Monthly Archives: March 2020

The I-thought -RM, RSpira

“WHO AM I ?”: THE FULL PROCESS OF ‘SELF-ENQUIRY’

“For all thoughts, the source is the ‘I-Thought’.

The mind will merge only by the Self-enquiry; ‘Who Am I?’

The thought; ‘Who am l?’, will destroy all other thoughts, and finally kill itself, also.

If other thoughts arise – without trying to complete them, one must enquire: ‘to whom did this thought arise?’

What does it matter how many thoughts arise? As each thought arises, one must be watchful and ask: ‘To whom is this thought occurring’?

The answer will be: ‘to me’.

If you then enquire: ‘Who am I ?’, the mind will return to its Source (or where it issued from). The thought which arose, will also submerge.

As you practise like this – more and more, the power of the mind to remain at its source, is increased.

By means of a moderate quantity of satvic (pure) food, which is superior to all other rules and regulations of self discipline, the satvic – or pure quality of the mind, will grow, and Self-Enquiry – will be helped.

Though ancient and timeless sense, attachments – in the shape of Vasanas (subtle tendencies) may rise; countless like the waves of the sea, they will all be destroyed, as ‘dhyana’ progresses.

Without giving any room. for doubt; ‘whether it would at all be possible to eradicate all those vasanas, and BE The Self – Alone, one must take hold – ceaselessly, of dhyana of The Self.

However great a sinner one may be, instead of lamenting: ‘I am a great sinner, how can I make any progress?’ – one must completely forget the fact of being a sinner, and earnestly pursue meditation of Self. He is then sure to succeed!

If the ego is present, all else will also exist. If it is absent, all else will also vanish.

As ego is all ‘this’; to enquire what this ego is. is to give up all attachment.

Controlling speech and breath, and diving deep within oneself; as a man dives into water to recover something that has fallen there, one must find out The Source from whence the ego rises, by means of ‘keen insight’.

‘Enquiry’ – which constitutes the path of Jnana, consists not in orally repeating ‘I’ – ‘I’, but in searching – by means of a deeply introverted mind – wherefrom the ‘i’ springs.

To think: ‘i’ am not this’, or ‘ii am that’, may be of help in the enquiry, but cannot be ‘the actual Enquiry’.

When we quest within our mind, ‘Who am i ?’, and reach The Heart, the ‘i’ topples down – and immediately, another entity will reveal itself, proclaiming ‘I-I’.

Even though IT also merges saying, ‘I’, IT does not connote the ego, but ‘The One Perfect Existence’.

If we unceasingly investigate the form of the mind, we find there is no such thing as the mind.

This is The Direct Path – open to all.

Thoughts alone constitute the mind; and for all thoughts, ‘the base’ – or Source, is the ‘I-thought’: This ‘i’, is the mind.

If we go inward – questing for The Source of the ‘i’, the ‘i’ topples down. This is ‘The Jnana Enquiry’.

Where the ‘i’ merges, another entity emerges, as ‘I-I’.., of its own accord.
… That is The Perfect Self!

There is no use removing doubts. If we clear one doubt another arises, and there will be no end of doubts.

All doubts will cease only when ‘the doubter’, and his source, have been found. Seek for the source of the doubter, and you find he is really nonexistent;

Doubter ceasing, doubts will cease.

Reality – being yourSelf, there is nothing for you to Realize. All are regarding ‘the unreal’ – as Real. What is required is that you give up regarding ‘the unreal’, as Real.

The object of all meditation (Dhyana), or Japa, is only that: to give up all thoughts – regarding the non-self; to give up many thoughts, and to hold on to one thought.

The object of all sadhana is to make the mind one-pointed, and to concentrate it on one thought, and thus exclude our many thoughts.

If we do this, eventually – even the one thought will go, and the mind will get extinguished, in its Source.

When we Enquire within: ‘Who am I ?’, the ‘i’ investigated is the ego. It is that which makes Vichara (Enquiry) also.

The Self has no ‘vichara’.

That which makes the enquiry, is ‘the ego’. The ‘i’ about which The Enquiry is made, is also the ego.

As the result of The Enquiry, the ego ceases to exist, and only The Self is found to exist.

What is the best way of killing the ego?
… To each person, that way is best, which appears easiest, or appeals the most.

All the ways, are equally good, as they lead to the same goal, which is the merging of the ego, in The Self.

What The Bhakta calls Surrender, the man who does Vichara calls Jnana. Both are trying to take the ego back to The Source from which it sprang, and make it merge there.

