September 25, 2009

The Rivulet -: -- 12-20

The Rivulet :
-12-

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"Chaturtham koosh'maand'aa"

Suraa-Sampoorna-Kalasham Rudhiraaplutameva- Cha,
Dadhaanaa-Hasta-Padmaabhyaam-Koosh'maandaa Shubhamastu me !

"Panchamam Skandamaateti"

Simhaasanagataa-Nityam Pdmamaashrit-Karadwayaa,
Shubhadaastu Sadaa Devee Skandamataa Yashaswinee .

"Shash'th'amam Kaatyaayaneeti Cha"

Chandra-Hasojjwalakaraa Shaardoolaravaahanaa,
Kaatyaayanee-Shubham-Dadyaa-Devee Daanava-Ghaatinee .

"Saptam Kaala Ratreeti"

Eka-veni Japaakarn'apooraa Nagnaa Kharrsthitaa,
Lamboshth'ee Karnikaakarnee Tailaabhyaakta-Shareerinee .


In Navaraatra Days, He would Chant while performing Pujaa of Devee.
On One such Navaratri, when Sharu wasnine years, He 'initiated' her into "Saraswat-Deekshaa.
By now was well-acquainted with various Sanskrit Chants, because of Father's company.
She was affectionately called 'Sharu', which was the short for 'Sharadaa', a name of Devee Saraswatee.

She had already learnt Sanskrit Vyakaranam and basics of Indian Classical Music.
She knew where 'C' (Saa) of the Octave starts. She always cherished to develop the singing skills, but father seemed to be reluctant to her this deep craving.
"Why?"
-She would often brood over it.
The reasons became clear, only when was she 16+ of Age.
One day, her father allowed her to practice the specific 'Raags' of Indian Classical Music.
Then father told to a friend of his,
I am happy that this girl of mine has successfully passed through the barrier, I was hopeful of.
He was waiting to see, how her voice turnes-out, when she crosses this specific age, when the
voice may go awry. Fortunately, It remained clear and melodious. Her voice gave her a free
access in all the three octaves.
But even then, Her father one day told her about the 'inner-music', that one needs to discover.
He taught her about the four kinds of 'Sound', one should be able to discriminate well.
He taught her about the "Vaikharee",
He taught her about the "Vaak",
He taught her about "Pashyantee", and finally about the "Paraa".
She asked him about the significance of each of them.
And he told her in short thus, :
"Vaikharee" is the sound made by animate and the in-animate objects.
"Vaak" is the one, through which one talks to one-self.
"Pashyantee" is the one, which remains attentive, and where-from "Vaak" originates.
"Paraa" is the All-encompassing Source and Ground of these three kinds of Sounds.

Telling her about the 'Shaila-Putree" and "Brahmachaarinee" forms of the "Mother-Principle",
He told her, "Staying in 'Brahman' is 'Tapas", and according to Upanish'ads, :
'Brahman Is Tapas'.
'Staying in pure sense of Being, without identifying oneself with the modes of the mind (Vritti) is 'Tapas'.
Though Formless, The 'Divine Mother-Principle (Paraa) becomes manifest, again in three
forms:
Cosmic,
Collective,
and Individual.
The Mother-Principle really never undergoes any change, but all this is Her Great Play only.
"Leelaa".
She was listening to it attentively.
In the evenings, The devotees would play "Garabaa", before an idol of Devee.
In Garabaa, only Female devotees could participate.
She too would take part enthusiastically. But it was a festival of devotion.
-Pure Devotion only.
There was no scope for vanity.
On such occassions, sometime some devotee would be 'possessed' by 'Maataa'.
Her father would worship her with due ritual performance, and there was no doubt, scepticism or fear about such incidence.
She always witnessed such an event with awe, -with admiration.
The Devee would sometimes perform some miracles, sometimes predict about the future of the
land, the people, and occassionally would suggest some remedies to ailing, worried devotees.
People talked about the veracity of theose predictions.
She was told by the father that human beings should not comment about such things. It is
beyond the capacity of "Vaikharee" and "Vaak" to understand such phenomena.
She could just wonder. She had to wait till she reaches to the "Pashyantee" level of the
Existence. And it is just as the "Grace" would have it. She would get readily convinced.

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-13-

"Mahaa-Gaureeti Chaash't'amam ... ... ..."

Shwete Vrish'e Samaaroodh'aa Shwetaambardharaa Shuchi:,
Mahaa-Gauree Shubham-Dadhaan-Mahaadeva-Pramodadaa.

This was the last stanza of the 'Chant' sung by her father. The titles cited before each of them together make-up one more shloka in themselves :

Prathamam Shaila-Putree Dwiteeyam Brahma-Chaarin'ee,
Triteeyam Chandra-Ghant'eti Chaturtham Cha Koosh'maand'aa.
Panchamam SkandaMaateti Sh'ash'th'am Kaatyaayaneeti Cha,
Saptamam Kaala-Ratreeti, Mahaa-Gaureeti Chaash't'amam.

