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By Suma Varughese Former
banker Ramesh S. Balsekar seems to be the new destination of serious spiritual
seekers. In words reminiscent of J.
Krishnamurti, he tells them that they are already there; only they
have to realize it
It was a disconcerting start for an interview. "There
is no me," asserted the voice. Who then was this spare little man in white kurta
pajamas, eyes beaming softly from a chiseled ascetic face, sitting in a cozy little
room in his flat in Mumbai, western India, with a small group of Indians and foreigners?
"What you see is a body-mind organism called Ramesh Balsekar,"
clarified the apparition gently.
It gets worse.
"All that is, is Consciousness."
"An individual has no free will. Everything happens according to God's will."
"Reality is a concept."
"There is no birth and no death. The final
truth is that nothing has happened, there is no creation. There is no seeker and
no sought. We are dreamed up creatures."
Each statement hits the mind like a bullet, ripping through and shredding
your conditionings, convictions, attitudes, thoughts, destroying every
comfortable crutch, every attribute of identity, leaving you with nothing,
not even yourself. No self, no will, no reality, no birth, no death, no
creation… only the Upanishadic neti, neti (not this, not that). Such ruthless
negation can be frightening, even disorienting. Yet, Balsekar's
students cannot have enough of it. Gabriela Jungblath, a young German
woman who has been to Ramana
Maharshi's ashram in Tamil Nadu, southern India, and to H.W.L.
Poonja in Lucknow, northern India, before coming to Balsekar, explains
why: "With the others, I had to do very hard sadhana. Here, Ramesh tells
us it is not necessary to do anything, as there is 'no one' to do it.
A burden has lifted off my shoulders!"
For most foreigners, Balsekar is the guru of the last resort, turned
to when a lifetime's spiritual search fails to yield result. Indeed, one
Indian disciple calls Balsekar's group "the graduate class". The
Indians drawn to him are not professional seekers, but even they find
value in his uncommon philosophy.
"I'm falling more and more in love with him," sighs Manjushri,
a video-film editor. Murthy, a former lecturer and now a bookie at Mumbai's Mahalaxmi
Race Course, adds: "The first time I met him, he cut off all my concepts. He didn't
leave me anything to think about. There's no more learning, just love. Last week,
I gave away 200 of my religious books."
Kavita
Mukhi, who runs a health food shop, reports: "The idea of Divine Will has changed
the way I view everything, including relationships. There is no enmity, jealousy,
or anger once you realize that no one's responsible for his or her actions."
Sit in on one of his sessions, and it is easy to see why Balsekar
elicits such love or is held in such high regard. When listening to a
student unburden himself, he is deeply attentive. "Oh, I see," he responds
with infinite compassion, or "I understand", and you know he does. He
validates his students, confirms their insights and sends them on their
spiritual journey.
Balsekar is not a guru for the masses, but his popularity has been
growing among a select band of people in India and abroad, kindled by
the seminars he has conducted in the USA and Germany between 1987-93,
his annual fortnight-long seminars at Kovalam beach, Kerala, southern
India, and his talks. Since last year, however, he has restricted himself
to daily morning sessions at his home.
Many people, however, would know him through his books. Starting with
Pointers From Nisargadatta
Maharaj, an expansion of his guru's philosophy, he went on to
write A Duet of One, an analysis of the Ashtavakra
Gita, Experiencing the Teaching, The Final Truth, From
Consciousness to Consciousness, Consciousness Speaks, Ripples,
and Consciousness Writes. Published in the USA, his books brought
him to the notice of Westerners, who have traditionally opted for the
jnana (knowledge) route to enlightenment.
Ramesh Balsekar is an unlikely guru, somewhat in the mold of Jiddu
Krishnamurti. He hasn't systematized his teaching nor set up an organization
to promote it. A former general manager of the Bank of India and a golfer,
he lives in the upmarket Warden Road area of Mumbai. The spacious, tastefully
furnished apartment, the upper middle class ethos, his flawless English
and drawing room manners area far cry from the traditional ochre-robed
hirsute gurus. He isn't above swapping the occasional dirty joke, though
admittedly washed clean by the sheer joy of narration.
Balsekar even savors his role as a family man. He lives with his
wife, while a daughter and a son live away from Mumbai. Both his children,
he says, are interested in his teaching. His eyes twinkle with pride when
he talks about the recent prize his granddaughter won for being the most
popular girl in school.
