The Pathless Path to Immortality
[This article by Dadaji appeared in Values
magazine in the 1970s. The images on this page are a contemporary image
of Dattatreya at his sacred site in Girnar, Gujarat; a contemporary
charcoal drawing of a Sadhu in Bali ((c) collection Mike Magee); line
drawing of Dadaji and Shakti by Jan Bailey.]
The name of Shri Bhagavan Dattatreya has occurred
sometimes in these essays, but he is still practically unknown outside
India. More lamentable still is the fact that although still worshipped
by millions of Hindus he is thought of more as a benevolent God rather
than a teacher of the highest essence of Indian thought. In the basic
essence which runs through the 3 patterns of thought which I have
classified as the Diamond Dharmas, we find their earliest
expression in the Guru teachings of Dattatreya, which preceded them all
and later became embraced in Brahma Vidya.
Shri Dattatreya was a dropout of an earlier age than
the period when Veda and Tantra merged to become one single cult. It was
men like Dattatreya who helped to make this possible. Three of his close
disciples were kings, one an Asura, and the other two belonging to the
warrior caste. Dattatreya himself was regarded as an avatar of
Maheshwara ( Shiva ),
but later was claimed by Vaishnavas as the avatar of Vishnu. Not such a
sectarian claim as it appears, as Hindus regard Shiva and Vishnu as the
same, or as manifestations of the Absolute taking form.
The teachings of Dattatreya, during his lifetime,
were most probably adjusted to meet the needs and understanding of the
disciples. We have an example of this in the case of Parashuram, a
Brahmin who became a disciple of Dattatreya. In accord with the Guru's
correct assessment of his stage, he was first initiated into the rituals
for the worship of the Mother Goddess (Shakti) in her form as Tripura (destroyer
of the three cities or Gunas). In time, Parashuram developed to
understand the higher teachings, and his opportunity for understanding
might have been lost in confusion if it had not been done gradually.
Parashuram has a great story of his own, and will be dealt with later.
The gems which can be described as the higher
teachings of Dattatreya (often used in a shorter form as Datta), come to
us in many ways. The least obvious and most important was the way in
which he lived. If chance had not given him several disciples of an
unusually high level of understanding, it might have been the only
medium through which we could know him. Another is the scripture or
wisdom texts which record their teaching. They are found in several
ancient Upanishads, a Tantrik text known as Haritayana Samhita, a
work of three sections. The last section, Charya Khanda, or
section on conduct, has been lost, and some believe destroyed. The other
important works are two Gitas -- the Jivanmukta Gita and the
Avadhuta Gita. The latter is a wonderful complete compilation of the
highest thought given to and recorded by two disciples, Swami and
Kartika.
The Upanishads describe Dattatreya with glowing
praise and enumerate his great qualities. Typical of most dropouts of
the ancient Pagan world, he lived completely naked. But this was a great
spiritual era when all world renouncers were mostly naked or near naked.
The Sanskrit idiom used to describe this condition was digambara, having
a literal meaning of 'clothed in the sky' or 'sky as garment', but also
an idiomatic meaning that the sadhu was one with his environment. This
was the world of Shiva- Shakti where the way of life of Nature was the
highest ideal. Civilisation and cities had already appeared, but men
knew that only artificial men could live and be produced in them.
The manner and way of life of these ancients was
something beyond words and explanations yet sufficient in itself.
Brahma-Vidya had no meaning if theory was not put into practice.
Academic and theoretical knowledge was helpful towards realisation but
alone it could not reach the goal. Physical patterns were considered
vital and essential to help overcome the past conditionings of the mind.
Before the soul could be free, the mind must be made free, and the body
had to be free before the mind became free.
While we are forced to accept that nudity was a
regular part of sadhu practices, the true and fuller meaning might not
be so obvious. There may have been important factors well known in the
past but lost to us today. A vast number of religions have had forms of
religious nudity. Even the Old Testament records an incident where
David, the King of Israel, reverted to an older Pagan custom and danced
naked before the shrine of the Lord in the temple. It could not have
been a sudden spontaneous act, but a practice rooted in ancient
tradition. Even in India it is only a few years ago that people visiting
the famous ice linga at Amritnath were only permitted to enter the cave
completely naked. Today, most sadhus dress and some overdress, and a few
may even display themselves in costly silks.
