Samadhi: Directly experiencing the sea
We have been discussing the five S to live a spiritual life. We have discussed how Swadhyay can help us realign our rational mind to the universal consciousness; how Shraddha can realign the emotional mind to the universal consciousness and how we can work on Samvedana with the technique called Vipassana to realign the unconscious mind to the same. We also discussed how freedom from these fixations put us back on track to living life with Swadharma. Thus, we discussed the four Ss.
Now let’s discuss the fifth and the
last S, which is Samadhi. Samadhi means coming out of the well of ignorance
and experiencing the sea of universal consciousness. Samadhi has developed a
very negative connotation in contemporary society due to the erratic
ventures of some people with “Yoga”. “Samadhi does not at all mean leaving the
world. It is living life with the alignment of the center of the rational,
emotional, and unconscious mind to the universal consciousness and our actions
being centered around Swadharma. When we recenter our life to the universal
consciousness, away from the rights and wrongs, likes and dislikes, and craving
or aversion to the pleasant and unpleasant sensations, we start experiencing
the universal consciousness.
Generally, when we sit in
meditation, closing our eyes, we experience our minds full of thoughts.
Different fears and worries start troubling us. Sometimes pleasant memories
flash into the mind. We identify with these thoughts and start getting engaged
with these thoughts. Thoughts keep filling our minds, one after the other and we
keep flowing with them. Sometimes, we bring our attention back to the breath
and concentrate on what’s happening in the body. In these moments, we start
engaging with the body sensations. Sometimes, we feel itching, and other
times heaviness in the legs or the back. We again start engaging with these
sensations and attention is fully lost in these sensations.
There are hardly any moments
wherein we are free. Sanyasa is freedom from the body and thoughts. As we
work with Swadhyaya and Shraddha, work on Samvedana with Vipassana, and live our
day-to-day life with Swadharma, our fixation with the rights and wrongs, likes
and dislikes, and pleasant or unpleasant sensations drop. While sitting in
meditation, we start being aware of the reality. We stop flowing with our
thoughts and are able to look at reality as it is. We are able to witness
what is going on inside our body as a third person.
In these moments of Samadhi, our understanding
of the reality of our true self gets broadened. We get to understand so many
new dimensions of our real nature that we were so far unaware of. This new understanding
helps us get rid of the fixations further. The old vicious cycle of
fixations gives way to the cycle of liberation:
These have been termed as different types of Yoga. In Jnana Yoga, we try to drop the fixations by working on the rational mind. In Bhakti yoga, we try to drop the fixations by working on the emotional mind. In Vipassana, we try to drop the fixations by working on the unconscious mind. In Karma Yoga, we try to live life without identifying with the result of our actions. In Raja Yoga, we try to forget everything and fix our attention on the universal consciousness. All these Yogas complement each other. The right mix of these depends upon the nature of our fixations.
तत्व को यथार्थ रूप में देखना,समझना एवं अनुभव करना ही सहज योग है। जब तक अनुभव पर कोई बात खरी नही उतरे तब तक व्यक्ति इंद्रियाँजनित क्षेत्र में ही बना रहता ही। सुनी सुनाई थोथी या लिखी लिखायी पोथी की बातों के आधार पर व्यक्ति विद्वता तो हासिल कर सकता है परंतु पूर्ण प्रज्ञा वन नही बन सकता।
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