Vakya Vritti
by Adi Shankara
Translated by Swami
Chinmayananda
Published by Chinmaya Mission, Mumbai
An Exhaustive
Explanation of the Statement
“That Thou Art” [Tat Twam Asi]
1. I bow down to that Pure Consciousness Divine – a
shoreless ocean of happiness, which is All-pervading (Vishnu), the Beloved of
Shri, the all-knowing Lord of the Universe, assuming endless forms and yet
ever-free, having an inscrutable power to become (apparently) the Cause of
creation, maintenance, and dissolution of the universe.
2.
Again and again I Prostrate at the feet of my Guru, by whose grace I have come
to realise, “I alone am the All-pervading Essence (Vishnu)”, and that “the world
of multiplicity is all a super-imposition upon myself.”
3.
Scorched by the blazing sun of the three miseries, a student – dejected with the
world and restless for release, having cultivated all the means of liberation
especially such virtues as self-control etc. – enquires of a noble
teacher:
4. “Merely out of your grace and mercy, holy
Teacher, please explain to me briefly the means by which I may easily get
liberated from the sorrows of this bondage-to-change”.
5.
The teacher said: “Your question is valid, and so very clearly expressed, I
shall answer it exhaustively to make it as vivid to you as though you are seeing
it near”.
6. Direct knowledge of that total identity
between the individual-Self and the Universal-Self, stemming forth from the
Vedic statements such as “Thou art that”, etc., is the immediate means to
liberation.
7. The disciple said: “What is the
individualised Self ? What, then, is the Universal Self ? How can they both be
identical ? And, how can statements like “That thou art” discuss and prove this
identity ?”
8. The teacher said: “I shall answer your
question. Who else can be the individual Self (Jiva) other than yourself, that
asks me this question, “Who am I ?”. There is no doubt about it. You alone are
the Brahman.
9. The disciple said: Not even the word
meaning do I fully grasp clearly; how can I then comprehend the significance of
the sentence, “I am Brahman” ?
10. The teacher said: “You
have said the truth when you complained that the knowledge and understanding of
the meaning of the words employed in a sentence are indeed the cause of the
understanding of the full significance of the sentence. And there are no two
opinions about it.”
11. “Why do you not recognise your own
Self, which is an embodiment of Eternal Bliss-Essence, the Witnessing Light that
illumines the inner equipments and their functions ?”
12.
“Give up the intellectual misconception that the Self is the body, etc., and
always meditate upon and think yourself to be the eternal Knowledge-Bliss – the
Witness of the intellect – a sheer mass of Pure
Knowledge”.
13. “The body is not the Self, as like the pot,
etc., the body also has form, etc., and again, the body is a modification of the
great elements such as Akash, just like the pot”.
14. The
disciple said: “If, by the strength of these arguments, the gross-body is
considered as “not-Self”, then please exhaustively explain and directly indicate
the Self – as clearly as a fruit in hand”.
15. The teacher
said: “Just as the perceiver of a pot is ever distinctly different from the pot
and can never be the pot – so too, you, the perceiver of your body, are distinct
from your body and can never be the body – this you firmly ascertain in
yourself.”
16. “Similarly be sure in yourself that you, the
seer of the senses, are not the senses themselves, and ascertain that you are
neither the mind, not the intellect, not the vital air
(Prana).”
17. “Similarly be sure that you are not the
complex of the gross and the subtle-bodies, and intelligently determine, by
inference, that you, the ‘seer’, are entirely distinct from the ‘seen’.”
18. “’I am He’, the One because of whose presence alone
the inert entities like the body and the senses, are able to function through
acceptance and rejection”.
19. “’I am He’, the One
changeless, Innermost Self that moves the intellect, etc., as a magnet does the
iron filings.”
20. “’I am He’, the One Entity in whose
vital presence the body, senses, mind, and Pranas, though inert in themselves,
appear to be conscious and dynamic, as though they are the
Self.”
21. “‘He am I’, the One Consciousness, which is the
Self that illumines the modifications in my mind such as ‘my mind went
elsewhere, however, it has been brought to rest now’, – ‘He am I’
(So’ham).”
22. “’He am I’, the One Consciousness which is
the Changeless Self that is directly cognised, that illumines the three states
of waking, dream, and deep-sleep, and that which illumines appearance and
disappearance of the intellect and its functions – ‘He am I’
(So’ham).”
23. “Know yourself to be the One Self, a
homogenous mass of Consciousness, which is the illuminator of the body and
therefore quite distinct from it – just as a lamp that illumines a pot is always
different from the pot illumined. ‘I am a mass of Consciousness’ (Aham
bodhavigraha).”
24. “Know yourself to be the One for whose
sake beings and things such as children and wealth – are dear, who is the sole
seer and dearest of all. ‘He am I’ – ascertain thus and realise,
So’ham.”
25. “Know yourself to be the One regarding whom
there is always the anxiety, ‘May I ever be; never cease to be’, as this Seer is
the dearest of all. ‘He am I’ – thus assert and
realise.”
26. “The Consciousness, the Self, which appears
as the Witness, is that which is meant by the word ‘thou’. Being free from all
changes even the witnessing is nothing but the illumining-power of the
Self.”
27. “Totally distinct from body, senses, mind, Prana
and Ego is that which is the Self; therefore, It is absolutely free from the
six-modifications, which all material things must necessarily undergo. This Self
is the indicative meaning of the term “thou”.