These were the Eight 'Forms' of the One and Only One Divine Mother, which the devotees worshipped during "Nava-Durgaa"- Festivals.

She was enchanted by every form of the Mother. Occasionally, she would realize that her mind has become tranquil, calm and collected. A soothing Light would engulf her mind and body and being. She could know only after returning to her usual self, that the "Light" was the Grace of the "Divine-Mother". This repeated for years. Especially on Fridays, and Tuesdays in the evenings, but sometimes in the mornings also. This was a kind of 'normal' thing for her.
In one of the Navaratra, however she came across a new revelation. While doing the traditional 'Garabaa', she felt the same Light is approaching to her from all directions, and as the Light touched her, she found herself transfixed in It. The sense of 'personal'-being however continued at a mild level. Only the Light that descended upon her took control of all her physical actions. She could sense that she is now possessed by a Greater divine power, and she had not to have fear any more. The Power was worshipped by her father, and the devotees, in the same way, as she herself used to do, when she saw earlier such happenings with other devotees, mostly the females only.
This time, however she could remember that the "Power" had a specific ethereal form that closely resembled one of the nine forms of the mother, as described in the scripture. She never disclosed the thing to any one.

She now knew well that where-from the "Divine" Forms come and where they return.
Her father had explained it:
"Lochayati, Lochyate waa, iti Loka:"
It meant that one who 'sees' or 'seen' is "Loka" i.e. the 'soul'.
The Divine forms of the Mother are themselves their Realms, i.e. Loka.
All this is Verily the "Brahman",
-The Upanishadik Lore came to her mind.
The Life was going smoothly. After some years she was married to a Brahmin boy of her own caste, and entered the 'Grihastha-Ashrama'.
She was not very wealthy, but had servants to help her in the domestic chores. She however continued to celebrate Navaratra, to worship and feed "Kumaarees", all the same. She would be 'visited' by the Divine Mother now and then, but nothing note-worthy happened. She gave birth to a son and a daughter,and lived happily.

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-14-

The ninth form of the Mother :

"Navamam Siddhi-Daatree...."

Siddha-Gandharva-Yakshaadyai:-asurai:-amarai:-api,
Sasevyamaanaa Sadaa Bhooyaat Siddhidaa Siddhidaayinee.

These nine forms of the Divine Mother Durga were devotedly worshipped during the Navaraatra Time.
During one such Navaratra, when she was just preparing for the evening pooja, a humble villager came to have her 'Darshana'
He prostrated before her. She was sometimes greeted by the visitors in such a way.
She just raised her open right palm upon her and said :
'Tathaastu'.
She was not even asked for a boon, but as the words spontaneously escaped her lips, the villager was just wonder-struck .
Taken aback, He tried to convey his wish, when she herself remarked,:
'Don't doubt, I shall myself appear at your home as a girl-child after the next Navaratra.'
She said to him.
She was at the time at another level of 'consciousness'. She was just lost in the contemplation of
the Mother, when he had suddenly arrived there.
She so, couldn't remember even a single thread of the conversation between them.
She resumed her work.
Next year, along-with a fellow women devotees of her village, she went to visit some holy places.
She went to Haridwaar, Rishikesh, Vaishno-Devi, Gangotree, Yamunotree. They had planned to visit KedaarNath and Badri-Naath Dhaams.
While returning, They again took a dip in the Ganges, -precisely at Har-Kee-Paidee, when the
memory of that humble villager resurfaced before her mental eyes. She could see her time had
come . She knew well that she is going to be absorbed in the Holy Ganges.
Unhesitatingly, she stepped forward in the deep waters, and was gone !
The mighty waves took her fast in their stride. The fellow women could do nothing.
They made a frenetic search for her, but she was swept-away in the streams. Found no-where.

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-15-


'Kinee' was 'Sharu' .

When the old villager heard the news of his wife's pregnancy, he was in his late
forties. Some 18 years ago was he married and so far had been childless. When the news broke-
over in the village, every-one congratulated him and his wife.
On the auspicious day of Deepawali, his wife delivered a girl-child. Living in the village that was
near a river, he named her ''Mandaakini', and the father lovingly called her by the name 'Kinee'.
We don't know if he knew or not about the demise of 'Sharu' alias 'Sharadaa'.
He was just happy.
He lived in the hamlet near the tiny rivulet, that becomes a somewhat bigger stream and joins
another one some thirty-forty miles away from his village. The river then again meets the
mighty Yamunaa. He had twice visited the confluence, where It joines the river Yamunaa.
'kinee' perhaps never knew the meaning or the origin of her name. She just thought, her name
was an alternative to a very small piece of 'mishree', or the sugar. And perhaps she was given
this name, just as the custom . Incidentally, she had a friend, who told her it was the name of some river. She didn't know what was the truth. She, however liked her name.


