google plus

Sunday, December 12, 2010

Paradox of Liberation

Liberation is believed to be the epitome of achievement of the human form. But the phenomenon of liberation is riddled with a great paradox. The paradox is that the liberated entity disintegrates, dissolves and no longer remains to appreciate the state of liberation therefore seems to be an exercise in futility when viewed from the standpoint of the individual endeavoring to seek liberation.
Liberation can never be an acquisition of the individual. Because liberation is not a person, liberation is from a person. It is often said by sages that the search of efforts to seek liberation will end only when the seeker ends.
All attempts made in this direction only further crystallize the identity and discreteness of the seeker. Desire for liberation is an oxymoron, because liberation is absence of all desires. Does it mean that all endeavors life meditation, devotion and prayer are superfluous? Sage Ashtavakra said precisely that. Liberation is merely a blink away. It need not involve any form of penance, effort or endeavor. The identity of self is totally a creation of the self and a figment of imagination. The name, the form is merely a projection. Liberation is instantaneously becoming aware of the absence of the subject-object dichotomy.
The meaning of the word Ashtavakra is "distorted at eight places". According to legend when Ashtavakra was still in his mother's womb, his father would recite from Vedic scriptures. But his chanting was defective and every time Ashtavakra discerned an error, he would squirm inside the womb. As a result he was born with eight deformities; hence the name. This story is symbolic. The squirming was perhaps at th4e futility of the chanting. Sage Ashtavakra was a realized soul and his discourse to King Janak forms the content of the treatise, Ashtavakra Gita that predates the Bhagavad Gita.
The name Ashtavakra has a far greater significance. Yoga as elucidated by Sage Patanjali is consisted of an eight fold path. Ashtanga Yoga, comprising yama, or restraint, niyama or self regulation, dhyaan or meditation, pranayama. The eightfold path leads to samadhi or liberation. But Ashtavakra said that all endeavors only fortify the identity of the seeker. He said that liberation is the state where the subject and object become one. All endeavors only serve to underline the ego and are a detriment to liberation. Ashtavakra therefore seems to underline the distortion created by any path of endeavor by the seeker. The philosophy challenge the basic premise that one has to make any effort to seek liberation - for that matter even ashtanga yoga. This is a radical departure from all established thought.
A specific form is merely the all pervading consciousness cleaving itself into a subject and object. It then goes about believing all that is observed as separate and discrete as its own self. The true nature of the self is beyond all identity and ego. It is plain consciousness by total conviction in this fleeting illusory identity. And then the game of seeking begins, like the dog chasing its own tail. Holding on to the illusion of identity, one goes about seeking. The form can never ever seek the formless consciousness of which it is a manifestation. It can only merge and this merger can happen only when the form realizes the futility of all efforts to be come the formless.

No comments:

Post a Comment

Spiritual spirit comes from the very inner layer of our body. This is known as feeling of an individuals.