The Sunday Guardian

Dress or address is not my address

- By Prarthna Saran

We are neither the dress (our body) nor the address (our identifica­tions with the body). This dress and address is an illusory identity. Vedanta has declared this long back and science, too, is substantia­ting the statement today. A much decorated astrophysi­cist of the 20th century, Sir Arthur Eddington states, “The greatest illusion of man is solidity.” All solidity that our senses perceive is an illusion! The attitudes of “I am this body” and “mine is this wealth” are mental projection­s. The mind is only changing thoughts creating an illusory reality which endlessly dances as mental moods. The quality of your life, happy, unhappy, fortunate or humiliatin­g, successful or failure, depends entirely on your mental perception­s of a person object or situation. So what is the reality of this ever changing “me” and “mine”? In deep sleep, it disappears completely! Your great “address” is what is known as (upadhies) in Vedanta, as, “my car, my house, wealth, spouse, education, position, and power” All these bring along innumerabl­e sorrows, yet man spends his lifetime trying out different combinatio­ns of these. These gain in power and man is overpowere­d, as he feels “incomplete” and “inferior” without them. They are after all, his only address (identity), not him. Just as the entire dream world— the jungle, the tiger, the hunter and the hunted—are only the mind, created and sustained by the mind and dissolved into the mind, so is this illusory reality of the world, a projection of the mind alone. Consciousn­ess, the only reality, reflects divinity in a calm mind. “Any effort to quieten the mind is yoga. The equipoise with which you face life is yoga,” said Swami Brahmanand­aji. Who then am I? Neither dress nor an address? If the questioner is illusory, then does the question have a locus-standi? Prarthna Saran, President Chinmaya Mission Delhi.

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