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-16-

The Night was past twelve. The deep silence and the noise and sounds of the wild 'beings' permeated the jungle. It was the first night of the new moon, -'Pratipadaa'.
She was hungry and thirsty, but it did not become a distraction to her journey 'inwards'.
She was so deeply absorbed and a bit fascinated also into the re-occurrences of her past lives, that seemed to her, as if re-enacting themselves, that a question started haunting her.
'Who am I?',
-verbally it could be framed in these three words. It was a real-life identity-crisis to her. She could not see if Sharu became the girl Kinee, or the girl Kinee was Sharu in her past life! She couldn't even judge if she was Kinee's new birth, or Kinee was her past one ! Who is She? She could vividly see that she was a female tiger retiring in her isolated spot under the trees in the silent jungle, but she could now doubt this fact .She thought, may be in the waking hours she is the female tiger, yet during hours when she is fast asleep, she owns other identities. She laughed aloud . In the silent jungle, her laughter didn't cause a stir. When she could not bear, she rose-up and went to the adjacent water-hole to quench her thirst.
The dreams/other worldly experiences resumed their play.
It occurred to her that she was just a witness that gave foundation to all these three characters, namely; Sharu, Kinee and this current one, the tiger. In an instant flash, her identity was bare before herself.
Good Joke ! she uttered to herself.
Then what does it mean when she is no more?
She could now easily recall all the three births, but the current one seemed to be overpowering. The other two seemed as if were a lucid dreams only.
Then again she wondered, why she has donned the tiger-skin?
She searched more and more. She could see herself postured in 'Padmaasana', performing some 'japa' as Sharu. Then she recalled herself as Kinee, playing with a tiger and being attacked and killed by the same. Then once more, she could find herself in a tiger-body, sitting with the hind legs folded while the rear-ones stretched-out crossing each other.
And it was very comfortable for her to perceive the thing, -her true identity, which was a non-verbal entity, as her simple being, -the witness.
She immediately realized that humans could never grasp this simple truth of Life.
She was a 'vehicle' of Life, she said to herself.
Then again she saw her father's face, who had told her about this truth.
'Life', -the Mother Divine permeates and pervades the whole Existence. The Whole Existence is just an infant in Her lap. But for the humans, She owes forms, she Herself becomes 'the Existence', -the whole life.
She rides the back of a Tiger, and the bull, and the Hansa (Swan), and the Peacock, and she keeps the existence breathing, alive.
Even at the gross level, humans survive, only if the tiger survives. If tiger survives not, only the herbivores would be there on the earth. They would graze-out every bit of grass, and the land will face droughts and famines , and humans too would vanish. And if Humans vanish, Life is lost.
Then, the tiger and the other carnivores have a slow rate of population. And if they are in aplenty, humans would go for their hunt. So, this whole life is a complete and perfect cycle.

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-17-

Bodily, she was a tiger, mentally, she was an amalgam of several mental attributes, thoughts, feelings, emotions, intelligence, all mingled together in front of the back-drop of a 'sense' of 'I'/ 'me'. An intense urge to understand the significance of this 'sense' of 'I'/'me' arose in her very being, at the core, where-from this sense must have its origin.
She could recall the events of her past lives as if happening on a screen. She was the screen, She was the picture, and she was the rapidly moving pointed tip of the consciousness that gave form and colour to the picture. She was the 'time-span' in which the pictures owed their ( virtual ) existence.
The myriad pictures were formed in a bit of second, and were dissolved in the nothingness.
The identity-crisis was overcome in a fraction of the moment. But it was not a 'new' knowledge.
Time had been ever like this. It never moved. It was the film that kept moving and created a sense of the movement of pictures, and the illusion of the passage of time also.
Bodily, she would live for the rest of her stipulated life as a lady tiger. She would kill a beast twice a week. Sometimes a day, if she kills a rabbit or a deer, She would search for a male, she would give birth to cubs every third year, and after some 15 to 20 years, or before that, die.
In the following night, she resumed her journey through the proverbial 'memory-lane'.
As Sharu, she was aware about the significance of 'Praana' and 'Chakras' , of 'Kunda' 'Kundala' and 'Kundalini', Of 'Idaa', 'Pingalaa' and 'Sushumnaa'. Of the various 'Devas' that own the 'Chakras'. The various kinds of 'Praanaayams', The concentration of mind, and retaining the 'Praanas', at a specific 'Chakra' or nerve-center. She also knew how to locate the centres through the 'inner-eye', without bringing-in imagination. How to 'vitalize' them, and direct, stop or reverse the movement of 'Pranas' through various passages (Naadees). How to propitiate the specific deities that are connected to those different centres. It was really very absorbing and yielding too.
But then ?
She could see, how 'Kaaya-vyooh' creation helped exhausting the 'individual-praarabdha' and that is one cause that lead her to newer births.
The successive 'Kaayaas' and the lives, helped her, no doubt.
But then ?
-What next?
She had no answer, but a deep satisfaction, contentedness, within her .


