Drg Drsya Viveka Lecture 01: Difference between revisions

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Om Shanti Shanti Shanti Shanti Harih Om!
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So, from today onwards we will cover this beautiful Prakarana Grantha of Advaita called Dhritya Viveka. Why is it so important, especially why I have chosen this one? There is a very special reason. You know, when we study the great master, there is the record of Totapuri's behaviour.
= An Introduction to the Dṛk Dṛśya Viveka =


Swami Sharada Ranji very clearly mentions that Totapuri had attained Nirvikalpa Samadhi. And yet you know what happened? After nearly 11 months, what happened to him? He could not accept this world as a reality. He accepted it, he used to say it is all Mithya.
== A Prakaraṇa Grantha of Advaita Vedānta ==
----


For a knower of Brahman, he should be able to see everything, both inside as well as outside as Brahman. Otherwise there is a defect. Now this incident raised a lot of controversy in our Pramakrishna order.
=== Opening Invocation ===
Oṃ śānti, śānti, śānti, śānti. Hare Oṃ.
----


Either very obviously or invisibly. How can a man who had attained to Nirvikalpa Samadhi has to go again through this painful experience? Did he actually experience Nirvikalpa Samadhi or was it less? Why he had to learn a new lesson? You know for us Nirvikalpa Samadhi means it is the highest, it is the very end. And yet such a person, why should he go through this experience? Most of us either we keep quiet, we say we don't understand about these things or in any case it is useless discussion.
=== Why This Text Was Chosen: The Mystery of Totāpurī ===
From today onwards, we will cover this beautiful prakaraṇa grantha of Advaita called the Dṛk Dṛśya Viveka. Why is it so important, and especially why have I chosen this one? There is a very special reason.


It is a divine mystery. But this book provides the answer. There are six types of Samadhis one has to practise, go through.
When we study the great master, there is the record of Totāpurī's behaviour. Swami Śāradā Rānji very clearly mentions that Totāpurī had attained nirvikalpa samādhi. And yet, you know what happened? After nearly eleven months, he could not accept this world as a reality. He used to say it is all mithyā.


Six types of Samadhis. Savikalpa Samadhi and Nirvikalpa Samadhi. Savikalpa Samadhi is again of three types.
For a knower of Brahman, he should be able to see everything — both inside as well as outside — as Brahman. Otherwise there is a defect. Now this incident raised a lot of controversy in our Rāmakṛṣṇa Order, either very obviously or invisibly. How can a man who had attained nirvikalpa samādhi have to go again through this painful experience? Did he actually experience nirvikalpa samādhi, or was it something less? Why did he have to learn a new lesson? For us, nirvikalpa samādhi means it is the highest, it is the very end. And yet such a person — why should he go through this experience? Most of us either keep quiet, saying we don't understand about these things, or in any case we say it is a useless discussion, a divine mystery.


And Nirvikalpa Samadhi is again of three types. So three types of inner Samadhi, three types of external Samadhi. And this has been recommended by this teacher.
But this book provides the answer.
----


Until I read this book, I could not understand Totapuri's behaviour frankly. But when I read this book, I knew why he insisted that Nirvikalpa Samadhi is of two types, both inner as well as outer. And he did not practise the outer Nirvikalpa Samadhi.
=== The Six Types of Samādhi ===
There are six types of samādhis one has to practise and go through. Six types of samādhis: savikalpa samādhi and nirvikalpa samādhi. Savikalpa samādhi is again of three types, and nirvikalpa samādhi is again of three types. So there are three types of inner samādhi and three types of external samādhi, and this has been recommended by this teacher.


His inner Nirvikalpa Samadhi was fine. When he closed his eyes, he could see everything as Brahma. But when he opened his eyes, it appeared to be Nithya.
Until I read this book, I frankly could not understand Totāpurī's behaviour. But when I read this book, I understood why he insisted that nirvikalpa samādhi is of two types — both inner as well as outer — and that he had not practised the outer nirvikalpa samādhi. His inner nirvikalpa samādhi was fine. When he closed his eyes, he could see everything as Brahman. But when he opened his eyes, it appeared to be real. He had advanced so far, and so the Divine Mother made him go through that experience, and then his realisation was complete.


And of course, he had advanced so far. So the Divine Mother also had made him go through that experience. And then his realisation was complete.
So this is a book which is very, very terse, short, and brief, and yet contains the most wonderful exposition.
----


So this is a book which is very, very terse, short, brief, and yet contains the most wonderful exposition. So viveka, what is viveka? Usually we translate it as discrimination. What is the discrimination? Intellectual gymnastics.
=== What is Viveka? ===
So, what is viveka? Usually we translate it as discrimination — intellectual gymnastics: "I know this is better and this is inferior, this is superior." That is not a very good translation. Viveka, I would prefer to say, is an attitude of mind. Everything depends upon our attitude. Attitude determines how we interpret things, and how we interpret things is our reality.


I know this is better and this is inferior, this is superior. So that is not a very good translation. Viveka, I would prefer to say an attitude of mind.
So viveka is not merely discrimination, but the development of that faculty of mind which cultivates that particular attitude and interpretation.


Everything depends upon our attitude. Attitude determines how we interpret things. And how we interpret things is our reality.
What do you mean by attitude? Let us take an example. What was Śrī Rāmakṛṣṇa's attitude towards women? Divine Mother. He interpreted everything only in that light: everything is Divine Mother. So suppose a woman comes and criticises him. What would be his attitude towards that event? "Divine Mother is teaching me some lesson. She is playing with me. She wants me to learn." Whether it is a good event or a bad event — everything.


So viveka is not merely a discrimination, but to develop that faculty of mind which develops that particular attitude and interpretation. What do you mean by attitude? Let us take an example. Ramakrishna's attitude towards women.
That is why in the Caṇḍī you get both the positive and negative expressions of the Divine Mother:


What was his attitude? Divine Mother. So he interpreted everything only in that light. Everything is Divine Mother.
''Adhini sarva-bhūteṣu brahante rūpeṇa saṃsthitā, nidrā rūpeṇa saṃsthitā, kṣudhā rūpeṇa saṃsthitā'' — as well as ''mātr̥ rūpeṇa saṃsthitā, dayā rūpeṇa saṃsthitā, kānti rūpeṇa saṃsthitā, kṣānti rūpeṇa saṃsthitā, śānti rūpeṇa saṃsthitā.'' Both. Why? Because both qualities stem from whom? From the Divine Mother.


So suppose a woman comes and criticises him. What would be his attitude towards that event? Divine Mother is teaching me some lesson. She is playing with me.  
That is why the Lord in the Gītā also tells us: whatever attitudes there are, whatever bhāvas there are, they have all originated from Me only — good and bad. That is why — I think this was in the eleventh chapter — it is said He not only destroyed the Kauravas, He also destroyed the Pāṇḍavas. Practically the whole army was destroyed. Only a few people — the five Pāṇḍavas and perhaps one or two others — remained. All the rest were completely dead.


She wants me to learn. Whether it is a good event, bad event, everything. That is why in the Chandi you get both the positive and negative expressions of the Divine Mother.
So in līlā, you cannot discriminate between good and evil. If it is līlā, good is also līlā, evil is also līlā. If it is real, then good is desirable and evil is undesirable. But if it is līlā — ''līlā puṣpāyaṇa'' — the Divine Drama will not be very enjoyable if there is no villain. Who will watch such a movie? Imagine a movie without a villain. For a drama, contrast is necessary. This Divine Drama also requires it.


Adhini sarva-bhuteshth brahante roopena samsthita, nidra roopena samsthita, kshudha roopena samsthita, as well as matra roopena samsthita, daya roopena samsthita, kanti roopena samsthita, kshanti roopena samsthita, shanti roopena samsthita. Both. Why? Because both qualities stem from whom? From the Divine Mother.
If we look at our own stage of life, we do not want the villain. Villain stands for anything unpleasant. But how do we improve? What contributes to our progress? If it is always good, if it is always happy, we are stuck like doormats. This is the simple fact. In drama, what is the most important element? Contrast. If everything is comedy, people will not enjoy it. Comedy is enjoyable only when there is tragedy. This is the simple truth.
----


That is why the Lord in the Gita also tells, whatever attitudes are there, bhavas are there, they have all originated from Me only. Good and bad. That's why, I think, I don't know whether we did it in the 11th chapter, in that it is said, He not only destroyed the Kauravas, He also destroyed the Pandavas.
=== The Nature of This Book ===
So, this book — the name is like Vivekacūḍāmaṇi — and viveka means discrimination. Now, any book must be practically useful for us. This one is very terse, very tough, very short, but full of meaning, and yet very, very practical, helpful, and profitable. It is profitable because, from one point of view, we are all emotional creatures. This is a very good antidote for emotion. After trying to study this book, you cannot afford to be so emotional. It needs a lot of intellect to discriminate.
----


Practically the whole army was destroyed. Only a few people, Panch Pandavas and perhaps one or two people remained. All the rest were completely dead.
=== Introduction to Vedāntic Scriptures: The Prasthāna Traya ===
Let me first give a small introduction. Vedāntic scriptures fall into three categories, as you know. They are called prasthāna traya — the foundational scriptures. Traya means triad, three. What are they? The Upaniṣads, the Brahma Sūtras, and the Bhagavad Gītā. All the scriptures are divided into three categories: śruti, smṛti, and purāṇa.


So in Leela, you cannot discriminate in Leela, this is good and this is evil. Because if it is Leela, good also is Leela, evil also is Leela. If it is real, then good is desirable, evil is undesirable.
==== The Upaniṣads: Śruti Prasthāna ====
The Upaniṣads fall under the category of śruti prasthāna — that is to say, pure śruti. What is śruti? The literal meaning of the word śruti means "that which is heard." It is interpreted in two ways.


But if it is Leela, then Leela Pushayana. Jagai Mathai. Leela Pushayana, the Divine Drama, will not be very enjoyable if supposing there is no villain.
The ṛṣis heard directly. But do not mistake this to mean that some words came into their ears. Intuitive discovery is called śruti, because if you merely hear, that is purely a physical thing. It could be a vision. It could be something which people feel they heard, or it could be some other type of experience. But then why is it said to be heard?


Who will watch such a movie? Imagine a movie without villain. So for a drama, it is alright. This Divine Drama also, that is necessary.
When we have some feeling intuitively, somewhere it has got to be expressed, and that expression can only be possible through saying it. You see, if you have some experience and you just go on looking at a person, the other person will never understand it. We all have a tendency — whatever emotion, thought, knowledge, or feeling we have — to vocalise it in the mind. You can never keep a thought as a thought. Either you hear it, or you see it, or you smell it, or you touch it, or you taste it. Of all these, the most important organ is the organ of hearing.


If we look at our stage of life, we don't want the villain. Villain means villain stands for anything unpleasant. But how do we improve? What is it that contributes for our progress? Is it good? If it is good, if it is happy, we are stuck like doormats.
So here, the meaning of śruti is intuitive understanding — not the physical hearing of something.


This is the simple fact. But if it is contrast, in fact, Vasha Swadhana or drama, what is the most important element in the drama? Contrast. If everything is comedy, then people will not enjoy it.
The second meaning is that it is also called śruti because it has been transmitted from a competent teacher to a competent disciple. Otherwise it would not be śruti. If you say something and the other person does not understand, it cannot be called śruti. Śruti means both sides: the person who is saying and the person who is listening. That conveying of knowledge is what is called śruti. So the guru had transmitted this knowledge through the mouth — from the mouth to the ears of the disciple, and from the mouth of the disciple to the ears of his disciple — that is why it is called śruti.


Comedy is enjoyable only when there is a tragedy. This is the simple truth. So, this book, the name is like Viveka Chudamani.
Now, why is it called śruti even when we have the development of written language? When you read a book, do you hear it, or do you just read it? It is possible only to hear it — either physically we vocalise, or mentally we vocalise. There is no other way, because this is the best way of conveying śruti.


Viveka means discrimination. Now, any book must be practically useful for us. So, this is a very terse, very tough, very short, but full of meaning, and yet it should be very, very practical, helpful, profitable.
Now, any type of knowledge — even the most ordinary type of truth — if you want to convey it to somebody, it can only be conveyed to a person who has the capacity to understand it. Knowledge cannot be passed to an unfit recipient.


And really it is profitable because from one point of view, we are all emotional creatures. This is a very good antidote for emotion. After trying to study this book, you cannot afford to be that emotional.
So the word śruti has these two meanings: first, the person who intuitively discovered and uncovered the truth — he did not invent it. Nobody can invent anything. It is not possible, because it is already there.
----


And it needs a lot of intellect to discriminate. So, let me first give a small introduction. Vedantic scriptures fall into three categories, as you know.
=== Creation in Advaita Vedānta: Removing the Obstacles ===
That is why, in Advaita Vedānta, one of the important questions that comes is about creation. What do you mean by creation? Did God create? What is your understanding of the word creation?


They are called Prasthana Traya, the foundational scriptures. Traya means triad, three. What are they? Upanishads, Brahma Sutras, and Bhagavad Gita.
Creation means destroying the obstacles. Creation means destroying the obstacles. In the Patañjali Yoga Sūtras, you have the concept of kṣetrika vāta. There is a river and there is a field. The field needs water. So what does the cultivator do? He removes the obstruction between the river and the field. He doesn't create water. Water is already there. The field is also already there. But he digs. Digging means removing the obstruction. So as soon as the obstruction is removed, automatically and naturally, water flows. That is the meaning of creation.


And all the scriptures are divided into these three categories. Shruti, Smriti, and Purana. So, the Upanishads fall under the category of Shruti Prasthana.
So this whole universe is a creation of God. What did God do? He removed the obstructions. Therefore, He himself has become.


That is to say, pure Shruti. What is Shruti? The literal meaning of the word Shruti means that which is heard. It is interpreted in two ways.
Take the example of a sculptor. You give a piece of stone to a sculptor. He makes a beautiful image of Kṛṣṇa. What did he do? Did he invent Kṛṣṇa? He merely chiselled away non-Kṛṣṇa. And what remains is Kṛṣṇa. This is our definition of creation.


Because the Rishis have heard directly. What do you mean by heard? Do not mistake it that some words came into their ears. Intuitive discovery is called Shruti.
What about māyā? Creation is using māyā to create this illusion — it is almost like superimposing. So how is He removing the obstacles? You can put it this way: He put obstacles. Exactly. That is what a sculptor does — he covers what is not Kṛṣṇa, and what you see is Kṛṣṇa. If it is a block of stone, you cannot see Kṛṣṇa there. So what He does is put obstacles on your eyes so that you see only Kṛṣṇa and do not see all the non-Kṛṣṇa.


Because if you hear, that is purely a physical thing. This is the point. It could be a vision.
The point is that the substance is there. Nothing new is brought out. It is a matter of what you want to see.


It could be something which people feel they heard. Or it could be some other type of experience. But then why is it said to be heard? When we have some feeling intuitively, somewhere it has got to be expressed.
If you want to experience God through your eyes, what will you see? Forms. If you want to experience God through the ears, what do you experience? Sounds. Suppose there is a blind man who cannot see colours. The function of the eyes is only to see colours, nothing else. All forms can be experienced through other means, including through the ears. That is what a whale or a dolphin does — it sends out a signal, like the radar near an airport. What do you see on the screen? An aeroplane. It is not sending a camera — it is sending sound, and what you receive is a form.


And that expression can only be possible through saying it. You see, if you have some experience, and you just go on looking at the person, the other person will never understand it. We all have a tendency, whatever emotion, thought, knowledge, feeling we have, to vocalise in the mind.
So the point is how we want to experience God. That is the Vedāntic concept of God.
----


You can never, never keep a thought as a thought. Either you hear it, or you see it, or you smell it, or you touch it, or you taste it. So, of all these things, the most important organ is the organ of hearing.
=== Pre-Concepts and the Vedānta Scope ===
A person, meeting any object, has already decided: "This is how I want to see this object." That is how some people like some things, and that is how some people do not like some things. It is predetermined, depending upon past experiences. There is nothing called a completely new judgemental experience.


So here, the meaning of the Shruti is intuitive understanding, not hearing something. The second meaning is, it is also called a Shruti, because it has been transmitted from a competent teacher to a competent disciple. Otherwise, it won't be Shruti.
Say somebody brings you a sweet. How do different people experience that sweet? It all depends upon what previous concepts they carry. Suppose you like Mysore pāk — when Mysore pāk comes, you look at it not as it is, but as you would like to look at it. Another person who does not like Mysore pāk at all — how does he look at it?


Because if you say something, and if the other person doesn't understand, then it cannot be called Shruti. Shruti means both sides, the person who is saying, and the person who is listening. That conveying of the knowledge, that is what is called Shruti.
Suppose a Bengali who does not like idli and chuṭney is brought first-class idli and first-class chuṭney — very nice. And suppose there is a South Indian who loves idli and chuṭney. Why do both of them react in two different ways? Is it because of the object? No. They have already come with their pre-concepts: "I like this, I don't like that."


That is why it is called Shruti. So the Guru had transmitted this knowledge through the mouth, from the mouth to the ears, and from the mouth of the disciple to the ear of his disciple, that is why it is called Shruti. Now, why is it called Shruti, when we have the development of language? It could be written.
Similarly: a man meets a woman. How does he look at the woman? He already has certain concepts — "My dream girl should be like this." So if she resembles that, he likes her. He slots her. Even if she is not objectively beautiful, she can look beautiful to him because she fits into his concept. Even if she is objectively beautiful, if she doesn't fit into his concept, he will never like her.


When you read a book, do you hear it, or do you just read it? It is possible only to hear it. Either physically we vocalise, or mentally we vocalise. There is no other way, because this is the best way of conveying Shruti.
What is my point? We are never judging an object as it is. We are always judging an object from our pre-concepts. And even after experience, we judge the same object in exactly the same way. We have already formed opinions about every one of us — we may not express them, because it is politically incorrect to express them, but our likes and dislikes depend completely on how slavish we are to these pre-formed moulds.


Now, some things, in fact, any type of knowledge, it applies to any type of knowledge. Even the most ordinary type of truth, if you want to convey to somebody, it can be only conveyed to a person who has the capacity to understand it. Anything, even the most ordinary thing, because knowledge cannot be passed to an unfit recipient.
This is actually useful, because there is already a mould, a pattern. If we can make that pattern what I call the Vedāntic pattern — I invented a new word for this: if you want to see very small things, how do you see? Through a microscope. If you want to see things far away, through a telescope. If you want to see God — the Vedānta scope. You must have the Vedānta scope.


So the word Shruti has these two meanings. The person who had intuitively discovered the truth, uncovered the truth. He did not invent it.
If you don't have the Vedānta scope, you will never see things in a Vedāntic way. Put on this Dṛk Dṛśya Viveka, put on the Vedānta scope, and you will see everything as likeable. Why? Because the Vedānta scope shows you everything as Brahman. Unless we put that on, any other scope — microscope, telescope, or whatever — distorts things. This is the simple truth.


Nobody can invent anything. It is not possible, because it is already there. So that is why in the Advaita Vedanta, one of the important questions that comes is about creation.
So Vedānta scope — that is called viveka. What is viveka? Putting on the Vedānta scope.
----


What do you mean by creation? Did God create? What is your understanding of the word creation? Creation means destroying the obstacles. Creation means destroying the obstacles. In the Patanjali Yoga Sutra, you have got Kshetrika Vata.
=== The Three Foundational Scriptures (Continued) ===


There is a river and there is a field. The field needs water. So what does the cultivator do? He removes the obstruction between the river and the field.
==== Smṛti Prasthāna: The Bhagavad Gītā ====
As I was mentioning, there are three types of foundational scriptures. The first is śruti. Then the next is smṛti: a person may not have had any direct experience, but he heard the direct experience from the realised person — directly or indirectly — and he has complete faith in it. Depending upon that faith, he expresses his understanding. Mind you, it is all indirect experience. You write a poem, you make a sculpture, or you write a drama, you write a bhajana. He has not realised it, but he had one hundred percent faith in it. So whatever scriptures have come under smṛti — having one hundred percent faith in the śrutis, not deviating one millimetre from the śrutis — they were composed for two reasons: for one's own enjoyment, and also in course of time to help other people.


