Adhyatma Upanishad ~ 12
अध्यात्म उपनिषद ~ 12
event type | discourse |
date & time | 19 Oct 1972 am |
location | Mount Abu, meditation camp |
language | Hindi & English |
audio | Available, duration 2h 5min. Quality: good (under revision). |
online audio | |
video | Not available |
online video | |
see also |
|
online text | find a PDF of this event |
shorttitle | FINGER12 & THOU46 |
- notes
- See Talk:Osho Timeline 1972#That Art Thou. English part of this event published as That Art Thou #46
CD-ROM about That Art Thou: "Originally titled "Sarvasar Upanishad" (first 17 discourses at Matheran), "Kaivalya Upanishad" (second 17 discourses at Mt. Abu) and "Adhyatma Upanishad" (last 17 discourses at Mt. Abu). Discourses were in Hindi and English, the tapes produced as "That Art Thou" are the English parts."
- synopsis
- Reader of the sutra: Ma Yoga Taru, also chanting.
- English part:
- The sutra
- When desires do not arise even in the face of the objects of enjoyment, know it as the state of vairagya -- non-attachment, desirelessness.
- And when the ego ceases to rise, know it as the highest state of knowledge.
- When the moods that have become extinct do not arise again, that state is known as one of the indifference.
- And the sage whose wisdom has become steady attains eternal bliss. One whose mind has dissolved into the supreme becomes innocent and inactive. And the moods of the mind then dissolve in the unity of the supreme self, and the purified individual self remains choiceless and in a state of pure consciousness.
- This state is called wisdom, or pragya. And one who has attained this wisdom throughout is called jivanmukta -- one free in life itself.
- One who has no egoistic feeling in respect of his body and the senses, and besides has ceased to think in terms of "me" and "mine" in respect to other objects, is called a jivanmukta.
- The sutra
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