| |
|
NDM:
When
you met your guru Swami Chinmayananda, how much of a vasana load did
you have at that time and how much were you able to shake off and
how long did this take after your realization of the self?
James: My vasana load was quite light. That is why I was able
to assimilate the teachings. I worked out my worldly desires…sex, money
and power…by my late Twenties. The tendencies were there but they were
non-binding.
Once I
realized that I was the Self…it is not actually correct to say that I
realized the self…the purification took place automatically as a result
of the knowledge, so it would not be completely accurate to say that “I”
was shaking off anything. If the knowledge “I am awareness” is firm it
does the work. The Bhagavad Gita says, “There is no purifier like
(self) knowledge.” In so far as there was a functional ego there…a
James…I directed him to make certain choices that resulted in the
further attenuation of the remaining non-binding
vasanas…as a
kind of hobby. There is nothing to be gained by being
vasana
free.
NDM: When you
say "there is nothing to be gained by being vasana free", what do
you think Sri Ramana meant when he said "owing to the fluctuation of
the vasana s, realization takes time to steady itself. Spasmodic
realization is not enough to prevent rebirth, but it cannot become
permanent as long as there are vasana s there."
James: This statement of Ramana’s needs a little bit of analysis.
Not all vasana s destabilize the mind. In fact there are
many…self inquiry, devotion, meditation, etc. that compose the mind
and enhance self inquiry and are considered means of self
realization. The vasana s that causes violent fluctuations
in the mind or that make it cloudy and dull are the
vasana s
he is talking about, I believe: greed, anger, lust, attachment,
hatred, etc. On this score he is definitely correct. The reason
you want a composed mind is so that you can assimilate the knowledge
that is equivalent to vasanas.
|
|
|
You
have to remember that Ramana was not a teacher. He was an
enlightened person of the highest character but he spoke one on one
to people with specific questions. He did not carefully unfold the
complete teachings of yoga or Vedanta in a systematic way in order
to resolve both apparent and real contradictions. The idea that
vasana exhaustion is equivalent to enlightenment, which I
assume he means by ‘prevent rebirth,’ is called the
vasana kshaya
theory of enlightenment. It is best known through Pantanjali’s Yoga
sutras in which he says ‘yoga chitta vritti nirodha.’ ‘Yoga
is the removal of the waves in the mind,’ not to put too fine a
point on it. Patanjali and traditional Vedanta would both agree
that only the binding vasanas need to be elimintated for
vasanas. A binding vasana is one that you are compelled
to act out. Why do you act it out? Because you identify with it.
You identify with it because you think it will complete you, make
you feel happy. Why do you identify with it? Because you are
ignorant of your true nature, which happens to be whole and complete
and in need of nothing, but which unfortunately which is
unappreciated by you. To make it simple, the idea is that you have
to get rid of some of your psychological baggage if you want to be
enlightened.
The
vasana s themselves have
no power. They are just ideas in awareness. But they become
powerful tendencies because of a person’s self ignorance. Therefore
it is the identification with the
vasana that needs to be
removed, not the vasana itself. The identification needs to
be removed because you should identify with the self if you want to
be free. Confident identification of oneself as the self
neutralizes the vasanas. So, speaking from the self’s point
of view the vasanas are not a problem. They are only a
problem from the point of view of an individual who wants to realize
the self and then only the binding ones need to be dealt with. In
that statement I was speaking from the platform of the self.
|
|
NDM:
Do you believe it’s possible for someone to drop their entire vasana
load immediately and all their life times of samskaras, karmic debt,
conditioning and so on with realizing the self.
Or is shaking off and unwinding these vasanas, samskaras usually a
gradual process that takes time, work and additional self-enquiry after
one has realized the self?
James: The complete dropping of the
vasana load at one time is
a Neo-Advaitic fantasy. There is no reason for
vasanas to be a
problem when you know that you are awareness. You can easily live with
them. The presence or absence of
vasanas is not enlightenment
because the karmic mind/ego entity is not opposed to awareness. It is
merely an appearance in awareness. Those making this claim are fame
seekers who equate enlightenment with purity. It is just big talk.
Additionally, nothing like this happens in nature. Everything in nature
is a gradual process, some call it evolution.
NDM:
What was it that qualified you to receive Swami Chinmayanandas Vedanta
teachings?
James: The hard and fast realization that there was not one thing in
samsara that could make me happy. I would have preferred to die to
living another day chasing the things I chased with such a passion
before. There are so many seekers and so few finders because most
seekers still have hope that samsara will work for them one day.
I was one hundred percent convinced that the world was empty.
|
NDM:
What are the odds that a typical westerner would be qualified,
have the right disposition, temperament, intelligence and the
other factors to study Vedanta with a satguru?
James:
About the same as winning the lottery. It is particularly
difficult for Westerners because the culture presents no
alternative to samsara. It is in love with
samsara.
It tells everyone that they are inadequate incomplete consumers
and it offers enticing sexy solutions. It is unlikely in India
too, but there is visible culture there that will respond to the
deeper needs of the soul.
NDM:
Do you believe it’s a result of one’s karma, action in prior
lives that someone would even begin seeking, or come across a
satguru?
James:
Yes, Although everything prior to right now is a ‘past life.’
No one knows the answer to this. It is best to think of it as
the self throwing off the shackles of ignorance.
|
|
NDM:
If someone would like to study Vedanta with a guru. How does one go
about finding a legitimate qualified traditional Vedanta teacher outside
of the contaminated modern day satsang market without traveling to India
like you did?
James: It is not
really advisable to seek a guru. If you are ready, it does not matter
where you are, the guru will appear. So the best thing is to do your
very best spiritually according to your own understanding, live as pure
a life and possible and ask God…however you see it…for freedom. It will
happen. The reason the Neo-Advaita scene is so dangerous is because it
has only a (half-baked) understanding of the teachings of non-duality
and, more important, no road map out of
samsara. It denies
samsara altogether so it does not deal with karma and dharma and
all the other essential knowledge and practice that prepares one for the
dialogue with a proper mahatma. Having said that, there are Western
people who are realized and who are good teachers, but they have the
good sense to keep their heads down and work quietly out of the
limelight. Seeking has become just another lifestyle these days. I
know several. Please don’t ask me their names.
NDM:
What is the difference with going to a satsang and getting Vedanta
instruction with a guru?
