A Jivanmukta is immortal
in the mortal life. Do you know the difference between what is mortal
and what is immortal? Your true Self is immortal, unchanging.
But, the Self by itself cannot function, cannot even exhibit itself,
without the help of a body. So the body and mind are more or less your
vehicles, the Self's vehicles, to express itself and to function.
Who is the real me?
If the body is me, how can I even say that it's my
body? What do you say if you are wearing a watch on your wrist? You
would say: "Here is my watch." You are not the watch. You are simply
owning a watch. We say: "My house, my car, my body." That means I am
not the body which is the truth. We always forget it.
So constant remembrance of the truth, "I'm not the body.
I'm simply living in this. This is my R.V., my recreation vehicle."
Yes. It has everything built into it: office, kitchen, bathroom.
Everything is built into the recreational vehicle.
You have to find out the
truth yourself. Constantly analyzing,
analyzing, analyzing. Every minute ask, "Who is the real me?" You may
say, "Oh, I am hungry." But, stop it there immediately.
Question yourself: "I am hungry? Ahh, who is hungry? Me or my stomach?"
Constant questioning. You say, "I burned my finger. I am in agony."
You burned your finger. Why are you in agony? It's your finger that should
be in agony, right? See? You are separating yourself, freeing yourself
from these thoughts, from wrong identification.
The body-mind being part of
nature will dissolve one day.
What comes together will go apart one day or other. You, the one who lives
in the body, is immortal. You don't die. So if you know the truth about your
own True Self, you realize that you are immortal and it's only the body and
the mind that dies. That is what you call real freedom.
Assert your true identity:
"Aham Brahmasmi, Sivoham" What does that mean?
"I am Brahma, I am Siva." You are the immortal Self! Remember always:
"I am only living in this body but I am not the body, I am the spirit.
I am that Light." In the case of Jesus and great sages and saints like him
they were able to experience that. They were simply using the body as a
vehicle but they are pure spirit-Self-realized.
So, to them, just dropping
the body is very simple. As Bhagavad Gita says
when the shirt is torn you just take it out. It becomes a way for them who
realized that, that they are the pure spirits. Then even while you are in the
body you are free.
Many still don't understand
exactly who the Jivanmuktas are, how the saints
lived. They think they are just a person. Whom do you call the person?
That's what I am trying to say here. The person is the life force, not the
body. The body is a house in which the person lives.
The Hindus call it Hiranyagarba,
the cosmic body. That's what you see in
Lord Vishnu's mythology. In the Bhagavad Gita, when Arjuna asked Krishna to
show him the viswaroopa, the virat swaroopa, the cosmic body, He became the
entire universe. In the western hemisphere probably only in Jesus's life we
see this resurrection and him appearing later on to many people for 40 days.
Are there any others saints like that in the western hemisphere? In the east
we have hundreds.
Unfortunately they are not
well-known in the west. For example, there was
Manickavasagar, one of the four great Nayanar saints. He went to Chidambaram.
He was singing the praise of Lord Nataraja and walked into the Sanctum Sanctorum
and then disappeared. He never came back. He got immersed, absorbed in the
Jyothi, in the Light. Saint Ramalinga Swamigal went into the room and then
that's all. When they opened the room, there was nobody. He just disappeared.
He was a great siddha. Even his body got completely changed into Light form... |