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sanatsujaatheeyam- chapter 2- 12 to15

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12.

yo abhiDhyaayan uthpathishNoon hanyaath

anaachaareNa aprathibuDhyamaanaH

sa vai mrthyum mrthyuriva

hanthibhoothvaa

hyevam vidhvaan yo abhihantheeha

kaamaan

 

One who discards the thoughts about

sense objects which rise in the mind

again and again and refrains from dwelling on them with indifference , he becomes

the death for death itself.

 

The word uthpathishNoon means those sense longings which rise in

the mind again and again, uthpathana meaning that falling and rising again.

 

abhiDhyaayan is explained as

considering them (as something fleeting, impure and cause of suffering.) Thinking

thus a wise man, vidvan, destroys the thoughts of sense gratification by

ignoring them. That is, by not following them, anaachaarena, and not thinking about

them again, aprathibuDhyaamaanaH.

 

He is like a death , mrthyuH iva bhoothvaa to death itself, and

destroys death, mrthyum hanthi. That is he becomes immortal conquering birth

and death, because he kills the desires here in this world, abhihanthi

iha kaamaan.

 

13. kaamaanuchaaree purushaH kaamaan

anuvinaSyathi

Kaamaan vyudhasya Dhunuthe

yathkinchith purusho rajah

 

The one who follows his desires , kaamaanuchaaree, is destroyed along with them anuvinaSyathi.. One who discards, vyudhasya, his desires, he destroys his karma, rajah.

 

The word rajah here means the sin or blemish which adhere

the man like dust particles , here the dust particles are the result of past karma.

Even if rajas is translated as the rajoguna the meaning is the same as the Lord

says in Gita , kaama

esha kroDha esha rajogunasamudhbhavaH, mahaaSano mahaapaapma,

(BG 3.37)

 

`Desire and anger are born out of rajoguna and the

great sinner and all-devourer.'

 

Kaamaan anuvinaSyathi- he is destroyed along with the desires. The

desires are fleeting and if one is satisfied another rises in its place and hence

it is called mahaaSanah, devours all like the fire. Thus the desires

last as long as one lives and finally destroys him by destroying his reason, as said in the Gita,

Dhyaatho

vishayaan pumsaH----budDhinaaSaath vinaSyathi (ch2.62, 63)

 

14.dheho aprakaaSo bhoothaanaam

narako ayam pradhrSyathe

grDhyantha eva Dhaavanthi

gaChanthaH Svabhram unmukhaaH

 

This body of all beings is like darkness as it is

not understood. aprakaasa means not manifest but the body is seen. So it really

means that the body is the product of ignorance and hence not understood to be

something insentient , made up of the three elements. Since it is taken to be

real it becomes the cause of all hell on earth. Also it is the cause of

entering hell after death as the karma done with the body with a mind riddled

with desires leads to hell. But the ignorant, thinking the body to be real and

permanent, run forward towards sense gratification, possessed by desires, and fall into hell like

the blind who rush forward towards a deep well.

 

15.amanyamaanah kshathriya kvachidh anyam

 

naaDheeyathe tharnam iva asya vyaaghraH

kroDhaath lobhaath mohabhayaantharaathmaa

sa vai mrthyuH svacChareere ya eshaH

-

Oh King, to the one who does not know any thing else

except the sense gratification, he does not acquire the knowledge of the Self and this body is

like a tiger stuffed with straw for him. His mind and intellect clouded with

delusion due to desire and anger he causes his own death,

 

One who follows the path dictated by his desires, is

not interested in aathmavidhya, self-knowledge. He may be well learned in Vedas

and sastras and even in Vedanta but all

are to him only book-learning and the body is of no use to him like a tiger stuffed

with straw. The meaning is, the body is all powerful like a tiger to secure release

from bondage and the cycle of birth and death but if it is wasted in sense pursuits

it is as good as a tiger stuffed with straw, hence powerless.

 

The desires lead one to anger and other traits as

outlined in the Gita chapter 2, slokas 62, 63, Dhyaayatho vishayaan--- and the mind is overpowered

by delusion and fear and that itself is called death. He kills himself as

declared in the Gita, aathmaiva ripuH aathmanaH (ch.6.5)

 

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