Saturday, August 23, 2025

Mandukya K2.33: Non-duality is auspicious (Advayata siva)

bhāvair-asadbhir-evāyam-advayena ca kalpitaḥ, bhāvā apyadvayenaiva tasmād-advayatā śivā. (33)

भावैः – objects; असद्भिः – unreal; एव – verily; अयम् – this (Self); च अद्वयेन – and for non-dual; कल्पितः – perceived; भावाःअपि – objects also; अद्वयेन-एव – the non-dual (Self) only; तस्मात् – therefore; अद्वयता – non-duality; शिवा – is auspicious 33.

This Ᾱtman is imagined both as the unreal objects that are perceived and also as the non-dual. The objects are also imagined in the non-duality Itself. Therefore non-duality is the (highest) auspiciousness. (tr-Chinmayananda)

This ( Ātmā) is imagined as the unreal objects and as the non-dual (substratum.) But, the (unreal) objects (exist) because of the non-dual (substratum) only. Therefore, non-duality is auspicious. (tr-Paramarthananda)


Thus since non-duality is the substratum of all illusion, and since this non-duality is ever unchanging in its own nature, advayata, non-duality; is Siva, auspicious, even in the state of illusion. But the illusions alone are evil, for they generate fear like that from the snake seen on a rope for instance. Non-duality is free from fear; hence that alone is auspicious. ~Shankara (tr-Gambhirananda)


Gauḍapāda says that all our imaginations of the unreal world of perceived plurality, as well as our philosophical conclusions that the supreme Reality is non-dual, both of them are mere imaginations. // In fact, to the Supreme Reality no quality can be attributed. To define the Supreme in terms of Its qualities or properties is to pull It down to the level of a substance. To define the Supreme would be to make it non-eternal and finite, perishable and changing. To define the Supreme as non-dual is only an ‘indicative definition’ bringing home to us the idea that It is the Absolute. It is non-dual only with reference to the duality perceived, but when we have realised that, duality itself is false, the term non-dual has no existence. ~Chinmayananda


The idea that the Self is the truth depends on the idea that the world and the jivas are false. When the world and the jivas are negated the word “truth” no longer applies. Only reality, “is-ness,” remains. It is neither true nor false. // The verse implies that the belief that objects exist on their own is inauspicious insofar as depending on them produces attachment. When you realize your innate non-dual wholeness, you are auspiciously freed of attachment to everything. ~Swartz


This is the first time we are encountering the idea of seeing Non-duality as being something to be viewed as ‘auspicious’. Even from the point of view of illusion, the Bhashya says that Non-duality is an auspicious concept. The reason is that it provides us with a changeless substratum against which we can evaluate the changing superimposition. It provides us with a solid foundation to work from. It provides us with a vision by which we can steer our lifeboat safely through this world. ~Sandeepany (Gurubhaktananda)






Thursday, August 21, 2025

Mandukya K2.32: This is the highest Truth (Iti esa paramarthata)

Na nirodho na cotpattir-na baddho na ca sādhakaḥ, na mumukṣur-na vai mukta ityeṣā paramārthatā. (32)

निरोधः – there is neither dissolution; न च-उत्पत्तिः – and nor creation, birth in other words, origination; न बद्धः – none is in bondage; न च साधकः – and none is aspirant for wisdom; न मुमुक्षुः – none hankers after liberation; न वै मुक्तः – none indeed is liberated; इति-एषा – this is; परमार्थता – the supreme Truth

32. There is neither dissolution, nor birth; neither anyone in bondage, nor any aspirant for wisdom; neither can there be anyone who hankers after Liberation, nor any liberated as such. This alone is the supreme Truth.

Tr-Chinmayananda


And then there is na nirodhah, no dissolution - nirodha being the same as nirodhana, utpattih, origination; baddhah, one under bondage, a transmigrating individual soul; sadhakah, one who strives for liberation; mumuksuh, one who hankers after liberation; muktah, one who is free from bondage. In the absence of origination and dissolution, bondage etc. do not exist. Iti esa paramarthata, this is the highest Truth. ~Shankara (tr-Gambhirananda

