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Sanatana Dharma for Kids: Sacred Symbols: AUM

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"Today we'll discuss AUM, the most sacred of the symbols of Sanatana

Dharma", said daddy, as they sat for dinner.

 

Mummy had prepared vegetable briyani with onion raita and green

salad, and the usual curd rice with mango pickles for dinner. Two

large bowls of briyani and curd rice with the side dishes in

satellite bowls were neatly arranged on the table. The aroma of

briyani wafted in the air, increasing everyone's appetite.

 

"Before we start eating", said daddy, "let us close our eyes for a

full minute and intently listen to this sacred mantra." He pressed

the Enter key of his laptap on the tall stool, and the sacred sound

of AUM reverberated in the room, wave after wave, as the computer

played the sound file for a full minute.

 

The children had promptly closed their eyes as had the elders, and

everyone listened to the mantra. When it was over, daddy said,

"Don't open your eyes now, but repeat the mantra AUM inside

yourselves, with your mouths closed, pronouncing every sound as you

heard just now, for another thirty seconds."

 

The children did as they were told, and finally opened their eyes at

their daddy's word. Daddy asked mummy to serve the dinner, and

started his discussion.

 

"The mantra you heard now is called the mula mantra or the root

mantra. AUM is also known as the maha mantra. First you should know

how to pronounce this mantra. Any idea, children?"

 

"Daddy, we have been pronouncing this mantra as simply om", said

Padma.

 

"Yes dad, we pronounced the vowel O for a longer time than the

consonant M. We sarted with Ohhhhhhh... but stopped rather short at

the M, without humming it properly as your demo showed now."

 

"How did you pronounce the mantra?" daddy asked mummy.

 

"Well, I knew that the mantra is written using the three letters A,

U, M. But I have not been articulating it the way we heard it here."

 

"I have also been guilty of your mummy's habit", admitted daddy.

"From now on, let all of us give due regard to this great mantra and

articulate it properly, in the way we heard it here. Reciting the

mantra correctly will greately benefit us."

 

Daddy continued: "Even though the mantra has three sounds A, U and

M, it is considered as a single letter and as a single syllable. You

already know that it is written as a single letter, and now you know

that it is pronounced with a long AU sound, which starts with a

short, bursting Ah sound, followed by a long O (or Oo as in moo)

sound, and an equally emphatic humming sound M, which gradually

wanes into silence. A single chant of the whole mantra takes at

least five seconds."

 

They continued eating the delicious briyani, between bites on their

green salad. When they paused for a second helping, daddy asked the

children, "Did both of you utter the mantra inside yourselves?"

 

"Yes, daddy", said the children in chorus.

 

"Well, did you notice or feel anything?"

 

"Yes daddy", said Padma. "It slighly choked in my throat."

 

"And it seemed to pass out of my ears", said Arvind.

 

"I felt peaceful", said mummy. "What did you feel?"

 

"Well, since I knew how it would feel, I did not feel anything

today!" said daddy. "My mind was preoccupied with how to teach this

great mantra to the children in a way that they will never forget."

 

"Did we feel the correct way, daddy?"

 

"Is there anything more, dad?"

 

"You are both wonderful children. I am really blessed to have you

two and mummy for a family", said daddy, his tone echoing his

gratitude and pride. "All the three of you felt it exactly the way

it would be felt. And there is a lot more to it."

 

The children looked at each other with widened eyes.

 

"There are three ways of reciting a mantra personally. In the adhama

or inferior way, a mantra is uttered loudly, as most of us do. Some

people just lisp a mantra, pronouncing the words without sound, but

with their lips moving. This is the madhyama or the medium way. The

uttama or the best way is to recite a mantra inside us with our

mouths closed, mentally listening to the articulations of the

mantra."

 

"We chant the mantras loudly in the morning assembly at school",

said Padma.

 

"The pundits chant the Veda mantras out loudly dad", said Arvind.

 

"Both are examples of community chanting", said daddy. "In a family

or community chanting of a prayer or a ceremony, the mantras are not

chanted for personal gains, so they must be recited out loudly.

Vedas are chanted by a group of pundits in order that the vibrations

set forth by the mantras benefit the people around, and the house

they are chanted at. In a personal chant, a mantra is best recited

in the uttamic way, because its vibrations mainly need to propagate

in the inner space."

 

"And how does this uttamic chanting of AUM benefit us, dad?"

reminded Arvind.

 

"As you say the AUM mantra inwardly, it reechoes inside you, causing

vibrations in your throat and ears. The vibrations travel upward to

the skull and downward to the navel. If the mantra is chanted with

pure aspirations and devotion, these vibrations calm the nerve

centers and tune up your chakras for meditation."

 

"But I didn't feel anything in my skull or navel", said Padma.

 

"I think I felt a slight knotting up in my navel", said Arvind.

 

"Padma felt the vibration in her throat, Arvind in his ears and

mummy had a peace of mind. So all of you are on the right track.

With sincere practice and when you learn yoga and meditation, the

benefits of AUM will be felt more and more. Yogis hear this pranava

sound in their meditation."

 

"Mummy has told us that Ganesha is the symbol of pranava. What

exactly is pranava dad?"

 

"The term pranava is from the Sanskrit roots pra + nu, and means to

utter or bring forth a droning or humming sound. This sound is AUM,

with which Brahma created the world. This is the primordial sound of

the universe, and is the base of every form of manifestation.

Pranava pervades everything from the macrocosm of the universe to

the microcosm of the atoms, from the outer space to the inner space,

so the term stands for these two forms of manifestations, as well as

Brahman from whom it all originates."