James: The way the satsang scene has evolved here is a joke. I
was recently given a copy of a book by Mooji who as you probably know is
one of the big luminaries in the Neo-Advaitic world. One of his
followers wanted me to debate him. I said “OK, if he wants to debate it
is fine with me but I have no idea what he is saying” so the person gave
me a copy of his book Breath of the Absolute. On the very first page he
goes into the theory of Advaita quite correctly. Mind you I am not
saying that I think Mooji is enlightened or not. He gives five or six
sentences...all the usual no this and no that…and then he says, “Here
you are not being told that you must be fit for this journey.” He may
be the Avatar of Avatars but this is just nonsense. Presumably Ramana’s
famous enlightened cow’s offspring could wander into one of Mooji’s
Tiruvannamalai satangs… which takes place in an area where cows wander
freely…and ‘get it.’ You cannot make it to the feet of a proper Vedanta
teacher unless you are qualified. The
sampradaya keeps those
that are unqualified out.
|

|
|
I
know that some will say that I have an ax to grind and it is probably
churlish to say this but one day I was channel surfing and I came across
Gangaji in satsang on a public access channel. I do have an ax
to grind with Neo-Advaita but I have no problem with any person doing
what they are inspired to do, enlightened or not, as long as they follow
dharma. Anyway, this woman came up to sit in the ‘hot seat.’ She was
an emotional wreck and broke into tears within minutes. Her life was so
difficult and enlightenment was so hard and…boo hoo...it was all so
tawdry like the ‘reality’ shows on TV. And Gangaji…of course….was so
‘supportive,’ so kind and compassionate…like enlightened people are
supposed to be. She took her hand and lovingly stroked her hair and
said, ‘There, there you poor dear’ or some sort of equally sappy
nonsense. I switched channels quickly before I was overcome with nausea
but I suppose what happened next…as it does in these Neo-Advaita
satsang s…the guru dishes up some terribly clever vague ‘advaitic’
psychobabble and the grateful recipient wanders off ‘fully’
enlightened.
Secondly, because the satsang here is white bread, meaning it
has very little food value, people wander from one guru to another. I
never met any of these teachers but sooner or later some of them show up
at my doorstep and I hear the list of names…it is always the same. And
what I discover is that these people are completely confused by what
they have heard. So and so said this and so and so said that etc. But
Vedanta has not changed since the beginning. There is only one teaching
and it is very refined and sophisticated. All the apparent
contradictions have been handled, not denied. It works and it will
continue to work forever. Just as nobody is going to invent a new
wheel, nobody is going to invent a new Vedanta. It crystallized into
its perfect form in the Eighth Century.
Finally, Ignorance is hard wired, persistent and very pervasive. You
need many tools to attack it. Vedanta is the complete tool kit. Neo-Advaita
is more or less in the same category as religion because without a valid
means of self knowledge you can only believe that everything is
non-separate from you.
|
NDM: So when
these neo advatins show up at your doorstep confused by these
satsang teachers. How you deal with someone who is delusional and
sincerely believes that they are "fully enlightened" according to
neo-advaita standards?
James: Those who are attracted to Neo-Advaita only come to
traditional Vedanta because Neo-Advaita has not worked for them.
But ‘fully enlightened’ delusional people generally do not show up.
I have only had one in the last three or four years. He bided his
time and then decided to show his enlightenment to the group.
Everyone was completely turned off. Then he wanted to argue with
me. I told him I did not argue and when he got aggressive I asked
him to please leave. He left. I later asked him why he left and he
said, because I said ‘please.’
The
thing about Vedanta is that the
sampradaya, the tradition,
works very nicely to keep unqualified people out. I almost never
have to deal with it. The interesting thing about Vedanta is that
it assumes that everyone who is there is enlightened. It speaks to
them as the self. It assumes that you already know who you are but
just lack a bit of clarity. And it is such a skillful means of self
knowledge that it takes away the doubt quite nicely without giving
you a complex in the process. When you approach people with the
understanding that they are unenlightened, you make matters worse.
You are forced to tell them that there is something wrong with them
and that they should do something to get what they already have…like
quit thinking and let go of their suffering and surrender their ego
and what not. It is not helpful.
NDM: As a
teacher, do you feel it is your responsibly to speak out against
misleading neo advaita teachers? Why not just keep quiet, turn the
other way and allow these people to take their money and waste their
time, to find out the hard way?
James: First of all I do not think of
myself as a teacher. It is not my identity. It is a hat I put on
when I am asked a question. As soon as the answer is finished the
hat comes off. Teaching is more or less like a hobby. It is not a
career.
|

How to Attain Enlightenment |
|
I
do not feel it is my responsibility. I am not motivated by
responsibility. I am motivated by desire. I WANT to show the
weakness of the Neo-Advaita teachings…but I think this is what you
mean. I have the highest regard for Vedanta and I hate to see how
uniformed, deluded and ambitious people corrupt the teachings. Mind
you, these are not ‘my’ teachings. I have no teachings. So I am
not upset on my behalf. I’m a very happy person with a great life
quite apart from Vedanta.
And
although it sometimes may not seem so, I have respect for everyone
as the self. Unfortunately certain names are associated in the
public’s mind with certain teachings…Ramesh Balsekar with the idea
“You are not the doer,” for example, so Ramesh may have his feelings
hurt…well, he won’t now because he is dead…when someone criticizes
his words…if he is attached to them.
Anyone squawking away in public like myself should be ready to take
the heat. I am quite happy to be criticized. Let people say what
they think, good or bad. It does not enhance or diminish me in the
slightest. I listen to what is said and see if there is truth in
it. If there is, I accept it and if there isn’t, I don’t. And as
far as Vedanta goes, you cannot actually attack it unless you are
ill informed. The Neos don’t really attack it because most of them
have no idea what it is, or if they do it is only because they read
a few books, not because they subjected themselves to the tradition
and heard it from the inside…in which case they would be qualified
to attack it. It has endured for thousands of years. In the
fullness of time Neo-Advaita will not even rate a minor footnote in
spiritual history because it has no proven methodology. It is an
unruly Hodge podge of ideas that gained a certain currency in the
last fifteen years and is now losing steam as a spiritual force
because it is basically a Western fad.
|
The way I
see it, everyone is enlightened. Everyone is the self.
You are not special because you say you are
enlightened. You are not special because you are a
teacher. Mind you, teaching is something you elect to
do. You definitely have an agenda. One of my agendas
is to help sincere people understand the limitations of
teachings that are not in harmony with tradition.
I do this in two ways.
First, I teach Vedanta which is a very positive and
complete teaching. When you have been taught Vedanta
you can see very clearly which teachings and teachers
are unskillful and harmful. Secondly, I feel justified
in having a go at Neo-Advaita, not for myself…I could
care less…but because I get many emails every day from
people around the world who have been through the Neo-Advaita
scene and want to know exactly why, in spite of its
sometimes seemingly reasonable ideas, it does not work.
Since I have started criticizing Neo-Advaita the
interest in the way I present traditional Vedanta has
increased ten-fold. Mind you I didn’t do it for fame.
Fame is a big drag. I did it because I could see the
harm that these half-baked teachings do.
Second, I
explain the limitations of Neo-Advaita. I don’t do it
because I am an angry self righteous do-gooder out to
defend the faith and get the people to come to the
church of Vedanta. I give solid reasons based on
scripture and the seeker’s own experience why Neo-Advaita
comes up short as a means of enlightenment. If you read
my book you will see that ninety five percent of it is
traditional Vedanta with no mention of Neo-Advaita.