He doesn't create water. Water is already there. The field also is already there.
As I said, you can only understand something if you are ready for that. So these are called smṛti. The Bhagavad Gītā is called smṛti prasthāna.


But he digs it. Digging means what? Removing the obstruction. So as soon as the obstruction is removed, automatically, naturally, water flows.
==== Nyāya Prasthāna: The Brahma Sūtras ====
And there are people who want to understand things in a completely non-controversial way, through logic and through reason. This is called nyāya prasthāna. The Brahma Sūtras is a work where Vyāsa himself — mind you, he was not the discoverer of the Vedas, he was only a compiler — collected whatever Vedas were already existing, divided them, classified them, and conveyed them to others for convenience. Classification is an easier way of understanding complicated things.


That is the meaning of creation. So this whole universe is a creation of God. So what did God do? He removed the obstructions.
But different ṛṣis had intuitively expressed their experiences through different words, and those words created controversies. So is it a really controversial thing, or have the words used simply different meanings, all ultimately meaning the same thing? Vyāsa himself brought out a number of such apparently contradictory statements and in the end proved that they all have only one meaning. The entire śruti has got only one purport, and that purport is the word ''tat'' — "that." Everything else must support that statement, in whichever way the words are expressed or used. Such a work is called the Brahma Sūtras.


Therefore, he himself has become. An example, a sculptor. You give a piece of stone to a sculptor.
Now the Brahma Sūtras emphasise logic, rationality, and reasoning — how to understand logically — because if you are understanding intuitively, there is no need for logic. But when you are incapable of understanding intuitively, you need logic to understand correctly. This is called nyāya prasthāna.
----


He makes a beautiful image of Krishna. What did he do? Did he invent Krishna? He merely chiselled away non-Krishna. And what remains is Krishna.
=== Prakaraṇa Granthas: Shorter Works of Clarification ===
On all three of these foundational works, hundreds of commentaries have been written, leading to contradictory schools of philosophy and views, creating further confusion. So the great teachers, out of their compassion, invariably composed certain shorter works called prakaraṇa granthas. For example: Vivekacūḍāmaṇi, Ātmabodha, Vākya Vṛtti, Dṛg Dṛśya Viveka, Upadeśa Sāhasrī, and so many others. I am quoting because these are all Śaṃkarācārya's works — though of course the Dṛg Dṛśya Viveka is not Śaṃkara's work. Some people consider it so, but most do not.


This is our definition of creation. Maharaj, creation is using his maya to create this illusion. So it's almost like superimposing.
Now among these prakaraṇa granthas, there are two types. One type generally treats the entire Vedānta subject in a very brief manner — Vivekacūḍāmaṇi and Upadeśa Sāhasrī are examples. But certain prakaraṇa granthas treat a particular subject elaborately. For example, some treat the tvaṃ padartha elaborately, some treat the tat padartha elaborately, some treat the asi padartha elaborately.


So how is he removing the obstacles? You can put it in this way. He put obstacles. Exactly.
Vivekacūḍāmaṇi falls under the category which treats the entire Vedānta briefly. But the Dṛg Dṛśya Viveka treats tvaṃ padartha more importantly than tat padartha or asi padartha. Tat — tvaṃ — asi: the emphasis here is on tvaṃ. Some treat all three equally, but this particular one treats tvaṃ padartha. That is why it is very useful.


That's what exactly a sculptor does. He covers what is not Krishna. And what you see is Krishna.
Now every prakaraṇa grantha avoids controversies completely. It is meant for the general public, meant to be easy of comprehension — though some of them make it so tough that you need hundreds of commentaries on them. They go on saying, "For the easy understanding of people, by the grace of God I am starting this book" — and by that time they finish. We need the help of God.


Do you see? If it is a block of stone, then you cannot see Krishna there. So what he does, he puts obstacles on your eyes so that you could see only Krishna. So you don't see all the non-Krishna you don't see.
This particular prakaraṇa grantha is very short. It contains only, I think, forty-five or forty-six ślokas.
----


Only you see the Krishna. The point is that the substance is there. Nothing new is brought out.
=== The Three Essential Topics of Every Prakaraṇa Grantha ===
Every prakaraṇa grantha must be very practical. Not only does it state "this is the goal," but it also elaborates how one can reach that goal. Every such book must treat three things: tattva, puruṣārtha, and hita.


It is a matter of what do you want to see. So creation is what do you want to see. You have to understand this clearly.
Tattva means: what is the reality? What is the truth? What is the meaning of human life? Puruṣārtha means: why should human beings take to that goal, be very conscious and clear, and make effort to reach it? And hita means: how to reach it. So this is the goal, this is the reason why you should reach this goal, and this is how to reach that goal — tattva, puruṣārtha, and hita. Every book treats these three.
----


If you see God through your eyes, you say, I want to see God through my eyes. What will you see? What do you see? Forms. You want to experience God through the ears.
=== Anubandha Catuṣṭaya and Sādhana Catuṣṭaya ===
To make this point clear, the teachers of these books have clarified two very important things: one is called anubandha catuṣṭaya and another is called sādhana catuṣṭaya.


What do you experience? Sounds. Do you see? Suppose there is a blind man and he cannot see colours. The function of eyes is only to see the colours, nothing else.
What is the difference between them? Anubandha catuṣṭaya is meant to clarify: what is the subject matter, what is the connection with this book, what is the purpose, what is it that you want to achieve, and who is fit — who is the adhikārī? And if one is an adhikārī, then what qualifications one should develop falls under sādhana catuṣṭaya sampatti. In brief, these four plus four are common for all spiritual aspirants, common for all scriptures — whether it is Christianity, Buddhism, or anything.


All forms can be experienced through other means, including through the ears. Forms can be seen or experienced through the ears. That's what a whale does it.
==== The First Component: Prayojana ====
So what is anubandha catuṣṭaya? First of all, what is the prayojana? Prayojana means: why do you want to read this book? Not only reading — why do you want to sit at the feet of a teacher and why do you want to listen to him? The prayojana is the first thing we have to be clear about before doing anything else. What do you want? Be very clear about what you want.


Or dolphin does it. What does it do? It sends... What is that near the airport? Radar. What does it do? So what do you see on the screen? An aeroplane.
Here in this case, there is only one goal: tāpatraya avicchinna muktiḥ — liberation from threefold misery.


See, it is not sending a camera. It is sending the sound. And what you receive, what you see is? Nobody ever told you this.
Now miseries are of two types: present, experienced misery, and future, coming misery. Sometimes we may not be experiencing misery right now. If we are experiencing misery now, we want to be free from it — most of us fall under this category. But there are some more intelligent people who want to be free not only from present misery but also from a misery which has not yet made its appearance but which is sure to appear later on. Because that is the nature of the world. Jagat means that which is changing. So today, if I am not undergoing misery, soon it will change. This is the truth. If we don't understand it through wisdom, through painful experience we will be made to understand it.


So if you want to see me, close your eyes, open them. Send your radar signal. So the point is how we want to experience God.
So what is the purpose? To get rid of misery. But if we are free from misery, then what is it that we are going to attain? A state which is free from misery — but there could be a misunderstanding about that. There is a stone and somebody is beating the stone. The stone, assuming it can speak, says, "Please do not beat me." Somebody goes and stops the beating. Thereafter what does the stone remain? A stone only. That is not the state we want.


That is the Vedantic concept of our God. Because we have a desire. Actually that is what we do in day-to-day life.
What we want is complete happiness: satyam, jñānam, anantam, brahma. Saccidānanda is usually the word we use — sat, cit, and ānanda; or asti, bhāti, and priyam. Here the Chāndogya Upaniṣad says satyam, jñānam, anantam. Satyam and jñānam correspond to sat and cit, asti and bhāti — exactly the same. But instead of ānanda, we use the word anantam. That is the more appropriate word. Why? Because what is ānanda? Usually we mistranslate it as happiness. But here, bliss means anantam. Anantam means it is eternal. Eternal state is happiness. So that state is what we want to attain. This is the prayojana.


If I deviate like this, the class will go on forever. But the point is very important. A person, one person meets another object.
==== The Second Component: Viṣaya and Sambandha ====
Then what is the viṣaya and the sambandha? What is the viṣaya? My purpose is to attain God. This book is teaching about chemistry. What is the connection between chemistry and my goal? There is no relationship. So this book must have a subject matter which deals exclusively with spirituality. That is the viṣaya — subject matter. And the sambandha is this: this book teaches spirituality, my purpose is spirituality — how to become spiritual — so this book helps me in being spiritual. That is the sambandha, the relationship.


Already he has decided, this is how I want to see this object. So that is how some people like some things, and that is how some people do not like some things. It is predetermined.
Otherwise people can make a mistake — they want to meditate and they go on watching movies. What is the relationship between these two? There is no relationship. There should be a definite relationship between our prayojana, viṣaya, and sambandha.


Yes, it is predetermined, depending upon maybe past experiences. You see, nothing called completely new judgemental experience. Say, somebody brings you some sweet.
==== The Third and Fourth Components: Adhikārī ====
Even if all three of these are wonderful, then who is the adhikārī? The adhikārī is one who sincerely wishes to have that prayojana. The prayojana is God — attaining God. And billions of human beings are not adhikārīs in that respect, because they are not interested in God. So they must become interested in God.


How do different people experience that sweet? It all depends upon what previous concepts. Though we are not vocalising these things. I would like to see this as wonderful.
These are called anubandha catuṣṭaya — very preliminary relationships.
----


I would like to see this. Suppose you like Mysore Pak. Then when Mysore Pak comes, you look at it not as it is, but as you would like to look at it.
=== Desire vs. Qualification: The Adhikārī ===
Now the adhikārī is the most important person. Just as a medical student has a desire to study medicine and become a doctor, he may have desire, but whether he is qualified is another matter. Desire is different from qualification.


You see the point? Another person who does not like Mysore Pak at all, then how does he look? You know, I am elaborating because you can make your own examples. Suppose a Bengali who does not like idli and chutney. If idli is brought, chutney, first-class idli, first-class chutney, imagine, very nice, is brought.
Suppose there is a person who is blind, a person who is lame, a person who is unintelligent — he may have desire. In fact, we all have desires. Only thing is, we don't have qualifications. This is the truth.


Suppose there is a South Indian who loves idli and chutney. Why both of them react in two different ways? Is it because of the object? No. For the first time, they have already come with their pre-concepts.
If somebody says, "You just become the President of the United States," no objection — but do you have the qualification? We don't have even the negative qualification, not only the positive one. The positive qualification is: you must have knowledge, you must have policy, you must have firm determination, and all that. What is the negative qualification? Why do 100,000 police, CID, and FBI try to protect the President? Because if he just walks, how many minutes is he going to survive? And still he knows it — he has that courage: "This is a risk I have to take." And he takes it. So you may have the positive qualities, but do you also have the negative quality? All qualities must be there.


I like this, I like that. Similarly, I extend this example. A man meets a woman.
So desire is wonderful, but once you have desire, that is the first step. What is the second step? You must acquire four qualifications. This is called sādhana catuṣṭaya sampatti.
----


So how does he look at the woman? Already he has certain concepts. My dream girl should be like this. So if she resembles, then he likes.
=== Sādhana Catuṣṭaya Sampatti: The Four Qualifications ===
What are the sādhana catuṣṭaya sampatti?


Yes, he slots. Even if she is beautiful, even if she is not beautiful, she can look as beautiful because she fits into his concept. Even if she is beautiful, if she doesn't fit into her concept, he will never like it.
First is viveka. Second is vairāgya. Third is samādhamādi ṣaṭ sampatti — the sixfold inner wealth. And the fourth is intense desire — mumukṣutva — and that is a very important point we have to briefly discuss. We all have desire, but what is the intensity of that desire? Do we have one hundred percent desire, fifty percent, ten percent, or one percent? That is very necessary.


What is my point? We are never judging an object. As it is, we are always judging an object from our pre-concepts. And even we are judging the same object after experience also, exactly in the same way.
These are most important — common for the study of any scripture, not only spiritual scripture but any scripture. Whether you want to be a chemist, want to be in IT, or even want to be a cook — even a cook must have these four qualities. Otherwise he will be cooking — he also cooks — but whether people will be happy with his cooking is a different issue.
----


We have already formed opinions about each one of us. You may not express it. Politically it is incorrect to express it.
=== Authorship of the Dṛk Dṛśya Viveka ===
So, first briefly about the authorship. A few people believe it was written by Śaṃkarācārya, but that is not supported by the evidence. Some people — a few more — claim it has been written by Swami Vidyāraṇya. But most people believe it was Bhāratī Tīrtha, one of the Śaṃkarācāryas of the Śṛṃgerī Pīṭha, who was also supposed to be the guru of Vidyāraṇya Swami himself.


But our likes, our dislikes, all these things depend completely on how slavish we are. So the same thing, it is useful because already there is a mould, there is a pattern. If we can make that pattern, what is called Vedantic pattern.
For our study, it is not really necessary who has written it. Whether it is a wonderful book — there is no controversy about it. It is a most marvellous book and it is very specialised. Even Vivekacūḍāmaṇi doesn't give certain points which are given here — and of that, the second part is the six types of samādhi and meditation, which we will come to later on.
----


Did I tell you? I invented a new word for that. If you want to see very small things, how do you see? If you want to see things at a long scope, so if you want to see God, Vedanta scope. You must have Vedanta.
=== The Title: Dṛk Dṛśya Viveka ===
Now about the title: Dṛk Dṛśya Viveka. As I said, any scripture must be very practical, very useful in our day-to-day life. So this Dṛk Dṛśya Viveka need not be interpreted only in the highest spiritual sense of the real and the unreal. It can also be used in our day-to-day life.


If you don't have Vedanta scope, you will never see things in a Vedantic way. Vedanta scope? So put on this, what is Drigya Dushya Viveka, put on the Vedanta scope and you will see everything is likeable. Why? Because Vedanta scope shows you everything as Brahman.
What is Dṛk? The experiencer. What is Dṛśya? Whatever is experienced. What is viveka? The correct, right way of establishing the relationship between these two.


Unless we put that one, any other scope, it will be microscope or telescope or whatever scope distorts things. This is the simple truth. So Vedanta scope, that is called Viveka.
Now let me give a small example. Suppose one morning you want to go to the office and you want to have breakfast first. For some reason, the breakfast has not turned out to be good. But you need to have breakfast. What type of attitude do you have towards that? If you have the right attitude, you will have no problem: "All that I need is some breakfast. It may not be tasty, but it is substantial. It is very good for my health. Let me have it and go." If you have that type of attitude, then your day will start in a nice manner.


What is Viveka? Putting on Vedanta scope. So, as I was mentioning, there are three types of foundational scriptures, Shruti. Then the next is, a person didn't have any direct experience, but he heard the direct experience from the person directly or indirectly and he has complete faith in it.
Or you may be having some talk with somebody and it may not be very pleasant. Should it ruin your whole life, your whole day? So it depends.
----


Depending upon that faith, he expresses his experiences. Mind you, it is all indirect experience. You write a poem, you make a sculpture, or you write a drama, you write a bhajan.
=== The Story of Bīrbal and Akbar: Whose Face Is Bad? ===
"Whose face did I see early in the morning?" Most often we see our own faces. That is why the story of Bīrbal and Akbar is so wonderful. You know, one day Akbar's sleep was broken in the morning. It was summer, still dark, and he said, "I can't sleep now, let me have a walk in the garden." So he went out, and an old servant who had been working in the garden for more than forty years was sweeping and clearing. That was the first face Akbar looked at. And then as he was walking, he stumbled, fell down, and was injured.


He has not realised it, but he had 100% faith in it. So whatever scriptures have come, having 100% faith in the Shrutis, not deviating one millimetre from the Shrutis, but to express it for two reasons, for one's own enjoyment and also in course of time to help other people. See, I am talking false under Smriti, because I am telling what I have understood in my own way, so that you can also understand it in a way of speaking.
So immediately he remembered: "The first face I saw was this gardener's. Chop off his head!" he gave this advice. Fortunately, the old man heard it, ran to Bīrbal, and was saved. Bīrbal said, "Don't worry, I will save you."


As I said, you can only understand if you are ready for that. So these are called Smriti. Smriti Prasthana, Bhagavad Gita is called Smriti Prasthana.
So about nine-thirty or ten o'clock, Akbar, still fuming, opened his Darbār. Bīrbal entered with this old man. Akbar became furious: "You are protecting this fellow? I wanted to chop off his head. Why did you do it?" Bīrbal said, "Before you decide to do anything, let us have a conversation. Why do you want to chop off his head?" Akbar said, "The first thing I saw was this fellow's face, and then immediately I fell down and got injured." Bīrbal asked, "Then what did you do?" "I ordered his head to be chopped off." "And what have you got to say?" Akbar asked the old man. Bīrbal said only this much: "He claims yours is the first face he saw. Now whose face is bad?" Laughter. Of course Akbar had no option but to laugh.


And there are people who want to understand things in a completely non-controversial way, through logic, through reason. This is called Nyaya Prasthana. Brahma Sutras is a work where Vyasa himself, mind you, he was not the discoverer of Vedas.
So most often we see our own faces. But this is the attitude — how to take everything, every experience, in our stride. The dṛśya is not in our control, but the dṛk — we have a lot of control. We don't have control over the event, but we can determine how we view it in a better way. This is called the Vedānta scope. This is called Vedānta.


He was only a compiler of the Vedas. Whatever Vedas were existing already, he had collected them, divided them, classified them, edited them. Editing means not deleting.
How does a devotee see? He says, "Whatever good or bad happens is God's will." If he is a karma yogī, he says, "Whatever happens is the result of my own actions." If it is a jñānī, he says, "It is my own doing. After all, I am Brahman. So if something happens, whom else can you blame? Only oneself."
----


No, editing means deleting. You take many of my photographs and then edit them. Remove.
=== Happiness is a Matter of Interpretation ===
Why can't we be happier? As we are now, we can be a million times happier than we are — with our present circumstances. Imagine children in Africa. If in your childhood you had lived like that, and then if magically somebody transported you into your present situation, you would consider you are in heaven. We are already in heaven, and so many things we are taking for granted every minute of our life.


Whatever Swami you don't like, whichever Swami, Rayatmananda you don't like, you delete them. He never deleted anything, but he classified them and conveyed that to others for convenience. Classification is an easier way of understanding complicated things.
Our happiness or unhappiness is no better than that of many millions of people in the world. The most marvellous thing is this māyā. One important factor is that our happiness does not depend upon what things we are getting, but how we take those things, how we interpret those things.


That is the simple way of putting it. But different Rishis have intuited, expressed their experience through different words and those words have created controversies. So is it a really controversial thing or the words used have different meanings? They all mean the same thing but use different words.
One simple example Swami Bhajānānandajī gives: a peasant sitting for his rough breakfast, maybe a ragi roti, and another person sitting in a seven-star hotel with caviar and other things. The peasant is ravenously hungry. The hotel guest has to take a lot of appetisers before he can even swallow. So even if both of them are hungry, is there any difference in the quantum of happiness each one gets? So long as it is an experience of the mouth, it is exactly the same.


So Vyasa himself brought out a number of such apparently seemingly contradictory statements and in the end proves that they are all having one meaning only. So Ekibhava or the entire Shrutis have got only one purport and that purport is the word that. Everything else must support that statement in whichever way the words are expressed or used.
Any experience we have of our five sense organs — it makes no difference whether it is a villager seeing an ordinary sight, or a city person exotically seeing, or even the President of the United States at his breakfast table. Whose happiness is better? Ours.


