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The Book Of One
Dennis Waite
awakening
nonduality
the eyeless eye
meditation
seeing without shadows
the wonder of wonder

How To Meet Yourself
and find true happiness
Dennis Waite
adyashanti
dennis waite
eckhart tolle
francis lucille
frederick franck
greg goode
jan
kersschot
jerry katz
j
krishnamurti
leo hartog
meister
eckhart
nisargadatta
maharaj
ramesh balsekar
rumi
stanley
sobottka
steven harrison
wei wu wei
yatri

Enlightenment
the path through the jungle
Dennis Waite

Back To The Truth
Dennis Waite
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what is advaita?
Sarah and
the Sage look beyond the labels
"So, Swami-ji, what would you say that Advaita is?"
The eager young woman crossed her legs and sat expectantly, pencil
poised above a pristine pad of paper.
"It simply means 'not two' the ultimate truth is
non-dual," replied the Sage, reclining in a large and
comfortable-looking armchair and not sitting in an upright lotus
position, as he ought to have been, for the sake of the photograph that
she had just taken, if nothing else.
She continued to wait for further elucidation before beginning to write
but it soon became apparent that the answer had been given. "But is it a
religion? Do you believe in God, for example?"
"Ah, well, that would depend upon what you mean by
those words, wouldn't it?" he responded, irritatingly. "If, by 'religion', you mean does it have priests and churches and a band of
followers who are prepared to kill non-believers, then the answer is no.
If, on the other hand, you refer to the original, literal meaning of
the word, namely to 'bind again', to reunite the mistaken person that we
think we are with the Self that we truly are, then yes, it is a
religion. Similarly, if by 'God' you mean a separate, supernatural
being who created the universe and will reward us by sending us to
heaven if we do what He wants, then the answer is no. If you use the
term in the sense of the unmanifest, non-dual reality, then yes, I most
certainly do believe in God."
The pencil raced across the paper, recording the
answer for the benefit of the magazine's readers but, as the words
clashed with previous ideas in her memory, the lack of a clear
resolution of her questions was reflected by an increasing puzzlement in
her expression.
He registered this with compassion and held out his hand
towards her. "Give me a piece of paper from your pad."
She looked up, mouth slightly open as she wondered why he could possibly
want that. But she turned the pad over, carefully tore off the bottom
sheet and placed it in his outstretched hand. He turned to the table at
his right and deftly began to fold and refold the paper. After a few
moments, he turned back and, before she had had time to see what he had
done, he held the paper aloft and launched it into the air. It rose
quickly and circled gracefully around the room before losing momentum
and diving to meet a sudden end when its pointed nose hit a sauce bottle
on the dining table. "Could you bring it back over here do you think?"
he asked.
"So, what would you say that we have here?" he
asked, as she handed it back to him. "It's a paper aeroplane," she
replied, with just a hint of questioning in her voice, since the answer
was so obvious that she felt he must have some other purpose in mind.
"Really?" he responded and, in an instant, he
screwed up the object and, with a practised, over-arm movement, threw it
effortlessly in a wide arc, from which it landed just short of the waste
paper basket in the corner of the room. "And now?" he asked. "It's a
screwed-up ball of paper", she said, without any doubt in her voice this
time.
"Could you bring it back again, please", he
continued. She did so, wondering if this was typical of such an
interview, spending the session chasing about after bits of paper like a
dog running after a stick. He took the ball and carefully unfolded it,
spread it out on the table and smoothed his hand over it a few times
before handing it back to her. "And now it is just a sheet of paper
again," he said, "although I'm afraid it's a bit crumpled now!"
He looked at her, apparently anticipating some sign of
understanding if not actual revelation but none was forthcoming. He
looked around the room and, after a moment, he stood up, walked over to
the window and removed a rose from a vase standing in the alcove.
Returning to his seat, he held the rose out to her and asked, "What is
this?"
She was feeling increasingly embarrassed as it was
clear he was trying to explain something fundamental, which she was not
understanding. Either that or he was mad or deliberately provoking her,
neither of which seemed likely, since he remained calm and open and
somehow intensely present. "It's a flower," she replied eventually.
He then deliberately took one of the petals between
his right-hand thumb and fore-finger and plucked it. He looked at her
and said, "And now?" She didn't reply, though it seemed that this time
he didn't really expect an answer. He continued to remove the petals
one by one until none remained, looking up at her after each action.
Finally, he pulled the remaining parts of the flower head off the stem
and dropped them onto the floor, leaving the bare stalk, which he held
out to her. "Where is the flower now?" he asked. Receiving no reply,
he bent down and picked up all of the petals, eventually displaying them
in his open hand. "Is this a flower?" he asked.
She shook her head slowly. "It was a flower only when all
of the petals and the other bits were all attached to the stem."
"Good!" he said, appreciatively. "Flower is the
name that we give to that particular arrangement of all of the parts.
Once we have separated it into its component parts, the flower ceases
to exist. But was there ever an actual, separate thing called 'flower'?
All of the material that constituted the original form is still here in
these parts in my hand.
"The paper aeroplane is an even simpler example.
There never was an aeroplane was there? And I don't just mean that it
was only a toy. There was only ever paper. To begin with, the paper was
in the form of a flat sheet for writing on. Then, I folded it in various
ways so that it took on an aerodynamic shape which could fly through the
air slowly. The name that we give to that form is 'aeroplane'.
When I screwed it up, the ball-shape could be thrown more accurately. 'Aeroplane' and
'ball' were names relating to particular forms of the
paper but at all times all that ever actually existed was paper.
"Now, this sort of analysis applies to every 'thing' that