To ask the mind to kill itself, is like making the thief the policeman. He will go with you and pretend to catch the thief, but nothing will be gained.

So you must turn inward, and see from whence the mind rises, and then it will cease to exist.

  • Breath – and mind, arise from the same Source, and when one of them is controlled – the other is also controlled.*

As a matter of fact, in the quest method – which is more correctly: ‘Whence Am I?’ and Not merely ‘Who am I?’:

We are not simply trying to eliminate, saying; ‘We are not the body, nor the senses and so on’, to reach what remains as; ‘The Ultimate Reality’, but we are trying to find out: ‘whence’ the ‘I-thought’ – or the ego, arises within us.

The method contains within it – though implicitly, and not expressly: ‘the watching of the breath’.

When we watch wherefrom the ‘I-thought’ arises, we are necessarily watching The Source of breath also; as The ‘I-Thought’ and the breath, arise from ‘The Same Source’.

Breath Control – may do as an aid, but can never – by itself, lead to The Goal.

While doing it mechanically, take care to be alert in mind, and to remember the ‘I- thought’, and the quest for its Source.

Then you will find that where the breath sinks – there, the ‘I-Thought’ arises. They sink and arise together.

The ‘I-Thought’ will also sink along with the breath.

Simultaneously, another luminous and Infinite ‘I-I’ , will emerge, and it will be continuous and Unbroken. That is The Goal!

It goes by different names – God, Self, Kundalini, Shakti, Consciousness, etc.

‘Who am I?’ is not ‘a mantra’.

It means that you must find out where – in you, the ‘I-Thought’ arises, which is The Source of all other thoughts.

But if you find that Vichara Marga (The Path Of Enquiry) is too hard for you,
… Then you go on repeating ‘I-I’, and that will lead you to the same Goal.

There is no harm in using ‘I’ – as a ‘mantra’. It is the first name of God.

I ask you to see where the ‘I’ arises in your body; but it is not really quite correct to say that the ‘I’ rises from, and merges in, The Heart – on the right side of the chest.

The Heart is another name for The Reality, and IT is neither inside nor outside the body. There can be no ‘in’, and ‘out’ for IT; since IT – Alone, IS.

I do not mean by ‘Heart’ any physiological organ, any plexus of nerves or anything like that, but so long as one identifies oneself with the body and thinks he is the body, he is advised to see – in the body, where the ‘I-Thought’ rises, and merges again.

It must be The Heart, at the right side of the chest, since every man of whatever race and religion, and in whatever language he may be saying – ‘I’, points to the right side of his chest, to indicate himself.

This is True, all over the world!

So ‘That’ must be ‘The place’; and by keenly watching the emergence of the ‘I-Thought’ – on waking, and its subsiding – in sleep, one can see that it is in The Heart, on the right side.

First know who you are! This requires no ‘sastras’ (scripture) or scholarship. This is simple experience.

‘The State Of Being’ is ‘Now and Here’, all along. You have lost hold of yourself and are asking others for guidance.

The purpose of philosophy is to turn the mind inward. If you know yourself, no evil can come to you. Because you asked me – I have told you this.

The ego comes up only holding You (The Self). Hold your Self – and the ego will vanish.

Until then, the sage will be happy saying: ‘There is’, and the ignorant will be asking, ‘Where?’

Regulation of life; such as getting up at a fixed hour, bathing, doing mantra-japa, etc.; all this is for people who do not feel drawn to Self-Enquiry, or are not capable of it.

But for those who can practise this method; all rules and disciplines are unnecessary.

Undoubtedly, it is said in some books, that one should go on cultivating one good quality after another, and thus prepare for Moksha; but for those who follow The Jnana – or Vichara Marga, their sadhana is itself quite enough for acquiring all Daivic (Divine) Qualities;

They need not do anything else!

What is Gayatri? It really means; ‘Let me concentrate on ‘That’, which illumines All’.”