Such a work is called Brahma Sutras. Now this Brahma Sutras, it emphasises logic or rationality, reasoning, how to understand logically because intuitively if you are understanding, there is no need for logic. But when you are incapable of understanding intuitively, you need logic to understand it correctly.
But if a saint is eating something, his happiness is inexpressible because he is eating prasāda. A happy, positive person's happiness is marvellous. But if a person is grumbling, grumpy, temperamental, short-tempered, worried, and depressed — it makes no difference what he is experiencing; worse, in fact. So it does not matter what we are experiencing. Everything depends upon who is experiencing it. It is very practical.
----


This is called Nyaya Prasthana. Now on all these three books, hundreds of commentaries have been written leading to contradictory schools of philosophy, views and that created further confusion. So the great teachers out of their compassion, all of them invariably have composed certain shorter works called Prakarana Granthas.
=== Dṛk and Dṛśya: The Experiencer and the Experienced ===
So, viveka means: the highest type of attitude we can bring to any one of our experiences. What is Dṛk? A seer — whoever is seeing or experiencing. What is Dṛśya? Whatever is experienced.


For example Vivekachudamani, Atmabodha, Vakya Vritti, Drigdhrishya Viveka and so many other things are there. Upadesa Sahasra etc. I am quoting because these are all Shankaracharya's works but of course Drigdhrishya Viveka is not Shankaracharya's work.
Now what is important here? I am here, this sofa is here. I am the Dṛk. Now here Dṛk means the one who is seeing — and seeing doesn't mean related only to the eyes. Seeing means experiencing through any one of our sense organs, including the mind, because the mind interprets and imposes its own way of experiencing things.


Some people consider it but most of them, they consider it is not his work. Now among these Prakarana Granthas, there are two types. One type is generally it treats the entire Vedanta subject in a very brief manner.
The same event: if I have a cataract, I have one way of looking at it. If I have impaired hearing, it creates another type of experience.


Example is Vivekachudamani, Upadesa Sahasra etc. But there are certain types of Prakarana Granthas which treat a particular subject elaborately. For example, some treat Tvam Padartha elaborately, some treat Tat Padartha elaborately, some treat Asi Padartha elaborately.
You know, there is an old couple sitting together. The old man is reading and the old lady is sewing. Suddenly the man takes it into his head to express something, so he shouts, "Mary, I love you." She was very deaf. "What?" He went near and shouted louder, "Mary, I love you." "What?" He went very near and shouted into her ear, "Mary, I love you." She said, "That is all right. I also don't love you."
----


Now Vivekachudamani falls under that category which treats the entire Vedanta in a brief manner. But this Drigdhrishya Viveka for example treats Tvam Padartha more importantly than Tat Padartha or Asi Padartha. Tvam, importance is, emphasis is on Tvam.
=== The Priority of Dṛk Over Dṛśya ===
When I am seeing something — this sofa — the sofa is called Dṛśya, and I am called the experiencer, the Dṛk. Now, in these two, who is most important? The Dṛśya has no consciousness. Therefore it doesn't even know it is a Dṛśya, let alone that it is a Dṛk. The Dṛk alone has complete control. Without Dṛśya, Dṛk can remain. Without Dṛk, Dṛśya can never remain. So Dṛk is in charge of everything — it is the most important thing.


See Tat, Tvam, Asi. Some treat all the three equally but this particular one treats Tvam Padartha. Its emphasis, so it is very useful.
The second point is: there could be billions and billions of Dṛśyas. But how many Dṛks? Only one. When I say "this is the world," the whole world falls into the category of Dṛśya, and I — the conscious, intelligent experiencer — alone am only one.


Now every Prakarana Grantha, it avoids controversies completely. That is to say, it is meant for general public, it is meant easy of comprehension, though some of them make it so tough that you need hundreds of commentaries for it. They go on saying, for the easy understanding of people, by the grace of God I am starting this book.
We can understand this with regard to non-living things easily. But when it comes to living things, we have a confusion. Say, I am seeing all of you sitting here, but I am also seeing this sofa, this carpet, this book, these windows. When it comes to you, I am seeing you and you are also seeing me — that confusion comes.


And by that time they finish. We need the help of God. If Shankara didn't write it, who wrote this? Who? I will come to that.  
We have to be very clear that all of you also fall under that Dṛśya category only. Why? Because there is only one criterion: you may be there or you may not be there — even if you are not there, I am there. But if I am not there, you are not there at all. Everything depends upon me — upon how I interpret you.
----


I am coming to that. So this particular Prakarana Grantha is very short in a way. It contains only I think 45 or 46 shlokas.
=== The Scope of Viveka: Misunderstanding vs. Right Understanding ===
When there is a Dṛk and a Dṛśya, then there must be some kind of scope. If it is microscope vision, you will see even the smallest faults. If it is telescope vision, you will magnify even the smallest thing and blow it up into the biggest. When I am looking in a particular way, it will never affect the Dṛśya — but it is going to affect me. For my own good, I must have the right type of scope. That is where viveka is necessary. Viveka means the right type of view, attitude, understanding.


And as I said, it treats Tvam Padartha and it also is very practical. Every Prakarana Grantha must be very practical. Not only it states this is the goal, but it also elaborates how one can reach that goal.
What is the right type of understanding? There are two possibilities: one is called misunderstanding, and the other is called right understanding. Misunderstanding is when, even though the Dṛśya has some nature, I do not understand it. It is my subjective understanding of the Dṛśya — I consider poison as nectar. It has nothing to do with the object. It has everything to do with the subject. That is called misunderstanding. Right understanding is knowing an object as it is, and not as I interpret it, understand it, or experience it.


Every such book must treat three things. Tattva, Kurushartha and Hita. Tattva means what is the reality, what is the truth, what is the meaning of human life.
Now the whole subject matter of Vedānta is this: what you consider as an object is, first of all, not an object — it is nothing but subject. Second, by calling something the object, you are making an unnecessary division: "I am the subject and you are the object." The undivided akhanda is being made into khanda — subject and object. That is why it is called māyā. Thirdly, even if you make this division, if you can understand an object's true value and true nature, then it would help you a lot.


Kurushartha means why human beings should take to that goal. Be very conscious, very clear and make effort to reach it. Hita means how to reach.
The classical example: there is a rope and here is me. If I see it as a snake, it is a wrong understanding on my part and it produces only misery. If I understand it as a rope, then at least I will be free from misery. But if I understand that rope as nothing but my own self — as God — then it produces ananta sukha, because I am seeing God. Three types of experiences: experiencing a rope as a snake produces only misery; experiencing the rope as a rope may not produce happiness, but at least does not produce misery; experiencing the rope as none other than Brahman produces infinite happiness. This is the prayojana of this viveka buddhi.
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So this is the goal and this is the reason why you should reach this goal and how to reach that goal. Tattva, Kurushartha and Hita. So every book treats it in that way.
=== How Many Dṛks? Only One ===
So, Dṛk and Dṛśya. How many Dṛśyas? Any number. How many Dṛks? Only one Dṛk.


So to make this point, what is called the teachers of these books, they have made very clear two points. One is called Anubandha Chatursthaya. Another is called Sadhana Chatursthaya.
Now there is a further point to be understood. Is there really a Dṛśya, or is it because the Dṛk is himself looking into his own mirror and creating many Dṛśyas? Is there a Dṛśya at all? The example given is: when you are dreaming, how many Dṛśyas are there? Is there any actual Dṛśya? Who is creating it? We are creating it. But at that time, if someone were to say, "All this Dṛśya is completely your own creation," would you believe it? You will never believe it.


What is the difference between Anubandha Chatursthaya and Sadhana Chatursthaya? So Anubandha Chatursthaya is meant for people, what is the subject matter and what is the connection with this book and what is the purpose, what is it that you want to achieve and who is fit, Adhikari, who is an Adhikari. And if he is an Adhikari, then what qualifications he should develop falls under Sadhana Chatursthaya Sampati. So in brief, these four plus four are common for all spiritual aspirants.
But when you wake up, you will see that all the Dṛśyas you had seen were only your own imagination. That is the important point these scriptures are making — whether Vivekacūḍāmaṇi, Upaniṣads, or everything. Because if Brahman is one, where from has the Dṛśya come? Where from have Dṛk and Dṛśya come?


It is common for all scriptures, whether it is Christianity, Buddhism or anything, specifically what is it. So what is Anubandha Chatursthaya? First of all, what is the prayojana? Prayojana means why do you want to read this book? Not only reading, why do you want to sit at the feet of a teacher and why do you want to listen to him? So prayojana, that is the first thing that we have to sit before doing anything else. What is the prayojana, what do you want? Be very clear about what do you want.
So the first thing is not to misinterpret any Dṛśya. The second is to recognise a Dṛśya as it is. And the last impediment is to understand that Dṛśya is none other than Dṛk only.
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Here in this case, there is only one goal. Trapatraya avidhata muktihi, liberation from threefold misery. Now miseries are of two types.
=== The Three States of Experience ===
So this Dṛśya is divided into three categories: jāgrat avasthā, svapna avasthā, and suṣupti avasthā. The Dṛk imparts reality to each of them. That is a very important point to understand at this stage.


Misery is of two types. That is present experienced misery and future coming misery. So sometimes we may not be experiencing misery now.
Now, this is the waking state. Is the waking state a reality, or am I imparting reality to it? See, you are looking at me and you are experiencing me, is it not? Suppose you happen to doze off — what would be my fate as far as you are concerned? Finished. As far as you are concerned, the whole visible world is gone.


If we are experiencing misery now, then we want to be free from it. Most of us fall under this category. But there are some more intelligent people and they want to be free not only from the present misery but also a misery which has not even made its appearance but which is sure to make its appearance later on.
There is a story: one priest was giving a sermon. An old woman came and sat with her grandson, and very soon the old woman started snoring. The priest got annoyed for several reasons: she was sitting in the front row, her snoring was louder than his sermon, and it was an insult — even if you don't listen, you pretend to listen, and he could tolerate that. But snoring openly — so he called her grandson and said, "You, wake up your grandma." The grandson said, "No way. You put her to sleep. You wake her up. It is your responsibility."


Because that is the nature of the world. World means jagat. Jagat means that which is changing.
So jāgrat avasthā is our creation. How do we know? Because the moment we withdraw from it — by going to the svapna avasthā — we have withdrawn the authority to make it real. We are the real.


So today if I am not undergoing misery, soon it will change. This is the truth. If we don't understand it, through painful experience we will be made to understand it.
A simple illustration: imagine three rooms in complete pitch darkness. There are many things in each room, but if you look at any of them, what do you see? Nothing. But take a torch and put it in one room — you will see many things in that room. The moment you go to the next room, the first room remains pitch dark. There may be things there, but nobody can see them. And if you come to the third room, the other two rooms become completely dark.


So what is the purpose? To get rid of misery. What is the way to get rid of misery? It will come later on. But if we are free from misery, then what is it that we are going to attain? A state which is free from misery.
The person carrying the torchlight alone makes those rooms come alive, real, useful. Without that torchlight, the rooms themselves are completely dark and useless. So when we go to the svapna avasthā, both suṣupti and jāgrat avasthā become unreal — they do not even exist. When we are in the jāgrat avasthā, the other two do not exist. When we are in deep sleep, those other two do not exist.


But there could be a misunderstanding. There is a stone. So somebody is beating the stone.
What is the conclusion? We are giving reality to each one of those states. And that means those three states are the Dṛśya, and we are the Dṛk. Which of these three states is real? All of them are completely unreal until I decide to give reality to them. Anything that I experience, I am giving reality to that object. This is the simplest truth.
----


So the stone, assuming it can tell that please do not beat me, somebody goes and stops. Thereafter what does it remain? How does it remain? A stone only. That is not the state we want.
=== The Practical Result: Our Happiness Depends Upon Ourselves ===
So what is the practical result of this? Our happiness or unhappiness depends totally on ourselves. Is it a fiction? Is it brainwashing? Or is it reality? It is true. If a worldly person looks at the world, he gets one type of experience. If a scientist looks at the same world, he gets a totally different experience. If a saint looks at the same world, he experiences something completely different. Depending upon what way we look, and how much reality we give to these states, my happiness totally depends upon that viewpoint.


What we want is complete happiness. Satyam, Gnanam, Anantam, Brahma. Now it is very interesting.
So how wonderful it is! If I want to be happy, what are we ordinarily doing? We are saying, "You be real and let me experience it." What is this book saying? "You are unreal — let me experience it." The example given again in the Dakṣiṇāmūrty Stotra: ''viśvaṃ darpaṇa dṛśyamāna nagarī tullyam.'' After bathing, whenever you go and sit in front of the mirror, who gives reality to that image? You put bhāva — you will see bhāva. The mirror just reflects. If I don't smile, it will not smile. If I smile, then it smiles. Whatever I do, I give reality to that image. But I go on looking and saying, "This is looking very bad." So what should you do? Give a slap — not to the mirror, to oneself. Because the poor mirror is only reflecting what I am.


So Sachidananda is usually the word we use. Sat, Chit and Ananda. Asti, Bhati and Priyam is another expression.
The whole world is nothing but a mirror. How I decorate myself, how I appear — that is what is very important.
----


Here Chandogya Upanishad says Satyam, Gnanam, Anantam. So Satyam and Gnanam, Sat and Chit, Asti and Bhati, exactly the same. But Anandam, instead of Anandam we use the word Anantam.
=== The Practical Usefulness of Dṛk Dṛśya Viveka ===
So this is the practical usefulness of the Dṛk Dṛśya Viveka. Do not think it is merely an Advaitic work. All these Advaitic works have got only one purpose: how to make our life very useful and practical — not only in the spiritual field, but in every field.


That is the more appropriate word. Why? Because what is Anandam? Usually we mistranslate it as happiness. But here bliss means Anantam.
Does it say so specifically? Yes. It says — with regard to the sādhana catuṣṭaya sampatti — if your health is bad, then your mood will be bad. If your mood is bad, then your understanding will be incomplete. If your understanding is incomplete, your attitude will be wrong. If your attitude is wrong, then your interaction will be wrong. If your interaction is wrong, your sukha and duḥkha depend upon your interaction. All these follow step by step.


Anantam means it is eternal. Eternal state is happiness. So that is the state we want to attain.
So the body is like a mirror. The mind also is like a mirror. Both are instruments. The more fit you make the instruments, even the act of making the instrument fit itself gives tremendous happiness.


This is the Prayojana. Then what is the Sambandha, Vishaya? What is the Vishaya? My purpose is to attain to God. This book is teaching about chemistry.
Suppose you have an ordinary bike or car. If it is, as they say, MOT fit — everything fine, tyre pressure correct — to that extent your travel will be comfortable. But suppose you buy a very high-cost car with more luxury, more controls, more gadgets — then it might increase your comfort a little more. But so far as any instrument is defective, it will make you immediately uncomfortable.


What is the connection between chemistry and my goal? There is no relationship. So this book must have that subject matter which deals exclusively with spirituality. That is the Vishaya.
And the person who is inside has another instrument: the mind. If the mind is made normally healthy, it will at least avoid misery even if it doesn't give higher happiness. For example, suppose you work very hard and become very hungry — then you can enjoy even ordinary food very nicely. In that way, if your mind is not very highly developed but does not have negative things like worrying, misinterpreting, finding fault — you may not get higher happiness, but you won't get misery either.


Vishaya means subject matter. So Sambandha, this is the Sambandha. This book teaches spirituality.
One day, your normal day in an office with a bad boss and bad colleagues who every day try to make your life very hard — imagine that one day all of them work very normally. They have not praised you, but they have also not unnecessarily created any problem. That day, how much happiness you experience! That much happiness we can experience if our mind is made to work normally.


My purpose is spirituality, how to become spiritual. So this book takes me, helps me in being spiritual. That is the Sambandha, relationship.
But if you want extra happiness, then you must make it go higher and higher in its way of looking at things.


Otherwise people can mistake and they want to meditate and they go on watching movies. What is the relationship between these two? There is no relationship. There should be a definite relationship between our Prayojana and Vishaya and Sambandha.
So how to make both body and mind fit? That is in a way the very first step — yama and niyama, āsana, prāṇāyāma — and even pratyāhāra, even dhāraṇā. That is why sādhana catuṣṭaya is very, very important — not only for spiritual progress, but even to enjoy normal life properly.
----


Even if all these three are wonderful, then who is the Adhikari? Adhikari is one who sincerely wishes to have that Prayojana. So what is the relationship? Prayojana is God, attaining God. And billions of human beings, they are not Adhikaris in that respect.
=== The Structure of the Text: Three Driks and One Absolute Dṛśya ===
So with this very brief introduction, let us proceed to the first few ślokas — five ślokas — which establish that there are three seers, three Dṛks. And how many Dṛśyas? One absolute Dṛk, one absolute Dṛśya, and two that are a combination of both Dṛk and Dṛśya.


Means they are not interested in God. So they must be interested in God. These are called Anubandha Chatustaya, very preliminary relationships.
Three types of seers: out of these, one seer is an absolute seer, one seen is absolute Dṛśya, but two in between are both seers and also seen.


Is it clear? Whenever you have any problem, stop me and make it clear. Even if you take time, it doesn't matter. Now, Adhikari is the most important person.
The author, Bhāratī Tīrtha, brings these three seers. The first seer is the sense organs, the second seer is the mind, and the third seer is the sākṣī.


So I have a desire, just like a medical student has a desire to study medicine and become a doctor. But he may have desire, but whether he is qualified. Desire is different, qualification is different.
==== The World as Absolute Dṛśya ====
The world is the Dṛśya. What is the world experienced by? First, by the sense organs — and when I say "eye," note that I am not talking about this physical eye, this golaka. I am talking about the indriya, the subtle faculty. Never forget that. Whenever you use the word "eye," never identify it with this physical eye — this is like a camera lens. Inside this, there is an intelligent agent who is called the indriya. That is why they are also called devas.


So supposing there is a person who is blind, person who is lame, person who is unintelligent. He may have desire, in fact we all have desires. Only thing is we don't have qualifications.
Without this indriya, even the sākṣī cannot see the world, because there is no world if there is no indriya. You must remember that. Even though it is God, God cannot see anything if He doesn't have the sense organs. When you see through the eye, what do you see? Colours. So if somebody is blind, he has the same sākṣī — but can he see colours? He can never see colours. Not because the colours are not there, but because the instrument is not there.


This is the truth. If somebody says you just become the President of United States, no objection. Whether you have the qualification, we don't have even the negative qualification.
==== The Sense Organs: Both Dṛk and Dṛśya ====
So the first relationship is: the world is the Dṛśya and the sense organ is the Dṛk. The second is that the sense organ becomes Dṛśya for the mind — so the mind is the Dṛk and the sense organs are the Dṛśyas. So the sense organs are both Dṛk and also Dṛśya. The world is only Dṛśya — it doesn't see anything else. So the sense organ is both Dṛk and Dṛśya.


Not only the positive qualification, we don't have even the negative qualification. What is the negative qualification? The positive qualification is you must have the knowledge, you must have the policy, you must have firm determination and all that. What is the negative quality? There are arrows directed towards President Obama.
==== The Mind: Dṛk of the Sense Organs, Dṛśya for the Sākṣī ====
The mind is the Dṛk of the sense organs, and the sense organs are the Dṛśya for the mind. The mind in its turn becomes Dṛśya for the sākṣī — not intellect: sākṣī. And sākṣī becomes the Dṛk.