In the ceremony of Sannyasa Diksha or initiation into
Sannyasa life, the candidate is required to walk at least 7 paces
completely naked to where the Guru sits and receives and repeats the
Priasha mantra. Many sects still require a sadhu to be naked if he does
puja of his Guru or Sect Guru, or when meditating if he has passed
beyond the relative stage of worship.
In some religions it might have been an expression of
going before God impoverished, or as a simple innocent child, or in
one's natural primordial state. Yet there is still some subtle aspect
which may be beyond all these. Today it is one of the best spiritual
"shock tactics" to make people wake up or start a chain of thought.
This, however, could hardly apply in very ancient times when nudity was
so common. Shiva or Maheshwara and his Consort were always considered
and described in texts as being naked. This might have served as a
pattern of life for those who desired one-ness and were prepared to
undertake the discipline to make it possible.
Dattatreya left home at an early age to wander naked
in search of the Absolute. There is no room for doubt that he was an
historical figure and seems to have spent most of his life wandering in
the area between and including North Mysore, through Maharashtra, and
into Gujarat as far as the Narmada River. One scripture refers to a
disciple finding Datta meditating on Gandhmadana Mountain. He attained
realisation at a place not far from the town now known as Gangapur.
Legends about his birth are many and varied, and the place he died is
unknown. It is stated that he was born on Wednesday, the 14th day of the
Full Moon in the month of Margashirsha, but of year and place there is
no reliable information. Scholars speculate it must have been not less
than 4000 years ago, or even earlier.
In spite of legends which made him the son of a
Brahmin couple, it would not appear that he had much time for them
although he avoided any concepts of caste distinction. More often his
teachings denied any importance being attached to the caste system in
true spiritual life. He did not suggest that in worldly relations the
caste system was needless or defective, but tried to show that there
must come a standard of understanding where they had no meaning.
Those who look for analogies with Christian ideals
will find none, nor the meaningless precepts and platitudes which
entangle most Western thinking. He taught no concepts of the brotherhood
of man, non-killing, or love one another- They were for people who loved
to live in the crowd but feared it- Instead he taught men the essence of
wisdom which would disentangle them for ever and the way one must think
and live if the expression ,dropout' was not to become only a
meaningless gesture- I am avoiding the use of Sanskrit texts and even
single Sanskrit words as much as possible- A few are unavoidable and
must be explained, but the English medium, on all levels, is quite
capable of conveying any relative concept known to mankind- Those who do
not understand Sanskrit only find Sanskrit shlokas like udders hanging
on a bull -- a useless ornament- Those who do know the Sanskrit
language can revert to
the source and need no help from me- This is only an effort to express a
difficult teaching in simple words, The search for the Absolute, the
Supreme Reality, is not one where we will ever witness mass realisation-
Only a few in any age have the karma and mind impressions from past
lives to make it possible- This does not mean that realisation and
liberation are reserved for a tiny select minority- It is a supreme
attainment from which none can be excluded, but it must be conceived as
a process which continues through many lives and rebirths, and over
countless periods of time. The safest guide an individual or guru can
have of one's stage in this long process is the sincerity and intensity
of the individual as it manifests in the present incarnation. What has
taken hundreds of thousands of lives to develop might still be very
difficult to mature in only the one present span. This means that all
spiritual life is a matter of investment in those values and yogas which
will one day come to maturity. The punishment for neglect is not the
wrath of God, but countless lives of misery, pain and frustration. The
reward for the diligent is to escape entirely from these things and
attain the only true bliss of the Supreme Reality.
There are three Sanskrit words which form much of the
essential structure upon which realisation and liberation depend. They
were much used by Dattatreya and constantly repeated in the Tantrik or
non- Vedic Agamas. Oddly enough, they are rarely used in Hindu life
today, though they exist as words in most Indian dialects. None of the 3
can be easily translated into a single English word, but fortunately the
language is rich enough to convey the meanings with even greater
intensity.
The three words are pratibha, sahaja
and samarasa. Each must be explained separately, perhaps
developed in the future. They not only have a unique beauty and charm of
their own, but they also represent three great stepping-stones to the
Absolute Reality.