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-18-

She could vividly 'see', her own past lives, when she was some aspirant , when she was a yogi,
tapasvee, bhakt, jnaanee, and saadhak. When she was having a male body. She had been trained
by competent spiritual masters. It was the life, when she believed in 'enlightenment', and in
'bondage', liberation, and God . Her belief was just nominal, because it was founded on ignorance
of the True nature of them. What precisely did she know? She wanted to gather 'knowledge'.
She desired to be a great scholar, Pundit, a Master of all Vedik-knowledge.
But there lied a ray of hope. The master repeatedly instructed her to practice 'chintana' of the
transient nature of the life, of the worldy pleasures and sorrows, and try to see for herself, what
lies beyond them. The master was very emphatic that any spiritual search in the quest of God,
Truth, Religion, Self, Brahma, etc. begins with understanding that if there is something, which
may be permanent ? If the search is not motivated with this understanding, it would eventually end in the pursuit of some worldy gains, and that would fail all efforts.

September 15, 2009

य एषु सुप्तेषु जागर्ति .

य एषु सुप्तेषु जागर्ति

कौन है वह जो 'इन' 'सोये-हुओं' में जागता है?
मैं इस सूक्ति को कुछ अलग अर्थ में देखता हूँ।
सोचता हूँ यह 'किसका' उल्लेख है?
कौन है, जो जागता है, -सोये हुओं के बीच ?
सोये हुए तो,
'-मैं जागता हूँ, ' नहीं कह सकते !
वे तो,
'मैं सो रहा हूँ,'
-ऐसा भी कहाँ कह सकेंगे?
निश्चित ही,
अवश्य ही,
'कोई' है,
जो 'जागृत' है ।
जो 'जानता' है, कि मैं सोया हुआ नहीं हो सकता ।
और 'दूसरे' ही 'सोये' हुए हैं ।
क्या शरीर ?
शरीर अपने स्वाभाविक कर्म में रत है ।
ऋतुओं की तरह ।
न जाने किसकी प्रेरणा से ?
"केन प्रेषितो अयं ?"
वह कुछ भी नहीं कहता,
न यह कि मैं जागता हूँ,
और न यह, कि मैं नहीं जाग रहा ।
बस चुपचाप अपना कार्य करता रहता है ।
फ़िर कौन?
क्या इन्द्रियाँ ?
वे तो मन का अनुगमन करती हैं,
-यंत्रवत ।
मन के जुड़ने से ही उन्हें 'सत्ता' मिलती है ।
हाँ यदि मन उनका दास हो जाए, तो मन उनके स्वरूप का हो जाता है,
-सोया-सोया सा,
-खोया-खोया सा ।
यंत्र ही हो बैठता है वह ।
क्या यंत्र कभी सोते हैं ?
या कभी जागते भी हैं ?
वे तो अपने स्वामी के संकेत से कार्य करने लगते हैं ।
किसी 'जागृत' सत्ता की प्रेरणा से स्फूर्त्त होकर !
किसी जागृत 'सत्ता' द्वारा 'प्राणों' को आंदोलित कर दिए जाने पर !
और,
क्या 'प्राण' भी यंत्रवत ही किसी 'देवता' का सान्निध्य पाने पर ही,
अपना कार्य नहीं करते हैं?
क्या उस 'जागृत' सत्ता को कोई 'सुप्त' कभी देख सकता है ?
'जागृत' अपना प्रमाण आप ही है ।
तो हम कर रहे थे ,
-इन्द्रियों की बात,
वे 'प्राणों' की गति से, और प्राणों को प्रेरित करनेवाले,
उस 'जागृत' या सुप्त मन की संलग्नता से ही अपने-अपने कार्य में प्रवृत्त होती हैं न ?
और 'मन' ?
क्या वह बुद्धि, स्मृति, इच्छा, संकल्प, और,
राग, द्वेष, से ही 'प्रवृत्त' नहीं हुआ करता ?
क्या वे सभी,
-यंत्रवत ही अपना कार्य नहीं करते ?
क्या वे 'जागृत' होते हैं ?
हाँ वे कार्य में संलग्न या उससे विलग्न अवश्य होते रहते हैं ।
क्या उनसे जुड़ा 'मन' सोया हुआ ही नहीं होता ?
किसी 'आदर्श', कल्पना, सुख-दु:ख या 'अवसाद' में,
'स्वप्नों' में डूबा हुआ ?
तो इन सब 'सोये-हुओं' में,
-'कौन' जागता है ?
"मैं" ?
जरूर हर-कोई जानता है,
-जब वह जागता है ,
जरूर हर कोई जागता है,
-जब वह जानता है ।
वह 'कौन' , कौन है ?
जो सदा है,
जो सदा-सर्वदा ही ऐसा है ।
-वह जागता भी अवश्य है ?
जो, सदा ।
जो मुक्त भी तो होता है,
कभी-कभी,
जब 'कोई' 'सो' रहा होता है,
और, जब हम उसे जगाने जाते हैं,
तो वह कहता है, -
'अभी मैं सो रहा हूँ, सोना चाहता हूँ।
जगाओ मत !'
क्या वह झूठ कहता है?
यदि वह झूठ कहता है, तो कैसे कह सकता था ?
यदि वह जाग रहा है, तो कैसे कह सकता था ?
'य एषु सुप्तेषु जागर्ति '
-ऋषि के वचन कितने अद्भुत हैं !
कितने सुंदर !
'य:' कहते ही, ऋषि,
उसे 'जागृत' कर देता है,
'अनावरित', और मुक्त,
'जो' सदा ही ऐसा है ।
- नित्य जागृत है ।
ऋषि,
क: एषु सुप्तेषु जागर्ति ,
स: एषु सुप्तेषु जागर्ति,
या,
अयं एषु सुप्तेषु जागर्ति ,
नहीं कहते !
जागृत चैतन्य को क: , स: की तरह से नहीं पहचाना जा सकता !
क्योंकि तब वह 'अपने ' से ही 'अन्य' हो जाता है !
चैतन्य तो 'अनन्य' होता है,
अहम्-इदं के विभाजन से रहित !
और इसीलिये , उसे स: अथवा अयं के रूप में भी नहीं ग्रहण किया जा सकता ।
य: का प्रयोग कितना सम्यक प्रयोग है !
तस्मै ऋषये नम इदं ।
किंतु यदि जागृत - चैतन्य सोये हुओं में जागता है , तो अवश्य ही वह उन सोये - हुओं से अभिन्न भी होता है ,
क्योंकि 'सोये-हुए' तो स्वयं को भी नहीं प्रमाणित कर सकते !!
कैसे ?
जागृत-आदि त्रयोन्मुक्तम , जागृत-आदि-मयं-स्तथा ,
ओंकारैक सु-संवेद्यो यत्पदं तन्नमाम्यहम !(मांडूक्य-उपनिषद् )
फ़िर ,
तत्-युष्मदोरस्मदि - संप्रतिष्ठा ,
तस्मिन्-विनष्टे -अस्मदि -मूल -बोधात ,
तत्-युष्मदस्मिं -मति वर्जितैका ,
स्थिति: ज्वलन्ती सहजात्मन: स्यात !! (सत् -दर्शनं , श्री रमण महर्षि )


