Śrīmad Devi Bhāgavatam | Book 11 Chapter 1
THE ELEVENTH BOOK
Chapter I
On what is to be thought of in the morning
1-13. Nārada said:
O Bhagavān! O Thou, the Eternal One! O Nārāyaṇa! O Lord of the past and the future! Thou art the Creator and the Lord of all the beings that lived in the past and that will come into existence in the future.
Thou hast described to me the highly wonderful and excellent story of the Exalted Devī.
How She did assume the forms of Mahā Kālī, Mahā Lakṣmī, Mahā Saraswatī and Bhrāmarī, for the fulfilment of the Devas’ purposes and how the Devas got back their possessions by the Grace of the Devī. All you have described.
O Lord! Now I want to hear the rules of Sadāchāra (right way of living), the due observance of which by the devotees pleases the World-Mother. Kindly describe them.
Nārāyaṇa said:
O Knower of Truth! Now I am telling you those rules of the right way of living, which rightly observed, always please Bhagavatī.
Listen first, I will talk of the Brāhmins, how their welfare is secured, what the Brāhmaṇas ought to do on getting up early in the morning from their bed.
From the sunrise to the sunset the Brāhmaṇas should do all the daily and occasional duties (Nitya and Naimittika Karmas) and they are to perform the optional works for some particular object such as Puttreṣṭi Yajña and other good works (not acts of black magic as killing, causing pain and inconveniences to others, etc.).
It is the Self alone and not the Father, Mother, etc., nor any other body that, helps us on our way to that happiness in the next world.
Father, Mother, wife, sons and others are helps merely to our happiness in this world. None of them are helpful to us in bettering our states in the next world.
Deliverance of one's Self depends verily on his own Self. Therefore one should always earn and store dharma (religion) and observe always there the right conduct to help one in the next world. If Dharma be on our side, this endless sea of troubles can be safely crossed.
The rules of right living as ordained by Manu in Śrutis and Manu Smriti are the principal Dharmas. The Brāhmaṇas should always be observant to their Dharma as ordained in the Śāstras, Śruti and Smriti.
Follow the right conduct and then you will get life, posterity and increase of happiness easily here and hereafter. By right conduct, food is obtained and sins are easily destroyed; the right conduct is the auspicious principal Dharma of men.
Persons of right living enjoy happiness in this world as well as in the next. Those, who are veiled in darkness by Ignorance and thus wildly enchanted, can verily see their way to Mukti if they follow the Great Light revealed to them by Dharma and the right conduct.
It is by Sadāchāra, that superiority is attained. Men of right conduct always do good deeds. From good deeds, knowledge comes. This is the advice of Manu.
14-24. Right way of living is the best of all the Dharmas and is great Tapasyā (asceticism). The knowledge comes from this Right Living. Everything is attained thereby.
He who is devoid of Sadāchāra, is like a Śūdra, even if he comes of a Brāhmin family. There is no distinction whatsoever between him and a Śūdra.
Right conduct is of two kinds (1) as dictated by the Śāstras, (2) as dictated by the popular custom (Laukika). Both these methods should be observed by him who wants welfare for his Self. He is not to forsake one of them.
O Muni! The village Dharma, the Dharma of one's own caste, the Dharma of one's own family and the Dharma of one's own country all should be observed by men.
Never, never he is to do anything otherwise. With great loving devotion that is to be preserved. Men who practise wrong ways of living, are censured by the public; they always suffer from diseases.
Avoid wealth and desires that have no Dharma in them. Why? If in the name of dharma, painful acts (e. g. killing animals in sacrifices) are to be committed, those are blamed by the people; so never commit them. Avoid them by all means.
Nārada said:
“O Muni! The Śāstras are not one, they are many and they lay down different rules and contradictory opinions, How then Dharma is to be followed? And according what Dharma Śāstra?”
Nārāyaṇa said:
Śruti and Smriti are the two eyes of God; the Purāṇam is His Heart. Whatever is stated in Śruti, the Smriti and the Purāṇas is Dharma; whatever else is written in other Śāstras is not Dharma.
Where you will find differences between Śruti, Smriti and Purāṇas, accept the words of the Śrutis as final proofs. Wherever Smriti disagrees with the Purāṇas, know the Smriti more authoritative.
And where differences will crop up in the Śrutis themselves, know that Dharma, too, is of two kinds. And where the differences will crop up in the Smriti themselves, consider, then, that different things are aimed at.
In some Purāṇas, the Dharma of the Tantras is duly described; but of these, which go against the Vedas, they are not to be accepted any means.