Why 100,000 police, CID, FBI try to protect him? Because if he just walks, how many minutes is he going to survive? But still he knows it, that my life is kaput. He knows it, but he has that courage. Inside he may be, everybody is afraid, nobody wants, but some people have that courage.
==== The Sākṣī: The Absolute Seer ====
Now sākṣī is Dṛśya for whom? For no one — sākṣī alone. There is no one else, nothing else besides sākṣī. That is why sākṣī is the absolute seer. The world is the absolute seen — it is not Dṛk for anything else. But in between, the sense organs and the mind are both Dṛk and Dṛśya in combination.


This is a risk I have to take. And they take. You may have the positive qualities, do you have the negative quality also? All qualities must be there.
Now, at any one point, the sense organs can either be Dṛk or Dṛśya — but they cannot be both at the same time, from their own perspective. From different perspectives, however, it is possible. When you are looking at the sofa, you become the Dṛk so far as it is concerned. When I am looking at you at the same moment, you become the Dṛśya so far as I am concerned. Because these are two separate relationships, the time-space conflict doesn't arise. But even for the same sense organ, it is not possible to be both Dṛk and Dṛśya for itself at the same time. Somebody else can make it Dṛśya, but it cannot simultaneously be its own Dṛk and Dṛśya.
----


So desire is wonderful, but once you have desire, that is the first step. What is the second step? You must acquire four qualifications. This is called Sadhana, Chitustaya Sampat.
=== The Practical Implication: We Are the Master ===
Why is it necessary for us to understand these three Dṛks? Because if something is the absolute seer, it has absolute control. If something is both Dṛk and Dṛśya, its control is on a shaky ground.


What are these Sadhana, Chitustaya Sampat? Viveka. Then next is Vairagya. Third is Samadhamadi, Shat Sampat.
When you are looking at something and interpreting it in a particular way, if you remember that you are both the Dṛk and the Dṛśya, then you as Dṛk have control over the Dṛśya. But if you identify yourself with the Dṛśya, then you become a slave to the Dṛśya, and Dṛśya will take over you. But if you remember "I am the master, I can see something as I like to see it" — this is the prerogative of saints.


The last is intense desire, and that is a very important point we have to briefly discuss. We all have desire. What is the intensity of that desire? Do we have 100% desire, 50% desire, 10% desire, or 1% desire? See, that is very necessary.
The saint says, "You may be a rākṣasa, but I look upon you as God himself. Then I won't suffer." Immediately the question comes: "But what if the rākṣasa tries to kill you?" That question is coming from the rākṣasa's point of view, not from the saint's point of view. The saint thinks the rākṣasa is lovingly expressing himself to him. And so long as the saint is happy, what is your headache? Any incident that happens to a saint, he interprets it in the best possible way: "This is the Divine Mother's way. It must be very good for me."
----


So you know Sadhana, Chitustaya Sampat. That is most important. These two are common for the study of any scripture.
=== Why Understanding the Background Matters More Than Completing the Shlokas ===
So I think this is quite a good introduction. Once the introduction is over, we can proceed very quickly. Once the foreground is prepared, you know what to expect. Then we can progress quite fast. Do not think that if I go on talking like this, how many ślokas are we going to cover? You are always thinking: will he complete or not? What does it matter? Right understanding of even one śloka is much more important than trying to go through them fast and then saying, "I have completed this, this, and this." What did you learn?


Any scripture. Not only spiritual scripture, but any scripture. Whether you want to be a chemist, want to be IT, want to be even a cook.
Once you understand the background, the rest is only an elaboration and expression. If you get the idea right, then you understand what the author is going to say very clearly. In this whole book, the conceptual framework is not difficult. But the six types of samādhis are slightly subtle — though not really very difficult. I will give you some examples so that you can understand them very clearly. You don't even need to go through the Sanskrit, because Sanskrit can create confusion about what this word means, what that word means.


Even a cook must have these four qualities. Otherwise he will be cooking. He also cooks.
Six kinds of samādhi — what are they? A very crystal-clear division: savikalpa and nirvikalpa; āntarika and bāhika; śabdānuvidha and dṛśyānuvidha; nirvikalpa. Two into three, six. Both savikalpa and nirvikalpa apply to internal and external experience.
----


But whether people will be happy with his cooking or not, that is a different issue. So this is one of those beautiful books. So first briefly about the authorship.
=== Spiritual Life Begins with Knowing "I Am God" ===
When Rāja Mahārāj said that spirituality starts from nirvikalpa samādhi — what is he actually telling us? What is, first of all, spiritual life? If you understand that word properly, then it is very easy to understand his statement. What is spiritual life? Seeing God everywhere. Who can see God everywhere? Only a person who is God. Only God can see God.


A few people believe it has been written by Shankaracharya, and that is not supported by the issues. Some people, a few more people claim it has been written by Swami Vidyaranya. But most people believe it was Bharati Tirtha, one of the Shankaracharyas of the Sringeri Peetha, who was also supposed to be the guru of Vidyaranya Swami himself.
So what is nirvikalpa samādhi? To know that I am God. Once you attain that state, then you see everything as God. Until that time, you are having faith, you are believing — "scriptures say everything is God, so I must look upon everything as God" — but you are not actually experiencing it. This is helpful, until you have actual experience. But actually, no knowledge ever comes until you experience — even in the ordinary world. When will you know what milk is? Only after you taste it. Even if you taste one drop, after that nobody can take away that knowledge of milk from you for eternity.
----


So most people believe. For our study, it is not really necessary who has written it. Whether it is a wonderful book, there is no controversy about it.
=== The Story of Upamanya: The Importance of Direct Experience ===
That is why there is the story of Upamanyu. ''Upamanyu muni kare tapasyā, dugdha samudra vāya vayu.'' He was the son of a very poor Brahmin — so poor that even the poorest in those days had at least one cow, but he didn't have any cow at all. His friends and colleagues all talked of what they had, and only he had nothing. His mother used to mix rice with water until it became pale white, and she used to say, "This is milk, you drink it." He was very happy, because he thought that was milk.


It is a most marvellous book. And it is very specialised. Even Vivekachudaman doesn't give certain points which he gives here.
Then one day he was invited for a feast and that day he got real milk. He came home and said, "You have never given me real milk?" The mother fell into tears. She said, "My son, it is not that we don't want to give you — we don't have it. There is no way we can get any cow." And I want milk — because after tasting real milk, he never wants to go back to the old rice-water. So the mother said, "Go and pray to Lord Śiva. He alone can fulfil your desire." So he went and prayed to Lord Śiva, and Śiva gave him not only one glass of milk — he gave him a whole ocean of milk to swim in.


Of that, the second part of it is the six types of Samadhi and meditation, which we will come to later on. And as I said, it is very short. Now about the title.
So the point is: until we experience something ourselves, intellectual knowledge will be only information. But once we experience, that is real knowledge. The same applies to spiritual life. Until we have some experience, we are only thinking, "This is God, that is God" — it is on very, very shaky ground. But if you have one experience, then you know for certain. At least you know the possibilities. That is why Hinduism places so much importance on direct experience — because once you have that experience, nobody can shake you. But until then, you can be shaken any number of times.
----


Drik Drishya Viveka. As I said, any scripture must be very practical, very useful in our day-to-day life. So this Drik Drishya Viveka need not be interpreted only in the highest spiritual sense of the real and unreal.
=== Everything is Imagination: Science and Spirituality Agree ===
That is why Brahmanandajī said that until you experience nirvikalpa samādhi — but why nirvikalpa? What about savikalpa samādhi? Because savikalpa samādhi is also your own imagination. Any object is whose imagination? That is why image and imagination fall into the same world. An image is nothing but imagination.


It can also be used in our day-to-day life. So what is Drik? Experiencer. What is Drishya? Whatever is experienced.
So anything — a tree — is my imagination. Is it my imagination, or is it reality? This fundamental law of psychology we always forget. We don't know what is actually out there. We only know what falls on our mind. When that image falls into the mirror of my mind, it becomes imagination. I imagine it is called a tree.


What is Viveka? The correct, right way of establishing relationship between these two. Now let me give you a small example. Suppose one day morning you want to go to office and you want to have breakfast and go to the office.
Why do I say it is a tree? I see this object and I say this is a human being, this is a tree, this tree is tall, this tree is small, this is a green tree, this is a red tree. All these names we are giving only in our imagination. This has nothing to do with scriptures — this is science, pure science.


And for some reason, imagine, the breakfast has not turned out to be good. But you need to have breakfast. What type of attitude do you have towards that? So if you have the right attitude, then you will have no problem.
We don't know what is outside. We only know what falls within the range of our sense organs. There are billions of microbes roaming all around us — do you see them? No, because they are not in the range of our sense organs. Whatever falls within the range, that only we imagine. And does the mind image things exactly as they fall?


Okay, all that I need is some breakfast. It may not be tasty, but it is substantial. It is very good for my health.
Even from the physiological point of view, it is very interesting. Here is a tree that falls into these two eyes. Where does the right eye's image go? Into the left side of the brain. Where does the left eye's image go? Into the right side. The tree is standing upright, but how does the image stand? Upside down — inverted. And it is the brain which resolves all of this: it makes the image upright, makes it one instead of two, coordinates left and right. It does so much video editing before it presents itself to your mind. I am not talking about spirituality — I am talking about pure physiology. Is it not a fact? If you are a scientist, you will learn all those things.


And let me have it and go. If you have that type of attitude, then your day will start in a nice manner. It is just as an example.
So we don't know what is outside. We only know what falls on the mind. That is why everything is an imagination. That is why even if you think of God, it is only an image, an imagination. But this imagination is based upon scriptural direction. What is the purpose? That you take this image as a help — not as reality, but as a pointer. That is why it is called a symbol. Any idol, any thought is nothing but a pointer to the reality.


Or you may be having some talk with somebody and it may not be very pleasant to talk. Should it ruin your whole life, whole day's life? So it depends, you know, we are ruining. Oh, whose face did I see early in the morning? Most often we see our own faces.
God has no qualities. God is nirguṇa, nirviśeṣa, niṣkriya. Yet He is both — as the Khaṇḍana Bhavabandana stotra says: ''nirguṇa guṇamaya.'' He is both. He is sākāra and nirākāra. These are all imaginations in the brain. You have to go beyond to the reality — beyond the imagination.
----


That's why Birbal and Akbar's story, you remember? Wonderful story. Did I not tell you? I think I told, but maybe. You know, one day Akbar, his sleep was broken in the morning.
=== The Mould of the Mind: Seeing God in Everything ===
Our whole life is how we imagine. If it is the guru image, then everything appears in that image. If it is the God image, everything appears in a godly way. How we make a mould — everything falls within that mould. That is called experiencing God in every way.


It was summer, fresh. So it was still dark. So he said, I can't sleep now, let me have a walk in the garden.
Gopāler Mā — what was she seeing? Why was her brain moulded into the image of Gopāla? So whatever was falling into that mould, it appeared only as Gopāla. Holy Mother's brain was moulded into motherliness. So whatever fell into her brain, she thought, "I am her mother." This is very wonderful.


So he went out and an old servant who was working in the garden for 40 years, more than 40 years, he was sweeping and clearing the garden. So that was the first face Akbar looked at. And then as he was walking, he stumbled, fell down and injured.
There is a well-known experiment: most chicks, the first time they see something, consider it as their mother. So one researcher was hatching wild turkey eggs — collecting the eggs and twice daily moving them from upside to downside and maintaining the correct temperature, just like a mother. One of the things he wanted to prove is that the first time the chick looks at him, she will mistake him for her mother. Babies also do that — whomsoever they look at, whatever they hear, "this is my mom." So slowly the egg hatched, it came out, and he was sitting there staring at it. Immediately the chick flew into his hands, because it is instinct — if it perceives its own mother, it will fly to her.


So immediately he remembered. The first face I saw was this gardener's. Chop off his head, he gave this advice.
So here it is a human being, and he was actually behaving like a mother — looking after them a thousand times better than their own mom. He was a veterinary doctor, an entertainer, a caretaker, a walker — they would sit on his shoulders and he would walk there. All these roles rolled into one.


Fortunately, the old man heard it, ran to Birbal and saved me. And Birbal, he said, don't worry, I will save you. Meanwhile, they were all searching.
So that is how nature itself works — whoever our eyes first fall upon, love at first sight. Only hindsight makes us realise otherwise.
----


So about 9.30, 10 o'clock, Akbar still fuming and he opened his Darbar. So Birbal enters with this old man. And Akbar became furious.
=== A Closing Question: Why Do We See the Negative? ===
One last question: if we are all seeking happiness, if we all want to be happy, why is it that we see the negative in whatever we are going through, in whatever situation we are placed?


You are protecting this fellow? I wanted to chop off his head. Why did you do it? He said, before you decide to do anything, let us have a conversation. So why do you want to chop off his head? He said, first thing I saw is this fellow's face.
There are two explanations. One explanation is māyā: the origin — how and when it started — because in the beginning only God was there, and the creation itself is because of māyā. Within māyā itself these variations are there. That is the original cause. That has to be accepted on faith, because we can never probe our way back to the very beginning.


And then immediately I fell down, I got injured. Then what did you do? I ordered his head to be chopped off. What have you got to say? Akbar asked.
But the next best understanding is that everything depends upon our mind. One man has written a beautiful book about a goldfish and a shark. Essentially, what happened: there was a boy who had a beautiful goldfish in a bowl, which he was feeding regularly. One day he takes it to the seashore so that he can both play in the sea and have his favourite pet nearby. Suddenly a huge wave comes and sweeps the whole bowl away. The goldfish was thrown suddenly into the salty sea. Now the goldfish started becoming hungry, because every day the boy used to feed it — it did not know how to hunt. Suddenly a shark comes. It looks at the goldfish — and it is a good kind of shark. It thinks, "People have a very bad idea about me. Let me show my good side."


I said, this much only. He claimed, yours is the first face he saw. Now whose face is bad? Laughter Of course Akbar had no option but to help.
So it says, "Buddy, come here. I will teach you." The goldfish thinks, "I am going to die." The shark says, "Yes, but anyway, before dying you can learn something. There is a miserable way of dying and there is a happy way of dying. At least I can teach you the happy way." So the shark gives some good advice: "You must become a philosopher. First, do your best to find your food and protect yourself, whatever you can. After that, whatever comes, sit with it. Ask: what does this situation teach me? What is the best I can do? What opportunities present themselves? What new meaning can I derive?" So it gives some good sermon and then says, "Look, I have urgent work, I am going." By that time the goldfish had learned, and the only question it needed to ask itself was: do I want to remain a goldfish, or do I want to become a shark? What does the shark do? It finds its own food. It hunts and looks after itself.


So, most often we see our own faces. But this attitude, how to take everything, every experience in our strength. That is where the Drishya is not in our control.
This, in a way, is a good lesson for us to learn. So this Dṛk Dṛśya Viveka also says exactly the same thing: do we want to remain miserable — or how do we get happiness? The ordinary goldfish understanding is, "Somebody feeds me, everything should be very nice — then only I will sit and hear these Dṛk Dṛśya Viveka lessons." No. The other way is: whatever be the situation, what shall I do? What has this got to teach me? Do I depend on others, or do I depend upon my own self? This is the lesson Vedānta ultimately wants to teach.
----


But Drik, we have a lot of control. We don't have control over the event, but we have a control. We can determine how we can view a thing in a better way.
=== Māyā, Habit, and What Is Within Our Power ===
So, the first cause of seeing the negative is the positive mind we fail to cultivate. The second is our own circumstances — the law of cause and effect — and within our limits, we ourselves can change our fate. That much we can do.


This is called Vedanta scope. This is called Vedanta. How to see if it is a devotee? He says, whatever good or bad happens is God's will.
But the rest — Mahāmāyā — for that a different lesson:


If it is a devotee. If he is a Karma Yogi, he says, whatever happens is the result of my own actions. If it is a Dhani, he says, it is my own doing.
''Śaraṇāgata dīnārta paritrāṇa parāyaṇe, sarvasyārti hare devi nārāyaṇi namas te.''


He says, after all you know I am Brahman. So if something happens, whom else can you blame? Only one can blame oneself. So this is very important for us.
For that there is no ordinary remedy. But for whatever is within our means, Mahāmāyā is not going to come — she has already provided the means for us. That is the important lesson.


Why we can't be happier? Now this is a very important subject again. As we are now, we can be a million times happier than we are. With the present circumstances.
Essentially, the whole of life is a rediscovery of one's own self. It is almost as if we want to be miserable — but no, that is not correct. No one wants to be miserable. But then why do we create it? That is because of two reasons: originally, it is because of Mahāmāyā; secondly, it is because of the habits we have developed ourselves. Habits can be changed by ourselves with some effort. But the original Mahāmāyā will never go until the Mother herself removes it. But if we do our part, she will do her part.


