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Atma
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Para-Brahma
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Kali-Santarana
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Maha-Narayana
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Narada-Parivrajaka
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Turiyatita-Avadhuta
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Paramahamsa-Parivrajaka
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Tejo-Bindu Upanishad - CHAPTER - V
The sage named Nidagha addressed the venerable
Ribhu: “O Lord please explain to me the discrimination of Atman from
non-Atman”. The Sage replied thus:
1-4(a). “The furthest limit of all Vak (speech) is Brahman; the
furthest limit to all thoughts is the Guru. That which is of the nature
of all causes and effects but yet without them, that which is without
Sankalpa, of the nature of all bliss and the auspicious, that which is
the great one of the nature of bliss, that which illuminates all
luminaries and that which is full of the bliss of Nada (spiritual
sound), without any enjoyment and contemplation and beyond Nadas and
Kalas (parts) – that is Atman, that is ‘I’, the indestructible.
4(b)-5(a). Being devoid of all the difference of Atman and non-Atman,
of heterogeneity and homogeneity and of quiescence and non-quiescence –
that is the one Jyotis at the end of Nada.
5(b)-6. Being remote from the conception of Maha-Vakyartha (i.e., the
meaning of Maha Vakyas) as well of ‘I am Brahman’, being devoid of or
without the conception of the word and the meaning and being devoid of
the conception of the destructible and indestructible – that is the one
Jyotis at the end of Nada.
7. Being without the conception ‘I am the partless non-dual essence’
or ‘I am the blissful’, and being of the nature of the one beyond all –
‘that is one‘ Jyotis at the end of Nada.
8. He who is devoid of the significance of Atman (viz., motion) and
devoid of Sachchidananda – he is alone Atman, the eternal.
9. He who is undefinable and unreachable by the words of the Vedas,
who has neither externals nor internals and whose symbol is either the
universe or Brahman – he is undoubtedly Atman.
10-12(a). He who has no body, nor is a Jiva made up of the elements
and their compounds, who has neither form nor name, neither the
enjoyable nor the enjoyer, neither Sat nor Asat, neither preservation
nor regeneration, neither Guna nor non-Guna – that is undoubtedly my
Atman.
12(b)-15(a). He who has neither the described nor description,
neither Sravana nor Manana, neither Guru nor disciple, neither the world
of the Devas nor the Devas nor the Asuras, neither duty nor non-duty,
neither the immaculate nor non-immaculate, neither time nor non-time,
neither certainty nor doubt, neither Mantra nor non-Mantra, neither
science nor non-science, neither the seer nor the sight which is subtle,
nor the nectar of time – that is Atman.
15(b)-16(a). Rest assured that not-Atman is a misnomer. There is no
Manas as not-Atman. There is no world as not-Atman.
16(b)-17(a). Owing to the absence of all Sankalpas and to the giving
up of all actions, Brahman alone remains and there is no not-Atman.
17(b)-21. Being devoid of the three bodies, the three periods of
time, the three Gunas of Jiva, the three pains and the three worlds and
following the saying ‘All is Brahman’, know that there is nothing to be
known through the absence of Chitta; there is no old age through the
absence of body; no motion through the absence of legs; no action
through the absence of hands; no death through the absence of creatures;
no happiness through the absence of Buddhi; no virtue, no purity, no
fear, no repetition of Mantras, no Guru nor disciple. There is no second
in the absence of one. Where there is not the second, there is not the
first.
22. Where there is truth alone, there is no non-truth possible; where
there is non-truth alone, there is no truth possible.
23. If you regard a thing auspicious as inauspicious, then
auspiciousness is desired (as separate) from inauspiciousness. If you
regard fear as non-fear, then fear will arise out of non-fear.
24. If bondage should become emancipation, then in the absence of
bondage will be no emancipation. If birth should imply death, then in
the absence of birth, there is no death.
25. If ‘thou’ should imply ‘I’, then in the absence of ‘thou’ there
is no ‘I’. If ‘this’ should be ‘that’, ‘this’ does not exist in the
absence of ‘that’.
26. If being should imply non-being, then non-being will imply being.
If an effect implies a cause, then in the absence of effect, there is no
cause.
27. If duality implies non-duality, then in the absence of duality,
there is no non-duality. If there should be the seen, then there is the
eye (or sight); in the absence of the seen, there is no eye.
28. In the absence of the interior, there is no exterior. If there
should be fullness, then non-fullness is possible. Therefore (all) this
exists nowhere.
29. Neither you nor I, nor this nor these exist. There exists no
(object of) comparison in the true one.
30. There is no simile in the unborn. There is (in it) no mind to
think. I am the supreme Brahman. This world is Brahman only. Thou and I
are Brahman only.