25-37. Tantra is accepted as the authoritative proof then and then only when it contradicts not the Vedas. Whatever goes clearly against the Vedas can in no way be accepted as a proof.
In matters concerning Dharma, the Vedas is the Sole Proof. Therefore that which is not against the Vedas can be taken as proof; otherwise not.
Whoever acts Dharma according to other proofs than what is ordained in the Vedas, goes to the hell in the abode of Yama to get his lesson.
So the Dharma that is by all means to be accepted as such, is what is stated in the Vedas.
The Smriti, the Purāṇas, or the Tantra Śāstras can be taken also as authoritative when they are not conflicting to Vedas.
Any other Śāstras can be taken as authoritative when it is fundamentally coincident with the Vedas. Else it can never be accepted.
Those who do injury to others even by the blade of a Kuśa grass used as a weapon, go to hell with their heads downwards and their feet upwards.
Those that follow their own sweet free will, that take up any sort of dress (e. g. Bauddhas), those that follow the philosophical doctrines called Pāśupatas,
and the other hermits and saints and persons that take up other vows contrary to the religions of the Vedas, for example, the Vaikhānasa followers, those who brand their bodies by the hot Mudras, at the places of pilgrimages, e. g. Dwārkā, etc., they go to hell with their bodies scorched by red hot brands (Tapta Mudras).
So persons should act according to the excellent religions commanded by the Vedas.
Every day he should get up from his bed early in the morning and think thus:
“What good acts have I done, what have I given as charities? Or what I advised others to do charities what greater sins (Mahāpātakas) and what smaller sins have I committed?”
At the last quarter of the night he should think of Para Brahmā. He should place his right leg on his left thigh and his left on his right thigh crosswise keeping his head straight up and touching the breast with his chin, and closing his eyes, he should sit steadily so that the upper teeth should not touch the lower jaw.
He should join his tongue with his palate and he should sit quiet, restraining his senses. He should be Śuddha Sattva. His seat should not be very low.
First of all he should practice Prāṇāyāma twice or thrice; and within his heart he should meditate the Self of the shape of the Holy Flame or the Holy Light.
38-49. He should fix his heart for a certain time to that Luminous Self whose Eyes are everywhere. So the intelligent man should practise Dhāraṇā.
Prāṇāyāma is of six kinds:
(1) Sadhūma (when the breaths are not steady), (2) Nirdhūma(better than the Sadhūma), (3) Sagarbha (when united with one's mantra), (4) Agarbha (when the practice is without the thought of any mantra), (5) Salakṣya (when the heart is fixed on one's Deity) and (6) Alakṣya (when the heart is not fixed on one's Deity).
No yoga can be compared with Prāṇāyāma. This is equal to itself. Nothing can be its equal.
This Prāṇāyāma is of three kinds, called: Rechaka, Pūraka and Kumbhaka.
The Prāṇāyāma consists of three letters, A, U, M, i. e. of the nature of “Om”.
Or, in other words the letter A, of the Praṇava Om indicates Pūraka, the letter “U” denotes Kumbhaka and the letter “M” denotes Rechaka.
By the Iḍā Nādi (by the left nostril) inhale as long as you count “A” (Viṣṇu) thirty-two times;
then withhold breath, i.e., do Kumbhaka as long as you count “U” (Śiva) sixty-four times
and by the Pingala Nādi (the right nostril) do the Rechaka, i.e., exhale the breath as long as you count “M" (Brahmā) for sixteen times.
O Muni! Thus I have spoken to you of the Sadhūma Prāṇāyāma.
After doing the Prāṇāyāma as stated above, pierce the Six Chakras (i. e., plexuses) (called Ṣaṭhakra bheda) and carry the Kula Kundalini to the Brahmā Randhra, the brain aperture, or to the thousand petalled lotus in the head and meditate in the heart the Self like a Steady Flame.
(The Nāḍis are not those which are known to the Vaidya or the Medical Śāstras. The latter are the gross physical nerves, The Nāḍis here are the Yoga Nāḍis, the subtle channels (Vivaras) along which the Prāṇa currents flow.)
Now the process of piercing the six Chakras (or nerve centres or centres of moving Prāṇa forces) is being described:
Within this body, the six nerve centres called Padmas (Lotuses) exist. They are respectively situated at the
(1) Mūlādhāra (half way between Anus and Linga Mūla), called the Sacral Plexus;
(2) Linga Mūla (the root of the genital organs); called postatic plexus; (this is also called Svādhiṣṭhāna)
(3) Navel, the Solar Plexus
(4) Heart, the cardiac Plexus,
(5) Throat
(6) Forehead, between the eye brows there; the lotus in the forehead, called the cavernous plexus (Ājnā Chakra) has two petals; in these two petals, the two letters “Ham” “Kṣaṃ” exist in the right hand direction (with the bands of the watch; going round from left to right keeping the right side towards one circumambulated as a mark of respect).