There is one short chapter in which I take on Neo-Advaita,
not because there is anything sinister about it, but
because it is an unskillful uninspiring teaching. Why
is it uninspiring? Because it denies the existence of
the seeker, among other things. You can tell me until
you are blue in the face that I do not exist but unless
you can prove it to me and give me a way to discover
what that means by myself, you are simply frustrating
me. I give all the reasons why Neo-Advaita does not
work, but I do not leave you there; I reveal the many
proven teachings like Karma Yoga, discrimination, the
three gunas and many others that do work. It is
not mindless criticism. The idea is to stimulate people
to think and provide them with a road map out of
samsara. Saying that
samsara does not exist
is not a road map.
The last point I have to
make is that my attacks, if that is what they are, are
not aimed at the person. They are aimed at the
teaching. As I said, it is unfortunate that certain
names are associated with certain teachings…the Buddha
with emptiness, for example…and unsophisticated people
think that the attack is on the person. The Vedantins
and the Buddhists have been going at it for two thousand
years. Everyone fights with everyone else. What’s
wrong with it? It can’t be helped. Some ideas work and
some don’t. For every complaint I get…and there are
not many…I get twenty ‘thank yous’ for saying that the
Emperor has no clothing. It a nasty job but someone has
to do it.
|
NDM: How
would you answer the charge that you speaking out about other
teachers is shadow projection, or playing game of one upmanship or a
negative competitiveness vasana playing itself out?
James: This is certainly the age of pop psychology and it is very
fashionable to psychoanalyze people. In the old days people were
busy surviving and did not have time for such frivolities. And
when you are a public figure you are inviting projections. As far
as the general public is concerned about a third think you are a
saint and are happy to worship you, a third don’t think anything and
a third think you are a scoundrel and are happy to vilify you. I
honestly do not care what people think. I am a good person. I live
a righteous life. I help a lot of people and I happen to know what I
am talking about. I have been a student of Vedanta for forty
years. My teachers are the top Vedanta men in India, Swami
Chinmayananda and Swami Dayananda. I am part of an ancient
lineage. I invite any Neo-Advaita teacher to do dharma combat on
the topic of moksa and how to attain it…specifically the way
to attain it…assuming we can agree on a definition of
moksa
and have impartial rules so that it does not end up being just
opinions. In the old days, the society reveled in debate,
controversy. They had great debates that lasted weeks with all the
different spiritual teachers taking on each other. Controversy is
healthy.
|
|
 |
Mind you there is nothing wrong with peace and harmony. I’m all for
hugs and kisses and the warm fuzzy stuff. But there is this notion
that spiritual life is about living up to some kind of ideal, living
the life Christ or the Buddha and the like. The problem is that
nobody knows what Christ and the Buddha were actually like.
Everybody thought Mother Theresa was a saint until her letters were
published posthumously and people who were out from under her thumb
started pointing out certain, shall we say, 'flaws' in her
personality. We are all damaged goods. There is a new book out on
Ramana in which it is suggested that he was verbally abusive. Maybe
he was and maybe he wasn’t. I personally doubt it. But it has caused
a big fuss in some circles because it contradicts the ideal, the
myth we have about enlightened beings. They are supposed to be
saints. They are supposed to usher in the Millennium when everyone
will be walking around with halos over their enlightened heads
hugging and kissing everyone. Is life like that? Was it ever like
that? Will it ever be like that? Human beings are a mixed bag.
They have wonderful qualities and not so wonderful qualities. Let
them express themselves as they are.
NDM: What about the belief that enlightened people are not
judgmental or do not criticize others? That doing this only proves
that one has "not arrived" yet?
James: It is just a belief, but there is some value to it,
particularly if you are attacking just to attack and do not have any
logic to support your statements. But I do not think that
enlightened people are any more important than rock stars or
politicians. We are all playing some kind of roles in this Divine
Comedy and no role is more important than any other. And people who
speak out, like Jesus, had better be able to take the heat. The
world of human beings is very beautiful and very ugly. It has
always been this way. Trying to sweep the ugliness under the carpet
is not helpful.
As
far as I am concerned, nobody is getting anywhere. Things are just
as they are. I actually believe that to say you are
enlightened…that you have ‘arrived’ to use your words…should be
cause for embarrassment and shame, not celebration. Why? Because
you have always been awareness. When a morbidly obese person looses
four hundred pounds he or she is heralded as an emblem of courage
and accomplishment. But is going back to normal an accomplishment?
What about the corruption that led the person so far astray in the
first place? Enlightenment is not the gain of a special status, it
is simply the removal of ignorance. Is this cause for celebration?
It is not correct to say that you are enlightened or that you are
unenlightened. Enlightenment has nothing to do with you. You are
that because of which enlightenment is known.
|
NDM: There
seems to be a bit of a war going on, regarding Vedanta and neo
advaita. For example, Tony Parsons said somewhere that Ramana
Maharshi was still living from duality or words to that effect. Even self enquiry is often
criticized and questioned For example this is from an interview
with Jeff Foster.
Q: So, it’s
okay to continue to self enquire?
Jeff Foster:
"Yes, if you find yourself engaged in that, then of course. If you
find yourself self-enquiring or playing pool, then that’s what’s
happening. All I found ultimately with self-enquiry was three words
and a question mark: WHO, AM, I, and a question mark, that is all I
found. All I found was the question and what was seen was that the
question was already that, the question was just arising in This. It
didn’t need an answer, no question needs an answer. That is real
Freedom."
NDM: What do you
make of this teaching?
James: Well, it is true from the
self’s point of view. But so what? This person does not seem to
understand that self inquiry is much more that the question Who am
I? That the Who am I question is just a clever sound bite
that is meant to encapsulate a vast tradition of Vedic wisdom. Self
inquiry is not a question, because the answer is well known. The
answer is “I am limitless non-dual ordinary actionless awareness.”
But again, so what? This is something to be appreciated. The person
who makes this statement is probably just making it for his own
satisfaction, probably to make himself look enlightened or profound,
although it is true from the self’s point of view. Self inquiry is
a body of experienced based knowledge that, when applied to a
qualified mind, gradually removes the doubts standing in the way of
the full assimilation of the meaning of the statement, “I am
awareness.”
|
|
NDM: What are your thoughts on neo advaitas position on
free will, dharma or karma?
1) There
is no free-will.
James: It is true if you
look at the individual from the point of view of the
total mind. It is apparently un true from the point of
view of the individual. Apparently untrue means that
as long as you take yourself to be an apparent person,
you are confronted with apparent choices in the apparent
reality. From the self’s point of view there is neither
free will nor the absence free will. It is illuminator
of the idea of free will and no free will.
2) There
is no dharma or karma (no good or bad, no natural order,
and no consequences for one's actions)
James: The
same answer applies to these statements. This is a very
good example of one of the serious limitations of Neo-Advaita.
It does not take into account the apparent reality. It
mindlessly denies the existence of experience. It is
actually karma to say that there is no free will. If
there is no karma, then how does this statement get
made? And there is definitely a consequence to this
person’s statement; I am explaining what is right and
wrong about it. If there is no consequence, then why
is this person making the statement? He is making it
because he wants a result. He wants us to think that
what he says is the truth.
Let me try to explain
it. I hope that some Neo-Advaita teacher with an open
mind reads this and thinks about it because it would be
immensely helpful, although it is only the first step to
developing a serious means of enlightenment. You cannot
say that the world does not exist or that it is unreal.