Pratibha It means vision, insight, intuition,
inner understanding, unconditioned knowledge, inner wisdom, awareness,
awakening. In Zen they use the word satori. It should not be confused
with enlightenment or realisation. Patanjali in his wonderful
theoretical textbook of varied yoga practices known as the Yoga
Aphorisms or Sutras, sees pratibha as the spiritual illumination
which is attained through yoga discipline to enable the disciple to know
all else.
It is then the insight or illumination which is the
open gateway to the final goal. It is the inner transformation which
enables the aspirant to distinguish Reality from the sham. In some way
it can be visualised as a bridge between the mind and the Real Self. It
produces changed people and clarity of thinking as well as being an
infallible guide in all undertakings. Some few people are born with it,
but seldom to more than a small degree.
Even this can eventually be obscured by social life
and its conditioning. It cannot thrive in a world where we permit others
to do our thinking for us. The more it is used, the more it increases in
intensity. Pratibha is not related to careful thought or deliberation.
It is instant in operation and spontaneous in manifestation. For the
average Zen student this was regarded as a sufficient attainment. Only
those who seek Buddhahood and Enlightenment go further. But this is also
a stage which, if once reached, requires no further guidance from a guru
or master. Sometimes it is even spoken of as pratibha-shakti -- the
power of illumination. It is most easily developed by meditation or
contemplation, and is independent of all religious patterns.
Pratibha is not even exclusively a spiritual concept.
Those who have developed this faculty are more likely to succeed in the
material world than the others. Modern Japan claims that most of the big
names in industry and commerce today were once successful Zen students.
Datta uses the word frequently in the Avadhuta Gita to show that
the difficult ideas and the puzzles not easy to understand are cleared
away instantly for that disciple who has developed the inner faculty of
insight-illumination known as Pratibha.
Pratibha is the real Divya Chaksus -- the Third Eye
which has so much captivated the mystical aspirations of the West. It is
not really an "eye" so much as a miraculous vision or knowledge capable
of plucking the gems of mystery and wisdom from the immaculate universe.
It is the Philosophers Stone which has the divine power to transmute the
sordid world of base lead into a golden mass of wonder and harmony. But
only when you really want it can you get it.
Sahaja When we review the vast procession of
naked, ragged and unkempt dropouts who illuminated the dreary passages
of history to leave wisdom on which lesser minds could ponder, have we
not cause for great wonder? What is it that made these men so different
from the men of the mass- produced, vulgar rabble who populate the
earth? The answer is that the former had Sahaja.
Man is born with an instinct for naturalness. He has
never forgotten the days of his primordial perfection except inasmuch as
the memory becomes buried under the artificial superstructures of
civilisation and its artificial concepts. Sahaja means natural. It not
only implies natural on physical and spiritual levels, but on the mystic
level of the miraculous. It means that easy or natural state of living
without planning, design, contriving, seeking, wanting, striving or
intention.
What
is to come must come of itself. It is the seed which falls to the
ground, becomes seedling, sapling and then a vast shady tree of which
the Pipal or Ashvattha is a classical example and used in wisdom
teaching. The tree grows according to Sahaja, natural and spontaneous in
complete conformity with the Natural Law of the Universe. Nobody tells
it what to do and how to grow. It has no svadharma or rules, duties and
obligations incurred by birth. It has only svabhava, its own inborn self
or essence to guide it.
Sahaja is that nature which, when once established,
brings the state of absolute freedom and peace. It is when you are in
your natural state, in the harmony of the Cosmos. It is the balanced
reality between the pairs of opposites. As the Guru of the Bhagavad Gita
says: "The person who has conquered the baser self and has reached to
the level of self mastery: he is at peace, whether it be in cold or hot,
pleasure or pain, honoured or dishonoured." Thus sahaja expresses one
who has reverted to his natural state, free from conditioning. It
typifies the outlook which belongs to the natural, spontaneous and
uninhibited man, free from innate or inherited defects.
In all the Golden Dharmas sahaja flourishes. In
Taoism it was the highest virtue (re). In the earlier Zen records it is
the main plank of training along which the disciples had to walk. The
masters demanded answers which were sahaja and not the product of
intellectual thinking or reason. The truth only came spontaneously.
Sahaja in Chinese became tzu-jan or Self-so ness.
