Friday 18 December 2020

If everything is predestined, how can the law of karma be true?

Last month a friend wrote to me posing two questions, ‘If everything is predestined, how can the law of karma be true? And if it is true, how can everything be predestined?’, to which he offered his own answers based on his understanding of Bhagavan’s teachings. This article is adapted from the replies I wrote to this and several subsequent emails, because what Bhagavan taught us about the law of karma in general and the scope of predetermination in particular is an area of his teachings that have been widely misunderstood and misinterpreted, and hence I am often asked about this subject.

  1. Though we are not free to change anything that is predetermined, we are free to want to change it and to try to change it
  2. Fate (vidhi) and will (mati) operate side by side in our life, without either ever intruding upon the domain of the other, so there is no question of either prevailing over the other
  3. Bhagavan expressed his teachings in a carefully nuanced manner, but most people who recorded his answers to questions lacked a sufficiently subtle understanding, so they often failed to grasp the nuances in what he said
  4. Freedom of will (icchā-svatantra) and consequent freedom of action (kriyā-svatantra) are implicit in all that Bhagavan taught us about the need for us to practise self-investigation and self-surrender
  5. So long as we rise as ego, will and fate both seem to be real, but if we investigate ourself keenly enough, we will see that we have never risen as ego and have therefore never acted under the sway of our will or experienced the fruit of such actions
  6. When Bhagavan said that ‘everything is predetermined’, the ‘everything’ he was referring to is everything that we are to experience according to prārabdha, so this does not at all contradict that fact that we do have freedom to will and act (icchā-kriyā-svatantra)
  7. When Bhagavan said ‘The only freedom you have is to turn your mind inward and renounce activities there’, it is clear from the context that what he meant is that the only freedom we have to renounce all activities is to turn our mind inwards
  8. We can use our freedom of will and action (icchā-kriyā-svatantra) to do either kāmya karmas of any kind or niṣkāmya pūjā, niṣkāmya japa or niṣkāmya dhyāna, but turning our mind inwards to attend to ourself alone is the best among all the possible uses we can make of this freedom
1. Though we are not free to change anything that is predetermined, we are free to want to change it and to try to change it

In reply to the first in this series of emails I wrote:

Many people seem to have misunderstood what Bhagavan meant when he said that everything is predetermined, and some take it to mean that whatever actions we do are predetermined, which would obviously contradict the law of karma, because it would leave no place for āgāmya [actions driven by our will], without which there would be neither saṁcita [the heap or store of all the fruits of āgāmya that we have done in the past but have not yet experienced] nor prārabdha [fate or destiny, which is the fruits of our past āgāmya that have been selected by God or guru from our saṁcita for us to experience in our present life].

What he meant is that everything we experience, in the sense of everything that happens to us, is predetermined, because it is the prārabdha allotted for us by God. However, though we are not free to change anything that is predetermined, we are free to want to change it (which is what he called icchā-svatantra: freedom of will) and to try to change it (which is what he called kriyā-svatantra: freedom of action), as he clearly implied by the clauses ‘என் முயற்சிக்கினும்’ (eṉ muyaṟcikkiṉum), ‘whatever effort one makes’, and ‘என் தடை செய்யினும்’ (eṉ taḍai seyyiṉum), ‘whatever obstruction [or resistance] one does’, when he wrote in the second to final sentences of the note that he wrote for his mother in December 1898:
என்றும் நடவாதது என் முயற்சிக்கினும் நடவாது; நடப்ப தென்றடை செய்யினும் நில்லாது. இதுவே திண்ணம். ஆகலின் மௌனமா யிருக்கை நன்று.

eṉḏṟum naḍavādadu eṉ muyaṟcikkiṉum naḍavādu; naḍappadu eṉ taḍai seyyiṉum nillādu. iduvē tiṇṇam. āhaliṉ mauṉamāy irukkai naṉḏṟu.

What will never happen will not happen whatever effort one makes [to make it happen]; what will happen will not stop whatever obstruction [or resistance] one does [to prevent it happening]. This indeed is certain. Therefore silently being [or being silent] is good.
Therefore when he wrote in the first sentence of that note, ‘அவரவர் பிராரப்தப் பிரகாரம் அதற்கானவன் ஆங்காங்கிருந் தாட்டுவிப்பன்’ (avar-avar prārabdha-p prakāram adaṟkāṉavaṉ āṅgāṅgu irundu āṭṭuvippaṉ), ‘According to their-their prārabdha, he who is for that being there-there will cause to dance’, which implies ‘According to the destiny (prārabdha) of each person, he who is for that (namely God or guru, who ordains their destiny) being in the heart of each of them will make them act’, he did not mean that all the actions we do are ones we are made to do by God, but only that we will be made to do whatever actions we need to do in order to experience whatever is predetermined according to our prārabdha. That is, our actions are driven by two forces, namely our prārabdha and our will, which are respectively what he referred to in verse 19 of Uḷḷadu Nāṟpadu as விதி (vidhi), fate, and மதி (mati), will, and to the extent that any action is driven by our will it is āgāmya, the fruit of which is stored in our saṁcita and may later be selected by God for us to experience as prārabdha.

This is also implied by him in verse 3 of Upadēśa Undiyār, in which he says that niṣkāmya karma done for God will purify the mind and thereby show the path to liberation. Niṣkāmya karma is action done without the interference of our will, so it implies that we are free to act either according to our will or solely in accordance with God’s will (that is, in accordance with whatever prārabdha he has allotted us).

Therefore when Bhagavan said that everything is predetermined, he did not mean that our will is predetermined, so he was not contradicting the law of karma but emphasising it.

Because there is so much confusion about this subject of predetermination (vidhi) and will (mati), I am often asked questions about it, so I have tried to clarify it in many of the articles in my blog, such as the ones listed here, and I discussed it in most detail in a long article called Like everything else, karma is created solely by ego’s misuse of its will (cittam), so what needs to be rectified is its will.

2. Fate (vidhi) and will (mati) operate side by side in our life, without either ever intruding upon the domain of the other, so there is no question of either prevailing over the other

In reply to this my friend referred to the analogy that Bhagavan sometimes gave of an actor in a drama and remarked: ‘The character in the drama has zero freewill. The actor imagining himself to be the character suffers. But if he realizes that he is *not* the character, then he is free even while playing the role. So the apparent 3 karmas (of the character) are all actually predetermined, every single bit. There is no freedom at the body/mind level which is where all karma takes place. But there is total freedom when karma is renounced within’.

He then added that this is made clear by Bhagavan in two passages recorded in Day by Day with Bhagavan, one on 1-6-46 (1989 edition, pages 211-2; 2002 edition, page 245), the third sentence of which he highlighted in bold:
It does not really rest with a man whether he goes to this place or that or whether he gives up his duties or not. All that happens according to destiny. All the activities that the body is to go through are determined when it first comes into existence. It does not rest with you to accept or reject them. The only freedom you have is to turn your mind inward and renounce activities there.
and the other on 4-1-46 Afternoon (1989 edition, page 78; 2002 edition, pages 91-2):
I asked him, “Are only important events in a man’s life, such as his main occupation or profession, predetermined, or are trifling acts in his life, such as taking a cup of water or moving from one place in the room to another, also predetermined?”

Bhagavan: Yes, everything is predetermined.
He then added: ‘Even taking a cup of water is predetermined! So any illusion of freedom (swatantra) to want or change anything is just that — an illusion. The only freedom is to turn the mind within and renounce actions there as he put it in the first quote above’.

In reply to this I wrote:

When you say that the three karmas ‘are all actually predetermined, every single bit’, do you mean to deny that we have any icchā-kriyā-svatantra (freedom of will and action)? This is clearly not what Bhagavan intended to imply, because he often explained that the law of karma is based on the fact that we do have icchā-kriyā-svatantra (because āgāmya is by definition actions that we do using our icchā-kriyā-svatantra), as also are all instructions given by sages and in śāstras (because if we had no icchā-kriyā-svatantra, no instructions would be either necessary or of any use, since we would have no freedom to choose either to follow them or not to follow them).

