Tuesday, January 7, 2014

(Jan 7,2014) Spiritual Message for the Day – The Pranava or Omkara

The Pranava or Omkara
Divine Life Society Publication: Section1 The Mandukya Upanishad by Swami Krishnananda

The Mandukya Upanishad is attributed to the revelation of a great sage called Manduka. For the liberation of the Mumukshu or seeker the Mandukya Upanishad alone is enough. This is a very comprehensive Upanishad, containing only twelve statements called Mantras, in which the whole wisdom or knowledge of the Upanishads is packed into a nutshell. It commences with a solemn declaration: Om ityetadaksharam idam sarvam, tasyopavyakhyanam bhutam bhavat bhavishyaditi sarvam omkara eva.

The Imperishable is OM, and it is 'all this'. Everything else, whatever be of the past, present or future, is like an exposition, explanation or commentary on the meaning of this great Truth – the Imperishable Om. Sarvam Omkara eva: Everything is Om, indeed. Om itiyetadaksharam idam sarvam: Whatever is visible, cognizable and can be comprehended under the single term, creation – all this is Om.

Om is supposed to have been the first vibratory sound that emanated as the seed of creation. Om is Pranava. It is a Bija-Mantra for all the other Mantras, whether Vaidika or Tantrika. Om is both Nama and Rupa, name as well as form. Om is not merely a chant or a recitation, a word or a part of human language but it is something more than all this. It is something which exists by its own right, something which is usually called "Vastu Tantra", as distinguished from "Purusha Tantra"; – that which exists not because it has a reference to anything else but because it is something by itself. We do not create Om by a chanting of it, but we only produce a vibration sympathetic with the vibration that is already there by its own right and which is called Om. Om is a cosmic vibration. Why do we chant Om? To establish a connection between ourselves and that which exists by its own right and which manifests itself as a sound-vibration in the form of Om.

The Supreme Absolute is the Rupa (Form) of Om which is the Nama (Name). As everything in the world is designated by a name, we designate Isvara, God, also, by a name. As we summon into our consciousness a form by calling out its name, remembering its name, so also we summon into our consciousness the Being or the Form of Isvara, God, by summoning His Name.

What binds us or liberates us is the nature of Jiva-Srishti, not so much the nature of Isvara-Srishti. Things as they are do not concern us very much. But things as they are to us mean very much to us, and it is this meaning  that binds us to what we call Samsara (earthly existence). You do not merely exist as a content of creation; you also have a connection with other contents in creation in several ways. This is the difference between you as a part of Isvara-Srishti and you as a center of Jiva-Srishti. The aspect of Isvara is your dignified nature, and the aspect of Jiva in you is what binds you to this realm of Samsara. So, you have a twofold nature, a double personality, a character that distinguishes you by means of your relation to Isvara, and your relation to this earthly life.

We want Moksha from Samsara. You want to transfer your existence from Jivatva to Isvaratva. You want to be absolutely independent as a Kevala. You want to attain Kaivalya. This is called Moksha; – absolute freedom.

Summon Isvara into your consciousness. Give Isvara a place in your heart. Instead of thinking of an object corresponding to a particular name, think of Isvara who is designated by a comprehensive Name. You have to call Him by a Universal Name, because He is Universal Form. The only language conceivable, revealed to the ancient Rishis, is Om, or Pranava.

Om is not a chant but a vibration that rose from the Supreme Being in the initial stage of creation – a comprehensive Universal vibration. We flow with the current of the cosmos when we recite Om, and produce a harmonious vibration in our bodily and psychological system. Instead of thinking independently as Jivas, we start thinking universally as Isvara. When a thought thinks of an object, it is Jiva's thought. When the, thought thinks only itself, it is Isvara's Thought, Isvara's Will. We always exist in relation to something else. Isvara exists with relation to nobody else. We are like streams wanting to rush into the sea, and just as by the force of the inclination of the waters, the rivers enter the ocean, we, by the inclination of the vibration of Om, enter the Universal Form of Isvara.

When you recite Om properly, you enter into a meditative mood by creating a vibration. Not a vibration which agitates you, irritates you, or creates a desire in your mind for a particular object, but a vibration which melts all other particular vibrations, puts an end to all desire, extinguishes all cravings and creates a desire for the Universal. As fire burns straw, this desire for the Universal burns up all other desires. The test of a correct recitation or chant of Om is that you become calm in your mind and feel satisfied with what you are and what you have.

The chant of Om should go together with the thought of the Universal. It is a Japa and a Dhyana combined. While other Mantras may lead to Dhyana, the Japa of Om suddenly becomes Dhyana when it is properly done. Here, Japa and Dhyana combine, and Nama and Rupa are brought together. Here, you do not have a distinction between the designator and the designated, because the Nama (name) which is Om, being Universal, merges into the Rupa (form) which is also Universal. There cannot be two Universals; there can only be one Universal. So the designator and the designated, in the case of Om, become one. Japa and Dhyana mean the same thing in the case of the chanting of Om.

Om is Akshara, and Akshara is imperishable. The Universal has no time. Om has a twofold nature, the temporal and the eternal: it is Sabda and Sabdatita. The soundless form of Om is Amatra (Chaturtha-Bhava), the immeasurable, and it is not audible to the ears. This Amatra, or the immeasurable, eternal nature of Om is not a sound or even a mere vibration, but it is just existence, pure and simple, known as Satchidananda-Svarupa – Existence-Consciousness-Bliss.

That which transcends time is the eternal nature of Om. In the temporal form, Om may be said to designate all that is existent in creation; in its eternal form it cannot be said to constitute any kind of particular form, but it is formless, durationless and spaceless. Om, therefore, is name and form; form and the formless; vibration and Consciousness; creation and Satchidananda. All this is Om.

How to chant Om? There is what is called a Matra or a measure. Bring the fist of the hand round your knee once, in leisure and make a snap of your fingers. How much time have you taken? This is one Matra. Bring it twice, these are two Matras; bring it thrice, these are three Matras. Now, when it is once, it is a short Matra. When it is twice, it is a middling Matra. When it is thrice, it is the elongated Matra. For the recitation of Om, you may choose whichever Matra is convenient, practicable and agreeable to your temperament and capacity.

What have you to think when you recite Om? Remember the Sloka of the Gita: Apuryamanam acalapratishtham. . . etc. You are the ocean into which all the rivers of objects rush. Chant Om, and entertain this feeling in your mind. The world enters you; and where is the world, then, to agitate you! Samsara is a network of agitations, and all these are like currents of rivers rushing into your universal being. The vexations of the world cease when they enter the solemn existence of your universality.

This is Isvaratva, for the time being. This is the gateway for the Sakshatkara (realisation) of Isvara. And if, by God's Grace, the Prarabdha is to come to an end, well, you may realize Him today. If we become instruments in the hands of Isvara, that would be our blessedness; and when we become real instruments in the hands of the Universal Power, we become God-realized souls. Moksha from Samsara, liberation from bondage, is attained by a simple method, according to the Mandukya Upanishad – a correct recitation of Om or Pranava, with contemplation on its Universal Form which is Isvara, or Brahman.

Excerpts from:
The Pranava or Omkara – Section 1 The Mandukya Upanishad  by Swami Krishnananda
The Mandukya Upanishad – An Introduction by Swami Krishnananda
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