Truth, considered single faceted
by humans, is in fact multidimensional in nature, just like a
diamond with many facets. The light of divinity when passing through this
diamond emits myriad reflections of colors and rays.
Divine epics like the Ramayana
and Mahabharata cannot be viewed as mere moral stories conveying assorted
virtues as displayed in the lives of it's characters. There is more to it than
meets the eye. Mahabharata may be considered the story of the virtuous
Pandavas who with the help of Krishna emerge
victorious in the battle against the Kauravas to regain their rightful
inheritance of Hastinapur and Indraprasth. But at another level Mahabharata is
also the story of an ideal devotee (Arjuna/Pandavas) guided by the inner Guru
(Krishna) in the battlefield of life
(Kurukshetra) against the Ego guided samskaras and desires (Kauravas) to attain
Moksha (Hastinapur).
And Ramayana?
Dasharatha is the king of
Ayodhya, ruling along with his three wives Kausalya, Sumitra and Kaikeyi.
Dashratha is the Mind, custodian of the 10 senses – five inner five outer (Dasha - ten, Ratha – chariot of 10 horses or senses).
His three queens are the three gunas which guide the mind –
Kausalya representing Sattwa (Pure),
Sumitra representing Rajas (Activating),
Kaikeyi representing Tamas (Dull or impure).
Dashratha is the Mind, custodian of the 10 senses – five inner five outer (Dasha - ten, Ratha – chariot of 10 horses or senses).
His three queens are the three gunas which guide the mind –
Kausalya representing Sattwa (Pure),
Sumitra representing Rajas (Activating),
Kaikeyi representing Tamas (Dull or impure).
So,
Dashratha (Mind) and Kausalya (Sattwa) give birth to Rama – Soul Awareness.
Dashratha and Kaikeyi (Tamas),
give birth to Bharat – Body consciousness.
Dashratha and Sumitra (Rajas)
give birth to twins ~
Lakshmana – Disciplined, Pure concentration always serving the Soul (Rama) and
Shatrughana – Karma Shakti or the power of action, always serving the body (Bharata).
Lakshmana – Disciplined, Pure concentration always serving the Soul (Rama) and
Shatrughana – Karma Shakti or the power of action, always serving the body (Bharata).
RAMA AND THE THREE WOMEN
The story goes that Rajarishi
Vishwamitra takes Rama and Lakshmana to his ashram for the protection of his
Yagna. During this journey Sri Rama (Divinity incarnate) encounters three women
and demonstrates how Divinity deals with different devotees or beings.
But first let us understand what a
woman means. A woman here does not refer to females. In Sanskrit a women
is referred to as 'Stri'. Stri is any individual
(I) under the influence of the three gunas – Sattwa, Tamas, Rajas. Hence the I
of a being is dominated by S,T,R and it becomes a Stri. When the three gunas
leave, all that is left is the pure I – the only male or Purusha beyond gunas,
hence purely divine.
Coming back to the story, the
first woman Sri Rama encounters is Taraka, the demoness. Taraka is pure tamas
and so Rama destroys her.
The second woman is Ahalya.
Ahalya though virtuous in nature was found guilty of inner impurity. She
gave into the charms of Indra who came to her in guise of her husband even
though she inwardly suspected this was Indra. Her husband Sage Gautama on knowing her impure thoughts through divine insight, cursed her to become a
stone until Sri Rama blesses her. Sri Rama blesses her by the touch of his feet
and the stone becomes a pure Ahalya again. Ahalya is Rajas and Sri Rama transmutes
her.
The third woman is Sita. Sita is
the embodiment of purity and virtues. She is Sattwa and so Rama embraces her
and makes her his own.
Thus Divine grace destroys Tamas,
transmutes Rajas and embraces Sattwa.
THE BANISHMENT
Queen Kaikeyi
(Tamas), who loves Rama as much as her Bharata, under the influence of the crooked
Manthara (evil thought or temptation) seeks to influence King Dashartha (Mind) towards banishing Rama (Soul consciousness) in favor of Bharata (Body
consciousness). This is in line with the biblical story of Adam and Eve where
the serpent tempts the Feeling energy of Eve to influence the Reasoning energy
Adam leading to fall from paradise. And so Rama leaves Ayodhya banished for
14 years, accompanied by Lakshmana and Sita.
