(Consciousness is distinct from the five bodies)
by Swami Sivananda
Extract from the book
Extract from the book
Jnana Yoga - Swami Sivananda
Atman is distinct from the five Koshas or sheaths.
The five sheaths are:
1.
Annamaya Kosha (food-sheath),
2.
Pranamaya Kosha (vital
sheath),
3.
Manomaya Kosha (mental
sheath),
4.
Vijnanamaya Kosha
(intellect-sheath)
5.
and Anandamaya Kosha (blissful
sheath).
'Maya' means full. 'Kosha'
means sheath.
Just as the scabbard hides the
sword, the outer shell covers the tamarind fruit, the coat covers the body, so
also these five sheaths hide the Atman. Hence the significant name Kosha. Just
as the Kosakar worm gets itself bound in its nest, so also the Jiva gets
himself bound within the Koshas.
Annamaya Kosha – physical sheath
Annamaya Kosha is this gross
body. This is the densest sheath. This is generated by a combination of Shukla
and Sonita (semen and female seed). It is born of food because semen is
manufactured out of food only. The body is nourished by food. It dies without
food. It gets itself merged in the Annamaya earth after death. It is the seat for
the experience of pleasure and pain. It is subject to six changes
(Shad-bhava-vikara, viz., birth, existence, growth, change, decay and death).
Hence the name Annamaya Kosha.
The Annamaya Kosha forms the
gross body. The Pranamaya, Manomaya, Vijnanamaya Koshas go to constitute the
subtle or astral body or Linga Sarira. The Anandamaya Kosha forms the causal
body or Karana Sarira. The five Karma Indriyas are contained in the Pranamaya
Kosha. The five Jnana Indriyas are contained in the Manomaya Kosha.
Just as the clouds which are
generated by the rays of the sun, and which exist only on account of the sun
cover the sun, just as the smoke which has its existence through fire conceals
the fire, just as the snake in the rope which owes its existence to the rope
hides the rope, just as the jar which exists on account of the clay conceals
the clay, just as the ear-rings which owe their existence to the gold hide the
gold, the five Koshas which owe their very existence to the Atman cover the
very Atman.
It is the innate tendency of
the human mind to identify the Self with the five Koshas. This is due to
ignorance (Avidya) only. This is due to Adhyasa or superimposition. The
ignorant man of dull intellect identifies the Self with the physical body.
Others identify the Self or Atman with Prana, mind, intellect, or the Karana
Sarira according to their various grades of intelligence. The Atman transcends
the five sheaths. It is entirely distinct from the five sheaths. You will have
to pierce through these five sheaths if you want to get knowledge of the Self.
These five sheaths form a cave (Guha) and the Atman is hidden in the cave. The
self-effulgent Atman shines in the midst of Pranas within the heart. A detailed
knowledge and comprehensive understanding of the five sheaths is an
indispensable requisite, if you want to attain Self-realisation and practise
the 'Neti-neti' doctrine of Vedanta.
Annamaya sheath or physical body.
The following arguments will prove clearly that the Atman is entirely distinct from the Annamaya sheath or physical body. The physical body is a mass of skin, flesh, blood, bones and lots of other filthy things. It can never be eternally pure, self-existent Brahman. It does not exist prior to birth or posterior to death. It lasts only for a short period. It is full of parts. It is ever changing. It has a beginning and an end. It is inert. It is the effect of Tamoguna. It is the combination of five elements. How can it be one's own Self, the silent witness of changes in all things?
The following arguments will prove clearly that the Atman is entirely distinct from the Annamaya sheath or physical body. The physical body is a mass of skin, flesh, blood, bones and lots of other filthy things. It can never be eternally pure, self-existent Brahman. It does not exist prior to birth or posterior to death. It lasts only for a short period. It is full of parts. It is ever changing. It has a beginning and an end. It is inert. It is the effect of Tamoguna. It is the combination of five elements. How can it be one's own Self, the silent witness of changes in all things?
There is no consciousness in a
dead body. If the gross body is the Self or Atman, the corpse also would be as
conscious as the living body. The physical body is dead as it were during the
dreaming state. The physical body is not eternal. It disintegrates after death.
As the physical body has a beginning and an end, it is an effect like the jar.
The body cannot be the Self, because one continues to live even when particular
limbs are gone, even when his legs and hands are amputated. That the Self is
entirely different from the body, its characteristics, activities and states of
which it is the silent witness is self-evident and needs no demonstration or
proof. How can the inert body, being a pack of bones, covered with flesh and
full of filth, and highly impure, he the self-luminous, self-existent, intelligent
Self, the Knower, which is ever distinct from it?
