06 December 2010

The Unfolding Mirror of Prakriti

by Richard Freeman

“A connoisseur draws out love with tender care from the pulsation of leaves, from the rays of flowers.” — Sahaja Verse

In order to understand the experience of yoga, the earliest schools of yoga postulated that there are two different principles of all experience which operate in a profound relationship to each other; that of Purusha and Prakriti. Purusha, which is pure being and pure consciousness, always has as the content of any experience Prakriti, which is creative, always changing energy.

Purusha is the seer, the witness, the real you or me. Prakriti is the seen, the experienced, the form, even down to the most subtle of mental events. Any ideas or feelings, even those about Purusha, are composed of the impermanent, interconnecting braids of a mutable, timeless energy, or Prakriti. Since Prakriti is the content of all experience, Purusha cannot be “experienced” as such, but is realized by the full releasing of Prakriti.

Technically we cannot even say there is a relationship between Purusha and Prakriti, since Purusha is completely unthinkable. Any relationships are actually between various complementary and opposite functions within the unified field of Prakriti. Philosophically the relationship between these two metaphysical absolutes comes to a halt in a knot of self reference paradox. This is not actually a problem. It happens eventually in all systems and is a beautiful and essential disappearance of the mentally constructed thinker.

Purusha and Prakriti are brilliant metaphors, which aid in the actual yoga practice and the experience of observing all phenomena as impermanent construction. For example, we can say that the process of realization in yoga can be likened to the simultaneous unfolding of millions of flowers (Prakriti) to face the light and glory of the rising sun (Purusha). The Kamakalavilasa Tantra also says, “The awakened flower energy, as Mulaprakrti or primordial Sakti is supreme; being in the nature un-originated and undisturbed joy, eternal, utterly incomparable, the seed of all, the spotless mirror in which is revealed the radiant form of Siva.”

Grounded in metaphor and myth, ancient Samkhya, Yoga and Tantra all state that it is the relationship between Purusha and Prakriti or between Shiva and Shakti which is the propelling force behind the creation, maintenance and dissolution of the universe.

Mythologically the deep process that one awakens in the other can only be compared to that of a profound love affair in the depths of its illusions, the complexities of its situations and the heights of its joys. The Yoga Sutra explains that, “the purpose of the coming together of Purusha and Prakriti is the gaining by the Purusha of the awareness of His true nature and the unfolding of the creative power inherent in Him as Prakriti.”

The Samkhyakarika explains that ultimately the emergence and evolution of the manifested world is to play out the process of the apparent bondage and liberation of the Purusha. Everything is for the sake of Purusha, the witness, consciousness: and, when illusion is finally removed, the Prakritic process is seen to be indescribably tender. “It is my thought that there is nothing more delicate than Prakriti who (says to Herself) 'I have been seen’, and never comes into sight of the Purusha….says the Seer (Purusha)’I have seen (Her)’. The other ceases (saying) ’I have been seen’, though the two are still in proximity, no creation takes place.”

It is from this apparent paradox of love, the primordial duality-in-unity of Purusha and Prakriti, that the whole universe of yoga unfolds. Philosophically the Samkhya universe is understood in terms of consciousness, i.e., in terms of how it appears to the Purusha. In fact, this is the key; that the universe is what appears to Purusha. It is what is seen (Drshya). Its entire purpose is to put on a show, an extraordinary theatrical event of sorts, to show the Purusha the wonder of it all.

The primary axiom of the system is the absolute distinction between Purusha and Prakriti; Purusha as pure, contentless consciousness, and Prakriti as the unconscious content thereof.

As it appears normally, consciousness is always conscious of something. Consciousness then appears as the thing of which it is conscious. What is unconscious then appears as conscious. Purusha appears as what it is not, and Prakriti appears as what it is not. A double negation occurs ("appears" within Prakriti) where both principles reveal what they are by appearing to be what they are not. The appearance of this paradoxical double negation forms the epistemological bind of illusion (Avidya), the confusion of Prakriti with Purusha, consciousness with its fleeting contents, the field with the knower-of-the-field.

The nature of the duality proposed here is subtle and the correct understanding of it in real life is liberation of the Seer. This is not a duality of the Cartesian variety where there is an ontological distinction between mind and body, thought and extension or awareness and matter. Quite paradoxically, Samkhya likes to include all distinctions within the category of Prakriti, allowing for a subtle reductive materialism in which gross arises from subtle which in turn arises from more subtle, and so on.

Ordinary consciousness or awareness is a manifestation of Prakriti as “Citta Vritti” or "Antahkarana Vritti”, meaning modifications of mind-stuff or modifications of the internal instruments. Ordinary awareness or thought is an intentional, striving, active construct of subtle material energy. On the other hand, Purusha is pure witness, contentless consciousness, never reducible to gross Prakriti or subtle Prakriti. Yet only when the subtle Prakritic vehicle waxes clear or flowers is the epistemic distinction between awareness as subtle Prakriti and the Purusha seen by the embodied Purusha.

