties if any will
  • somehow be completed without any volition on their part. They will eternally abide as the sole
  • supreme Self. (Ch. 30, v. 31)
  • * In all the 13 verses (69-81) of Chapter 32, the term Bhavana is to be understood as faith or
  • firm belief in "Aham-Brahmam (I am the Self).
  • 69 By the persistent and continued Bhavana* of “I am the Brahman~Self " all thoughts
  • and feelings or differentiation of self and non-self will drop off and permanent abidance
  • in Brahman-Self will be achieved. This Bhavana is possible only for those with keen
  • inquiring mind intent on knowing the self and not for those who are indifferent about Self Knowledge.
  • (Ch. 32, v. 18)
  • 70 Ignorance and indifference in regard to the enquiry of the truth about one-self is the store
  • house of nescience and trouble, blocking the view of the Self, and creating in a split second
  • all sorts of illusions and harassments of mental worry. Non-enquiry renders Bhavana
  • impossible. (Ch. 32, v. 19)
  • 71 In short, non-enquiry will steep one forever in the ocean of samsara (earthly suffering).
  • There is no greater enemy for one than non-enquiry. Therefore, this habit must be
  • overcome in order to-fix the mind in the Bhavana which leads to abidance in the Self. (Ch.
  • 32, v. 20)
  • 72 Enquiry should be made this wise: With the kind help of the Sat-Guru one should enquire
  • “Who am I, what is this world and what is the reality behind all these?” (Ch. 32, v. 21)
  • 73 Staying in the company of Sadhus those engaged in the pursuit and enjoyment of the bliss of
  • the Sat-Self) and respectfully questioning the Sat-Guru-Jnani, one should first make clear
  • 12
  • about the objective to be obtained. This is an important aspect of the enquiry. After thus
  • making sure of the objective, one must firmly abide in that objective of Sole Brahman-Self
  • until the Self is unmistakably experienced. (Ch. 32, v. 22)
  • 74 The conscious introspective concentration of Self-Enquiry ("Who am I?”) kills all
  • thoughts and destroys the dense darkness of nescience; it effaces all all worry; it
  • illuminates the intellect with the radiance of pure awareness; it wipes out all conceptual
  • confusions; it fixes one in Siva-Self; it transforms a host of impending disasters into
  • auspicious events; and lastly, it destroys the ego-mind utterly with all its afflictions. (Ch. 32, v.
  • 24)
  • 75 Only by those strong willed persons who make earnest and persistent Self-Enquiry will
  • the turbulent mind be controlled and fixed still in the practice of firm Bhavana. In due
  • course all thoughts and nescience will disappear, yielding place to the effulgent AwarenessSelf
  • of Mukti. (Ch. 32, v. 26)
  • 76 One should relentlessly pursue Self-Enquiry until all conceptual forms of creature, world and
  • creator merge and disappear in the pure thought-free, alert Awareness-Self, enabling one to
  • abide in that Bhavana of the experience, "l am the Brahman-Self". (Ch. 32, v. 27)
  • 77 It is only the mind which appear as world and bondage; there is no world other than
  • the mind. On inquiry this mind turns out to be nothing more than a group of ripples
  • (thoughts) in the still ocean of pure Awareness-Siva-Self. I am that Siva-Self only and
  • there is nothing apart from me. One should ever abide in the conviction born of this
  • experience. (Ch. 32, v. 33)
  • 78 There is no world apart from the mind. What appears, as the world is only the mind If
  • this mind is investigated, it turns out to be nothing more than a bundle of thoughts
  • based on the primary thought of “I am the body” called ego – I is enquired into and its
  • identity searched, it gets swallowed up without a trace in the pure Awareness-BeingSiva-Self.
  • One should maintain this firm Bhavana “I am Self~Siva", until that state of being
  • the Siva-Self - becomes the spontaneous experience free from the effort of Bhavana. (Ch.
  • 32,- v. 34)
  • 79 In me, the pure Awareness-Self, the universe is born, maintained and dissolved as the
  • mind. Therefore, there are no mind and thought forms of objects apart from me the Self. In
  • this firm experience experience one should ever abide. (Ch. 32, v. 35)
  • 80 One should ever abide as pure Siva-Self by the firm experience that there are no thought
  • forms of creature, world and creator apart from the mind which is just an array of
  • ripples in me the still ocean of pure Awareness-Self and therefore I am the sole BeingSiva-Self
  • only. (Ch. 32, v. 36)
  • 81 Even as the world, seen in my dream, is not apart from me but only my creation, even
  • so, the world of the waking state is only a creation made by me and seen by me in the
  • medium of my pure Awareness-Self. In this experience one should firmly abide. (Ch. 32, v.
