(Based on Swami Paramarthananda’s Gurupurnima talk 2019)
Jivanmukthi is a concept unique to Advaita
Vedanta. The person who has realized
through Athma Jnanam the oneness of his Self with Brahman and shed his dehathma
buddhi is considered a liberated person, while living and his state is
called Jivanmukthi. Liiberation as per Advaita Vedanta is not the
attainment of some new state in some other world after the end of the present
life, but it is the realisation, through Athma Jnanam in this life
itself, of what one has always been, namely Brahman, by the removal of
the wrong notion that one is the body-mind complex, So in the state of Jivanmukthi, a Jivanmuktha
lives enjoying infinite happiness and peace at all times with the wrong
identification, as self with the body, mind and senses, removed and freed from
the mistaken notion of bondage, until his prarabhdha karma is exhausted.
Prarabhdha karma is one of
the three karmas, agami, sanchita and prarabhdha, that is
generated by one’s actions with the sense of doership. Agami karmas are the unfructified karmas of present
birth; sanchita karma, the
accumulated karmas over previous births and
prarabhdha karma, that part of the sanchita karma that
comes to fruition at the time of one's birth. Prarabhdha
Karma determines जातिः (Jathihi),
environments of birth,आयुः (aayuh), lifespan, भोगाः (bhoghah), experiences of life as per sutra 13 of
Sadhana pada of Patanjali Yoga Sutra.
For a Jivanmuktha, on giving up the Ahamkara ‘I’ and
shedding the sense of doership (karthrutva bhava) and enjoyership (bhokthruthva
bhava), agami karma is annihilated, sanchita karma is
liquidated and no further karma
accrues as he acts thereafter without sense of doership. As Lord Krishna observes in Gita (4-37) “Jnanaagnih
sarvakarmaani bhasmasaat kurute”.( The fire of Jnanam
reduces all karmas to ashes).
But this does not apply to the
prarabdha karma which is like the arrow that has left the bow shot at a
target that cannot be got back or arrested in its movement but has to exhaust
itself, by reaching the target. So a Jivanmuktha stays in the body and
continues living in the world until the prarabhdha karma is exhausted.
This we can say is a good and a bad news. It is good news because a Jivanmuktha
stays alive as Jnani, blessing people with his knowledge and service and
inspiring sadhakas through his teaching and personal example. The bad news is his body has to suffer out
the bad prarabhdha. I say his body because he does not view the body as
himself any longer. The balance of prarabdha
karma does not affect Jivanmuktha mentally, as he does not identify
himself with his body/mind. He has internalised
the knowledge “Brahma Satyam, Jagan Mithya, Jiva Brahmaiva na para” (Brahman
is Sathyam, the world is mithya and Jiva is none other than Brahman)” and has
the perspective that this world of variety other than his Real Self is only an
appearance supported by Brahman and his Real Self is not different from
Brahman. This we can see from the lives of Sri Ramakrishna Paramahamsa and Sri
Ramana Maharishi who viewed their body afflictions in a detached manner as
something affecting the body only and not themselves. The assimilation of Brahma
jnanam and attaining such a perspective is called Mithyatva darsanam. The Jivanmukthas who continue to stay in
society and interact with people have the Mithyatva darsanam that
dilutes the impact of prarabhdha rendering it insignificant like the
aerial view of mountains.
Acharyas who came after Adhi
sankara highlight a second method of countering Prarabhdha which is
discussed in Swami Vidyaranya’s work “Jivanmukthiviveka”. A Jivanmuktha Jnani
who prefers to live in solitude with minimum contact with the world for body’s
basic needs only, has this approach to neutralise the impact of prarabhdha
in the mind. Normally Nitidyasanam,
Vedantic meditation, is practiced for removing viparitha bhavana, wrong notions
and misconceptions regarding self in the mind. But In this second method it is also used as a
source of happiness, Nitidyasana sukham.
In Nitidyasanam one meditates on the teaching of Vedanta that
focusses on Jiva Brahma Ikyam to internalise the teaching that one is
not a samsari jiva subject to limitations but the infinite Brahman which
is Sat,Chit, Aananda. This new understanding of one’s own Self is
portrayed in Kaivalya Upanishad(1-1-14) as follows;
Puratraye kridati yasca jivaḥ tatasthu jatam
sakalam vicitram I
Aadharamanandamakhandabodham, yasmin layam
yati puratrayam ca II 14 II
All this diversity is born
out of jiva alone which sports in the three worlds of experience
(waking, dream and deep sleep). Moreover,
these three worlds resolve into the jiva which is indivisible
consciousness and aananda, the substratum (of all).
When this Jivanmuktha
Jnani contemplates on his Aananda swarupa in Nitidyasanam, his
mind is filled with experiential happiness, which is far, far superior to vishayananda,
that comes from contact with anathma. The Prathibimba Aananda he
enjoys is from contact with Bimba Aananda itself as he is, as described
in Gita (2-55), “Aatmanyevaatmanaa tushtah” (happy in the Self by the
Self). From this happy state no worldly
problem or sorrow can shake him or move him to grief as pointed out in Gita
(6-22), “Yasmin sthito na duhkhena gurunaapi vichaalyate” (wherein
established, he is not moved even by heavy sorrow). This Nithidyasana sukham, the Jnani
uses to dilute the impact of prarabhda.
Rather he feels thankful to prarabhda for this life as a Jeevanmuktha
Jnani that he is enjoying, with the reflection as described in the Kaivalya
Upanishad (1-1-19):
Mayyeva sakalaṁ jataṁ, mayi sarvaṁ pratisthitam
I
Mayi sarvaṁ layam yati, tad brahmadvayamasmyaham II
Everything is born in me
alone; everything is based on me alone; everything resolves into me alone. I am
that nondual Brahman.
This Nitidyasana sukham
is also called by various other names such as Jivanmukthi sukham, Jnananda,
Yogananda and Athmananda.
So while a Jivanmuktha
Jnani serving the world staying in public life dilutes the impact of prarabhdha
through mithyatva darsanam, the withdrawn Jivanmuktha Jnani dilutes
it through Jivanmukthi sukham. When prarabhdha is exhausted, the Jivanmuktha
of either type attains
Videhamukthi. In Videhamukthi freed
from the earthly existence in the body, a Jivanmuktha becomes one with Brahman,
like the space in the pot becoming one with the open space, when the pot is
broken. As the subtle body is
also dissolved at that time, he is freed from the cycle of birth and death as
well.
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