Thus, the problem of bondage and release appears only within Prakriti as the adventures of a subtle Prakritic vehicle mistakenly identified as consciousness itself. The Samkhyakarika states: “Nothing, therefore, is bound, nothing released, likewise not anything transmigrates. Only Prakriti in its various forms transmigrates, is bound and is released.” Enlightenment reveals what has always been the case, a principle beyond Prakriti, always free as pure consciousness. This principle is no-thing: it is, however, indicated by seeing the negative dialectics within Prakriti. As the Upanishads say, “Neti, Neti”, “not this, not this”.

So now there is nothing left to examine or to explain but Prakriti. But a close observation of Prakriti can bear the greatest prize for the observer. The Yoga Sutra states, “Liberation is when there is equality of purity of the Purusha and Sattva (intelligence/ Buddhi)”. What is observed, Prakriti as intelligence, can be tuned so as to reflect the pure light of consciousness. Descriptions and thoughts about Prakriti, any conditions from which they might have arisen, and any reactions they might produce are also Prakriti. Prakriti apprehends Prakriti. When the Prakritic vehicle of Sattva (intelligence) is free of epistemological confusions the very process of Prakriti appears, to the delight of the Purusha, as the delicate flowering of truth.

Cited from www.yogaworkshop.com 

Manas: Posisi Kunci

Manas menduduki posisi sentral yang merupakan esensi keberadaan manusia. Dari kata Manaslah kemudian muncul kata manusia dalam Bahasa Indonesia atau human atau man dalam Bahasa Inggris. Upanishad menegaskan, “Mana eva manushyaanam kaaranam bandha mokshayoh” – bagi manusia, Manaslah yang menyebabkan perbudakan atau pencapaian Moksha.”

Meskipun menduduki sentral, dalam hierarki Sankhya pikiran atau Manas menduduki posisi kunci di bawah keakuan atau Ahamkara. Kecerdasan atau Buddhi berada pada tataran yang lebih tinggi dari pikiran, dan sejajar dengan keakuan. Sedangkan, kesadaran atau Citta berada di atas kecerdasan dan keakuan. Citta sejajar dengan Triguna (Sattva, Rajas, Tamas) - tiga kekuatan Prakriti namun belum terpengaruh olehnya. Citta turunan langsung dari Purusa – yang merupakan hakikat yang berlawanan dengan Pradhana atau Prakriti – semesta material. Dari Pradhana inilah Triguna berasal.



Bila Citta terpengaruh oleh Triguna dan didominasi oleh Sattva, maka ia tidak lagi sebagai kesadaran yang jernih, melainkan Buddhi. Dan, bila Citta dipengaruhi dan didominasi oleh Rajas dan Tamas, maka terlahirlah Ahamkara.



Ahamkara inilah yang membawahi dan menggerakkan Manas. Buddhi sangat jarang turut campur dalam pemerintahan ini. Ketika melayani Ahamkara, Manas menjadi sibuk, bergolak, berpusar, berubah-ubah, terombang-ambing, menimbulkan berbagai bentuk pemikiran dan perasaan.

Konyolnya, dalam ketidaktahuannya manusia justru mengidentifikasikan dirinya sebagai pikiran itu sendiri. Hanya apabila dominasi Ahamkara terhadap Manas dapat direbut oleh Buddhi, kondisi atau sifat kedewataan Sattva akan menyinarinya. Buddhi mendekati kondisi Citta, sehingga jauh lebih mudah menerima pancaran cahaya Purusa di dalam batin manusia.

Dikompilasi dari berbagai sumber.

Kelepasan Dalam Jangkauan

Paparan Sri Swami Sivananda, pendiri The Divine Life Society tentang Yoga:

Yoga bukanlah mengurung diri di dalam gua-gua, bukan pula berkelana di hutan-hutan lebat sekitar Pegunungan Himalaya. Ia juga bukan hanya memakan jenis makanan yang berupa sayur-mayur dari pegunungan. Brahman bukanlah pengecut yang lari dari hiruk-pikuknya komunitas dan pemukiman manusia. Praktikan sajalah Yoga di rumah Anda sendiri. Manakala hasrat untuk mempraktikkannya muncul, ini berarti bahwa kebebasan telah berada dalam jangkauan Anda, oleh karenanya manfaatkan peluang ini sebaik-baiknya... Menjalani kehidupan sebagai seorang yogi, tidaklah mesti menelantarkan siapa pun juga atau mengabaikan kewajiban-kewajiban melekat Anda. Ia bermakna mengubah sikap hidup dari kebiasaan mengerjakan sesuatu yang sia-sia, menuju jalur yang secara pasti mengantarkan langsung kepada Tuhan. Ia dibarengi dengan perubahan perilaku dalam menjalani kehidupan serta metode-metodenya guna membebaskan  diri Anda dari berbagai belenggu dan kemelekatan. Kebenaran dan pengabaian keakuan, sebenarnya  merupakan masalah sikap batin.

