Thursday, July 10, 2025

In the Whites

The science says this universe is ninety-nine point nine percent space. The wisdom says the mind needs even less to make its world realistic.

The truth is nondoing. All doing is in your head. If nondoing is the nature of that absolute, effortlessness is the quality of its manifestation.

There were those moments in the Whites when I no longer climb a mountain but the mountain is climbing me.

Satcitananda is nameless. Mahavakyas leave us speechless. Life materializes in being. Attention to death is appearing in consciousness.


1.

Whether waking or sleeping, the dreaming always feels real.

Consciousness-existence is effortless and intuitive.

The bliss of self-awarenes is the nature of brahman.



Ancient Nondual Revelations

Metaphysical ignorance is not beyond belief. It is exactly belief.

Consciousness is believed to be a product of the mind’s brain. Do you think?

Consciousness cannot speak for itself. Our ancient nondual revelations do.

Consciousness-existence is obviously the ground and aham brahmasmi.


1. 

The science says this universe is ninety-nine point nine percent space. The wisdom says the mind needs even less to make its world realistic.

The truth is nondoing. All doing is in your head. If nondoing is the nature of that supreme absolute, effortlessness is the quality of its manifestation.

There were those moments in the Whites when I no longer climb a mountain but the mountain is climbing me.

Satcitananda is nameless. The mahavakyas leave us speechless. Life is appearing in being. Attention is appearing in consciousness.






Wednesday, July 9, 2025

On Shankara. Snippets on Shankara's Identity and True Works (plus Alston Info)

The idea that Śaṅkara was a Brahmin from the south who taught and wrote mainly in the north, who gathered many pupils about him, who won fame travelling about and engaging in debates and who was a devotee of Viṣṇu can be supported from the surviving writings of Śaṅkara himself and his early followers.

The picture drawn in the Śaṅkara Digvijaya of Śaṅkara travelling far and wide and gaining fame as a Teacher and debater can also be supported from the same sources.

That Śaṅkara was an incarnation of the deity Śiva receives no support from contemporary sources. On the contrary, a certain predilection for Viṣṇu has been detected in Śaṅkara’s own writings and in those of his immediate pupils and followers which militates against the possibility of any contemporary belief that he was an incarnation of Śiva. For instance, Śaṅkara himself identifies Hari and Nārāyaṇa (names of Viṣṇu) with the Absolute in his Brahma Sūtra commentary, but does not mention Śiva in this way.

But if his early followers did not regard him as an incarnation of the deity, they certainly regarded him as a Teacher of quite exceptional importance and magnitude.

Certain passages in his commentaries suggest that he had the capacity to write beautiful devotional poetry if he had wished, but in the verse part of the Upadeśa Sāhasrī, the only surviving verse work of certain authenticity, the beauty derives from the content rather than from the form throughout.

The groundwork for securing criteria for distinguishing between the authentic and inauthentic works has been done by Professor Hacker. The authenticity of the Commentaries (Bhāṣya) on the Brahma Sūtras and on the Bṛhadāraṇyaka, Chāndogya, Taittirīya, Īśa, Aitareya, Kaṭha, Praśna and Muṇḍaka Upanishads is not questioned by the vast majority of authorities.

Professor Hacker’s methods, has removed all reasonable doubt as to the authenticity of the commentaries on the Bhagavad Gītā and on the Māṇḍūkya Upanishad with Gauḍapāda’s Kārikās, as also of the two commentaries on the Kena Upanishad. It appears also that there is no reason to doubt the authenticity of the commentary on the Adhyātma Paṭala of the Āpastamba Dharma Sūtra,

Excluded (and it is very important to exclude them if one wants clarity about what Śaṅkara actually said) are such popular favourites as Viveka Cūḍāmaṇi, Ātma Bodha, Svātmanirūpaṇa, Aparokṣānubhūti and Śata Ślokī, which belong to an altogether later age. It is also unsafe to use any of the devotional hymns attributed to Śaṅkara’s name as guides to his doctrine. For instance, the two of them with the best prima facie claims to authenticity are the Dakṣiṇā Mūrti Stotra with a commentary ascribed to Sureśvara and the Hymn to Hari with a commentary ascribed to Ānandagiri. Both works, however, have dubious features.

The present anthology is accordingly based on the Commentaries to the Brahma Sūtras, the Gītā, the Kārikās of Gauḍapāda and to the Adhyātma Paṭala of the Āpastamba Dharma Sūtra, and on the individual commentaries to the classical Upanishads.


