Manthra and Japa
Q. Is there any Manthra or Japa that will give us this Santhi state that
you spoke about just now? If there is any, which is the important one?
A. Manthra and Japa are essential for all types of men. What is a manthra?
'Ma' means 'manana' and 'thra' means 'saving'; so 'manthra' means that
which can save you if you meditate on it. Manthra will save you from being
caught up in the coils of this worldly life which is infested with death,
grief and pain. Of all manthras, the Pranava is the highest and the best.
It is the very head and crown of all of them.
Q. Suppose each one does the Japam of the name of the Ishtadevatha according
to his own light; I believe it is not wrong. Or is it?
A. You mean that however savage or foolish a man may be, he cannot but
call on the Lord! Well, if the name is recited along with the Pranava,
it is bound to be beneficial. Just as the waters of the ocean are raised
into the sky by the rays of the sun and then, falling as rain, they form
rills and rivers and rush towards the ocean to become once again the waters
of the ocean, all sounds and manthras that were once only Pranava, reach
the Pranava through the Japa and other disciplines and rites. They all
get merged in the Pranava, their source.
Q. Swami! Some elders have said that the more bija-aksharas a manthra
has, the more effective it is. Are such manthras to be preferred to others
which have only a few bija-aksharas?
A. I don't agree with the view that when the number of bija-aksharas diminishes,
there is less chance for concentration in Dhyana. Sadhakas would be benefited
more if they repeat the Panchakshari or Ashtakshari with the Pranava added
in the beginning. When they have proceeded some distance thus, they can
give up even the words and concentrate on the Form depicted through the
sound and transform the Manthra into the Devatha Himself. That is why
the Sruthi says, 'Nissabdo Brahma Uchyathe' - "Brahma is Silence,
absence of Sound."
Q. How are we to create a vacuum of sound? How can that be Brahmam?
A. The Sruthis declare that this objective world, this Prakrithi, is Maya;
they also say that He who has all this Maya under His control is Eswara.
So, try to have all this creation under control and become Eswara yourself.
The stage when, so far as you are concerned, the objective world has come
to naught, is the stage when you attain Brahmam. Until that is set at
naught, you cannot attain Brahmam; that is certain. Like the snake that
discards its skin and assumes a new skin, the Sadhaka discards the old
skin, puts on the skin of the Deity indicated by the manthra that he concentrates
upon.
Q. Pardon me, Swami! I cannot understand all this. Make it clear through
some more examples.
A. You have seen an egg, is it not? When the bird sits on the egg for
some time, the chick grows inside it to its full stature and then, when
the shell of the egg is broken, it emerges and assumes its real form.
In the same way, when the Sadhaka, with purified consciousness dwells
on the manthra and its meaning, and revolves its significance in his mind
without break, the vision grows in his mind without break, the shell of
Ajnana breaks and he shines in the splendour of the Divinity that he has
formed in his consciousness.
Q. All things originate from Pranava and all things finally merge in
Pranava, they say. Then why is it that the very elders who say this declare
that some can pronounce this and some cannot?
A. What is Prakrithi, except the commingling of the Five Elements? The
Pranava is the very life of all the elements and so it is the life-breath
of Prakrithi itself. The roar of waters falling down a cliff, the beating
of waves on a promontory of the shore, both repeat the Pranava only. The
sound of inhaling and exhaling breath is itself the Pranava, is it not?
Whether they know it or not, the heigh-ho of the men who carry along a
palanquin on their shoulders, the heave of those who lift weights, the
heehoy of those who beat clothes on slabs by the riverside; all resound
with the Pranava. Repeat it with a full knowledge of its inner significance
and you will soon be relieved of the burden of this world's worry. The
Pranava of the breathing process is also the saviour from grief. It is
meaningless to argue that some have the right to utter the Pranava and
some have not. Those who do not breathe may not have the authority to
utter it; but all who breathe are reciting it already in the process and
so there is no sense in denying it to any one. When Arjuna asked how one
should remember the Lord at the point of death, do you not know the reply
that Krishna gave? He said that he should recall to his mind the Pranava
which is undifferentiated from Him. Such a Bhaktha will, He said, attain
the highest goal. So every one has the right to this great manthra, the
Pranava.
Q. How can the goal be reached through the Upasana of Pranava? How can
the person who meditates become transformed into the thing meditated upon?
Please make this unequalled manthra and the way it helps us clearer to
me by means of easy illustrations.
A. Very good. Pranava is the bow; the Atma is the arrow; Parabrahmam is
the target. So the Sadhaka must, like the practitioner of the art of archery,
be unaffected by things that agitate the mind. He should pay one-pointed
attention to the target; then the bowman is filled with the target; he
becomes the thing meditated on. In the Kaivalyopanishad, the Mundakopanishad
and in various parts of the Sruthi, the Pranava is extolled in various
ways. Therefore this manthra which liberates man can be recited and meditated
upon by all. All can practise the Pranava Upasana; you need have no doubts
on this point.