The Root of the Wandering (Nano-Management)
A nano-level
diagnosis of Raag and Dwesh, and what it actually means to be free of them.
Preface: The
Simplest Formula and the Hardest Practice
The enlightened beings
did not leave a complicated map. They left one line.
Jyaan tyaan thi Raag
Dwesh rahit thavu, e Dharma chhe.
Getting rid of Craving
and Aversion, wherever I am and in whatever I am doing, that is Dharma. That is
the path. That is the entirety of the spiritual work available to a human being
in this birth.
Not ritual. Not
accumulation of knowledge. Not performance of renunciation. Just this: the
progressive reduction, and eventually the complete absence, of Raag and Dwesh
in every moment of living.
Simple to state. The
work of a lifetime to “live”.
And the reason it is
the work of a lifetime is not because Raag and Dwesh are rare or exotic. It is
because they are so continuous, so ordinary, so completely woven into the
fabric of every moment of experience, that they are almost entirely invisible.
Not the large, dramatic versions. Those are relatively easy to spot. The nano
versions. The ones that operate in fractions of seconds, hundreds of times a
day, below the threshold of ordinary awareness, those are what actually drive
the accumulation of karma across Anantkaal, beginningless time.
This journal is an
attempt to see them. At that level. Without flinching.
Part One: The Root
Knot
Love, hate, and
ignorance are the main knots of the bondage of karma. That by which their
stoppage occurs is the path to liberation.
This points to three
things as the root of all karmic bondage: Raag, Dwesh, and Agyaan i.e. craving,
aversion, and wrong knowing respectively. And it names them as a knot, not
three separate problems but one tightly interwoven structure where each feeds
and maintains the others.
Agyaan is the
foundation. Wrong knowing means taking the temporary, fake identity, the body,
the name, the roles, the accumulated self-image, to be the real "I."
From this wrong identification, everything else follows automatically.
Because if I believe I
am this body and this name and these roles, then everything that feels good to
this body and this name and these roles will produce Raag. I will move toward
it, crave it, seek its repetition, feel diminished in its absence.
And everything that
threatens, inconveniences, or displeases this body and this name and these
roles will produce Dwesh. I will resist it, push it away, feel disturbed by its
presence, feel relieved by its absence.
Raag and Dwesh are not
moral failures. They are the automatic and inevitable result of Agyaan. They
are what happens when the wrong identity is taken to be real. And they are what
keeps the wrong identity feeling real, because every Raag and every Dwesh
reinforces the sense that there is a "me" here who wants and does not
want, who is pleased and displeased, who is served and threatened.
The knot is
self-tightening. Agyaan produces Raag and Dwesh. Raag and Dwesh reinforce Agyaan.
And the accumulation of karma from all of this ensures that the cycle continues
into the next birth and the next, across Anantkaal.
The path to liberation
is not the path of managing Raag and Dwesh from outside. It is the path of
seeing through Agyaan from inside. And seeing through Agyan means, first and
most practically, seeing Raag and Dwesh as they actually operate, at the nano
level, in the texture of my real day.
Part Two: The Felt
Sense, and the Problem of Where the Attention Goes
Here is the most
precise and most honest observation I can make about how Raag operates in my
actual experience:
When something
convenient, pleasant, comfortable, or familiar arrives, a wave of felt
experience moves through the system. A warmth. A settling. A reaching. A
satisfaction. Something in the body responds, something in the senses registers
it, something in the mind endorses it, and something in what I loosely call the
heart opens toward it.
And my entire
attention goes into that wave. Into the feeling. Into the experience.
This is where the
problem lives. Not in the pleasant feeling itself. In where the attention goes.
Because in that moment
of felt-good experience, the one who is actually experiencing all of it, the “Knower”,
the true experiencer, the real "I," becomes completely invisible to
itself. It has merged with the instruments through which the experience is
happening. It has identified with the body feeling it, the senses registering
it, the mind endorsing it. It has mistaken the screen for the projector. The
instrument for the one who is aware of the instrument.
This is Moh at its
most fundamental and most ordinary level. Not the dramatic, visible version.
The quiet, continuous, moment-by-moment version. Happening in every pleasant
experience. Happening in every moment of Raag.
