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Soul in Saiva Siddhanta: the most extensive study of the soul

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 HOME PAGE Bhagavadgita Pages, Chapters 1 to 18  BG01 BG02 BG03 BG04 BG05 BG06 BG07 BG08 BG09 BG10 BG11 BG12 BG13 BG14 BG15 BG16 BG17 BG18 Veeraswamy Krishnaraj  The soul according to Saiva Siddhanta  Ramakrishna Paramahamsa says that Maya is like mud, the soul is like a bar of iron stuck in the mud and God is like a Magnet. Unless the iron bar is cleaned of the thick mud, it is difficult for it to migrate towards the magnet. The soul should be cleansed of the mud of Maya so that it is free to be migrate and stick to the magnet of God. Adapted from The Sayings of Ramakrishna , saying 18 page 27. Prevailing view of Saiva Siddhanta on the states of a soul.  Soul is like a crystal; it takes the color of a juxtaposed object. Two common juxtaposed entities are Siva Sakti and Mala; the crystal of a soul can be colored by Siva Sakti, Mala or both, which define its three states ( avastha ): Suddha, Kevala, and Sakala . Soul's natural state before birth in a body is Kevala with Anava Mala (Sahaja Mala, innate impurity) as the coloring agent; when the soul acquires a body on account of Karma, it is in Sakala state, a multicolored state in which Malas and Siva Sakti are the coloring agents; when all Malas are extinct, the soul is in Suddha state, where Siva Sakti is the only coloring agent. Kevala Avastha is night in slumber; Sakala state is day in phenomenal awakening and awareness; Suddha state is merger with Siva. The soul has a sticky surface according to other interpreters of Siddhanta. If the soul is unstuck from Anava Mala, it can stick with Siva Sakti; it is like competitive displacement and binding of chemicals, when a stronger affinitive element displaces the lesser affinitive element and takes its place. This corresponds to displacement of Anava Mala and replacement with Siva Sakti in the soul. Since Siva Sakti is the source of pristine soul which is back home with Siva, it is Advaitam, oneness and more specifically unity in duality. There are many souls coming to Siva. This is a homogenized state for all souls in association with Siva. Homogenized milk comes from many cows; the buyer does not know how many cows it came from, though the cows know (if you can imagine that possibility). Assuming
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one drop is one soul, each soul knows its identity. One liter is 1000 mls; one ml is 15 drops;

therefore, there are 15,000 drops. By extension of analogy, there are 15,000 souls inhomogenized state with Siva. Siva is not part of the homogenized state; he is heavier and purer,

if you can imagine that state.

Siva and liberated souls move as one unit, but there is Siva as one identity and the myriadhomogenized souls as the second entity. Siva is heavy water and the souls are light water.

Chemically Heavy Water (D2O) and light water (H2O) are the same. The two Hydrogen atomsin light water are replaced by heavier Deutrium atoms in D2O. The atomic nucleus of Deutrium

has one proton and one neutron and one orbiting electron. It is the extra neutron that makes D2O

heavier than H2O by 10%. D2O and H2O exist in lake water in a proportion of 1 to 20 millionwater molecules. When you drink water it is a mixture of both. Likewise your body is soaked in

Heavy Soul and light soul. An infinitesimal tad of Heavy Water Siva is necessary for you to

sustain life, moderate motion and passion and exercise caution. You are the ubiquitous abundant

light-weight individual soul compared to the all-pervasive heavier Soul of Siva. Just rememberthat Siva is zillion times heavier than the individual soul, though Siva and the pure soul are

(chemically) identical. Pralaya (destruction of the body) by Siva is recycling of soul, until theymerge with him.

Another way of looking at Siva and individual souls is that Siva is proton-heavy and the

individual soul is electron-light. The individual souls are like the orbiting electrons.

Siva and the liberated souls: It is like a father getting together with his many sons. There isoneness and yet a duality.

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Christian theologicians are of the belief that only humans possess the indwelling soul, whichlifted them above other animals. Hinduism is of the belief that all fauna and flora including

matter possess soul. If God created this universe, it is hard to imagine that His created inanimateobjects do not have a fragment of Himself; that Himself is the soul. He could not have

incorporated souls just in humans and left animals, plants and matter without the soul. Since Hepervades all, He has His fragment in all. Sentience is same in all, from a sage to a stone.