For example, in section 426 of Talks with Sri Ramana Maharshi (1978 edition, page 393; 2006 edition, page 409) it is recorded that in answer to someone who asked ‘Has man any Free-Will or is everything in his life predestined and preordained?’ Bhagavan replied:
Free-Will holds the field in association with individuality [ego]. As long as individuality lasts so long there is Free-Will. All the sastras are based on this fact and they advise directing the Free-Will in the right channel.

Find out to whom Free-Will or Destiny matters. Abide in it. Then these two are transcended. That is the only purpose of discussing these questions. To whom do these questions arise? Find out and be at peace.
Just as will (mati or cittam) belongs only to ego, the fruits of whatever actions are driven by it also belong only to ego, so when they are allotted as fate (vidhi or prārabdha) they are experienced only by ego. Therefore without ego there is neither will (mati) nor fate (vidhi), so ego is what Bhagavan refers to as ‘விதி மதி மூலம்’ (vidhi mati mūlam), ‘the root of fate and will’, and ‘விதிமதிகட்கு ஓர் முதல் ஆம் தன்னை’ (vidhi-matigaṭku ōr mudal ām taṉṉai), ‘oneself, who is the one origin for fate and will’, in verse 19 of Uḷḷadu Nāṟpadu:
விதிமதி மூல விவேக மிலார்க்கே
விதிமதி வெல்லும் விவாதம் — விதிமதிகட்
கோர்முதலாந் தன்னை யுணர்ந்தா ரவைதணந்தார்
சார்வரோ பின்னுமவை சாற்று.

vidhimati mūla vivēka milārkkē
vidhimati vellum vivādam — vidhimatigaṭ
kōrmudalān taṉṉai yuṇarndā ravaitaṇandār
sārvarō piṉṉumavai sāṯṟu
.

பதச்சேதம்: விதி மதி மூல விவேகம் இலார்க்கே விதி மதி வெல்லும் விவாதம். விதிமதிகட்கு ஓர் முதல் ஆம் தன்னை உணர்ந்தார் அவை தணந்தார்; சார்வரோ பின்னும் அவை? சாற்று.

Padacchēdam (word-separation): vidhi mati mūla vivēkam ilārkkē vidhi mati vellum vivādam. vidhi-matigaṭku ōr mudal ām taṉṉai uṇarndār avai taṇandār; sārvarō piṉṉum avai? sāṯṟu.

அன்வயம்: விதி மதி மூல விவேகம் இலார்க்கே விதி மதி வெல்லும் விவாதம். விதிமதிகட்கு ஓர் முதல் ஆம் தன்னை உணர்ந்தார் அவை தணந்தார்; பின்னும் அவை சார்வரோ? சாற்று.

Anvayam (words rearranged in natural prose order): vidhi mati mūla vivēkam ilārkkē vidhi mati vellum vivādam. vidhi-matigaṭku ōr mudal ām taṉṉai uṇarndār avai taṇandār; piṉṉum avai sārvarō? sāṯṟu.

English translation: Only for those who do not have discernment of the root of fate and will is there dispute about which prevails, fate or will. Those who have known themself, who is the one origin for fate and will, have discarded them. Say, will they thereafter be associated with them?

Explanatory paraphrase: Only for those who do not have vidhi-mati-mūla-vivēkam [ability to distinguish or discern the root of fate (vidhi) and will (mati), namely ego] is there dispute about which prevails, fate or will. Those who have known [the reality of] themself [ego], who is the one origin [cause or foundation] for fate and will, have [thereby] discarded them [because ego as such does not actually exist, since its reality is not what it seems to be but just pure self-awareness, so when one knows oneself as pure self-awareness the appearance of ego will be dissolved forever, and thus one will have discarded not only ego but also its fate and will]. Say, will they thereafter be associated with them?
If you argue that everything is predetermined and that we therefore have no icchā-kriyā-svatantra, you are in effect arguing that fate (vidhi) always prevails over will (mati), which is precisely the argument that Bhagavan refers to in the first sentence of this verse: ‘விதி மதி மூல விவேகம் இலார்க்கே விதி மதி வெல்லும் விவாதம்’ (vidhi mati mūla vivēkam ilārkkē vidhi mati vellum vivādam), ‘Only for those who do not have vidhi-mati-mūla-vivēkam [ability to distinguish or discern the root of fate and will, namely ego] is there dispute about which prevails, fate or will’. Neither does fate ever prevail over will, nor does will ever prevail over fate. Both operate side by side in our life, without either ever intruding upon the domain of the other.

Fate (vidhi) determines all that we are to experience, whereas will (mati) determines what we want to experience and try to experience. These are two entirely separate domains or jurisdictions. Will (mati) cannot change what we are to experience, and fate (vidhi) cannot change what we want to experience, so there is no question of either prevailing over the other. The courts in the US cannot prevail over the courts in India, and the courts in India cannot prevail over the courts in the US, because they are two entirely different jurisdictions.

The law of karma is operated by grace, so its workings are extremely subtle, and hence we should not expect to be able to understand exactly how fate (vidhi) and will (mati) operate side by side without either ever intruding into the domain of the other. All we need to understand is the general principle that whatever actions our mind, speech or body are driven to do by our will (mati) are āgāmya, the fruits of which are stored in saṁcita, from which God or guru selects which fruits are to be experienced by us in each life, and that whatever we experience is therefore the prārabdha (fate or vidhi) that he has predetermined for us.

3. Bhagavan expressed his teachings in a carefully nuanced manner, but most people who recorded his answers to questions lacked a sufficiently subtle understanding, so they often failed to grasp the nuances in what he said

Regarding the passage you refer to from Day by Day 4-1-46 Afternoon, when Bhagavan said ‘everything is predetermined’, what he implied in the context is that everything we are to experience is predetermined. We cannot experience drinking a cup of water unless we are destined to do so. We can want to experience it and try to experience it, but we cannot experience it unless it is predetermined.

That is, even though we are not free to experience anything that we are not destined to experience, we are nevertheless free to want to experience and to try to experience such things, as Bhagavan clearly implied when he wrote in the second sentence of his note for his mother: ‘என்றும் நடவாதது என் முயற்சிக்கினும் நடவாது’ (eṉḏṟum naḍavādadu eṉ muyaṟcikkiṉum naḍavādu), ‘What will never happen will not happen whatever effort one makes [to make it happen]’. Likewise, even though we are not free to avoid experiencing anything that we are destined to experience, we are nevertheless free to want to avoid experiencing and to try to avoid experiencing such things, as he clearly implied when he wrote in the third sentence of the same note: ‘நடப்ப தென்றடை செய்யினும் நில்லாது’ (naḍappadu eṉ taḍai seyyiṉum nillādu), ‘what will happen will not stop whatever obstruction [or resistance] one does [to prevent it happening]’. If we did not have such freedom to want and to try (icchā-kriyā-svatantra), he need not and would not have included the clauses ‘என் முயற்சிக்கினும்’ (eṉ muyaṟcikkiṉum), ‘whatever effort one makes’, and ‘என் தடை செய்யினும்’ (eṉ taḍai seyyiṉum), ‘whatever obstruction [or resistance] one does’, in these two sentences.

As Devaraja Mudaliar freely admitted, he was always puzzled by the fact that Bhagavan said that everything is predetermined yet also said that we have icchā-kriyā-svatantra (freedom of will and action), which we need to use appropriately, so since he had difficulty in understanding how these two teachings could be compatible, he often asked him to explain this. He once told Sadhu Om that whenever Bhagavan explained to him why there is no contradiction between these two teachings, he thought he had understood it, but then each time he would think about it later and again become confused.