The foolish man identifies
himself with a mass of flesh, fat, skin, bones and filth, while the man of
discrimination knows that his Self is distinct from this perishable body. The
stupid man thinks that he is the body. A Pundit who has read some religious
books identifies himself with a mixture of body and soul, while the liberated
sage regards the eternal, unchanging Atman as his Self. So long as the learned
Pundit does not abandon his erroneous identification with this unreal,
perishable body, there is no hope of salvation for him, even though he is a
scholar in Vedanta. The identification with the physical body alone is the root
cause which brings the misery of birth and death and its concomitant evils.
Therefore destroy at once this identification. There will be no more chance for
rebirths. O ignorant worldly man! Give up Moha for this physical body of filth,
flesh and hones. Identify yourself with the pure Brahman, the Self of all and
thus attain Immortality and everlasting Peace.
There is an illusory
connection between Annamaya Kosha and Atman through Anyonya Adhyasa or mutual
super-imposition by which the Dharmas or attributes of the former appear on the
latter and the Dharmas of the latter appear on the former.
In Indian Logic there are two
kinds of relationship, viz., Samavaya and Samyoga. Samavaya Sambandha is
inseparable. This is the relationship that exists between a man and his limbs,
a person and his qualities, the actor and his actions. There is no Samavaya
Sambandha between Atman and the five Koshas. Samyoga Sambandha is the
relationship that exists between a drum and the stick. There cannot be any
Samyoga Sambandha between Atman and the five sheaths, as Atman is not a
substance that is made up of the five elements. But the relationship that
exists between Atman and the five sheaths is only the Adhyasa (illusory or
superimposed) relationship that exists between a rope and a snake or between
mother-of-pearl and silver or between a post in darkness and a thief, or
between the sky and the blue colour. Is the illusion caused by one to another,
or is it reciprocal? It must be reciprocal (Anyonya Adhyasa), because Atman and
Ahamkara go hand in hand and are referred one to the other reciprocally in
worldly parlance.
The mutual illusory
relationship that exists between Atman and Annamaya Kosha can be clearly
understood from the daily talks of men. People say: I am a man. I am a male. I
live. I grow. I shall die. I am a boy. I am a grown up man. I am an old man. I
am a Brahmin. I am a Kshatriya. I am a Vaishya. I am a Sudra. I am a
Brahmachari. I am a householder. I am a Sannyasi. I am an Indian. I am an
Englishman. I am a Pundit. I am an illiterate man. I am sick. I am poor. I am
fat. I am lean. I am sickly. I am healthy. Here all the properties of Annamaya
sheath are ascribed by delusion to Atman. The characteristics of Satchidananda
are attributed falsely to the Annamaya Kosha as you see from such illustration:
My body is. My body shines. My body is dear. You can clearly understand now
that there exists a mutual illusory relationship between Atman and the Annamaya
Kosha. Therefore the Atman is not Annamaya Kosha. This food-sheath is not
yours. This is gross body. You are the Self. The Self is distinct from the
food-sheath, because it is the Knower of the sheath.
Pranamaya Kosha –Vital sheath
The second sheath or the
sheath lying next to the physical body consists of the five vital airs with the
five organs of action (Karma Indriyas) and is known as Pranamaya Kosha permeated
by which the Annamaya Kosha engages itself in all activities as if it were
living.
There is Anyonya Adhyasa or
mutual illusory relationship between Atman and the Pranamaya Kosha. The
attributes of the vital sheath such as hunger and thirst are superimposed on
the Self. Man generally says: I am hungry. I am thirsty. I am strong. I am
brave. I walk, I talk, I give. I do actions. I am dumb. I am a lame man. I am
impotent. I am weak. Here the functions of the Pranamaya Kosha are falsely
attributed to Atman (the 'I'). Conversely the attributes of Atman are falsely
ascribed to the vital sheath. Man generally says: My Prana is; my Prana shines;
my Prana is dear to me. This is the reciprocal relationship between Atman and
the Pranamaya Kosha.
Prana is Jada or inert. It is
an effect of Tamoguna. It has no knowledge of itself. It cannot know others.
During sleep it cannot welcome a man. It cannot stop a thief from removing his
jewels. Therefore it is Jada or inert like a jar or a piece of stone. It has a
beginning and an end. It cannot be self-effulgent Atman, because it is a
modification of Vayu and like the air it enters into and comes out of the body,
because it never knows in the least either its own weal or woe, or those of
others, being eternally dependent on the Self.
The Atman is pure
consciousness and is eternally distinct from the Pranamaya Kosha. You are not
the Pranamaya Kosha. This is not yours also. This belongs to the subtle body.
The Self is distinct from the vital sheath because it is the Knower of this
sheath.
Manomaya Kosha – Mental sheath
The five organs of knowledge
together with the mind constitute the Manomaya Kosha or the mental sheath. This
mind is the cause for the diversity of the things such as 'I' and 'mine'. It
creates egoism and mineness in house, son, wife and property. It passes outside
through the avenues or channels of senses. It is powerful, it creates the
difference of name, etc. It manifests itself as permeating the vital sheath.