  • 37)
  • 13
  • 82 The rock firrm conviction of "I am the Self” is the sure mark of firm abidance in the
  • Self. Abidance in that conviction under all conditions is, true divine worship, meditation on
  • God, incantation of mantras, practice of right conduct in life, contemplation, integral yoga,
  • wisdom of the Self and Moksha as well. (Ch. 33, v. 16)
  • 83 Whatever appears as Maya, creator, creature, mind, world, names and forms are the
  • pure Brahman-Self only and not apart from that Self. (Ch.34,v. 15)
  • 84 Steady abidance in the rock-firm conviction born of the experience of "1 am the Self", is the
  • greatest Yoga, total dissolution of the mind, true renunciation, true wisdom, and.Jivan-Mukti
  • as well. (Ch. 34, v. 46)"
  • 85 Whatever names and forms are seen by me in my dream are not anything apart from me.
  • Even so, this world seen by me in my waking state is not anything apart from me, the
  • Avareness-Self that I am. The wise one should give up all differentiation of Self and non-Self,
  • and abide as pure Self only. (Ch. 35, v. 23)
  • 86 If this world of the waking state is not evanescent in its nature, whatever is seen in the waking
  • state must be seen during sleep also. Since I as pure Self exist alone and always, there is no
  • room for thought of non- Self-world. I-Self-Brahman is the sole Existence. (Ch. 35, v. 24)
  • 87 No world exists during the absence of mind, and there is no mind apart from my
  • awareness. So, mind and world are nothing apart from the Self, and I am ever that sole
  • Existence-Awareness-Brahman-Self. The wise one should abolish all thought of differentiation
  • of self and non-Self. (Ch. 35, v. 25)
  • 88 I see neither mind nor world during my sleep. In my dream there is mind with its creation, the
  • dream world. The dream world is falsified in my waking state. But I-Self exist always. Arguing
  • thus, one must give up all differentiation of self and non-self, and ever abide firmly as the
  • thought-free alert Awareness-Self- Brahman. (Ch. 35, v. 26)
  • 89 All diversities of world, mind, maya (confusing power of Brahman), wakefulness, dream,
  • sleep, talk of you and me are evanescent, and yet, not apart from the Self. This wise one
  • should give up all thought of Self and non-Self and abide as Self only. (Ch. 35, v. 27)
  • 90 In dim light the illusion of a serpent is seen in a rope, and this serpent is nothing but
  • the rope. Even so all illusion of non-Self exist in the self only. This wise one should give
  • up all thought of Self and non-Self and ever abide firmly in the peace of the Self. (Ch. 35, v.
  • 28)
  • 91 In the wisdom of integral experience, I am the non-dual, transcendental, motionless, peaceful,
  • bondage- freedom-notion-free, sky of pure consciousness only. With this experience one
  • should reject all differentiation of Self and non-Self and ever abide firmly in the peace of
  • Brahman-Self. (Ch. 35, v. 33)
  • 92 One should give up all hatha yogic practices like breath control, all religious dogmas and their
  • diverse sadhanas and be ever satisfied in simple abidance as the Self only. (Ch. 35, v. 38)
  • 14
  • 93 Only those who contemplate on Lord Siva-Self, the pure supporting screen of all
  • manifestation, gain the pure experience of Sahaja-Nirvikalpa-Samadhi. Apart from this
  • devotion to Lord Siva (the Pure-Alert- Awareness-Self) there are no other means leading to
  • liberation. (Ch. 35, v. 44)
  • 94 The non-dual sole being existing in deep sleep conjures up a world in the dream state. Even
  • so, the shadow world conjured up in the waking state is the work of the power, inherent in
  • one's own Brahman-Self. Abiding firmly in the experience of pure Brahman-Self, one finds
  • that the mind and all its confabulations are lost for ever. (Ch. 36, v. 25)
  • 95 One should remain firm in the conviction "I am the Self" and reject all thoughts like "I am this
  • body" and "This world is real". If one maintains this habit unremittingly, this false belief will
  • drop away even as a flower held in the hand slips away when one falls into deep slumber.