Why? Because it is experienced. You have to exist to
make that statement and you cannot deny your own
existence. At the same time you cannot say that it is
real either. Why? Because it does not last. The
definition of reality is ‘that which is unborn and
eternal.” So what is the world with its free will and
karma etc? It is apparently real. The word is
mithya in Vedanta. It is one of the most important
teachings and it is completely lost on the Neos.
What does
mithya mean? It is real for you as long as you take
yourself to be something other than awareness. If it is
real for me, then I am going to need something more than
the statement that it doesn’t exist to make it
apparently real for me. Speaking like this without the
means to back it up is like asking people to believe in
the tooth fairy.
In this very rudimentary
discussion of an important topic I did not attack this
person, although it may seem so. I have no idea who he
is. He is just a name associated with an idea. I
attacked the idea. I did not willy nilly slag it off
and move on as if I was some kind of authority on the
topic whose word should be taken as gospel. I gave the
reasons why it was OK and why it was not OK.
NDM: What about people that say things like karma, dharma and free will is in the mind,
made up by some characters named Buddha, Christ,
Krishna and Shankara in a story. That in essence it’s
all meaningless, futile, and hopeless and any meaning is
simply in the mind and so on?
James:
This is an ignorant statement. It actually makes me
laugh. But let’s accept it. It says some old fuddy
duddies cooked up karma, dharma etc and it is
meaningless because it is only in the mind. Isn’t the
idea that it is meaningless only in the mind too? If
that is true, how can we take it seriously?
Turning
the mind into a villain is another of Neo-Advaita’s
extremely silly teachings. The mind is a very useful
instrument when it contains knowledge that is in harmony
with the nature of reality. When it is stuffed with
ignorance it is definitely a problem. But you do not
get rid of the problem by dismissing the mind. You
cannot dismiss it. It is a fact. It is consciousness
functioning in the apparent reality. You handle the
mind by giving it discrimination so that it can separate
what is real from what is apparent. You have to educate
it, cultivate it. The instant enlightenment teaching of
the Neos…transcend the mind, drop the mind, etc…is
popular because it is meant to be ‘instant.’ I guess
the idea is that you will just wander in to the satsang
and ‘get it.’ Satsang is a great institution but the
way it has evolved in the West is a parody of a proper
satsang. At best it is a very skimpy and blunt tool
that, because of its lack of methodology, only adds to
the mind’s confusion about the nature of enlightenment.
It does not remove the supposed villain in the piece.
Vedanta
is a complete science of enlightenment. It has a
cosmology, a psychology and for want of a better term a
theology. It has a plethora of methods for cultivating
the mind…the yogas. It deals with values and ethics and
love and every conceivable topic of interest to
spiritually inclined human beings. All of human
civilization, good and bad, was built by the mind. You
cannot just contemptuously dismiss it and hope to be
taken seriously. We owe a great debt of gratitude to
the human mind.
Neo-Advaita
picked up this teaching from traditional Vedanta. It is
called neti neti, not this, not that. Bascially,
all that Neo-Advaita has is
neti neti, but it is
not actually properly understood by the teachers.
Negating the mind can take you quite a way, but it
cannot close the deal because the denial of the apparent
reality is not tantamount to the hard and fast
realization “I am limitless non-dual ordinary actionless
awareness.” And the removal of the apparent is not
accomplished by believing in this teaching, by mindless
denial. It only comes about by intense self inquiry,
applying inquiry to everything that happens in you on a
moment to moment basis.
This
apparent reality teaching is quite sophisticated and I
cannot do it justice here. I deal with it carefully in
my book.
NDM: Here is
another example on neo advaita and free will.
"There is
no such thing as free will or choice, there is no doing
or destiny, motive or purpose. The belief that there is
a seeker (subject) who has the free will to choose to
self-enquire in order to discover clarity (object)
simply maintains the dreamer in the hypnotic dream of
separation."
James: This
is another half truth masquerading as truth. It is true
from the self’s point of view. But if there is no
seeker, there is also no one making this statement that
there is no seeker. This contradicts experience. The
one who is making this statement has exactly the same
order of reality that the imaginary seeker that is being
denied.
NDM: In
chapter one of your book, you talk about people chasing objects.
Other people, love and so on and how this cannot bring lasting
happiness. That human beings are essentially controlled, or
governed as a result of their samskaras, vasansas, karma,
habits, conditioning and so on.
If there are all these pre-existing conditions, how much
true free will does a person who is not liberated have if almost
everything they do or say is done on auto pilot or in a state of
sleep walking?
James: You have apparent choices in samsara and since
you believe that samasara is real, they seem like real
choices for you. In this case, if you feel a spiritual
inclination, you should chose to follow it instead of
worldly impulses. But you really don’t have the choice
to choose to be out of samsara altogether because you do
not
know
there is another alternative.
At a certain time in the lives of certain
people, however, you get a glimpse of another possibility,
usually as a result of some kind of existential trauma. At
this point you know there is another way to see things and
at this point free will becomes real for you. But you still
have to exercise it to work your way out of samsara. Because
of lack of real knowledge many of the Neo-Advaita teachers…I
won’t name names…present the idea of determinism in such a
way that a seeker can draw the conclusion that even the
decision to do sadhana is predetermined and so the seeker
conveniently uses the no-free will teaching as an excuse not
to do anything for his or her enlightenment. If you do not
exercise the free will you have to get out of samsara,
according to the knowledge you have at any stage, ‘grace’
will not descend because the self, being non-coercive, will
assume that the choice you exercised not to use your free
will was your exercise of free will and it will leave you as
you are suffering under the tyranny of your vasanas.
NDM: How much free will does a
person who is liberated have and what is the difference
between a liberated persons free will and a non-liberated
persons free will?
James: The problem with this question is the idea that there
is a liberated person. Liberation means liberation from the
person. This means that you know you are awareness.
Awareness is always free of everything. So the idea of free
will is not an issue for you.
But if you want to assume that liberation is something
that some people have and other’s don’t, then a
liberated person’s free will is exercised without the
belief that he or she will be changed as a consequence
of the results flowing from the choices he or she makes.
In other words, he or she will not be attached to the
fruits of his or her actions, whereas an
unenlightened
person will be happy when the results are favorable and
unhappy when they aren’t. An enlightened person is happy
with the self alone.
NDM:
Have you ever experienced nirvikalpa samadhi or other types of
samadhi and can you explain how does samadhi help one to realize the
true self.
James: Yes. I have experienced every conceivable
samadhi.
Samadhi can be a great help, a ‘raincloud of dharma’
to quote Panchadasi or it can be a complete hindrance. It
is useful for purifying the mind and preparing it for self
knowledge. If you equate
nirvikalpa Samadhi with
liberation, you are really shooting yourself in the foot.
It is a technical discussion and there is not time to go
into it here. I go into it in my book, How to Attain
Enlightenment. Second to the last chapter, I believe.
|
 |
NDM. When did you first experience nirvana and what was this
like for you?