As I explained in Those who recorded what Bhagavan said in reply to questions about fate and free will often failed to grasp all the nuances in his replies and again in Those who recorded what Bhagavan said in reply to questions about predetermination and freedom of will often failed to grasp all the nuances in his replies, the subject matter of his teachings, particularly with regard to the law of karma, is extremely subtle, so it was necessary for him to express his teachings in a carefully nuanced manner, but most people who recorded his answers to questions lacked a sufficiently subtle understanding, so they often failed to grasp the nuances in what he said, and hence their recording of his teachings was in many cases not sufficiently clear or accurate. A clear example of this is what Devaraja Mudaliar recorded in Day by Day and My Recollections of Bhagavan Sri Ramana about what Bhagavan explained to him about the compatibility of predetermination and freedom of will.

Unfortunately, certain statements of Bhagavan that he recorded in this regard, particularly the statement that ‘everything is predetermined’ (Day by Day 4-1-46 Afternoon: 1989 edition, page 78; 2002 edition, page 92), have been taken out of context by many people, including neo-advaita teachers, and have been used to distort and misrepresent his teachings. For example, some neo-advaita teachers claim that self-realisation is predetermined, so no spiritual practice is necessary. If you are to get it, you will get it, as they claim they got it, so you are free to live in any way you like, drinking, smoking, taking drugs, eating meat or whatever, because whatever you do cannot prevent you getting self-realisation whenever you are destined to get it. Therefore we have to be very careful not to give room for or add fuel to such misinterpretations by glossing over the nuances in his teachings.

4. Freedom of will (icchā-svatantra) and consequent freedom of action (kriyā-svatantra) are implicit in all that Bhagavan taught us about the need for us to practise self-investigation and self-surrender

You say ‘any illusion of freedom (swatantra) to want or change anything is just that — an illusion’, but you can say the same about any phenomenon, because all phenomena are just an illusory appearance (vivarta). What is real is only ‘I am’, our fundamental awareness of our own existence (sat-cit), as Bhagavan clearly states in the first sentence of verse 13 of Uḷḷadu Nāṟpadu, ‘ஞானம் ஆம் தானே மெய்’ (ñāṉam ām tāṉē mey), ‘Oneself, who is jñāna [pure awareness], alone is real’, and in the first sentence of the seventh paragraph of Nāṉ Ār?, ‘யதார்த்தமா யுள்ளது ஆத்மசொரூப மொன்றே’ (yathārtham-āy uḷḷadu ātma-sorūpam oṉḏṟē), ‘What actually exists is only ātma-svarūpa [the real nature of oneself]’.

However, though all phenomena, including icchā-kriyā-svatantra (and hence both mati and vidhi), are just an illusory appearance, they are no more illusory than ego, in whose view alone they seem to exist. Though both ego (the subject or experiencer) and phenomena (all objects or things experienced by it) are illusory, they seem to be real so long as we rise and stand as ego, so we can get rid of them all only by investigating ourself and thereby being aware of ourself as we actually are. Therefore, though icchā-kriyā-svatantra is ultimately not real, Bhagavan’s teachings are based on the fact that it seems to exist and is in effect real so long as ego and other phenomena seem to exist.

The sole aim and purpose of all his teachings is eradication of ego, because only when we eradicate ego can we be free of all phenomena, including both will (mati) and fate (vidhi), and we can eradicate ego only by turning within to see ourself as we actually are. However, in order to turn within and see ourself as we actually are we must be willing to surrender ourself entirely, and we will be willing to surrender ourself entirely only when our love to just be as we actually are is greater than the combined strength of all our viṣaya-vāsanās (inclinations to be aware of anything other than ourself), so in order to eradicate ego we need to weaken our viṣaya-vāsanās to a considerable extent, which we can do most effectively by the practice of self-investigation, as he clearly explains in the tenth and eleventh paragraphs of Nāṉ Ār?.

Viṣaya-vāsanās are the seeds that constitute our will (cittam or mati), so if we had no freedom of will (icchā-svatantra) we would not be able to curb our viṣaya-vāsanās by turning within to attend to ourself. Therefore freedom of will (icchā-svatantra) and consequent freedom of action (kriyā-svatantra) are implicit in all that Bhagavan taught us about the need for us to practise self-investigation and self-surrender. If our will were predetermined, as you imply when you say that the three karmas (including āgāmya karmas, which are actions driven by our will) ‘are all actually predetermined, every single bit’, then we would have no freedom to curb our viṣaya-vāsanās by turning within.

If you want to understand more clearly and deeply what Bhagavan taught us about the law of karma and the central role that our icchā-kriyā-svatantra (freedom of will and action) has both in creating karma and in eradicating it by means of self-investigation and self-surrender, it has been explained clearly and in detail by Sadhu Om in the Karma chapter of ஸ்ரீ ரமண வழி (Śrī Ramaṇa Vaṙi, the original Tamil version of The Path of Sri Ramana), so I suggest that you may find it very beneficial if you read that whole chapter with an open mind and carefully consider all that is written in it.

5. So long as we rise as ego, will and fate both seem to be real, but if we investigate ourself keenly enough, we will see that we have never risen as ego and have therefore never acted under the sway of our will or experienced the fruit of such actions

In reply to this second reply of mine (which is what I adapted above as sections 2 to 4) my friend wrote:
A lot of the confusion that Devaraja Mudaliar and others have reported with understanding what Bhagavan meant by “everything is predetermined” is because of the simple identification with the ego that is the root of all misunderstanding and ignorance.

Bhagavan has said again and again that the ONLY freedom you have is to turn inward. That means there is NO freedom outward — in all the 3 karmas. How is that to be reconciled then with the apparent freewill that creates aagamya karma?

This can be very clearly reconciled if we go to the simple example Bhagavan gave again and again. You are Michael James and say there is a play of Mahabharata where you are assigned the role of Arjuna. In the play, Arjuna seems to act with freewill and even the audience thinks so and either praises or blames Arjuna depending on his actions. Now if you yourself forgot that you are Michael James and you identify totally with Arjuna, then you suffer every action and reaction of Arjuna. You act like you have freewill that apparently creates reactions and in turn new actions etc. But do you really have ANY freedom as Arjuna? No, the whole script is already playing as written. What is the ONLY freedom you have? To turn inward and realize that you are not Arjuna, but Michael James which is your real identity. This is what Bhagavan has used as the example to drive the point so simply and clearly. The ONLY freedom therefore we have is to turn within and realize our true nature or Self. Any freedom apparently there at the level of the character we play is only apparent and not so in the ultimate sense. “The whole program is chalked out” as Bhagavan puts it.

Seen correctly in this light, verse 19 of Ulladu Narpadu that you quote will be very clear. The debate between fate and free will is only for the character (ego). The actor (Self) is neither bound by fate nor by free will. This is made explicitly clear in verse 38 (vinai mudan) where Bhagavan says by asking “who is the doer”, one is free of all three karmas and eternally so. How can it be eternally so — including the past “before” Self-realization? Because Self-realization is only waking up to our true identity. The actor (Self) playing the role never had any karma — including when he thought wrongly that he was the character, and was, is and will always be free. And the character (ego) is NEVER free — in all 3 karmas. The only freedom is to turn inward and realize that I am the actor, not the character.

This is what Bhagavan makes explicitly clear by summarizing: “The only freedom you have is to turn your mind inward and renounce activities there”.
In reply to this I wrote:

From the pāramārthika perspective, which is the perspective of our real nature (ātma-svarūpa), there is no ego, and there never was any ego, so there is neither will (mati) nor fate (vidhi). This eternal state of egolessness is what Bhagavan describes as ‘நித்தமாம் முத்தி நிலை’ (nittam-ām mutti nilai), ‘the state of mukti [liberation], which is eternal’ in verse 38 of Uḷḷadu Nāṟpadu, and it is the only real freedom.

