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Song Name: Atraiva Vraja Bhavanam
Official
Name: Chapter 8; Vraja Bhava
Vicarah
Language: Sanskrit
LYRICS:
(1)
atraiva
vraja-bhāvānāḿ śreṣṭhyam uktam
aśeṣataḥ
mathurā-dvārakā-bhāvās
teṣāḿ puṣṭikarā matāḥ
(2)
jīvasya
mańgalārthāya vraja-bhāvo vivicyate
yad-bhāva-sańgato
jīvaś cāmṛtatvāya kalpate
(3)
anvaya-vyatirekābhyāḿ
vivicyo'yaḿ mayādhunā
anvayāt pańca sambandhāḥ
śānta-dāsyādayaś ca ye
(4)
kecit tu vraja-rājasya
dāsa-bhāgavatāḥ sadā
apare
sakhya-bhāvāḍhyāḥ
śrīdāma-subalāadayaḥ
(5)
yaśodā-rohiṇī-nandāḥ
vātsalya-bhāva-saḿsthitāḥ
rādhādyāḥ
kānta-bhāve tu vartante rāsa-maṇḍale
(6)
vṛndāvanaḿ vinā
nāsti śuddha-sambandha-bhāvakaḥ
ato vai
śuddha-jīvānāḿ ramye vṛndāvane ratiḥ
(7)
tatraiva kānta-bhāvasya
śreṣṭhatā śāstra-sammatā
jīvasya nitya-dharmo'yaḿ
bhagavad-bhogyatā matā
(8)
na tatra kuṇṭhatā
kācit vartate jīvakṛṣṇayoḥ
akhaṇḍa-paramānandaḥ
sadā syāt prīti-rūpa-dhṛk
(9)
sambhoga-sukha-puṣṭy-arthaḿ
vipralambho'pi sammataḥ
mathurā-dvārakā-cintā
vraja-bhāva-vivardhinī
(10)
prapańca-baddha-jīvānāḿ
vaidha-dharmāśrayāt purā
adhunā
kṛṣṇa-samprāptau pārakīya-rasāśrayaḥ
(11)
śrī-gopī-bhāvam
āśritya mańjarī-sevanaḿ tadā
sakhīnāḿ sańgatis
tasmāt tasmād rādhā-padāśrayaḥ
(12)
tatraiva bhāva-bāhulyān
mahābhāvo bhaved dhruvam
tatraiva
kṛṣṇa-sambhogaḥ sarvānanda-pradāyakaḥ
(13)
etasyāḿ vraja-bhāvānāḿ
sampattau pratibandhakāḥ
aṣṭādaśa-vidhāḥ
santi śatravaḥ prīti-dūṣakāḥ
(14)
ādau
duṣṭa-guru-prāptiḥ pūtanā
stanya-dāyinī
vātyā-rūpa-kutarkas tu
tṛṇāvarta itīritaḥ
(15)
tṛtīye
bhāra-vāhitvaḿ śakaṭaḿ buddhi-mardakam
caturthe
bāla-doṣāṇāḿ svarūpo
vatsa-rūpa-dhṛk
(16)
pańcame
dharma-kāpaṭyaḿ nāmāparādha-rūpakam
baka-rūpī
mahā-dhūrto vaiṣṇavānāḿ virodhakaḥ
(17)
tatraiva
sampradāyānāḿ bāhya-lińga-samādarāt
dāmbhikānāḿ na
sā prītiḥ kṛṣṇe vraja-nivāsini
(18)
nṛśaḿsatvaḿ
pracaṇḍatvam aghāsura-svarūpakam
ṣaṣṭhāparādha-rūpo'yaḿ
vartate pratibandhakaḥ
(19)
bahu-śāstra-vicāreṇa
yan moho vartate satām
sa eva saptamo lakṣyo
brahmaṇo mohane kila
(20)
dhenukaḥ
sthūla-buddhiḥ syād gardabhas tāla-rodhakaḥ
aṣṭame lakṣyate
doṣaḥ sampradāye satāḿ mahān
(21)
indriyāṇi bhajanty eke
tyaktvā vaidha-vidhiḿ śubham
navame vṛṣabhās te'pi
naśyante kṛṣṇa-tejasā
(22)
khalatā daśame
lakṣyā kālīye sarpa-rūpake
sampradāya-virodho'yaḿ
dāvānalo vicintyate
(23)
pralambo dvādaśe cauryam
ātmano brahma-vādinām
praviṣṭaḥ
kṛṣṇa-dāsye'pi vaiṣṇavānāḿ
sutaskaraḥ
(24)
karmaṇaḥ phalam
anvīkṣya devendrādi-prapūjanam
trayodaśātmako doṣo