James: It depends on what you mean by nirvana. We experience
thousands of mini nirvanas through the year when our minds become
resolved. So probably the day I popped out of the womb and suckled
on my mother’s breast. There is a very nice sub-heading in the third
section of Tripura Rahasya “On
the uselessness of fleeting samadhis and the way to wisdom.”
If you mean the ‘big spiritual nirvana” again I can’t recall,
although the first time I had an orgasm probably qualifies.
Sorry for being purposely obtuse, but if you mean nirvalkapa Samadhi,
it was in my thirtieth year. But then it would not be accurate to
say that I experienced it, if you think I am a person, an
experiencing entity, because in that nirvana you are not there to
experience it as a person.
If you mean savilkalpa Samadhi I experienced it unconsciously on and
off for about three years from twenty six to about twenty eight. By
unconsciously I mean I did not know what it was then but now that I
do I can look back and see that did experience it. For the next two
years I experienced it about 95% of the time. Since my guru erased
the veil I am in savikalpa Samadhi all the time. It means nothing
however, except continuous peace, because I am not actually ‘in’
Samadhi. Samadhi is ‘in’ me. In other words, it is an experience
that appears in me, because the mind that I formerly thought was
‘mine’ is locked permanently on me.
|
NDM.
Can you please tell me about an epiphany that helped you to
realize the self and do you believe it’s possible to realize
the self without some kind of an epiphany?
James: Here is the passage from my autobiography, Mystic by
Default, that describes it in detail.
“Since I am not
an accomplished writer and cannot describe my feeling of
self-loathing well, you will have to take it on faith that I
finally hit bottom, my consciousness peppered with thoughts
of suicide. Then, on a lovely tropical morning, after a
drunken and debauched night with a woman whose husband was
out of town, I` was sluggishly lumbering through the
International Market Place on my way to the Post Office, the
pavement glistening from a light morning shower, the sun
playing hide and seek with big billowy clouds as the
plumerias sprayed their erotic fragrance and gentle trade
winds rattled the palm fronds. I noticed a jaunty old man, a
vacationer or pensioner come to Hawaii to idly pass the
sunset years, appropriately attired in Bermuda shorts, aloha
shirt, tennies and a straw hat, perusing his mail as he
ambled my way. As he got closer I realized we were on a
collision course and sent a message to my feet to move left,
but nothing happened! Panic stricken, I tried to move out of
the way a second time but the body wouldn’t respond!
I had completely
lost control.
A couple of
seconds before impact the bodies stopped face to face and I
heard a sweet voice speaking through me.
"Excuse me, sir, may I ask you a question?" it said.
Someone else had
taken over!
Since I had no
idea what the voice was about to say, I tried to apologize
but the words wouldn’t come.
I wasn’t connected at the mouth either!
The old man
looked up, unaware of my distress, a kind smile on his
wrinkled face. "Yeah, sure, sonny, shoot."
Then the voice, flowing like nectar from a deep place
within, resumed, "Out of curiosity, sir, how old do you
think I am?"
Since I already knew the answer and didn’t have the
slightest interest in the opinion of the doddering old
codger, I was completely flabbergasted.
Certain that I
was going mad, I ran frantically around inside my mind
looking for the control panel but reality, which had a mind
of its own, was completely uninterested.
The old man
stepped back, pulled on his pipe, gave me the once-over, and
judiciously replied, "Well, sonny, I'd say you're
forty-three."
A long history
of untruth meant I could spot a lie a mile away; he was
deliberately underestimating my age to spare my feelings.
"Well, yes, thank you very much," the voice said sweetly.
"Don't mention it, sonny," he said, proceeding on his way.
I seriously
considered the possibility I was losing my mind, but the
experience was permeated with such a sense of clarity, I
didn’t indulge my fear. And then I regained control and
proceeded toward my mailbox, the mind settling on the
concerns of the day.
But as I entered
the foyer I lost it again! Instead of proceeding into the
Post Office proper as programmed, the body confidently
turned left, entered the men's room and parked itself in
front of a big mirror over the wash basins, eyes glued
straight ahead, feet welded to the floor.
"Oh no, not
again! Am I flipping out?" I thought anxiously.
But I wasn’t
going mad. I was having a good look, courtesy of God, at
what I had become. I don’t know how long I stood there,
unable to move a muscle - perhaps a full five minutes -
aware but unaware of the stares of the men coming and going,
the flushing toilets and the irritating flicker of the neon
light over the mirror. But it didn’t matter because a brand
new world had miraculously opened up, an inner world
illumined by a powerful light in whose presence I saw every
last bit of the sin and corruption that I was.
The moment of
truth in the post office lifted a monstrous weight, like
Saul on the road to Damascus. Though I still looked a wreck,
overweight and run-down, my face etched with deep pain
lines, I felt young again, inspired by the conviction that I
might find an exit from my dark labyrinth. And for the first
time in my twenty-six years I realized there was a
compassionate God.”
Is it possible to realize the self without an epiphany?
Oh yes, definitely. Epiphanies can be very useful or they
can be a complete impediment. In my experience about half
the people who get moksa through Vedanta have not had an
epiphany.
It is what kind of experiences you have had in life that
matter. It is how you assimilate them, what they mean to
you.
|
NDM. Do you
think there is a neurological aspect to enlightenment? For
example some neuroscientists believe that there are changes in
the right amygdala and the left hippocampus and other regions of
the brain, such as the anterior commissure, a bundle of nerves
connecting the two cerebral hemispheres.
James: I don’t know what they are trying to prove, but I bet
that they are in the ‘chemistry is destiny’ camp. So the answer
is no. However, the state of your mind, which is the result of
your knowledge or ignorance, does have an impact on your cells.
Vedanta says that these people, who are materialists with a
dualistic mentality, have got the cart before the horse.
Consciousness causes matter, not the other way around, although
as I suggested, there is a connection. But they are not equal
principles. Matter is a subset of consciousness. Their view,
which purposely ignores common sense, is that consciousness is a
subset of matter.
|
 |
|
NDM: What was your experience like living in a cave with a
python and your guru. Did you sleep on some kind of make shift bed,
where did you get your food and water from?
James: I slept on the sand wrapped in my dhoti. Sadhus and local
kids brought me food and I sometimes walked to Laxman Jhoola to get
it myself. I drank from the Ganges. My guru was downstream a couple
of miles in his very comfortable ashram.
NDM. Do you believe there is there such a thing as a third eye
and is this connected to the pineal gland?
James: I suppose you mean a physical third eye? You have to read
Lobsang Rampa to find about about that . There is a chakra in the
third eye location between and slightly above the eyebrows, but what
it is meant to do I am not sure. In Vedanta we say that the
scripture is the third eye. It is knowledge that cures the disease
of ignorance that is the result of looking at the world with two
eyes.
|
NDM. What is your take on the chakra system and
can one be enlightened if there are blockages or
ethereal knots of some kind in the chakras? Such as
Brahma Granthi, Vishnu Granthi and the Rudra Granthi?
Here is an email and my reply that deals with this
question.
I have a question. When I was reading the book "Play of
Consciousness" by Swami Muktananda…maybe you have read
the book also…it caused a question. Swami is talking
much about the Kundalini and the process of awakening
that snake energy so it can get up through your chakra's.