This verse sums up the meaning of the chapter. When duality is perceived to be illusory and Atman alone is known as the sole Reality, then it is clearly established that all our experiences, ordinary or religious (Vedic), verily pertain to the domain of ignorance. Then one perceives that there is no dissolution, i.e., destruction (from the standpoint of Reality); no birth or creation, i.e., coming into existence; no one in bondage, i.e., no worldly being; no pupilage, i.e., no one adopting means for the attainment of liberation; no seeker after liberation, and no one free from bondage (as bondage does not exist). The Ultimate Truth is that the stage of bondage, etc., cannot exist in the absence of creation and destruction. How can it be said that there is neither creation nor destruction? It is thus replied: There is no duality (at any time). ~Shankara (tr-Nikhilananda)


Gauḍapāda’s work is a call of Truth to man, from Truth, to walk the path of Truth, and to reach the Truth. Throughout the path, the Truth is explained and the Truth is described only in the native language of the land of Truth. Thus, without commentary and vivid explanations given by interpreters, who know both the language of Truth as well as the language of ignorance, none can understand the Kārikā fully. ~Chinmayananda


The creation, sustenance, and dissolution of the waking world only seemingly happen but really they do not happen from the standpoint of Turīya ātmā. From the waker’s standpoint they are real. Jīvas coming into existence, experiencing saṃsāra, jīvas becoming seekers, following the sādhanas karma-yoga, upāsana-yoga and jnana-yoga, coming to a guru, guru teaching, and getting liberated only seemingly happen. There is no question of anyone becoming liberated. From the standpoint of the body-mind complex, all these are really happening but from the standpoint of Turīyam, all these are as though happening. ~Paramarthananda


This statement is probably responsible for more mischief in the modern “advaita” world than any other. In the hands of untaught teachers with no impersonal means of knowledge, it amounts to a license to frustrate unqualified seekers and has spawned a generation of non-existent gurus proclaiming non-existent truths to non-existent seekers. Unless it is seen in the context of a complete teaching of reality – satya and mithya – and a sadhana that converts an undisciplined seeker into a disciplined inquirer, it amounts to nothing more than denial of mithya. The mithya world and the mithya seeker exist, so a teaching has to account for it and provide tools that prepare the mind to understand the meaning of this statement. ~Swartz


Karikas 31 and 32 present Gaudapada’s famous teaching of “nonorigination” (ajativada). These karikas exhibit a very close resemblance to some portions of Mahayana Buddhist literature... Though Gaudapada’s language here is undeniably similar to that of Nagarjuna and to Mahayana Buddhism in general, the similarity ends at this point, for Gaudapada’s perspective is quite different. Gaudapada’s perspective is based upon the teaching contained in the Mandykya Upanisad. If the phenomenal world is an unreal appearance, then there is no real origination or real destruction, there can only be an apparent origination and an apparent destruction. Accordingly, there is no one who is really bound etc. ~Comans


From the standpoint of Reality the stanza is indeed true. To one who has awakened to the supreme Consciousness, there is neither dissolution, nor birth, nor bondage. Having reached the goal there are no more aspirations, no more seeking, no more the satisfaction of having gained the Liberation. Having become the native of the land of Liberation, the individual has already transcended the ordinary planes of delusions. To him, therefore, the pluralistic world of illusions or the endless demands made by the physical, psychological and intellectual entities in himself are no more there. Having cognised the Self, he becomes the Self, and as the Self he is himself the all-pervading, divine Reality. ~Chinmayananda




Tuesday, August 19, 2025

Footnotes to Mandukya K2.16

Which was first—this reflection or the mirror? Neither inner nor outer nor altered in any way be.

Dreams dream. That’s what we do. It’s not about the dream as it is the dreaming. That's our first clue.

We are imagination nation. What I dream is just another dream in you. That I dream is the point. Is it not, you?.







Short Talks on Mandukya K2.16: kalpayate purvam

People are not created but imagined.

Because people were imagined, a person will imagine too.

With individuality comes ego. With ego comes duality.

Nobody knows which came first: reflected consciousness or the material universe.

Maya is beginningless. Pure consciousness is beyond both.