Imagine people in Africa, children. If in your childhood you were like that. Imagine children in South America.
I heard every day many, many children are killed, stabbed, raped and thrown in the gutters in South America. If we had been under those circumstances, and then if magically somebody transports us into this present situation, we would consider we are in heaven. We are already in heaven.
So many things which we are taking for granted every minute of our life. This is just like a super dream for so many millions of people in the world. And yet how unfortunate we are.
Our happiness or unhappiness is no better than their happiness or unhappiness. Most marvellous thing is this Maya. You know, one important factor is that our happiness doesn't depend upon what things we are getting, but how we take those things, interpret those things.
One simple example, Swami Bhajananandji gives. You know, a peasant sitting for his rough breakfast, maybe on a ragi roti, chapati made out of millet. And another person sitting in a seven-star hotel with caviar and other things.
Just imagine these two situations. A peasant, he is ravenously hungry. This fellow has to take a lot of appetisers before he can even swallow this.
Most of the time he is only swallowing. Even if both of them are hungry, is there any difference in the quantum of happiness this person gets and that person gets? So long as it is an experience of the mouth, it is exactly the same. So any experience we have of our five sense organs, it makes no difference whether it is a villager who is seeing an ordinary sight, whether a city person is exotically seeing, or whether President Obama is having.
I heard that some of these fellows, they have only this muslin breakfast. What difference is there if you are sitting in the White House and having muslin breakfast? Muslin or what do you call it? Cereal. And you are also sitting here and having first-class roti.
Whose happiness is better? Mine. So the point is, whatever experience we are having through the five sense organs, objectively it makes no difference. But if a saint is eating something, his happiness is inexpressible because he is eating prasadam.
If a happy person, a positive person is experiencing, his happiness is marvellous. But if a person is grumbling, grumpy and temperamental, short-tempered, worried and depressed person, he may be having, this is the point. It makes no difference, and worse.
So it doesn't make what we are experiencing. Everything depends upon who is experiencing it. It's very practical.
So we can be much happier people, but some of you are grumbling, oh I didn't get promotion, I could have done with some raise. And all those things. But imagine, millions of people who do not have any employment, who are not only suffering because of lack of money, but more importantly, they don't know how to spend their time properly.
They have experience, they have knowledge, but they don't have the opportunity to express themselves. How fortunate we are in so many ways. So that is where even Dhritarashtra Viveka can be of absolute importance.
But as I said, let us first analyse. Viveka means, what was the definition I gave? The highest type of attitude we can bring to any one of our experiences. And what is Drik? A seer, who is seeing or experiencing.
And what is Drishya? Whatever is experienced. Now what is important here? If there is Drik and Drishya. Let me give you a small example.
I am here, this sofa is here. I am the Drik. Now here Drik means, the literal translation is, a person who is seeing.
Now seeing doesn't mean related only to the eyes. Seeing means experiencing through any one of our sense organs, including the mind. Because mind interprets or interrupts, intermediate to its stance, and it imposes its own way of experiencing things.
The same thing. If I have a cataract, I have one way of looking at it. If I have short of hearing, it creates another type of... You know that, Mary? Hi, Mary, I love you.
You know, an old couple were sitting. Old man was reading and the old lady was sewing. Suddenly the man took into his head to express something.
So he shouted, Mary, I love you. She was very deaf. So she said, what? So went near, shouted louder, Mary, I love you.
He said, what? He went very near and shouted in her ear, Mary, I love you. She said, that is alright, I also don't love you. So what is the point here? When I am seeing, as an example, this book or this sofa.
This sofa is called Drishya. That is an experience. I am called the experiencer.
Now in these two, who is most important? Because the Drishya has no consciousness. And therefore it doesn't even know, let alone it doesn't know it is a Drik, it doesn't even know it is the Drishya. The Drik alone has complete control.
Without Drishya, Drik can remain. Without Drik, Drishya can never remain. So Drik is in charge of everything, the most important thing.
This is the first point. The second point is, there could be billions and billions of Drishyas. But how many Driks? Only one.
What it means is, when I say that this is the world, the whole world falls into the category of Drishya. And I, the conscious, intelligent experiencer alone is only one. We can understand this with regard to the whole universe.
But we cannot, and non-living things. But when it comes to living things, we have a confusion. What is the confusion? Say, I am seeing all of you sitting here.
But I am seeing this sofa, this carpet, this book, these windows. So I know, I am this ear, they are this ear. But when it comes to you, I am seeing you and you are also seeing me.
That confusion comes. So we have to be very clear that all of you also fall under that Drishya category only. Why? So only one criteria.
What is that criteria? Because, so you may be there, you may not be there. Even if you are not there, I am there. But if I am not there, you are not there at all.
Everything depends upon me. That means how I interpret you. So that is why Viveka, Drik Drishya is fine.
But Viveka, a special type of scope makes all the difference in my experience. So the next point we have to understand is, here is Drik, and if there is nothing else, no scope is necessary. Here is Drishya, there is no Drik.
No scope is not even thought, not necessary. It is not at all to be thought of. But when there is a Drik and a Drishya, then there must be some kind of scope.
So if it is microscope vision, then you will see even the smallest of the faults. If it is telescope, you will magnify even the smallest scope, blow it up into the biggest. So that will make a lot of difference, not to you, not to the Drishya.
You see, this is an important point. When I am looking in a particular way, it will never affect you, or I don't know how it will affect you. But it is going to affect me.
For my own good, I must have a right type of scope, understanding. That is where viveka is necessary. Viveka means the right type of developing a view, an attitude, an understanding.
Now what is the right type of understanding? When we say understanding, we have two views. When we say understanding, we have got two views. What is the view? One view is called misunderstanding.
Another is called right understanding. What is misunderstanding? Even though there is some nature of the Drishya, but I do not understand. It is my subjective understanding of the Drishya.
Poison, I consider poison as nectar. I can consider nectar as poison. It has nothing to do with the object.
It has everything to do with the subject only. It is my understanding. That is called misunderstanding.
What is right understanding? To know an object as it is, and not as I understand it, interpret it, experience it. Now the whole subject matter of Vedanta is that what you consider as an object, first of all, is not an object. It is nothing but subject.
Second, what you consider the object. Your object means you are making an unnecessary division. I am the subject and you are the object.
The undivided Akhanda is being made into Khanda. Subject, object, that is why it is called Maya. Thirdly, even if I divide it, if I can understand its true value, its true nature, then it would help me a lot.
But to understand it, it is completely different. This is the classical example. What is the classical example? There is a rope and here is me.
And if I see it as a snake, it is a wrong understanding on my part. But if I understand it as a rope, then at least I will be free from misery. But if I understand that rope as nothing but my own self or as God, then my... You see, three types of experiences.
Experiencing a rope as a snake produces only misery. Experiencing the rope as a rope may not produce happiness, but at least doesn't produce misery. But experiencing the rope as none other than Brahman, it produces Ananta Sukha, because seeing God.
So this is the Prayojana of this Viveka Buddhi. So, Drik and Drishya. How many Drishyas? It could be any number.
And how many Driks? Only one Drik. Now there is further point to be understood. Is there really a Drishya or is it because the Drik is himself looking into his own mirror and creating a lot of Drishyas? Is there a Drishya at all? Example given is, when you are dreaming, how many Drishyas are there? Is there any such Drishya? Who is creating it? We are creating it.
But at that time, if we are having this Drishya Viveka class, and if I happen to say that all this Drishya is completely your own stupid creation, would you believe it? Believe me. You will never believe it. You see, if we say that Ketankar and Nandini Banerjee, they are all what is called phantoms in the brain.
Phantoms in the brain. Would they believe it? They will say, ulta, you are having phantoms in your brain. But when you wake up, you will see all the Drishyas that he has seen.
Only your own imagination. That is the important point these scriptures are making. Vivekachudamani or Upanishads or everything.
Because if Brahman is one, where from the Drishya has come? Drik and Drishya has come. So, the first thing is not to misinterpret any Drishya. The second is to recognise a Drishya as it is.
And the last impediment is to understand a Drishya is none other than Drik only. So, this Drishya is divided into three categories. Jagrad Avastha, Swapna Avastha and Sushukti Avastha.
That is why Pituri Avastha or Drik, this year, he is imparting reality. That is a very important point at this stage we have to understand. Now, this is the waking state.
We call it waking state. So, is the waking state a reality or am I imparting reality to it? See, you are looking at me and you are experiencing me, is it not? Suppose you happen to doze off, what would be my fate as far as you are concerned? Kaput. Is it not? As far as you are concerned, the whole Drishyatra panchayat is gone.
Swami also, he is the first person to go. You know why? Because he was the person to cause it. One priest was giving a sermon.
So, an old woman came and sat with her grandson. And very soon, the old woman started snoring. So, the priest got annoyed for two reasons.
One reason is, she is sitting in the front row. Second reason is, he wants to be heard. But the old woman snored.
It was bigger than the fellow's sermon. Third is, you know, it is an insult. Even if you don't listen, you pretend to listen, he can tolerate it.
But frankly, she is going to sleep like that. So, he called her grandson, you, wake up your grandma. He said, no way.
You put her to sleep. You wake her up. It is your responsibility.
So, jagra davastha is our creation. How do we know? Because the moment we withdraw, giving reality to the jagra davastha. That means, by going to the swapna avastha, you have withdrawn that authority to make it real.
You are the real. A simple illustration to make this point clear. Imagine three rooms.
Completely in pitch darkness. There are many things. But if you look at any of the rooms, what do you see? Nothing.
But you take a torch and you put it in. You will see many things in that room. The moment you go to the next room, the first room remains pitch dark.
There may be things. That is not the point. Nobody can see them.
And if you come to the third room, the other two rooms become completely dark. What is the point? I am trying to make... The person who is carrying the torchlight, he alone makes those rooms come out alive, real, useful. Without that torchlight, the rooms themselves are completely dark, useless.
This is an example. So, when we go to the swapna avastha, both sushupti and jagrat avastha become unreal. Unreal means they do not even exist.
When we are in the jagrat avastha, the other two do not exist. When we are in the deep sleep, those other two do not exist. That means, what is the conclusion? We are giving reality to each one of those states.
And that means, those three states are the drishya, and we are the drig. Now, which of these three states are real? All of them are completely unreal, until I decide to give reality to them. Anything that I experience, I am giving reality to that object.
This is the simplest truth. Do you see? So, what is the practical result of this? Our happiness or unhappiness depends totally on ourselves. Is it a fiction? Is it brainwashing? Or is it a reality? What I am saying is true.
That's why, if a worldly person looks at the world, he gets one type of experience. If a scientist looks at the same world, he gets a totally different experience. If a saint looks at the same world, he experiences a completely totally different experience.
And depending upon what way we look, how much reality we give to these states, my happiness totally depends upon that viewpoint. So, how wonderful it is! If I want to be happy, what are we doing now? We are saying that you be real and let me experience it. What is this book saying? That you are unreal, let me experience it.
So, how is it? The example given again in Dakshinamurthy's Totra. Vishwam, Darpana, Drishyamana, Nagari, Tuliya. After bathing, whenever you go and sit in front of the mirror, who gives reality to that image? You know, you put Bhuttu, you will see Bhuttu.
You put something here like this, you see something there. The mirror, just it reflects. But if I don't smile, it will not smile.
You see? If I smile, then it smiles. Whatever I do, I give reality to that image. But I go on looking, this is looking very bad.
So, what should you do? Give a slap. Where? Not to the mirror, to oneself. Because the poor mirror, it is only reflecting what I am.
This example is a very good example. The whole world is nothing but a mirror. And how I decorate myself, how I appear myself, that's very important.
So, this is the practical usefulness of Drik Drishya Vijayaka. Do not think it is an Advaithic work. All these kinds of Advaithic works have got only one purpose.
How to make our life very useful and practical. Not only in spiritual field, but in every field. In every field.
Does it say so? Specifically, yes. It says, you know, Sadhana Chaitra Shastra Sampatthi. What does it say? If your health is bad, then your mood will be bad.
If your mood is bad, then your understanding will be incomplete. If your understanding is incomplete, your attitude will be wrong. If your attitude is wrong, then your interaction will be wrong.
If your interaction is wrong, your Sukha Dukha depends upon your interaction. All these follow step by step. So then, mind is another instrument.
So, body is like a mirror. Mind also is like a mirror. Instruments.
So, the more fit you make the instruments, even making the instrument fit, itself gives tremendous happiness. Let me give you an illustration. Supposing, you have a bicycle or a car.
It meets on their varieties, you know, from the less expensive bikes to very, very expensive bikes. On iPod, do you know how much it has gone on the internet? eBay? Seven million dollars. What? iPod.
Why? Who owned it? Somebody. I don't know who owned it. But that is the news.
So, what is seven million? The iPod inside is exactly the same. But the outside is covered with 24 karat gold and very precious diamonds and all those things. The buttons and all those things is, you know, like mirror.
Ambani's house mirror, have you ever seen? Don't go and see it. Because even if Ambani's mirror also, you will appear in that mirror. Outside is covered with lot of gold, diamonds, buttons, the handles and all those things will be there.
So, you see, what is the point? It's a mirror. It's a very good example. So, our body, every instrument is a mirror.
Imagine, you have an ordinary bike or ordinary car. And if it is made, what is called, MOT fit, everything, the pressure, tyre pressure, everything is fine. To that extent, your travel will be comfortable.
So, this is an example. But suppose you buy a very high, costly car with more luxury. It can run speedily.
It has more controls, more gadgets, etc. Then it might increase your comfort a little more. But so far as that can give it, I am not talking about the mind.
So far that instrument is defective, then it will make you immediately uncomfortable. That is, every external object is like that instrument. But the person who is inside, he has another instrument.
What is it? The mind. So, if the mind is also made normally healthy, then it will at least avoid misery, even if it doesn't give. One example given is, to understand properly, suppose you work very hard and you get very hungry.
Then you can enjoy even ordinary food also very nicely. In that way, if your mind is not very highly developed, but it doesn't have these negative things, like worrying and misinterpreting, finding faults, etc. You may not get higher happiness, but you won't get at least misery.
And you know how much happiness we can get. You can imagine through your experience. One day, your normal day, suppose you are working in an office, and suppose you have what is called a bad boss and bad colleagues.
Every day they are trying to make your life very hard. Imagine. Imagine, one day, all of them worked very normally.
They have not praised you, but they have also not unnecessarily created any problem. That day, how much enjoy happiness you experience. See, that much happiness we can experience, if our mind is made to work normally.
But if you want extra happiness, then you must make it go higher and higher way of looking at things. So both body and mind, how to make them fit? And that is in a way the very first step. Yama and Niyama, Asana, Pranayama.
Until this. And even Pratyahara. You can say even Pratyahara.
You can say even Dharana. Until that. So that is why Sadhana Chaitustraya is very, very important, not only for spiritual progress, but even to enjoy life, normal life, properly.
It is very important. So with this very brief introduction... Let us... So the first few shlokas, five shlokas, the first thing what it does is, that there are three Seers. There are three Seers, three Bricks.
And there are how many Brishyams? Brishyams? One absolute Brick, one absolute Brishyam, and two combination of both Brick and Brishyam. Three Seers. It will be clear when we... I will briefly tell about it.
Three types of Seers. Yes. Out of these, one Seer is an absolute Seer, one seen Brishyam is absolute Brishyam, but two in between are both Seers and also seen.
Now, before you make further notes, let me briefly explain this. So the author Bharati Devta brings these three Seers. The first Seer is the sense organs, the second Seer is the mind, the third Seer is the Sakshi.
So the world is the Drishya, and the Drishya or experience is experienced by whom? First Seer is the sense organs. The eye, not this eye, this is a Golaka. We are talking about Indriya and Sukshma.
Never forget that. Whenever you use the word eye, never identify with this eye. This is called... it's like a camera lens.
That's not important. But inside this, there is an intelligent agent who is called Indriya. That's why they are also called Devas.
So this eye is the Master Seer and the word is the seen. Without this Indriya, even the Sakshi cannot see the world because there is no world if there is no Indriya. You must remember that.
Even though it is God, God cannot see anything if He doesn't have the sense organs. So when you see through the eye, what do you see? Colours. So if somebody is blind, he has got the same Sakshi.
Can he see colours? He can never see colours. It is not possible for him to see the colours. Not because the colours are not there, but because the instrument is not there.
So this is the first, the world is the Drishya and the sense organ is the Rik. The second is, the sense organ becomes Drishya for the mind. So the mind is the Drik and the sense organs are the Drishyas.
So the sense organs are both Drik and also Drishya. The world is only Drishya. It doesn't see anything else.
So the sense organ is both Drik and Drishya. Now the mind is the Drik of the sense organs and the sense organs are the Drishya for the mind. Now the mind in its turn becomes Drishya for the Sakshi.
Not intellect, Sakshi. Sakshi. And Sakshi becomes the Drik.
Now Drik is the Drik for seeing the mind and Drik is the Drishya. For whom? Sakshi is Drishya for whom? Sakshi. So there is no one else, nothing else besides Sakshi.
That's why Sakshi is the absolute seer. World is the absolute seen. It is not Drik for anything else.
But in between the sense organs and the mind are both a combination. They are also Driks, they are also Drishyas. So at any one point, the sense organs can either be Drik or be Drishya but they cannot be both.
Yes, at the same time. They are both Drik and Drishya. Because when they are looking, you are looking at the sofa and I am looking at you at the same moment as you are looking at it.
So you become the Drik, so far as it is concerned. You become a Drishya, so far as I am looking at you. Because these are two separate things, the time-space conflict doesn't arise.
You see? We make this problem because you cannot at the same time, so you can be here and you can't be there at the same time. But so far as you are looking at there, you are the Drik, but so far as I am looking at you, you are the Drishya. In that way, it is possible.
But even for that same sense organ, it is not possible to be both Drik and Drishya for itself. Somebody else can make it Drishya, but it cannot be at the same time Drik and Drishya at the same time. That's not possible.
So this is a wonderful book in that sense, there are three Driks. Why is it necessary for us to have three? It's division. Because if something is absolute seer, it has absolute control.
If something is both Drik and Drishya, its control is on a shaky ground. The unshakeable theory of such a person is on a very shaky ground. You see the point? So how is it very practical? This is a very important thing for us to study.
When you are looking at something and you are interpreting in a particular way, then if you remember this, you are both the Drik and the Drishya, then it means you as a Drik has a control over the Drishya. But if you identify yourself with the Drishya, then you become a slave to the Drishya, and Drishya will take over you. But if you remember, I am the master, I can see something as I like to see it.
This is the prerogative of saints. The saint says that you may be a Rakshasa, but I look upon you as God himself. Then I won't suffer.
Immediately the stupid question comes, what if the Rakshasa tries to kill you? You are talking from the Rakshasa's point of view, not from the saint's point of view. The saint thinks the Rakshasa is lovingly expressing itself to him. And so long as he is happy, what is your headache? This is the point.
Any incident that happens to a saint, he interprets it in the best possible way. This is Divine Mother's way. It must be very good for me.
So I think it is quite a good introduction. If any questions are there, I will deal with them. Once the introduction is over, we can proceed very quickly.
Once the foreground is prepared, you know what to expect. Then we can progress quite fast. Don't think that if I go on talking like this, then how many shlokas are we going to end up with? You are always thinking, will he complete or not? What does it matter? What does it matter? Right understanding even one shloka is much more important than trying to go through fast and then say, I have completed this, this, this.
Somebody says, no, you didn't complete it, and you get very angry. What did you learn? Very practical. But once you understand the background, see the idea you get, then the rest is only an elaboration, expression.
If you get the idea right, then you understand what he is going to tell very, very clearly, you can understand. In this whole book, this is not a difficult point. But the six types of samadhis are slightly, but not really not very difficult.
I will give you some examples so that you can understand it very clearly. And then you can read it yourself, the shlokas, and then you will be able to understand it. You don't even need to go through the Sanskrit, because Sanskrit can create, what is the meaning of this word, what is the meaning of that word? Six kinds of samadhi, what are they? Very crystal clear division, Savikalpa, Nirvikalpa, Antarika, Vahika, Shabdan Vidha, Drishyan Vidha, Nirvikalpa.
That is it, both apply to internal and external. Two into three, six. When Raja Maharaj said that spirituality starts from Nirvikalpa, after Nirvikalpa samadhi, was he actually referring to this inner and outer Nirvikalpa samadhi? No, what he is telling is, what is first of all, spiritual life.
If you understand that word properly, then it is very easy to understand his statement. What is spiritual life? Seeing God everywhere. Who can see God everywhere? Only a person.
Yes, you are right. Only God can see God. So, what is Nirvikalpa samadhi? To know that I am God.
Once you attain that state, then you see everything as God. Until that time you are having faith, you are believing, scriptures tell everything is God, so I must look upon everything as God. So, you are not trying, so that is helpful.
Until you have an actual experience, actually no knowledge ever comes until you experience, even in the ordinary world also. When will you know this is milk? Only after you taste it. Even if you taste one drop, after that nobody can take away that knowledge of milk from you for eternity.
Even if you never get any type of milk. That's why Upamanyu, you know, the story of Upamanyu. Upamanyu Muni kare tapasya dodha samudra vada vayu So, he was the son of a very poor Brahmin.
And he was so poor, that even the poorest poor in those days, had at least one cow. He didn't have any cow at all. Everybody was talking, his friends or colleagues were talking, he had an iPod, he had some other pod, and only I don't have anything.
You know, all children, they shut their parents' mouth, they want anything, you know, this friend has that, that friend has that, everybody has some pod, only I don't have any pod. The parents have nothing to say about it. So, until 13 years, I thought my parents' name was shut up.
Because until 13 years, he goes on telling, my friends have these friends, if they say no, no, no, no, shut up. Leave me, that's all. So, Upamanyu, his mother used to mix rice with water, and it used to become pale, white.
She used to say, this is milk you drink. He was very happy, because he thought that was milk. Then one day he was invited for a feast, and that day he got real milk.
Then he came home and said, you have never been given real milk? Then the mother fell into tears. She said, my son, it's not that we don't want to give you, we don't have. There's no way we can get any cow.
And I want milk, because after tasting milk, he never wants to go back to the old rice water. So, mother says, go and pray to Lord Shiva. He alone can fulfil your desire.
So, he went and prayed to Lord Shiva, and he gave him not only one glass of milk, he gave him a whole ocean of milk. You can be swimming in it. This is the story of Upamanyu.
So, the point is, until we experience something ourselves, intellectual knowledge will be only information. But once we experience, that is real knowledge. So, the same thing applies to spiritual life also.
Until we have some experience, you only go on thinking, this is God, that is God. It is on a very, very shaky ground. But if you have one experience, then you know for certain.
At least you know the possibilities of that. That is why Hinduism places so much importance on direct experience. Because once you have that experience, then nobody can shake you.
But until you can be shaken, any number of times. So, that is why Brahmanandaji said, until you experience Nirvikalpa Samadhi, why Nirvikalpa Samadhi? What about Savikalpa Samadhi? Because Savikalpa Samadhi is also your own imagination. You see, any object is whose imagination.
That is why image and imagination fall into the same world. An image is nothing but imagination. So, anything, a tree is my imagination.
Is it my imagination? Or is it reality? This fundamental law of psychology, we always forget. You don't know what is there. But its image is falling in our mind.
When that image falls into the mirror of my mind, it becomes imagination. I imagine it is called a tree. It looks like this.
Why do I say it is a tree? Because I see this object, say this is a human being. I have to distinguish, isn't it? So, I make different names. Let me give the name human being to this image.
Let me give another name to this image called tree. Let me say this is between two trees. This is a tall tree.
This is a small tree. This is a green tree. This is a red tree.
All these names, in our imagination only, we are giving. You see the point? So, this is nothing to do again with scriptures or anything. This is science, pure science.
We don't know what is the outside. We only know what falls on our mind. There are billions of microbes roaming here.
Do you see them? Because they are not in the range of our sense organs. Whatever falls within the range, that only we imagine. Imagination, imaging the mind.
Does it image exactly as it falls? Even from the most physiological point of view, it is very interesting. What is physiological point of view? Here is a tree that falls into these two eyes. Where does this right eye's image go? Into the left side.
What is the left image goes? Into the right eye. The tree is standing upright. And here the tree is standing? Upside down.
Inverted. Not only inverted. The image is upside down.
Now it is the brain which is resolving. This makes it upright. Makes it one instead of two.
Makes it the left and the right coordinates. It does so much of this video editing before it presents itself to your mind. I am not talking about spirituality.
I am talking about pure physiology. Is it not a fact? This itself is so complicated. Just imagine.
If you are a scientist, you will learn all those things. Even your camera, how does it see? It is exactly everything. That is why the negative will be... So what you have to do? To make it positive.
Spirituality is to make everything positive. See, how interesting, wonderful. So, we don't know what is outside.
We only know what falls. That is why everything is an imagination. That is why even if you think of God, it is only an image, an imagination.
But this imagination is based upon scriptural direction. What is the purpose? The purpose is that you take this image as a help. Not as reality.
As a pointer. That is why it is called a symbol. You must never forget that.
Any idol, any thought is nothing but a pointer. The reality is... Never mistake it. But it doesn't mean these things are wrong.
It means they are not reality, but they are pointers to the reality. And that is what we need. We need correction.
Go this way. Think of God this way. Develop these qualities.
God has no qualities. God is Nirguna, Nirvisesha, Nishtriya. Don't you see? Khandana, Bhavavandana, Jagavandana, Vanditum, Tiranjana, Naralukodara, Nirguna, Gunamaya.
So, He is both. He is not both. Even if you cannot talk, He is Saguna or He is Nirguna.
He is Akara, He is Nira. These are all imaginations in the brain. You have to go beyond to the reality.
Let it not be an imagination in the brain. So, this is brain, you know. Brain means better brain.
This is brain. One fellow, one old woman, went to a shop for shopping. Now, the owner of that shop gave strict instructions.
Never, never say to anybody, we don't have this thing. You say, if it is not there, we ordered it. We are expecting it within 2-3 days.
So, one day he went, you know that, one day he went there and he saw this assistant telling madam, no, we don't have that and we don't think we expect it anytime soon. The owner got wild. He pushed aside the assistant and said, no madam, we just ordered it.
We are expecting it within 2-3 days. And then the old woman looked blank at him and went away. After that, he asked her, what was the woman wanting? She said, she was asking about rain.
She was asking about rain. Our whole life is how we imagine. If it is Guru image, then everything appears in the image.
If it is God image, it appears in the Godly way. How we make a mould. Everything falls within that mould.
That is called experiencing God in every way. Gopalarma, what was she seeing? Why her brain was moulded into the image of Gopal? So whatever was falling into that mould, it was only appearing as Gopal. This is the simple truth.
Holy Mother's brain is moulded into motherliness. So whatever is falling into her brain, she thinks, I am her mother. This is very wonderful.
Experiment is going on. Even to see those experiments is to progress in spiritual life. So one man was experimenting.
Because most of the chicks, the first time what they see, they consider as their mother. So what this fellow, he was making, I think what is that, wild turkey. Turkey, you saw that? Many people are making this experiment.
Turkeys, you know. He was hatching the eggs. He collected the eggs.
And then like a mom, twice daily he was moving it from upside to downside like that and maintaining correct temperature. One of the things he wanted to prove is, the first time the chick looks at him, she will mistake. She will think, this is my mom.
Babies also, that's what they do. Whomsoever they look, whatever they hear, this is my mom. So he was practically showing it to us on the film, how slowly it hatched, it came out.
And he was also sitting there staring at it. And then immediately she flew into his hands. Because it is instinct for them, if it is its own mother, they will fly into it.
So here it is a human being. And actually he was also behaving like a mother only. And he was very charismatic.
He was not there to kill them. He was there to experiment and see. He was looking after them a thousand times better than his own mom.
He was a veterinary doctor. He was an entertainer. And he was a caretaker.
He was a walker, means they would sit on his shoulders and he would be walking there. All these roles rolled into one. So how this nature itself, we trust, that is how, whoever our eyes fall, love at first sight.
Only hindsight. Why was I married by a judge? I should have been a Jew. One last question.
So if we are all seeking happiness, we all want to be happy, so why is it that we see the negative in whatever we are going through or what situation we are placed in? See, there are two explanations to it. One explanation is that Maya, the origin, how and when it started, because in the beginning only God was there. Then the creation itself is because of Maya.
Within Maya itself these variations are there. So that is the original cause. The secondary, that has to be accepted on faith.
Because we can never probe and come to this is the beginning. But the next best is that everything depends upon our mind. One man has written a beautiful book.
It is called Gold Fish and Shark. You have heard of that? It's a beautiful story. Who stole my cheese? Who moved my cheese? So it is a book like that.
So what happened? There was a boy. Oh, you have? These people, they don't have, you know. It's a storybook.
A man who had lost his job and then how he sat down and said, OK, the job is not there, how do I make my life now? Essentially, that is the essence of it. So he became an advisor. Like, you know, a failed marriage man, he becomes a marriage counsellor.
So this man became an advisor for many companies. So he made up one story and it became very popular. It came out in the form of a book.
Essentially, what happened, there was a boy. He had a beautiful gold fish in a bowl. It was very happy.
He was feeding it regularly. One day he takes it to the shore, seashore, so that he can both play in the sea and also have his favourite pet. So what happens, suddenly a huge wave comes and then takes away the whole bowl.
The gold fish was thrown suddenly into the salty sea. Now the gold fish started becoming hungry because every day this boy used to feed it dainty dishes and all that, lovingly protecting. Now he did not know how to hunt.
Suddenly a shark comes. A shark. And it looks at this gold fish.
And then it is a good kind of shark. Just to make it, you know, it has an idea. People have a very bad idea about me.
Let me now show a good side that I have also got a good side. The story is beautiful, simply beautiful. So it says, buddy, come here.
I will teach you. So what have you got? Oh, I am going to die. Yes, anyway, before dying, you can learn something.
There is a miserable way of dying. There is a happy way of dying. At least I can teach you.
Happy way of dying. So he takes it. What is it? Oh, see, the thing is, you must become a philosopher.
That means you must find out. Life is all about philosophy. So first of all, you do your best to find your food, to protect yourself, whatever you can.
And after that, whatever comes, you sit and stay. Okay, this is the situation. So what does it teach me? What best can I do? What opportunities presents? What new meaning can I derive? All these things you can learn.
So it gives some good sermon and says, look here, I have an urgent work. I am going. By that time, the goldfish had learned.
What did it learn? Only to question itself and say, do I want to be a goldfish, remain a goldfish, or do I want to become a shark? What does the shark do? It finds its own food. It hunts and it has to look after itself. This is the essence of the whole book.
Ultimately, the question this man wants to convey is, each one of us has to ask, do I want to remain a goldfish? Or then goldfish, you know, after that old fish. Or do I want to become a shark? This, in a way, is a good lesson for us to learn. So this Drikdrishe Viveka also is exactly the same thing.
It tells that we want to remain miserable. Or how to get happiness? Usual understanding of the goldfish. You know, somebody feeds me.
Everything should be very nice. And then only I will sit and hear this Drikdrishe Viveka lessons. No, the other way is, whatever be the situation, what shall I do? What has this got to teach? Do I depend upon, or do I depend upon my own self? This is the lesson, ultimately, Vinanta wants to teach.
So, Mataji, you are saying the first one is the positive mind. Second is our own circumstances. That is the law of cause and effect.
So, how we, ourselves, can change our fate within our limit. So that much we can do. But the rest, Mahamaya, for that a different lesson.
For that only, Sharanagata Dhyanath Paritranaparayude Sarvasyaarthi Hari Devi Narayani Namaskar For that, there is no remedy. But for whatever is within our means, Mahamaya is not going to come. She has already provided the means for us.
That is the important lesson. Essentially, the whole life is rediscovery of one's own self. It is almost like we want to be miserable.
So, even if it's not there, sometimes it's... No, that is not correct. No one wants to be miserable. But then why do we create that? That is because of two reasons.
The same. Originally, it is because of Mahamaya. Secondly, it is because of the habits we developed ourselves.
Correct. That's it. So, habits can be changed by ourselves with some effort.
But the original Mahamaya will never go until mother herself removes herself. But if we do our part, she will do her part.
[[Category:Drg Drsya Viveka]]
[[Category:Drg Drsya Viveka]]

