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Nothing Existed Except the Eyes of the Maharshi
by N.R. Krishnamurti Aiyer. Oct. 29, 2001
Who Are You? An Interview With Papaji by
Jeff Greenwald. Oct. 24, 2001
An Interview with Byron Katie by Sunny
Massad. Oct. 23, 2001
An Interview with Douglas Harding by Kriben
Pillay. Oct. 21, 2001
The Nectar of Immortality by Sri Nisargadatta
Maharaj. Oct. 18, 2001
The Power of the Presence Part Two by David
Godman. Oct. 15, 2001
The Quintessence of My Teaching by Sri Nisargadatta Maharaj. Oct. 3, 2001
Interview With David Godman. Sept. 28, 2001
The Power of the Presence Part One by David
Godman. Sept. 28, 2001
Nothing Ever Happened Volume 1 by
David Godman. Sept. 23, 2001
Collision with the Infinite by Suzanne
Segal. Sept. 22, 2001
Lilly of the Valley, the Bright and Morning
Star by Charlie Hopkins. August 9, 2001
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Our
email address is editor
@realization.org.
Copyright
2001 Realization.org.
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Here's
a question from a reader which I pass along to
you: "Papaji says that the only thing that
needs to be done is to stop all effort. When this
happens, there is quiet and a sense of egolessness.
But in that state, it is possible to ask "Who
am I?" and find an observer whose source
is yet to be found. In other words, in that state,
it seems that self-inquiry is still needed. Does
this mean that Papaji is teaching something different
from Ramana Maharshi? What is the connection between
this effortless state and the state of abiding
in the heart?"
When
Papaji said in satsang, "Make no effort,"
he was trying to put the person in front of him
into a state of no-mind in which no effort is
necessary or possible, since the "I"
has temporarily gone. He was not trying to put
the person in a halfway stage in which further
effort is needed.
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| Papaji:
Interviews by David Godman. |
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| Here
is a paradox for you. Ramana Maharshi realized the
Self without any effort, without being interested
in it, and without any practice, and then spent
the rest of his life telling people that they must
make continuous effort up till the moment of enlightenment.
Papaji spent a quarter of a century doing japa and
meditation prior to his climactic meetings with
Ramana, but when he began teaching, he always insisted
that no effort was necessary to realize the Self.
Papaji's
attitude to self-inquiry was, "Do it once
and do it properly." Ramana's was, "Do
it intensively and continuously until realization
dawns." Although you could never get Papaji
to admit that there were differences between his
teachings and those of his Guru, they clearly
didn't agree on the question of effort.
With regard to the question of the difference
between the effortless state and the state of
abiding in the Heart, I would refer to Lakshmana
Swamy. He agrees with Ramana that hard, continuous
effort is needed up till the moment of realization.
He also says that by effort the mind can reach
the effortless thought-free state, but no further.
If that state has been achieved, and if one has
the good fortune to be with a realized Guru, then
the power of the Self will pull the mind into
the Heart and destroy it. In the effortless state,
mind is still there, but when one abides in the
Heart it is gone.
Papaji
conceded that meditation and effort had a limited
use. He would sometimes say that intense meditation
would earn the punyas or spiritual merit necessary
to have the opportunity to sit with a realized
being. Once that has happened, effort is no longer
necessary. In fact, it is counter-productive.
When one meets the Guru, the power of the Self
that is present in an enlightened being's satsang
takes over and gives the results and experiences
that the mind is ready for.
All
this probably appears to be confusing and contradictory.
The teachers I have written about disagree profoundly
on the question of effort and its role in Self-realization,
but they all agree that being in the presence
of a realized being is the greatest aid to enlightenment.
I can say from my own experience that when one
is in the presence of such beings, mind drops
away of its own accord.
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| "Papaji's
attitude to self-inquiry was,
'Do it once and do it properly.'
Ramana's was, 'Do it intensively
and continuously until realization
dawns.'" |
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In
his book Relaxing
Into Clear Seeing, Arjuna Nick Ardagh
says, "In the past few years, there has been
a dramatic increase in the ease with which Self-realization
can occur. Indeed, a kind of 'epidemic' has begun
in the West whereby the awakened view is becoming
increasingly available." It seems to me that
Arjuna is referring here to glimpses, not Self-realization,
and I wonder if they are any more common today
than they have been in India for millennia. Perhaps
the real difference is that Indians didn't regard
these glimpses as particularly unusual or worth
noting.
I
don't think that there is an epidemic of Self-realization
in the West or anywhere else. I think full realization
is a rare phenomenon. There are certainly more
people who think that they have realized the Self,
but I think that they are deluding themselves.
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According
to some Western advaita teachers who claim to
follow Sri Ramana's teachings, Self-realization
is a two-part process. First, there is an awakening,
a temporary experience of non-duality and egolessness.