Balsekar sums up his philosophy in four words: "Thy will be done."
This acceptance of the absoluteness of Divine Will is based on the non-duality
of Advaita Vedanta.
When Balsekar says: "All that is, is Consciousness", he means that
the Universe, including us, is a manifestation of the Creator and has
no separate existence. Truly understanding this intellectually and experientially
reveals the illusory nature of the Universe and the self, enabling us
to know ourselves as we really arebeyond attributes, beyond mind-body,
time and space. Each one of us is omnipresent, eternal, the nothing that
contains everything. In short, the Self is God.
Surrendering to Divine Will eliminates all sense of personal doership,
of pride in success, of guilt or shame in failure, or enmity at another's
actions. All action is an expression of Totality, and has nothing to do
with us. Free of worry or remorse, we experience freedom.
Further, our subject-object relationship with the world changes to one
of witnessing. "Things happen. Anger happens, compassion may arise," says
Balsekar, as opposed to 'I am angry' or 'I am compassionate'. Witnessing
eventually leads to the state of 'I am', where we are able to know ourselves
without any attribute, save the one truth that we exist.
To rub home the primacy of Divine Will, Balsekar juxtaposes Mother
Teresa with a psychopath. "Good things happen through Mother Teresa
and bad things through a psychopath, because that is how their body-mind
organisms have been programmed. Neither had any choice."
Isn't the trap of fatalism lurking here? No, explains Balsekar,
"because the energy inside won't let you do nothing". The best plan of
action, he recommends, is to continue doing whatever you are doing, safe
in the knowledge that what you do is what God wants you to do, otherwise
the thought would not have entered your head. All thoughts, feelings and
desires are reactions of the brain to outside stimuli. Therefore, it is
erroneous to attribute ownership to any of them.
This reasoning pre-empts the existence of individual soul or personal
karma. "When we die, we go back to the pool of Consciousness, which sends
forth other body-mind organisms to continue the cycle of cause and effect.
Where is the question of reward or punishment when there is no 'you'?"
he asks acerbically.
His own life is proof that even spiritual seeking is due to God's grace.
His quest started when he was just 12, but in fulfillment of a prediction,
he found his true guru, Nisargadatta Maharaj, only a year after
retiring from his job at the bank.
Unlettered
and poor, Nisargadatta was a beedi (an Indian variation of the
cigarette) shop owner when enlightenment dawned. His clear and lucid elucidation
of jnana yoga proves that wisdom has little to do with learning.
His talks, compiled in I Am That by a foreign disciple Maurice
Friedman, is a classic of our times. Nisargadatta lived in a small loft in a congested area in Mumbai,
where Balsekar went to meet him. Maharaj was alone. On seeing Balsekar,
he said: "So you have come at last. What took you so long?" Soon after,
Balsekar attained realization, which he narrates in Consciousness
Speaks.
Even before Nisargadatta Maharaj's death from throat cancer in
1981, Balsekar was authorized to speak on his behalf. In due time,
Maharaj's mantle fell upon him. While their philosophy is identical, Balsekar's
presentation is often quite different. His higher level of education and
knowledge add clarity to Nisargadatta's statements. He has coined many
terms to distinguish different concepts.
And while Maharaj still addressed the person rather than Consciousness,
Balsekar refuses to do so. Nisargadatta did prescribe ways to reach
enlightenment, such as staying in the 'I am' or practicing desirelessness
and fearlessness. But for Balsekar, there is no question of getting
there since we already are there. All we need is to know that. No spiritual
practice can speed up the process. "If meditation is to happen,
it will happen," he says.
Such a rigorous approach seems to be producing results. According to one
of his disciples, at least five or six of his students have realized whatever
they had to realize. Balsekar himself, however, says that there
is no way to judge if a person is enlightened or not from his behavior.
This is because the experience may or may not bring any change in the
body or the mind.
What then is the benefit of enlightenment? None,
because there is no one left to enjoy it, he points out.
His characteristic
negation extends to his own teaching. Once he began a talk by saying that he was
not teaching anything to anybody, and then promptly corrected himself: "I'm selling
something that is nothing on behalf of the Divine Entity, which is really no entity
and therefore nothing either. And the biggest joke is I'm selling this nothing
to you who are all nothing! This is really a joke. But until the joke is realized
as a joke, it can be a terribly tragic joke."