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| The Yoga Sutras of Patanjali - Book 1 - The Problem of Union |
| 15. Non-attachment is freedom from longing for all objects of desire, either earthly or traditional, either here or hereafter. |
Non-attachment can also be described as thirstlessness. This
is the most correct occult term to use as it involves the dual idea of water, the symbol
of material existence, and desire, the quality of the astral plane, whose symbol is also
water. The idea of man being the "fish" is curiously complete here. This symbol
(as is the case with all symbols) has seven meanings; two are of use in this place:
Where there is no longing for any object whatsoever, and where there is no desire for rebirth (ever the outcome of longing for "form-expression" or material manifestation) then the true thirstlessness is attained, and the liberated man turns his back upon all the forms in the lower three worlds and becomes a true saviour. In the Bhagavad Gita the following illuminating words are found:
J. H. Woods makes this clear in his translation of the comment by Veda Vyasa which is here appended:
The word "traditional" carries the student's thought away from that which is usually regarded as the object of sensuous perception into the world of thought forms, into that "forest of delusion" which is constructed of men's ideas about God, heaven or hell. The sublimation of all this and its highest expression in the three worlds is that "devachan" which is the goal of the majority of the sons of men. Devachanic experience must, however, be transformed eventually into nirvanic realization. It may be of value to the student to remember that heaven, the object of aspirational desire, which is the outcome of traditional teaching, and of all formulations of doctrinal faiths has several meanings to the occultist. For the purpose of a clearer understanding the following may be found to be of use:
Strictly speaking those adepts who have achieved non-attachment but who have chosen to sacrifice themselves and abide with the sons of men in order to serve and help them are not technically Nirvanis. They are Lords of Compassion pledged to "suffer" with, and to be governed by, certain conditions analogous to (though not identical with) the conditions governing men who are still attached to the world of form. |
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