Latest revision as of 23:46, 18 May 2026

Full Transcript (Not Corrected)

An Introduction to the Dṛk Dṛśya Viveka

A Prakaraṇa Grantha of Advaita Vedānta


Opening Invocation

Oṃ śānti, śānti, śānti, śānti. Hare Oṃ.


Why This Text Was Chosen: The Mystery of Totāpurī

From today onwards, we will cover this beautiful prakaraṇa grantha of Advaita called the Dṛk Dṛśya Viveka. Why is it so important, and especially why have I chosen this one? There is a very special reason.

When we study the great master, there is the record of Totāpurī's behaviour. Swami Śāradā Rānji very clearly mentions that Totāpurī had attained nirvikalpa samādhi. And yet, you know what happened? After nearly eleven months, he could not accept this world as a reality. He used to say it is all mithyā.

For a knower of Brahman, he should be able to see everything — both inside as well as outside — as Brahman. Otherwise there is a defect. Now this incident raised a lot of controversy in our Rāmakṛṣṇa Order, either very obviously or invisibly. How can a man who had attained nirvikalpa samādhi have to go again through this painful experience? Did he actually experience nirvikalpa samādhi, or was it something less? Why did he have to learn a new lesson? For us, nirvikalpa samādhi means it is the highest, it is the very end. And yet such a person — why should he go through this experience? Most of us either keep quiet, saying we don't understand about these things, or in any case we say it is a useless discussion, a divine mystery.

But this book provides the answer.


The Six Types of Samādhi

There are six types of samādhis one has to practise and go through. Six types of samādhis: savikalpa samādhi and nirvikalpa samādhi. Savikalpa samādhi is again of three types, and nirvikalpa samādhi is again of three types. So there are three types of inner samādhi and three types of external samādhi, and this has been recommended by this teacher.

Until I read this book, I frankly could not understand Totāpurī's behaviour. But when I read this book, I understood why he insisted that nirvikalpa samādhi is of two types — both inner as well as outer — and that he had not practised the outer nirvikalpa samādhi. His inner nirvikalpa samādhi was fine. When he closed his eyes, he could see everything as Brahman. But when he opened his eyes, it appeared to be real. He had advanced so far, and so the Divine Mother made him go through that experience, and then his realisation was complete.

So this is a book which is very, very terse, short, and brief, and yet contains the most wonderful exposition.


What is Viveka?

So, what is viveka? Usually we translate it as discrimination — intellectual gymnastics: "I know this is better and this is inferior, this is superior." That is not a very good translation. Viveka, I would prefer to say, is an attitude of mind. Everything depends upon our attitude. Attitude determines how we interpret things, and how we interpret things is our reality.

So viveka is not merely discrimination, but the development of that faculty of mind which cultivates that particular attitude and interpretation.

What do you mean by attitude? Let us take an example. What was Śrī Rāmakṛṣṇa's attitude towards women? Divine Mother. He interpreted everything only in that light: everything is Divine Mother. So suppose a woman comes and criticises him. What would be his attitude towards that event? "Divine Mother is teaching me some lesson. She is playing with me. She wants me to learn." Whether it is a good event or a bad event — everything.

That is why in the Caṇḍī you get both the positive and negative expressions of the Divine Mother:

Adhini sarva-bhūteṣu brahante rūpeṇa saṃsthitā, nidrā rūpeṇa saṃsthitā, kṣudhā rūpeṇa saṃsthitā — as well as mātr̥ rūpeṇa saṃsthitā, dayā rūpeṇa saṃsthitā, kānti rūpeṇa saṃsthitā, kṣānti rūpeṇa saṃsthitā, śānti rūpeṇa saṃsthitā. Both. Why? Because both qualities stem from whom? From the Divine Mother.

That is why the Lord in the Gītā also tells us: whatever attitudes there are, whatever bhāvas there are, they have all originated from Me only — good and bad. That is why — I think this was in the eleventh chapter — it is said He not only destroyed the Kauravas, He also destroyed the Pāṇḍavas. Practically the whole army was destroyed. Only a few people — the five Pāṇḍavas and perhaps one or two others — remained. All the rest were completely dead.

So in līlā, you cannot discriminate between good and evil. If it is līlā, good is also līlā, evil is also līlā. If it is real, then good is desirable and evil is undesirable. But if it is līlā — līlā puṣpāyaṇa — the Divine Drama will not be very enjoyable if there is no villain. Who will watch such a movie? Imagine a movie without a villain. For a drama, contrast is necessary. This Divine Drama also requires it.

If we look at our own stage of life, we do not want the villain. Villain stands for anything unpleasant. But how do we improve? What contributes to our progress? If it is always good, if it is always happy, we are stuck like doormats. This is the simple fact. In drama, what is the most important element? Contrast. If everything is comedy, people will not enjoy it. Comedy is enjoyable only when there is tragedy. This is the simple truth.


The Nature of This Book

So, this book — the name is like Vivekacūḍāmaṇi — and viveka means discrimination. Now, any book must be practically useful for us. This one is very terse, very tough, very short, but full of meaning, and yet very, very practical, helpful, and profitable. It is profitable because, from one point of view, we are all emotional creatures. This is a very good antidote for emotion. After trying to study this book, you cannot afford to be so emotional. It needs a lot of intellect to discriminate.


Introduction to Vedāntic Scriptures: The Prasthāna Traya

Let me first give a small introduction. Vedāntic scriptures fall into three categories, as you know. They are called prasthāna traya — the foundational scriptures. Traya means triad, three. What are they? The Upaniṣads, the Brahma Sūtras, and the Bhagavad Gītā. All the scriptures are divided into three categories: śruti, smṛti, and purāṇa.

The Upaniṣads: Śruti Prasthāna

The Upaniṣads fall under the category of śruti prasthāna — that is to say, pure śruti. What is śruti? The literal meaning of the word śruti means "that which is heard." It is interpreted in two ways.

The ṛṣis heard directly. But do not mistake this to mean that some words came into their ears. Intuitive discovery is called śruti, because if you merely hear, that is purely a physical thing. It could be a vision. It could be something which people feel they heard, or it could be some other type of experience. But then why is it said to be heard?

When we have some feeling intuitively, somewhere it has got to be expressed, and that expression can only be possible through saying it. You see, if you have some experience and you just go on looking at a person, the other person will never understand it. We all have a tendency — whatever emotion, thought, knowledge, or feeling we have — to vocalise it in the mind. You can never keep a thought as a thought. Either you hear it, or you see it, or you smell it, or you touch it, or you taste it. Of all these, the most important organ is the organ of hearing.

So here, the meaning of śruti is intuitive understanding — not the physical hearing of something.

The second meaning is that it is also called śruti because it has been transmitted from a competent teacher to a competent disciple. Otherwise it would not be śruti. If you say something and the other person does not understand, it cannot be called śruti. Śruti means both sides: the person who is saying and the person who is listening. That conveying of knowledge is what is called śruti. So the guru had transmitted this knowledge through the mouth — from the mouth to the ears of the disciple, and from the mouth of the disciple to the ears of his disciple — that is why it is called śruti.

Now, why is it called śruti even when we have the development of written language? When you read a book, do you hear it, or do you just read it? It is possible only to hear it — either physically we vocalise, or mentally we vocalise. There is no other way, because this is the best way of conveying śruti.

Now, any type of knowledge — even the most ordinary type of truth — if you want to convey it to somebody, it can only be conveyed to a person who has the capacity to understand it. Knowledge cannot be passed to an unfit recipient.

So the word śruti has these two meanings: first, the person who intuitively discovered and uncovered the truth — he did not invent it. Nobody can invent anything. It is not possible, because it is already there.


Creation in Advaita Vedānta: Removing the Obstacles

That is why, in Advaita Vedānta, one of the important questions that comes is about creation. What do you mean by creation? Did God create? What is your understanding of the word creation?

Creation means destroying the obstacles. Creation means destroying the obstacles. In the Patañjali Yoga Sūtras, you have the concept of kṣetrika vāta. There is a river and there is a field. The field needs water. So what does the cultivator do? He removes the obstruction between the river and the field. He doesn't create water. Water is already there. The field is also already there. But he digs. Digging means removing the obstruction. So as soon as the obstruction is removed, automatically and naturally, water flows. That is the meaning of creation.

So this whole universe is a creation of God. What did God do? He removed the obstructions. Therefore, He himself has become.

Take the example of a sculptor. You give a piece of stone to a sculptor. He makes a beautiful image of Kṛṣṇa. What did he do? Did he invent Kṛṣṇa? He merely chiselled away non-Kṛṣṇa. And what remains is Kṛṣṇa. This is our definition of creation.

What about māyā? Creation is using māyā to create this illusion — it is almost like superimposing. So how is He removing the obstacles? You can put it this way: He put obstacles. Exactly. That is what a sculptor does — he covers what is not Kṛṣṇa, and what you see is Kṛṣṇa. If it is a block of stone, you cannot see Kṛṣṇa there. So what He does is put obstacles on your eyes so that you see only Kṛṣṇa and do not see all the non-Kṛṣṇa.

The point is that the substance is there. Nothing new is brought out. It is a matter of what you want to see.

If you want to experience God through your eyes, what will you see? Forms. If you want to experience God through the ears, what do you experience? Sounds. Suppose there is a blind man who cannot see colours. The function of the eyes is only to see colours, nothing else. All forms can be experienced through other means, including through the ears. That is what a whale or a dolphin does — it sends out a signal, like the radar near an airport. What do you see on the screen? An aeroplane. It is not sending a camera — it is sending sound, and what you receive is a form.

So the point is how we want to experience God. That is the Vedāntic concept of God.


Pre-Concepts and the Vedānta Scope

A person, meeting any object, has already decided: "This is how I want to see this object." That is how some people like some things, and that is how some people do not like some things. It is predetermined, depending upon past experiences. There is nothing called a completely new judgemental experience.

Say somebody brings you a sweet. How do different people experience that sweet? It all depends upon what previous concepts they carry. Suppose you like Mysore pāk — when Mysore pāk comes, you look at it not as it is, but as you would like to look at it. Another person who does not like Mysore pāk at all — how does he look at it?

Suppose a Bengali who does not like idli and chuṭney is brought first-class idli and first-class chuṭney — very nice. And suppose there is a South Indian who loves idli and chuṭney. Why do both of them react in two different ways? Is it because of the object? No. They have already come with their pre-concepts: "I like this, I don't like that."