He is supposing that it is necessary to awaken the
kundalini for getting enlightenment. I searched your
Vedanta-CD and found little about it. Just in one of
your satsangs you pointed something out which gave me
some more insight. But while I already had the idea of
laying the question at your feet, I still want to do. It
might still help give me more stable view at the topic.
On the CD you said, "The Self is everything and
everything is the Self, so why bother working on
kundalini? It will happen when it needs to happen, and
when it doesn't happen it doesn't need to happen." Is
that your answer? What use is it anyway?
James: What does it mean to say that the kundalini is
awakened? When most people think of kundalini they think
of the incredible psycho-spiritual ‘mystical’
experiences that happen when the kundalini awakens and
passes through the charkas on its way to union with
Shiva. Additionally, people often believe that if these
experiences do not happen in the way that they have read
about them or heard about them from others that they
will not get enlightened. So they take up certain
practices that they believe should initiate the shakti
and start this process in motion. As they are described
these experiences are almost always incredible,
fantastic, and exotic. Considering that most people feel
sensation-starved the they are attracted by this kind of
shakti sadhana.
But trying to wake up the kundalini is a little like the
tail wagging the dog. If they happen…and it is not
necessary that they do happen for enlightenment contrary
to what Swami Muktananda says…they should be the result
of the spontaneous awakening of the kundalini.
The kundalini does not awaken in the same way in every
person. It often produces dramatic experiences but in
most cases it does not. You can assume that your
kundalini is awakened if you have an interest in
religion, mysticism, meditation, etc. If you find
yourself attracted to chanting, reading holy books,
associating with spiritual people, going on pilgrimages,
etc. then your kundalini is awakened. If you have
experienced altered states of consciousness it means
your kundalini is active.
What actually is the kundalini? It is the Self creating
experiences that shake you up and cause you to seek
answers to the basic existential questions: what is this
world and who am I? The kundalini of everyone in the
so-called ‘spiritual’ world is active to varying
degrees; they all have had ‘spiritual’ or ‘mystical’
experiences that have caused them see the world and
themselves in a different way. It is not giving you
experiences just for the fun of it.
An awakened kundalini is not enlightenment. It just
means that the mind has become somewhat subtle and can
now experience ‘inner’ states, not just sense objects,
emotions and thoughts. These inner experiences are of
every imaginable type, positive and negative, gross and
subtle. The type of experience that an individual has
depends on the nature of his or her vasanas when the
kundalini wakes up. What cause her to wake up? Usually
the person has had enough worldly experience. They are
fed up with the world, bored perhaps. They know there is
nothing in it but they don’t know where to go. The Self
is awaiting for this to happen. When it does it
illumines the latent vasanas for spiritual experience
and something dramatic happens…one’s life starts to flow
in a different direction.
There is nothing mystical about the ‘chakras.’ They are
just general categories of experience. For example
sexual energy means that the kundalini is associated
with the root charka and this causes creativity and
sexual desire, is a gross desire for union. An
experience of great power means that the kundalini is
associated with the manipura charka. An experience of
universal love means that the kundalini is associated
with the heart chakra, the anahata. And so on. Spiritual
literature is full of these experiences. You may have
read “Mystic by Default,’ my autobiography. In it there
are many ‘kundalini’ experiences. In fact every
experience that we have, inner or outer is kundalini,
the Self in the form of matter and energy. It is
important for a spiritual person not to turn the idea of
kundalini into a big romantic fascination. Ninety nine
percent of people, Eastern and Western, who are
practicing ‘kundalini’ yoga are not qualified for
kundalini sadhana and will not see it through to the
end. In fact most of the ‘kundalini’ sadhanas you find
in the West are not proper kundalini sadhana at all. The
kundalini symbolism is very beautiful and very dramatic
and mysterious and so people are attracted to it. It has
become a fashion now and almost completely corrupted by
the Westerners.
Enlightenment is the knowledge “I am the Self, limitless
awareness.” It is the hard and fast knowledge that all
my experiences are me but I am something more than my
experiences, subtle and gross. Kundalini Yoga says the
enlightenment is the union of shakti and shiva, the
energy of Consciousness, the Self, with Pure
Consciousness. So the next question is: what is this
‘union?’ Supposedly it is an experience in which the
subject and the object ‘become’ one. This tempts us to
ask: what is this ‘becoming?’ A ‘becoming’ means that
something that was in one form before changes into
another form. To use the yogic metaphor, the individual
soul that ‘merges’ into the universal soul. In short,
something limited inadequate and incomplete ‘becomes’
limitless adequate and whole. This is all very fine as
an idea but it presents a very real problem: experience,
‘becoming’ is subject to change. It never stops
changing. This means that there is no such thing as a
‘permanent experience.’
So what happens is that the person who ‘became’ the
Self, ‘unbecomes’ the Self after the experience of union
has run its course. This is what one might call
‘temporary’ Self realization. These temporary Self
realizations or ephiphanies are useful in so far as they
give the experiencer an idea that there is a Self
(Shiva) and maybe some insight into its nature. But, if
the person believes that enlightenment is the ‘permanent
experience of the Self’ he or she will simply develop a
vasana for Self experience by practicing a sadhana
designed to produce Self experience. There are many
sadhanas beside kundalini sadhana that give experience
of the Self. In fact sports, accidents, sex, and many
fear related activities produce Self experience. Any
practice that you do with great faith, concentration,
and devotion will awaken the kundalini and produce a
‘spiritual’ experience. But you should know that if
something wakes up it will definitely go back to sleep.
This is karmic law. This is why you have so many
frustrated people in the spiritual world. However, if
you pursue the sadhana that awakens kundalini with
incredible intensity, day and night without a break,
forgoing every worldly attachment and desire, the mind,
which is what is waking up, will eventually become so
energized with shakti that it will only fall back to
sleep for very short periods. This is important because
most of the time it is in direct contact with the Self
and this is desirable if you want Self knowledge. This
is why the yoga shastras encourage the pursuit of a
sattvic mind. Remember, the Self is not awake because it
was never asleep. It is the awareness of waking and
sleep. It is the knower of the mind. It is the knower of
the kundalini. So as the Self you are already beyond the
kundalini. It will not turn you into the Self…I think
this is what people believe. They think they will be
‘transformed’ into the Self, like a larva becomes a
butterfly…but this is just imagination.
Nonetheless, this sadhana is so severe that only one
person in ten million can practice it successfully. The
desire for liberation has to be one hundred percent. If
you have even a small attachment to your body or to
worldly things it will not work.
