joedirt wrote:I also have a translation by Paramahansa Yogananda, but I can not seem to locate it right now.
Man, I haven't seen my copy of Sri Yogananda's translation and commentary,
God Talks with Arjuna: The Bhagavad Gita, since the late 1970s. Lent it to a "friend" who left town with it.
Before Sri Swami Yogananda actually translated the Bhagavad Gita, himself, he was enthusiastic to present to the Western world, the translation of Sir Edwin Arnold,
The Song Celestial. Personally, it is one of my least favorite translations but I've still got in in hand (for sentimental reasons).
But Sir Edwin Arnold translated this same line as such,
"Wert though worst of of all wrong-doers, this FAIR SHIP OF TRUTH should bear thee safe and dry across the sea of thy transgressions." Master Yogananda was an exceptional, realized yogi himself, a traveler to ineffable heights of spiritual consciousness... but was not he himself, an expert Sanskrit scholar nor a seasoned literary pundit. How cares? For myself and what I value in a literal & experience translation, I prefer the direct knowledge of those who have firsthand knowledge of the Divine state, over the dry musings of intellectuals.
I'm not trying to be a smug dink here, just trying to keep it real. There can be little to no doubt, that Sri Krishna disguised as a simple charioteer, was making absolutely NO reference to the root bark of Mimosa Hostillas. India a is a looooooong way from the Amazon.
I do applaud such imaginative pondering, though. It's fun to look for interconnections that may or may not exist only within our own frame of referencing.
I believe the statement implies sailing the sea of mortal illusion, keeping buoyantly afloat by the light of the Atman within, seeking the eternal horizon line... the point of full spiritual immersion within the Unified Field of Being.
Furthermore, had Sri Krishna implied the aid of psychedelic interphase, he would have used the more familiar reference of
Soma, so often mentioned in the Rig Vedas.
Without going into exhaustive detail about what is the specific formula for the legendary Soma or as neighboring Persians named it, "Haoma"... and who is correct in their recipe for Soma... it was not likely to be exactly akin to Ayahuasca. Most contemporary scholars lean towards a drink made form hashish or hash oil, ephedra and Syrian Rue but if Gordon Wasson is even partially correct, Amanita Muscaria may have been one of the psychoactive ingredients.
I suspect the ingredients were relative to the advance in time periods, environmental changes on the subcontinent and availability of said herbs. Much of the ancient science of Ayurveda is shrouded in total secrecy... so who really knows?
Now, I wouldn't be such an inflexible fool as to flatly refute any possibility that DMT containing Acacia Catechu, known as "Khair" within India, couldn't have been one of the changing list of ingredients within Soma... but it is certainly not what is being referenced specifically, with this line from the Gita.
But my main point here is that Lord Krishna speaks directly towards the immersion of the individual's subjective perception, with the Gnosis of the Supreme Godhead. Sri Krishna was advocating Yogic interphase with the indwelling Light of Lights. Entheogens are surely one approach to this union... but I feel it is clear that this line is not a direct or specific reference to a psychedelic substance.
Rather, I see this heavenly advice to Arjuna, as parabolic. A lesson aimed at sentient being's greatest challenges in seeking cosmic insight... an allegory of the journey of the individuated, relative self, merging within the limitlessness of the
Absolute Self.
In other words, the process of the Egoself dissolving it's subjective perception into a fusion of conscious-awareness, within Omniscient God, thus, perceiving the greater parameters of the Omniself
as oneself and so, awaken to the Sacredness and immanence of Infinite being (as it blooms effulgently, within our fleeting dream of relative being).
Lord Krishna is inarguably speaking about the necessity of a harmony and balancing of the internal & the external realms. I feel that the wisdom he teaches is aimed towards the path of kriya/karma yoga, that being, the art of cohesively uniting rational, conceptual pragmatism and the boundlessness and wholly formless shift of mindset... which generates an ego-freezing and all absorbing, perceptual experience of Divine Being.
That being said... I wouldn't go so far as to say that entheogens are not employed to expand the perceptual horizons of earnest yogins. Speaking of Swami Paramahansa Yogananda, if one looks closely within the pages of the Swami's, Autobiography Of A Yogi, there are 2 definitive references to psychedelics.
When Lahiri Mahasaya first meets his Gurudev, Sri Babaji Maharaj, the great spiritual master reminds him of their past life connections. He says,
"Behold your bowl, from which you often drank the NECTAR prepared by me! See how I have kept the brass cup brightly polished, that you might drink again therefrom! My own, do you now understand?"Sri Babaji also states,
"Lahiri, you need purification. Drink the oil in this bowl and lie down by the river." The still unrealized Lahiri Mahasaya, obediently drank the mysterious oil. He trips his brains out for 6-8 hours, barely aware of being a physical entity, wholly enraptured in bliss. Hash oil? Or perhaps harsh oil mixed with Syrian rue oil? That's my pet theory and one which may well be true. The Indians have imported rue seeds for millenniums, from neighboring Persian regions.
Anyhooooooo... he awakens to experience a vision of a shimmering, jewel-encrusted golden palace, which is actually physical and solidly material. I do not personally believe it was real... but I didn't experience his reality. Each persons dreamscape is equally valid. He maintained it was temporarily created out of the ethereal, matrix of Divine Mind. I have my doubts about this assertion.
But then again, what is reality and what is an illusion? I have envisioned fabulously intricate and geometric temples and palaces, on Hyper-spacial voyages, so where does the psychedelic/religious pilgrim draw a hard line in the proverbial sand? for my own sadhana, it helps if I am open to all experiences of alternate realities, levels and planes of conscious-awareness, and yet, question any and all of my perceptions, especially entheogenic visionary experiences.
As a wise friend of mine is known to say,
"Believe Nothing. Allow Anything. Question Everything." With such sage advice, looking at anything can be an epiphany or an illusion. A clear glance into the eternal Spirit or a mirage as well, a conceptual hike through a revolving house of mirrors. Most importantly, I see this as our need to always seek to travel the Middle Road. Gotta love the clarity and practical wisdom of our esteemed Brother,
joedirt.
Rising Spirit attached the following image(s):
KrishnaRocks.jpg
(202kb) downloaded 153 time(s).There is no self to which I cling, for I am one with everything.