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Śrīmad-Bhāgavatam
<< Canto 2, The Cosmic Manifestation >> << 2 - The Lord in the Heart >>
<< VERSE 19 >>
इत्थं मुनिस्तूपरमेद्व्यवस्थितो विज्ञानदृग्वीर्यसुरन्धिताशयः स्वपार्ष्णिनापीड्य गुदं ततोऽनिलं स्थानेषु षट्सून्नमयेज्जितक्लमः
itthaṁ munis tūparamed vyavasthito vijñāna-dṛg-vīrya-surandhitāśayaḥ sva-pārṣṇināpīḍya gudaṁ tato ’nilaṁ sthāneṣu ṣaṭsūnnamayej jita-klamaḥ
WORD BY WORD
ittham thus, by Brahman realization; muniḥ the philosopher; tu but; uparamet should retire; vyavasthitaḥ well situated; vijñāna-dṛk by scientific knowledge; vīrya strength; su-randhita well regulated; āśayaḥ aim of life; sva-pārṣṇinā with the heel of one’s foot; āpīḍya by blocking; gudam the air hole; tataḥ thereafter; anilam life air; sthāneṣu in the places; ṣaṭsu six primary; unnamayet must be lifted; jita-klamaḥ by extinguishing material desires;
TRANSLATION
| By the strength of scientific knowledge, one should be well situated in absolute realization and thus be able to extinguish all material desires. One should then give up the material body by blocking the air hole [through which stool is evacuated] with the heel of one’s foot and by lifting the life air from one place to another in the six primary places.
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PURPORT
| There are many durātmās who claim to have realized themselves as Brahman and yet are unable to conquer material desires. In the Bhagavad-gītā [18.54] it is clearly explained that an absolutely self-realized soul becomes completely aloof from all material desires. Material desires are based on the false ego of the living being and are exhibited by his childish and useless activities to conquer the laws of material nature and by his desire to lord it over the resources of the five elements. With such a mentality, one is led to believe in the strength of material science, with its discovery of atomic energy and space travel by mechanical vehicles, and by such tiny advancements in material science the false egoist tries to challenge even the strength of the Supreme Lord, who can finish all man’s tiny endeavors in less than a second. The well-situated self, or Brahman-realized soul, perfectly understands that the Supreme Brahman, or the Personality of Godhead, is the all-powerful Vāsudeva and that he (the self-realized living being) is a part and parcel of the supreme whole. As such, his constitutional position is to cooperate with Him in all respects in the transcendental relation of the served and the servitor. Such a self-realized soul ceases to exhibit his useless activities of attempting to lord it over material nature. Being scientifically well informed, he fully engages himself in faithful devotion to the Lord.
| | The expert yogī who has thoroughly practiced the control of the life air by the prescribed method of the yoga system is advised to quit the body as follows. He should plug up the evacuating hole with the heel of the foot and then progressively move the life air on and on to six places: the navel, abdomen, heart, chest, palate, eyebrows and cerebral pit. Controlling the life air by the prescribed yogic process is mechanical, and the practice is more or less a physical endeavor for spiritual perfection. In olden days such practice was very common for the transcendentalist, for the mode of life and character in those days were favorable. But in modern days, when the influence of Kali Age is so disturbing, practically everyone is untrained in this art of bodily exercise. Concentration of the mind is more easily attained in these days by the chanting of the holy name of the Lord. The results are more effective than those derived from the inner exercise of the life air.
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