The Panchakosas
Q. How then can this delusion disappear?
A. Why, Viveka and Vijnana will make it disappear.
Q. For the Jivi reflected in the Buddhi and the Kootastha have they any
superimposition, one upon the other?
A. Though there may be no superimposition for all appearances, the superimposition
exists.
Q. How is that?
A. the Kootastha is unattached, unmoved, unaffected, ever-free. Still
due to the superimposition, it appears differently. This is the result
of their co-existence.
Q. Some elders say that "That and Thwam" are the same, identical; how
is that? What is its meaning? Please enlighten me.
A. Take the pot, the house and a picture. They are distinct, is it not?
They are not identical. But the Akasa that is in all of these is the same.
When the Upadhi or Condition or Limitation is removed, the Akasa in the
pot (ghata), house (mata) and picture (pita) all merge with the Akasa
that is unconditioned, unlimited. Light too is like this. The light inside
and the light outside merge.
Q. Well, Swami. You have said that the human being in this body composed
of the five elements has to realise the Atma encased in the Panchakosa.
What is Panchakosa, exactly?
A. Kosa means a sheath, a case, a cover. A sword is put into a scabbard.
Money is kept in a treasury or kosa. You must realise that the thing kept
in this five-fold case, is the real 'I'. To see one's own truth one has
to remove the five cases, the Panchakosa.
Q. Which are these five, Swami?
A. They are called the Annamaya, the Praanamaya, the Manomaya, the Vijnaanamaya
and the Aanandamaya kosas.
Q. What does Annamaya mean?
A. This body grew in the womb of the mother with the help of the Anna
or Food taken by the mother. Besides, even after birth, it has grown and
is being sustained by food alone. After death, it becomes part of the
Earth which produces Food. So it is called Anna-maya.
Q. Of what importance is this Annamaya kosa?
A. It is the Sthula Deha, the gross body, which suffers grief and exults
in joy.
Q. Is that the only name it has? Or has it any other name?
A. It has. It is called "Bhogaayathanam."
Q. The Praanamaya kosa; what does that mean?
A. The sphere of the five senses, the five Pranas; they form this cover.
Q. Swami! It seems there are not only Pranas; there are Upa-pranas also?
A. There are. They are called: Nag, Kurma, Gridhra, Devadatta and Dhananjaya.
Q. What is the action of each of these?
A. Naga causes belching; Kurma causes blinking of the eyelids; Gridhra
is responsible for sneezing; Devadatta causes the yawn; Dhananjaya fills
the body and causes it to grow fat. Even after death, these affect the
body and cause changes in the corpse.
Q. What does Manomaya kosa mean?
A. The sphere of the five Jnanendriyas, plus the mind, of which they have
become the instruments. It is inside the Pranamayakosa.
Q. You say often mind, mind; please explain what that mind is.
A. That which makes you feel you are the body and feel all things related
to the body as "Mine"; that which runs out through the senses to the objects,
in order to experience the pleasure therefrom. It is thus rendered very
unsteady; always flitting from one object to another.
Q. Swami! How is man to realise that he is separate from, beyond and
above the Annamaya-kosa?
A. The body is not evident before birth or after death. It is seen only
during the intervening period of time. The body has a beginning and an
end, growth and decay. Such things are 'products', 'effects', and effects
are conditioned. So the body too is limited, conditioned thing. The wise
man tells himself, "I exist always: I am not material; I have no
cause and effect, I am separate from this gross body. So, I cannot be
this Annamaya-kosa. I am the knower of the Annamaya-kosa; I am the witness."
When this knowledge is well established, he knows the truth. He must realise
that he is beyond the Annamaya sheath.
Q. How is one to realise that he is beyond the Pranamaya-kosa?
A. At night, when the individual is asleep, the Pranas, or vital airs
are moving; but one does not know what is happening in him or around him.
He does not fight if enemies come during his sleep. He is inert and inactive
like a log. But "My nature is not this inertness. I am the ever-conscious
witness. I am separate from all the sheaths," thus he must discriminate,
reflect and know.