However, from the vyāvahārika or prātibhāsika perspective, which is the perspective of ego, we have now risen as ego, so there is both will (mati) and fate (vidhi). The freedom of will and the consequent experience of fate are not ultimately real, but they both seem real from the perspective of ego, so in effect they are real so long as we do not investigate ourself keenly enough to see that there never was any ego.

When we investigate ourself keenly enough and thereby see what we actually are, we will see that we were always that and that there was therefore never any such thing as ego, so there was also never any such thing as will or fate, as Bhagavan implies in verse 38 of Uḷḷadu Nāṟpadu:
வினைமுதனா மாயின் விளைபயன் றுய்ப்போம்
வினைமுதலா ரென்று வினவித் — தனையறியக்
கர்த்தத் துவம்போய்க் கருமமூன் றுங்கழலு
நித்தமா முத்தி நிலை.

viṉaimudaṉā māyiṉ viḷaipayaṉ ḏṟuyppōm
viṉaimudalā reṉḏṟu viṉavit — taṉaiyaṟiyak
karttat tuvampōyk karumamūṉ ḏṟuṅkaṙalu
nittamā mutti nilai
.

பதச்சேதம்: வினைமுதல் நாம் ஆயின், விளை பயன் துய்ப்போம். வினைமுதல் ஆர் என்று வினவி தனை அறிய, கர்த்தத்துவம் போய், கருமம் மூன்றும் கழலும். நித்தமாம் முத்தி நிலை.

Padacchēdam (word-separation): viṉaimudal nām āyiṉ, viḷai payaṉ tuyppōm. viṉaimudal ār eṉḏṟu viṉavi taṉai aṟiya, karttattuvam pōy, karumam mūṉḏṟum kaṙalum. nittam-ām mutti nilai.

English translation: If we are the doer of action, we will experience the resulting fruit. When one knows oneself by investigating who is the doer of action, doership will depart and all the three actions will slip off. The state of liberation, which is eternal.

Explanatory paraphrase: If we are the doer of action, we will experience the resulting fruit. [However] when one knows oneself [as one actually is] by investigating who is the doer of action, [ego, which is what seemed to do actions and to experience their fruit, will thereby be eradicated, and along with it its] kartṛtva [doership] [and its bhōktṛtva, experiencership] will depart and [hence] all [its] three karmas [its āgāmya (actions that it does by its own will), sañcita (the heap of the fruits of such actions that it is yet to experience) and prārabdha (destiny or fate, which is the fruits that have been allotted for it to experience in its current life)] will slip off. [This is] the state of mukti [liberation], which is eternal [being what actually exists even when we seem to be this ego].
The actions that bear fruit are āgāmya (actions driven by ego’s will), and the doer of such actions is ego, so when Bhagavan says ‘வினைமுதல் நாம் ஆயின், விளை பயன் துய்ப்போம்’ (viṉaimudal nām āyiṉ, viḷai payaṉ tuyppōm), ‘If we are the doer of action, we will experience the resulting fruit’, he means that so long as we rise as ego and therefore act under the sway of our vāsanās (the totality of which are what constitute our will), we will experience prārabdha, which consists of the fruits of such actions that we have done in previous lives. However, if we investigate keenly enough what this ego (the doer of āgāmya and the experiencer of prārabdha) actually is, we will thereby know our real nature, and hence ego will be eradicated and all its three karmas (āgāmya, saṁcita and prārabdha) will cease to exist. This is the state of real freedom (mukti), which is eternal, because we are always that, even when we seem to rise as ego.

In other words, so long as we rise as ego, will and fate both seem to be real, so we seem to act under the sway of our will and consequently to experience the resulting fruit as fate, but if we investigate ourself keenly enough and thereby see what we actually are, we will see that we have never risen as ego and have therefore never acted under the sway of our will or experienced the fruit of such actions.

6. When Bhagavan said that ‘everything is predetermined’, the ‘everything’ he was referring to is everything that we are to experience according to prārabdha, so this does not at all contradict that fact that we do have freedom to will and act (icchā-kriyā-svatantra)

You ask, ‘Bhagavan has said again and again that the ONLY freedom you have is to turn inward. [...] How is that to be reconciled then with the apparent freewill that creates aagamya karma?’, but then you try to reconcile them by denying that we have any freedom with respect to doing āgāmya. This is not reconciling freedom of will (mati) and fate (vidhi) but is asserting that fate (vidhi) always prevails because there is no such thing as freedom of will (mati).

What needs to be reconciled is that in some books it is recorded that Bhagavan said ‘everything is predetermined’ (Day by Day 4-1-46 Afternoon) whereas in other books it is recorded that he said: ‘As long as individuality lasts so long there is Free-Will. All the sastras are based on this fact and they advise directing the Free-Will in the right channel’ (Talks section 426). Taken at face value, these two statements seem to contradict each other, because if everything is predetermined, how can there be freedom of any kind whatsoever? Likewise, if we have freedom of will, then how can it be correct to say that everything is predetermined? So how to reconcile such seemingly contradictory statements?

Since Bhagavan’s teachings are a perfectly coherent whole, they are not at all contradictory, so the only way to reconcile such statements is to conclude that what he actually said on such occasions was altogether more nuanced than what has been recorded in these books, and that those who recorded such books were not able to grasp all his nuances and therefore glossed over them when recording what he said. In other words, what they recorded is not exactly what he said but only a rough approximation.

The nuances in everything he wrote and said were conveyed through his careful choice of the words, phrases and clauses he used in Tamil, so if every word, phrase and clause he used is not accurately recorded or translated, the meaning he intended to convey will be distorted, sometimes just slightly but often quite drastically. For example, if he had spoken instead of writing what he wrote in his note for his mother, and if the sentences ‘என்றும் நடவாதது என் முயற்சிக்கினும் நடவாது; நடப்ப தென்றடை செய்யினும் நில்லாது’ (eṉḏṟum naḍavādadu eṉ muyaṟcikkiṉum naḍavādu; naḍappadu eṉ taḍai seyyiṉum nillādu), ‘What will never happen will not happen whatever effort one makes [to make it happen]; what will happen will not stop whatever obstruction [or resistance] one does [to prevent it happening]’, had been recorded without the clauses ‘என் முயற்சிக்கினும்’ (eṉ muyaṟcikkiṉum), ‘whatever effort one makes’, and ‘என் தடை செய்யினும்’ (eṉ taḍai seyyiṉum), ‘whatever obstruction [or resistance] one does’, as ‘என்றும் நடவாதது நடவாது; நடப்பது நில்லாது’ (eṉḏṟum naḍavādadu naḍavādu; naḍappadu nillādu), ‘What will never happen will not happen; what will happen will not stop’, that would have conveyed a significantly different meaning to the one he intended, because it would have excluded the crucial caveat that though whatever is not to happen will not happen and whatever is to happen will happen and cannot be stopped or prevented, we are nevertheless free to try to make what is not to happen happen and to prevent what is to happen.

This is why the only record of his teachings that is entirely reliable is his own original writings (though in the case of a few of his original writings we need to make suitable allowance for the context in which he wrote them), and why most of the records of his oral teachings (particularly those that were recorded in English rather than in Tamil, which was the language in which he generally spoke) are far less reliable. With the exception of Nāṉ Ār?, which although it was originally recorded by Sivaprakasam Pillai (for the most part directly from what Bhagavan wrote on the sandy ground, a slate or slips of paper) was later revised and rewritten by Bhagavan in the form of an essay, which is therefore the principal version of it, the most reliable record of Bhagavan’s oral teachings is Guru Vācaka Kōvai, because although the verses of Guru Vācaka Kōvai do not always record the exact words spoken by Bhagavan (since he spoke in prose and Muruganar recorded what he said in poetry), they do accurately record the meaning he intended to convey, partly because Muruganar was able to understand all the nuances in what Bhagavan said, but also because he showed each of the verses to Bhagavan soon after he composed it, and whenever Bhagavan considered it necessary he would revise what Muruganar had written, and occasionally he would re-express the same idea in a verse of his own, so Guru Vācaka Kōvai was very much a work of close collaboration between Bhagavan and Muruganar.

