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| Vaikuntha Ekadasi |
Discourse: Saline turned Sweet Discourse of Sathya Sai Baba, Dharmakshethra, Vaikuntha Ekadasi,
7 Jan 1971
On this sacred day called Vaikuntha Ekaadhashi, one is reminded of this, because, festivals like this have been ordained in order to take stock of one’s spiritual progress and to make man resolve to march forward, until the goal is reached. This is a thrice-blessed day, as the Thriveni is the confluence of three holy streams: Thursday, which is especially significant for Sai devotees, being Guru Vaar (the day of the Guru); the Akhanda Bhajan (non-stop singing) which you concluded after twelve hours, a few minutes ago; and, the festival of Vaikuntha, for which you have gathered here. Vaikuntha means, without any trace of grief or pain; the place where
perfect peace reigns, and there is no flutter of fear. Ekaadhashi means
the eleventh day of the lunar fortnight. The phases of the moon are
numbered, and the day after the tenth, Dhashami, is referred to as the
Ekaa-dhashi! But the real meaning of Ekaadhashi, the eleventh, is this:
When the ten senses - the five senses of action and the five through
which knowledge of the objective world is gained - are all co-ordinated
and turned in the direction of God, the eleventh, then it becomes genuine
Ekaadhashi! |
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Man has to pay Attention to 26 Categories This is also the meaning of the Namaskaar, where you fold both palms together and hold them on your chest, near the heart region. The ten senses surrender to the person adored, with real sincerity in the heart! The caricatures of these reverential rites are today current in almost all circles. People are reluctant to follow tradition and so, they hold the palms as if they are trying to shield the rays of the sun from their eyes (!) or vigorously shaking them defiantly at the face of the person who is sought to be honored (!). This is a day on which one has to transcend the lower impulses originating from the Thaamasik (inertia) and the Raajasik (passionate activity) natures and, help the upsurge of Saathwik (pure) tendencies. Men engage in good works, good thoughts, and good speech - but they do not pause to inquire the purpose, the goal. Man has to pay attention to 26 categories.
Know Thyself, you know the World When the 24 categories are analyzed and known, nothing is gained. For, they belong to the realm of the relatively real, not the absolutely real. They are Jagath (world), the moving, changing, the transitory, and the untrue! The Vedas, Shaasthras and Puraanas have not mentioned anything about the origins and dissolution’s of these, with any degree of certainty, because they are concerned more with the rescue operations of the I that is entangled in them and with validation that they are of no importance. Know thyself; you know the world, which is but a projection of thy mind; that is the lesson conveyed. Measure the microcosm; you have measured the macrocosm. Know all about clay; you have known all about pots, pans, plates and cups. Know about the base, you have known about the superstructure. Know about water, you know about rain, cloud, steam, stream, river - all its modifications and manifestations. The same quantity of silver might be shaped into a plate today; a set of spoons tomorrow, a number of cups the day after. The forms get new names; the uses of each are different. When put to use or when silver remains as a silver ‘lump’ only, in the hands of every one that holds it or handles it, in the beginning or in the end, it and they are always silver. The core, the truth is ever one. In the murky dust of ignorance, it appears diverse, that is all; for, then, you are led to distinguish and differentiate on the bases of name and form. There are two sets of rules which regulate human conduct: the one a-moral and the other, moral. The a-moral is illustrated by the rule that you have to be at the airport at a particular hour, in order to board a plane. The moral rule is illustrated when the father’s property is divided between the sons, half for one and half for the other, equal share for both. From the point of view of Dharma (righteousness), equality is seen as the basic principle. From the Aathmic standpoint, all beings are equal. The primary Seed of Knowledge When one proceeds to attain the Aathmic vision, one has to negate everything, as ‘not this’ until at the end of the journey, the Aathma alone is cognized. It admits of no definition, no description, and no designation. It is the end of enquiry, the summum bonum of all endeavor, the silence that swallows all speech. The primary seed of knowledge is "I am not the body". It contains three entities: I, body and ‘not’. I is the Aathma, the only truth. The idea ‘I’ applies only to the eternal I, over which the transient I’s are superimposed by ignorance, born out of false identification. Then, we have the entity called Dheha (body). Dheha means that which will undergo destruction (Dah: to burn). It means the five feet bundle of bone and muscle, nerve and brain, the senses, the vital airs, the mind that imagines (constructs images), the intellect that argues pros and cons, the Chittha that revolves around the past impressions and choices and the Ahamkaara (ego) that urges outwards, the internal and external equipment’s of man. Dheha means not only these. It is composed of the five elemental categories also: earth, water, fire, air and sky. It disintegrates finally into these five, for, it is built up of those five. It is kith and kin, with these five; so, by Dheha is meant all the regions of the five elements, Desha (country), in fact! Realization cannot be won by Book Knowledge The multifarious efflorescence of Maya, the primal desire which proliferated into the universe - all that is the permutation and combination of the five elements, to cognize which man has equipped himself with the nose (smell, earth attribute), tongue (taste, water attribute), eye (perceptible form, attribute of fire), skin (touch, attribute of air) and ear (sound, attribute of sky). So, the statement says, I am not ‘the body’, that is, it declares that nature, the universe, all created things and beings, are not I, or Aathma (the true self), but, only appearances of I. Man can realize the goal either by picturing something that is different and distant, and praying to it, adoring it, worshipping it - such ways are useful only up to a limit, to purge the mind of low desires, sensual urges etc. - or by delving into oneself, to reach the truth. The realization of the one cannot be won by means of advice, listening
to talks and discourses, study of books or austerities. It worried even
Naaradha, who approached the sage, Sanathkumaara, for the vision of
the infinite. With this decomposing body and the deteriorating intellect,
man cannot experience and contain the boundless surge of bliss that
accompanies the realization that he is the absolute. The wisdom that
comes of actual experience is as the raindrop, when compared with seawater,
which is saline and undrinkable book-knowledge or derived knowledge.
Through the interaction of the rays of the sun, the salinity was removed
and the water that floated into the sky became sweet and sustaining.
Saadhana that turns the physical into the metaphysical is the solar
action that confers portability. |