ब्रह्म सजातीय, विजातीय, तथा स्वगत भेदों से रहित है ।
नित्य जागृत चैतन्य , आत्म-तत्त्व, ही इन सोये हुओं में जागता है ।


posted by Vinay Vaidya,


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September 06, 2009

My first posts

The Rivulet : 1 - 11.

-1-


She,
Was a cute girl.
Comely, charming,
-17.
Going to jungle every-day.
In fact, it was her home!
She lived there in a hut.
With her parents.
She used to roam the surrounding jungle every-day.
The monkeys, the mongoose, were her friends.
And the fish,
-That lived in the little water-hole (well), adjacent to her hut.
And also those, who swam into the rivulet from where she fetched water.
Because it was convenient.
Because she could play there with the fish,
and bring the water from there while returning.
She was often accompanied by her puppy,
-Always, -we can say !
It was also cute like her,
- but ferocious too!
Her parents were living with her.
They were worried about her marriage !
They but never showed their anxiety before her.
Where-from the money will come?
They had been saving it bit-by-bit.
The jungle was enough to give them their daily bare requirements,
-like food, cloth and shelter.
But they needed salt too !
And the jungle sometimes provided them something that they can exchange for money
and buy such luxuries sometimes.
She knew about their worry, stealthily though, while listening to their talks.

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-2-

Today she saw 'Her'.
The Tiger, or rather the Tigress,
-The Lady-Tiger !
In the quiet hours just before dawn, when the darkness becomes thicker.
She was going to respond the daily early morning call of the nature, as usual.
She had no facility in the hut,
She spotted her there.
Quenching the thirst, in the river-waters.
She was stunned.
Oh yes!
It was a She-Cat!
A large one.
The wild-one.
The Big Lady-Tiger -in fact!
There were Black and yellow, creamy stripes on her body !
Golden, honey-coloured.
She walked-away, Gracefully.
While walking-back, she looked with her wide eyes to the girl.
It sent a shiver in her spine.
Without staying for the next second she was gone.
-Leaped onto her way.
In those silent hours,
There was the silver showering from the sky,
- in the form of moonlight.
They were on the opposite sides of the rivulet.
At the far ends.