And the same thing
happens in Dwesh, but in reverse. Something inconvenient, unpleasant, or
unwanted arrives. The system contracts. The body tightens. The mind resists.
The senses recoil. And again, the entire attention goes into the contraction,
into the resistance, into the felt sense of aversion. The true experiencer is
again invisible to itself, now identified with the instrument of resistance
rather than the instrument of pleasure. But equally lost. Equally merged.
Equally absent from itself.
In both Raag and
Dwesh, the mechanism is identical: the true experiencer loses itself in what is
being experienced. The attention flows away from the “Knower” and into the
content of experience, whether that content is pleasant or unpleasant.
And Nijbhaan, the
awareness of the true Self, is precisely the reversal of this. Not the blocking
of experience. Not the absence of feeling. Not the suppression of the wave. But
the presence of the experiencer, knowing itself as distinct from what is being
experienced, even while the experience continues fully and completely through
the instruments.
The wave can still
happen. The body can still feel it. The senses can still register it. The mind
can still note it. But there is a background knowing: this is being felt by the
instruments. The one who is aware of the instruments feeling it is not the instruments.
That background knowing is the beginning of actual Raag-Dwesh reduction. Not
suppression. Not management. The true experiencer simply not losing itself
inside the experience.
Part Three: Raag
for Anukulta and Dwesh for Pratikulta, The Two Engines of Wandering
Gaadh (Extreme) Raag
for Anukulta, convenience and pleasantness, and Gaadh (Extreme) Dwesh for
Pratikulta, inconvenience and unpleasantness. These two, intense craving for
what is agreeable and intense aversion for what is disagreeable, are the
engines of Anantkaal of paribhraman, the wandering across beginningless time.
Not occasionally.
Continuously. In every moment of every day.
And the subtlety that
makes this so difficult to see clearly is this: Anukulta and Pratikulta are not
only the big, obvious things. They are the texture of every moment of
experience. The preference for one chair over another is Anukulta-Raag. The
slight irritation when a door is harder to open than expected is
Pratikulta-Dwesh. The satisfaction when traffic moves smoothly is
Anukulta-Raag. The barely perceptible contraction when a conversation goes
longer than preferred is Pratikulta-Dwesh.
None of these feel
significant. Each one seems entirely trivial. But each one is the same
mechanism as the gross versions, just operating at a finer grain. And they are
not happening occasionally. They are the continuous hum of an ordinary day,
running beneath conscious awareness, shaping every preference, every reaction,
every movement toward and away.
Nano management of
Raag and Dwesh means learning to see these. Not the occasional large fires. The
constant small sparks. Because the large fires are made entirely of small
sparks, accumulated and compounded over time.
Part Four: The Nano
Map, Raag and Dwesh Across the Ordinary Day
What follows is a
mapping of where Raag and Dwesh live in the texture of an ordinary day, at the
level of granularity where they are usually invisible.
In physical
sensation and comfort.
The preference for a
certain temperature in the room. The mild dissatisfaction when the water in the
shower is slightly off. The pleasure of a comfortable seat and the subtle
resistance to an uncomfortable one. The enjoyment of a particular taste and the
slight disappointment when the food is not quite as expected. The pull toward
physical ease and the resistance to physical effort.
None of these register
as Raag and Dwesh in any dramatic sense. But every one of them is the system
moving toward Anukulta and away from Pratikulta, automatically, without
examination, hundreds of times a day.
In social
interaction and conversation.
The slight warmth when
someone responds enthusiastically to what I have said, Anukulta-Raag. The
barely perceptible contraction when someone seems uninterested or dismissive,
Pratikulta-Dwesh. The pull toward conversations that are comfortable and familiar.
The resistance to conversations that are challenging or uncomfortable. The
micro-pleasure when I am understood and the micro-irritation when I am not. The
satisfaction when the conversation goes the way I hoped and the subtle
deflation when it does not.
In work and effort.
The flow state when
work is going well, accompanied by a subtle Raag for that state, a craving for
it to continue. The resistance to tasks that are tedious, difficult, or
unclear. The satisfaction of completion and the subtle disappointment of delay.
The pull toward work that feels meaningful and the resistance to work that
feels pointless. The micro-pride when something is done well and the
micro-irritation when something does not come together as expected.
