Sri Sathya Sai Speaks, Vol 15 (1981 - 82)
4
The cleansing process

Contents 
Cleansing the mind of dirt, Grow in it pure and holy thoughts: Then you can view the world With Wisdom Vision, as Right and Light. No fruit can grow on tree sans flower; It cannot ripen into sweetness Without emerging Grace. Disciplined work alone can grow Into devotion; and that alone can transform into Wisdom deep. As the core of this Universe, about which we speak and which we describe, is Paramatma (Supreme Self), about which we cannot speak and which is beyond all description. Both the cognisable and non-cognisable have emanated from the same One Indivisible Consciousness. Each is full and complete in itself. The individual consciousness is the manifestation of the Cosmic Consciousness. When the material sheath falls off, it merges in its source. The Vedas declare, "That is full; this is full. From the full, emerges the full. When the full is taken from the full, the full remains full." So, the Cosmos, the world, the individual - all are embodiments of the Full. Nothing can be fractional or incomplete. The symbol of the full is OM, the Pranava. The Vedas announce: "The One indestructible sound Om is Brahman, the Universal Absolute." The moving and unmoving, everywhere are only paraphrasing OM, elaborating its nature, illustrating its potentialities. The past that has gone, the present that is here and the approaching future are all also OM. The Pranava is the Name, (Nama), and Paramatma is the Named, (Nami). The two are not separate. "Sarvam Khalu idam Brahma". All this is indeed Brahman (Paramatma). But, this awareness of the immanence of the Universal can come to man only when the I - consciousness is forgotten; when the 'I' disappears, man becomes fit to know the non-'I'.
The four steps in sadhana
In order to delve deep into the principle represented by the Pranava (OM), four steps have been demarcated in sadhana. One may doubt how the eternal unique integral Om' can be understood in stages! The steps, however, are designed to help the identification of the principle itself. Wakefulness, dream, deep sleep and the "fourth" are the steps. They are known as jagrath, svapna, sushupthi and thureeya in the Shasthra. Jagrath means "being awake", "exterior altertness" , or "outward vision." The consciousness is gross, while in this stage and in dreams the impressions that impinge on the consciousness are reflections and images of the Truth. In the sushupthi or deep sleep stage, the individual is not conscious at all; he is just a witness, who acknowledges later, (after awakening) that he slept well. The consciousness is not aware of itself. It is pure unaffected prajna or awareness. It has no contact with the objective world or the senses, outer and inner. It is pure Brahman Consciousness (Prajnanam Brahman). The last stage is thureeya. It is the stage when the consciousness is fully aware of itself. It cannot be identified as such by any means! We can try to delineate it a little by saying that it is the silence that prevails, after one OM and before another OM follows it. These four stages of Pranava are associated with the deities Vishnu, Brahma, Rudhra and the Paramatma. Vishnu means that which is omnipresent. The visible Universe is suffused with beauty and beauty is God. Since the Universe is the Body of God, the Supreme Person, Vishnu, is also described in the scriptures as "He who delights in decoration" (Alankara Priyo Vishnu). The material Universe is saturated in harmony, law and symmetry and is therefore charming and fascinating. Through this attraction, the external world, the Universe, draws man into various paths and exertions. The five elements, the five senses, the five vital airs and other phenomena teach man various lessons to mould his nature. So the objective world can be taken as his Guru.
Experiences in dream and deep-sleep stages
Vishnu is the deity who fosters and feeds, who moulds and masters. Moreover, He is the guardian of the Cosmos, the Jagadrakshaka. The scriptures teach man to sanctify the waking hours - jagrath stage - for they belong to Vishnu, and are charged with the Vishnu-principle. They exhort man to avoid wicked deeds, polluting thoughts, and all types of errors and failings. During the dream stage, we can experience holiness and bliss, only when we engage ourselves, while awake, in steady pure unselfish activities. In dreams, we see diverse objects and persons, strange worlds, of skyscrapers and castles. From where did these emerge? Through whom were they presented? Prajnanam Brahman, the Supreme Consciousness, is the basis for the creation of this variety of dream appearances. Brahma is the deity that creates. So, the dream state is the Brahma-phase of consciousness. Then, the deep sleep stage. Here, the experiences gained during the waking hours or gone through in dreams do not impinge on man. They have all been extinguished. Rudhra, the deity into Whom the Cosmos ultimately merges, is therefore associated with the sushupthi phase. Next, we have the thureeya or the fourth stage, the stage of Atma-Consciousness. When the salt doll is dropped in the sea, it reaches the bottom and is dissolved. The same happens to the seeker of the Atma. He is dissolved. He becomes one with that which he sought to know. He cannot return and describe the experience. "The A of OM is the Vishwa; the U is Thaijas; the M is Prajna" - ,this is another interpretation in the scriptures. Vishwa is the Waking, Thaijas the Dream, Prajna, the Deep sleep stage. The Pranava Sadhana (the spiritual exercise of meditation on OM) is therefore very important for seekers. The Vedas prescribe the repetition of the Pranava while studying holy texts, reciting the Name of the Divine, carrying out daily duties and offering gifts.