varjanīyaḥ prayatnataḥ
(25)
cauryānṛta-mayo doṣo
vyomāsura-svarūpakaḥ
śrī-kṛṣṇa-prīti-paryāptau
narāṇāḿ pratibandhakaḥ
(26)
varuṇālaya-samprāptir
nandasya citta-mādakam
varjanīyaḿ sadā
sadbhir vismṛtir hy ātmano yataḥ
(27)
pratiṣṭhā-paratā
bhakti-cchalena bhoga-kāmanā
śańkhacūḍa iti
proktaḥ ṣoḍaśaḥ pratibandhakaḥ
(28)
ānanda-vardhane kińcit
sāyujyaḿ bhāsate hṛdi
tan nanda-bhakṣakaḥ sarpas
tena muktaḥ suvaiṣṇavaḥ
(29)
bhakti-tejaḥ-samṛddhyā
tu svotkarṣa-jńānavān naraḥ
kadācid
duṣṭa-buddhyā tu keśighnam avamanyate
(30)
doṣāś
cāṣṭādaśa hy ete bhaktānāḿ
śatravo hṛdi
damanīyāḥ prayatnena
kṛṣṇānanda-niṣevinā
(31)
jńānināḿ
māthurā doṣāḥ karmiṇāḿ
pura-vartinaḥ
varjanīyāḥ sadā
kintu bhaktānāḿ vraja-dūṣakāḥ
TRANSLATION
1) In this book
the moods of Vraja have already been elaborately
described. The moods of Mathura and Dvaraka nourish the moods of Vraja.
2) I will now
discuss the moods of Vraja for the auspiciousness of
the living entities. By remaining attached to the moods of Vraja,
the living entities achieve eternal life.
3) These moods
of Vraja will now be directly and indirectly
considered. Through direct consideration, shanta, dasya, sakhya, vatsalya, and madhurya are found.
4) Some attain
the service of the King of Vraja, and the devotees
such as Sridama and Subala
serve the Lord in the mood of friendship.
5) Yashoda, Rohini, and Nanda are the examples of parental love, and gopis such as Sri Radhika are
present in the rasa-mandala in the conjugal mood.
6) Pure
relationships and their respective moods are found only in Vrndavana.
That is why pure living entities have a natural attraction for Vrndavana-dhama.
7) All
scriptures agree that the conjugal mood of Vrndavana
is the topmost, because the Lord' nature as the enjoyer and the living
entities' nature as the enjoyed are purely found therein.
8) In Vaikuntha, there is no anxiety between Krsna
and the living entities, as both are situated in their eternal constitutional
positions. Perpetual supreme happiness in the form of love is eternally present
there.
9) The ultimate
goal of vraja-rasa is the happiness of enjoyment
between Krsna and the living entities. The mood of
separation, in the form of purva-raga, mana, prema-vaicittya, and pravasa, is extremely essential in nourishing this
happiness. This becomes perfected by contemplation on Mathura
and Dvaraka. Therefore the moods of Mathura and Dvaraka nourish the
moods of Vraja, as previously described.