Remember the tree-huggers who embraced two thousand year old trees from being felled. They

said that they know it was a seedling when Jesus Christ appeared on this earth. It reminded themof him. That tree has sentience; its expression is suboptimal compared to that of a human.

Consciousness sleeps in stone, feels in flora, senses in fauna and thinks in man. Sentience runs

parallel with consciousness. Only the extent of its manifestation varies. Sentience may parallelthe sophistication of nervous energy. Since there is only a difference in the (expression of )

degree of sentience between animal and man, how could one kill an animal for whatever

purpose? That is the basis of Ahimsa or noninjury. Let me give you an example. A sentient manknocked unconscious for any reason lays in the hospital for a month in an obtund state. For theduration of his vegetative state he is less than fully sentient. That does not negate the fact he was

sentient before his present condition. It is the very low degree of sentience that reduced him to a

vegetative state. He can become fully sentient when he recovers from his condition. In likemanner objects and beings though sentient intrinsically, have variable degree of expression.Karma can reduce a soul to an embodied state of an animal, plant, or tree in its next birth. All

inanimate objects were eternally ordained to suppress their sentience by God. Fish eggs lay

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dormant, lifeless, and insentient in a dry riverbed; once there is rain and water starts flowing you

see fish where there were none before. The insentient egg which was part of the mud, acquiredsome degree of sentience when it became a fish. Sentience is feeling and awareness. Sentience is

conditioned by certain qualities: Sattva (virtue and goodness), Rajas (motion and passion) and

Tamas (darkness, sloth and slumber). A stone is Tamas through and through with no Sattva or

Rajas. A Sage, Yogi, or prophet is the highest form of a human being and shows Sattva to itsfull extent. Ordinary human beings have a mixture of Sattva, Rajas and Tamas in variable

amounts and their behavior corresponds to the degree to which they have these three qualities.

Hitler was 85% Tamas, 14% Rajas and 1% Sattva. Remember he cried over injury caused to thecut flowers and a dead bird; that accounts for 1% of Sattva. His Rajas was the driving force for

His Tamas. These three qualities are compared to a tricycle in Hinduism. The front wheel is

Rajas (front-wheel drive); the right rear wheel is Sattva; the left rear wheel is Tamas. The driverwho is sitting on the tricycle turns the Rajas wheel to the right and goes the way of a Sattvic (and

Rajasic) man; when he turns the wheel to the left he goes the way of a Tamasic (and Rajasic)

man. If he goes straight, he is the average man. Rajas provides momentum in whichever

direction a man goes. Without momentum there is no direction. The same allegory is used to

describe Gods: Brahma in Rajasic mode during creation, Vishnu in Sattvic mode in sustenanceand Siva in Tamasic mode in destruction.

Kevala: Soul plus Anava Mala.

Sakala: Soul plus three Malas and Siva Sakti. 

Suddha: Soul plus Siva Sakti.

In Sakala state, Siva Sakti and Malas coexist in the soul. The three entities (Soul, Malas and

Siva Sakti) are comparable to the rice grain with three corresponding elements: the rice, the

chaff, and the rice germ. The Malas do not preclude the presence of Siva Sakti and have noeffect on him; Siva Sakti is as unaffected by Anava mala as the sun is unaffected by cloud, an

umbrella or sunshade. Anava Mala does not veil Siva Sakti but only the soul. The soul is

compared to an owl which is naturally equipped with the nictitating membrane in addition tothe eyelids. The owl covers its eyeballs with its nictitating membrane and prevents light

from entering its eyes. In like manner, Anava Mala covers the soul, preventing the light of 

knowledge reaching the soul. The soul, unlike God, is subject to viciss itudes in knowing,needs organs (Indriyas), objects, and sunshine of knowledge, and carries a shroud of Anava

Mala which prevents diffusion of knowledge. 

The soul and its capacity to acquire knowledge are compared to an eye or crystal; God or

Siva is the sun. All objects, including the crystal, disappear in the thick of darkness and the

eye cannot perceive any object (in darkness); the eye and the crystal need sunlight to see andshine respectively. Siva Sakti provides sunlight of knowledge to the soul to cognize an

object and attain salvation.

People stand on the mountain; walk, run, and slice through air; and wade in water, and yet

neither see the mountain nor feel the air, nor alleviate the thirst. People stand and grope in broad

bright daylight and yet do not see. In like manner, they wade in the knowledge of the Supreme

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and yet do not recognize it. Anava Mala is in pursuit of evanescent pleasures of the world which

end in pain, suffering and disappointment. It is like a cat that goes after a cockroach while sittingon a milk pot. These flimsy joys of the world do not lead to salvation of the soul. Whatever little

spiritual knowledge that the soul acquires during Sakala Avastha is Siva Knowledge.