Dasharatha suffers immensely due to parting with Rama leading to his death. The mind suffers immensely when under the influence of tamasic qualities it
banishes our divine consciousness within.
THE 14 YEARS
The banishment of 14 years has
deep esoteric meaning. In a human body are 7 chakras. The top most is Sahasrara
(Ayodhya) and the bottom most is the Muladhara (Lanka- filled with pleasure of
the senses). 14 is 7+7. The 14 year banishment is the journey of the Divine
Atma descending from the highest chakra to the lowest chakra and finally by
supreme self effort of spiritual discipline (the war at Lanka) ascending from
the lowest chakra to the highest. This is a banishment every single embodied
soul faces. Thus we are all Ramas (individual Atmas) living to make our way
back to our kingdom
of Ayodhya (Self Realisation).
BHARATA’S SORROW
When Bharata (Awakened Body
Consciousness) comes to know of the banishment of his dear brother, he
immediately renounces his mother (tamas) and father (influenced mind) and sets
out to seek Sri Rama to return and surrender over the bodily kingdom. Sri Rama
lovingly asks Bharata to be a good king of Ayodhya. But Bharata refuses and taking the sandals of Sri Rama and rules Ayodhya in proxy. This signifies that in an
advanced state the awakened body consciousness gives up its claim on the
body and senses knowing it to belong to divinity and rules the body on
behalf of the soul while it waits for complete enlightenment (Sri Rama’s
return)
4 YUGAS IN THE FOREST
Sri Rama, Sita and Lakshmana live
in the forest during their years of banishment. Sita here represents an ideal
devotee. Lakshmana represents one-pointed devotion and Sri Rama is God or the
Divine consciousness. Thus a devotee lives with pure devotion in divine consciousness. They
dwell in Chitrakoot in joy and simplicity in company of Sages, the beautiful flora
and fauna and birds and beasts. This signifies the Golden Age or the Satya
Yuga.
When the demon takes the guise of
the golden deer it appeals to the mind of Sita (devotee) and a desire arises
within her. Due to her desire for the illusive golden deer, Sri Rama (divine
consciousness) leaves her to pursue the deer.
This is descending to the Silver
Age or the Treta Yuga, marked by the arrival of desire and the departure of
Divine consciousness.
Sri Rama in pursuing the illusive
Golden deer, eventually shoots it to death. All desires like the deer that
appears golden but is a demon within, promise joy but lead to sorrow. Sri Rama
though having the capability of catching the deer (desire) destroys it knowing
it's illusory nature.
Back in their hut now remain Sita
(devotee) and Lakshmana (one-pointed devotion). This is the state of the
Dwapara Yuga or the Bronze age, a state where pure devotion exists but Divine
consciousness is lacking. The presence of this one-pointed devotion is what
gives the devotee complete protection. However things change when Sita
getting anxious for Rama tries to send Lakshmana away. Sri Lakshmana refuses to
leave keeping in mind his promise to his brother to protect Sita at all costs.
But in a state of delusion Sita (devotee) accuses Lakshmana (devotion) of being
impure and forcing him to leave.
How do we understand this? Devotion to God is a devotee's greatest protection. Often a devotee who has been following spiritual practices for long may find no effect or instant fruits of his efforts. When temptations come and try to lure him away, the devotee may give up what little discipline (Lakshmana) he may be following, thereby losing all connection with the divinity within and becoming vulnerable to be taken over by the lower evil self.
Here then comes the final state
of existence. Lakshmana, pressured by Sita agrees to leave. Before leaving Lakshmana using his powers, draws a boundary around the hut, beseeching Sita to remain at all
times and at all costs within the boundary for protection, until they return. Saying thus, a
reluctant Lakshmana leaves Sita behind all by herself. This is the Kali or the
Iron/Dark age, wherein a devotee is left all by him/herself with only the Lakshmana
rekha as his/her protection.
THE LAKSHMANA REKHA
The Lakshmana rekha drawn to
protect Sita, has deep significance. Sita here represents both a human and a
woman. It is interesting to note that at no point before in the story (in any
other age) was any boundary drawn for protection. A human (Sita) is free as
long as it has Divine consciousness and/or one-pointed devotion as its company.
The need for the boundary comes in place where Sita is alone (Kali age) meaning where a devotee or a human is bereft of any spiritual
consciousness for its protection.