you care to think of. Look at that table over there and this chair on
which you are sitting. What are they made of? You will probably say that
they are wooden chairs?"
He looked at her questioningly and she nodded, knowing at
the same time that he was going to contradict her. "Well, they are made
of wood certainly, but that does not mean that they are wooden chairs!
On the contrary, I would say that this, that you are sitting on, is
actually chair-y wood, and that object over there is table-y wood. What
do you say to that?"
"You mean that the thing that we call 'chair' is
just a name that we give to the wood when it is that particular shape
and being used for that particular function?" she asked, with
understanding beginning to dawn.
"Exactly! I couldn't have put it better myself.
It is quite possible that I could have a bag full of pieces of wood
that can be slotted together in different ways so that at one time I
might assemble them into something to sit upon, another time into
something to put food upon and so on. We give the various forms
distinct names and we forget that they are ONLY names and forms and not
distinct and separate things.
"Look here's an apple," he said, picking one out
of the bowl on the table and casually tossing it from one hand to the
other before holding it up for her to examine. "It's round or to be
more accurate, spherical; it's reddish in colour and it has", he sniffed
it, "a fruity smell. No doubt if I were to bite into it, I would find
it juicy and sweet.
"Now all of these round, red, fruity, juicy,
sweet are adjectives describing the noun 'apple.' Or, to use more Advaitic
terms, let me say that the 'apple' is the 'substantive' the apparently
real, separately existing thing and all of the other words are
'attributes' of the apple merely incidental qualities of the thing
itself. Are you with me so far?"
She nodded hesitantly but, after a little
reflection, more positively. "But suppose I had carried out this
analysis with the rose that we looked at a moment ago. I could have
said that it was red, delicate, fragrant, thorny and so on. And we
would have noted that all of those were simply attributes and that the
actual existent thing, the substantive, was the rose. But then we went
on to see that the rose wasn't real at all. It was just an assemblage
of petals and sepals and so on I'm afraid I am not a botanist! In the
same way, we could say that the apple consists of seeds and flesh and
skin. We may not be able to put these things together into any form
different from an apple but Nature can.
"If you ask a scientist what makes an apple an
apple, he will probably tell you that is the particular configuration of
nucleotides in the DNA or RNA of the cells. There are many different
species of apple and each one will have a slight variation in the
chromosomes and it is that which differentiates the species. If you
want to explain to someone what the difference is between a Bramley and
a Granny Smith, you will probably say something like 'the Bramley is
large and green, used mainly for cooking and is quite sharp tasting,
while the Granny Smith is still green but normally much smaller and
sweeter'. But these are all adjectives or attributes. What is actually
different is the physical makeup of the cell nuclei.
"But, if we look at a chromosome or a strand of
DNA, are we actually looking at a self-existent, separate thing? If you
look very closely through an electron microscope, you find that DNA is
made up of four basic units arranged in pairs in a long, spiral chain.
And any one of these units is itself made up of atoms of carbon,
hydrogen, oxygen and nitrogen, again arranged in a very specific way.
So even those are not separate 'things-in-themselves'; they are names
given to particular forms of other, more fundamental things.
"And so we arrive at atoms even the ancient
Greeks used to think that everything was made up of atoms. Are these
the final 'substantives' with all of the apparent things in the world
being merely attributes? Well, unfortunately not. Science has known
for a long time that atoms mainly consist of empty space with electrons
spinning around a central nucleus of protons and neutrons. And science
has known for somewhat less time that these particles, which were once
thought to be fundamental, are themselves not solid, self-existent
things but are either made up of still smaller particles or are in the
form of waves, merely having probabilities of existence at many
different points in space.
"Still more recently, science claimed that all of
the different particles are themselves made out of different
combinations of just a few particles called quarks and that those are
the ultimately existing things. But they have not yet progressed far
enough. The simple fact of the matter is that every 'thing' is
ultimately only an attribute, a name and form superimposed upon a more
fundamental substantive. We make the mistake of thinking that there
really is a table, when actually there is only wood. We make the
mistake of thinking that there is really wood, when actually there is
only cellulose and sugars and proteins. We make the mistake of thinking
there is protein when this is only a particular combination of atoms.
Ultimately, everything in the universe is seen to be only name and
form of a single substantive."
The journalist was transfixed; not exactly open-mouthed
but her pencil had not moved for some time. Eventually, she asked in a
small voice: "But then where do I fit into all of this?"
"Ah", he replied. "That again depends upon what
you mean by the word 'I'. Who you think you are 'Sarah' is
essentially no different from the table and chair. You are simply name
and form, imposed upon the non-dual reality. Who you really are,
however
well, that is quite different you are that non-dual reality.
You see, in the final analysis, there are not two things; there is only
non-duality. That is the truth; that is Advaita."
~ Dennis Waite
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Dennis Waite has been a student of Advaita for over
20 years and maintains one of the most visited websites on the subject.
He is a moderator of the Advaitin group and has
published several books,
including
'The Book of One' and 'Back to the Truth: 5000 Years of Advaita'.
For information about the
books, together with endorsements and many extracts, visit
www.advaita.org.uk
Note: This essay may be freely published and
circulated, provided that these notes are also included.
If you do
publish it in any hardcopy format, it would be great if you could let
the author know by emailing him via the website.
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