I bow down to these which are the two- lettered Brahmā. The lotus that exists in the throat laryngeal or pharyngeal plexus has sixteen petals (viśuddhā chakra);
in these are in due order in right hand direction the sixteen letters (vowels) a, ā, i, ī, u, ū, ṛi, ṛī, lri, lrī, e, ai, o, au, am, aḥ; I bow down to these which are the sixteen lettered Brahmā.
The lotus that exists in the heart, the cardiac plexus (anahata chakra), has twelve petals; wherein are the twelve letters k, kh, g, gh, n, ch, chh, j, jh, ñ, ṭ, ṭh; I bow to to these twelve lettered Brahmā.
The Solar plexus forms the Great Junction of the Right and Left sympathetic chains Iḍā and Pingalā with the Cerebral-spinal Axis.
The lotus that exists in the navel, called the Solar Plexus, or Epigastric plexus (Maṇipura Chakra) has ten petals wherein are the ten letters ḍ, ḍh, ṇ, t, th, d, dh, n, p, ph, counting in the right hand direction (that is clockwise) (and the action of this clock is vertical in the plane of the spinal cord; also it may be horizontal).
The lotus that exists at the root of the genital organ, the genital plexus or prostatic plexus has six petals. The petals are the configurations made by the position of Nāḍis at any particular centre.
Svādhiṣṭhāna chakra or Svāyambhu Linga, wherein are situated the six letters: b, bh, m, y, r, l; I bow down to this six-lettered Brahmā. (These are the Laya Centres).
The lotus that exists in the Mūlādhāra, called the sacral or sacral-coccygeal plexus has four petals, wherein are the four letters: v, ś, ṣ, s. I bow down to these four-lettered Brahmā.
In the above six nerve centres or Laya Centres, or lotuses, all the letters are situated in the right hand direction (clockwise).
(Note: All the nerves of the body combine themselves in these six nerve centres or Laya Centres. Each of these centres is spheroidal and is of the Fourth Dimension. At each centre many transitions take place, many visions take place, many forces are perceived and wonderful varieties of knowledge are experienced. These are called the Laya Centres. For many things vanish into non-existence and many new Tattvas are experienced.)
Thus meditating on the Six Chakras or plexuses, meditate on the Kula Kundalini, the Serpent Fire. She resides on the four petalled lotus (Centre of Śaktī) called Mūlādhāra Chakra (Coccygeal plexus);
She is of Rajo Guṇa; She is of a blood red colour, and She is expressed by the mantra “Hrīm,” which is the Māyā bīja;
she is subtle as the thread of the fibrous stock of the water lily. The Sun is Her face; Fire is Her breasts; he attains Jīvan mukti (liberation while living) within whose heart such a Kula Kundalini arises and awakens even once.
Thus meditating on Kula Kundalini, one should pray to Her:
Her sitting, coming, going, remaining, the thought on Her, the realisation of Her and chanting hymns to Her, etc., all are Mine, Who is of the nature of all in all; I am that Bhagavatī;
O Bhagavatī! All my acts are Thy worship; I am the Devī; I am Brahmā, I am free from sorrow. I am of the nature of Everlasting Existence, Intelligence and Bliss.
Thus one should meditate of one's own-self:
I take refuge of that Kula Kundalini, who appears like lightning and who holds the current thereof, when going to Brahmārandhra, in the brain, who appears like nectar when coming back from the brain to the Mūlādhāra and who travels in the Suṣumnā Nādi in the spinal cord.
Then one is to meditate on one's own Guru, who is thought of as one with God, as seated in one's brain and then worship Him mentally.
Then the Sadhaka, controlling himself is to recite the following Mantra:
“The Guru is Brahmā, the Guru is Viṣṇu, it is the Guru again that is the Deva Mahēśvara; it is Guru that is Para Brahmā. I bow down to that Śrī Guru.”
gurur brahmā gurur viṣṇu gurur devo maheśvaraḥ
guruḥ sākśāt parabrahma tasmai śrī gurave namaḥ
Here ends the First Chapter of the Eleventh Book on what is to be thought of in the morning in the Mahā Purāṇam Śrīmad Devī Bhāgavatam of 18,000 verses by Mahāṛṣi Veda Vyāsa.