All the other records of his oral teachings vary in accuracy on a scale from not sufficiently accurate to seriously inaccurate, so we should not rely on any of them to be the exact words spoken by Bhagavan. There are several reasons for this. Firstly, nothing that Bhagavan ever said was tape-recorded, and the ashram management had passed an order that no one should write notes in his hall, so whoever recorded what he said did so from memory, albeit often later on the same day, but in the case of most reminiscences only many years later. Therefore the accuracy of what they recorded depended firstly on how clearly and deeply they had understood what he said, and secondly upon how accurately they could remember whatever they had understood. If they did not understand all the nuances in what he said, as it would seem that in most cases they did not, whatever they recorded would be coloured by their own inadequate understanding. Therefore we need to take all these factors into consideration when we read such records, and should not hastily conclude that whatever has been recorded was exactly what he said. In the case of each particular statement attributed to Bhagavan in such records, we should judge it in the light of the fundamental principles that he has taught us in his own original writings, and if anything that has been recorded conflicts in any way with those fundamental principles, we should understand that in such cases what has been recorded would not have been exactly what he said.

Bearing all this in mind, let us now consider each of the two seemingly contradictory statements referred to above. When (and if) he said that ‘everything is predetermined’ (as recorded in Day by Day, 4-1-46 Afternoon), the ‘everything’ he was referring to is everything that we are to experience, and every action that we need to do in order to experience whatever we are to experience, because everything that we experience and everything we must do in order to experience it is according to prārabdha, which is predetermined by God or guru.

Since everything that we experience is predetermined (which is what he meant when he said ‘The whole programme is chalked out’, as recorded in Day by Day 4-1-46 Afternoon), we are not free to change it even to the slightest extent, so we cannot experience anything that is not predetermined for us to experience, and (except by turning within and thereby eradicating ego) we cannot avoid experiencing anything that is predetermined for us to experience, as he implied when he wrote in his note for his mother: ‘என்றும் நடவாதது என் முயற்சிக்கினும் நடவாது; நடப்ப தென்றடை செய்யினும் நில்லாது. இதுவே திண்ணம்’ (eṉḏṟum naḍavādadu eṉ muyaṟcikkiṉum naḍavādu; naḍappadu eṉ taḍai seyyiṉum nillādu. iduvē tiṇṇam), ‘What will never happen will not happen whatever effort one makes [to make it happen]; what will happen will not stop whatever obstruction [or resistance] one does [to prevent it happening]. This indeed is certain’. However, though we are not free either to experience anything that is not predetermined or to avoid experiencing anything that is predetermined, we are free to want to do so and to try to do so, as he implied by the clauses ‘என் முயற்சிக்கினும்’ (eṉ muyaṟcikkiṉum), ‘whatever effort one makes’, and ‘என் தடை செய்யினும்’ (eṉ taḍai seyyiṉum), ‘whatever obstruction [or resistance] one does’. Therefore the fact that everything we experience is predetermined does not at all contradict that fact that we do have freedom to will and act (icchā-kriyā-svatantra).

7. When Bhagavan said ‘The only freedom you have is to turn your mind inward and renounce activities there’, it is clear from the context that what he meant is that the only freedom we have to renounce all activities is to turn our mind inwards

Incidentally, the English term ‘free will’ is imprecisely defined, because when philosophers and others talk about free will, they generally mean freedom to do as we want, which is not actually freedom of will (icchā-svatantra) but freedom of action (kriyā-svatantra), or even freedom to achieve what we want, which is a freedom we do not have at all, because whatever we are to achieve (in the sense of whatever worldly aim we are to achieve) is predetermined by prārabdha. However, freedom of will and freedom of action are closely associated, and in practice they go hand in hand, so the term that Bhagavan generally used to refer to freedom of will and action is icchā-kriyā-svatantra, and hence in most cases this is the term that is translated as ‘free will’ (or ‘free-will’ or ‘freewill’, as it is sometimes incorrectly spelt) in English recordings of his answers to questions in books such as Talks and Day by Day.

When Bhagavan said ‘The only freedom you have is to turn your mind inward and renounce activities there’ (as recorded in Day by Day, 1-6-46), it is clear from the context that what he meant is that the only freedom we have to renounce all activities (both those driven by will (mati) and those driven by fate (vidhi)) is to turn our mind inwards and thereby dissolve back into the source from which we rose. So long as we allow our mind to face outwards, we are to a greater or lesser extent allowing ourself to be swayed by our viṣaya-vāsanās (which are what constitutes mati in the sense of cittam or will) and we consequently have to experience and do whatever is allotted in our vidhi for us to experience and do.

He also implied the same when he said ‘The only freedom man has is to strive for and acquire the jnana which will enable him not to identify himself with the body’ (as recorded in My Recollections of Bhagavan Sri Ramana, chapter 4: 1992 edition, page 90). Until we investigate ourself keenly enough to dissolve forever in the clear light of pure awareness (jñāna), we will continue to rise as ego, and whenever we rise as ego we experience ourself as a body and consequently have to experience whatever prārabdha has been allotted for that body to undergo.

In order to strive for and acquire jñāna we need to turn our attention within to face ourself alone, and since our viṣaya-vāsanās are constantly driving our attention outwards, we need to weaken and eventually destroy all of them by persistent practice of self-attentiveness, as Bhagavan makes clear in the tenth and eleventh paragraphs of Nāṉ Ār?. So long as we allow our attention to go outwards, we are thereby allowing our mind to wander to a greater or lesser extent under the sway of its vāsanās, and so long as we wander under the sway of our vāsanās, we are thereby inevitably doing āgāmya.

You say that even āgāmya is predetermined, but that cannot be the case, because we can avoid doing āgāmya by turning our attention inwards. Whatever is destined to happen according to prārabdha is predetermined, so it will continue (until ego is eradicated) whether we turn our attention inwards or outwards, but we do āgāmya only to the extent that we allow ourself to be swayed by our viṣaya-vāsanās. To the extent that we turn our attention inwards, we are thereby avoiding being swayed by them and hence avoiding doing āgāmya. Moreover, whenever we allow our attention to go outwards, our vāsanās tend to pull us in various conflicting directions, so we are free to choose whether to be swayed by one vāsanā or another, and hence the āgāmya we do is determined by whichever vāsanās we allow ourself to be swayed by.

8. We can use our freedom of will and action (icchā-kriyā-svatantra) to do either kāmya karmas of any kind or niṣkāmya pūjā, niṣkāmya japa or niṣkāmya dhyāna, but turning our mind inwards to attend to ourself alone is the best among all the possible uses we can make of this freedom

The actor analogy that you refer to is useful in helping us to understand how we can remain inwardly detached in the midst of whatever actions our mind, speech and body are driven to do in accordance with our prārabdha, and to the extent that we are detached we thereby avoid doing āgāmya. However, like any analogy, its applicability is limited, so we should not stretch it by trying to apply it in a way that Bhagavan did not intend, and he certainly never intended it to mean that whatever āgāmya we do is predetermined, as you seem to imply.

The script that has been written is prārabdha, so we cannot deviate from that script, but not every action of the actor is scripted. So long as he does not deviate from the script he has a limited freedom to do as he pleases without detracting from his performance. For example, one day he may scratch his head and another day he may not, or one day he may speak some lines facing one part of the audience whereas another day he may speak the same lines facing another part of it. Likewise, though we cannot deviate even in the least from the script of prārabdha, we nevertheless have limited freedom to do whatever āgāmya we please. This limited freedom is what Bhagavan called icchā-kriyā-svatantra, the freedom of will and action.