31. I am Chinmatra simply and there is no not-Atman. Rest assured of
it. This universe is not (really at all). This universe is not (really)
at all. It was nowhere produced and stays nowhere.
32. Some say that Chitta is the universe. Not at all. It exists not.
Neither the universe nor Chitta nor Ahankara nor Jiva exists (really).
33-34. Neither the creation of Maya nor Maya itself exists (really).
Fear does not (really) exist. Actor, action, hearing, thinking, the two
Samadhis, the measurer, the measure, Ajnana and Aviveka – none of these
exists (truly) anywhere.
35-38. Therefore the four moving considerations and the three kinds
of relationship exist not. There is no Ganga, no Gaya, no Setu (bridge),
no elements or anything else, no earth, water, fire, Vayu and Akasa
anywhere, no Devas, no guardians of the four quarters, no Vedas, no
Guru, no distance, no proximity, no time, no middle, no non-duality, no
truth, no untruth, no bondage, no emancipation, no Sat, no Asat, no
happiness, etc., no class, no motion, no caste and no worldly business.
39. All is Brahman only and nothing else – all is Brahman only and
nothing else. There exists then nothing (or Statement) as that
‘consciousness alone is’; there is (then) no saying such as ‘Chit is I’.
40-41. The statement ‘I am Brahman’ does not exist (then); nor does
exist (then) the statement: ‘I am the eternally pure’. Whatever is
uttered by the mouth, whatever is thought by Manas, whatever is
determined by Buddhi, whatever is cognised by Chitta – all these do not
exist. There is no Yogin or Yoga then. All are and are not.
42. Neither day nor night, neither bathing nor contemplating, neither
delusion nor non-delusion – all these do not exist then. Know that is no
not-Atman.
43. The Vedas, Sciences, Puranas, effect and cause, Ishvara and the
world and the elements and mankind – all these are unreal. There is no
doubt of it.
44. Bondage, salvation, happiness, relatives, meditation, Chitta, the
Devas, the demons, the secondary and the primary, the high and the low –
all these are unreal. There is no doubt of it.
45. Whatever is uttered by the mouth, whatever is willed by Sankalpa,
whatever is thought by Manas – all these are unreal. There is no doubt
of it.
46-47. Whatever is determined by the Buddhi, whatever is cognised by
Chitta, whatever is discussed by the religious books, whatever is seen
by the eye and heard by the ears and whatever exists as Sat, as also the
ear, the eye and the limbs – all these are unreal.
48-51(a). Whatever is described as such and such, whatever is thought
as so-and-so, all the existing thoughts such as ‘thou art I’, ‘that is
this’, and ‘He is I’, and whatever happens in Moksha, as also all
Sankalpas, delusion, illusory attribution, mysteries and all the
diversities of enjoyment and sin – all these do not exist. So is also
not-Atman. Mine and thine, my and thy, for me and for thee, by me and by
thee – all these are unreal.
51(b)-52(a). (The statement) that Vishnu is the preserver, Brahma is
the creator, Rudra is the destroyer – know that these undoubtedly are
false.
52(b)-54(a). Bathing, utterings of Mantras, Japas (religious
austerities) Homa (sacrifice), study of the Vedas, worship of the Devas,
Mantra, Tantra, association with the good, the unfolding of the faults
of Gunas, the working of the internal organ, the result of Avidya and
the many Crores of mundane eggs – all these are unreal.
54(b)-55. Whatever is spoken of as true according to the verdict of
all teachers, whatever is seen in this world and whatever exists – all
these are unreal.
56-58(a). Whatever is uttered by words, whatever is ascertained,
spoken, enjoyed, given or done by anyone, whatever action is done, good
or bad, whatever is done as truth – know all these to be unreal.
58(b)-59. Thou alone art the transcendental Atman and the supreme
Guru of the form of Akasa, which is devoid of fitness (for it) and of
the nature of all creatures. Thou art Brahman; there is no doubt of it.
60. Thou art time; and thou art Brahman, that is ever and
imponderable. Thou art everywhere, of all forms and full of
consciousness.
61. Thou art the truth. Thou art one that has mastered the Siddhis
and thou art the ancient, the emancipated, emancipation, the nectar of
bliss, the God, the quiescent, the diseaseless, Brahman the full and
greater than the great.
62-64. Thou art impartial, Sat and the ancient knowledge, recognised
by the words ‘Truth, etc.’. Thou art devoid of all parts. Thou art the
ever-existing – thou appearest as Brahma, Rudra, Indra, etc., -- thou
art above the illusion of the universe – thou shinest in all elements –
thou art without Sankalpa in all – thou art known by means of the
underlying meaning of an scriptures; thou art ever content and ever
happily seated (in thyself); thou art without motion, etc., In all
things, thou art without any characteristics; in all things thou art
contemplated by Vishnu and other Devas at all times.
