Subala Upanishad
Contents
ToggleThe undaunted man never grieves, as he knows Atma to be great, all-pervading and unborn. (...) Some attain this Atma by the six means: of Truth, Charity, Austerity, of Non-injury to any creature, of Brahmacharya, of indifference to worldly objects; And there are no other means.
—Subala Upanishad Chapter 3
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Virtuous life as means to self-knowledge [spacer height="20px"] Chapter 3 elaborates the path to moksha (liberation) through realization of the ultimate reality and being, the Atman and the Brahman. Atman and Brahman, asserts the text, is unborn, uncaused, devoid of form or nature that can be sensed; is imperishable, neither short nor long, neither definable nor obscure, neither provable nor shrouded, neither manifested nor measurable, neither with interior nor with exterior. [spacer height="20px"] One attains this Atman and self-knowledge through virtues, which are six in number – truthfulness, charity, austerity, non-injury to others, Brahmacharya, and renunciation. The text then repeats the "da, da, da" axiology found in section 5.2 of the Brihadaranyaka Upanishad, referring to dama (self-restraint), dāna (charity) and daya (compassion). [spacer height="20px"] States of consciousness [spacer height="20px"] Chapter 4 states that the soul resides in the heart of a living being (dahara), in a ten petaled lotus. The heart feeds the 72,000 vessels in the body (nadis). The immortal soul, the innermost center of one's existence, is ever-present as the "resplendent effulgence", whether one is in an awake state of consciousness or dreaming in one's sleep. This section of the Subala Upanishad resonates with the doctrine presented in the much more ancient Chandogya Upanishad's section 8.1. [spacer height="20px"] Organs in the human body are divine [spacer height="20px"] Chapter 5 asserts, one by one, that 14 organs in the human body and ahamkara (personality) are divine. He who moves in these organs and binds them is the "fearless, sorrowless, infinite" Atman (soul, self). [spacer height="20px"] For example, states the text, the eye is the deity Surya and the source of knowledge, and is thus linked to the soul. The tongue and mouth are Varuna, the hands are Indra, the feet are Vishnu, the mind is Moon, ahamkara (personality) is Rudra, and the sexual organs are Prajapati. [spacer height="20px"] One must meditate on one's soul, states the text. This soul is the all-knowing ruler of all these organs and the source of happiness. The text asserts that soul is what is discussed by the Vedic texts and scriptures. [spacer height="20px"] Narayana: the basis [spacer height="20px"] Chapters 6 and 7 state that Narayana (Vishnu) is the one divine alone. The directional gods, all Devas, time and the aeons, the planetary systems, the climatic phenomena, the fourteen nadis, all organs of living beings, parents, siblings, fire, and ghee (clarified butter) are identified as manifestations of Narayana. Narayana is the radiant indwelling spirit in everyone and in every creature, asserts the text. [spacer height="20px"] Dissolution [spacer height="20px"] Chapter 8 through 12 state that everything except the Narayana (soul) is transitory and subject to dissolution. Everything merges back into the immortal, fearless, sorrowless, endless, seedless Brahman. Chapter 10 asserts that Atman is Brahman, and everything rests in one's own soul. [spacer height="20px"] Be child-likeबाल्येन तिष्ठासेद्बालस्वभावोऽसङ्गो निरवद्यो मौनेन पाण्डित्येन निरवधिकारतयोपलभ्येत
Child-like simplicity ought to be one's outlook on life. Unattached, innocent, blameless, silent, with aloneness.
—Subala Upanishad Chapter 13
[spacer height="20px"] The life of the sage [spacer height="20px"] Chapter 13 asserts that the child is a state of innocence and non-attachment, and this is what one must cultivate. The child knows of no classes or stages of life and learns innocently. So also, states the text, is the state of moksha (liberation) for a sage, who knows no fear, worries, cravings, anger, or falsehood. [spacer height="20px"] Gradual dissolution in the supreme [spacer height="20px"] Chapters 14 to 16 assert that with self-knowledge, a person dissolves into the supreme, the Narayana. In this state, there is "neither Sat, nor Asat, nor Sat-asat."