Sunday, October 07, 2012

Body is karmic fruit - mantrA 160

srigurubhyO namahA |
In the 160th mantrA, the sage details the alchemical process behind the formation of the physical body. The clever use of allegories adds to the poetic beauty of what is being discussed and highlights the truth that this physical body has its origins in perishable matter and thus is also perishable. The fig (atthi pazham) and the amaranthus (arai kIrai) are clearly organic in composition and we are instantly made aware of the perishable nature of both. This in fact is also the story with the physical body.



அத்திப் பழமும் அறைக்கீரை நல்வித்தும்
கொத்தி உலைபெய்து கூழட்டு வைத்தனர்
அத்திப் பழத்தை அறைக்கீரை வித்துண்ணக்
கத்தி எடுத்தவர் காடுபுக் காரே. I.2.18.160
 
Fruit of fig and seeds of green to pieces chopped,
In a pot they placed, mixed and ground to paste;
Seeds of green the fruit of fig consumed,
Loud they wailed, and bore the body in haste. I.2.18.160

Com - Fruit of fig and seeds of green, The fruited fig or shrOnithA and the seeds of green or shuklam to pieces chopped,In a pot they placed, mixed and ground to paste; were stewed together in the ‘pot’ known as the womb and their combined juices were cooked into the ‘gruel’ known as the embryo (karu). Seeds of green the fruit of fig consumed, then the shronithA was affected by the presence of the shuklam (i.e. fertilisation occured) and produced the foetus. Loud they wailed, and the baby whose birth was heralded by the loud screams of labour pains, and bore the body in haste. Eventually had to also be taken to the graveyard (at the end of its natural life).

*Using the twilight language or paribAshA to veil the subject of discussion, the sage brings our attention to a very important idea. To understand this better, we need to be aware of the ayurvEdic/holistic concept of shuklam and shrOnitham. The reproductive energy and also the physical egg in the woman is known by the term ‘shrOnitham’. This has been described in the texts as being red in colour and oval in shape. Thus the sage is using the metaphor of the ‘atthi pazham’ or the fruited fig which is similar in appearance and colour. The sperm of the male and the reproductive/creative energy is known as shuklam. This has been described as being white in colour and minute. So the apt metaphor of the seeds of the ‘arai kIrai’ (amaranthus tritis) a kind of spinach is used to indicate it. ‘The seeds of the green consuming the fig’ refers to the process of fertilisation or the admixture of the shuklam and the shrOnitham. This union of the two forces takes place in the womb and is responsible for the life that begins to grow from within it. With great pain the baby is born into this world. However, once the appointed time of death arrives, this body so brought into the world will have to be consigned to the flames.
The important point to note here is that the body that is the result of the admixture of the shuklam and the shrOnitham is by its very nature perishable. This is not the case with the body of light or one that is not born from the womb. More on this subject will follow in the later tantrAs.

thirucchitrambalam |

4 comments:

Anonymous said...

body is transitory, agreed. but why keep on stressing it, singing so many songs on the same theme again and again, stuck on one idea. is this really from one person or the same idea from different persons compiled and made to look as though from one person..just like most of our ancient literature.

and if you really want to sustain interest here, i would rather suggest you go by themes rather than by every song every week.

is this you recapping things for yourself or discussing things for others.

if its the former, the pace and the elaborateness and the repeatedness is ok, but if this for an audience, i suggest you go be themes and a multiple songs on the things.

Anonymous said...

the last line reads as

i suggest you go by themes and a multiple of songs on one particular theme.

there was a typo there.

mooligai sidhan said...

srigurubhyO namahA |

@anonymous,
body is transitory, agreed.
I am delighted to know that you have understood that the body is transitory!
but why keep on stressing it, singing so many songs on the same theme again and again, stuck on one idea.
Because I am pretty sure that you still have not lost all body identification from reading the last few mantrAs on this topic! It is one thing to 'intellectually' say that ya, the body is transitory..but it is quite another thing to get it in perspective and change your everyday actions to correspond to the change in awareness unless that awareness was holistic and all encompassing.
Though you may feel that the sage is saying the same thing over and over again, I am afraid there is no overstressing this fact.Until you and every reader is absolutely aware that this body is transitory and that they are not the body (and change your everyday actions to reflect that), we have not really understood what the sage is trying to say. Not just the twenty odd mantrAs in this text, even if from today until kingdom come I kept saying the same thing there is no guarantee that one will overcome the delusion of being the body.
This delusion is 'anAdi' or one that has been continuing for eons and eons and it is not something that can be destroyed from reading a few mantrAs. Thus in the context of this being in the first tantrA titled upadEshA, the words of the guru to the new initiate to prepare him for the journey, it is quite appropriate that the guru spends time to get these basic delusions removed. Thus the transcience of the body, one's wealth, youth etc has to be clearly cognised by one who is to be expected to spend long hours everday through years and years dedicated to the pursuit of self. The world is full of distractions and if one was not made aware of the pointlessness in persuing these distractions, then I am sure it will only be matter of time before one is led astray from the goal of self.

mooligai sidhan said...

srigurubhyO namahA |
@anonymous,

''and if you really want to sustain interest here, i would rather suggest you go by themes rather than by every song every week.''

Thanks for the advice. Though I can tell you rightaway that I am not writing this commentary with the sole objective of sustaining interest here on this blog. If there is one reader who benefits in some way from this, then it has been worth the effort. Thats all.My main objective would be to do justice to the text of the thirumandiram and not how to present the text to get maximum readership.

''is this you recapping things for yourself or discussing things for others.''

Well, I think I would have the good sense to keep it as a word document in my own laptop if this was an exercise of recapping things to myself! The use of a public platform is ofcourse with a view to present the wisdom of the thirumandiram to others.

''if its the former, the pace and the elaborateness and the repeatedness is ok, but if this for an audience, i suggest you go be themes and a multiple songs on the things.''

It is not the former. And thanks for your suggestion. As presented at the very onset of this commentary, my aim is to provide a full commentary to the text. As such that involves going mantrA by mantrA. That too I can only do in the pace I can with other commitments to my time daily.So I am sorry if this is too slow or spread out for you.

If I perhaps publish this as a book someday, I will certainly keep your suggestions in mind and cull the text to manageable size.