The Open Secret by Swami Vivekanandar

Whichever way we turn in trying to understand things in their reality, if
we analyse far enough, we find that at last we come to a peculiar state of
things, seemingly a contradiction: something which our reason cannot grasp
and yet is a fact. We take up something — we know it is finite; but as soon
as we begin to analyse it, it leads us beyond our reason, and we never find
an end to all its qualities, its possibilities, its powers, its relations.
It has become infinite. Take even a common flower, that is finite enough;
but who is there that can say he knows all about the flower? There is no
possibility of anyone’s getting to the end of the knowledge about that one
flower. The flower has become infinite — the flower which was finite to
begin with. Take a grain of sand. Analyse it. We start with the assumption
that it is finite, and at last we find that it is not, it is infinite; all
the same, we have looked upon it as finite. The flower is similarly treated
as a finite something.

So with all our thoughts and experiences, physical and mental. We begin, we
may think, on a small scale, and grasp them as little things; but very soon
they elude our knowledge and plunge into the abyss of the infinite. And the
greatest and the first thing perceived is ourselves. We are also in the
same dilemma about existence. We exist. We see we are finite beings. We
live and die. Our horizon is narrow. We are here, limited, confronted by
the universe all around. Nature can crush us out of existence in a moment.
Our little bodies are just held together, ready to go to pieces at a
moment’s notice. We know that. In the region of action how powerless we
are! Our will is being thwarted at every turn. So many things we want to
do, and how few we can do! There is no limit to our willing. We can will
everything, want everything, we can desire to go to the dogstar. But how
few of our desires can be accomplished! The body will not allow it. Well,
nature is against the accomplishment of our will. We are weak. What is true
of the flower, of the grain of sand, of the physical world, and of every
thought, is a hundredfold more true of ourselves. We are also in the same
dilemma of existence, being finite and infinite at the same time. We are
like waves in the ocean; the wave is the ocean and yet not the ocean. There
is not any part of the wave of which you cannot say, “It is the ocean.” The
name “ocean” applies to the wave and equally to every other part of the
ocean, and yet it is separate from the ocean. So in this infinite ocean of
existence we are like wavelets. At the same time, when we want really to
grasp ourselves, we cannot — we have become the infinite.

We seem to be walking in dreams. Dreams are all right in a dream-mind; but
as soon as you want to grasp one of them, it is gone. Why? Not that it was
false, but because it is beyond the power of reason, the power of the
intellect to comprehend it. Everything in this life is so vast that the
intellect is nothing in comparison with it. It refuses to be bound by the
laws of the intellect! It laughs at the bondage the intellect wants to
spread around it. And a thousandfold more so is this the case with the
human soul. “We ourselves” — this is the greatest mystery of the universe.

How wonderful it all is! Look at the human eye. How easily it can be
destroyed, and yet the biggest suns exist only because your eyes see them.
The world exists because your eyes certify that it exists. Think of that
mystery! These poor little eyes! A strong light, or a pin, can destroy
them. Yet the most powerful engines of destruction, the most powerful
cataclysms, the most wonderful of existences, millions of suns and stars
and moons and earth — all depend for their existence upon, and have to be
certified by, these two little things! They say, “Nature, you exist”, and
we believe nature exists. So with all our senses.

What is this? Where is weakness? Who is strong? What is great and what is
small? What is high and what is low in this marvelous interdependence of
existence where the smallest atom is necessary for the existence of the
whole? Who is great and who is small? It is past finding out! And why?
Because none is great and none is small. All things are interpenetrated by
that infinite ocean; their reality is that infinite; and whatever there is
on the surface is but that infinite. The tree is infinite; so is everything
that you see or feel — every grain of sand, every thought, every soul,
everything that exists, is infinite. Infinite is finite and finite
infinite. This is our existence.

Now, that may be all true, but all this feeling after the Infinite is at
present mostly unconscious. It is not that we have forgotten that infinite
nature of ours: none can ever do that. Who can ever think that he can be
annihilated? Who can think that he will die? None can. All our relation to
the Infinite works in us unconsciously. In a manner, therefore, we forget
our real being, and hence all this misery comes.

In practical daily life we are hurt by small things; we are enslaved by
little beings. Misery comes because we think we are finite — we are little
beings. And yet, how difficult it is to believe that we are infinite
beings! In the midst of all this misery and trouble, when a little thing
may throw me off my balance, it must be my care to believe that I am
infinite. And the fact is that we are, and that consciously or
unconsciously we are all searching after that something which is infinite;
we are always seeking for something that is free.

The search for freedom is the search of all religions; whether they know it
or not, whether they can formulate it well or ill, the idea is there. Even
the lowest man, the most ignorant, seeks for something which has power over
nature’s laws. He wants to see a demon, a ghost, a god — somebody who can
subdue nature, for whom nature is not almighty, for whom there is no law.
“Oh, for somebody who can break the law!” That is the cry coming from the
human heart. We are always seeking for someone who breaks the law. The
rushing engine speeds along the railway track; the little worm crawls out
of its way. We at once say, “The engine is dead matter, a machine; and the
worm is alive,” because the worm attempted to break the law*. The engine,
with all its power and might, can never break the law.* It is made to go in
any direction man wants, and it cannot do otherwise; but the worm, small
and little though it was, attempted to break the law and avoid the danger.
It tried to assert itself against law, assert its freedom; and there was
the sign of the future God in it.

Calmness iss within you    K Rajaram IRS 27725

On Sun, 27 Jul 2025 at 04:46, Jambunathan Iyer <[email protected]>
wrote:

> You do not need the world to calm down to find peace. You only need to
> remember that peace begins with you. When we believe that Arjuna could find
> clarity on the battle field of Kurukshetra, then we too can find it in our
> own daily wars too.
>
>
> *N Jambunathan , Chennai " What you get by achieving your goals is not as
> important as what you become by achieving your goals. If you want to live a
> happy life, tie it to a goal, not to people or things "*
>
>
>

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