The second step is to stabilize the experience
of this awakening, or in other words, make it
permanent.
But
when I read about Mathru Sri Sarada in your book
No Mind I Am The Self, I seem to
get a completely different picture. In her case,
a permanent awakening experience may have been
necessary, but by itself was not sufficient. For
her, Self-realization happened only when her mind
descended into her heart center and dissolved
permanently. I get the impression that she could
have remained in the "awakened state"
indefinitely without this descent into the heart.
Would
you comment on this?
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When
egolessness is there, there is no one left who
can stabilize or lose the experience. These experiences
come and go. They go because the vasanas of the
mind reassert themselves. When they arise and
take over, you resume the practice again. This
is the classic prescription of the Gita,
and it is also what Ramana taught. Stay awake,
stay mindful, and whenever you catch the mind
straying, take it back to its source.
As
regards Mathru Sri Sarada, I think you are referring
to the experience she had just before she realized
the Self. She felt that her mind had died because
she was temporarily abiding in the Heart, but
her Guru, Lakshmana Swamy, could see that her
"I" was not dead, which meant that this
was a temporary experience. She was talking about
her experiences and genuinely felt that her "I"
was dead, but it was not a real, permanent awakening.
A
few minutes later, with the help of her Guru,
the "I" went back to its source and
died forever. There was no fully awakened state
prior to this experience. The final death of the
"I" in the Heart was necessary to complete
the realization process
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| Sri
Ramana Maharshi |
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Can
you name any people who are teaching today who
are Self-realized?
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I
could hide behind my earlier statement and say
that I am not qualified to say who is enlightened
and who is not. That is true, but I have absolute
faith that Lakshmana Swamy and Saradamma are in
that state. I don't want to make comments about
anybody else.
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What
plans do you have for future books and other works?
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I
am working on a third volume of The Power of
the Presence, and I hope to see it published
in a few months. After that, I have a project
to translate and publish some of Muruganar's poetry
from Tamil into English. He recorded many of Bhagavan's
teaching statements in short Tamil verses, and
most of them have never been translated. This
will be a major undertaking that may take a year
or two. I also hope to get back to working on
Papaji in the near future. I particularly want
to edit the Lucknow satsang dialogues from the
early 1990s. That's a big job, though, and would
probably take years.I recently volunteered to
make a book of all Sadhu Natanananda's writings
on Bhagavan for Ramanasramam. I will fit that
in between all my other projects.
When
I sit down in front of my screen in the morning
I often have no idea what I will be working on
ten minutes later. I might look at something I
have edited recently, move on to something else,
and then find another chapter of another book
that suddenly grabs my attention and interest.
Or I might switch the machine off and go outside
and do some gardening instead.
I
have come to the conclusion that Bhagavan brought
me to Tiruvannamalai to write about him and his
disciples. I have learned this the hard way. I
went back to England twenty years ago, hoping
to earn enough money to come back to India and
not do any work here. Nobody was willing to hire
me to do anything. I even flunked an interview
for picking up litter in the London zoo. But as
soon as I had the idea of writing a book about
Bhagavan, everything fell into place. Though I
had never written anything in my life, I was given
a contract by a major publisher and sent back
to India to write about him. That's how Be
As You Are came into existence.
A
few years before that I gave up editing the Ramanasramam
magazine and went to Andhra Pradesh to be with
Lakshmana Swamy. My intention was just to meditate
there. I had had enough of writing, but within
a few weeks of my arrival he asked me to write
No Mind I am the Self.
Whenever
I do work on Bhagavan or his disciples, everything
goes well. Whenever I try to do something else,
so many problems come up, nothing ever gets accomplished
or completed.
Having
learned this from experience, I have now surrendered
to this destiny. I enjoy the work, and many, many
people seem to appreciate the books. I asked Papaji
years ago whether writing all these books on Bhagavan
was a distraction for the mind.
He
replied, "Any association with Bhagavan is
a blessing." I took that as an instruction
to carry on with the work.
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| "Nobody
was willing to hire me to do anything.
I even flunked an interview for
picking up litter in the London
zoo. But as soon as I had the
idea of writing a book about Bhagavan,
everything fell into place."
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Thanks
very much for this interview, David. I learned
a lot from it, and you have been extraordinarily
generous.
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| RELATED
READING ON THIS SITE |
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David
Godman
Our
main reference page on David includes a biography,
links, and information about all his books.
Sri
H.W.L. Poonja
Our
main reference page on Papaji includes a biography,
links, and book recommendations.
Sri
Ramana Maharshi
Our
main reference page on Sri Ramana includes a biography,
links, and book recommendations.
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Photo
of Sri Ramana Maharshi copyright Sri Ramanasramam
and others. Used by permission.
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This
page was published on September 28, 2001 and
last revised on October 15, 2001.
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