Pasu: It is the individual soul. Before the soul stepped into this mundane world sporting abody, it was in Kevala state (Kevala-k-kitai), which is disembodied inactive condition of the soul

mired in Anava (I-ness, Mineness, spiritual darkness). Vaishnava ThAkura calls them, Ahamta(mineness) and Mamata --possessiveness (example of Ahamta: I am a doctor; example of 

Mamata: This is my house.) Mala, the inherent darkness of the soul. It was solitary (Kevala) and

of low status, pining all the time for Bliss. It was wilted, with no iccha, Jnana and Kriya (desire,knowledge and action)-- a case of deep depression and darkness. Kevala state is a dormant state

of the soul suspended in time between destruction and creation of the universe. It is a time of 

sleep for the soul because there is no world to speak of, and Maya and karma exist in a potential

but inactive state. This is the interphase for the soul and the world, when there is no kinesis; theinactive soul keeps company with Anava Mala. (you may draw some parallels between the

interphase of the soul and that of the cell physiology.)

Kevala Avastha of the soul during its sleep state is comparable to amblyopia (blindness) of the

eye due to visual deprivation from abnormalities of the eyelid and lens , and distortion of image

from astigmatism, and corneal opacities. The retina of the eye is normal and can perceive lightand sight, if light is allowed to pass without hindrance. In Kevala Avastha, the soul is unable to

see the Light of the Lord (Siva Jnanam) from the veiling by Anava Mala; soul's intelligence

(light and sight) diminishes and the soul takes on the qualities of Anava Mala (darkness of the

soul). Thus deprived of its intelligence, the soul becomes matter.

Notes: abnormality of eyelid: hemangioma causing swelling of eyelid and blocking entry of 

light. Opacity of lens causing cataract and blocking of light.

In Sakala state, there is some light coming in for the soul to gain knowledge necessary to

merge with Siva in Suddha state. Without light, the eye has no value; without knowledge, thesoul has no value. Knowledge proceeds from total absence in Kevala state, to limited knowledge

in Sakala state to great knowledge in Suddha state.

Siva Sakti wakes up the soul first and other sleepers out of their slumber. Anava Mala is the next

one to wake up. Siva Sakti sets in motion the creative process in which the now-awakened Maya gives Tanu, Karana, Bhuvana, and Bhogam to the soul according to its karmic merits. The soul

enters Sakala state with the body and three Malas: Anava, Maya and Karma Malas.

Tanu = body; Karana = intellect and mind; Bhuvanam = world; Bhogam = experience as aresult of past karma, painful and pleasant.

Siva Sakti ordains that man in his Sakala state enjoys and suffers fruits of his Karma: theseare known as Bhōga, experience, as a result of past karma, whether painful or pleasant and 

Bhōgya, experience of good or evil karma; an object of enjoyment. (Bhōga is the experience andBhōgya is the object of enjoyment.) The soul goes through many births and rebirths under the

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purview of Siva Sakti, performs Karmic deeds, eats their respective fruits and thus spends time

on earth in Sakala Avastha.

This process of birth, death, and rebirth of the soul is compared to a bird on a tree. The bird

leaves (death of the body) the tree in the morning and returns (rebirth of a soul in a body) to the

tree in the evening; this happens many times as long as the bird lives. When the bird dies(liberation of the soul), it never returns to the tree of life (earth). There are many birds on a tree;

many go and come; some don't; some new ones come in; that is flux. That flux in permanence inthe return of the embodied souls is Samsara (life on earth), while for individual soul liberation is

the end of life on earth.

Review and explanation: Siva Sakti wakes up the soul from its Kevala state. Siva Sakti takes

pity, gives the soul a body and sends it to the world so it can enjoy the world, have varied

experiences, births and rebirths, and through it all mature, ripen and come back to him in a state

of Bliss, Suddha state. Now the soul has become the samsaric world traveler. This state is calledSakala Sate. Kanma and Maya Malas come into the soul during Sakala state along with a trace of 

Siva Consciousness (knowledge) in the spiritual heart. Anava Mala is intrinsic to every soul thatis born; Maya Mala is conferred to the soul by God; Kanma (karma) Mala is generated by thesoul on account of its thought, word and deed. Maya is like a lamp that gives a little light in the

dark of night until the sun comes up in the morning. Maya gives some spiritual light to soul but

only a little until the latter receives Grace, which together with Karma tends to attenuate, andlater destroys Anava Mala. Though Maya sheds some light of knowledge on the soul, it is a

Mala because the knowledge gained through Maya is by itself not adequate to liberate the soul.

