Monday, November 5, 2018

YOGA VASISHTA SARA

YOGA VASISHTA SARA

CHAPTER ONE
DISPASSION

1. Salutations to that calm effulgence which, is endless and unlimited by space, time etc., the pure consciousness which can be known by experience only.

2.  Neither  one  who  is  totally  ignorant  nor  one  who  knows  it  (i.e.  Truth)  is  eligible  to  study  this  book. Only he who thinks' I am bound ; I must become free ' is entitled to study it
.
3.  Until  one  is  definitely  blessed  by  the  Supreme  Lord  he  will  not  find  either  a  proper  Guru  or  the right scripture.

4. Just as a steady boat, O Rama, is obtained from a boatman, so also the method of crossing the ocean of samsara is learnt by associat
ing with great souls.

5.  The  great  remedy  for  the  long lasting  disease  of  samsara  is  the  enquiry,  'Who  am  I  ?,  to  whom  does this samsara belong ?,' which entirely cures it.

6. Not a day should be spent in a place which does not possess the tree of a wise  knower of Truth with its good fruit and cool shade.

7. The sages are to be approached even if they do not teach. Even their talks in a light vein contain wisdom.

8. The company of sages converts emptiness into fullness, death into immortality and adversity into prosperity.

9. If sages were concerned solely with their own happiness with whom could those tormented by  the sorrows of samsara seek refuge.?

10.  That  which  is  imparted,  O  good  soul,  to  a  worthy  disciple  who  has  become  dispassionate,  is  the real wisdom; it is the real purport of the sacred texts and is also the comprehensive wisdom.

11.  Following  the  customary  method  of  teaching  is  only  for  preserving  the  tradition.  Pure  awareness results solely from the clarity of the disciple's understanding.

12. The Lord cannot be seen with the help of the sacred texts or the Garu. The self is seen by the Self alone with the pure intellect.

13. All the arts acquired by men are lost by lack of practice, but this art of wisdom grows steadily once it rises.

14.  Just  as  an  ornament  worn  round  the  neck  is  considered  lost  through  forgetfulness  and  is  gained  when  the  mistake  is  realized,  so  also  the  Self  is  attained  (when  the  delusion  is  removed)  by the words of the Guru.
15.  He   is  indeed  an  unfortunate  person  who,  not  knowing  his  own  Self,  takes  pleasure  in sense-objects, like one who realizes too late that - the food eaten by him was poisonous.

16.  That  perverted  man  who,  even  after  knowing  that  worldly  objects  are  deceptive,  still thinks of them, is an ass, not a  man.

17. Even the slightest thought immerses a man in sorrow ; when devoid of all thoughts he enjoys imperishable bliss.

18. Just as we experience the delusion of hundreds of year in a dream lasting an hour, so also  we experience the sport of maya in our waking state.

19.  He  is  a  happy  man  whose  mind  is  inwardly  cool  and  free  from  attachment  and  hatred  and who looks upon this (world) like a mere spectator.

20.  He  who  has  understood  well  how  to  abandon  all  ideas  of
acceptance  and  rejection  and  who  has realized the consciousness which is within the innermost heart - his life is illustrious.

21.  On  the  dissolution  of  the  body  the  ether  (consci
ousness)  limited  by  the  heart  (hrdayam) alone ceases to Exist. People lament needlessly that the Self is extinct.

22.  When  pots,  etc.  are  broken  the  space  within  them  becomes  unlimited.  So  also  when  bodies  cease to exist the Self remains eternal and unattached.

23.  Nothing  whatever  is  born  or  dies  anywhere  at  any  time.  It  is  Brahman  alone  appearing illusorily in the form of the world.

24. The Self is more extensive than space; it is pure, subtle, undecaying and auspicious. As such how could it be born and how can it die ?

25.  All  this  is  the  tranquil,  One  without  beginning,  middle  or  end,  which  cannot  be  said  to  be existent or non-existent. Know this and be happy.

26.  O  Rama,  it  is  indeed  nobler  to  wander  begging  about  the  streets  of  the  outcasts  (chandalas), an earthen bowl in, hand, than to live a life steeped in ignorance.

27.  Neither  disease  nor  poison  nor  adversity  nor  any  other  thing  in  the  world  causes  more  suffering to men than such stupidity engendered in their bodies.

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