Nine essences and sustainers of human life
The Pranava is the essence of all sustenance, the embodiment of Rasa. Of all creation, moving and un-moving, the Earth is the Rasa; of the Earth, water is the Rasa; of the Water, food (Oshadhi) is the Rasa; of the food, the Human Person is the Rasa; of the Human Person, the word is the Rasa; of the word, Rk is the Rasa; of the Rig Sama is the Rasa; of the Sama (Veda) OM is the Rasa. These eight Rasas, the earth, water, physic, person, word, Rig, Sama and OM lead to the ninth, Anandha (Bliss). These are the Navarasas, the Nine Essences, the Nine Sustainers. Anandha (Bliss) is the goal which man is seeking, the aim of human life. Man struggles variously to attain Anandha. Anandha is the height of happiness, the embodiment of joy. It is sought in three different ways, according to the innate quality of the seeker - the sathwik, the rajasik and the thamasik. The sathwik path is poison in the early stages and nectar while coming to fruition. It invokes firm control and regulation of the senses, of cognition and action. This will be very hard to accomplish. But as one progresses in practice, the joy increases and bliss is attained. How can such a goal be secured without undergoing hardships? The scriptures say, "Happiness cannot be won through happiness": Na sukhad labhyathe Sukham. Happiness can be won only through misery. Pleasure is but an interval between two pains. To achieve the sathwik happiness that is positive and permanent, man must perforce take on trials and tribulations, loss and pain.
The Rajasik and Thamasik paths
Now about the second type - the rajasik. In the early stages, this path is nectarine but later, it slides into misery, for the happiness is derived through the senses from objects of the external world. The pleasure soon reveals itself as unreal, false and exhausting. Once the process starts, it drags on with no facility for rest. Man becomes too weak to pursue the goals of dharma (righteousness) artha (prosperity) kama (wish-fulfilment) and moksha (liberation) which are laid down for him. His intellect, imaginative skill, intuitive faculty - all are rendered lame. Man can even lose his human-ness. The blind pursuit of objective sensual pleasure has today resulted in this very calamity. Man has forgotten his true Divinity and surrendered his life to unholy activities.
Lastly, we have the thamasik path. People who prefer this way of life are unconcerned with the problems of the world; they sleep away their lives, deriving joy in sloth and darkness. Of these three paths towards the goal of Anandha, man must accept the sathwik road, whatever the hardship, the loss, the misery, the anxiety and the labour. He must attain the awareness of Divinity, the experience of Godhead (Bhagavan) and be established in the Anandha.
Nine lamps that can illumine the mind
What is the inner meaning of the expression, Bhagavan? The Vedas say, "Brahmaithi, Param- Atmaithi; Bhagava-theethi sabdyathe." (The Bhagavan principle is the same as Brahman, Paramatma). Bhagavan is the Ultimate, the Full. Bha means having full auspiciousness and prosperity. Ga means deserving praise and adoration. In the Ramayana, Bhagavan is described in clear terms. He sustains the Universe using His creative power as the means. He creates and fosters what is created. So, He is Sambhartha or Bhartha, He who raises, He who rules and saves. Bha also means light, splendour. Bhagavan is He who sheds and spreads Light. Bhagavan is Jyothiswaruup, embodied Light, Effulgence. Since He can and does illumine all things and beings everywhere at all times, He is Bha-ga-van. When do we need Light? Not during the day, but when night prevails. Then we need a lamp, a flame, the Moon. So too, until wisdom enlightens us, we need sadhanas; until we experience the One Unified Divine, we have to accept and practise discipline, regulations and sadhanas. Ignorance is the Night. Knowledge is the Light. There are nine lamps that can illumine the mind and free it from darkness - sravanam (listening), keerthanam (adulation), smaranam (remembering), padsevanam (showing respect by touching the feet), archanam (ceremonial worship), Vandanam (paying obeisance), dasyam (doing service), sakhyam (friendliness), and atmanivedanam (self surrender). We must shape ourselves into fit instruments for the spiritual pilgrimage. There are four classes of persons: those who pay attention to their own faults and the excellences of others (the best); those who highlight their own excellences as well as the excellences of others (the middlings); those who pay attention only to their own excellences and only to the faults of others (the worse type) and those who present their own faults as excellences and the excellences of others as faults (the worst). Each one can discover for himself the group to which he belongs. Remember this: when one is yearning to become aware of the Full, the Sacred, the Prema, the Atma, the Bhagavan, he has to prepare himself for the first and the best group - discovering his own faults and observing only excellences in others. This is the most desirable sadhana.