10) According
to their qualification, the conditioned living entities first take shelter of
regulative devotional service. Later, when attachment awakens, the mood of Vraja awakens. When one externally follows the regulative
process of devotional service and internally takes shelter of attachment to Krsna, then the relationship between Krsna
and the devotee known as parakiya-rasa, or paramour
love, is appreciated. Just as a married woman becomes overwhelmed by the beauty
of another man and secretly becomes attached to him while externally respecting
her own husband, similarly the lovers of Krsna take
shelter of parakiya-rasa by internally cultivating
attachment while externally following the regulative principles and respecting
the Lord and protector of those principles. This science is very important for
persons in the conjugal rasa. The uttama-adhikaris
can never give this up even if they are criticized by the madhyama-adhikaris.
This book is not meant for the kanistha-adhikaris, therefore the regulative principles are not being
elaborated herein. One will have to study these regulative principles from
books like Hari-bhakti-vilasa. The main purport of
the regulative principles is that when the conditioned living entities'
constitutional duties are almost dormant, or pervertedly
reflected as attachment for material objects, then whatever the learned doctors
prescribe in order to cure the disease are called regulative principles. While
wandering in the material world, a great personality is able to arouse his
dormant attachment by certain activities. He bestows his mercy on the living
entities by establishing those activities as a form of spiritual practice. The
prescriptions given by those great personalities must be followed by the kanistha-adhikaris as though they were scriptural
injunctions. The sages who establish these prescriptions are all uttama-adhikaris and swanlike personalities. Those persons
who cannot awaken attachment by their own efforts have no alternative other
than following these prescriptions. In the Srimad Bhagavatam those prescriptions are classified into nine
divisions, beginning with hearing and chanting. Those prescriptions have been
further discussed in Bhakti-rasamrita-sindhu as
sixty-four limbs. The conclusion is that those whose natural attachment is
practically dormant are eligible for vidhi-marga, the
path of regulative principles; but as soon as attachment is awakened, the path
of regulative principles becomes secondary. Those regulative
principles that are followed in order to awaken one's attachment while
cultivating Krsna consciousness should be followed
with gratefulness long after attachment is awakened, so that people can follow
that example. In any case, swanlike mahatmas reserve the right of either
following or giving up the regulative principles.
11) In the upasana-kanda, or Vedic division on worship, attachment is
divided into three categories—pure attachment, attachment in the mood of Vaikuntha, and attachment based on material examples of
spiritual relationships. Pure attachment, or mahabhava,
is the property of Radhika, who is half of Krsna's form. Similar but slightly different to mahabhava are the eight pure symptoms of transcendental
ecstatic love, personified by the eight sakhis.
Similar to the mood of the sakhis (please see the
commentary on 7.2) are attachments based on material examples of spiritual
relationships, personified by the manjaris. The
worshiper should first take shelter of a manjari who
has a nature similar to his own. Later he should take shelter of the sakhi who is worshiped by that manjari.
By the mercy of that sakhi, one will attain the
shelter of the lotus feet of Sri Radhika. The
positions of a worshiper, a manjari, a sakhi, and Srimati Radhika in the circle of the rasa
dance are similar to an asteroid, a planet, the sun, and Dhruvaloka
of the material world.
12) When the
living entities approach mahabhava by gradual
advancement of their loving emotions, then enjoyment with Krsna,
which bestows unlimited bliss, is easily attained.
13) There are
eighteen obstacles that pollute one's ecstatic love in the wonderful mood of Vraja. Contemplating the names of these obstacles is the
indirect consideration of the mood of Vraja.
14) Persons who
are on the path of attachment should avoid the first obstacle, accepting a
bogus guru, by discussing Putana's
arrival in Vraja in the guise of a nurse [see
Appendix A]. There are two types of gurus—antaranga,
or internal, and bahiranga, or external. The living
entity who is situated in samadhi is his own antaranga guru69. One who
accepts argument as his guru and who learns the process of worship from such a
guru is said to have accepted the shelter of a bogus guru. When argument poses
as nourishment for the living entities' constitutional duties, this may be
compared with Putana's falsely posing as a nurse.