 

"That is why Brahman is also known as the Nada Brahman", said mummy.

 

Daddy nodded at her and continued. "In the term pranava, the suffix

nava indicates new. Every moment something is born and something is

destroyed. As modern science has discovered, atomic particles turn

into energy and energy crystallizes back into particles. Our cells

die and are replaced constantly. This is why Shakespeare said, And

so, from hour to hour, we ripe and ripe, And then, from hour to

hour, we rot and rot; And thereby hangs a tale.."

 

"I think the quote is from the play As You Like It", said mummy who

was an M.A. English. "Jaques used these words of the court jester

Touchstone, remarking that he met that motley fool in a forest."

 

"You have a good memory", said daddy. "Mandukya Upanishad has the

AUM mantra for its entire subject matter. Of the three letters of

this mula mantra, the letter A represents the Adimatwa or the

beginning, the letter U represents the Utkarsha or progress and the

letter M represents Mitti or limit or dissolution. Thus the letters

A, U, M stand for creation, preservation and dissolution, and

represent the Trimurti--Brahma, Vishnu and Shiva."

 

"How deep and correlating our concepts are!" exclaimed mummy.

 

"There are other correlations. The letter A stands for the Satva

guna, U for Rajas and M for Tamas, which are the three gunas or

qualities of Prithvi or Nature. And then, the letters also stand for

the three worlds: A stands for the earth, the Bhurloka, U for the

astral world, the Bhuvarloka and M for the heavens, the Svarloka".

 

"Wonderful", said mummy.

 

"There is more", said daddy. "Children, don't worry if you can't

follow the relationship between AUM and yoga meditation that I am

going to explain now. Just listen to these advanced concepts without

seeking any explanation. Things will be clearer to you as you grow

older and practice meditation."

 

"I heard that AUM has a significant role in meditation", said mummy.

"But I am not familiar with the details."

 

"To understand the details, you need to know that the mantra AUM has

actually four parts: the three sounds A, U, M--and silence. These

four parts are associated with the four levels of consciousness. The

sound A represents the waking level, called vaishvanara. The sound A

has a bursting quality. It arises quickly, in a flash from the

previous level of silence."

 

"I see. The sound O is actually a diphthong, comprising A and U",

said mummy, drawing on her knowledge of the English language. "Of

these two sounds A and U here, A is short and U is longer. Together

they make the O, pronounced Oh... and then Oo... in AUM. So AU is

svara and M anusvara that completes the vibration into silence."

 

"Nicely put", said daddy. "The U sound represents the dreaming level

of consciousness, called taijasa. The M sound stands for the deep

sleep level, called prajna. The fourth level is turiya which is

Consciousness itself permeating all other levels. At this level, the

observer, the observed and the process of observing all become one."

 

"Is turiya the equivalent of samadhi?" said mummy.

 

"Turiya is said to be a case of high samadhi. You might say that

turiya is the highest level of consciousness that results in the

state of samadhi."

 

The children appeared dumbstruck and were eating the curd rice

silently, as daddy continued his Vedanta.

 

"It is not just the sacred sound, but the very letter AUM

represents the four levels of consciousness.", said daddy, pointing

to the AUM letter displayed on the laptap screen. The children

looked up eagerly.

 

"The lower curve of the letter represents the waking level, the

right curve represents the dreaming level and the upper curve stands

for the deep sleep level."

 

"Above the upper curve is an arc, daddy" said Padma.

 

"On top of that is a dot" said Arvind. It was obvious that the

children wanted at least a small part in the discussion of which

they understood nothing.

 

Daddy smiled at them benevolently. "The dot or point or bindu

represents the fourth level turiya. The arc below the dot indicates

that the bindu or turiya level is separate from the other three, and

oversees them silently, standing above as well as permeating them.

Swami Jnaneshvara Bharati, popularly known as Swami J, of the

Himalayan Yoga tradition, has a very detailed analysis of all the

aspects of yoga meditation as he calls the process, in his Website

http://www.swamij.com. A nice feature of this Website is that the

concepts expounded by Swami J are those of Vedanta. This Website is

a treasure house of pure spiritual information and instructions."

 

Mummy closed her eyes and took a deep breath, savouring the

pronouncements made by daddy. She said, "I have a question. When you

say that the individual sounds of AUM represent a level of

consciousness, what exactly does that mean in practice?"

 

"A good question. Swami J says that as you medidate, when your

awareness is on each sound of the AUM mantra, 'you cultivate and

train yourself to have a simultaneous awareness of each level of

consciousness' at the personal microcosm and gradually transfer it

to the universal macrocosm. I think this is something like

meditating on successive chakras, starting from the muladhara, the

base chakra."

 

They had finished their dinner a little while back and their hands

started to dry up. Daddy belched loudly and said, "AUM is also used

in Buddhist and Jain rituals. Well, I think that's all I can explain

about this great mantra."

 

"I have a question, dad" said Arvind. "How do you spell the mantra

in English--AUM or just OM?"

 

"You can spell it either way. You can also pronounce it AUM with

full articulation or the simpler OM that we say in our shlokas. The

AUM articulation, however is used in meditation, and as a personal

mantra for the spiritual benefits it offers."

 

"The mantra is captivating daddy", said Padma. Arvind played the

sacred sound once again on daddy's laptap. With their eyes glowing,

the children played the mantra repeatedly for sometime, before they

dispersed to complete their school homework.

 

Regards,

saidevo

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