~ Ramana Maharshi ~

RSpira videos, rjs notes

How do you teach cultural things re form and understanding it’s a manifestation of being aware?
A child doesn’t know it’s an infant born into a world as one homogeneous mass and cannot distinguish between its body and its mother’s body. Like a fish in the ocean. After awhile the child begins to separate itself out – the I-thought arises and associates with its body as me entity, beginning of ego. Pre-egoic state (where the ego separates itself from experience) = beginning of NETI-NETI process. = “I’M NOT THIS, I’M NOT THAT.” I am consciousness. A child does this: I’m not this and I’m not that. I thought I was my mother’s body but I’m not. I am this body. Ego begins. Then the consciousness REMAINS STUCK AT THAT LEVEL the rest of the person’s life. That process continues until finally the person says I’m not my thoughts either. I’m not my thoughts. They come and go like my mother comes and goes, my sensations come and go like father.
What cannot be removed? What is with me always? Only BEING AWARE. A further step is the recognition of the ever-present unlimited nature of awareness. Post-egoic realization. If one separates from all things and says I am pure awareness = ENLIGHTENMENT = I-awareness with the body-mind-world. With yoga meditations, coming together with body-mind-world being merged in experience. To the infant and the animal consciousness has completely lost itself to the sea of undifferentiated experience. That’s the pre-egoic state that infants and animals are in. The ego develops by associating itself with the body-mind. Then it further develops itself but when it goes back to look at the things of the body-mind-world it finds they’re made of consciousness. Experience is merged with consciousness in the post-egoic state and consciousness is merged with experience in the pre-egoic state. THIS EXPLAINS THE MISUNDERSTANDING IN THE NEO-ADVAITA TEACHINGS.
THEY MISUNDERSTAND THE PRE-EGOIC STATE FOR THE POST EGOIC STATE. THEY DON’T DISTINGUISH BETWEEN THE TWO. THEY’RE DESCRIBING A PRE-EGOIC STATE WHERE CONSCIOUSNESS IS MERGED IN EXPERIENCE. IT’S QUITE DIFFERENT. EXPERIENCE IS MERGED IN CONSCIOUSNESS.

Search for method is another form of escape -JK

Though intellectually we may perceive the cause of suffering, it has but little influence on our lives. Though we may intellectually agree that so long as there is attachment there is fear and sorrow, yet our desire is so strongly possessive that it overcomes all reasoning. Even though we may know the cause of suffering, suffering will continue, for mere intellectual knowledge is not sufficient to destroy the cause. So when the mind through analysis discovers the cause of suffering, that very discovery itself may become a refuge. The hope that by discovering the cause of sorrow, suffering will cease, is an illusion.

Why does the mind seek the cause of sorrow? Obviously to overcome it. Yet in the moments of ecstasy there is no search for its cause; if there were, ecstasy would cease. In craving for ecstasy, we grope after those causes that stand in the way. This very craving for ecstasy and the intense desire to overcome sorrow prevent their fulfillment.

A mind that is burdened with the desire for reality, for happiness, for love, cannot free itself from fear. Fear deadens sorrow as also it distorts joy. Is our whole being in direct contact with sorrow as it is with happiness, with joy?

We are aware that we are not integral with sorrow; that there is a part of us which is trying to run away from it. In this process the mind has accumulated many treasures to which it clings desperately. When we realize this process of accumulation, then there is an urge to put a stop to it. Then we begin to seek methods, the way to get rid of these burdens. The very search for a method is another form of escape.

The choice of methods, of a way to rid yourself of those accumulated burdens, which cause resistance—this very choice is born of a desire not to suffer and is therefore prejudicial. This prejudice is the outcome of the desire for refuge, comfort.

The Collected Works of
J. Krishnamurti
Volume III 1936-1944
The Mirror of Relationship
Jiddu Krishnamurti

Searching for outcome is escape -JK

Though intellectually we may perceive the cause of suffering, it has but little influence on our lives. Though we may intellectually agree that so long as there is attachment there is fear and sorrow, yet our desire is so strongly possessive that it overcomes all reasoning. Even though we may know the cause of suffering, suffering will continue, for mere intellectual knowledge is not sufficient to destroy the cause. So when the mind through analysis discovers the cause of suffering, that very discovery itself may become a refuge. The hope that by discovering the cause of sorrow, suffering will cease, is an illusion.

Why does the mind seek the cause of sorrow? Obviously to overcome it. Yet in the moments of ecstasy there is no search for its cause; if there were, ecstasy would cease. In craving for ecstasy, we grope after those causes that stand in the way. This very craving for ecstasy and the intense desire to overcome sorrow prevent their fulfillment.

A mind that is burdened with the desire for reality, for happiness, for love, cannot free itself from fear. Fear deadens sorrow as also it distorts joy. Is our whole being in direct contact with sorrow as it is with happiness, with joy?

We are aware that we are not integral with sorrow; that there is a part of us which is trying to run away from it. In this process the mind has accumulated many treasures to which it clings desperately. When we realize this process of accumulation, then there is an urge to put a stop to it. Then we begin to seek methods, the way to get rid of these burdens. The very search for a method is another form of escape.