28. “Having
thus ascertained the meaning of the term “thou” one should reflect upon what is
meant by the word “that” – employing both the method of negation and also the
direct method of scriptural assertion.”
29. “’That’, which
is free from all the impurities of the Samsara, ‘that’ which is defined by the
Upanishads as: ‘Not large etc., having the qualities of imperceptible etc., that
is beyond all darkness created by ignorance”.
30. “Having
no greater Bliss than Itself, a pure embodiment of External Consciousness, and
having ‘existence’ for its specific definition, is the All-Pervading Being – is
the meaning indicated by the term ‘that’; so, the scriptures declare in their
songs.”
31. “That which is proved in the Vedas as
All-knowing, All-powerful and Supreme Lord, is Itself the Infinite Brahman… make
sure of that Brahman in your own understanding.”
32. “That
which the scriptures have discussed through examples of mud etc., as that by
knowing which all else will become known … make sure of that Brahman in your
understanding.”
33. “That which the scriptures propose to
prove as a limitless, and in order to support that proposition, called the World
of Plurality as Its effects .. make sure of that Brahman in your
understanding.”
34. “That which the Upanishads clearly
establish as the sole object of deep contemplation for those who are sincere
seekers of liberation – make sure of that Brahman in your
understanding.”
35. “That which is heard of in the Vedas
‘as having entered each creature as its individualised self’, and which is
known, from the same sources, to be their controller – make sure of that Brahman
in your understanding.”
36. “That which the Upanishads
declare as the sole paymaster for all action, and as the very agent (prompter)
in all actions, performed by each individualised ego – make sure of that Brahman
in your understanding.”
37. “The meaning of the terms
‘that’ and ‘thou’ have been discussed and finally determined. Now we shall
discuss the meaning of the commandment (Mahavakya) ‘That thou art’. In this, the
total identity of the meanings of ‘that’ and ‘thou’ alone is
shown.”
38. “What is meant by the sentence (commandment
‘That thou art’) is not arrived at, either through its ‘sequence-of meaning’ or
as ‘qualified-by-something’. An indivisible Being, consisting of Bliss only –
this alone is the meaning of the sentence, according to the
wise.”
39. “What appears (anjati) as the
Witnessing-Consciousness within, (the individual-Self), is of the nature of
Bliss, One-without-a-second; and the one that is the Bliss within is none other
than the individualised-Self the Witnessing Consciousness
within.”
40. “When, as explained above, the mutual identity
between the two words ‘thou’ and ‘that’ is comprehended, then the idea ‘I am not
Brahman’, entertained by ‘thou’, shall immediately
end.”
41. “If as said, the depth-meaning of the term ‘that’
is ‘Mass-of Bliss, without-second’, and ‘thou’ is the
‘Witnessing-Consciousness’, then what ? Listen: the Inner-self, the
Consciousness, that illumines all thoughts, remains as the All-full, One-Mass-of
Bliss, without-a-second.”
42. “The great statements, like
‘That thou art’, established the identity of what is meant by the two terms
‘thou’ and ‘That’ in their deeper indicative-meaning.”
43.
“How great statement discards the two qualified-meanings, and reveals what it
really means – this we have carefully commented upon
already.”
44. ‘That which shines, as the object of the idea
and the word ‘I’, is Consciousness expressing in the inner equipments. This is
the direct word-meaning of ‘thou’ (twam).”
45. “The
Consciousness that is expressed through Maya, which then becomes the ‘cause of
the Universe’, which is described as omnipresent, etc.; that which is known only
indirectly (meditate); and which is having the nature of existence, etc., --
that Eswara is the word-meaning of the term ‘That’.”
46.
“In case we insist upon the identity of ‘that’ and ‘thou’ based upon the
word-meaning of these terms, then for one and the same factor we will have to
attribute contrary nature; the quality of being mediately and immediately known
– and also insist qualities of ‘existence of duality’ and also of ‘absolute
oneness’, for one and the same factor. Identity between such contrariness is
impossible hence suggestive-meaning, ‘explanation by implication’ has to be
accepted.”
47. “If the direct word-meaning throws up an
inconsistency with what is pointed out by other proofs and evidences, the sense
consistent with its word-meaning that is intelligently suggested by the term, is
to be accepted – and this is its suggestive-meaning
(lakshana).”
48. “In the statements like ‘that thou art’
etc., the reject-accept method is to be employed as in the sentence ‘He is this
man’. No other method can be applied.”
49. “Until the
direct personal experience of ‘I am Brahman’ is gained, we must live values of
self-control, etc., and practice listening to teachers, or reading scriptures,
and doing daily reflection and meditation upon those
ideas.”
50. “Through the grace of a spiritual teacher when
a seeker gains a clear and direct experience of the Supreme Self as expounded in
the scriptures, he, the realised, becomes free from all ‘ignorance’, which is
the foundation for the entire experience of this world of
plurality.”
51. “No more conditioned by his gross and
subtle bodies, free from the embrace of the gross and subtle elements, released
from the charm of actions, such a man gets immediately
liberated.”
52. “The liberated-in-life, due to the
compelling force of those actions that have begun to produce their results
(Prarabdha), remains for some time to exhaust them”.
53.
“The liberated-in-life comes to gain the State of Absolute Oneness, the
never-ending immeasurable Bliss, called the Supreme Abode-of-Vishnu, from
wherein there is no return.”
end