~A. J. Alston, Absolute, pp55-62



Dennis Waite (from Back to the Truth):

A. J. Alston (died 2004) was the brilliant translator of “The Method of the Vedanta”* (see [below]). His ability to render the often abstruse philosophical arguments of Shankara into comprehensible and readable English is without parallel in my experience. Accordingly, this set of books – “A Shankara Source Book Vols. 1 – 6” - is invaluable to serious students of Advaita. I have only read one of these - Vol. 2 Shankara on the Creation (Ref. 335) - but am prepared unreservedly to recommend them all on the basis of this. Each book is divided into clear sections and sub-sections. Each topic is introduced and explained by the author, who then selects relevant passages from Shankara’s text which address the topics. It took Alston 37 years to complete this task and Advaitins everywhere can now reap the rewards.

* The Method of the Vedanta: A Critical Account of the Advaita Tradition by Swami Satchidanandendra, translated by A. J. Alston (Ref. 24). This is a huge book, requiring considerable commitment but, if you want to understand clearly what Shankara believed and how his message has been modified or even distorted by subsequent interpreters, then it is indispensable reading. Shankara’s essential method is presented as that of adhyAropa - apavAda, attribution and subsequent denial. His commentaries on the prasthAna traya are examined in detail. Then, following a brief look at pre-Shankara Advaita, there are chapters on each of the major teachers and schools that followed him, in which the same topics are re-examined and the differences outlined. Fortunately, the translation is by A. J. Alston - see below - so is always understandable.









Tuesday, July 8, 2025

On Intelligence, Intuition, and Intellect

Let’s talk about intelligence, intuition, and intellect.

Like consciousness-existence, intelligence is the nature of brahman.

Intellect is partly material. Intuition is partly light.


Monday, July 7, 2025

On the Seventh Day of a Seventh Month

Maya veils and projects. And maya reveals. Ego usurps.

Ego is the name of ignorance in the form of maya.

Feed your intellect. Listen to intuition. Aham Brahmasmi.




Advaita Talk

By playing your part, you worship its one. Saguna Braman is the one true god. Nirguna Brahman is the nondual one.

Advaita is beyond belief. Nonduality transcends all thought. Faith and its confirmation is the real thing.

The deepest you can go is consciousness-existence. Any thought is more shallow.

Mind-off is deep sleep. Mind-on is dreaming. Body-on is the waking dream.

Some say Gaudapada is Advaita cooked in Nargajuna. Some say they’re Shankara but they’re not.


Buddha and Buddhi

You can’t lose consciousness. You are consciousness.

When the mind is turned off in deep sleep, consciousness is witnessing the absence of duality.

Some sages say nirvikalpa samadhi is consciousness witnessing the presence of nonduality.

Atman is the witness consciousness and absolute self but not the doer.

The mind, intellect, memory, and ego act in concert as the doer. They call it the inner instrument.

Intuition trains the intellect but that’s as far as maya goes.



Friday, July 4, 2025

Sonnet in Satcitananda

Consciousness is not manufactured by the mind.

Dreams are manufactured by the mind.

Consciousness-existence is that in which both dreams and deep sleep are appearing.

Consciousness-existence is my nature but I do not have a name.

Self-awareness is the bliss of consciousness-existence to the power of three.

The mind waking from a dream is being mindful.

Pure consciousness seeing through all daydreaming is realization itself.

Don’t take yourself personally.

God isn’t dead but your particular concept of a god has outlived its usefulness.

The principle of existence is like fire. The mind is like on fire.

Seeing through one’s superimposition is the way.

The mind divides naturally. Use the mind carefully in these matters of the self.

All things must be deconstructed.

Effortless nondoing and intuitive nonknowing is the way of consciousness-existence.



The Ten Beginnings

The big is brahman. The big bang is maya.

Satcitananda is the foundation upon which this city of samsara has been imagined.

Maya is neither real nor unreal. Maya is both beginningless and finite.

Maya is the power of saguna brahman, Isvara, name your god.

Nirguna brahman is saguna brahman without the mindstuff.

Consciousness-existence is what I am when I’m not thinking about it.

Self-awareness is the nature of awareness. Another name for that is bliss.

From the point of view of avidya, self-awareness takes a universe of space-time.

As self awareness is the nature of awareness, enlightenment is sudden.

Realization is spontaneous. Like a dream, this never happened.





In a Nondual Point of View

Like an ocean isle, the mind only knows what the mind can know. What the mind can’t know is like the boundless seven seas.

The mind knows what’s within the boundaries of the mind. The mind cannot know the boundless consciousness in which it is appearing.

In the binary way of the mind, the mind considers itself divided from that which it cannot know.

In religion, that unknowable is called god. In scientific materialism, where that unknowable is now a theory to be proven in time, the future is god.

Separating the knowable from the unknowable is a form of ignorance in the shape of maya from the point of view of that nondual consciousness which is all-knowing and myself.