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-3-


She was not afraid.
She returned to the hut.
The father had got-up.
He put a 'biree' in his mouth'
Lit a match-stick and blew-out a thick smoke.
Took the 'tin-mug' and left for the jungle.
She didn't tell him or the mother about the tiger.
Instead she untied the puppy from the corner, and took it out for the daily stroll.
She was worried about her puppy.
She knew it was a relishing food for the 'bitch'.
She cursed the big bitch-cat.
She would not leave the puppy alone any more.
But then,
There are far more animals, bigger ones, that could feed the 'bitch',
-She consoled herself.
She played with the puppy,
-kissing her sometimes, running after him, chasing him to long distances in the
jungle.


*****************************************************

-4-


In the coming nights she would get-up twice or thrice, startled by her own thoughts.
She knew the natural enmity between the felines and the canines.
She would sometimes used to sleep with the puppy, but only when she was a bit
doubtful about its safety.
Otherwise, she would just check out for it in the corner, and see it there sitting lazily or just snoozing.
Then one evening, she again spotted the tiger.
Returning from the jungle, with firewood and a few wild berries, and the puppy, she
saw her. She was there under the thicket of the bush. Relaxing, as if a part of the
land. She hurried to home. The tiger remained unmoved when she cast a glance over her again.
The same thing happened after a few days, when she saw her speeding away towards the deeper area of the jungle. She heaved a sigh of relief.

*********************************************


-5-

After every 2-3 weeks she would encounter her from a long distance, and she
gradually grew bold and fearless of the feline. She began to feel some kind of
affinity with her. During next whole year they both developed a cordial friendly
relationship. The tiger was almost tamed by her. Occassionally, she would sniff her,
and she would just have shivers . She could not believe, but it gave to her a strange
sense of gratification. Now she didn't carry the puppy along-with. She had an axe, :
'-in case something happens',
-she would think aloud.
The time kept moving, the seasons changed, and one day she found her puppy missing.
It was missing for the next two days. She had three consecutive sleepless nights.
She couldn't see the tiger also. The third day the puppy returned, with a bitch.
She understood. The three lived happily there for a few months and the bitch gave 3
cute pups.


The things repeated. She was now having an 'affair', -sort of a romance with the tiger. She could now gaze sometimes for a moment, for a very long moment indeed, though it was really a fraction of a second, appeared to her an unending long one moment.
Looking into those fearless fiery big eyes always fascinated her. Somehow, one day
she gathered heart and caressed her fur. The silky, smooth stripes . There were many
fears. Trepidation, thrill, excitement, but She had a great experience that day.

After returning to home the pets kept sniffing and barking at her incessantly.
Only after her taking a bath the pets could somehow manage to bear her. After that
day she never tried to touch the big cat.
But she would meet her once in a while
without fail.
And this happened one day.
She saw her, The big cat approached her with silent paces, very gracefully and kept basking in her company as usual. Suddenly in a fit of rage, it pounced upon her, tore her, and made her her food.
The pets kept waiting for her. The father searched for her, and found her remains
in the jungle. He could easily recognise her clothes, bangles and the ear-rings.


****************************************************************************

-6-

She was there. All alone.
She could not believe her eyes. She could not understand if she was the same girl, that she herself had devoured yesterday. She was the tigress, and she was the girl.
She could see the things, the happenings, and understand too, but could not think in
or through words. The past life would come to her as a remembrance,njust like a waking-
dream. She was going through two mental states. One, as a tiger, another as the girl. Gradually these two states merged into one, and she started feeling herself now mostly
as a tiger, though occassionally, she would dream of being the girl also.
She was after all a wild animal ! Was she one?
She felt She was the Goddess of the woods, Fauna -वन देवी, वन-दुर्गा,  'Van-Devi'.
She even now sees in her 'waking dreams' how she had worshipped herself when she was a 16 year old girl, -during the past life?
- As a tiger she could never remember she had devoured a sixteen or eighteen year old
girl a year ago !
She could remember how she worshipped the Mother-Goddess, the River-Goddess,
and the Goddess in stone, The Marble-One. She could here some sounds, chants, and
rituals being performed by herself in that 'past' life of her's.
The merge was complete. The girl and the tigress coalesced.


