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Questioner:
A thousand years ago a man lived and died. His identity (antahkarana) re-appeared in a new body. Why does he not remember
his previous life? And if he does, can the memory be brought into the
conscious?
Maharaj:
How do you know that the same person re-appeared in the new body? A new body
may mean a new person altogether.
Q: Imagine a pot of ghee. (Indian clarified
butter). When the pot breaks, the Ghee remains and can be transferred to
another pot. The old pot had its own scent, the new -- its own. The Ghee will
carry the scents from pot to pot. In the same way the personal identity is
transferred from body to body.
M: It is all right. When there is the body, its
peculiarities affect the person. Without the body we have the pure identity in
the sense of 'I am'. But when you are reborn in a new body, where is the world
formerly experienced?
Q: Every body experiences its own world.
M: In the present body the old body -- is it merely
an idea, or is it a memory?
Q: An idea, of course. How can a brain remember
what it has not experienced?
M: You have answered your own question. Why play
with ideas? Be content with what you are sure of. And the only thing you can be
sure of is 'I am'. Stay with it, and reject everything else. This is Yoga.
Q: I can reject only
verbally. At best I remember to repeat the formula: 'This is not me, this is
not mine. I am beyond all this'.
M: Good enough. First verbally, then mentally
and emotionally, then in action. Give attention to the reality within you and
it will come to light. It is like churning the cream for butter. Do it
correctly and assiduously and the result is sure to come.
Q: How can the absolute be the result of a
process?
M: You are right, the relative cannot result in
the absolute. But the relative can block the absolute, just as the non-churning
of the cream may prevent the butter from separating. It is the real that
creates the urge; the inner prompts the outer and the outer responds in interest
and effort. But ultimately there is no inner, nor outer; the light of
consciousness is both the creator and the creature, the experiencer and the
experience, the body and the embodied. Take care of the power that projects all
this and your problems will come to an end.
Q: Which is the projecting power?
M: It is imagination prompted by desire.
Q: I know all this, but have no power over it.
M: This is another illusion of yours, born from
craving for results.
Q: What is wrong with purposeful action?
M: It does not apply. In these matters there is
no question of purpose, nor of action. All you need is to listen, remember,
ponder. It is like taking food. All you can do is to bite off, chew and
swallow. All else is unconscious and automatic. Listen, remember and understand
-- the mind is both the actor and the stage. All is of the mind and you are not
the mind. The mind is born and reborn, not you. The mind creates the world and
all the wonderful variety of it. Just like in a good play you have all sorts of
characters and situations, so you need a little of everything to make a world.
Q: Nobody suffers in a play.
M: Unless one identifies himself with it. Don't
identify yourself with the world and you will not suffer.
Q: Others will.
M: Then make your world perfect, by all means.
If you believe in God, work with Him. It you do not, become one. Either see the
world as a play or work at it with all your might. Or both.
Q: What about the identify of the dying man?
What happens to it when he is dead? Do you agree that it continues in another
body.
M: It continues and yet it does not. All depends
how you look at it. What is identity, after all? Continuity in memory? Can you
talk of identity without memory?
Q: Yes, I can. The child may not know its
parents, yet the hereditary characteristics will be there.
M: Who identifies them? Somebody with a memory
to register and compare. Don't you see that memory is the warp of your mental
life. And identity is merely a pattern of events in time and space. Change the
pattern and you have changed the man.
Q: The pattern is significant and important. It
has its own value. By saying that a woven design is merely coloured threads you
miss the most important -- the beauty of it. Or by describing a book as paper
with ink stains on it, you miss the meaning. Identity is valuable because it is
the basis of individuality; that which makes us unique and irreplaceable. 'I
am', is the intuition of uniqueness.
M: Yes and no. Identity, individuality,
uniqueness -- they are the most valuable aspects of the mind, yet of the mind
only. 'I am all there is' too is an experience equally valid. The particular
and the universal are inseparable. They are the two aspects of the nameless, as
seen from without and from within. Unfortunately, words only mention, but don't
convey. Try to go beyond the words.
Q: What dies with death?
M: The idea 'I am this body' dies; the witness
does not.
Q: The Jains believe in a multiplicity of
witnesses, forever separate.
M: That is their tradition based on the
experience of some great people. The one witness reflects itself in the
countless bodies as 'I am'. As long as the bodies, however subtle, last, the 'I
am' appears as many. Beyond the body there is only the One.
Q: God?
M: The Creator is a person whose body is the
world. The Nameless one is beyond all gods.
Q: Sri Ramana Maharshi died. What difference
did it make to him?
