A Study on OM and the Māndūkya Upanisad

Dhamma wheel
A Study on OM
Māndūkya Upanisad

OM shanti shanti shanti 

1. This letter that is OM (AUM) is all this. Of this a clear exposition (is started with): All that is past, present, or future is verily OM. And whatever is beyond the three periods of time is also verily OM. 

2. All is surely Brahman. This Self (atman) is Brahman. The Self, such as It is, is possessed of  four quarters. 

3. The first quarter is Vaiśvānara whose sphere of action/activity is the waking state, whose consciousness relates to things external, who is possessed of seven limbs and nineteen mouths, and who enjoys/experiences gross/material things. 

4. Taijasa is the second quarter, whose sphere of action/activity is the dream state, whose consciousness is internal, who is possessed of seven limbs and nineteen mouths, and who enjoys/experiences gross/material things.  

5. That state is deep sleep where the sleeper does not desire any enjoyable thing and does not see any dream. The third quarter is Prājña who has deep sleep as sphere, in whom everything becomes undifferentiated, who is a mass of mere consciousness, who abounds in bliss, who is surely an enjoyer of bliss, and who is the doorway to the experience ( of the dream and waking states). 

6. This is the Lord of all, this is the knower of all, this is the inner controller of all; this is the source of all; this is verily the place of origin/beginning and dissolution/end of all  beings. 

7. They consider the Fourth to be that which is not conscious of the internal world, nor conscious of the external world, not conscious of both the worlds, nor a mass of consciousness, nor conscious, nor unconscious. Unseen, incapable of being spoken of, ungraspable, without any distinctive marks, unthinkable, unnameable, the essence of knowledge of the one self, that into which the world is resolved, the peaceful, the benign, the non-dual. That is the Self, and That is to be known. 

8. That very Self, considered from the standpoint of the syllable is of the nature of the syllable OM.  Considered from the standpoint of the letters (constituting OM),  the quarters (of the Self) are the letters ( of OM/AUM) and the letters are the quarters. Namely the letter a, u and m.  

9. Vaiśanara, having the waking state as  sphere of activity, is the first letter a, because of (the similarity of) pervasiveness or being the first (Alpha). The one who knows thus, does verily attain all desirable things, and becomes the foremost. 

10. Taijasa, with the state of dream as sphere (of activity ) is the second letter u (of OM/AUM); because of the similarity of excellence and intermediateness. One who knows thus increases the current of knowledge and becomes equal to all. None is born in their family who does not know Brahman. 

11. Prãjña with sphere of activity in the sleep state is m, the third letter of OM/AUM, because of measuring or because of absorption. Anyone who knows this measures all this, and becomes the place of absorption.   

12.  The partless (without element) OM  is Turīya- beyond all conventional dealings, the limit of the negation of the phenomenal world, the auspicious, and the non-dual. OM is thus the Self to be sure. One who knows this enters the Self through his self.   

Shankhāra (sankhāra)

Dhamma wheel

Buddhist Dictionary, Manual of Buddhist Terms and Doctrines
Nyanatiloka Thera (1952)
Buddhist Publication Society

Shankhāra (Pali. Sanskrit, samskāra) this term has, according to its context, different shades of meaning. Which should be carefully distinguished.

(I) To its most frequent use (1-4, following) the general term “formation” may be applied, with the qualifications required by the context. This term may refer either to the act of “forming” or to the passive state of “having been formed” or to both.

(1) As the second link of the formation of dependent origination, (paticcasamuppāda) shankhāra has the active aspect, “forming”, and signifies “karma”, i.e., wholesome or unwholesome violation activity (cetanā) of body (kāya-sankhāra), speech (vacī-sankhāra), or mind (citta- or mano-sankhāra). This definition occurs, e.g. at Samyutta Nikaya (SN) 12:2, 27. For sankhāra in this sense, the word, “karma-formation” has been coined by the author. In other passages, in the same context, sankhāra is defined by reference to (a) meritorious karma-formation (punn’abhissankhāra), (b) by demeritorious sankhāra (apunn’abhissankhāra), (c) imperturbable sankhāra (ānenj’abhissankhāra), e.g. in SN 12:511; DN 33. This threefold division covers karmic activity in all spheres of existence; the meritorious karma-formations extend to the sensuous and the fine-material sphere, the demeritorious ones only to the sensors sphere, and the “imperturbable” only to the immaterial sphere.