65-69. Thou hast the nature of Chit, thou art Chinmatra unchecked,
thou stayest in Atman itself, thou art void of everything and without
Gunas, thou art bliss, the great, the one secondless, the state of Sat
and Asat, the knower, the known, the seer, the nature of Sachchidananda,
the lord of Devas, the all-pervading, the deathless, the moving, the
motionless, the all and the non-all with quiescence and non-quiescence,
Sat alone, Sat commonly (found in all), of the form of Nitya-Siddha (the
unconditioned developed one) and yet devoid of all Siddhis.
70-73. There is not an atom which thou dost not penetrate; but yet
thou art without it. Thou art devoid of existence and non-existence as
also the aim and object aimed at. Thou art changeless, decayless, beyond
all Nadas, without Kala or Kashta (divisions of time) and without
Brahma, Vishnu and Shiva. Thou lookest into the nature of each and art
above the nature of each. Thou art immersed in the bliss of Self. Thou
art the monarch of the kingdom of Self and yet without the conception of
Self. Thou art of the nature of fullness and incompleteness.
74. There is nothing that thou seest which is not in thyself. Thou
dost not stir out of thy nature. Thou actest according to the nature of
each. Thou art nothing but the nature of each. Have no doubt ‘thou art
I’.
75. This universe and everything in it, whether the seer or the seen,
resembles the horns of a hare (or an illusory).
76-89(a). Earth, water, Agni, Vayu, Akasa, Manas, Buddhi, Ahankara,
Tejas, the worlds and the sphere of the universe, destruction, birth,
truth, virtue, vice, gain, desires, passion, anger, greed, the object of
meditation, wisdom, guru, disciple, limitation, the beginning and end,
auspiciousness, the past, present and future, the aim and the object of
aim, mental restraint, inquiry, contentment, enjoyer, enjoyment, etc.,
the eight parts of Yoga, Yama, etc., the going and coming (of life), the
beginning, middle and end, that which can be taken and rejected, Hari,
Shiva, the organs, Manas, the three states, the twenty-four Tattvas, the
four means, one of the same class or different classes, Bhuh and other
worlds, all the castes and orders of life with the rules laid down for
each, Mantras and Tantras, science and nescience, all the Vedas, the
inert and the non-inert, bondage and salvation, spiritual wisdom and
non-wisdom, the enlightened and the non-enlightened, duality and
non-duality, the conclusion of all Vedantas and Shastras, the theory of
the existence of all souls and that of one soul only, whatever is
thought by Chitta, whatever is willed by Sankalpa, whatever is
determined by Buddhi, whatever one hears and sees, whatever the guru
instructs, whatever is sensed by all the organs, whatever is discussed
in Mimamsa, whatever is ascertained by Nyaya (philosophy) and by the
great ones who have reached the other side of the Vedas, the saying
‘Shiva destroys the world, Vishnu protects it and Brahma creates it’,
whatever is found in the Puranas, whatever is ascertained by the Vedas
and is the signification of all the Vedas – all these resemble the horns
of a hare.
89(b). The conception ‘I am the body’ is spoken of as the internal
organ.
90. The conception ‘I am the body’ is spoken of as the great mundane
existence; the conception ‘I am the body’ constitutes the whole
universe.
91-96. The conception ‘I am the body’ is spoken of as the knot of the
heart, as non-wisdom, as the state of Asat, as nescience, as the dual,
as the true Jiva and as with parts, is certainly the great sin and is
the disease generated by the fault of thirst after desires.
97. That which is Sankalpa, the three pains, passion, anger, bondage,
all the miseries, all the faults and the various forms of time – know
these to be the result of Manas.
98-104. Manas alone is the whole world, the ever-deluding, the
mundane existence, the three worlds, the great pains, the old age and
others, death and the great sin, the Sankalpa, the Jiva, the Chitta, the
Ahankara, the bondage, the internal organ and earth, water, Agni, Vayu
and Akasa. Sound,, touch, form, taste and odour, the five sheaths, the
waking, the dreaming and dreamless sleeping states, the guardians of the
eight quarters, Vasus, Rudras, Adityas, the seen, the inert, the pairs
and non-wisdom – all these are the products of Manas.
105. Rest assured that there is no reality in all that is Sankalpa.
The whole world, the guru, disciple, etc., do not exist, yea, do not
exist.
Thus ends the fifth chapter.
Tejo-Bindu Upanishad Chapters - 1
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