Author: Krupananda

Kathopanishad Chapter 2 Valli 2 Mantra 6

Satsangatve nissangatvam nissangatve nirmohatvam, nirmohatve niscalatattvam niscalatattve jivanmuktiH.
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Kathopanisad

Chapter 2 Valli 2 Mantra 6

Mantra

hanta̍ ta i̱daṁ pra̍vakṣyā̱mi̱ gu̱hyam bra̍hma sa̱nāta̍nam |
yathā̍ ca̱ mara̍ṇam prā̱pya̱ ā̱tmā bha̍vati̱ gauta̍ma ||

hanta = well, now again; gautama = O Gautama; te = to you; pravakṣyāmi = I will relate, tell; idaṁ = this; guhyam = secret, mystery; brahma sanātanam = of the eternal Brahman; maraṇam prāpya = after having attained death; yathā = how;  ātmā = the Self; bhavati = becomes, fares.

Well Now, O Gautama, I will explain the mysterious and ancient Brahman, and also what happens to the soul after Death.

 

by Swami Chinmayananda:

All that Lord Death has so far said seems to be but an introduction to enter the subject proper, viz., “what happens to the soul after death! Lord Death here kindly informs Nachiketas that he will be now initiated into the knowledge of what happens to the Jiva when it has once experienced the process of Death in its delusions, And, surely, we shall never have a better reporter than Lord Death Himself to explain to us “what happens to the Soul after the body has become cold and inert in the icy embrace of Death;

Atma (ego center) — In the Upanishad Mantras we often meet with the use of the word Atman to indicate sometimes the body, sometimes the mind, sometimes intellect and, yet at other times, the mind and mind conditioned, Pure Consciousness, the Jiva. Herce, in this particular Mantra, the word Atman is used to indicate the ego center and not the Self. For, if we were to assume that the word literally means its own special connotation it would mean that the Mantra here is contradicting the very philosophy of the Upanishads. Nothing ever happens to Pure Consciousness, the Truth, When Pure Consciousness presides over the functions of this body, with reference to the body, it is said to be the ‘individual Soul’, just as the all-pervading space with reference to the four walls of a room is said to be the “room space”.

In fact, the infinite space can never be conditioned or limited by the walls, which themselves stand in space. Similarly, Consciousness or Knowledge is homogeneous and one without a second. When the body perishes, the Divine Spark, or the Life Center, that presided over the body while it lived, undergoes no change but eternally remains the same. The death and the consequent departure from the dead body at the time of death, and the feeling of having entered a new form at the time of birth, are both the delusory ideas of the ego center.

The Supreme Self reflected in the mind intellect is, we have already seen, the Jiva or the ego. This ego idea leaves its ideas of ‘i-ness’ and ‘my-ness’ with the dead body, and after an uncertain interval of existence without a body, each ego center comes to develop its sense of ownership and possession with another body form.

Thus, when Lord Death says that He will explain “what happens to the Atman after death” He certainly means to explain to us what happens to the Jiva with all its vanities of “i-ness” and attachments of “my-ness”, when it leaves one body to perish and enters the womb to take up another birth.

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Kathopanishad Chapter 2 Valli 2 Mantra 5

Satsangatve nissangatvam nissangatve nirmohatvam, nirmohatve niscalatattvam niscalatattve jivanmuktiH.
Index…

Kathopanisad

Chapter 2 Valli 2 Mantra 5

Mantra

na̱ prāṇe̱na nā̍pāṇe̱na̱ ma̱rtyo jī̍vati̱ kaśca̍na |
i̱tare̱ṇa tu̍ jīva̱nti̱ ya̱sminn etāv u̱pāśri̍tau ||

na prāṇena na apāṇena = neither through the function of exhaling nor inhaling; kaḥ cana martyaḥ = [does] any mortal being; jīvati = live; tu = but; itareṇa = by another (something else); jīvanti = [do] they live; yasmin = that upon which; etāu = these two (inspiration and expiration); upāśritau = are dependant.

Not by Prana, not by Apana does any mortal live; but it is by some other, on which these two depend, that men live.

 

by Swami Chinmayananda:

One who has followed the commentaries, and therefore the Mantras so far, should not find any difficulty at all in understanding the direct statement of the Sruti when she says that a man lives not because his body-mind-intellect-equipment is functioning well when the Pranas function, but that all signs of life’s activities met with in a living man, depend upon the glorious touch of the Self in him. The Pranas function only when life resides in the body.

Though the meaning of the stanza is clear and direct, the philosophical implications in the statement of the Sruti are rather new to the early students in the study of the Hindu Sastras.

The parts constituting an assemblage are in themselves not free. They constitute together and maintain themselves as such, only for the benefit of somebody else, who is not himself a part of the assembly. For example, let us take the case of a house. The walls, the rafters, the beams, the tiles, etc., are all necessary parts which constitute together the house. The house is not built for the walls, nor for the rafters, nor for the beans. They all together form an entire whole only for the sake of the Master of the house. Mr. Dass, the owner of the house, has all the freedom to walk in or walk out of his house at his own sweet will; not so, the bricks that constitute the walls!

Similarly, the indriyas, the limbs of the body, the mind and intellect are all parts of the body assembly which exists only for the same of the Purusha in it. The body in itself has no freedom to act as it lists, while the Purusha can walk out of the body in all freedom at the time of death. When once Mr.Dass had discarded his house, in time, it perishes in ruins; when the Atman leaves the body, the body perishes. The Source of Life is not the Pranas; the Pranas end and perish themselves, when the Atman, the Source of Life, discards its temple, the body.

In the terminology of sastra, they say that all actions physical, mental and intellectual, are Prana-Vrttis.

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