|    
       | Bhavana Upanishad / Bhavanopanishad
 Translated by Dr. A. G. Krishna 
		Warrier
 Published by The Theosophical Publishing House, Chennai
 
 Om ! Gods ! With ears let us hear what is good;Adorable ones ! With eyes let us see what is good.
 With steady limbs, with bodies, praising,
 Let us enjoy the life allotted by the gods.
 May Indra, of wide renown, grant us well-being;
 May Pusan, and all-gods, grant us well-being.
 May Tarksya, of unhampered movement, grant us well-being.
 May Brihaspati grant us well-being.
 Om ! Peace ! Peace ! Peace !
 
 1. The holy Teacher is the Power (Para-Sakti) that is the cause of all.
 2. Of that Power the body with its nine orifices is the form.
 3. It is the holy Wheel in the guise of the nine wheels.
 4. The Power of the Boar is paternal: Kurukulla, the deity of sacrifice, 
		is maternal.
 5. The (four) human Ends are the oceans (purusharthas - dharma, artha, 
		kama and moksha).
 6- 7. The body with the seven constituents (Chile, blood, flesh, fat, 
		bone, marrow and semen) like the skin and the hair is the island of the 
		nine gems.
 8. Resolutions are the wish-granting trees; energy (of the mind) is the 
		garden of the trees of plenty.
 9. The six seasons are the tastes, namely sweet, sour, bitter, pungent, 
		astringent and saltish, which are apprehended by the tongue.
 10. Knowledge is the material for worship; the object of knowledge is 
		the oblation; the knower is the sacrificer. The meditation on the 
		identity of the three, knowledge, its object, and the knower, is the 
		worship rendered to the holy Wheel.
 11. Destiny and sentiments like love are (the miraculous attainments 
		like) atomicity, etc. Lust, anger, greed, delusion, elation, envy, 
		merit, demerit – these constitute the eight powers of Brahma, etc. 
		(Brahma, Maheshvari, Kaumari, Vaishnavi, Varahi, Raudri, Charmamunda and 
		Kalasamkarsini).
 12. The nine abodes (muladhara etc.,) are the powers of the mystic 
		gestures.
 13. The earth, water, fire, air, ether, ear, skin, eye, tongue, nose, 
		speech, feet, hands, the organs of evacuation and generation and the 
		modification of mind are the sixteen powers such as the pull of lust, 
		etc.
 14. Speech, grasp, motion, evacuation, generation, and the attitudes of 
		rejection, acceptance and apathy are the eight (entities) such as the 
		flower of love, etc.
 15. Alambusa, kuhu, visvodara, varana, hastijihva, yasovati, payasvini, 
		gandhari, pusa, sankhini, sarasvati, ida, pingala and susumna – these 
		fourteen arteries are the fourteen powers such as the all-exciting, etc.
 16. The five vital breaths and the five minor breaths are the ten 
		divinities of the outer spokes, (styled) Sarvasiddhiprada, etc.
 17. The digestive fire becomes fivefold through distinctions based on 
		its association with this pre-eminent breath. (They are) what ejects, 
		what cooks, what dries, what burns and what inundates.
 18. Owing to the prominence of the minor breath, these (fires) in the 
		human body come to be styled as the corroder, the ejector, the agitator, 
		the yawner and the deluder. They promote the digestion of the fivefold 
		food: eaten, chewed, sucked, licked and imbibed.
 19. The ten aspects of Fire are the ten divinities of the inner spokes, 
		Sarvajna, etc.
 20. The qualities of cold, heat, pleasure, pain, desire, sattva, rajas 
		and tamas are the eight powers, vasini, etc.
 21. The five, rudimentary sound, etc., are the flowery shafts.
 22. Mind is the bow made of sugarcane.
 23. Attachment is the cord (that binds).
 24. Aversion is the hook.
 25. The unmanifest, the Great, and the principle of Egoism are the 
		divinities of the inner triangle: Kameshvari, Vajreshvari and 
		Bhagamalini.
 26. Absolute awareness, verily, is Kameshvara.
 27. The supreme divinity, Lalita, is one’s own blissful Self.
 28. Of all this the distinctive apprehension is the red glow.
 29. Perfection (ensues from) exclusive concentration of the mind.
 30. In the performance of meditation consist (various acts of) 
		respectful service.
 31. The act of oblation is the merger in the Self of distinctions like 
		I, Thou, Existence, non-Existence, the sense of duty and its negation, 
		and the obligation worship.
 32. Assuagement is the thought of identity of (all) objects of 
		imagination.
 33. The view of time’s transformation into the fifteen days (of the half 
		lunar month) points to the fifteen eternal (divinities).
 34. Thus meditating for three instants, or two, or even for a single 
		instant, one becomes liberated while living; one is styled the Siva-Yogin.
 35. Meditations on the inner wheel have been discussed (here) following 
		the tenets of Saktaism.
 36. Whoso knows thus is a student of the Atharvasiras.
 
 Om ! Gods ! With ears let us hear what is good;
 Adorable ones ! With eyes let us see what is good.
 With steady limbs, with bodies, praising,
 Let us enjoy the life allotted by the gods.
 May Indra, of wide renown, grant us well-being;
 May Pusan, and all-gods, grant us well-being.
 May Tarksya, of unhampered movement, grant us well-being.
 May Brihaspati grant us well-being.
 Om ! Peace ! Peace ! Peace !
 
 Here ends the Bhavanopanishad, included in the Atharva-Veda.
     
		------- 
			This site is devoted to
          presenting the ancient Self-Realization path of
          the Tradition of the Himalayan masters in simple, understandable and 
          beneficial ways, while not compromising quality or depth. The goal of 
          our sadhana or practices is the highest 
          Joy that comes from the Realization in direct experience of the 
          center of consciousness, the Self, the Atman or Purusha, which is 
          one and the same with the Absolute Reality. 
          This Self-Realization comes through Yoga meditation of the Yoga 
          Sutras, the contemplative insight of Advaita Vedanta, and the 
          intense devotion of Samaya Sri Vidya Tantra, the three of which 
          complement one another like fingers on a hand. 
          We employ the classical approaches of Raja, Jnana, Karma, and Bhakti 
          Yoga, as well as Hatha, Kriya, Kundalini, Laya, Mantra, Nada, Siddha, 
          and Tantra Yoga. Meditation, contemplation, mantra and prayer 
          finally converge into a unified force directed towards the final 
          stage, piercing the pearl of wisdom called bindu, leading to the 
          Absolute.
			   
                
                
		 
		    |     |