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Crest
Jewel of Wisdom
(Viveka-Chudamani)
Verses
551-580
The
man free from identification with the body lives experiencing
the causal effects of previously entertained desires,
just like the man subject to samsara, but, being realised,
he remains silently within himself as the witness there,
empty of further mental imaginations - like the axle
of a wheel. 551
He
whose mind is intoxicated with the drink of the pure
bliss of self-knowledge does not turn the senses towards
their objects, nor does he turn them away from them,
but remains as a simple spectator, and regards the results
of actions without the least concern. 552
He
who has given up choosing one goal from another, and
who remains perfect in himself as the spectator of his
own good fortune - he is the supreme knower of God.
553
Liberated
forever here and now, having achieved his purpose, the
perfect knower of God, being God himself by the destruction
of all false indentifications, goes to the non-dual
God. 554
Just
as an actor, whatever his costume may or may not be,
is still a man, so the best of men, the knower of God,
is always God and nothing else. 555
Wherever
the body may wither and fall like a tree leaf, that
of the ascetic who has become God has already been cremated
by the fire of the knowledge of Reality. 556
There
are no considerations of place and time laid down with
regard to relinquishing this mass of skin, flesh and
filth for the wise man who is already forever established
in God within himself as the perfect non-dual bliss
of his own nature. 557
Liberation
is not just getting rid of the body, nor of one's staff
or bowl. Liberation is getting rid of all the knots
of ignorance in the heart. 558
Whether
a leaf falls into a gutter or a river, into a shrine
or onto a crossroad, in what way is that good or bad
for the tree? 559
The
destruction of body, organs, vitality and intellect
is like the destruction of a leaf, a flower or a fruit.
It is not the destruction of oneself, but of something
which is not the cause of happiness for one's true self.
That remains like the tree. 560
The
scriptures that teach the truth declare that the property
of one's true nature is "a mass of intelligence" (Brihadaranyaka
Upanishad 4.5.13), and they talk of the destruction
of secondary additional attributes only. 561
The
scripture declares of the true self that "This Self
is truly imperishable" (Brihadaranyaka Upanishad 4.5.14),
the indestructible reality in the midst of changing
things subject to destruction. 562
In
the same way that burnt stones, trees, grass, rice,
straw, cloth and so on turn to earth, so what we see
here in the form of body, organs, vitality, mind and
so on when burned by the fire of knowledge take on the
nature of God. 563
Just
as darkness, though distinct from it, disappears in
the light of the sun, so all that we can see disappears
in God. 564
Just
as when a jar is broken the space in it becomes manifest
as space again, so the knower of God becomes the God
in himself with the elimination of false identifications.
565
Like
milk poured into milk, oil into oil and water into water,
so the ascetic who knows himself becomes united with
the One in himself. 566
The
ascetic who has thus achieved the nature of God, perfectly
free of the body and with the indivisible nature of
Reality, does not come back again. 567
How
could the brahmin come back again after becoming God
when his external features of ignorance and so on have
been burned by the recognition of his oneness with the
Truth? 568
The
Maya-produced alternatives of bondage and liberation
do not really exist in one's true nature, just as the
alternatives of there being a snake or not do not exist
in the rope which is not affected by them. 569
Bondage
and liberation can be referred to only in connection
with the existence or absence of something covering
what is really there, but there can be no covering of
God as there is nothing else and no covering, since
this would destroy the non-duality of God, and the scriptures
do not admit duality. 570
Bondage
and liberation are unreal. They are an effect of the
intellect which the stupid identify with reality just
like the covering of the sight caused by a cloud is
applied to the sun. For this imperishable Reality is
non-dual, unattached and consciousness. 571
The
opinion that this covering exists or does not exist
in the underlying reality is an attribute of the intellect
and not of the eternal reality underneath. 572
So
these alternatives of bondage and liberation are produced
by Maya and not in one's true nature. How can there
be the idea of them in the non-dual supreme Truth which
is without parts, actionless, peaceful, indestructible,
and without blemish, like space? 573
There
is neither end nor beginning, no one in bondage and
no aspirant, no one seeking liberation and no one free.
(Amritabindu Upanishad 10). This is the supreme truth.
574
I have shown you today repeatedly, as my own son, this
ultimate secret, the supreme crest of the scriptures
and of the complete Vedanta, considering you one seeking
liberation, free from the stains of this dark time,
and with a mind free from sensuality. 575
On
hearing these words of his guru the disciple prostrated
himself before him and with his permission went away
free from bondage. 576
The
guru too with his mind immersed in the ocean of Truth
and Bliss, and with his mind free of discriminations
went on his way purifying the whole world. 577
In
this way, in the form of a dialogue between teacher
and pupil, the nature of one's true self has been taught
for easy attainment of the joy of Realisation by those
seeking liberation. 578
May
those ascetics who have removed all defilements of mind
by the designated methods, whose minds are at peace
and free from the pleasures of the world, and who delight
in the scriptures, reverence this teaching. 579
For
those who are suffering in samsara from the heat of
the threefold forms of pain, and wandering in delusion
in a desert thirsting for water, may these words of
Shankara which secure nirvana and excel all others,
procure for them the ocean of nectar close by in the
form of the non-dual God. 580
THE
END
Appendix
The following verse is found in some editions, following
verse 327, which also then omit verses 328 and 329.
There are also other minor differences, above all in
the division of the verses, but these make little difference
in practice to the meaning.
He
who has achieved perfection while still alive, is perfect
when free from the body too. The Yajur Veda declares
that he who sees duality experiences fear. 328
This
page was published on Realization.org on May 16, 2000.
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