Worshipers on the path of attachment must immerse all arguments in spiritual
subjects and take shelter of samadhi. The external
guru is he from whom the science of worship is learned. One who knows the
proper path of attachment and who instructs his disciples according to their
qualification is a sad-guru, or eternal guru. One who does not know the path of
attachment yet instructs others in this path or who knows that path and
instructs his disciples without considering their qualification is a bogus guru
and must be given up. The second obstacle is false arguments. It is difficult
for one's ecstatic emotion to be awakened until Trnavarta,
in the form of a whirlwind, is killed in Vraja. In
the form of Trnavarta, the arguments of philosophers,
Buddhists, and logicians are all obstacles to the ecstatic emotion of Vraja.
15) Those who do not understand the purpose of the regulative
principles but simply carry the burden of following them out of formality are
unable to develop attachment. When one destroys Sakata, who personifies
carrying the burden of the regulative principles, the third obstacle is
overcome. Bogus gurus who did not consider their disciples' qualification for
the path of attachment and thus instructed many Sakata-like people to accept
service in the mood of manjaris and sakhis committed offenses in the form of disrespecting
confidential subject matters and fell down. Those who worship according to such
instructions also gradually fall away from spiritual life, because they do not
attain the symptoms of deep attachment for those topics. Yet they may still be
delivered by the association of devotees and proper instructions. This is
called breaking Sakata. The living entities are sober by nature, but when they
are disturbed due to possessing a body made of blood and flesh it is called bala-dosa, or juvenile offenses. This is the fourth
obstacle, in the form of Vatsasura [see Appendix B].
16) The most
clever Bakasura, who is the personification of
cheating religion, is the fifth obstacle for Vaisnavas.
This is called namaparadha, offenses against the holy
name of the Lord. Those who do not understand their qualification but accept
the instruction of a bogus guru and engage in the process of worship meant for
exalted devotees are cheated asslike people. And
those who have understood their ineligibility yet with a goal to accumulate
money and prestige still follow the process of worship meant for exalted
devotees are called cheaters. Until this cheating in the name of religion is
destroyed, one's attachment will not awaken. Such people deceive the entire
world by making a show of sectarian formalities and pseudo-renunciation.
17) Those who see and respect such proud people's show of external
formalities cannot attain love for Krsna and are like
thorns in the side of the world. It is to be understood here that one should
not disrespect a swanlike person just because he has accepted external
formalities that are generally considered detestable. It is the eternal duty of
Vaisnavas to develop the symptoms of love by
associating with and serving devotees, while remaining indifferent to external
formalities.
18) Aghasura, the personification of intolerance and cruelty,
is the sixth obstacle. Due to a lack of compassion for the living entities
there is a possibility that one's attachment will gradual diminish, because
compassion cannot remain separated from attachment. The basis of compassion for
the living entities and devotion to Krsna is the
same.
19) If one
intensely absorbs his mind in various arguments, opinions, and their respective
literatures, then all realizations attained through samadhi
are practically lost. This is called illusion based on the flowery words of the
Vedas. Being overwhelmed with this illusion, Brahma doubted the supremacy of Krsna. The Vaisnavas should
regard this illusion as the seventh obstacle.
20) Subtle
discrimination is extremely important for Vaisnavas.
Those who invent social distinctions and preach the unbreakable principles of Vaishnavism while breaking them to suit their needs are
said to possess gross discrimination. This gross discrimination takes the form
of the ass Dhenuka. The ass cannot eat the sweet palm
tree fruits, and he opposes others' attempts to eat them. The purport is that
the previous acaryas of the authorized sampradayas have written many spiritual literatures, which
people with gross discrimination neither understand nor allow others to see. Asslike devotees who are simply interested in the
regulative principles and under the control of gross discrimination are unable
to attain a higher platform. Vaisnava principles are
so unlimitedly exalted that those who simply remain entangled in the regulative
process without endeavoring to understand the science of attachment are
comparable to ordinary fruitive workers. Therefore,
until the ass Dhenukasura is killed, one cannot
advance in the science of Vaishnavism.
21) Many
weak-hearted people give up the path of regulative principles and enter the
path of attachment. When they are unable to realize the souls' spiritual
attachment, they behave like Vrishabhasura [Arishtasura, the bull] by cultivating perverted material
attachment. They will be killed by the prowess of Krsna.