What does the Lakshman rekha represent?
The Lakshmana Rekha are the moral and social codes of conduct that humans should strictly adhere to in the Kali age if they are to safe guard and protect themselves. These do’s and don’ts seen as restrictive and unwanted by modern society, play a role in protecting the inner sanctity of the soul which the ignorant humanity is utterly unaware of.
What does the Lakshman rekha represent?
The Lakshmana Rekha are the moral and social codes of conduct that humans should strictly adhere to in the Kali age if they are to safe guard and protect themselves. These do’s and don’ts seen as restrictive and unwanted by modern society, play a role in protecting the inner sanctity of the soul which the ignorant humanity is utterly unaware of.
To be under restriction is not a
state appreciated by humans and rightly so as it stands against our inner idea
of freedom.. However just as a little baby is put in a crib for its protection;
just as you build a fence around a young plant, so also you put these codes
around humans in the kali age who are spiritually vulnerable or in a baby
state, to protect them from the ever active maya temptations (Ravana) that can cause their downfall spiritually. Once the baby grows into a full fledged human (becomes God conscious) or when the plant grows
into a strong tree, neither need a fence to protect it.
Humanity today has long breached this Lakshmana rekha. Man and even women, considered the custodians of virtue, have long renounced these codes and volunteered themselves to be held captive by baser thoughts and feelings, all in the name of freedom and liberation.
Because humanity does not understand the use of the moral codes, they often use it in wrong ways or to suppress others. Codes of virtue then become weapons of suppression. Yet even then they cannot and should not be discarded. What is needed is wisdom of understanding.
Because humanity does not understand the use of the moral codes, they often use it in wrong ways or to suppress others. Codes of virtue then become weapons of suppression. Yet even then they cannot and should not be discarded. What is needed is wisdom of understanding.
These codes are true for every
religion. It is interesting to note that while the teachings of the higher ages were
so deep and profound these moral codes seem like child's babble before them. The
insightful Vedas and Upanishads came to us in the Satya and Treta age.. The
pure wisdom of the Gita came to us in the Dwapara age. And what came to us in
the Kali age? Codes like the ten commandments – Thou shall not steal, shall not
lie, shall not … These simple codes do not reflect on any lesser understanding
of Moses; it simply is catering to a level of humanity that
has lost its connection with higher understanding. The profound made way for
the basic and simple. Yet we struggle to live up to these codes and fail
them again and again. And what are the consequences? It is best learned from
the Ramayana.
CROSSING THE BOUNDARY
The demon king Ravana
(representing the lower mind) yearns to capture the vulnerable Sita (devotee).
Taking the guise of a Sadhu (evil camouflaged as good) he tries to lure Sita
away from the boundary so that she can be captured. This teaches us that no teacher who is true will ever lure you away from what is good
for your soul. In the modern age even God and religion is sold under false pretext to
lure people under its fold for political and financial reasons.
Sita though not tempted in any
way, purely out of good intent and respect for the disguised sadhu makes the
mistake of crossing the boundary with dire consequences. This teaches us that
no matter how good the reason one must not go against what our Dharma or conscience
prohibits us from.. Never give in to the lower mind, no matter what the
temptations.
SITA CAPTURED
As Sita crosses the boundary,
Ravan the lower mind, captures her and takes her away to his kingdom where she
is held captive, lost to the knowledge of Rama and Lakshmana (Divinity and
devotion). One desire leads Sita from the presence of Sri Rama to being the
captive of the evil Ravana. From here enormous efforts have to be made to bring
Sita back, leading to an all out war where thousands are killed on both sides. Even
victory cannot bring things to their pristine state, as Sita is first made to
undergo the fire test to prove her purity. Despite her success in proving
herself, Sita eventually is sent away from the kingdom when a subject doubts
her purity and raises question on Rama the king.
This also has meaning at the
mystical level where Sita represents the Kundalini shakti as well as a devotee
and a woman. The Kundalini Shakti is found coiled in the
muladhara chakra (Lanka). When the Kundalini rises it has to pass through the
fire chakra - manipura before it can ascend to the highest chakra of Sahasrara
(Ayodhya). This signifies that each devotee who has lived on earth being
captive to the lower mind has to pass through severe tests to prove their
purity and worthiness to reclaim their pure divine nature.