Man generally says: I think. I fancy. I am in grief. I am deluded. I am hot-tempered.
I am the enjoyer, I am a sickly person. I am the desirer. I am the seer, the
taster, the smeller, toucher. I am a deaf person. I am a blind man, and so on.
Here the functions of the Manomaya Kosha are falsely attributed to the Atman.
Conversely the characteristics of Atman are falsely ascribed to the Manomaya
Kosha. Man generally says: My mind is, my mind shines and my mind is dear to
me. Thus there is the reciprocal illusory relationship between Atman and the
Manomaya Kosha.
There is no ignorance outside
mind. The mind is Avidya. When mind is destroyed, everything else is destroyed.
When the mind manifests, all else manifests. In dreams, the mind alone creates
the object such as mountains, rivers, flowers, chariot, horses, driver etc. It
is the subject. It is the object. In dreamless sleep it rests in the Mula
Ajnana or primitive ignorance, its cause. If it were identical with
consciousness, it should have continued like it even when the man enters into
dreamless sleep. Mind is only Jada or inert. It is not self-luminous. It is a
product of Sattva-Guna. It has a beginning and an end. It is only an instrument
in the hands of the subject who is its user. It is subject to modifications. It
is ever changing. It is an object. Its attributes are pleasure and pain.
Therefore, it cannot be changeless, self-effulgent, pure Atman. The Atman
exists even during deep sleep. This is proved by the man's remembrance in the
morning to the effect that he enjoyed sound sleep the previous night and that
he was aware of nothing during sleep. As only that man who had the experience
can have the remembrance of an experience, we must conclude that the man who
had the remembrance in the above form in the morning did exist during deep
sleep and experience the bliss and the absence of knowledge remembered by him
during the waking state.
Mind is associated with the
Vrittis, viz., lust, anger, greed, etc. It has no steadiness. So it is a
Vikari. Atman is changeless (Nirvikara) and silent witness. In reality you are
the Atman. Therefore, you are not the Manomaya Kosha. It is not yours also. It
belongs to the subtle body. You are distinct from the Manomaya Kosha. You are
the knowing subject. The Self is distinct from the Manomaya Kosha, because it
is the Knower of this sheath.
Vijnanamaya Kosha - Intellect sheath
Buddhi or intellect with its
modifications and the five organs of knowledge, having the characteristics of
the agent constitutes the Vijnanamaya Kosha or the knowledge-sheath. In deep
sleep, it gets involved along with the reflected intelligence (Chidabhasa). The
knowledge sheath is highly luminous on account of its close proximity to the
Paramatman.
Man generally says: I am the
agent. I am a man of firm determination. I am a man of intelligence. I am a
learned man. I can understand everything beautifully. I can remove the doubts
of others. I know the Vedas. I am a wise man. Here the functions of the
Vijnanamaya Kosha are falsely ascribed to Atman. Conversely the attributes of
Atman are falsely attributed to the Vijnanamaya Kosha. Man says: My Buddhi is,
my Buddhi shines and my Buddhi is dear to me. Thus there exits a reciprocal
illusory relationship between Atman and the intellectual sheath.
This knowledge-sheath cannot
be the self-effulgent pure Atman, because it is subject to change, it has a
beginning and an end; it is an effect of Sattva-Guna; it is Jada or insentient;
it is not self-luminous; it is a limited thing; it is an object; it is not
constantly present; it gets involved during deep sleep. An unreal thing cannot
therefore be taken for the eternal, real Atman.
You are not the Vijnanamaya
Kosha. This sheath also is not yours. It belongs to the subtle body. You are
the Knower of this sheath and as such are entirely distinct from it.
Anandamaya Kosha – Causal or blissful sheath
The fifth sheath is the
Anandamaya Kosha or Avidya in its Sattvic aspect causing the blissful
experience of Sushupti or deep sleep. It is endowed with the three Vrittis,
viz., Priya, Moda and Pramoda. Priya is the happiness that arises in one from
the mere sight of a desired object. Moda is the happiness which one enjoys when
he is in possession of a desired object. Pramoda is the happiness which one
gets from the actual enjoyment of the desired object. This sheath makes itself
spontaneously felt to the fortunate during the fruition of their virtuous
deeds. This Anandamaya Kosha has its fullest play during deep sleep. In the
dreaming and waking states it has only a partial operation, caused by the sight
of pleasant objects. Priya Vritti is the head of Anandamaya Kosha. Moda Vritti
is the right wing. Pramoda Vritti is its left wing. Pratibimbananda is its
trunk. The Bimbananda of Atman is its tail.
Man generally says: I am the
enjoyer. I am happy. I am peaceful. I am contented. I am Sattvic. I am Rajasic.
