(adapted from a lecture of Swami Paramarthananda)
Purity is
referred to as soucham or Suddhi in Sanskrit. Purity, internal and external,
is emphasised in our scriptures. For instance in Ashtanga yoga, soucham is emphasized as one of the five disciplines of Niyama. along
with santosha, svadyaya, tapas and Isvara pranidhanam. Also it is mentioned in Bhagavad Gita as a DaiviSampath in Chapter 16 and also as a requirement for Jnanam in Chapter 13.
All Vedic rituals start with aachamaneeyam, which is meant for internal
purification. So Purity has been part of Vedic culture and is elaborately
discussed at five different levels in our scriptures. They are, in the increasing order of subtlety: 1) Desa
suddhi, 2) Anna suddhi, 3) Deha suddhi, 4) Vak suddhi
and 5) Manas suddhi.
Desa suddhi: Here the word ‘Desa’ refers to the
place one lives i. When one keeps the environs and the house clean, the country
also will be clean. Today in India we
have sadly fallen in this regard and the “Swatcch Bharat” campaign
started by the Prime Minister Mr. Modi is an earnest step to restore it to its
ancient glory in this regard.
Anna suddhi: Chandogya Upanishad points out that the food
we eat has three layers; sthula amsa, madhyama amsa and sukshuma
amsa. Sthula amsa caters to taste that is purged as waste; madhyama
amsa caters to physical nourishment
and the sukshma amsa caters to our sukshma sareera and thereby to our
mind, our personality and character. So we
should take the food that contributes to our mental health as well by helping
to build up a satvic personality that aids spiritual progress. Scriptures not only mention about the type of
food but also about the one who cooks the food and also one who serves, the
source of food, from where it comes, and says all of them contribute to the sukshma
amsa of the food one takes. Since
all these things cannot be controlled always, one should offer the food to the
Lord physically or mentally before eating to purify it. Further for Anna suddi one is advised
to use cow’s ghee in one’s food.
Deha suddhi: Deha
suddhi means cleanliness of the body.
This needs no elaboration as modern medical science places emphasis on
personal hygiene and cleanliness. An
instance in this regard is the insistence on hand-washing before and after
visiting a medical ward in the hospital.
Our sages in ancient times were carrying a kamandalu all the time
for this purpose. Taking castor oil
regularly in olden days was to maintain deha suddhi by purging the toxic
waste from the stomach. Pranayama
is considered as a wonderful practice for cleaning the inner physiological
system of nadis.
Vak suddhi: This is considered an important purity as
words have immense influence in raising emotions, good and bad and so one
should exercise control to avoid mechanical and impulsive talk and adopt
quality control of words coming out of one's mouth. Lord Krishna in Bhagavad Gita (17-15)
gives four quality parameters in this regard which are; anudvegakaram or
verbal ahimsa, satyam, priya and hitam. We shall now see
these four in a little more detail. Verbal ahimsa implies that your
words do not cause hurt to anybody. Satyam
is speaking truth preferring silence to hurting truth. Priya means one’s
manner of communication, the tone of communication, the facial expression
during communication, the body language during the communication are all soft
and gentle while communicating with words. Hitam means one’s talk is
beneficial to others and to oneself. If
one adopts this yardstick, one will not indulge in gossip-mongering or
slander-mongering. The Vak shuddi
is considered as extremely important for one’s own well-being as well as the
well-being of the surrounding.
Manas Suddhi:
This is the most important of the five and the basis of the other four and the
most difficult to practice. In chapter
17 of Bhagavad Gita healthy thoughts are given under daivi sampath and
unhealthy thoughts are discussed as asuri sampath. One key field in this respect is raga-dwesha
and their management is an important part of Manas suddhi. We should here clearly understand that raga-dwesha
cannot be completely eliminated and they can only be controlled. If not controlled we will be affected by
emotional disturbance when our raga-dwesha is violated in a situation, as
happening of external situations is not under our control. When we let the emotional disturbance to stay
in the mind without nipping it in bud it causes stress and emotional slavery
which becomes serious as one’s physical health gets affected that in turn
affects adversely the mental health. The
emotional disturbance can be handled through three methods. The first one is Viveka. Exercise discrimination to curb emotional
disturbance at the early stage remembering the harmful effects of letting it
deteriorate to emotional slavery. The second is Sankalpa, resolve to nip
the emotional disturbance in the bud and repeat this resolve regularly until it
becomes an ingrained habit. Third is Prathipaksha
Bhavana, nurturing positive thoughts in the mind to counter the stress and
to prevent mind sinking into emotional dependence especially when thoughts of
anger, fear, hate and worry invade the mind, by countering with positive
opposite thoughts and avoiding fast hasty reaction. Having sincere bhakthi and replacing
world-dependance with God-dependance helps to develop this prathipaksha
bhavana. To be in satsangha
and have some sat purushas as models helps in the practice of prathipaksha
bhavana. This way one can keep the raga-dwesha
at non-toxic levels that will give one Manas suddhi.
One lives a pure life socially and personally when one practices with diligence these five suddhis
i.e. Desa Suddhi, Anna suddhi, Deha suddhi, Vak suddhi and Manas
suddhi.
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