Sita was captured for a period of 9 months. During this time Ravana used many lures, tricks and threats to bring her into his fold. But Sita, one-pointed in her thought of Rama, never gave in. All of humanity is Sita. Captured by our base mind we face lures and temptations, fears and deceits in life, but we must at all times be take shelter in the God within to protect our inner sanctity and purity.
Sita was captured for a period of 9 months. During this time Ravana used many lures, tricks and threats to bring her into his fold. But Sita, one-pointed in her thought of Rama, never gave in. All of humanity is Sita. Captured by our base mind we face lures and temptations, fears and deceits in life, but we must at all times be take shelter in the God within to protect our inner sanctity and purity.
THE VANARA SENA
On their return and finding their hut empty, Sri Rama and Lakshmana seek out Sita. This represents the state of the early seeker on
the spiritual path (a Rama in ignorance) who is keen to find something which its soul deeply seeks
but he has no understanding of what it is and where and how to find it.
It is here that Sri Rama meets
Hanuman, Sugriva and the Vanara sena.
Monkeys are restless in nature.
The Vanara sena represents the controlled Prana shakti which in a worldly man
runs hither and tither with no direction or control making him restless.
Hanuman (Vayu shakti – son of Wind God) is primary of these prana shaktis
which through supreme will power (Yoga sadhana) has brought itself in control
and dedicated itself to the seeking soul consciousness or Rama. Sugriva
literally means Su – good, Griva – throat. The throat is the most important
body part while performing Yoga sadhana in order to control and keeping the
prana in check. Hence Sugriva is the king of the vanaras.
The Vanara sena (prana shakti)
now forms an alliance with Sri Rama and helps to seek out Sita (the Kundalini
Shakti) in its war against the demons of the lower mind.
HANUMAN SEEKS SITA
Hanuman, the mighty vanara hero,
the ideal devotee, sets out on a mission to seek Sita. Here Hanuman represents
the will power that initiates man in his search for emancipation. In his
approach to Lanka, Hanuman leaps over the ocean. As Lanka is the Muladhara
chakra, the ocean is the Swadhistan chakra (Element wise the Swadhistan chakra
represents water.) It also is the chakra of the sex organ. Hanuman, a pure
celibate, thus never puts even a foot on the ocean to rest.
Entering Lanka, Hanuman seeks out
Mother Sita through the opulent city. This again is the state of an early seeker on
the spiritual path who seeks eternal truth through the myriad temptations and
attractions of the world.
Upon finding Mother Sita, Hanuman is delighted as Sita sheds tears of joy. When a sincere spiritual aspirant finds the truth of his Self, there is much inner rejoicing and elation upon discovering our Divine nature even if in theory.
Thereupon Hanuman challenges the demons and ends up burning the city of Lanka. Here the devotee in wanting to pursue the spiritual path to achieve absolute freedom, throws a challenge at the lower self and sees through (Burns) all the illusory attractions that the lower self has to offer thereby revealing its reality.
Upon finding Mother Sita, Hanuman is delighted as Sita sheds tears of joy. When a sincere spiritual aspirant finds the truth of his Self, there is much inner rejoicing and elation upon discovering our Divine nature even if in theory.
Thereupon Hanuman challenges the demons and ends up burning the city of Lanka. Here the devotee in wanting to pursue the spiritual path to achieve absolute freedom, throws a challenge at the lower self and sees through (Burns) all the illusory attractions that the lower self has to offer thereby revealing its reality.
At one point Hanuman offers to
free Mother Sita by himself and take her
back to Sri Rama, but Sita refuses this offer. Here again Sita represents
Kundalini Shakti. By affirming to
Hanuman that only Sri Rama should come and free her, Sitaji is saying that the
Kundalini Shakti should not be attempted to be raised for any reason other than
God realization alone. Many sadhaks seek to awaken the kundalini for the wrong reasons using various mystical techniques. Awakening the Kundalini may lead to siddhis which at
best will delude and delay a devotee. The Kundalini must therefore be awakened by
Rama, for Rama and towards Rama. When devotion towards God is pure the Kundalini raises itself naturally without any need to prompt it.
THE WAR BEGINS
The war of Ramayana is an inner
war. The warriors of both sides are within us. Ravana is the Rajas within that
dominates and activates our lower self. The mighty Kumbhakaran is Tamas that loves to
procrastinate any spiritual efforts. Vibhishana is the Sattwa quality within,
representing the good within the lower mind that knows its flaws and weaknesses
and brings it forward to help the aspirant defeat the lower self.
