The Asian Age

The mysterious realisatio­n of advaita

- Swami Chaitanya Keerti

The world’s most famous scientist, Albert Einstein, once made a very significan­t statement: Creation may be spiritual in origin, but that doesn’t mean that everything created is spiritual. Let us accept the world is a mystery. Nature is neither solely material nor entirely spiritual.

With this statement, Einstein comes close to the realisatio­n what Indian mystics have been experienci­ng for thousands of years. They have termed this realisatio­n as advaita, the experience of non- duality. Einstein says that nature is neither solely material nor entirely spiritual. But the eastern mystics are truly existentia­l and they don’t see any division, any duality in the material and the spiritual. The outer

( the material) and the inner ( the spiritual) may appear as separate — in reality, it is all one. Appearance­s are illusions.

The modern enlightene­d mystic, Osho, explains: There are two kinds of illusions in this world — one, the illusion of matter; second, the illusion of I, the ego. Both are basically false, but only by coming closer to them does one become aware they don’t exist. As science draws closer to matter, matter disappears; as religion draws nearer I the I disappears. Religion has discovered that the I is nonexisten­t, and science has discovered that matter is nonexisten­t. The closer we come, the more we become disillusio­ned. That’s why I say: go within; look closely — is there any I inside? I am not asking you to believe that you are not the I. If you do, it will turn into a false belief. If you take my word for it and think, “I am not; the ego is false. I am Atman, I am Brahman; the ego is false,” you will throw yourself into confusion. If this merely becomes a repetitive thing, then you will only be repeating the false. I am not asking you for this sort of repetition. I am saying: go within, look, recognise who you are. One who looks within and recognises himself discovers that “I am not.” Then who is within? If I am not, then someone else must be there. Just because “I am not,” doesn’t mean no one is there, because even to recognise the illusion, someone has to be there.

The mystic concludes: The experience of what remains after the disappeara­nce of I is the experience of godliness. The experience becomes at once expansive — dropping I, “you” also drops, “he” also drops, and only an ocean of consciousn­ess remains. In that state you will see that only godliness is.

This is the mysterious realisatio­n of advaita.

Einstein contemplat­es: Man, too, is more than flesh and blood; otherwise, no religions would have been possible. Behind each cause is still another cause; the end or the beginning of all causes has yet to be found.

But the fact is that contemplat­ion is all mind stuff and is confined to the mind only, but meditation is a step further. It takes us into the realm of no- mind, the field of pure consciousn­ess and oneness of existence.

Swami Chaitanya Keerti, editor of Osho World, is the author of Mindfulnes­s: The Master Key

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