  • (Ch. 37, v. 33)
  • 96 One is solely responsible for one's own liberation or bondage, since the choice of
  • destroying the restless mind or allowing it to roam at large rests with that one only. Therefore,
  • one should conquer the restless mind by steady abidance in the pure thought-free AlertAwareness-
  • Self only. This steady abidance is Moksha. (Ch. 38, v. 7)
  • 97 You are the sole supreme Godhead, the Self. There is nothing apart from you. This, we
  • declare to be the ultimate truth after a complete analysis of all the scriptures. By, the holy feet
  • of Siva, we swear this to be the truth beyond all doubt. By the feet of the Sat-Guru, we swear
  • again that this is the truth declared by the Upanishads. (Ch. 38, v. 9)
  • 98 All charitable gifts, all pilgrimages to sacred places, all sorts of mantra-japa and worship of
  • diverse gods must be firmly given up in favour of steady practice of the teachings of this book
  • (Ribu Gita) only. (Ch. 38, v.24)
  • 99 All yogic practices, all philosophic pursuits, all devotional exercises, and all faiths and beliefs
  • should be abandoned. One should confine oneself to practice of the teachings of this book
  • only. (Ch. 38, v. 25)
  • 100 By the sole practice of the teachings of this book, all confusion and ignorance will be
  • destroyed. Firm abidance in the Self will be the positive result. With the fusion of the wisdom
  • and peaceful bliss in the Self, Mukti will be attained. (Ch. 38, v. 29)
  • 101 Only when ~ll sins are washed off by the practice of virtues running through many lives, one
  • gets the rare opportunity of securing this treatise and practising its tenets. By the feet of Lord
  • Siva we declare that only those whose cycle of births and deaths has come to an end with
  • this life will ever get this treatise in their hands and practise its teachings. (Ch. 38, v. 40)
  • * Verses 102 to 121 (20 verses) contain the declarations of the disciple Nidaga before his
  • teacher Ribhu, expressing the spiritual achievements secured by him by the grace of
  • his teacher, and expressions of his gratitude to his teacher, Ribhu.
  • 15
  • 102 0 My Lord Sat-Guru! By thy grace I have, in a split second, shed all sense of differentiation of
  • Self and non-Self; I have attained the certainty that all is Brahman and I am that BrahmanSelf;
  • I have become settled in the eternal bliss of Brahman-Self. (Ch. 39, v. 7)
  • 103 I am verily the Sat-Chit-Ananda-Brahman-Self. I am the eternal undisturbed peace devoid of
  • name and form. I am the flawless integral whole of all existence. Firmly I am settled in my
  • sole Brahman-Self. (Ch. 40, v. 10)
  • 104 Oh! I have become Brahma, Vishnu, Rudra, Mahesa, Sadasiva, Parameswara and his
  • spouse Parvati, Vinayaka, Subrahmanya, cohorts of Siva's hosts (Siva-Ganas) and devotees
  • of Lord Siva, all rolled into one! (Ch. 41, v. 15)
  • 105 I am myself all the Devas (Celestials) and Asuras (denizens of the nether-world), Indra the
  • Chief of the Devas, the Lord of the eight cardinal directions, the community of sages, the
  • swarm of Rakshasas (embodiments of wickedness), and in fact, the denizens of this and all
  • other worlds. (Ch. 41, v. 16)
  • 106 I have become the five elements, multitudinous worlds scattered in the skies, all existing
  • things and their histories, all the Vedas, and all the diversities of name and form. (Ch. 41, v.
  • 17)
  • 107 At one stroke I have become the bodies, senses, and souls owning them, the mind, intellect,
  • intuition, ego, the primal nescience and the restless commotion of spirit, and in short all that is
  • seen and known. (Ch. 41, v. 19)
  • 108 That gracious person who gives these teachings is no doubt the embodiment of Lord
  • Parameswara, His Devi Parvati, Vinayaka and God Shanmukha all rolled into one. (Ch. 42, v.