Taoism openly lamented the loss of the peculiar naturalness and
unselfconsciousness of the child. Lao Tzu saw that Confucian ethics
(which have their counterpart in the modern world) crushed the original
natural loveliness of the child into the rigid patterns of its
conventions.
Retirement from such a society became the outer
symbol of freedom from the bonds and bounds of conventional society.
Taoism, as Brahma-Vidya and Zen, saw retirement or renunciation as the
only possible way for men to recover sahaja. Thus the greatest quality
of children again became recaptured by saints and sages.
Artificial clowns throng the world: Only children and
saints know sahaja.
Dattatreya tried to each men that if they had sahaja
there was no need to do anything to prove it. It manifested only by the
way one lived. Sukhadev, the great naked Mahatma who expounded the
Bhagavad Purana, stood, when a young man, naked in the presence of
his father, the sage Vyasa, to be initiated into the Brahmin caste with
mantra and sacred thread. This was a moment such as we have just
mentioned, when the natural unspoiled boy was to be ushered into a world
of concepts, ideas and obligations, and all naturalness would be lost.
Sukhadev decided to keep his sahaja. Taking to his
heels, he ran from the house and took to the path which wound itself
along the side of a river and into the jungle.
As he came to the river some young women were bathing
naked in the water. They took no notice of Sukhadev and he only glanced
and ran on. But Vyasa the father was hot on his tracks, and following
the young man to induce him to return. But as Vyasa approached the
river, the young women screamed, rushed for their garments and covered
themselves as he drew near. Having observed their complete indifference
when his naked son ran past, and this modest but demonstrative display
at his own approach, Vyasa could not help wondering at the contrast.
He stopped by the now covered women, and asked for
some explanation of such widely different behaviour towards his naked
son and his decorously dressed self. One of the women explained: "When
your son looks at us he sees only people and is not conscious of male
and female. He is just as unconscious of our nakedness as he is of his
own, but with you, Maharaj Vyasa it is different." Sukhadev had sahaja,
and the women knew it. He knew it, and never lost it. His father never
caught up with him and he never returned home. He became one of India's
many great saints, not living in any fixed place, but only in the
fullness of the immediate present.
The three Sanskrit words Pratibha, Sahaja and
Samarasa are related even in meaning, interlocking with each other and
together to form a 'Holy Trinity' of liberation. The 3rd, however, is
the greater and by far the most interesting, for it is the one single
magic word which contains the Absolute, the Universe, and the World.
Samarasa This unique word, completely absent
from Vedic texts, is found again and again in Tantra, Upanishads and all
the best of non-Vedic literature. In one short chapter of the Avadhut
Gita it occurs more than 40 times. This whole Gita would be impossible
to read and understand without knowledge of this word.
One of the unique but mysterious features of the
Sanskrit language is how many words can be used at three separate and
distinct levels of thought. Even whole verses have this remarkable
feature. It is one of the factors which have made translation into other
languages so difficult. The difference presupposes three groups of
people. First there is the literal meaning intended for the householder
or worldly man, and a guide to better thought and action. The second is
the meaning on a higher level intended for the mumukshi or hungry seeker
for God. Here the same words take the reader from the mundane level to
the higher level, and the implications. The third is the meaning
intended for the soul who has attained or is nearly ready to attain
liberation.
This play of words is not unknown in other languages
'A dog's life' would have a different meaning to Diogenes of Sinope, a
harassed householder, or to a dog itself. There is little wonder that
the sages warned against public reading of many scriptures and confined
them only to disciples or near relatives. It is also one of the features
which has made the Sadguru indispensable to the sincere disciple.
The Tantrik or non-Vedic teachers used the word
samarasa in its mundane meaning to suggest higher truth. Samarasa can
mean the ecstasy attained in sexual intercourse at the moment of orgasm.
Using this, as many other worldly things, to draw an analogy between the
moment of sexual bliss and the spiritual bliss of realisation, it was
thought men and women would better understand absolute concepts from the
examples of relative life.
Going higher, it means the essential unity of all
things -- of all existence, the equipoise of equanimity, the supreme
bliss of harmony, that which is aesthetically balanced, undifferentiated
unity, absolute assimilation, the most perfect unification and the
highest consummation of Oneness.
To Dattatreya it meant a stage of realisation of the
Absolute Truth where there was no longer any distinction to be felt,
seen or experienced between the seeker and the Sought.
