The Spiritual Import of the Mahabharata and the Bhagavad gita : Ch-10. Part-16.




Chapter 10: The Imperishable Among All that is Perishable :


Part-16.


The various energies of our body-mind complex become concentrated spontaneously at the time of death.

The senses are withdrawn—you need not put forth great effort at the time of death to withdraw your senses.

You will not see, you will not hear, and you will not speak.

The senses cease to operate.

When a man is about to die, people come and ask, “Do you see me?

Do you know who I am? Who am I?”

He cannot say who they are.

He has ceased to see, he cannot hear what is spoken, and he cannot utter a word.

At that time, this state of affairs supervenes because of the withdrawal of the power of the senses.

The scripture tells us that the deities depart and cease to control the sense organs.

The sun operating in the eyes and the other devatas of the senses withdraw themselves and allow this bodily vehicle to go to putrefaction.

The powers of the senses therefore get converged in the mind and the mind enters the prana.

All this is told in the Upanishads and Brahma Sutras, etc.


Swami Krishnananda

To be continued  ....




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