  • 5)
  • 109 He is again, Nandikeswara, Dattatreya, Dakshinamurti, and in short, the supreme Lord Siva
  • Himself (Ch. 42, v. 6)
  • 110 After being duly initiated into these teachings by the Sat-Guru, the disciple must, as long as
  • life lasts in him, provide his teacher liberally with money, food, clothing and shelter and loving
  • devotion. This is the sine-qua-non for the disciple's Mukti. (Ch. 43, v. 11)
  • 111 Further, he should adorn his forehead and body with Vibhuti (sacred ash) in the prescribed
  • manner, as this use of Vibhuti alone will entitle him to Lord Siva's Grace which removes all
  • impediments to salvation. (Ch.43 v. 12)
  • 112 The habitual smearing of the body with Vibhuti is called Pasupatha-Vratham (austerity in
  • devotion to Siva). This practice quickens the attainment of Se1f- Knowledge. 0 Lord Sat-Guru!
  • By this practice I earned the merit for arriving at thy holy feet which have led me to salvation.
  • (Ch. 43, v. 13)
  • 113 I am ever the eternal, pure, all knowing, free, unshakable, non-dual, integral Self. This is the
  • firm conviction of the experience of the Jivan-Mukta in the Self. (Ch. 43, v. 28)
  • 16
  • 114 That mature jnani who is lost in the Maha-Mownam (total stillness) of the pure effulgent
  • Awareness-Brahman-Self, devoid of the least trace of nescience, totally devoid of all
  • consciousness of the body and its three states of waking, dream and sleep, devoid of all
  • distinctions of name and form and devoid of any thought of bondage or freedom is a VidehaMukta.
  • (Ch. 43. v. 29)
  • 115 Thou hast, 0 Lord Sat-Guru, taken me across the boundless ocean of Samsara in the boat of
  • Self-knowledge. To me, floundering in the misery of the belief that. "I am the body" thou hast
  • taught that "I am the Brahman-Self" and vouchsafed to me the bliss of all embracing
  • Awareness-Being. To thee, I render these devout salutations. (Ch. 44, v. 16)
  • 1'l6 Salutations to thee, my Lord-Sat.Guru! Thou hast destroyed my illusion that I am the body
  • and that the world is apart from me and is real. Thou hast given me the experience of my own
  • Brahman-Self. Thou hast destroyed my wrong belief that Karma (action) is the road to
  • salvation, and showing that Knowledge alone could make one free. Thou hast given me my
  • salvation in the Self. (Ch. 44, v. 17)
  • 117 To that divine Grace-embodied, to that Omnipresence beyond compare, to that Siva-Self-SatGuru,
  • I render devout salutation. (Ch. 44, v. 18)
  • 118 To that Sat-Guru who is the core of my Self, who destroyed my nescience by the gift of
  • Awareness-Self, to that embodiment of Self-Knowledge, do I offer these salutations. (Ch. 44,
  • v. 19)
  • 119 Salutations to the Sat-Guru who is the embodiment of undisturbed peace, qualityless eternal
  • purity, all pervasive infinite sky of consciousness and integral perfection (Ch. 44, v. 20)
  • * The following verses 120 and 121 contain Ribhu's exhortation to Nidaga.
  • 120 In reply to the words of Nidaga, Ribhu replies thus. 0 my son! You are now no doubt firmly
  • settled in the bliss of Brahman-Self, having been freed from all illusion and nescience. All the
  • same, as abundant pre-caution until you attain Videha-Mukti you must assiduously practise
  • continued abidance in the Self. (Ch. 44) v. 22)
  • 121 Aspirants of Self-Knowledge will find their success accelerated by practical bodily worship of
  • Siva. Living in a Siva-Kshetra (neighbourhood of Siva Temple) they should offer worship to
  • Siva-Maha-Lingam, wearing the sacred Vibhuthi and Rudraksham (garland of a specified sort
  • of beads), and repeating the litanies of Siva with loving devotion. (Ch. 44, v. 39)
  • 122 Benedictory Verses offering salutations to Siva-Self.
  • Salutations to Sat-Chit-Ananda-Siva-Self!
  • Salutations to that Peace undisturbed, the Self!
  • Salutations to that integral Perfection, the Self!
  • Salutations to that Effulgent-Awareness, the Self!
  • Salutations to that qualityless blemish-free Self!
  • Salutations to that indivisible Unity, the Self!
  • Salutations to that pure sky of consciousness, the Self!