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-7-


What does that mean to her?
There was one, The Tigress, which remembered her past "Lives".
Though she thought herself a tigress, she could never deny, she was a girl in a past life.
She roamed free, in the vast 'Sanctuary', the 'Reserved Forest', where hunting was
prohibited by the Law of the Land.
It was comparatively a longer winter.
In this part of the earth, the winter was a
pleasant gift of nature (thinking a in tiger-friendly way.)
The day-time was shorter, the nights longer. She could go on her hunting expedition.
She was also sensing the upsurge of a strange energy and spirit in herself. She needed a 'male' friend. The urge was intense, great indeed !!
One night she smelled a scent in the jungle. The wind had carried the scent from the
east, and she could recognise immediately; it was the 'puppy'. It was her her own pet. She was transported for a while into the realm of the girl's life. Something stirred in her heart. The images revived. She gave a roar, the girlish one. Quick came the reply.
There was one on the far-end in the east. It was a Big Tiger, Male.
It was not her puppy. Then why she smelt her 'puppy' in the scent ?
She could see. She could understand by her sixth sense. She could understand the tiger had eaten-up her puppy. And her puppy had a new birth! Death is not ugly. She realized.
She could see she could continue, reunite with her own dear puppy ! She was in fact Happy. No thought of complaint touched her mind. Instead, she felt gratitude ! To the Mother Goddess. Who-so-ever may she be !!
She could sense the secret !
या देवी सर्वभूतेषु... 
या निशा सर्वभूतानां... 
" ya nisha sarva-bhootaanam...."
These lines came to her mind. She could hear the syllables, but couldn't see what it
meant ! She could remember she had heard these sounds in her yet earlier past life when she daily recited 'Geetaa'.
In the flashback, She could see a clear picture of a (her own previous) life, when
she was a scholarly lady of repute.
She spontaneously with-out a desire entered 'her' psyche of her own past birth as that lady. She knew so many things in those ten or fifteen minute's time.
She was deeply engrossed in that 'vision' when the wind had changed the direction of
movement. It was now very slow, south-eastwards. And the scent was gone. She
searched a long way through the jungle, but alas ! She couldn't reach her soul-mate,
on that dark night !!

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-8-


That night was a long, very long, lonely night. She had never known what loneliness
meant.That night she was sad. Sad for what? For the 'puppy'? In a way, -yes, she could no more bear the pain of separation. In her mind the images overlapped, intersected, intercepted, shared each other, and she was split in herself as a result. So many dream-spaces tried to occupy her. Their conflict gave a way to her past forgotten memories.
She was a scholar, she was not though directly connected with the religion, but the
Sanskrit language was her passion. She dwelt on the beauty and the sublimity of the
language. The most important aspect of the language that impressed her, was the growth of sensibility accompanied by learning it. You always achieve another higher level of sensibility, a kind of spiritual Intelligence, -she would realize. She could understand the hidden and secret,  sacred meanings of this timeless, ancient, old, ancient language.
She had her own way of grasping the words, she would often break-up every word, and
see how they are formed. ETYMOLOGY.
"Ya Devee Sarvabhooteshu, ... ... ..."
Suddenly the words came-up in her mind. She corrected herself. 'But then isn't "Nisha"
'a Devee, -a Goddess?' -she said to herself.
There was the catch, She could see now.
So It is the Mother Goddess, that permeates every creature, every being. Every-one
is Her child. Me too.
She again tried to 'visualize', her past birth as a scholar. Yes. She understood the words are never a way to knowledge. There is some other route, to understand the life. -And the things that are life.
She again remembered, what she was trying to understand, She could see now how the
animals were sacrificed before an idol of Devee. She could see, for the first time,
that Life and death are one, inseparable. Nothing dies.
It went on throught the night. She didn't go for a 'kill'. She had killed a wild boar, and the half-eaten body of the animal was still there near her den. She felt thirsty, Went up to the water-hole to quench the thirst.
She would observe a fast to-night.

**************************************************************

-9-


It was a strange night. She kept awake the whole night. She always wake-up after sun-set, wonder the jungle, eventually find some deer, or other animal to feed herself. Sometimes it would take 2 to 3 hours. Meanwhile she would go to the water-hole for the drink. She never killed an animal while drinking water. She could not kill a creature when it would be fulfilling some natural need. She would never kill a couple, But occassionally she had killed a pregnant one, in-advertantly. Afterwards, she could not consume the prey, and now she know, why. Now she know the strange ways of destiny. Not exactly, but she does know life learns about itself, and the destiny always helps.
The sacrifice of a buffalo and the goats before the idol of Devee came before her eyes. Once She had seen herself that a tiger had leapt-out upon, from the clay-image of the vehical of the mother, when a sacrifice was being performed. She told this to the  surrounding people, but they laughed-away at her remarks in disbelief. She was just  surprised. But she knew that it has some meaning at the higher level of life's esoteric facts.
"Destiny". she uttered to herself.
It was a no moon night. "अमावस्या amAwasyA", when the moon rises not.". She recalled. She was there. As a lady, she was not allowed to take part in the certain rituals, but she could attend the ceremonies.
The next nine days she had observed the ceremonial fast. In those nine days, the Mother Goddess revealed before her Her nine forms, and so far she kept the things secret. She knew well, that The Mother is, Everything. Manifest and the Unmanifest. And It is a Play of a kind.
She could see the meaning of the sloka -
"Ya Devee Sarva Bhuteshu......"
She could understand there are innumerable forms of the Mother, and the worldly mother is but one of them. She also remembered, how a cat consumes one of her kittens !
And how a female-snake, one or many of her own offsprings.
But it in no way justifies a sacrifice. She thought.
It is the Mother Nature, that has her own ways. One should never comment upon it.
It was the dawn of wisdom. She would just stay-away amazed. Speechless.
In that moonless night several screens opened-up before her eyes.
The past birth(s).