I am Tamasic. I am a dull man. I am an ignorant man. I am a miserable man. I am
a discontented person. I am a man of discrimination. I am a vicious person. I
am a deluded person. Here the attributes of the Anandamaya Kosha are falsely
ascribed to the Atman. Conversely the characteristics of the Satchidananda of
Atman are falsely attributed to the Anandamaya Kosha. Man generally says: My
bliss is, my bliss shines and my bliss is dear to me. Thus there is reciprocal
illusory relationship between Atman and Anandamaya Kosha.
The Anandamaya Kosha cannot be
the Atman, because it is endowed with changeful attributes. It is a
modification of Prakriti. It is the effect of past good deeds. It has an end.
You are not the Anandamaya Kosha. This sheath is not yours also. It constitutes
the causal body. You are entirely distinct from this sheath. You are always the
knower of this sheath. In the illustrations, 'My cow', 'my son', 'my wife', 'my
house', the cow, the son, the wife and the house are entirely separate from
man. Man generally says, 'My body, my Prana, my intellect, my senses, my
ignorance'. This means that the body etc., are different from their proprietor
indicated by the word 'my'. It is obvious that all the things are related to a
Being which is beyond them all. The relationship is one of property towards its
proprietor. You can clearly understand by the practice of 'Neti, neti' doctrine
(a continuous process of elimination) that the body, Prana, mind, etc., are not
the Soul or Atman, but belong to it.
All this illusion has arisen
in men on account of ignorance and non-discrimination or absence of the faculty
which discriminates between the eternal Atman and the illusory five sheaths
which are falsely superimposed upon the Atman. The five sheaths are creations
by the mind on account of ignorance. The five sheaths cannot be the pure,
self-existent, self-luminous Atman. Srutis emphatically declare that the Atman
is bodiless. Just as the changes that take place in the cow such as growth,
decay, etc., do not in the least affect the proprietor of the cow, the seer, so
also the changes that occur in the five sheaths do not touch their proprietor
and seer, the Atman.
Just as you can clearly
distinguish the sound of one man from another through the power of
discrimination; just as you can clearly feel, this is soft, this is hard, this
is hot, this is cold, by the power of discrimination; just as you can clearly
understand by looking at a picture on a wall, this is black colour, this is red
colour, this is wall, this is a picture, through the power of discrimination,
although you are not able to separate the red colour from the black colour, the
picture from the wall; just as you can clearly understand by tasting a drink,
this is lemonade, this is orange, this is raspberry, through the power of
discrimination, although you cannot separate the salt or sugar from the water;
just as you can know the odour in a cloth by the organ of smell although you
cannot separate the odour from the cloth; so also you can clearly differentiate
Atman and the Koshas by understanding the essential nature of Atman and the
five sheaths, by hearing Vedanta from a Guru. You can clearly understand that
there is no connection between the Atman and the five sheaths. Although it is
impossible for ordinary people to separate water from milk, yet it is possible
for a Hamsa (swan) to separate water from milk. Although it is impossible for
people of gross intellect to differentiate Atman from the five sheaths, yet it
is possible for a man of subtle intellect to differentiate between them.
The five sheaths are not
really in Atman. Just as the snake is superimposed upon the rope, silver on the
mother-of-pearl, thief on the post, water in the mirage, blueness in the sky,
so also the five sheaths are superimposed on the Atman on account of ignorance.
Just as the illusion of snake vanishes when the knowledge of rope is attained,
so also the erroneous conception of the five sheaths disappears when one gets
knowledge of the Self.
The disciple generally asks
the Guru: The five sheaths do not entirely perish, but manifest themselves even
after the attainment of the Self. How can they be said to be illusory? Just as
the water in the mirage appears for the man even after he is fully aware that
it is illusory water only, so also, the five sheaths may appear to the sage
even after he has attained Brahma Jnana. Just as a pot with a neck, body, etc.,
though it is nothing but the illusory appearance of clay, survives as long as
the neck, body, etc., survive, so also the five sheaths, though known to be
illusory appear as real like a burnt cloth so long as Prarabdha survives. When
the soul gets differentiated from its sheaths, it shines in its true pristine
glory, it shines in its true character of pure consciousness. It does not
require any proof; for it is the basis of all proofs, something that the proofs
must presuppose before they are brought into operation.
It is the unshakable and final
conclusion of the Vedanta that, like the clay which alone truly survives after
the name and form of the jar, which is but an illusory appearance of the clay,
perish, the eternal, self-luminous Atman alone really survives after the five
sheaths, which are but illusory attributes of Atman, are destroyed by the
knowledge of the Self. Whoever knows thus, he is a Knower of Brahman, he is a
Knower of the truths of Vedanta, he alone is a Jivanmukta. This
is the emphatic declaration of the Upanishads.
Peace love harmony