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The Natural State

In verse 2 of his Sanskrit work, Sri Ramanaparavidyopanisad (The Teaching of Supreme Science), K. Lakshmana Sarma refers to "the natural state of the real Self" and equates it with right awareness (v. 2). In Talk 17, 24th January, 1935, Ramana Maharshi says that "the ever-present state is the natural state sahaja ."  Sri Sarma further explains that the sahaja or natural state has been described, previously, in Upanishads such as Mandukya, where it is revealed as the firm conviction, in one's core essence, which is beyond knowledge or ignorance and without definable characteristics. In essence, this sahaja state is the absence of mindstuff ( vikalpas ), i.e. the ever-present witness centred in the here and now.

Finding Ramana

I first came across Ramana Maharshi, in 1968, mentioned in a book called "Teach Yourself Yoga." The author was James Hewitt. I still have the book. It is an excellent introduction to Yoga and continues to surpass other yoga books for beginners. Here is the short passage, from the book, which introduces the teaching of Sri Ramana Maharshi –– ""Pursue the enquiry 'Who am I?' relentlessly," advised an Indian guru, Sri Ramana Maharshi. "Analyse your entire personality. Try to find out where the I-thought begins. Go on with your meditations. Keep turning your attention within. One day the wheel of thought will slow down and an intuition will mysteriously arise. Follow that intuition, let your thinking stop and it will eventually lead you to the goal."" (p. 121) A wonderfully succinct passage. This 1968 edition of Teach Yourself Yoga also contained a rather useful bibliography which led to further research via Paul Brunton's The Quest of t

Samadhi

External samadhi is holding on to the Reality while witnessing the world, without reacting to it from within. There is the stillness of a waveless ocean. The internal samadhi involves loss of body- consciousness. - Ramana Maharshi in Talks #406

Mind is Atman

From Talk 25 - "If the enquiry into the ultimate cause of manifestation of mind itself is pushed on, mind will be found to be only the manifestation of the Real which is otherwise called Atman or Brahman."  - Ramana Maharshi

Who am I?

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Who Am I? is the question.

Cosmick Laughter

SURRENDER to the  Cosmick Laughter.

Wu - a rice cake of nothingness

Wu is like a dog with a mouthful of hot sticky rice cake. It's far too hot to swallow and far too sticky to spit out. And yet a solution to the predicament must be found. ( Master Dahui Zonggao)