The example of this obstacle is regularly found among the selfish dharma-dvajis, the show-bottle devotees.
22) Kaliya's malice always pollutes the water of the Yamuna, which is the spiritual liquid of the Vaisnavas. It is everyone's duty to give up this tenth
obstacle [see Appendix C]. The eleventh obstacle of the Vaisnavas
is sectarianism, which takes the shape of the forest fire. Due to sectarianism
a person cannot accept anyone outside of his own group as a Vaisnava,
and as a result he faces many obstacles in finding a guru and associating with
devotees. Therefore extinguishing the forest fire is most important.
23) The impersonalists desire to merge the soul in the impersonal
Brahman. In other words, searching for the liberation of complete merging is
the defect of stealing the self, because there is no happiness in this state.
Neither the living entity nor the Lord gain anything
from this. If one believes the impersonalists'
philosophy, then he must accept this material world as false. One then
denounces Brahman as indifferent and gradually develops doubts about the basis
of Brahman. If one deeply discusses this topic, then he is compelled to accept
meaningless nescience and nonexistence of the living entities. Thus all of
mankind's endeavors and considerations become meaningless. Sometimes this
philosophy enters amongst Vaisnavas in the form of Pralambasura to spread anarthas,
in the form of stealing the self. This is the twelve obstacle
in the Vaisnavas' science of love.
24) The
thirteenth obstacle for the Vaisnavas is the worship
of minor demigods such as Indra with a desire for fruitive results even after becoming situated in the
process of devotional service.
25) The
fourteenth obstacle in developing love for Krsna is
stealing others' property and speaking lies. These create disturbances in Vraja in the form of Vyomasura.
26) The
transcendental happiness of the living entities in Vraja
is known as nanda. In order to enhance that
happiness, some deluded people drink wine, and as a result they create the
great anartha of forgetting themselves. Kidnapping Nanda to the abode of Varuna is
the fifteenth obstacle for the Vaisnavas. People who
are absorbed in the mood of Vraja never drink wine.
27) The desire
for gaining fame and sense gratification through bhakti
is called Shankhacuda. This is the sixteenth
obstacle. Those whose actions are motivated by a desire for fame are also proud, therefore Vaisnavas should
always be careful of such persons.
28) As the Vaisnavas' happiness continually increases in the process
of worship, they sometimes lose consciousness. At that time the feeling of
merging overcomes them. This feeling of merging with the Lord is the snake that
swallowed Nanda Maharaja. A practitioner who remains
free from this snake will become a qualified Vaisnava.
29) Kesi, a demon in the form of a horse, personifies the
practitioner's conception of being more expert than others in devotional
service. When he comes to Vraja, he creates a great
disturbance. As a Vaisnava gradually begins
proclaiming his own superiority, a mentality of disrespect for the Lord arises
and the devotee falls from his position. Therefore it is most important to
prevent this evil mentality from entering the heart. Even if one is expert in
devotional service, a Vaisnava will never give up the
quality of humility. If one does so, then there is a need for killing Kesi. This is the eighteenth obstacle.
30) Those who
want to happily serve Krsna in the pure mood of Vraja should carefully destroy the above-mentioned eighteen
obstacles. Some of these obstacles should be destroyed by a person's own
endeavor and purity, and some should be destroyed by the mercy of Krsna. A living entity is able to personally destroy the
obstacles that are found under the shelter of religious duties through samadhi known as savikalpa. The Srimad Bhagavatam explains that
these obstacles are actually destroyed by Baladeva.
But it is also described that the obstacles that are destroyed by taking
shelter of Krsna are actually destroyed by Him.
Swanlike persons with subtle discrimination should carefully discuss these
topics.
31) Those who
are on the path of jnana should give up the offenses
found in the realm of Mathura, and those who are on
the path of fruitive activities should give the
offenses found in Dvaraka. But devotees should give
up the obstacles that pollute the mood of Vraja and
be absorbed in love for Krsna.
No Extra Information available for this song!
UPDATED: July 25, 2009