However, as he often explained, using our icchā-kriyā-svatantra to do any āgāmya is a misuse of it, because doing so causes us to fall in the ocean of action, as he says in verse 2 of Upadēśa Undiyār:
வினையின் விளைவு விளிவுற்று வித்தாய்
வினைக்கடல் வீழ்த்திடு முந்தீபற
      வீடு தரலிலை யுந்தீபற.

viṉaiyiṉ viḷaivu viḷivuṯṟu vittāy
viṉaikkaḍal vīṙttiḍu mundīpaṟa
      vīḍu taralilai yundīpaṟa
.

பதச்சேதம்: வினையின் விளைவு விளிவு உற்று வித்தாய் வினை கடல் வீழ்த்திடும். வீடு தரல் இலை.

Padacchēdam (word-separation): viṉaiyiṉ viḷaivu viḷivu uṯṟu vittāy viṉai-kaḍal vīṙttiḍum. vīḍu taral ilai.

English translation: The fruit of action having perished, as seed it causes to fall in the ocean of action. It is not giving liberation.

Explanatory paraphrase: The fruit of [an] action having perished [by being experienced], [remaining] as a seed [a karma-vāsanā or propensity to do the same kind of action] it causes [one] to fall in the ocean of action. [Therefore] it [action] does not give liberation.
What he refers to here as ‘வித்து’ (vittu), ‘seed’, is karma-vāsanās (inclinations or propensities to do the same kind of actions), and at the heart of every karma-vāsanā is a viṣaya-vāsanā (an inclination to experience a certain viṣaya or phenomenon), because what motivates our inclinations to do actions is our inclinations to experience phenomena. Whatever actions we do under the sway of such inclinations (vāsanās) are āgāmya, and doing āgāmya causes us to fall in the ocean of action by perpetuating the cycle of the three karmas, because not only does āgāmya create fruit, which are stored in saṁcita until they are allotted as the prārabdha of a future life, but it also creates and sustains seeds (vāsanās), which are what drive us to continue doing āgāmya.

Instead of misusing our freedom in this way to do any action under the sway of our viṣaya-vāsanās, it is better to refrain from doing such actions, which are kāmya karmas, and to do only niṣkāmya karmas for the love of God alone, because as he says in verse 3 of Upadēśa Undiyār, that will purify the mind (by weakening its viṣaya-vāsanās, which are its impurities) and thereby show the way to liberation (in the sense that it will give us the clarity of mind and heart to recognise that the only means to attain liberation is to turn our mind inwards to face ourself alone):
கருத்தனுக் காக்குநிட் காமிய கன்மங்
கருத்தைத் திருத்தியஃ துந்தீபற
      கதிவழி காண்பிக்கு முந்தீபற.

karuttaṉuk kākkuniṭ kāmiya kaṉmaṅ
karuttait tiruttiyaḵ dundīpaṟa
      gativaṙi kāṇbikku mundīpaṟa
.

பதச்சேதம்: கருத்தனுக்கு ஆக்கும் நிட்காமிய கன்மம் கருத்தை திருத்தி, அஃது கதி வழி காண்பிக்கும்.

Padacchēdam (word-separation): karuttaṉukku ākkum niṭkāmiya kaṉmam karuttai tirutti, aḵdu gati vaṙi kāṇbikkum.

English translation: Desireless action done for God, purifying the mind, it will show the path to liberation.

Explanatory paraphrase: Niṣkāmya karma [action not motivated by desire] done [with love] for God purifies the mind and [thereby] it will show the path to liberation [that is, it will enable one to recognise what the correct path to liberation is].
However, as he says in verse 8 of Upadēśa Undiyār, among all the beneficial uses of our icchā-kriyā-svatantra that he describes in verses 4 to 8, the ‘best of all’ (aṉaittiṉ-um uttamam) is only ananya-bhāva, which means meditation on nothing other than ourself:
அனியபா வத்தி னவனக மாகு
மனனிய பாவமே யுந்தீபற
     வனைத்தினு முத்தம முந்தீபற.

aṉiyabhā vatti ṉavaṉaha māhu
maṉaṉiya bhāvamē yundīpaṟa
     vaṉaittiṉu muttama mundīpaṟa
.

பதச்சேதம்: அனிய பாவத்தின் அவன் அகம் ஆகும் அனனிய பாவமே அனைத்தினும் உத்தமம்.

Padacchēdam (word-separation): aṉiya-bhāvattiṉ avaṉ aham āhum aṉaṉiya-bhāvam-ē aṉaittiṉ-um uttamam.

English translation: Rather than anya-bhāva, certainly ananya-bhāva, in which he is I, is the best among all.

Explanatory paraphrase: Rather than anya-bhāva [meditation on anything other than oneself, particularly meditation on God as if he were other than oneself], certainly ananya-bhāva [meditation on nothing other than oneself], in which he is [considered to be] I, is the best among all [practices of bhakti, varieties of meditation and kinds of spiritual practice] [in the sense that it is the most effective of all means to purify the mind, and is also the only means to eradicate ego, the root of all impurities].
As he makes clear in these verses (2 to 8), turning our mind within to attend to ourself alone is not the only freedom we have, because we can also use our freedom of will and action (icchā-kriyā-svatantra) to do either kāmya karmas of any kind or niṣkāmya pūjā, niṣkāmya japa or niṣkāmya dhyāna (that is, worship, repetition or meditation that is not motivated by desire for anything but only by the love of God), but it is the best among all the possible uses we can make of our icchā-kriyā-svatantra.

Therefore let us not confuse ourself by denying that we have any icchā-kriyā-svatantra, but instead use it wisely as advised by Bhagavan to turn within to face ourself and thereby see what we actually are. That is, at each moment of our life we have a fundamental choice, whether to attend to ourself or to anything other than ourself. We are always free to choose either, but the wisest use of this freedom is to turn within by attending to ourself alone.

11 comments:

Michael James said...

In a comment on one of my recent videos, 2020-12-13 Yo Soy Tu Mismo: Michael James discusses distinguishing free will from destiny, a friend wrote, “So does all this mean that we have no free will (unless it was already part of our destiny, which means it isn’t free will), but we are free to think that we have free will. Is this correct?”, to which I replied:

No, that is not correct. What Bhagavan taught us is that what is destined to happen will happen, and what is not destined to happen will not happen, but we nevertheless do have icchā-kriyā-svatantra (freedom of will and action).

What this means is that we are free to want and to try to experience what we are not destined to experience and to avoid experiencing what we are destined to experience, but that no matter how much we may want to do so and try to do so, we cannot experience anything that we are not destined to experience and we cannot avoid experiencing anything that we are destined to experience (so long as we allow our mind to go outwards, away from ourself).

What we want to experience and what we are destined to experience are two entirely separate domains, so neither can encroach upon the domain of the other. That is, what we want to experience cannot change what we are destined to experience, and what we are destined to experience cannot change what we want to experience. In other words, our will cannot change our fate, and our fate cannot change our will.

This is why Bhagavan wrote in verse 19 of Uḷḷadu Nāṟpadu: ‘விதி மதி மூல விவேகம் இலார்க்கே விதி மதி வெல்லும் விவாதம்’ (vidhi mati mūla vivēkam ilārkkē vidhi mati vellum vivādam), ‘Only for those who do not have vidhi-mati-mūla-vivēkam [ability to distinguish or discern the root of fate and will, namely ego] is there dispute about which prevails, fate or will’.

Neither does fate ever prevail over will, nor does will ever prevail over fate. Both operate side by side in our life, without either ever intruding upon the domain of the other.

Michael James said...

