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An ENT Surgeon running my own Clinic since 1989 at Kodakara, Thrissur.

Thursday, February 6, 2014

'GEMS' FROM BHAGAVAN - A necklace of sayings by 'BHAGAVAN SRI RAMANA MAHARSHI' on various vital subjects Strung together by A. DEVARAJA MUDALIAR - THE THREE STATES: WAKING, DREAM AND SLEEP-There is no difference between the dream and the waking state except that the dream is short and the waking long. Both are the result of the mind. Our real state is called turiya, which is beyond the waking, dream and sleep states. The Self alone exists and remains as It is. The three states owe their existence to avichara (non-inquiry), and inquiry puts an end to them. However much one may explain, this fact will not become clear until one attains Self-Realization

THE THREE STATES: WAKING,

DREAM AND SLEEP

There is no difference between the dream and the waking
state except that the dream is short and the waking long. Both
are the result of the mind. Our real state is called turiya, which
is beyond the waking, dream and sleep states.
The Self alone exists and remains as It is. The three states
owe their existence to avichara (non-inquiry), and inquiry
puts an end to them. However much one may explain, this
fact will not become clear until one attains Self-realization,
and wonders how he was blind to the self-evident and only
existence for so long.
All that we see is a dream, whether we see it in the dream
state or waking state. On account of some arbitrary standards
about the duration of the experience and so on, we call one
experience  a  dream  and  another  waking  experience. With
reference to Reality both the experiences are unreal. A man
might have an experience such as getting anugraha (grace)
in his dream, and the effects and influence of it on his entire
subsequent  life  may  be  so  profound  and  abiding,  that  one
cannot call it unreal - whilst calling real some trifling incident
in  the  waking  life  that  just  flits  by,  which  is  casual,  of  no
consequence and is soon forgotten. Once I had an experience,
a vision or a dream, whatever you may call it. I and some
others, including Chadwick, had a walk on the hill. Returning,
we were walking along a huge street with great buildings on
either side. Pointing out the street and the buildings, I asked
Chadwick and others, whether anybody could say that what
we were seeing was a dream, and they all replied, ‘Which fool
will say so?’ We then walked along, entered the hall and the
vision or dream ceased, or I woke up. What are we to call this?
Just before waking up from sleep, there is a very brief state,
free from thought. That should be made permanent.
In  dreamless  sleep  there  is  no  world,  no  ego  and  no
unhappiness, but the Self remains. In the waking state there
are all of these. Yet there is the Self. One has only to remove
the transitory happenings in order to realize the ever-present
beatitude of the Self.
Your nature is bliss. Find that on which all the rest are
imposed and you then remain as the pure Self.
In  sleep  there  is  no  space  or  time. They  are  concepts,
which arise after the ‘I-thought’ has arisen. You are beyond
time and space. The ‘I-thought’ is the limited ‘I’. The real ‘I’
is  unlimited,  universal,  beyond  time  and  space.  Just  while
rising from sleep and before seeing the objective world, there
is a state of awareness which is your Pure Self. That must be
known.

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