(2) The aforementioned three terms, kāya, vacī, and citta-sankhāra are sometimes used in quite a different sense, namely as (1) bodily function, i.e. in-and-out-bereathing (e.g. Majjhima Nikaya (MN) 10); (2) verbal function, i.e., thought-conception and discursive thinking; (3) mental function, i.e. feeling and perception (e.g. MN 44).

(3) It also denotes the fourth group of existence (sankhāra-kkhandha), and includes all “mental formations’ whether they belong to ‘karmically forming’ consciousness or not.

(4) It occurs further on the sense of anything formed (sankhata) and conditioned, and includes all things whether in the world, all phenomena of existence. This meaning applies e.g. to the well-known passage: “All formation are impermenant…. subject to suffering (sabbe sankhāra aniccā… dukkhā). In that context, however, sankhāra is subordinate to the still wider and all-embracing term Dhamma (thing): for dhamma includes also the Unformed or Unconditioned Element (asankkhata-dhātu), i.e. Nibbāna (e.g. in sabbbe dhammā anattā, “all things are without self”).

(II) sankharā also means sometimes ‘volitional effort’, e.g. in the formula of the roads to power (idhipāda); in sasankhāra- and asankhāra-parinibbāyī (anāgāmī); and in the Abhidhamma terms asankhārika- and sasankhārika-citta, i.e. without effort, spontaneously, and with effort prompted.

In Western literature, in English as well as in German, sankhāra is sometimes mistranslated by ‘subconscious tendencies’ or similarly (e.g. Prof, Beckh: ‘unterbeweBte Bilderkräfte,’ i.e. subconscious formative forces). This misinterpretation derives perhaps from similar usage in non-Buddhist Skr literature, and it’s entirely inapplicable to the connotations of the term in Pāli Buddhism, as listed above under I, 1-4. For instance, with dependent origination, sankhāra is neither subconscious nor a mere tendency, but it is a fully conscious and active karmic volition. In the context of the five groups of existence (see above I, 3), a very few of the factors from the group of mental formation (sankhāra-kkhandha) are also present as concomitants of subconsciousness, but are of course not restricted to it, nor are they mere tendencies.

An Ardent Law Argued

When the state fears the people
     The people are citizens of state.
When the people fear the state 
    The people are subjects of state.  

Summation  of the additives, life and liberty  equates to happiness. 

All are entitled to pursue their own definition of happiness free from any definition  that would be imposed by another individual or collective.  Any imposition on one’s liberty is a similar imposition on right to life and subtractive of one’s total happiness. 

One has the right to defend in whole or in part  the principles of this equation  that is life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness. 

This is not  a right  that  can in any way be infringed upon , it is a fundamental law of nature. As this is not a declaration of rights but an acute observation of natural law. 

Those who would be governed choose to allow those who govern to infringe on these rights  to the extent that they derive some societal/collective benefit.  Any  individual must choose whether any subtraction of rights is justified. 

Defense of natural law requires no declaration as it is writ by the laws of nature and self- evident  to all, who are part of nature. 

Spell casting

What was one concealed, 
    The mysteries of the cosmos,
    The aspiring mystikos
To self would reveal. 

Conscious that there is only one religious source, self, and that outward displays of one’s religious observances are but metaphor of inner observance, creed.

Deathless Dead Duck

A fourth of the flock, 
By the three forgot,
Near night’s opened door,
Lifeless laid on the floor. 

Life’s brief dream,
Fallen leaf in a stream,
Mere memory evermore. 

Matter matters not,
But carnage in rot,
By wood-handled spade
In earthen-clay laid. 
To higher realms I pray you soar. 

Trinity

From: Hymn to God, My God, in My Sickness by John Donne

“I joy, that in these straits I see my west; 
For, though their currents yield return to none, 
What shall my west hurt me? As west and east 
In all flat maps (and I am one) are one, So death doth touch the resurrection.”

Ariya-sacca (Noble Truths)

[woodcut no. 2]
Cattāriariya-saccāni (The Four Noble Truths)

dukkha (truth of suffering)
tanhā (truth of attachment)
nirodha (truth of renunciation)
magga (truth of the path):

sammā-ditthi (right view)
sammā-sankappa (right intent)
sammā-vacca (right speech)
sammā-kammanta (right action)
sammā-ājīva (right livelihood)
sammā-vāyāma (right effort)
sammā-sati (right mindfulness)
sammā-samādhi (right concentration)