Siva Sakti has a presence in Sakala state along with the Malas; thus, Sakala state is Sat-Asat,

Sat being Siva and Asat being the Malas. Siva-Sat gives the soul some spiritual knowledge and

Malas-Asat gives rise to spiritual ignorance. Anava Mala, the intrinsic Mala of the soul, is so

recalcitrant that Siva Sakti employs Maya and Karma Malas to weaken it. Maya brings Tattvas tothe soul thus giving the soul a body and organs, which help the soul acquire some rudimentary

spiritual knowledge which to certain extent weakens Anava Mala. Maya is thus a faint light of 

the soul, while Siva Sakti in comparison is the sun.

Sat = Being; Asat = nonbeing, matter.

Since Maya is only a weak light (in modern parlance, low-wattage bulb or night light), it

provides limited mundane knowledge to the soul and not the knowledge of Siva; it takes Siva(Supreme Light) to offer Supreme spiritual knowledge to the soul. Maya is always Asat while

Siva is always Sat and the soul is Sat-Asat. The question is why Siva Sakti uses Maya Mala to

shed some light to the soul and also partially remove Anava Mala. Why does Siva Sakti use one

Mala (Maya) to remove another Mala (Anava)? The argument goes as follows: As washermanuses soap or detergent (compared to Maya Mala) to remove a more ingrained dirt (compared to

Anava Mala) in the soiled cloth. Thus by partial cleansing by detergent and beating of the clothe

on the wash-stone, Maya prepares the soul ingrained with Anava Mala for greater purification by

Siva Sakti. In modern parlance, the soul in Sakala state attends the school of hard knocks in thisphenomenal world; hard knocks of daily living mature and "ripen" the Malas, which when

completely ripened, fall off and the soul goes to the next state, Suddha Avastha. The soul goes

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through spiritual evolution over many human births and this progress is proportional to the

attenuation of Anava Mala, which, when expunged with the Grace of God, results in liberation.

Eradication of Anava Mala is complete abandoning of I, Mine, I-ness, and My-ness, which

coincides with the descent of wisdom into the soul. This stage, called Malaparipākam, strikes

the death knell of three Malas and sets the stage for Iru-Vinai-y-Oppu, Satti- nipātham, liberation to enjoy Siva's bliss and Odukkam 

Malaparipākam: stage of the soul when its three Malams meet with the causes of their

removal.

Iru-Vinai-y-Oppu = State of the soul in which it takes an attitude of perfect equanimity

towards meritorious and sinful deeds) 

Satti-nipātham = Sakti-nipātham = Setting (descent) of the Divine Grace in the soul, when

it is ripe.

Definitions are according to Tamil Lexicon.

Odukkam = involution into Siva Sakti 

One of the five functions (panchakritya) of Siva is Tirodhana or veiling, concealment of 

spiritual knowledge; it is actually a function of Siva Sakti, the feminine aspect of Siva

(Tiruvundiyar, Verse 78); Arul Nandi in Siddhiar is of the view that Tirodhana is a Mala along

with Maya, Karma, and Anava Malas, because it obscures the souls from the Light of Siva Saktiin order to ripen Anava Mala. Tirodhana Sakti, belonging to Sakti, is an obscurant of divine

knowledge, instigator of Anava Mala and impeller of desires, and creates in the embodied soul a

sense of belonging to the world of pain and pleasure until the soul is ready (mature enough) togive them up for progress towards Suddha Jnana (pure knowledge) state. It is like the professorof mathematics concealing his knowledge of higher mathematics and letting his preschooler son

struggle with simple additions.

Karma is the wash-stone on which the clothes are beaten for removing dirt; this beating of fabric

of soul on the stone of Karma by Tirodhana Sakti (washerman) causes pain to soul, as Malas

(impurities) are removed.

