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How
can we overcome the duality of the doer and the done?
Questioner:
That we understand, yet constantly we make attempts to
live our lives instead of just living. Making plans for
the future seems to be an inveterate habit with us.
Maharaj:
Whether you plan or don't, life goes on. But in life
itself a little whorl arises in the mind, which indulges
in fantasies and imagines itself dominating and
controlling life. Life itself is desireless. But the
false self wants to continue -- pleasantly. Therefore it
is always engaged in ensuring one's continuity. Life is
unafraid and free. As long as you have the idea of
influencing events, liberation is not for you: The very
notion of doership, of being a cause, is bondage.
Questioner:
How can we overcome the duality of the doer and the
done?
Maharaj:
Contemplate life as infinite, undivided, ever present,
ever active, until you realise yourself as one with it.
It is not even very difficult, for you will be returning
only to your own natural condition.
Once you realise that all comes from within, that the
world in which you live has not been projected onto you
but by you, your fear comes to an end. Without this
realisation you identify yourself with the externals,
like the body, mind, society, nation, humanity, even God
or the Absolute. But these are all escapes from fear. It
is only when you fully accept your responsibility for
the little world in which you live and watch the process
of its creation, preservation and destruction, that you
may be free from your imaginary bondage.
Questioner:
Why should I imagine myself so wretched?
Maharaj:
You do it by habit only. Change your ways of feeling and
thinking, take stock of them and examine them closely.
You are in bondage by inadvertence. Attention liberates.
You are taking so many things for granted. Begin to
question. The most obvious things are the most doubtful.
Ask yourself such questions as: ‘Was I really born?' 'Am
I really so-and-so?’ 'How do I know that I exist? 'Who
are my parents?’ 'Have they created me, or have I
created them?' 'Must I believe all I am told about
myself?' ‘Who am I, anyhow?'.
You have put so much
energy into building a prison for yourself. Now spend as
much on demolishing it. In fact, demolition is easy, for
the false dissolves when it is discovered. All hangs on
the idea 'I am'. Examine it very thoroughly. It lies at
the root of every trouble. It is a sort of skin that
separates you from the reality. The real is both within
and without the skin, but the skin itself is not real.
This 'I am' idea was not born with you. You could have
lived very well without it. It came later due to your
self-identification with the body. It created an
illusion of separation where there was none. It made you
a stranger in your own world and made the world alien
and inimical. Without the sense of 'I am' life goes on.
There are moments when we are without the sense of 'I
am'. at peace and happy. With the return of the 'I am'
trouble starts.
Questioner:
How is one to be free from the 'I'-sense?
Maharaj:
You must deal with the 'I'-sense if you want to be free
of it. Watch it in operation and at peace, how it starts
and when it ceases, what it wants and how it gets it,
till you see clearly and understand fully. After all,
all the Yogas, whatever their source and
character, have only one aim: to save you from the
calamity of separate existence, of being a meaningless
dot in a vast and beautiful picture.
You suffer because you have alienated yourself from
reality and now you seek an escape from this alienation.
You cannot escape from your own obsessions. You can only
cease nursing them.
It
is because the ‘I am' is false that it wants to
continue. Reality need not continue -- knowing itself
indestructible, it is indifferent to the destruction of
forms and expressions. To strengthen, and stabilise the
'I am' we do all sorts of things -- all in vain, for the
'I am' is being rebuilt from moment to moment. It is
unceasing work and the only radical solution is to
dissolve the separative sense of 'I am such-and-such
person' once and for good. Being remains, but not
self-being.
Questioner:
I
have definite spiritual ambitions. Must I not work for
their fulfilment?
Maharaj:No
ambition is spiritual. All ambitions are for the sake of
the 'I am'. If you want to make real progress you must
give up all idea of personal attainment. The ambitions
of the so-called Yogis are preposterous. A man's
desire for a woman is innocence itself compared to the
lusting for an everlasting personal bliss. The mind is a
cheat. The more pious it seems, the worse the betrayal.
Questioner:
People come to you very often with their worldly
troubles and ask for help. How do you know what to tell
them?
Maharaj:I
just tell them what comes to my mind at the moment. I
have no standardised procedure in dealing with people.
Questioner:
You are sure of yourself. But when people come to me for
advice, how am I to be sure that my advice is right?
Maharaj:Watch
in what state you are, from what level you talk. If you
talk from the mind, you may be wrong. If you talk from
full insight into the situation, with your own mental
habits in abeyance your advice may be a true response.
The main point is to be fully aware that neither you nor
the man in front of you are mere bodies; If your
awareness is clear and full. a mistake is less probable.
Source: from book “I am That” By
Sri Nisargadatta
Maharaj
Related Article:
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"Sri Nisargadatta Maharaj Quotes"
"Question on Meditation Answered by Nisargadatta Maharaj"
"Ramesh balsekar - Disciple of
Nisargadatta Maharaj"
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