Similarly: a man meets a woman. How does he look at the woman? He already has certain concepts — "My dream girl should be like this." So if she resembles that, he likes her. He slots her. Even if she is not objectively beautiful, she can look beautiful to him because she fits into his concept. Even if she is objectively beautiful, if she doesn't fit into his concept, he will never like her.

What is my point? We are never judging an object as it is. We are always judging an object from our pre-concepts. And even after experience, we judge the same object in exactly the same way. We have already formed opinions about every one of us — we may not express them, because it is politically incorrect to express them, but our likes and dislikes depend completely on how slavish we are to these pre-formed moulds.

This is actually useful, because there is already a mould, a pattern. If we can make that pattern what I call the Vedāntic pattern — I invented a new word for this: if you want to see very small things, how do you see? Through a microscope. If you want to see things far away, through a telescope. If you want to see God — the Vedānta scope. You must have the Vedānta scope.

If you don't have the Vedānta scope, you will never see things in a Vedāntic way. Put on this Dṛk Dṛśya Viveka, put on the Vedānta scope, and you will see everything as likeable. Why? Because the Vedānta scope shows you everything as Brahman. Unless we put that on, any other scope — microscope, telescope, or whatever — distorts things. This is the simple truth.

So Vedānta scope — that is called viveka. What is viveka? Putting on the Vedānta scope.


The Three Foundational Scriptures (Continued)

Smṛti Prasthāna: The Bhagavad Gītā

As I was mentioning, there are three types of foundational scriptures. The first is śruti. Then the next is smṛti: a person may not have had any direct experience, but he heard the direct experience from the realised person — directly or indirectly — and he has complete faith in it. Depending upon that faith, he expresses his understanding. Mind you, it is all indirect experience. You write a poem, you make a sculpture, or you write a drama, you write a bhajana. He has not realised it, but he had one hundred percent faith in it. So whatever scriptures have come under smṛti — having one hundred percent faith in the śrutis, not deviating one millimetre from the śrutis — they were composed for two reasons: for one's own enjoyment, and also in course of time to help other people.

As I said, you can only understand something if you are ready for that. So these are called smṛti. The Bhagavad Gītā is called smṛti prasthāna.

Nyāya Prasthāna: The Brahma Sūtras

And there are people who want to understand things in a completely non-controversial way, through logic and through reason. This is called nyāya prasthāna. The Brahma Sūtras is a work where Vyāsa himself — mind you, he was not the discoverer of the Vedas, he was only a compiler — collected whatever Vedas were already existing, divided them, classified them, and conveyed them to others for convenience. Classification is an easier way of understanding complicated things.

But different ṛṣis had intuitively expressed their experiences through different words, and those words created controversies. So is it a really controversial thing, or have the words used simply different meanings, all ultimately meaning the same thing? Vyāsa himself brought out a number of such apparently contradictory statements and in the end proved that they all have only one meaning. The entire śruti has got only one purport, and that purport is the word tat — "that." Everything else must support that statement, in whichever way the words are expressed or used. Such a work is called the Brahma Sūtras.

Now the Brahma Sūtras emphasise logic, rationality, and reasoning — how to understand logically — because if you are understanding intuitively, there is no need for logic. But when you are incapable of understanding intuitively, you need logic to understand correctly. This is called nyāya prasthāna.


Prakaraṇa Granthas: Shorter Works of Clarification

On all three of these foundational works, hundreds of commentaries have been written, leading to contradictory schools of philosophy and views, creating further confusion. So the great teachers, out of their compassion, invariably composed certain shorter works called prakaraṇa granthas. For example: Vivekacūḍāmaṇi, Ātmabodha, Vākya Vṛtti, Dṛg Dṛśya Viveka, Upadeśa Sāhasrī, and so many others. I am quoting because these are all Śaṃkarācārya's works — though of course the Dṛg Dṛśya Viveka is not Śaṃkara's work. Some people consider it so, but most do not.

Now among these prakaraṇa granthas, there are two types. One type generally treats the entire Vedānta subject in a very brief manner — Vivekacūḍāmaṇi and Upadeśa Sāhasrī are examples. But certain prakaraṇa granthas treat a particular subject elaborately. For example, some treat the tvaṃ padartha elaborately, some treat the tat padartha elaborately, some treat the asi padartha elaborately.

Vivekacūḍāmaṇi falls under the category which treats the entire Vedānta briefly. But the Dṛg Dṛśya Viveka treats tvaṃ padartha more importantly than tat padartha or asi padartha. Tat — tvaṃ — asi: the emphasis here is on tvaṃ. Some treat all three equally, but this particular one treats tvaṃ padartha. That is why it is very useful.

Now every prakaraṇa grantha avoids controversies completely. It is meant for the general public, meant to be easy of comprehension — though some of them make it so tough that you need hundreds of commentaries on them. They go on saying, "For the easy understanding of people, by the grace of God I am starting this book" — and by that time they finish. We need the help of God.

This particular prakaraṇa grantha is very short. It contains only, I think, forty-five or forty-six ślokas.


The Three Essential Topics of Every Prakaraṇa Grantha

Every prakaraṇa grantha must be very practical. Not only does it state "this is the goal," but it also elaborates how one can reach that goal. Every such book must treat three things: tattva, puruṣārtha, and hita.

Tattva means: what is the reality? What is the truth? What is the meaning of human life? Puruṣārtha means: why should human beings take to that goal, be very conscious and clear, and make effort to reach it? And hita means: how to reach it. So this is the goal, this is the reason why you should reach this goal, and this is how to reach that goal — tattva, puruṣārtha, and hita. Every book treats these three.


Anubandha Catuṣṭaya and Sādhana Catuṣṭaya

To make this point clear, the teachers of these books have clarified two very important things: one is called anubandha catuṣṭaya and another is called sādhana catuṣṭaya.

What is the difference between them? Anubandha catuṣṭaya is meant to clarify: what is the subject matter, what is the connection with this book, what is the purpose, what is it that you want to achieve, and who is fit — who is the adhikārī? And if one is an adhikārī, then what qualifications one should develop falls under sādhana catuṣṭaya sampatti. In brief, these four plus four are common for all spiritual aspirants, common for all scriptures — whether it is Christianity, Buddhism, or anything.

The First Component: Prayojana

So what is anubandha catuṣṭaya? First of all, what is the prayojana? Prayojana means: why do you want to read this book? Not only reading — why do you want to sit at the feet of a teacher and why do you want to listen to him? The prayojana is the first thing we have to be clear about before doing anything else. What do you want? Be very clear about what you want.

Here in this case, there is only one goal: tāpatraya avicchinna muktiḥ — liberation from threefold misery.

Now miseries are of two types: present, experienced misery, and future, coming misery. Sometimes we may not be experiencing misery right now. If we are experiencing misery now, we want to be free from it — most of us fall under this category. But there are some more intelligent people who want to be free not only from present misery but also from a misery which has not yet made its appearance but which is sure to appear later on. Because that is the nature of the world. Jagat means that which is changing. So today, if I am not undergoing misery, soon it will change. This is the truth. If we don't understand it through wisdom, through painful experience we will be made to understand it.

So what is the purpose? To get rid of misery. But if we are free from misery, then what is it that we are going to attain? A state which is free from misery — but there could be a misunderstanding about that. There is a stone and somebody is beating the stone. The stone, assuming it can speak, says, "Please do not beat me." Somebody goes and stops the beating. Thereafter what does the stone remain? A stone only. That is not the state we want.

What we want is complete happiness: satyam, jñānam, anantam, brahma. Saccidānanda is usually the word we use — sat, cit, and ānanda; or asti, bhāti, and priyam. Here the Chāndogya Upaniṣad says satyam, jñānam, anantam. Satyam and jñānam correspond to sat and cit, asti and bhāti — exactly the same. But instead of ānanda, we use the word anantam. That is the more appropriate word. Why? Because what is ānanda? Usually we mistranslate it as happiness. But here, bliss means anantam. Anantam means it is eternal. Eternal state is happiness. So that state is what we want to attain. This is the prayojana.

The Second Component: Viṣaya and Sambandha

Then what is the viṣaya and the sambandha? What is the viṣaya? My purpose is to attain God. This book is teaching about chemistry. What is the connection between chemistry and my goal? There is no relationship. So this book must have a subject matter which deals exclusively with spirituality. That is the viṣaya — subject matter. And the sambandha is this: this book teaches spirituality, my purpose is spirituality — how to become spiritual — so this book helps me in being spiritual. That is the sambandha, the relationship.

Otherwise people can make a mistake — they want to meditate and they go on watching movies. What is the relationship between these two? There is no relationship. There should be a definite relationship between our prayojana, viṣaya, and sambandha.

The Third and Fourth Components: Adhikārī

Even if all three of these are wonderful, then who is the adhikārī? The adhikārī is one who sincerely wishes to have that prayojana. The prayojana is God — attaining God. And billions of human beings are not adhikārīs in that respect, because they are not interested in God. So they must become interested in God.

These are called anubandha catuṣṭaya — very preliminary relationships.


Desire vs. Qualification: The Adhikārī

Now the adhikārī is the most important person. Just as a medical student has a desire to study medicine and become a doctor, he may have desire, but whether he is qualified is another matter. Desire is different from qualification.

Suppose there is a person who is blind, a person who is lame, a person who is unintelligent — he may have desire. In fact, we all have desires. Only thing is, we don't have qualifications. This is the truth.

If somebody says, "You just become the President of the United States," no objection — but do you have the qualification? We don't have even the negative qualification, not only the positive one. The positive qualification is: you must have knowledge, you must have policy, you must have firm determination, and all that. What is the negative qualification? Why do 100,000 police, CID, and FBI try to protect the President? Because if he just walks, how many minutes is he going to survive? And still he knows it — he has that courage: "This is a risk I have to take." And he takes it. So you may have the positive qualities, but do you also have the negative quality? All qualities must be there.

So desire is wonderful, but once you have desire, that is the first step. What is the second step? You must acquire four qualifications. This is called sādhana catuṣṭaya sampatti.


Sādhana Catuṣṭaya Sampatti: The Four Qualifications

What are the sādhana catuṣṭaya sampatti?

First is viveka. Second is vairāgya. Third is samādhamādi ṣaṭ sampatti — the sixfold inner wealth. And the fourth is intense desire — mumukṣutva — and that is a very important point we have to briefly discuss. We all have desire, but what is the intensity of that desire? Do we have one hundred percent desire, fifty percent, ten percent, or one percent? That is very necessary.

These are most important — common for the study of any scripture, not only spiritual scripture but any scripture. Whether you want to be a chemist, want to be in IT, or even want to be a cook — even a cook must have these four qualities. Otherwise he will be cooking — he also cooks — but whether people will be happy with his cooking is a different issue.


Authorship of the Dṛk Dṛśya Viveka

So, first briefly about the authorship. A few people believe it was written by Śaṃkarācārya, but that is not supported by the evidence. Some people — a few more — claim it has been written by Swami Vidyāraṇya. But most people believe it was Bhāratī Tīrtha, one of the Śaṃkarācāryas of the Śṛṃgerī Pīṭha, who was also supposed to be the guru of Vidyāraṇya Swami himself.

For our study, it is not really necessary who has written it. Whether it is a wonderful book — there is no controversy about it. It is a most marvellous book and it is very specialised. Even Vivekacūḍāmaṇi doesn't give certain points which are given here — and of that, the second part is the six types of samādhi and meditation, which we will come to later on.


The Title: Dṛk Dṛśya Viveka

Now about the title: Dṛk Dṛśya Viveka. As I said, any scripture must be very practical, very useful in our day-to-day life. So this Dṛk Dṛśya Viveka need not be interpreted only in the highest spiritual sense of the real and the unreal. It can also be used in our day-to-day life.

What is Dṛk? The experiencer. What is Dṛśya? Whatever is experienced. What is viveka? The correct, right way of establishing the relationship between these two.

Now let me give a small example. Suppose one morning you want to go to the office and you want to have breakfast first. For some reason, the breakfast has not turned out to be good. But you need to have breakfast. What type of attitude do you have towards that? If you have the right attitude, you will have no problem: "All that I need is some breakfast. It may not be tasty, but it is substantial. It is very good for my health. Let me have it and go." If you have that type of attitude, then your day will start in a nice manner.

Or you may be having some talk with somebody and it may not be very pleasant. Should it ruin your whole life, your whole day? So it depends.


The Story of Bīrbal and Akbar: Whose Face Is Bad?

"Whose face did I see early in the morning?" Most often we see our own faces. That is why the story of Bīrbal and Akbar is so wonderful. You know, one day Akbar's sleep was broken in the morning. It was summer, still dark, and he said, "I can't sleep now, let me have a walk in the garden." So he went out, and an old servant who had been working in the garden for more than forty years was sweeping and clearing. That was the first face Akbar looked at. And then as he was walking, he stumbled, fell down, and was injured.

So immediately he remembered: "The first face I saw was this gardener's. Chop off his head!" he gave this advice. Fortunately, the old man heard it, ran to Bīrbal, and was saved. Bīrbal said, "Don't worry, I will save you."

So about nine-thirty or ten o'clock, Akbar, still fuming, opened his Darbār. Bīrbal entered with this old man. Akbar became furious: "You are protecting this fellow? I wanted to chop off his head. Why did you do it?" Bīrbal said, "Before you decide to do anything, let us have a conversation. Why do you want to chop off his head?" Akbar said, "The first thing I saw was this fellow's face, and then immediately I fell down and got injured." Bīrbal asked, "Then what did you do?" "I ordered his head to be chopped off." "And what have you got to say?" Akbar asked the old man. Bīrbal said only this much: "He claims yours is the first face he saw. Now whose face is bad?" Laughter. Of course Akbar had no option but to laugh.

So most often we see our own faces. But this is the attitude — how to take everything, every experience, in our stride. The dṛśya is not in our control, but the dṛk — we have a lot of control. We don't have control over the event, but we can determine how we view it in a better way. This is called the Vedānta scope. This is called Vedānta.

How does a devotee see? He says, "Whatever good or bad happens is God's will." If he is a karma yogī, he says, "Whatever happens is the result of my own actions." If it is a jñānī, he says, "It is my own doing. After all, I am Brahman. So if something happens, whom else can you blame? Only oneself."


Happiness is a Matter of Interpretation

Why can't we be happier? As we are now, we can be a million times happier than we are — with our present circumstances. Imagine children in Africa. If in your childhood you had lived like that, and then if magically somebody transported you into your present situation, you would consider you are in heaven. We are already in heaven, and so many things we are taking for granted every minute of our life.

Our happiness or unhappiness is no better than that of many millions of people in the world. The most marvellous thing is this māyā. One important factor is that our happiness does not depend upon what things we are getting, but how we take those things, how we interpret those things.

One simple example Swami Bhajānānandajī gives: a peasant sitting for his rough breakfast, maybe a ragi roti, and another person sitting in a seven-star hotel with caviar and other things. The peasant is ravenously hungry. The hotel guest has to take a lot of appetisers before he can even swallow. So even if both of them are hungry, is there any difference in the quantum of happiness each one gets? So long as it is an experience of the mouth, it is exactly the same.

Any experience we have of our five sense organs — it makes no difference whether it is a villager seeing an ordinary sight, or a city person exotically seeing, or even the President of the United States at his breakfast table. Whose happiness is better? Ours.

But if a saint is eating something, his happiness is inexpressible because he is eating prasāda. A happy, positive person's happiness is marvellous. But if a person is grumbling, grumpy, temperamental, short-tempered, worried, and depressed — it makes no difference what he is experiencing; worse, in fact. So it does not matter what we are experiencing. Everything depends upon who is experiencing it. It is very practical.


Dṛk and Dṛśya: The Experiencer and the Experienced

So, viveka means: the highest type of attitude we can bring to any one of our experiences. What is Dṛk? A seer — whoever is seeing or experiencing. What is Dṛśya? Whatever is experienced.

Now what is important here? I am here, this sofa is here. I am the Dṛk. Now here Dṛk means the one who is seeing — and seeing doesn't mean related only to the eyes. Seeing means experiencing through any one of our sense organs, including the mind, because the mind interprets and imposes its own way of experiencing things.

The same event: if I have a cataract, I have one way of looking at it. If I have impaired hearing, it creates another type of experience.

You know, there is an old couple sitting together. The old man is reading and the old lady is sewing. Suddenly the man takes it into his head to express something, so he shouts, "Mary, I love you." She was very deaf. "What?" He went near and shouted louder, "Mary, I love you." "What?" He went very near and shouted into her ear, "Mary, I love you." She said, "That is all right. I also don't love you."


The Priority of Dṛk Over Dṛśya

When I am seeing something — this sofa — the sofa is called Dṛśya, and I am called the experiencer, the Dṛk. Now, in these two, who is most important? The Dṛśya has no consciousness. Therefore it doesn't even know it is a Dṛśya, let alone that it is a Dṛk. The Dṛk alone has complete control. Without Dṛśya, Dṛk can remain. Without Dṛk, Dṛśya can never remain. So Dṛk is in charge of everything — it is the most important thing.

The second point is: there could be billions and billions of Dṛśyas. But how many Dṛks? Only one. When I say "this is the world," the whole world falls into the category of Dṛśya, and I — the conscious, intelligent experiencer — alone am only one.

We can understand this with regard to non-living things easily. But when it comes to living things, we have a confusion. Say, I am seeing all of you sitting here, but I am also seeing this sofa, this carpet, this book, these windows. When it comes to you, I am seeing you and you are also seeing me — that confusion comes.

We have to be very clear that all of you also fall under that Dṛśya category only. Why? Because there is only one criterion: you may be there or you may not be there — even if you are not there, I am there. But if I am not there, you are not there at all. Everything depends upon me — upon how I interpret you.


The Scope of Viveka: Misunderstanding vs. Right Understanding

When there is a Dṛk and a Dṛśya, then there must be some kind of scope. If it is microscope vision, you will see even the smallest faults. If it is telescope vision, you will magnify even the smallest thing and blow it up into the biggest. When I am looking in a particular way, it will never affect the Dṛśya — but it is going to affect me. For my own good, I must have the right type of scope. That is where viveka is necessary. Viveka means the right type of view, attitude, understanding.

What is the right type of understanding? There are two possibilities: one is called misunderstanding, and the other is called right understanding. Misunderstanding is when, even though the Dṛśya has some nature, I do not understand it. It is my subjective understanding of the Dṛśya — I consider poison as nectar. It has nothing to do with the object. It has everything to do with the subject. That is called misunderstanding. Right understanding is knowing an object as it is, and not as I interpret it, understand it, or experience it.

Now the whole subject matter of Vedānta is this: what you consider as an object is, first of all, not an object — it is nothing but subject. Second, by calling something the object, you are making an unnecessary division: "I am the subject and you are the object." The undivided akhanda is being made into khanda — subject and object. That is why it is called māyā. Thirdly, even if you make this division, if you can understand an object's true value and true nature, then it would help you a lot.

The classical example: there is a rope and here is me. If I see it as a snake, it is a wrong understanding on my part and it produces only misery. If I understand it as a rope, then at least I will be free from misery. But if I understand that rope as nothing but my own self — as God — then it produces ananta sukha, because I am seeing God. Three types of experiences: experiencing a rope as a snake produces only misery; experiencing the rope as a rope may not produce happiness, but at least does not produce misery; experiencing the rope as none other than Brahman produces infinite happiness. This is the prayojana of this viveka buddhi.


How Many Dṛks? Only One

So, Dṛk and Dṛśya. How many Dṛśyas? Any number. How many Dṛks? Only one Dṛk.