In reply to my reply that I reproduced in my previous comment, the same friend wrote, “Thank you so much for your reply. So with everything that is predestined to happen, will happen, does that include all the smaller things too (like me touching my leg right now), or only the bigger things like my career, my child, etc? Where is the crossover on what is destined and what is not destined?”, to which I replied:

Whatever you are to experience (in the sense of whatever is to happen to you), down to the smallest detail, is predestined, but your will and the influence it has over your actions are not predestined, so you are free to want whatever you want and (within certain limits) to do whatever you want.

Michael James said...

In reply to my reply that I reproduced in my previous comment, the same friend wrote, “Sorry I still don’t quite get it. If absolutely everything is predetermined down to the smallest detail, how can there be any free will? You say we can Want to try to change it, which is a Thought. And you say that we can Try to change it, which is an Action. But if everything is predetermined down to the smallest detail, how can the ‘Trying’ to change the outcome Happen ‘outside’ of the everything is predetermined If everything is already predetermined (including the Trying to change it?). If even the clicking of my fingers that I do whenever I choose to is also predetermined, how can anything else that I do Not be predetermined? I truly appreciate your patience on this to clarify. Thank you so much for your time”, to which I replied:

Firstly we need to be clear about what exactly we mean by ‘free will’, because the sense in which it is generally used contains two distinct ideas, namely freedom of will and freedom of action. We are free to like whatever we like, to dislike whatever we dislike, to want whatever we want and so on, so in this sense our will is certainly free and there are no constraints on its freedom. Within certain limits we are also free to do what we want, so in this sense we have limited freedom of action.

The actions that we do under the sway of our will are what is called āgāmya, which is the first of the three karmas (āgāmya, saṁcita and prārabdha) and the one that bears fruit, which are stored as saṁcita and may later be selected for us to experience as part of the prārabdha (destiny or fate) of a future life. What is predetermined is only our prārabdha and not our āgāmya, because āgāmya is the actions that we do using our freedom of will and action.

In my previous reply, I did not just write ‘Whatever you are to experience, down to the smallest detail, is predestined’, but tried to clarify what I meant by ‘whatever you are to experience’ by adding in brackets after it ‘in the sense of whatever is to happen to you’. Whatever is to happen to you is prārabdha, so it is a predetermined selection of the fruits of āgāmya that you have done in previous lives.

Though we experience our will (our likes, dislikes, desires, attachments, hopes, fears and so on) and the actions of our mind, speech and body (thoughts, words and deeds) that we do under the sway of our will (namely āgāmya), these are not things that happen to us but things that happen by us, so they are not prārabdha and are therefore not predetermined.

Michael James said...

Referring to one of my recent videos, 2020-12-13 Yo Soy Tu Mismo: Michael James discusses distinguishing free will from destiny, and to an old article of mine, Concern about fate and free will arises only when our mind is turned away from ourself (particularly to section 8, The actions of our mind, speech and body are driven by two forces, fate and free will), a friend wrote, “What you said about fate and free will being two different domains which don’t intrude with each other, does that mean that (using the analogy of the two drivers in one car that you use in the article), the will-driver can’t have an impact or influence in where the fate-driver is going to lead the car to (they can’t change fate), and vice versa, the fate-driver can’t make the will-driver to change their wanting for experiencing or avoiding one specific experience?”, to which I replied:

In the analogy of the two drivers, it is perhaps best to imagine a car with two sets of controls, one operated by fate and the other operated by will. Fate will only drive the car to do whatever actions are necessary in order for us to experience our fate (prārabdha). Will is free to drive however it likes, so sometimes it may drive in synchronicity with fate, and sometimes it may drive otherwise. It is free to drive otherwise so long as it does not try to prevent the actions driven by fate, because it can never override such actions, since they belong to the domain of fate, into which it has no power to intrude.

When I said that fate and will each have their own domain and that neither is free to intrude into the domain of the other, what I meant is this: By our will we cannot change what is destined to happen, so will can never prevail over fate. Likewise, fate cannot make us want anything we do not want, and it cannot prevent us wanting what we do want, so fate can never prevail over our will. Therefore there is no conflict between the two.

Only in the realm of action may there seem to be a conflict, but even here there is no conflict, because the realm of action is clearly divided between these two domains. Fate drives only those actions that are necessary for us to do in order for us to experience our fate, so such actions are its domain and can never be obstructed by will. All other actions belong to the domain of will.

Sometimes there is an overlap between these two domains, because at such times fate and will drive us to do the same actions, but in this overlapping area there is never any conflict, because the overlap occurs only because will happens to be in agreement with fate. Both drivers happen to be operating their controls in synchronicity.

Michael James said...

In continuation of the thread of question and answer comments on 2020-12-13 Yo Soy Tu Mismo: Michael James discusses distinguishing free will from destiny that I reproduced in my first three comments above, the same friend wrote, “Michael my last question on this subject, I promise. So even something as simple as a cough that comes up (without my wanting of the cough), would of been predetermined before this physical lifetime? I now know that a conscious cough that I choose to do is from my free will. But how about a cough that comes up unexpectedly?”, in reply to which I wrote:

We will be made to do whatever actions we need to do in order to experience whatever we are destined to experience, but our will is also driving us to do actions, so we cannot (and need not) distinguish to what extent each particular action is driven either by destiny or by will. Many actions are driven by both.

We cannot avoid doing whatever actions we are destined to do, but we can avoid doing actions driven by our will. However, in order to avoid doing such actions we do not need to identify to what extent any particular action is driven by our will. All we need to do is to curb our will (our likes, dislikes, desires, attachments, hopes, fears and so on, the seeds of which are our viṣaya-vāsanās) as much as we can, and the most effective means to do so is to try to be self-attentive.

To the extent that we are self-attentive, we are thereby curbing not only the rising of our viṣaya-vāsanās but also the rising of their root, namely ego, so this is the most effective means to surrender both ourself and our will.

Therefore, rather than paying any attention to our actions (such as by wondering to what extent they are driven either by destiny or by will), we should try to attend only to ourself.

Michael James said...

Referring to a video in which someone seems to have implied that a burning aspiration to achieve liberation is more important than the method or process adopted to achieve it, a friend asked whether this is correct, in reply to which I wrote:

Bhagavan often said, ‘bhakti is the mother of jñāna’, thereby implying that without love we cannot attain jñāna, because without all-consuming and heart-melting love we will not be willing to turn within and surrender ourself entirely.

As he said in verse 26 of Uḷḷadu Nāṟpadu, ‘ஆதலால், யாது இது என்று நாடலே ஓவுதல் யாவும் என ஓர்’ (ahandai-y-ē yāvum ām. ādalāl, yādu idu eṉḏṟu nādal-ē ōvudal yāvum eṉa ōr), ‘Therefore, know that investigating what this [ego] is alone is giving up everything’, so in order to be able to investigate ourself keenly enough to know what we actually are we need to be willing to give up everything, and we will be willing to give up everything else only when our svātma-bhakti (love to know and to be what we actually are) is so strong that it overwhelms and consumes all our desires and attachments for other things. This is why he said metaphorically in the eleventh paragraph of Nāṉ Ār? that in order to sink deep within ourself and obtain the pearl of ātman we need to tie the stone of vairāgya to our waist.

However, though all-consuming love is absolutely essential, this does not mean that the correct ‘method’ is not equally essential. How can we see the midday sun shining in the sky above us except by turning to look upwards? Likewise, how can we see the bright sun of pure awareness that is always shining in our heart as ‘I’ except by turning back within to look at ourself keenly?