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-10-

She was 5, when her mother died. The mother loved her deeply, and she felt her absence when she left her at that tender age.
Her father was a Brahmin, working as a priest in the Durga Temple.
Her father was a Sanskrit-loving pundit, and was very particular about observing and performing the rituals in minute details. She could hear the different mantras, Ved-paath daily in her house. After the death of the mother her father soon married her aunt, the younger sister of her mother.
It was very helpful to him, because now he could devote more time to his work and the child could be also be taken care of well.
The aunt was also very affectionate towards her, but not like her own mother. She would cling to father more, and in a way, it created in her heart an interest of Sanskrit chants.
She could recite the Geetaa, though she could hardly understand even the simple meanings of the slokas.
"Ahamaatmaa Gudakesha Sarva-Bhootaashay-sthita:"
(10/20), was a typical sloka that was her favourite one, because she thought, it has something to do with 'jaggery', -the indian 'Gud', raw form of cane-sugar.
Years after she could see the real meaning of the word, and knew that it was an address to Arjuna. It meant; 'the one that has conquered the sleep'.
What is meant by 'conquering the sleep' ?
-She had asked to her father.
The father was very happy for her asking such a question.
'There are so many kinds of sleep'. He explained.
'One is the simple sleep which overpowers us in the night.
Then there is another one. The ignorance of our true identity. We are lost in identifications and in this way are unmindful of the real truth of our being. We think, we are a person, and remain forgetful of our reality. This is called the sleep of ignorance.
-sleep of delusion, -"Moha-Nidra".
"Moha" means, not seeing the truth in the right way. "Muh" is the 'dhaatu', (root) . The words 'Moodha' has its origin in "Muh". Every-one from the very birth is a "Moodha", Because of th senses are naturally turned outwards. One, who has turned the senses inwards can be said to have 'awakened', -no more asleep. But this is the beginning. Arjuna could turn his senses inwards. And so, he was aware that he was till now living in 'Moha-Nidra'. Waking-up to one's "Moha-buddhi" is also a victory over sleep.
"What precisely did he wake-up to?"
-She asked to the father.
'Of course, he didn't wake-up to the Reality of the Self (Atmaa), but became conscious of the 'self-sense' that every one has naturally from the very birth, but most don't ever become conscious of.' -said he.
"Asmi-Chetanaa?"
"Yes." "Knowing that 'I am', precedes knowing everything else. That is pure knowing of being. The intellect is just a development of this pristine 'knowing".
From there on, a question kept haunting her, :
"What is this "Self"?
"I am", and I know I am. But what does that mean? And 'God' resides within the heart i.e. core of very being of every creature in the form of "Asmi-Chetanaa". She concluded.
She was also careful that it is just an intellectual inference, and has to 'stay' for long in this truth, so that the full import of it can dawn upon her.

She would repeat this sloka,and came to understand the deeper meaning when she compared it with :
"Vedaanaam SaamavVedo-Asmi, .... ....
.... ..... ... Bhootaanaam-Asmi-Chetanaa"

She knew, the Devee and The "Asmi-Chetanaa" are same in essence.

She got a straight indication, how to go in search of The God.

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-11-

Her father was chanting a prayer, :

Prathamam Shailaputree.

"Vande Vaanchhit-Laabhaay chandraardha-krit-Shekharaam,
vrish'aaroodh'aam shooladharaam Shailputreem Yashaswineem."

She thought, the first manifestation of the Divine Mother is in th Earthly body of a 'cell' which connotes with 'Shail'. Medical Science would agree. She thought.

"Dwiteeyam 'Brahmachaarinee "


"Dadhaanaa kara-padmaabhyaamakshamaalaa-kamand'alam,
Devee praseedatu mayi Brahmachaarin'yanuttamaa."

"Triteeyam Chandra-Ghant'eti"
"Pind'ajapravaraaroodh'aa Chand'akopaastrakairyutaa,
Prasaadam Tanute Mahaam ChandraGhant'eti Vishrutaa."

Her father one day told her the deeper meaning of this next sloka.

She could immediately realize that "God lives in the hearts of all creatures in the form of 'pure knowing'."

It was the first day of Navaratra, some 50 years ago !!

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next :
The Rivulet -
12-21