Mandukya K2.16 Medley

Gauḍapāda says that first of all, the imagination of separative individual Self, jīvātma bhāvanā, is rendered upon the Ᾱtman. (Ātmā, with the help of māyā-śakti projects the waking world.~P) This egocentric idea is born with the concept of the separateness, when the mind rose up and the awareness was reflected on the mental pool of its own thought flow. ~C

Even though we cannot talk about the order of the appearance of the experiencer and the experienced, for our understanding we talk about an order. In that order, first the experiencer jīva is created according to the karma of the jīva and thereafter the experienced world is created based on the karma of the jīva only. The world does not have puṇya-pāpam because it is inert. ~P

How can projection be a series? It isn’t a series, but breaking it down into stages makes it easier for a Self-ignorant person to understand the nature of mithya. Liberation is complete knowledge of satya and mithya. If you don’t understand the relationship between your sentient jiva and its thoughts and feelings, which after all are just material objects, how can you free yourself from attachment to them? ~S

From this basic sense of individuality, arises the entire projection of falsity into this world. This is denoted here by “he imagines different objects”, where the key word is not ‘objects’ but ‘different’. Difference denotes Duality, which is a departure from Non-duality, the state of the Pure Self. We can say, the Ego gives birth to Duality, because Duality is really not there in a world where Ego is not present. ~S/G

This delusion creates a multiple hierarchy of delusions, each thickening the veil and taking us farther and farther away from our real nature and in the ultimate analysis of it all, the egocentric deluded entity in us looks out, into a self-made world through the mind and the sense organs, to cognise in its own dream world a panorama of names and forms arranged and paraded to order. ~C

First comes the knowledge of the idea of cause and next the knowledge of the idea of effect. Then follows the memory of both cause and effect. This memory is followed by a corresponding knowledge which results in the various states of knowledge characterized by action, actor, and effect. These are followed by their memory, which, in turn, is followed by other states of knowledge. In this way are imagined various entities, internal and external. ~S(N)


~text from quotes of Chinmayananda, Paramarthananda, Swartz, Sandeepany/Gurubhaktananda, Shankara (tr-Nikhilananda) see MK2.16 [&17,18]: Translations & Commentaries) for each quote's context







Monday, August 18, 2025

MK2.16 (&17,18): Translations & Commentaries

jīvaṁ kalpayate pūrvaṁ tato bhāvān pṛthag-vidhān, // bāhyān-ādhyātmikāṁś-caiva yathā-vidyas-tathā-smṛtiḥ. (16)

जीवम् – the jīva, the individual; कल्पयते – (the Self) projects, imagines; पूर्वम् – first; ततः – thereafter; भावान् – objects; पृथक्-विधान् – various entities; // बाह्यान् – external, objective; आध्यात्मिकान् – subjective, personal; च एव – and also; यथा – as is; विद्यः – the knowledge; तथा – so is; स्मृतिः – the memory

16. First of all the egocentric attitude (jīva bhāvanā) is projected and thereafter follow imaginations of the various entities both objective and subjective. As is the knowledge, so is the memory of it. (tr-Chinmayananda)

Like the fancying of a snake in a rope, He purvam kalpayate, first imagines; jivam, the individual-who is a bundle of causes and effects expressing themselves through such beliefs as, ‘I act; and mine are the (resulting) sorrows and happiness’ - on the pure Self that is devoid of such characteristics.   After that, for his sake, He (the Lord) imagines different objects, such as the vital force and so on, bahyan adhyatmikan ca eva, both external and mental, dividing them into action, instruments, and results.   As to that, what is the reason for that imagination? That is being stated. The individual that is imagined by (the Lord) Himself and is himself capable of imagination, gets a memory, yathavidyah, in accordance with the kind of thought-impressions that he is possessed of; that fact is alluded to by tathasmrtih, he is possessed of that kind of memory.    ~Shankara (tr-Gambhirananda)

First comes the knowledge of the idea of cause and next the knowledge of the idea of effect. Then follows the memory of both cause and effect. This memory is followed by a corresponding knowledge which results in the various states of knowledge characterized by action, actor, and effect. These are followed by their memory, which, in turn, is followed by other states of knowledge. In this way are imagined various entities, internal and external, which are perceived and are related to one another as cause and effect. ~Shankara (tr-Nikhilananda)

Ātmā, with the help of māyā-śakti projects the waking world. The entire created world should include the experiencer jīva and the experienced objects. One is sentient and the other is insentient. Even though we cannot talk about the order of the appearance of the experiencer and the experienced, for our understanding we talk about an order. In that order, first the experiencer jīva is created according to the karma of the jīva and thereafter the experienced world is created based on the karma of the jīva only. The world does not have puṇya-pāpam because it is inert. …The whole drama starts. The only solution is to raise oneself from Viśva, Taijasa and Prājña to Turīyam.   ~Paramarthananda