Rama is the inner Guru or light
that leads the aspirant in the war (spiritual sadhana) with the help of
concentration (Lakshmana) devotion and will power (Hanuman) and disciplined
prana shakti (Vanara sena).
The various demons aiding Ravana
are the various weaknesses and desires that cause the downfall of man.
Meghanada is a powerful general who can single handedly cause havoc. Megha
means cloud or cloudy. Meghanada represents a clouded, confused, chaotic
restless mind that prevents any sincere devotee from meditating on truth.
Meghanada thus is the natural foe of Lakshmana (One-pointed concentration), and
Rama uses Lakshmana to counter Meghanad.
During the battle however
Meghanada uses the Naag paash weapons and manages to bind both brothers leading
them to near death state. One of the common lure of the restless mind is the
lust thought or temptations (Naag – Snake weapon). Thoughts of lust can easily
break concentration and take one away from Divine consciousness. It is a potent
weapon used by the lower mind in its battle against the freedom seeking sadhak.
Interesting to note is the fact that even in the biblical story of Adam and
Eve, it was a serpent that came to lure
Eve and Adam into lust consciousness.
Snakes crawl on earth and live in
holes underneath the earth. Sex temptations keep an aspirant down and deep
within worldly consciousness. During the war it is Garuda the celestial bird,
that comes to aid and frees the brothers from the snake weapon. Birds fly high
in the sky, away from earth. Garuda is divine thoughts and lofty inspiration that can
help the aspirant regain concentration and Divine consciousness (Lakshmana and Rama).
Meghanada in his final attempt to
destroy Sri Rama’s army, plans to initiate a yagna performing which he will
become invincible in the war. It is Vibhishana, the good side of the lower self
which brings to fore this information urging Sri Rama to act immediately. The
yagna which is performed to appease the darker aspect of Shakti energy,
signifies that the lower restless mind attempting to commit the aspirant to the sensations of lust which when fully awakened pulls the consciousness down making spiritual sadhana impossible.
Vibhishana urges Rama to act
immediately before the yagna begins and not wait to engage Meghanada post the
yagna which will then be too late. This is best explained by a advice that Sri
Paramahansa Yogananda would give His disciples that whenever temptation comes
in any form – Say No and get out of that place immediately and reason later. If
you try to reason or deal with the temptation on the spot, you will most likely
fail. Thus Sri Rama sends Hanumana and
Lakshmana (will power and concentration) to foil the plans of the restless
mind. Finally it is Lakshmana who after intense battle manages to slay
Meghanada. This should inspire all aspirants that no matter how restless one’s
mind, it is deep and one-pointed concentration that is more powerful and can
take you through all difficulties on the spiritual path.
THE RETURN
Finally Sri Rama defeats Ravana
and Sita is freed. With the lower self defeated, the kundalini raises in order
to ascend back to soul consciousness at the highest chakra Sahasrara (Ayodhya). This is Moksha, the
ultimate freedom that every soul seeks.
In truth, Sri Rama and Ravana co-exist in an average human whose life is a constant war to reclaim the pure inner Sita lying captured as the dormant Kundalini at the Muladhara. This war wages not through a life, but through several lifetimes and incarnations. Smaller victories can be claimed by the Soul self or the Lower self at the end of each incarnation, however the battle continues as the fortunes of war change depending on the individuals effort. Until finally, when through supreme effort the sadhak through divine devotion, concentration and will power overcomes the lower self and frees the Kundalini reuniting it with the Purusha at the higher centers which results in enlightenment within. This enlightenment is celebrated as the festival of lights - Diwali when Sri Ramachandra returns to Ayodhya along with Sita and Lakshmana.
May we all awaken to the Rama within and find victory in the battlefield of life.
Related Posts ~
- Meeting Mahavatar Babaji
- Understanding Meditation - 3 The Restless Mind
- An Atheist meets God
- The Real Religion and Evil
- An Invitation to an Inner Journey
Related Posts ~
- Meeting Mahavatar Babaji
- Understanding Meditation - 3 The Restless Mind
- An Atheist meets God
- The Real Religion and Evil
- An Invitation to an Inner Journey