The choice of methods, of a way to rid yourself of those accumulated burdens, which cause resistance—this very choice is born of a desire not to suffer and is therefore prejudicial. This prejudice is the outcome of the desire for refuge, comfort.

The Collected Works of J. Krishnamurti – Volume III 1936-1944: The Mirror of Relationship
Jiddu Krishnamurti

On negativity and other nonsense RAdams

So when you react negatively to a situation, you can call it blasphemy. For you’re saying that God doesn’t know what he’s doing. That somehow consciousness has made a mistake someplace and you have to correct it, what nonsense. Yet most of us are doing these things everyday. Thinking that it’s up to us to straighten something out, up to us to correct somebody, it’s up to us to fix things. These things that you’re trying to correct and fix have been going on since the beginning of time, when the illusory universe first appeared. It’s all God’s leela. The sport of God, it’s a joke and you’re taking it seriously.

Is there any wonder that you’re feelings are always hurt. That you become angry everyday over some situation that is a trifle or nonsense, for you refuse to understand your divinity. You’re looking at yourself as a mortal being who has to go out into this world and fight for survival. It’s a lie, it’s not the truth.

This is what you should focus on day and night, and the best way to work on yourself is through self-inquiry. It encompasses all these things we’re talking about. But it’s up to you to do it and keep doing it day and night without stopping. Whatever comes to you, whatever you see everyday, whether it’s a trifle or it’s a serious thing, you have to inquire, “To whom does this come? Who feels this? Who sees this?” I know it’s hard for some of you to do this and this is because you’re not practicing the little things.

If you keep practicing the little things first, then when a so-called big catastrophe comes along, you’ll be able to handle it beautifully. You’ll simply say, “To whom does this come? To me, the ego, the I. I am free of it completely,” and be able to shrug it off and walk away in complete peace. But if you’re not practicing this, then when a so-called catastrophe comes along in your life, you will become violently upset over it, depressed, mad. It’s like when you’re going to die and leave your body. What you occupy your mind with when you die is that’s where you’re going to go. So some of you say, “Well I’m going to occupy my mind with Brahman, when I die I want to go straight to Brahman.” Of course it doesn’t work this way. Because if you have not been practicing previously to death, so-called, you will not be able to do it. When mr death comes to pay you a call, you will be in total fear. You will not be able to think straight. This is why it’s so important to practice now. It makes you stronger, in control.

Practice “Who am I?” constantly, continuously. “Who is this I that has this problem, this fear, this frustration? Where did the I come from?” As you keep separating yourself from the I daily, continuously soon you will not have to voice these things. It will be automatic. Whatever situation unveils itself, you will not say anything you will just look at it and smile and not be involved in it whatsoever. You will have risen to a higher consciousness, just by smiling at the condition, the situation. But if you are not practicing, then when a situation confronts you’ll get angry, mad, upset, depressed and the rest.


Transcript 226

Whatever You See Is The Self

25th February, 1993

Robert Adams Satsangs

The Collected Works

You are asleep -Gurdjieff

“In order to awaken, first of all one must realize that one is in a state of sleep. And in order to realize that one is indeed in a state of sleep, one must recognize and fully understand the nature of the forces which operate to keep one in the state of sleep, or hypnosis. It is absurd to think that this can be done by seeking information from the very source which induces the hypnosis.
….One thing alone is certain, that man’s slavery grows and increases. Man is becoming a willing slave. He no longer needs chains. He begins to grow fond of his slavery, to be proud of it. And this is the most terrible thing that can happen to a man.”

~ G.I.Gurdjieff

Being by Yourself, Satsang RAdams

Stop looking for scraps of fulfilment outside (your) Self.

