PATANJALI
YOGASUTRAS
CHAPTER-3
VIBHUTI PAADHA
Samyama is the process of seeing your multi faceted
self, from different angles – and ultimately realizing all of them. In Samyama,
we start with Dharana on a particular Goal – and therefore, all wisdom
pertaining to that Goal and it extensions - comes to the Sadhaka in
Samyama. We have seen that process in earlier sutras upto 3.49 – and we are
continuing with the same further here.
sattva purusha anyata khyaati maatrasya
sarva-bhaava adhisthaatrittvam
sarvajnaatritvam cha
Ø sattva = sattvaguna; pure
positive mind set
Ø purusha = pure
consciousness
Ø anyata = How one is
different from other
Ø khyati = process of understanding, discerning
Ø maatrasya = only
Ø sarva-bhava = over all
states or forms of existence, omnipotence
Ø adhisthatrittvam =
supremacy
Ø sarva-jnatritvam =
omniscience
Ø cha = and
Sathva Guna represents the
purest aspect of mind that seems to us to be the knower of the external world
in us. In fact, it is also not the knower of the world. It is only a repository
of all information received from the senses through the tanmatras or the sensory
powers.
The sensory powers receive
inputs from external world and present them as knowledge to the mind. Mind
stores this information as a knowledge Bank. But, our senses are very, very
imperfect instruments and the inputs they receive and give us are neither total
nor perfect.
Your eyes always receive
information according to the sensory capability of the physical eye, and not
according to what is actual, in the external world. Then also, while its reach
is vast, its focus is very limited. What we see also, we are unable to receive
fully, analyze, cognize and store. Hardly a small fraction of what the eye
sees is actually seen by the mind. The same thing is true of other sensory
powers. But, we begin to feel, we know. We don’t. Our knowledge is subject to
too many limitations that our senses suffer from.
There is just no way that
we can transcend even these physical limitations. When we see everything, there
is no focus. When we focus, we don’t see much at all. Either way, our knowing remains
incomplete.
Therefore, mind, which
receives information is not a great knower. Again, the power that mind gets in
analyzing, and knowing is not its own.
It gets it from the Buddhi
and Buddhi gets it from the reflected consciousness which resides in it. The
consciousness itself, which is the real knower is external to all these – the body,
the senses, the mind and the Buddhi.
The pure consciousness is
the real knower, the real self. But, superficially, the intelligence in us,
which we may call as the Sathva, looks like our SELF. Our intelligence is what
we use, and it is external to us. It is a tool for us. The consciousness, the Purusha,
is the real self, the subject, the one which is the real knower.
All states of existence
and all levels of knowing are thus tools for the one who is very clearly established
in the knowledge of this distinction between the purest aspect of mind called
Satva and the purest consciousness, namely, the Purusha.
He will have command and supremacy
over both existence and Intelligence.
Effectively, what it means
is, one must always remain as the
awareness of all that is happening rather than identify with all that is
happening which is nothing but knowledge and information that is flowing
through the senses.
Vs. 3.51
thath vairagyaath api
dosha beeja kshaye kaivalyam
Ø thath = that
Ø vairagyaath = desire-less
state
Ø api = and
Ø dosha = defect
Ø beeja = seed
Ø kshaye = by elimination
Ø kaivalyam = total
liberation
All bondages arise from identification. Some identify with the body;
Some with the mental states; Some with the intellect; Some, with feelings;
Some, even with the people around, objects around and so on.
But, all these identifications create bondages; You
tend to become what you identify with, for all worldly purposes. The identifications
with any or many of these things create and promote many desires in us. They
create excitement at times and hopelessness and disappointments at other times
in us. We are tossed from one state of
feelings to another states all the times. The mood swings virtually look like
us, when they possess us.
But, once a sadhaka ceases his identification with
all these states, and even with the intelligence in him, then the
identifications drop completely and he begins to resides in his own self, as an
observer, as the real knower. This delinking with all bondages creates a new
freedom, a new liberation which is total. In effect, desire is bondage. Desire-less-ness
is freedom or liberation.
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