Now there is a further point to be understood. Is there really a Dṛśya, or is it because the Dṛk is himself looking into his own mirror and creating many Dṛśyas? Is there a Dṛśya at all? The example given is: when you are dreaming, how many Dṛśyas are there? Is there any actual Dṛśya? Who is creating it? We are creating it. But at that time, if someone were to say, "All this Dṛśya is completely your own creation," would you believe it? You will never believe it.

But when you wake up, you will see that all the Dṛśyas you had seen were only your own imagination. That is the important point these scriptures are making — whether Vivekacūḍāmaṇi, Upaniṣads, or everything. Because if Brahman is one, where from has the Dṛśya come? Where from have Dṛk and Dṛśya come?

So the first thing is not to misinterpret any Dṛśya. The second is to recognise a Dṛśya as it is. And the last impediment is to understand that Dṛśya is none other than Dṛk only.


The Three States of Experience

So this Dṛśya is divided into three categories: jāgrat avasthā, svapna avasthā, and suṣupti avasthā. The Dṛk imparts reality to each of them. That is a very important point to understand at this stage.

Now, this is the waking state. Is the waking state a reality, or am I imparting reality to it? See, you are looking at me and you are experiencing me, is it not? Suppose you happen to doze off — what would be my fate as far as you are concerned? Finished. As far as you are concerned, the whole visible world is gone.

There is a story: one priest was giving a sermon. An old woman came and sat with her grandson, and very soon the old woman started snoring. The priest got annoyed for several reasons: she was sitting in the front row, her snoring was louder than his sermon, and it was an insult — even if you don't listen, you pretend to listen, and he could tolerate that. But snoring openly — so he called her grandson and said, "You, wake up your grandma." The grandson said, "No way. You put her to sleep. You wake her up. It is your responsibility."

So jāgrat avasthā is our creation. How do we know? Because the moment we withdraw from it — by going to the svapna avasthā — we have withdrawn the authority to make it real. We are the real.

A simple illustration: imagine three rooms in complete pitch darkness. There are many things in each room, but if you look at any of them, what do you see? Nothing. But take a torch and put it in one room — you will see many things in that room. The moment you go to the next room, the first room remains pitch dark. There may be things there, but nobody can see them. And if you come to the third room, the other two rooms become completely dark.

The person carrying the torchlight alone makes those rooms come alive, real, useful. Without that torchlight, the rooms themselves are completely dark and useless. So when we go to the svapna avasthā, both suṣupti and jāgrat avasthā become unreal — they do not even exist. When we are in the jāgrat avasthā, the other two do not exist. When we are in deep sleep, those other two do not exist.

What is the conclusion? We are giving reality to each one of those states. And that means those three states are the Dṛśya, and we are the Dṛk. Which of these three states is real? All of them are completely unreal until I decide to give reality to them. Anything that I experience, I am giving reality to that object. This is the simplest truth.


The Practical Result: Our Happiness Depends Upon Ourselves

So what is the practical result of this? Our happiness or unhappiness depends totally on ourselves. Is it a fiction? Is it brainwashing? Or is it reality? It is true. If a worldly person looks at the world, he gets one type of experience. If a scientist looks at the same world, he gets a totally different experience. If a saint looks at the same world, he experiences something completely different. Depending upon what way we look, and how much reality we give to these states, my happiness totally depends upon that viewpoint.

So how wonderful it is! If I want to be happy, what are we ordinarily doing? We are saying, "You be real and let me experience it." What is this book saying? "You are unreal — let me experience it." The example given again in the Dakṣiṇāmūrty Stotra: viśvaṃ darpaṇa dṛśyamāna nagarī tullyam. After bathing, whenever you go and sit in front of the mirror, who gives reality to that image? You put bhāva — you will see bhāva. The mirror just reflects. If I don't smile, it will not smile. If I smile, then it smiles. Whatever I do, I give reality to that image. But I go on looking and saying, "This is looking very bad." So what should you do? Give a slap — not to the mirror, to oneself. Because the poor mirror is only reflecting what I am.

The whole world is nothing but a mirror. How I decorate myself, how I appear — that is what is very important.


The Practical Usefulness of Dṛk Dṛśya Viveka

So this is the practical usefulness of the Dṛk Dṛśya Viveka. Do not think it is merely an Advaitic work. All these Advaitic works have got only one purpose: how to make our life very useful and practical — not only in the spiritual field, but in every field.

Does it say so specifically? Yes. It says — with regard to the sādhana catuṣṭaya sampatti — if your health is bad, then your mood will be bad. If your mood is bad, then your understanding will be incomplete. If your understanding is incomplete, your attitude will be wrong. If your attitude is wrong, then your interaction will be wrong. If your interaction is wrong, your sukha and duḥkha depend upon your interaction. All these follow step by step.

So the body is like a mirror. The mind also is like a mirror. Both are instruments. The more fit you make the instruments, even the act of making the instrument fit itself gives tremendous happiness.

Suppose you have an ordinary bike or car. If it is, as they say, MOT fit — everything fine, tyre pressure correct — to that extent your travel will be comfortable. But suppose you buy a very high-cost car with more luxury, more controls, more gadgets — then it might increase your comfort a little more. But so far as any instrument is defective, it will make you immediately uncomfortable.

And the person who is inside has another instrument: the mind. If the mind is made normally healthy, it will at least avoid misery even if it doesn't give higher happiness. For example, suppose you work very hard and become very hungry — then you can enjoy even ordinary food very nicely. In that way, if your mind is not very highly developed but does not have negative things like worrying, misinterpreting, finding fault — you may not get higher happiness, but you won't get misery either.

One day, your normal day in an office with a bad boss and bad colleagues who every day try to make your life very hard — imagine that one day all of them work very normally. They have not praised you, but they have also not unnecessarily created any problem. That day, how much happiness you experience! That much happiness we can experience if our mind is made to work normally.

But if you want extra happiness, then you must make it go higher and higher in its way of looking at things.

So how to make both body and mind fit? That is in a way the very first step — yama and niyama, āsana, prāṇāyāma — and even pratyāhāra, even dhāraṇā. That is why sādhana catuṣṭaya is very, very important — not only for spiritual progress, but even to enjoy normal life properly.


The Structure of the Text: Three Driks and One Absolute Dṛśya

So with this very brief introduction, let us proceed to the first few ślokas — five ślokas — which establish that there are three seers, three Dṛks. And how many Dṛśyas? One absolute Dṛk, one absolute Dṛśya, and two that are a combination of both Dṛk and Dṛśya.

Three types of seers: out of these, one seer is an absolute seer, one seen is absolute Dṛśya, but two in between are both seers and also seen.

The author, Bhāratī Tīrtha, brings these three seers. The first seer is the sense organs, the second seer is the mind, and the third seer is the sākṣī.

The World as Absolute Dṛśya

The world is the Dṛśya. What is the world experienced by? First, by the sense organs — and when I say "eye," note that I am not talking about this physical eye, this golaka. I am talking about the indriya, the subtle faculty. Never forget that. Whenever you use the word "eye," never identify it with this physical eye — this is like a camera lens. Inside this, there is an intelligent agent who is called the indriya. That is why they are also called devas.

Without this indriya, even the sākṣī cannot see the world, because there is no world if there is no indriya. You must remember that. Even though it is God, God cannot see anything if He doesn't have the sense organs. When you see through the eye, what do you see? Colours. So if somebody is blind, he has the same sākṣī — but can he see colours? He can never see colours. Not because the colours are not there, but because the instrument is not there.

The Sense Organs: Both Dṛk and Dṛśya

So the first relationship is: the world is the Dṛśya and the sense organ is the Dṛk. The second is that the sense organ becomes Dṛśya for the mind — so the mind is the Dṛk and the sense organs are the Dṛśyas. So the sense organs are both Dṛk and also Dṛśya. The world is only Dṛśya — it doesn't see anything else. So the sense organ is both Dṛk and Dṛśya.

The Mind: Dṛk of the Sense Organs, Dṛśya for the Sākṣī

The mind is the Dṛk of the sense organs, and the sense organs are the Dṛśya for the mind. The mind in its turn becomes Dṛśya for the sākṣī — not intellect: sākṣī. And sākṣī becomes the Dṛk.

The Sākṣī: The Absolute Seer

Now sākṣī is Dṛśya for whom? For no one — sākṣī alone. There is no one else, nothing else besides sākṣī. That is why sākṣī is the absolute seer. The world is the absolute seen — it is not Dṛk for anything else. But in between, the sense organs and the mind are both Dṛk and Dṛśya in combination.

Now, at any one point, the sense organs can either be Dṛk or Dṛśya — but they cannot be both at the same time, from their own perspective. From different perspectives, however, it is possible. When you are looking at the sofa, you become the Dṛk so far as it is concerned. When I am looking at you at the same moment, you become the Dṛśya so far as I am concerned. Because these are two separate relationships, the time-space conflict doesn't arise. But even for the same sense organ, it is not possible to be both Dṛk and Dṛśya for itself at the same time. Somebody else can make it Dṛśya, but it cannot simultaneously be its own Dṛk and Dṛśya.


The Practical Implication: We Are the Master

Why is it necessary for us to understand these three Dṛks? Because if something is the absolute seer, it has absolute control. If something is both Dṛk and Dṛśya, its control is on a shaky ground.

When you are looking at something and interpreting it in a particular way, if you remember that you are both the Dṛk and the Dṛśya, then you as Dṛk have control over the Dṛśya. But if you identify yourself with the Dṛśya, then you become a slave to the Dṛśya, and Dṛśya will take over you. But if you remember "I am the master, I can see something as I like to see it" — this is the prerogative of saints.

The saint says, "You may be a rākṣasa, but I look upon you as God himself. Then I won't suffer." Immediately the question comes: "But what if the rākṣasa tries to kill you?" That question is coming from the rākṣasa's point of view, not from the saint's point of view. The saint thinks the rākṣasa is lovingly expressing himself to him. And so long as the saint is happy, what is your headache? Any incident that happens to a saint, he interprets it in the best possible way: "This is the Divine Mother's way. It must be very good for me."


Why Understanding the Background Matters More Than Completing the Shlokas

So I think this is quite a good introduction. Once the introduction is over, we can proceed very quickly. Once the foreground is prepared, you know what to expect. Then we can progress quite fast. Do not think that if I go on talking like this, how many ślokas are we going to cover? You are always thinking: will he complete or not? What does it matter? Right understanding of even one śloka is much more important than trying to go through them fast and then saying, "I have completed this, this, and this." What did you learn?

Once you understand the background, the rest is only an elaboration and expression. If you get the idea right, then you understand what the author is going to say very clearly. In this whole book, the conceptual framework is not difficult. But the six types of samādhis are slightly subtle — though not really very difficult. I will give you some examples so that you can understand them very clearly. You don't even need to go through the Sanskrit, because Sanskrit can create confusion about what this word means, what that word means.

Six kinds of samādhi — what are they? A very crystal-clear division: savikalpa and nirvikalpa; āntarika and bāhika; śabdānuvidha and dṛśyānuvidha; nirvikalpa. Two into three, six. Both savikalpa and nirvikalpa apply to internal and external experience.


Spiritual Life Begins with Knowing "I Am God"

When Rāja Mahārāj said that spirituality starts from nirvikalpa samādhi — what is he actually telling us? What is, first of all, spiritual life? If you understand that word properly, then it is very easy to understand his statement. What is spiritual life? Seeing God everywhere. Who can see God everywhere? Only a person who is God. Only God can see God.

So what is nirvikalpa samādhi? To know that I am God. Once you attain that state, then you see everything as God. Until that time, you are having faith, you are believing — "scriptures say everything is God, so I must look upon everything as God" — but you are not actually experiencing it. This is helpful, until you have actual experience. But actually, no knowledge ever comes until you experience — even in the ordinary world. When will you know what milk is? Only after you taste it. Even if you taste one drop, after that nobody can take away that knowledge of milk from you for eternity.


The Story of Upamanya: The Importance of Direct Experience

That is why there is the story of Upamanyu. Upamanyu muni kare tapasyā, dugdha samudra vāya vayu. He was the son of a very poor Brahmin — so poor that even the poorest in those days had at least one cow, but he didn't have any cow at all. His friends and colleagues all talked of what they had, and only he had nothing. His mother used to mix rice with water until it became pale white, and she used to say, "This is milk, you drink it." He was very happy, because he thought that was milk.

Then one day he was invited for a feast and that day he got real milk. He came home and said, "You have never given me real milk?" The mother fell into tears. She said, "My son, it is not that we don't want to give you — we don't have it. There is no way we can get any cow." And I want milk — because after tasting real milk, he never wants to go back to the old rice-water. So the mother said, "Go and pray to Lord Śiva. He alone can fulfil your desire." So he went and prayed to Lord Śiva, and Śiva gave him not only one glass of milk — he gave him a whole ocean of milk to swim in.

So the point is: until we experience something ourselves, intellectual knowledge will be only information. But once we experience, that is real knowledge. The same applies to spiritual life. Until we have some experience, we are only thinking, "This is God, that is God" — it is on very, very shaky ground. But if you have one experience, then you know for certain. At least you know the possibilities. That is why Hinduism places so much importance on direct experience — because once you have that experience, nobody can shake you. But until then, you can be shaken any number of times.


Everything is Imagination: Science and Spirituality Agree

That is why Brahmanandajī said that until you experience nirvikalpa samādhi — but why nirvikalpa? What about savikalpa samādhi? Because savikalpa samādhi is also your own imagination. Any object is whose imagination? That is why image and imagination fall into the same world. An image is nothing but imagination.

So anything — a tree — is my imagination. Is it my imagination, or is it reality? This fundamental law of psychology we always forget. We don't know what is actually out there. We only know what falls on our mind. When that image falls into the mirror of my mind, it becomes imagination. I imagine it is called a tree.

Why do I say it is a tree? I see this object and I say this is a human being, this is a tree, this tree is tall, this tree is small, this is a green tree, this is a red tree. All these names we are giving only in our imagination. This has nothing to do with scriptures — this is science, pure science.

We don't know what is outside. We only know what falls within the range of our sense organs. There are billions of microbes roaming all around us — do you see them? No, because they are not in the range of our sense organs. Whatever falls within the range, that only we imagine. And does the mind image things exactly as they fall?

Even from the physiological point of view, it is very interesting. Here is a tree that falls into these two eyes. Where does the right eye's image go? Into the left side of the brain. Where does the left eye's image go? Into the right side. The tree is standing upright, but how does the image stand? Upside down — inverted. And it is the brain which resolves all of this: it makes the image upright, makes it one instead of two, coordinates left and right. It does so much video editing before it presents itself to your mind. I am not talking about spirituality — I am talking about pure physiology. Is it not a fact? If you are a scientist, you will learn all those things.

So we don't know what is outside. We only know what falls on the mind. That is why everything is an imagination. That is why even if you think of God, it is only an image, an imagination. But this imagination is based upon scriptural direction. What is the purpose? That you take this image as a help — not as reality, but as a pointer. That is why it is called a symbol. Any idol, any thought is nothing but a pointer to the reality.

God has no qualities. God is nirguṇa, nirviśeṣa, niṣkriya. Yet He is both — as the Khaṇḍana Bhavabandana stotra says: nirguṇa guṇamaya. He is both. He is sākāra and nirākāra. These are all imaginations in the brain. You have to go beyond to the reality — beyond the imagination.


The Mould of the Mind: Seeing God in Everything

Our whole life is how we imagine. If it is the guru image, then everything appears in that image. If it is the God image, everything appears in a godly way. How we make a mould — everything falls within that mould. That is called experiencing God in every way.

Gopāler Mā — what was she seeing? Why was her brain moulded into the image of Gopāla? So whatever was falling into that mould, it appeared only as Gopāla. Holy Mother's brain was moulded into motherliness. So whatever fell into her brain, she thought, "I am her mother." This is very wonderful.

There is a well-known experiment: most chicks, the first time they see something, consider it as their mother. So one researcher was hatching wild turkey eggs — collecting the eggs and twice daily moving them from upside to downside and maintaining the correct temperature, just like a mother. One of the things he wanted to prove is that the first time the chick looks at him, she will mistake him for her mother. Babies also do that — whomsoever they look at, whatever they hear, "this is my mom." So slowly the egg hatched, it came out, and he was sitting there staring at it. Immediately the chick flew into his hands, because it is instinct — if it perceives its own mother, it will fly to her.

So here it is a human being, and he was actually behaving like a mother — looking after them a thousand times better than their own mom. He was a veterinary doctor, an entertainer, a caretaker, a walker — they would sit on his shoulders and he would walk there. All these roles rolled into one.

So that is how nature itself works — whoever our eyes first fall upon, love at first sight. Only hindsight makes us realise otherwise.


A Closing Question: Why Do We See the Negative?

One last question: if we are all seeking happiness, if we all want to be happy, why is it that we see the negative in whatever we are going through, in whatever situation we are placed?

There are two explanations. One explanation is māyā: the origin — how and when it started — because in the beginning only God was there, and the creation itself is because of māyā. Within māyā itself these variations are there. That is the original cause. That has to be accepted on faith, because we can never probe our way back to the very beginning.

But the next best understanding is that everything depends upon our mind. One man has written a beautiful book about a goldfish and a shark. Essentially, what happened: there was a boy who had a beautiful goldfish in a bowl, which he was feeding regularly. One day he takes it to the seashore so that he can both play in the sea and have his favourite pet nearby. Suddenly a huge wave comes and sweeps the whole bowl away. The goldfish was thrown suddenly into the salty sea. Now the goldfish started becoming hungry, because every day the boy used to feed it — it did not know how to hunt. Suddenly a shark comes. It looks at the goldfish — and it is a good kind of shark. It thinks, "People have a very bad idea about me. Let me show my good side."

So it says, "Buddy, come here. I will teach you." The goldfish thinks, "I am going to die." The shark says, "Yes, but anyway, before dying you can learn something. There is a miserable way of dying and there is a happy way of dying. At least I can teach you the happy way." So the shark gives some good advice: "You must become a philosopher. First, do your best to find your food and protect yourself, whatever you can. After that, whatever comes, sit with it. Ask: what does this situation teach me? What is the best I can do? What opportunities present themselves? What new meaning can I derive?" So it gives some good sermon and then says, "Look, I have urgent work, I am going." By that time the goldfish had learned, and the only question it needed to ask itself was: do I want to remain a goldfish, or do I want to become a shark? What does the shark do? It finds its own food. It hunts and looks after itself.

This, in a way, is a good lesson for us to learn. So this Dṛk Dṛśya Viveka also says exactly the same thing: do we want to remain miserable — or how do we get happiness? The ordinary goldfish understanding is, "Somebody feeds me, everything should be very nice — then only I will sit and hear these Dṛk Dṛśya Viveka lessons." No. The other way is: whatever be the situation, what shall I do? What has this got to teach me? Do I depend on others, or do I depend upon my own self? This is the lesson Vedānta ultimately wants to teach.


Māyā, Habit, and What Is Within Our Power

So, the first cause of seeing the negative is the positive mind we fail to cultivate. The second is our own circumstances — the law of cause and effect — and within our limits, we ourselves can change our fate. That much we can do.

But the rest — Mahāmāyā — for that a different lesson:

Śaraṇāgata dīnārta paritrāṇa parāyaṇe, sarvasyārti hare devi nārāyaṇi namas te.

For that there is no ordinary remedy. But for whatever is within our means, Mahāmāyā is not going to come — she has already provided the means for us. That is the important lesson.

Essentially, the whole of life is a rediscovery of one's own self. It is almost as if we want to be miserable — but no, that is not correct. No one wants to be miserable. But then why do we create it? That is because of two reasons: originally, it is because of Mahāmāyā; secondly, it is because of the habits we have developed ourselves. Habits can be changed by ourselves with some effort. But the original Mahāmāyā will never go until the Mother herself removes it. But if we do our part, she will do her part.