Vedanta questions the whole idea underlying yoga. It
says that the problem with this ‘union’ idea is:
anything that was caused by action, karma, will only
last for a finite time. When the energy that generated
the experience plays out the experience ends and one
returns to a state of separation, limitation and
incompleteness. Kundalani is a karmic force. It is the
Self operating in time. It may lead you to the Self or
it may lead you far away. It may even cause madness in
people who are weak minded. Much of the mild insanity
you see in spiritual people is caused by their inability
to integrate their spiritual experiences into everyday
life. So the kundalini, the energy of the Self, is a
very mixed bag and not something to be sought after. If
it comes, it comes and you must learn how to deal with
it. But rather than cultivate it, it is better to
cultivate devotion for God. Yes, bhakti is a dualistic
path, just like kundalini, but cultivating love for the
Self in some form is more natural than forcing the body
and mind to do a lot of very complicated and potentially
dangerous practices. Vedanta says that experiential
sadhanas may purify the mind but they will not produce
enlightenment. This is so because enlightenment is the
removal of Self ignorance. Experience will not remove
ignorance. Only the knowledge that arises with
experience can do that. If you don’t know this you can
have all sorts of amazing mystical experience and be as
Self ignorant as an animal.
Vedanta says that there are not two separate selves that
must become one. It says that there is only one Self
that has been misunderstood to be two or many. Now, who
is it that misunderstands that he or she is separate
from the Self? Is it the kundalini? It is not the
kundalini, the shakti, because the kundalini is not
conscious. Activated by the Self it moves, it changes
and causes all sorts of things to happen but it does not
know anything. It has (is) a strong feeling that it is
missing something and so it works its way through many
experiences (the charkas) seeking for freedom from this
sense of limitation. This is not a conscious seeking. It
is trial and error. Sometimes it goes into a positive
experience (Pingala nadi) and sometimes it goes into a
negative experience (ida nadi) (I may have these names
reversed). And it can get stuck in an experience which
is very pleasureable or very painful. That it gets stuck
indicates that is it ignorant, unconscious. It foolishly
clings to pleasureable experiences because it doesn’t
realize that experience is changeable and that the
pleasure will eventually disappear. When it gets stuck
in a painful experience, this shows that it doesn’t have
discrimination or it would have avoided the experience
in the first place. Discrimination is the most important
function of consciousness. Without it you cannot
function in this world nor can you separate the pure
Self from the moving Self, the kundalini shakti.
Kundalini is just a force, a power, an energy. It is not
real. The Self alone is real. Yes, the kundalini is the
Self but the Self is not (only)the kundalini.
So who is it that takes his or herself to be limited?
Who is it that wants to erase this sense of limitation
and is therefore open to the seductive message of
kundalini yoga? The common answer is that it is the ego.
But Vedanta says there are not two selves, a higher
enlightened Self and a lower ignorant ego Self. There is
only one Self.
Now we come to the most difficult thing to understand.
If there is only one Self and this Self always knows who
it is, i.e. that it is limitless and whole and therefore
does not need any particular experience to erase its
sense of limitation and make it whole, how can it forget
who it is?
Vedanta says that it can’t forget but that it can
forget. Or to put it another way it says that there is
only one Self, pure Awareness, and that this Self is
capable of both knowledge and ignorance. It would not be
limitless if it were unable to be ignorant. This
capability of being two opposite things at once is
called Maya. The definition of Maya is: that which is
not. You can see the problem in the definition. How can
something that is not, be? Well, strangely, it can.
Now the question that arises with reference to the
process of experience, which we can call kundalini, is:
does the experience of union with the Self erase
ignorance and produce knowledge? Knowledge means that
you understand that you are whole, complete, limitless
and free. And the answer is that it may produce
knowledge and it may not produce knowledge. Whether it
produces knowledge or not depends on what you think
enlightenment is. If you think enlightenment is the
permanent experience of the Self then you will not ‘get
enlightened.’ You will experience oneness, wholeness,
and limitlessness for a time and that experience will
wear off and you will then experience duality,
incompleteness and limitation once again. This is why
kundalini yoga and all the other yogas rarely bring
about enlightenment.
But it is possible for yogis to get enlightened if they
develop inquiring minds as a result of their spiritual
experiences. When the experience of oneness happens one
needs to remain alert and try to determine what one is
actually experiencing. This is what Vedanta calls
inquiry. If you are trained to observe and draw the
correct conclusions from your observations you will see
that the ‘oneness’ that you are experiencing is you, not
some incredible state of consciousness, unless you
understand that incredible state of consciousness to be
you, the seer, the experiencer. If you understand that
what you are experiencing is you, you have freed
yourself of experience. You never have to practice yoga
again. Why? Because when are you not you? How far are
you from you?
What kind of knowledge is it? It is immediate
‘experiential’ knowledge. This means that when ignorance
tries to rise up and tell you that you are missing
something and you see your desires being activated, you
have a good laugh and can let the whole process of
desire die before it produces karma. It means you are
the master of your mind, not the other way around.
Is it possible to ‘attain’ enlightenment without an
awakened kundalini as it is presented in the kundalini
shastras? Yes, absolutely. Is it common. Enlightenment
according to Vedanta is the removal of Self ignorance
brought about by the understanding that the Self is
limitless actionless awareness and that I am that Self.
I have met perhaps twenty enlightened people whose
kundalini was not active in that it was not producing
mind altering inner experiences. I have also met at
least one hundred people who were having intense
kundalini experiences…sometimes for many years…and who
were actively seeking ways to turn the experience
off…since it completely disrupts one’s life. You won’t
be able to accomplish anything solid or real in the
world with this going on. It is too disturbing and it
often has a strong negative impact on the people you
come in contact with. You say and do things that make
normal people think you are nuts. And in a way you are.
The spiritual world is full of peole who have had it
going on for varying periods and it does not rise up and
‘mate’ with Shiva. It just bounces around in the chakras.
Shakti sadhanas can be very dangerous without the right
teacher and the right karmic situation.
It is also important to know that kundalini does not
generate the same experiences for everyone. It generates
the experiences that are necessary to stimulate inquiry.
Certain people have developed very subtle minds as a
result of the way they have lived. So for these people
the Self as kundalini awakens inquiry, leads them to a
jnani, and their ignorance is removed by the non-dual
teachings. Their enlightenment is in no way inferior to
the people who have realized who they are during or
after an intense kundalini sadhana. Enlightenment is
enlightenment; it has nothing to do with the way it came
about. Ramana, for example, did not practice kundalini
sadhana although his kundalini was obviously active; it
produced his ‘death’ experience. He is an example of a
yogi who had an inquiring mind and practiced vichara,
Self inquiry, not kundalini sadhana.
Muktananda does say that enlightenment can only come
through kundalini sadhana but he knew that this was not
true. He was very smart about psychology and he was
trying to build a big religion…Siddha Yoga…and it does
not help to give people too eclectic a view of
enlightenment…it just confuses them…so you say it is the
only way. It is very much like the Christians who say
Jesus is the only way. Well, Jesus may be ‘a’ way but
the only way? I don’t think so. The same with Kundalini.
It may work…there is no sense putting it down…but I
would bet my bottom dollar that of all the
enlightenments that happened since the beginning of time
not more than one or two percent were the result of a
classic kundalini sadhana. Look at all the great
enlightened people that have come out of Buddhism and
other paths…and they are not talking kundalini.
The truth is that everyone is basically in love with
experience and this is all we have to our credit when we
awaken. But experience is only as good as one’s ability
to understand it. So when you begin consciously
searching you are naturally drawn to yoga because it
promises a spectacular experience that is supposed to
solve all problems. In a way this is true but in another
way it is not true.