This was made clear by Bhagavan in so many ways and in so many places. For example, in verse 22 of Uḷḷadu Nāṟpadu he asks rhetorically, ‘மதிக்கு ஒளி தந்து, அம் மதிக்குள் ஒளிரும் மதியினை உள்ளே மடக்கி பதியில் பதித்திடுதல் அன்றி, பதியை மதியால் மதித்திடுதல் எங்ஙன்? மதி’ (matikku oḷi tandu, a-m-matikkuḷ oḷirum matiyiṉai uḷḷē maḍakki patiyil padittiḍudal aṉḏṟi, patiyai matiyāl madittiḍudal eṅṅaṉ? madi), ‘Consider, except by, turning the mind back within, completely immersing it in God, who shines within that mind giving light to the mind, how to fathom God by the mind?’, and in verse 27 he likewise asks rhetorically, ‘நான் உதியாது உள்ள நிலை நாம் அது ஆய் உள்ள நிலை. நான் உதிக்கும் தானம் அதை நாடாமல், நான் உதியா தன் இழப்பை சார்வது எவன்? சாராமல், தான் அது ஆம் தன் நிலையில் நிற்பது எவன்? சாற்று’ (‘nāṉ’ udiyādu uḷḷa nilai nām adu-v-āy uḷḷa nilai. ‘nāṉ’ udikkum thāṉam-adai nāḍāmal, ‘nāṉ’ udiyā taṉ-ṉ-iṙappai sārvadu evaṉ? sārāmal, tāṉ adu ām taṉ nilaiyil niṟpadu evaṉ? sāṯṟu), ‘The state in which one exists without ‘I’ rising is the state in which we exist as that [brahman]. Without investigating the place where ‘I’ rises [namely sat-cit, one’s fundamental awareness of one’s own existence, ‘I am’], how to reach the annihilation of oneself, in which ‘I’ does not rise? Without reaching, say, how to stand in the state of oneself, in which oneself is that?’.

Michael James said...

A friend wrote to me: “The question of fate and will is indeed a very interesting topic. According to Bhagavan we must take this world in the same way as our dream. How much of the will do we have in our dreams? Probably only one: to keep on dreaming or we want to wake up :) The rest maybe just the seeming will, as the script has been already written. The question is: the thought flow, beginning from the primal thought ‘I’, lies in which domain? That of the fate or of the will? We cannot find any ‘cause’ of the thought ‘I’ since it is the primal ‘cause’ and all other thoughts stem from this first thought, leading me to believe that all the thoughts, beginning with the thought ‘I’ are in our fate domain. I cannot remember when my lack of self attention caused this ‘I’ to appear, in the same way we cannot remember the moment of falling asleep. Moreover our attention is the feature of ‘I’, but if ‘I’ falls into the fate domain so all of its features must fall there too. Please share your thoughts on the above”.

In reply to this I wrote:

According to Bhagavan, our present state, which we now take to be waking, is actually just another dream, so will and fate both play their respective roles in any other dream just as much as they do in this dream.

The thought ‘I’ is ego, which is the root of both will and fate, because it is what has a will of its own and acts accordingly, and therefore it has to experience the fruits of its past wilful actions as fate.

Like actions of speech and body, actions of mind (namely thoughts) may be driven either by will or by fate, or often by both working in sync. Whatever thoughts, words and deeds we need to do in order to experience our allotted fate we will be made to do, as Bhagavan says in the first sentence of the note that he wrote for his mother: ‘According to the destiny (prārabdha) of each person, he who is for that [namely God or guru, who ordains their destiny] being in the heart of each of them will make them act’.

However, though some of our actions are ones we are driven to do in accordance with our fate, most of them are driven by our will, but no action that we do driven by our will can alter in any way what we are destined to experience, as he says in the next two sentence of that note: ‘What will never happen will not happen whatever effort one makes [to make it happen]; what will happen will not stop whatever obstruction [or resistance] one does [to prevent it happening]’. To emphasise this he added ‘This indeed is certain’, and then concluded, ‘Therefore silently being [or being silent] is good’, thereby implying that we should refrain from acting according to our will.

How can we refrain from acting according to our will? The most effective means is cling firmly to self-attentiveness and thereby avoid being swayed by our viṣaya-vāsanās (inclinations to attend to anything other than ourself), which are the seeds of all our likes, dislikes, desires, attachments, hopes, fears and so on.

Michael James said...

A friend wrote to me about an elaborate explanation given by a Swami who ‘explains the Vedas in the traditional way’, according to which there are two levels of veiling and projection, namely the level of God and the level of jīva, and asked me whether such an explanation contradicts Bhagavan’s teachings. In reply to this I wrote:

As Bhagavan explained, within advaita different levels of explanation are offered to suit people of different levels of maturity, because the majority will not be willing to accept the deeper and simpler explanations. The set of explanations that is favoured by the majority of advaitins is sṛṣṭi-dṛṣṭi vāda and nānā jīva vāda, according to which the world is created by God through his power of māyā and it is subsequently perceived by numerous jīvas, the majority of whom are deluded by avidyā (ignorance) and therefore fail to see themselves and the world as brahman.

However, a deeper, simpler and more practical set of explanations is offered by Bhagavan in works such as Uḷḷadu Nāṟpadu and Nāṉ Ār?, and this set is what is called dṛṣṭi-sṛṣṭi vāda and ēka jīva vāda, according to which there is only one jīva or ego and the world seems to exist only in its view, like a dream, so it is created only by ego’s perception of it. Therefore, māyā and avidyā are not two different things (as they are according to the more superficial explanations) but are both just the nature of ego. If we as ego investigate ourself, we will dissolve and merge back into pure awareness, which is our real nature, and thus avidyā and māyā will both cease to exist along with ego.

According to this view, God is nothing other than our own real nature (ātma-svarūpa), but so long as we rise as ego and thereby limit ourself as a finite set of adjuncts (namely a body consisting of five sheaths) he seems to be something other than ourself. Therefore, as Bhagavan says in verse 25 of Upadēśa Undiyār, we can know God as he actually is only by knowing ourself without adjuncts.

It is all so simple, but for those who are not satisfied with simplicity, all sorts of complicated explanations need to be given to satisfy them.

Michael James said...

In a comment on my most recent video, 2021-01-05 Denis and Michael discuss ego, will and fate, a friend wrote, “... how specific is our destiny or fate? For example, why would one be destined to have a good meal on the 10th of December, a bad meal on the 11th of December and a good meal on the 12th of December? Can fate be that detailed and specific?”, to which I replied:

Yes, according to Bhagavan, every detail of what we are to experience (in the sense of what happens to us rather than by us) is predetermined, because it is all a carefully tailormade selection of the fruits of āgāmya (actions driven by our will) that we have done in previous lives.

Michael James said...

In a comment on my most recent video, 2021-01-05 Denis and Michael discuss ego, will and fate, another friend wrote, “Michael, you say that the actions we have to do in order to experience what we’re destined to experience, we’ll be made to this actions. Like cooking the good meal if we’re destined to eat a good meal. And that our will is also involved, we want to eat the good meal. If we curb or destroy the will, even though it may have been our destiny to eat the good meal, will it not happen, because we won’t even cook the meal?”, to which I replied:

Rajat, since it is destined to happen, it will certainly happen, whether we want it to happen or not. If we could completely curb our liking or desire to eat a tasty meal, whatever actions of our mind, speech or body are required for us to eat such a meal would not be driven by that liking or desire but they would nevertheless still be driven by God in accordance with our prārabdha (destiny or fate).

Michael James said...

In a comment on my most recent video, 2021-02-18 Michael James discusses ‘free will’: what is will and do we have freedom of will?, a friend asked, “Hi Michael, shouldn’t our free Will only be used to turn within and surrender to Ramana? Why would we want something else? Why use free will to achieve anything of the world once we are an aspirant on this path of self realization? We should not give any importance to the world. If anything happens, so be it. It is my destiny. Why be concerned since I am not this body and the world is a thought. I understand it is difficult, but isn’t this how our approach should be?”, to which I replied:

Yes, Krishna, that is the whole purpose and aim of what Bhagavan taught us about freedom of will. Using our freedom of will to want anything other than to turn within and surrender ourself is a misuse of it, so we need to persistently practise self-investigation and self-surrender in order to wean ourself off all our viṣaya-vāsanās and resultant likes, dislikes, desires, attachments, fears and so on.