Gauḍapāda says that first of all, the imagination of separative individual Self, jīvātma bhāvanā, is rendered upon the Ᾱtman. This egocentric idea is born with the concept of the separateness, when the mind rose up and the awareness was reflected on the mental pool of its own thought flow; and the egocentric entity, seemingly real, changes its attitude, character, nature and behaviour according to the reflecting medium, namely, the mental condition. This ego (jīva), which is the reflection of Reality on the mental lake, is the one which is the enjoyer and the doer, who is the sufferer and the liberated, who is the seeker and siddha. // Once this projection of the egocentric concept is posited upon the Ᾱtman, this delusion creates a multiple hierarchy of delusions, each thickening the veil and taking us farther and farther away from our real nature and in the ultimate analysis of it all, the egocentric deluded entity in us looks out, into a self-made world through the mind and the sense organs, to cognise in its own dream world a panorama of names and forms arranged and paraded to order. These are as decided by the previous mental impressions in the individuals! This idea is very subtly indicated when Gauḍapāda says very crisply, ‘as the knowledge, so is the memory of it’. ~Chinmayananda

The “I” sense in itself is not a product of ignorance. In its pure state, this “I” is actually our true Self. However, when it begins to relate to and identify itself with the limited body and mind, it becomes a puny imitation – a caricature of the splendour that is our real Self. // From this basic sense of individuality, arises the entire projection of falsity into this world. This is denoted here by “he imagines different objects”, where the key word is not ‘objects’ but ‘different’. Difference denotes Duality, which is a departure from Non-duality, the state of the Pure Self. We can say, the Ego gives birth to Duality, because Duality is really not there in a world where Ego is not present. Duality lies only in the Ego’s perception of the world! ~Sandeepany (Gurubhaktananda)

How can projection be a series? It isn’t a series, but breaking it down into stages makes it easier for a Self-ignorant person to understand the nature of mithya. Liberation is complete knowledge of satya and mithya. If you don’t understand the relationship between your sentient jiva and its thoughts and feelings, which after all are just material objects, how can you free yourself from attachment to them? ~Swartz


aniścitā yathā rajjur-andhakāre vikalpitā, sarpa-dhārādibhir-bhāvais-tadvad-ātmā vikalpitaḥ. (17)

17. As the rope whose real nature, when not known, is imagined in the dark to be a snake, a water line and so on, so also the Ᾱtman is imagined in various ways.   ~Tr- Chinmayananda

To say the Self is not clearly known implies that it is also vaguely known. If the Self is not known, Vedanta won’t set you free, because Vedanta is a means of knowledge, not a belief system. A means of knowledge removes vagueness about something, in this case your identity.   ~Swartz


Niścitāyāṃ yathā rajjvāṃ vikalpo vinivartate । rajjureveti cādvaitaṃ tadvadātmaviniścayaḥ ॥ 18॥

When the rope is clearly known as “(this is) rope only”, (every) misperception goes away and the nondual (rope remains.) The knowledge of Ātmā (is also) like that. (verse 18).  ~Tr. Paramarthananda





MK2.16 Medley

Gauḍapāda says that first of all, the imagination of separative individual Self, jīvātma bhāvanā, is rendered upon the Ᾱtman. (Ātmā, with the help of māyā-śakti projects the waking world.~P) This egocentric idea is born with the concept of the separateness, when the mind rose up and the awareness was reflected on the mental pool of its own thought flow. ~C

Even though we cannot talk about the order of the appearance of the experiencer and the experienced, for our understanding we talk about an order. In that order, first the experiencer jīva is created according to the karma of the jīva and thereafter the experienced world is created based on the karma of the jīva only. The world does not have puṇya-pāpam because it is inert. ~P

How can projection be a series? It isn’t a series, but breaking it down into stages makes it easier for a Self-ignorant person to understand the nature of mithya. Liberation is complete knowledge of satya and mithya. If you don’t understand the relationship between your sentient jiva and its thoughts and feelings, which after all are just material objects, how can you free yourself from attachment to them? ~S

From this basic sense of individuality, arises the entire projection of falsity into this world. This is denoted here by “he imagines different objects”, where the key word is not ‘objects’ but ‘different’. Difference denotes Duality, which is a departure from Non-duality, the state of the Pure Self. We can say, the Ego gives birth to Duality, because Duality is really not there in a world where Ego is not present. ~S/G