Uphold-the true glory of man
Man is suffering today because he is engrossed in the external world, with no sadhana or steady practice to correct his vision. What can ten baths a day do to cleanse a person, when his mind is fouled by evil thoughts? What can the shaven head and the ochre clothes do to foster spirituality when his mind is riddled by desires and wants? You may rotate a ball of sweets outside the mouth but unless it is put into it and eaten, hunger will not be abated. So, develop sincere longings, cleanse the mind, purify the thoughts, and put the precepts into practice. In Vedantha, this process is mentioned as, karma marga, the path of activity. There is no fruit without a flower; there can be no devotion without karma. The fruit ripens and becomes sweet; bhakthi ripens into jnana (wisdom). So, we must first take up holy activity with clean intentions: One sadhana that is cultivated on a large scale today is dhyana: (meditation). But, the dhyana that is done is not in consonance with the principle of Bharatheeya Culture. In the absence of a purified mind, dhyana can never achieve the mergence. How can a house be built without brick and mortar?
By sadhana you can correct your faults
It is said that one can succeed in dhyana by indulging in it whenever a little time is available and that one can be engaged in this sadhana, whatever the habits one is prone to, whatever feelings and thoughts reside in you and whatever path you follow. But this advice is not correct. If one has to remain quiet for sometime without being distracted or disturbed by fear or anxiety, one could indulge in drink or consume opium. Dhyana must have far higher aims and far stricter credentials. Or else, the culture of Bharath will suffer great damage. Therefore, fine virtues have to be cultivated first, good thoughts have also to be entertained One should uphold the true glory of man.
Many people come to me distraught and pray, "Swami! I have no peace. Give me peace" But peace cannot be got from the outer world; it has to be sought in the heart. Wicked desires breed misery; beneficial desires result in joy. The removal of desire ensures peace (shanthi). When desire after desire multiply in the mind, how can peace be gained? After bhajan and dhyan, you repeat shanthi thrice, praying for physical, mental and spiritual peace. But the awareness of the atma, being the reality of all, can only confer shanthi. A single mango seed is planted; the tree yields thousands of fruits and in every fruit, you find the seed! The same atma is in every Being! The Lord is the seed that is manifested as thousands of seeds. "Ekoham (I am single) Bahusyam (shall become many)", said the Lord. When we posit differences and distinctions due to ignorance of this fact, we are afflicted by fear and shanthi disappears. When man doubts and disbelieves brother man, how can shanthi prevail? Now, the mind of man is tending towards evil. The mathi (mind) has become durmathi (bad mind). The year that begins today, Sunday, is "Durmathi" and people apprehend that evil may increase. The year begins on the day of Sun who is, according to ancient astrological texts, the King for the next twelve months. The Sun is also the Lord of the Peoples, the Lord of Rain Clouds, and the Lord of Curative Herbs. Moreover, the Moon is His Manthri or Minister. Since the Moon has no independent source of light and energy, the King and the Minister will move amicably and so, the year will be a happy and prosperous one. But, whatever astrology may indicate, you can direct your mind (the Moon) and your intellect (the Sun) into propitious channels of peace and prosperity. By sadhana, you can correct your faults and mould your excellences and ensure shanthi for yourselves, your society and your country. Pray everyday for the welfare of all the world: "Lokas samasthas sukhino bhavanthu". This is my message for the new year.
Selected Excerpts From This Discourse
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