Gorakhnath, who
wrote the first texts of the Nathas, explains samarasa as a state of
absolute freedom, peace and attainment in the realisation of the
Absolute Truth. He placed it on a higher level than samadhi.
Samarasa implied the joy and happiness with perfect
equanimity and tranquility, maintained after samadhi had finished, and
continued in the waking or conscious state. In this sense it is a form
of permanent ecstasy and contemplation which the saint maintains at all
times. Zen maintains the same concepts, but nothing comparable with
pratibha, sahaja or samarasa are found in any of the Black Dharmas of
Judaism, Christianity and Islam.
In the Tantrik-Buddhist school which existed for
about 300 years between the 7th and 10th centuries AD, samaras and
sahaja hold a prominent place, and were also adopted by Tibetan Lamaism.
The Siddha and Natha sects used samaras instead of the word moksha. In
this way the word became used to express the highest ideal of human
life. It is much elucidated in the Agamas of the Shiva-Shakti tradition.
Samarasa is not just a matter of outlook or
adjustment of ourselves with the world and its innumerable divisions, or
to try and adjust the world to ourselves. One ends in greater
conditioning, and the other in frustration. Samarasa must be regarded
only as the culminating point of real yoga. The true yogi does as
Dattatreya did -- seeing himself in the world and the world in himself,
the most perfect harmony of man and nature.
Pagan India was never a world of universal
spirituality. Although it was the cradle of the highest spiritual
concepts, the spiritual truth seekers were always, as even now, only a
minority. Its great saints and sages were even fewer. Most people sought
the world and worldly things, but did, at the same time, accept the
authority of teachers and gums. How many, then, could possibly
understand ideas of samarasa, and moksha, and who was truly competent to
be regarded as authorities on the difficult way to understand concepts
of realisation and liberation?
Tae answer was their acceptance of the wise authority
of those liberated souls who had won the goal. It was not mere blind
faith, but the faith born of confidence in those those who had
undertaken the yoga and attained the goal. There have always been these
great souls and there will be in the future. Most of them live and die
in obscurity. The true seekers will always find them even if the worldly
public never hears of them.
Side by side with these great yogis hidden from the
world are the wisdom texts and traditions of great yogis who have gone
before. This is the medium by which the real seeker develops the
enthusiasm to find the living. Of the ancient past, Dattatreya rises
above them all.
But this, the greatest of men, the public have
consigned to the inferior position of an object to worship and the
resort of those who seek favours.
Students of Tao and Zen will see deeper into these
these lines. Speaking of the Absolute Reality, Dattatreya says:
"It is not pervading, or that which could be less
pervading: there can be no place for it to rest nor can there be the
absence of such a place. It is something as well as being nothing. How
can it be explained?"
Then the play of words, but still leaving the problem
defying intellectual answering:
"Break that distinction between broken and unbroken:
Do not cling to the distinction of clinging or non-clinging."
The level of conception is far beyond ordinary
conventional thought. They are like koans used in Zen monasteries. Thus
Dattatreya becomes the boat which carries us beyond, beyond.
Dattatreya aimed at the negation of the thought
behind things and ideas because conflict exists, not so much in the
things and ideas (such as words), but those meanings with which we
associate them. Even a correct meaning becomes devoid of value if it is
not apprehended. The simple naturalness of sahaja and the supreme ideal
of samarasa, must never be lost in meaningless and petty wrangles
between philosophies, concepts and mere human ideas.
Onto the great platform of the greatest of all
controversies, and which still rages today -- the Dvaita and Advaita and
Non-Duality concepts -- he declares both are true and both are wrong.
Since the Absolute is beyond all classification or expressions, neither
term can be applied to it. What proceeds from the Absolute as creation
or manifestation cannot be entirely a delusion, but must have a relative
reality. Creator and creation imply duality, so in this sense it is
correct. But also if there is perfect unity, even identity between
creator and created, then to speak of non-duality is also correct. It is
not actually so important to solve these problems as to be able to stand
aside from them completely. When one truly realises oneness then duality
and non-duality are only meaningless words and the symbols of delusion.
This, for the moment, must suffice. What more do you need to know.?
Shri Gurudev Mahendranath Paramahams (Dadaji)