(How to change milk into butter;)
We see no hope. We think it’s the end. Nobody loves us. We have incurable diseases. We have no job. The world looks like it!s coming to an end. There are wars. Mans inhumanity to man, and we don!t know where it!s going to end. But for whom it this ~ for YOU? Find out for whom is al the destruction. For whom is the negative conditions ~ NOT FOR YOU. Because You are not your body. AS long as You believe that You are your body, then the world becomes very real to You. As long You believe You are your mind, then the thoughts will frighten You, scare You, and make you do strange things. It will make you hate people, be suspicious, be doubtful and have all kind of problems; But when You inquire; “For whom is the mind, for whom is the body?” EVERYTHING STOPS. You see ~ the substratum of All existence is BLISS.That’s the bottom line, simply speaking.THE SUBSTRATUM OF ALL EXISTENCE IS BLISS.You come from Bliss, and You go to Bliss. It’s Your Real Nature.It’s like watching a movie. And in the movie there are good people, bad people, all kinds of people… Yet ~ You watch, you do not get involved in the movie. Even tho You know you’re watching a movie You know it’ll have an end. And You’ll awaken, get up and go home. It’s like that. Life is a cosmic movie.. Things begin, things has a middle and things has an end. Everything changes, and changes and changes continuously. NOTHING is ever the same. And it pulls You in. It pulls You into what we call maya, the grand illusion. It makes you believe that life is virtuous, and interesting. It gets You enmeshed in the things of this world. Until You become totally involved, and when you become totally involved, You see it turns out what you didn’t expect. It’s different than you thought.
Then you go after something else, and you go after something else and it never ends. Until you become so discouraged ~ You don’t know what to do with yourself.
This is true with every human being, EVERYBODY. So what to do?
Take time out by yourself. Think about these things.
That’s the first vessel; BE ALONE. BE HAPPY TO BE BY YOURSELF,that you can think about these things, and take control of Your mind and Your body. Spend lots of time by yourself. Being by Yourself is not loneliness, when You know what you are doing. Begin to love to be by your Self. You can’t wait for the time to be alone.
Number two, the second vessel; is the LOVE TO BE IN SATSANG. Satsang literally means to sit at the feet of the master. With an empty mind. Not with preconceived ideas, not with doubts, not with the fighting spirit., but with an open Heart. LOVE FOR SATSANG LEADS TO ENLIGHTENMENT. But you have to be careful, to whom you go, where you go. There are so many movements, so many organisations, so many so called spiritual groups, that’s hard to decide where to go. The best way to know is to ask your Self. Be by yourSelf. If you are sincere, if you have been working on yourself diligently, something in You will lead you a right place. Where you can grow and unfold beautifully.
Vehicle number three; YOU HAVE TO HAVE A DESIRE, TO ASSOCIATE WITH PEOPLE ON THE PATH LIKE YOURSELF, your friends, to associate WITH SAGES, with people think like you, who are trying to unfold. It’s easy for the world to pull You down and associate with the wrong people. and they look very interesting to you. But they pull you down into maya. And than you have to start all over again to work your way up. You gotta be careful, AWARE where you go, with whom you hang around. LET YOUR HEART TELL YOU.
❤ Robert Adams ~ How to change milk into butter. SATSANG ~ audiorecording
http://www.robert-adams.info/1990-09-02.mp3

spontaneous union with one’s self = enlightenment

THE ESSENCE OF RIBHU GITA: Verse 30
~Prof. N. R. Krishnamoorthi Aiyer.
The following verses constitute the teachings of Siva to Ribhu, who in turn transmits those teachings to his disciple Nidhaga Rishi.
The treatise goes by the name Ribhu Gita.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Sahaja Samadhi

  1. Remaining alertly aware and thought-free, with a still mind devoid of differentiation of Self and non-Self even while being engaged in the activities of worldly life, is called the state of Sahaja Nirvikalpa Samadhi (the natural state of abidance in the Self when all differentiation has ceased). This is called Akhandakara vritti, the ‘I’ of infinite perfection as contrasted with the ‘I am the body’ notion of those who have not realised the Self. (Ch.18, v.40)

*Sahaja (Sanskrit: सहज sahaja) means spontaneous enlightenment, or “spontaneous union with one’s self.”
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

18.40. If all these do not exist, I am, without nonexistence. I am only Brahman, the goal. This only is the endless sorrow. This, indeed, is the changeless, never-ending joy.
(Translated by Ramamoorthy and Nome)

Everything is on your side -RAdams

Do not try to figure people out or analyze conditions, situations. You cannot do this, it’s too complicated. This is why it is written in all the great books, leave everything alone. Leave people alone, leave the world alone. Remember there is nothing to fear and there is nothing to fight. You are carried along in a stream of blessedness to your highest good. Everything is on your side. There is nothing against you you know. There is no one or nothing trying to hurt you. You do not have to defend yourself against anyone or anything, because there is nothing trying to hurt you.

Every situation that comes into your life is necessary at this time, everything. If you look at everybody and everything as God you’ll be on your right track. Look at every situation, every condition as Brahman.

If there is only Brahman, and there is only Brahman, how can there be mistakes someplace. How can people make a mistake? See what I’m saying? There is only the one, and that one is all-pervading, omnipresent, perfection, love, happiness, joy, that one is you.

You are the one.


Transcript 226

Whatever You See Is The Self

25th February, 1993

Robert Adams Satsangs: The Collected Works

Drawing by Jane Adams

Robert Adams