Dikutip dari Buku Kidung Kelepasan Patanjali alih bahasa oleh Anatta.

Quintuplication of Elements

Quintuplication of elements is also called Panchikarana. According to this ancient theory, owing to ignorance one identifies with the physical body which is made up of five basic, pure elements: akasha, ether; vayu, air; agni, fire; apas, water; and prathivi, earth. These undergo permutation and combine with each other in definite proportions. This is called quintiplication.

In their subtle or pure form, the five basic elements combine in definite proportions to form gross elements. It is these gross elements upon which the existence of the earth depends. Each gross element is made up of one half of its corresponding pure element and one-eight of each of the four other subtle elements.

Further, each of these elements has five properties. These properties are based upon the interaction of the subtle elements within the gross elements, and the total twenty-five in number.

Quintuplicated Elements


Disclaimer: In quintuplication, the gross physical elements are not quintuplicated; only the subtle rudimentary principles of these elements are quintuplicated. Else, one would perceive silver in a pillar of stone.

Compiled from various sources.

Three Gunas

Sattva-Rajas-Tamas. Equilibrium-Distraction-Inertia. Neutral-Active-Passive. Neutral-Positive-Negative. Intelligence-Motions-Body. Virtue-Passion-Darkness. Neutral-Subject-Object. Witness-Agent-Matter.

Prakriti is matter, Purusa is Spirit, and Gunas are modes or attributes. Sattva, Rajas, and Tamas are white, red and black.

Unmanifested Prakriti holds these three qualities in equilibrium, in which Rajas and Tamas are merged into Sattva. In manifestation, the three qualities differentiate, with Sattva giving rise to the mind, Rajas generating the life force and Tamas creating form and substances through which the physical body comes into being.
Sattva, Rajas and Tamas are compared to a tricycle with Sattva and Tamas forming the rear right and left wheels and Rajas forms the front wheel. If the front wheel moves to the right, Positive valence of Sattva is dominant and if it moves to the left, the negative valence of Tamas is dominant.


Purusa is weak in its limbs and has vision and consciousness, and the Prakriti is blind but has the brawn and the brute strength. The all-seeing Purusa rides on the shoulders of the muscular Prakriti. Prakriti is unthinking and its products are unconscious; Purusa has the vision and consciousness and therefore we become aware of Prakriti. When Purusa is riding on the shoulders of Prakriti, it deludes itself into thinking that it acts and does the walk. Buddhi (discerning intellect) and Manas (Mind), and other products of Prakriti, are unconscious elements, but are the instruments of Purusa's consciousness. When Buddhi decides on a course of action under the aegis of Purusa, the Indriyas (organs) carry out the order and do the work. Purusa is the King and sits at the top of hierarchy, Buddhi is the Prime Minister, the Manas is the commander-in-chief, and the Indriyas are the workers, soldiers, or bureaucrats.

Prakrti consists of three gunas and reflects Brahman. Prakrti having Pure Sattva Guna is Maya; Prakrti having all Gunas is Avidya; Consciousness, reflected in Maya Mirror, is called Isvara; Consciousness, reflected in Avidya Mirror, is Jiva. Brahman with Maya is Isvara; Brahman with Avidya--ignorance-- is Jiva or individual soul. Isvara has two sides, transcendent and immanent; He is transcendent when he is Brahman, He is immanent when he creates the world. Brahman is beyond human thought and imagination, as human beings are beyond the imagination of a worm. Since Avidya has many combinations and permutations by virtue of its Gunas, the Jiva has many aspects or modes of behavior.

Other Correspondences of the Three Gunas:

Color
1. Sattva - White, purity and harmony
2. Rajas - Red, action and passion
3. Tamas - Black, darkness and delusion

Time
1. Sattva - Day, clarity
2. Rajas - Sunrise and Sunset, twilight, transition
3. Tamas - Night, darkness

Energy
1. Sattva - neutral or balanced
2. Rajas - positive, sets things in motion
3. Tamas - negative, retards motion

Worlds
1. Sattva - heaven or space, the region of peace
2. Rajas - atmosphere, the region of storms
3. Tamas - earth, the realm of gravity and inertia

Levels of Cosmos
1. Sattva - causal or ideal
2. Rajas - subtle or astral, pure form
3. Tamas - gross or physical

Kingdoms of Nature
1. Sattva - spiritual beings: Gods, Goddesses and sages
2. Rajas - human realm
3. Tamas - mineral, plant and animal kingdoms

States of Consciousness
1. Sattva - waking
2. Rajas - dream
3. Tamas - deep sleep

Compiled from various sources.