8/02/2023

post 24

Devotee: In what sense is happiness our real nature?

Maharshi: Perfect Bliss is Brahman. 
Perfect Peace is of the Self. 
That alone exists and is conscious. 

The same conclusion is arrived at: 
(a) judged metaphysically, and 
(b) inferred by Bhakti Marga 
(Path of Devotion).

We pray to God for Bliss and receive it by Grace. The bestower of bliss must be Bliss itself and also Infinite. 
Therefore, Iswara is the Personal God of infinite power and bliss. Brahman is Bliss, impersonal and absolute. 
The finite egos, deriving their source from Brahman and then Iswara, are in their spiritual nature bliss only. 

Biologically, an organism functions 
because such functions are attended with happiness.
It is pleasure that helps our growth; food, exercise, rest, and gregarious qualities. 
The psychology (and metaphysics) of pleasure is perhaps this; Our nature is primarily one, entire, blissful. 
Take this as a probable hypothesis. 
Creation is by the entire Godhead breaking into God and Nature (maya or prakriti). 
This maya is of two parts: 
(para) - the supporting essence and 
(apara) the five elements, mind, intellect, and ego (eightfold).
Ego’s perfection is suddenly broken at a point and a want is felt giving rise to a desire to get something or do something. When that want is cured by the fulfilment of that desire, the ego is happy and the original perfection is restored. 
Therefore happiness may be said to be our natural condition or nature. 

Pleasure and pain are relative and refer to our finite state, with progress by satisfaction of want. If relative progress is stopped and the soul merges into Brahman - of the nature of perfect peace - that soul ceases to have relative, temporary pleasure and enjoys perfect peace - Bliss. 
Hence Self-Realisation is Bliss; 
it is realizing the Self as the limitless spiritual eye (jnana dristi) and not clairvoyance; it is the highest self-surrender. 
Samsara (the world-cycle) is sorrow.

- Talks with Sri Ramana Maharshi. 
Talk 28.

post 23

GURU VACHAKA KOVAI

1164. Know that the bodiless and indivisible great Mukta’s walking as if [he were] having a body, is as if the supreme space [of consciousness] were walking [on earth], just like Lord Vishnu, who paced [all] the worlds as His domain.

Michael James: Since the Jivan-mukta has realized that He is not the limited body, He shines devoid of the body as the indivisible and unlimited Self. However, in the outlook of ajnanis He seems to have a body and to be walking on earth. Since it is truly nothing but a formless space of Self which seems to be walking in the form of that body, it is as wonderful as Lord Vishnu, who assumed a vast form and covered all the worlds in three paces, thereby claiming them as His domain.