In the relationship
with time.
The mild impatience
when something takes longer than expected, Pratikulta-Dwesh directed at the
passage of time itself. The pleasure when something finishes sooner than
expected, Anukulta-Raag. The resistance to waiting. The pull toward efficiency.
The subtle agitation when the day's rhythm is disrupted and the satisfaction
when it flows smoothly.
In the relationship
with people.
Raag for those who
agree, validate, appreciate, and support. Dwesh, ranging from mild to intense,
for those who challenge, criticise, ignore, or simply do not fit the preferred
relational texture. The pull toward people who make the fake identity feel good
and the resistance to people who make it feel threatened or uncomfortable. The
micro-warmth when someone behaves as hoped and the micro-contraction when they
do not.
In spiritual
practice itself.
The Raag for the
pleasant state of a good meditation or a good reading session. The subtle
seeking of that expanded, soothing feeling. The mild disappointment when the
practice feels dry or mechanical. The pull toward spiritual contexts that feel
elevating and the resistance to those that feel flat. The satisfaction of
understanding something deeply and the subtle irritation of confusion. All of
this is Raag and Dwesh operating within the very activity that is meant to
reduce Raag and Dwesh.
In recognition and
being seen.
The micro-pleasure
when the name is mentioned positively. The micro-deflation when it is not
mentioned at all. The Raag for being understood and the Dwesh for being
misunderstood. The pull toward audiences that are receptive and the resistance
to those that are indifferent. The satisfaction of a contribution being
acknowledged and the subtle lack when it is not.
Part Five: The
Mind's Partial Awareness and Its Own Trap
Here is where the
examination must become most precise and most honest.
When the mind is aware
that Raag or Dwesh is operating, something does happen. The involvement reduces
slightly. The aggression of the craving or aversion is diluted. The reaction is
less intense than it would have been without the awareness. And this is real.
It is genuine progress at one level.
But here is what also
happens, and it is worth seeing with complete honesty:
The mind then
registers that it was aware. It notes the reduction in involvement. And it
produces a quiet conviction: "I was aware, therefore I did better. The
awareness is working."
And that conviction
itself, that felt-good of having been a good observer, that subtle satisfaction
in the quality of one's own witnessing, is itself a Raag.
The mind is now
experiencing Anukulta-Raag about its own spiritual awareness. It is feeling
good about feeling less. It is craving the experience of being a good observer.
And it is doing all of this, and calling it progress, while remaining entirely
within the domain of the mind.
This is the most
elegant and most invisible trap in the entire inner life of a seeker. Because
it wears the most acceptable clothing imaginable. It wears the clothing of
genuine spiritual development.
The paradox is precise
and uncomfortable: the pride in humility is still pride. The Raag about reduced
Raag is still Raag. The mind congratulating itself for its own partial
awareness is still the mind. Still the instrument. Still not the “Knower”.
True reduction of Raag
and Dwesh does not leave a residue of satisfaction about the reduction. The “Knower”,
resting in its own nature, does not feel good about feeling less. It simply is.
Without commentary. Without a scorecard. Without the meta-Raag of spiritual
self-approval.
This does not mean
awareness is useless or that the mind's partial awareness should be abandoned.
It means the awareness must be awareness all the way down. Including awareness
of the mind's tendency to convert awareness itself into a new object of Raag.
Part Six: The
Experiencer and the Experience, The Only Real Distinction
Everything in this
journal comes back to one distinction. The most fundamental distinction
available in the inner life.
The experience and the
experiencer.
The experience is
everything that happens through the instruments: the pleasant sensation, the
unpleasant sensation, the thought, the emotion, the preference, the resistance,
the felt-good wave, the contraction. All of it, Raag and Dwesh included, is experience.
It arises in the instruments, moves through the instruments, and passes through
the instruments.
The experiencer is the
“Knower”. The real "I." The one who is aware of all of this
happening. The one who is aware of the body feeling, the mind thinking, the
senses registering, the emotions moving.
Agyaan is the
confusion of the two. Taking the experience to be the experiencer. Taking the
felt-good wave to be the "I" that is feeling it. Taking the
contraction of Dwesh to be the "I" that is resisting. This confusion
is the root of all Raag and Dwesh, because only a self that is identified with
the instruments can crave what pleases those instruments and resist what
displeases them.