What should happen when you take up an experiential
sadhana like kundalini is that your mind should become
subtle and inquiry should start to happen. But what
usually happens is that you get addicted to experience.
You want to meditate all day and go into traces and have
transcendental experiences. You want to hang out with
powerful gurus and get shaktipat, etc. And so you build
up a vasana for experience and you fantasize the big
one…enlightenment…which you always imagine is just
around the corner. It’s like going to Las Vegas and
pulling the long arm of one of those big slot machines.
You pay and pull and pay and pull and in your mind every
minute you are waiting for the big Ka-Ching! and a flood
of money to bury you. It never happens. All that happens
is that you get a big experience vasana.
Question: How do you see kundalini and trying to work
with that in relation to Vedanta and Self-knowledge.
"The Self is everything and everything is the Self, so
why bother with working on kundalini? It will happen
when it needs to happen, and when it doesn't happen it
doesn't need to happen". Is that your answer? But what
is
the use of it anyway?
Ram: I would not advise ‘working on kundalini.’ Vedanta
says that kundalini is just another name for the Self.
So everything is already kundalini. Every experience you
have is kundalini, the shakti. Why limit it to a
particular set of experiences or a particular process?
You can have all sorts of amazing experiences and never
learn anything about who you are and you can also have
very boring ordinary experiences and suddenly understand
who you are … because you were thinking clearly. If you
had a certain experience and you found yourself walking
out of the house without saying goodbye to your family
and getting on a plane that was going somewhere and when
you got off you met a strange man in a café who invited
you home and you started to spontaneously perform kriyas
and have visions and felt amazing things taking place
within yourself then that would be kundalini and you
would be into it and there would be no question of
‘working on it.’ It is not something you work on. It is
something that happens. And it is not something that
needs to happen. So don’t long for it and imagine that
you are spiritually incomplete unless you have had it
happen. I had it happen and it all stopped many years
ago and I am very happy that it all stopped.
You - the Self - are the source of the energy. Without
you there is no energy. You are not this little
body/mind instrument that perks up with the influx of
energy and wilts when the energy leaves. Kundalini is a
very fickle bitch. She is completely unfaithful and
inconstant. One minute she is seducing you and driving
you wild with passion and the next minute she abandons
you without so much as a by-your-leave and you end up
angry and depressed. Aim for shanti, it beats shakti
every time.”
|
NDM: Can someone be enlightened/liberated if their Sahasrāra
(Crown Chakra) is not opened?
James: Yes, of course. This presupposes that enlightenment is some
kind of special experience that depends on certain conditions.
Enlightenment is the nature of the self, meaning it is the nature of
everyone. The question of enlightenment can be solved very simply
when you understand this. As I said above, it does not depend on
your experience. It depends on how you assimilate or interpret your
experience. If you understand the value of understanding and how
ignorance works and you expose your mind to a valid means of
knowledge like Vedanta, that is all that is required for moksa.
Westerners have almost no idea of the great Vedanta sampradaya and
of the many people that gain enlightenment through it.
NDM: Buddhism has the
eightfold path that addresses moral issues. such as right view,
speech, thoughts, conduct, occupation, concentration, mindfulness
and so on. What does Vedanta have to say on moral and ethical issues
such as these?
James: It agrees with Buddhism completely on these
issues as indirect and secondary means of enlightenment.
NDM: What are your thoughts on other paths of enlightenment like
Buddhism, Sufism, and Christian Gnosticism? Do you believe that
they all lead to the same place?
James: I don’t have any beliefs. I do not know. I fell into
Vedanta when I was very young. It finished my search and I have had
no interest in other paths. They may work. I have met many
enlightened people all over the world who did not come through any
of the traditional means. In the end, it is an individual thing. If
you are completely fed up with
samsara and you earnestly
strive to be free, the self will see to it that you realize who you
are irrespective of your karmic situation. Why? Because it is
actually the self waking up to itself and it its will cannot be
denied.
|
 |
 |
NDM: What is the difference between sin and negative karma?
James: None, in
practice. The word ‘sin’ means to miss the mark. It means that
when you take the self to be the body/mind entity, you have missed
the mark. That is to say, you failed to see yourself as you are, as
awareness. When this happens you make many dumb choices that lead
to inappropriate and untimely actions which fructify as unpleasant
experiences.
NDM: What is the difference between Khrisna, Christ and Buddha
consciousness?
James: It depends on what you mean by consciousness. Krishna,
Christ and Buddha were supposedly people that realized they were
consciousness but we have no way of knowing whether they did or not
because they are not here to testify to their realization. Vedanta
says that there is only consciousness appearing in many forms. So
in that sense they are just forms of consciousness who supposedly
realized that they were consciousness.
|
NDM: What about attaining knowledge from the self through
gnosis, insight and not just from external sources such as gurus
or teachers.
James: Yes, indeed. There is no one way. It can happen in any
way. It is not really up to the person because there really
isn’t someone other than the self. So when, for whatever
reason, the self gets fed up living in an ignorant form, it will
wake up and realize who it is irrespective of the situation.
Because I have been more or less sheltered in the great Vedanta
sampradaya and know of many of the many successful inquiries in
that world I have not…until about six or seven years ago when I
put up shiningworld…had much knowledge of enlightenment outside
of the tradition. But the website attracts maybe eight or ten
enlightened people a year. I almost always manage to get their
stories and it turns out that it does happen quite frequently
outside of any established tradition…all over the world. Some
make perfect or near perfect scores on my enlightenment quiz.
|
 |
NDM: Doesn't the Self, the sat guru, also shine light
on the ignorance of the mind?
James: I’m not sure what the import of the question is.
Perhaps you are implying that nothing needs to be done, that
the self will just do it without any outside assistance?
Yes, it can. But the problem with this argument is that the
self is not a person who is suffering under the spell of
ignorance. It is the illuminator of ignorance. And it is
just as happy with ignorance as it is with knowledge. It
views everything equally. It does not need to enlighten
itself because it is already enlightened.
If it suffers under the spell of apparent ignorance and
thinks it is a suffering person, it will have to invoke
itself (see how silly this sounds…but that’s Maya!) to
generate an awakening. Usually the best way for it to do
this is to ‘hit bottom.’ That gets its attention and starts
the process of evolution. A proper teacher and a valid
teaching is helpful because not everyone has the purity and
maturity to inquire and remove his or her own ignorance.
Many people do 99% of the work on their own and then show up
at the feet of a teacher for the finale. This type is well
suited for Vedanta and can finish the search in a very short
time.
NDM: Isn't the self the source of infinite knowledge, and
intelligence?
James: The self in its capacity as Isvara, God, is infinite
knowledge, and intelligence. It has all qualities. But if
reality is non-dual, then there is no such thing as the
creation and no knowledge, power, desire, etc. These things
apparently exist as long as ignorance is operating, but the
self is free of them. So it is “beyond’ God, beyond the
limitless creation. It is that because of which
limitlessness and limitation are known. You cannot actually
say what it is or that it is the source of anything.
For
more info visit
www.shiningworld.com
|
|
|