This delusion creates a multiple hierarchy of delusions, each thickening the veil and taking us farther and farther away from our real nature and in the ultimate analysis of it all, the egocentric deluded entity in us looks out, into a self-made world through the mind and the sense organs, to cognise in its own dream world a panorama of names and forms arranged and paraded to order. ~C

First comes the knowledge of the idea of cause and next the knowledge of the idea of effect. Then follows the memory of both cause and effect. This memory is followed by a corresponding knowledge which results in the various states of knowledge characterized by action, actor, and effect. These are followed by their memory, which, in turn, is followed by other states of knowledge. In this way are imagined various entities, internal and external. ~S(N)



TOC Karika 2 Vaitathya Prakarana (from Chinmaya Sandeepany)

Vaitathya Prakarana

Section 2.1: THE UNREALITY OF DREAMS

Verse 2.1: Dreams are an Unreality – Reasons 1 & 2

Verse 2.2: Dreams are an Unreality – Reasons 3 & 4

Verse 2.3: Dreams are an Unreality – Reason “5”

Section 2.2: WAKING & DREAM COMPARED

Verse 2.4: Objects are Perceived in Both States

Verse 2.5: Two Similarities of Waking and Dream States

Verse 2.6: The Unreality of the Waking State

Verse 2.7: Utility is No Proof of Reality

Verse 2.8: Predictability is No Proof of Reality

Verse 2.9: The “Inner & Outer Consciousness” Within Dream

Verse 2.10: The “Inner & Outer Consciousness” Within Waking

Verse 2.11: Who is Their Cognizer and Support?

Section 2.3: THE ROLE OF IMAGINATION

Verse 2.12: The Imaginer – One’s Own Self!

Verse 2.13: How Does Self “Imagine Itself”?

Verse 2.14: “The Time Frames are Different”

Verse 2.15: “The Appearance is Totally Different”

Verse 2.16: The Primary Error – Egocentricity

Verse 2.17: An Analogy for Egocentric Projections

Verse 2.18: Knowledge Removes the Error

Verse 2.19 Ignorance Multiplies the Error

Section 2.4: KNOWLEDGE & BELIEF SYSTEMS

Verse 2.20: Systems 1-4

Verse 2.21: Systems 5-8

Verse 2.22: Systems 9-12

Verse 2.23: Systems 13-16

Verse 2.24: Systems 17-20

Verse 2.25: Systems 21-24

Verse 2.26: Systems 25-28

Verse 2.27: Systems 29-32

Verse 2.28: Systems 33-35

Verse 2.29: How “Belief Systems” take Root

Verse 2.30: Knowledge Unites, Imagination Divides

Verse 2.31: Multiplicity is Unreal

Section 2.5: NON-DUALITY – THE ULTIMATE BELIEF

Verse 2.32: The Benchmark of Non-duality

Verse 2.33: The “Benchmark”of Duality

Verse 2.34: The Non-dual Vision of the World

Verse 2.35: The Realisation of Non-Duality

Verse 2.36: Being Devoted to Non-Duality

Verse 2.37: The Saint & Society

Verse 2.38: The Non-dual Ideal in Practice



Saturday, August 16, 2025

Arriving at Mahavakya

Negative capability is real power. Like effortless nondoing.

Let self-remembering be the front line of your mind control.

The Big Bang is an appearance in Supreme Silence.

Mithya appears in satcitananda. Ayam atma brahma.





Note to Self

Dreams are manufactured in the mind by the power of sleep. Me and god appear in consciousness by the power of maya.

When the mind forgets, memory remembers. Consciousness is timeless. Maya is only beginningless.

Duality isn’t. Nonduality is. There is no me but everything is myself.





Talks on Mandukya K2.12: atmanatmanam-atma

As the dream state is projected from the mind by its own power of sleep, the waking state is projected from consciousness, in consciousness, and by consciousness through the power of its maya.

The dream begins as the mind forgets itself. The universe begins as the nondual Self has no need to know a thing (there is no other). In order to know itself, maya happens. God, beings, and the universe, oh my!

The projection of the Self is not duality. A movie doesn’t trouble the movie screen. In this way, the Self is just a witness. And the self-realized one knows all is in and of the Self. This is Vedanta, Gaudapada says.