M: None. What he was, he is -- the Absolute
Reality.
Q: But to the common man death makes a
difference.
M: What he thinks himself to be before death he
continues to be after death. His self-image survives.
Q: The other day there was a talk about the use
by the jnani of animal skins for meditation etc. I was not convinced. It
is easy to justify everything by referring to custom and tradition. Customs may
be cruel and tradition corrupt. They explain, but do not justify.
M: I never meant to say that lawlessness follows
self-realization. A liberated man is extremely law-abiding. But his laws are
the laws of his real self, not of his society. These he observes, or breaks
according to circumstances and necessity. But he will never be fanciful and
disorderly.
Q: What I cannot accept is justification by
custom and habit.
M: The difficulty lies in our differing points
of view. You speak from the body-mind's. Mine is of the witness. The difference
is basic.
Q: Still, cruelty is cruelty
M: None compels you to be cruel.
Q: Taking advantage of other people's cruelty
is cruelty by proxy.
M: If you look into living process closely, you
will find cruelty everywhere, for life feeds on life. This is a fact, but it
does not make you feel guilty of being alive. You began a life of cruelty by
giving your mother endless trouble. To the last day of your life you will
compete for food, clothing, shelter, holding on to your body, fighting for its
needs, wanting it to be secure, in a world of insecurity and death. From the
animal's point of view being killed is not the worst form of dying; surely
preferable to sickness and senile decay. The cruelty lies in the motive, not in
the fact. Killing hurts the killer, not the killed.
Q: Agreed; then one must not accept the
services of hunters and butchers.
M: Who wants you to accept?
Q: You accept.
M: That is how you see me! How quickly
you accuse, condemn, sentence and execute! Why begin with me and not with
yourself?
Q: A man like you should set an example.
M: Are you ready to follow my example? I am dead
to the world, I want nothing, not even to live. Be as I am, do as I do. You are
judging me by my clothes and food; while I only look at your motives; if you
believe to be the body and the mind and act on it you are guilty of the
greatest cruelty -- cruelty to your own real being. Compared to it all other
cruelties do not count.
Q;
You are taking refuge in the claim that you are not the body. But you are in
control of the body and responsible for all it does. To allow the body full
autonomy would be imbecility, madness!
M: Cool down. I am also against all killing of
animals for flesh or fur, but I refuse to give it first place. Vegetarianism is
a worthy cause, but not the most urgent; all causes are served best by the man
who has returned to his source.
Q: When I was at Sri Ramanashram, I felt
Bhagwan all over the place, all-pervading, all-perceiving.
M: You had the necessary faith. Those who have
true faith in him will see him everywhere and at all times. All happens
according to your faith and your faith is the shape of your desire.
Q: The faith you have in yourself, is not that
too a shape of a desire?
M: When I say: 'I am', I do not mean a separate entity
with a body as its nucleus. I mean the totality of being, the ocean of
consciousness, the entire universe of all that is and knows. I have nothing to
desire for I am complete forever.
Q: Can you touch the inner life of other
people?
M: I am the people.
Q: I do not mean identity of essence or
substance, nor similarity of form. I mean the actual entering into the minds
and hearts of others and participating in their personal experiences. Can you
suffer and rejoice with me, or you only infer what I feel from observation and
analogy?
M: All beings are in me. But bringing down into
the brain the content of another brain requires special training. There is
nothing that cannot be achieved by training.
Q: I am not your projection, nor are you mine.
I am on my own right, not merely as your creation. This crude philosophy of
imagination and projection does not appeal to me. You are depriving me of all
reality. Who is the image of whom? You are my image or am I yours. Or am I an
image in my own image! No, something is wrong somewhere.
M: Words betray their hollowness. The real
cannot be described, it must be experienced. I cannot find better words for
what I am now. What I say may sound ridiculous. But what the words try to
convey is the highest truth. All is one, however much we quibble. And all is
done to please the one source and goal of every desire. whom we all know as the
'I am'.
Q: It is pain that is at the root of desire.
The basic urge is to escape from pain.
M: What is the root of pain? Ignorance of yourself.
What is the root of desire? The urge to find yourself. All creation toils for
its self and will not rest until it returns to it.
Q: When will it return?
M: It can return whenever you want it.
Q: And the world?
M: You can take it with you.
Q: Must I wait with helping the world until I
reach perfection?
M: By all means help the world. You will not
help much, but the effort will make you grow. There is nothing wrong in trying
to help the world.
Q: Surely there were people, common people, who
helped greatly.
M: When the time comes for the world to be
helped, some people are given the will, the wisdom and the power to cause great
changes.