Under the influence of Tirodhana Sakti, the evil, unpliant and defiant I-defining Anava Malaexpresses desire which leads the soul to action which in its turn leads to Karma and

transmigration. Though Siva Sakti sits side by side with Anava Mala and soul, Siva Saktiactivates but does not interfere with Anava Mala's natural autonomous course which is

comparable to the sun (earth and water) not wanting to alter the kind of tree that grows from aparticular seed.

Siva does not use Tirodhana Sakti and Anava Mala to torture but induce the soul give updesires that cause karma and make it eat the fruits of their deeds which helps obtaining liberation

for the soul.

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The self-centered Anava Mala is full of desires and has a choke hold on Jnana and Kriya

Saktis; Siva Sakti stimulates Karma and Maya Malas; the latter induces the soul to performpurifying actions (karma) over many births and life on earth. The soul abandons Anva Mala with

the help of Siva Sakti going into Malaparipākam1, Iru-Vinai-y-Oppu

2, Satti- nipātham3,

Oddukkam4

and VIdu5

=மலபபக1,இரவனய2

, சதநபத3,

ஒடக4 andவ ட 5 = Removal of impurities1, resolution of sin and merit2, descent of 

Sakti3, Involution

4, and liberation

5to enjoy Siva's bliss. 

Oddukkam =ஒடக: Involution, as of the elements, one into another; absorption,

dissolution, disappearance, as of salt in water; in this instance it means that the soul involutes

into Siva Sakti.

In order to function in Sakala state, naturally man is endowed (burdened) with Tattvas. Don't bedisheartened; even gods, celestials, and worms are in Sakala state, according to Mular. Soul has

the susceptibility to accumulate surface impurities, when it comes into contact with Malas

(literally feces, here it means impurities). Anava Mala is compared to verdigris on the surface of copper vessel. Anava is recalcitrant surface impurity burrowing deeper into the vessel. Anava is

the first Mala of the soul and the last Mala to leave the soul, when Siva confers Grace. Some

students of Saiva Siddhanta wonder why the soul, which is or should be a pure entity, is affectedby corrosive verdigris. Another common analogy given is that the soul is a crystal which takes

on the color of the object next to it. The soul is sticky and the dirt (malas) easily sticks to it. The

soul has to graduate from its Sakala state to Suddha (pure) state. Now it is important to scrub andremove the verdigris before it attains liberation; it is removed only by the grace of God. The new

soul, which is a magnet for this and that, cannot remain in isolation, must take qualities from

God before it can obtain Bliss. Let me give you an example to illustrate the stickiness of the soul

to anything that passes by. The bone avidly eats up calcium and lead; calcium is good for the

bone, but lead is not. When a child eats paint chip with lead, the child gets lead poisoning andlead deposits in the bone, which over time releases lead into the bloodstream causing anemia

and brain damage. The lead in the bone and blood is like impurities (Malas) sticking on the soul.How do you get rid of the lead from the bone and blood? It is done by use of therapeutic

modality of competitive binding and substitution. EDTA likes to combine with calcium and

lead; but it likes lead more than it likes calcium. If you give Calcium EDTA to a child, the lead

in the bone leaches out into the blood, kicks out the calcium from calcium EDTA and takes itsplace. Then the lead EDTA circulating in the blood is excreted in urine; the child gets the

calcium, gets rid of the lead EDTA in the urine and gets better. In the same manner, Sivaness

(calcium) likes to replace Malas (lead) by competitive binding and substitution, thereby makingthe soul pure (suddha).

When Sakalars with three impurities get rid of Kanma or Karma, they graduate to a higher class,Pralayakalars. Sakalars with three Malas were wallowing in Asuddha (impure) Maya ( 24

Tattvas beginning with #13 to #36) Go to Tatttvas-36. Man's soul is Tattva#12. Having moved to

a higher ground, the Pralayakalars swim in Suddha-Asuddha Maya Tattvas (Pure and impure

Maya). Srikanta Rudras also belong to this category. Once the Pralayakalars lose their MayaMalam, they become Vijnanakalars with Anava Mala. You might remember that anyone having

only Anava Mala is said to belong to Kevala state; now Kevala state is the lowest rung of the

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ladder that Vijnanakalars have to scale; they are still enveloped by Asuddha Maya. There are

four steps they have to ascend to reach Point Bliss: Each step one above the other is a purerstate, Kevala-kevala, Kevala-sakala, Kevala-suddha, and Kevala-Arul. The 24 tattvas (#13 to

#36), known as Anma Tattvas belonging to the body, involute into the soul of the aspirant

(Tattva #12), as he moves from Sakalar state to Pralayakalar state. This aggregate of 25 Tattvas

merge into six Vidya Tattvas (Suddha-Asuddha Tattvas, #6 to #11). This aggregate of 31Tattvas (#6 to #36) merges into Suddha Vidya Tattva (#5) of Suddha Tattvas, which involutes

into Isvaram(#4), Sadakhyam (#3) and finally into Sakti Tattva (#2). Sakti stands with all the

lower Tattvas involuted (dissolved or merged) in her (#2) and Siva (#1) stands with her.

