SrI: SrImathE SatakOpAya nama: SrImathE rAmAnujAya nama: SrImath varavaramunayE nama:
taṁ vidyād duḥkha-saṁyoga-
viyogaṁ yoga-saṁjñitam
sa niścayena yoktavyo
yogo ’nirviṇṇa-cetasā
‘Know, that is called meditation (yoga), —the disunion from union with pain; that, into which one, with misery-less mind, shall positively penetrate.’
That meditation, wherein, by dint of practice, the completely abstracted mind feasts, i.e., wherein it gets transported with ecstatic felicity;
Wherein, the mind, perceiving ātma, attains supreme contentment, leaving nothing else to be desired for;
Wherein is experienced by the intellect, that ineffable bliss, beyond the range of the senses to comprehend.
Wherein, established, one does not desire to give up the exquisite happiness felt;
Which (meditation) when achieved, one, even in the hours of non-meditation, does not think there is any higher gain;
That, wherein established, one, whether immersed in its (meditation’s) depths or risen therefrom (virataḥ), is not shaken by afflictions even as grave as the bereavement (by death) of bright and good sons etc.,
Learn that is called meditation which shall sever connection with affliction; or meditation is that which is antithetical to affliction.
Knowing the nature of meditation to be such, one should enter its portals with the mind steeped in faith (or certitude), and freed from all embarassments, i.e., a mind happy and contented.
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