The “Knower” in its
own nature, Swabhaav, neither craves nor resists. It knows. It is aware. It
witnesses. Raag and Dwesh are Vibhaav, the distorted state, the state of the “Knower”
when it has lost itself in the instruments and their experiences.
Nijbhaan is the return
of the “Knower” to its own nature. Not a dramatic event. Not a mystical
experience. The quietest possible thing: the experiencer becoming aware of
itself as the experiencer, rather than being lost in the experience.
In that awareness, the
wave of pleasant sensation can still move through the instruments. But the “Knower”
is not inside the wave. It is aware of the wave. And what is aware of the wave
is not moved by the wave.
This is not
indifference. The “Knower” aware of itself is not cold or detached in any
ordinary sense. It is present, (whereas the “Knower” that is lost inside the
experience is not present), because it is seeing what is actually happening
rather than being swept along by it.
And from this seeing,
Raag and Dwesh do not have to be managed or suppressed. They begin, naturally
and gradually, to reduce. Because the fuel that feeds them, the identification
of the “Knower” with the instruments and their experiences, is being
progressively withdrawn. Not by force. By seeing.
Part Seven: What
Nano Management Actually Means
Nano management of
Raag and Dwesh is not a technique. It is not a practice to be added to the day.
It is a quality of seeing that, once genuinely established even partially,
begins to operate continuously.
It means catching the
micro-Raag in the moment of its arising. The slight preference for one chair
over another. The barely perceptible pleasure when a message arrives from a
particular person. The micro-satisfaction of a task finishing on time. Not to suppress
these. Not to judge them. To see them. To know: this is Anukulta-Raag
operating. This is the instrument responding to what is agreeable. The
experiencer is here, watching.
It means catching the
micro-Dwesh in the moment of its arising. The slight contraction when a plan
changes unexpectedly. The barely perceptible irritation when someone speaks in
a tone that is slightly off. The micro-resistance to a task that is tedious.
Not to suppress these. To see them. To know: this is Pratikulta-Dwesh
operating. This is the instrument responding to what is disagreeable. The
experiencer is here, watching.
And it means catching
the meta-Raag as well. The subtle satisfaction of having caught the Raag. The
quiet spiritual self-approval of being a good observer. Seeing that too.
Without drama. Without the second layer of judgment about the judgment.
The seeing does not
have to be continuous from the first day. It cannot be. It begins as
occasional, brief, and partial. Four genuine moments of seeing in a whole day
is four more moments than yesterday. Each genuine moment of the “Knower”
knowing itself as the experiencer rather than being lost in the experience is a
moment of actual Nirjara, actual dissolution of accumulated karma. Not
dramatic. Not visible. But real.
And gradually, with
genuine consistency and without the performance of spiritual progress, the
moments accumulate. The gaps between them narrow. The seeing becomes more
natural, more available, more present across more of the ordinary day.
Not perfectly. Not all
at once, but gradually for sure and that too with the visible progress, if treaded
consistently.
The direction is
clear. And the direction is enough to walk in.
Part Eight: The
Only Question Worth Carrying
Through the meal,
through the meeting, through the pleasant sensation and the inconvenient
situation, through the moment of recognition and the moment of being
overlooked, through the spiritual practice and the ordinary distraction, one
question is worth carrying as a quiet companion:
Is the experiencer
present right now, or is it lost inside the experience?
Not asked as a burden.
Not asked as a performance. Not asked to produce a spiritually satisfying
answer.
Asked honestly. In the
fraction of a second before the wave of Anukulta or Pratikulta fully takes
over. In the gap, however small, between stimulus and response.
Because in that gap,
even briefly, the “Knower” can know itself. And in knowing itself, it is not
adding to what has already accumulated across Anantkaal.
That not-adding is the
beginning of freedom.
And freedom, from this
direction, is not a distant destination.
It is the natural
condition of the “Knower” that has stopped confusing itself with its
instruments.
It is what remains
when Raag and Dwesh, seen clearly and without drama, have nothing left to feed
on.
Jyaan tyaan thi
Raag Dwesh rahit thavu, e Dharma chhe.
This is the path.
Already known. Now to be lived, one nano moment at a time.