  • Salutations to that supreme integral Existence, the Self! (Ch. 44, v. 51)
  • 17
  • The Central Teaching of the Ribhu Gita
  • (Six Verses selected by Sri Ramana Maharshi)
  • The concept "I-am-the-body" is the sentient inner organ, the mind. It is also the illusive bondage to
  • identification with birth and death. It is the source of all groundless fears. If there is no trace of it at all
  • everything will be found to be the Reality of the Supreme Absolute Being.
  • • The concept "I-am-the-body" is the primal ignorance. It is known as the firm knot of the heart.
  • It gives rise to the concepts of existence and non-existence. If there is no trace of it at all
  • everything will be found to be the Reality of the Supreme Absolute Being.
  • • The ego or separate soul is a concept. God, the world, the mind, desires, action, sorrow and
  • all other things are all concepts.
  • • Abiding without concepts is the undifferentiated state. It is inherence in the Supreme Being. It
  • is wisdom. It is Liberation. It is the natural and true state. It is the Reality of the Supreme
  • Absolute Being. It is the Supreme Formless God. If there is no concept at all everything will
  • be found to be the Reality of the Supreme Absolute Being.
  • • The body and the various functions of manifest existence are only concepts. Hearing,
  • reasoning and contemplating are concepts. Enquiry into the ultimate nature of one's own
  • existence is a concept. All other things are also concepts. Concepts give rise to the world, the
  • separate souls, and God. There is nothing whatever except concepts. Everything is in truth
  • the Reality of the Supreme Absolute Being.
  • • The mind is unreal. It is like a magic show. It is like the son of a barren woman. It is absolutely
  • non-existent. Since there is no mind there are no concepts, no Master, no disciple, no world,
  • no separate soul. All concepts are really the Reality of the Supreme Absolute Being.
  • from The Song of Ribhu: The English Translation of the Tamil Ribhu Gita.
  • Translation by Dr. H. Ramamoorthy and Nome. Published by SAT, Society for
  • Abidance in Truth, 2000.
  • "Advaita Vedanta, or the Teaching of Nonduality, is that which is expounded by Ribhu, Sri Dattatreya
  • (the Avadhuta), Sri Ashtavakra, Sri Sankara, Sri Ramana Maharshi, and many other great sages. It
  • reveals the utter absence of any differentiation between Atman (the Self) and Brahman. It is the
  • revelation of Reality without even a trace of notional superimpositions. The entire Ribhu Gita gives an
  • exposition -- a veritable scripture -- of Advaita Vedanta."
  • "ATMAN. The Self. The Self is one and universal, different from the body, sensory organs, senses,
  • mind, intelligence, inner senses, and such others, remaining only as a witness to the activities of
  • these and unsullied by them. The Self is of the nature of Being-Consciousness-Bliss, self-luminous, of
  • the nature of Knowledge, needing no other knowledge to know it. The Self is without desire or hatred,
  • fear or sorrow, quality or activity, form, change or blemish. It is immaculate, indivisible, all-pervasive,
  • and infinite. The Self and Brahman are one."
  • "BRAHMAN. A Sanskrit word formed from the root brmh, which means growth, and the suffix man,
  • which signifies an absence of limitation (in space or time). Thus, Brahman means that which is
  • absolutely the greatest. Brahman, according to the Masters of Advaita, is said to be known through
  • Vedic texts, primarily the Upanishads, which are considered a valid means of knowledge, as a direct
  • perception.
  • "Brahman is the only Reality; it is beyond definition in words, the range of sensory perceptions, and
  • the human mind. It is conceived to be boundless Being, ever existent, limitless in space and time,
  • immutable, immaculate, devoid of qualities, attributes, name, or form. It is not subject to birth,
  • continuation, growth, maturity, decay and dissolution, and has nothing similar to it and nothing
  • different from it. It is also described as pure Knowledge.
  • 18
  • "It is also regarded as both the efficient and material cause of the visible universe, the all-pervading
  • spirit of the universe, the essence from which all beings are produced and into which they are
  • absorbed. The entire phenomenal world of beings, qualities, actions, all manifestations, and so on, is
  • said to be an illusory superimposition on the imperishable substratum, which is Brahman.
  • "The Upanishad-s also identify Brahman with the Universal Self. What Brahman, the only Reality, is
  • and, more importantly, what Brahman, the only Reality, is not is discussed in the entire text of the Song of Ribhu."



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