Tuesday, March 17, 2026

6. Pure (Shuddh).

 At the core level of the truth, every living being is inherently a pious soul _(shuddhaatma)_ that is pure, untouched, and complete.


However, in the realm of external conduct _(vyavahaar)_, individuals inevitably form opinions about me based on my current behaviour, past actions, and perceived identity across various states and phases _(paryays)_. 


These judgments arise from their own current, percieved and limited standpoint, conditioned by their state of understanding and their own karmic coverings.


Recognising this, my inner orientation is to remain unaffected, whether I am offered praise or criticism. Both are reflections of perception, not of the Self.


My true concern is not the world’s evaluation, but the silent and precise view/feedback of the super consciousness _(param chetna)._ 


To be understood by a layman, it is typically expressed through the law of karma. 


What truly matters is:


"My" inner intention _(vrutti)_,


"My" expressed action _(pravrutti)_,


And 


"My" movement towards the inner withdrawal and karmic cleansing _(nivrutti)._


Technically, the "My" is not to be considered from the ownership standpoint but from a perspective of being the aware "knower"


While the Soul _(jeev)_ is, in essence, the knower _(gyaata)_ and seer _(drashta)_, within embodied existence it appears as the doer. In this apparent doership, _pravrutti_ (action) unfolds in the foreground, but it is _vrutti_(intention) that determines the nature of karmic bondage.


The essential question, therefore, is:

Am I constantly "aware" of "witnessing" the both i.e. not just what I do, but why I do it? _(At the core, from a knower standpoint, it is what is being done and why is it being done)_


The law of karma functions with absolute precision like an infallible system that neither errs nor biases. One may deceive the world, and at times even oneself, but karmic accounting remains exact and unaltered.


There is a subtle but crucial understanding here:

Even the mental act of calculating outcomes like “what will happen if I do this or that” can itself become a form of interference, and thereby a cause of further karmic influx.


Understanding karma is necessary.

Interfering with its functioning is not.


This approach may, at times, appear as _shushk gyaan_ (a dry, overly intellectual stance). However, its intent is not intellectualisation but purification: to enable purusharth with total awareness, free from emotional reactivity, judgment, and unnecessary interference in the karmic process.


If this principle applies to analysing my own _vrutti_ and _pravrutti_, then I need to also strongly consider that what happens when I begin judging others?


In that moment, I step beyond awareness and enter entanglement.


_Again here I need to internally consider "My own" is a symbolic representation of being an aware knower at the core, because when I am in the doership mode the karmic calculations are vigilant about their assignments accordingly_


Circling back, Judging, analysing, justifying (whether of myself or others) has been a continuous, often unconscious habit since infinity. This very habit keeps strengthening the bondage.


The path, therefore, is not suppression, but training.


Constantly training myself to be:


Watchful of every thought,


Aware of every word,


Conscious of every action,


And sensitive to the subtlest shifts in intention.


To cultivate the state of a witness, not occasionally, but continuously, moment after moment.


Let karma perform its function.


Let me remain established as the witness.


This is not an intellectual exercise.


It is a lifelong discipline; constant, regular, and sustained over time _(satatam, nityam, chiram)._


In the NOW...

In this present moment....

I am aware.

I am the witness.

I am living in the NOW.


Ultimately, the entire framework of jeev (living beings), pudgal (all the loving stuff), karma, bondage, and liberation can be distilled into:


_Kriya te karm_ — Actions give rise to karma.

_Upyog te dharm_ — Right awareness is dharma.

_Parinaame bandh_ — Inner states determine bondage.


These three lines are not just philosophical statements. They are a complete map of existence and liberation.


The task is simple in expression, but profound in practice:


*To remain in pure awareness _(shuddha upyog)_, without interference, without judgment, and without deviation.*

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