Sakalar Pralayakalar Vijnanakalar

3 Malas: Anava, Maya and

KanmaAnava and Maya Malas Anava Malam

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Mular says that there are nine states for the soul to pass through: three Kevala series, three

Sakala series, and three Suddha series.

States of Jiva

Kevala-Kevala — 1 Atita-atitia

state

Kevala-Sakala — 2 Vaindava

manifestation

Kevala-Suddha--3 (Vijnanakala

state)

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Sakala-Kevala — 4 Jagrat-Atita

State

Sakala-Sakala — 5 Jagrat

within jagrat State

Sakala-Suddha — 6 Tat-Para

State

Suddha-Kevala — 7 State of 

Upasantha

Suddha-Sakala — 8 Expansive

Turiya State

Suddha-Suddha — 9 Siva-

becoming State.

Kevala-kevala — 1: Atita-atitia state

Kevala-sakala — 2: Vaindava manifestation

Kevala-suddha — 3: Vijnanakala state

Ref: Madras university: Lexicon

Sakala-kevala--4 = Jagrat-atita: state: condition of the soul while awake, when it loses its breath

and consciousness.

Sakala-sakala--5: Jagrat within Jagrat state = Condition of the soul in waking state, in which allits powers are in full display, as when a person is alert and wide awake.

Sakala-suddha--6 = State of Tat Para state (self-illumined, Final Bliss)

Suddha-Kevala--7 = State of Upasantha (Calmness, tranquillity, peacefulness; Mitigation,

alleviation.)

Suddha-Sakala--8 = Expansive Turiya state (Transcendental consciousness)

Suddha-Suddha — 9 Siva-becoming State

The soul has to climb nine stages in order to become one with Siva.

Unless the soul acquires Brahman knowledge (Brahma Vidya or Siva Consciousness) during

Sakala state and goes on to Suddha state it will go to Sakala-kevala (stage 4)) or Suddha-kevala(stage 7) state between destruction and creation of the universe. All knowledge acquired in

previous lives are not wasted but retained, accounted for, and factored in, when the soul is born

in a higher Avastha; the soul is closer to salvation in stage nine (Suddha-Sudda state). If there isno destruction of the universe the soul goes back into Sakala state in endless cycles of birth and

death, until one of two things happen: 1. the soul graduates to Suddha state and gets Arul

(Grace); 2. the soul is shunted into Sakala state again until Malas ripen and drop off.

Sakala state is the life in the phenomenal world; the joy and sorrow, success and failure, pain

and pleasure, knowledge and ignorance, health, wealth, and happiness and their respective

opposites are enjoyed or suffered in the name of maturation and fall of Malas. As said earlier, weare pulled by Malas by one hand and Siva Sakti by the other hand. 

1. IruL, darkness. We are pulled by the passions of the world and Pasa (impurities) and that

centrifugal pull is Pasajnanam, the pull or knowledge of pasa (fetters or bond) also known as

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IRUL (darkness). Knowledge derived of the world is pasajnanam, which has no value for

liberation. Pasajnanam = knowledge of bonds of the world; mundane knowledge; useless

knowledge lacking Siva Jnanam (wisdom of Siva) 

2. Marul, confusion. Tugged by God (Siva) and the world, the soul is confused and becomes

introspective and looks within for self-knowledge or knowledge of its own nature. This isPasujnanam, or introspective knowledge, which causes confusion in the choice the soul has to

make.

3. Arul, Grace. The soul has won over Irul and Marul, gave up darkness and confusion, seeks

knowledge of Pati, the Chief, the God, or Siva and receives Grace. This is Patijnanam.

This is the soul's progress from Darkness, to Confusion to Grace in Sakala state.

Considering Siva's Panchakrityas (five functions: creation, maintenance, destruction, veiling

and liberation), the aim of four preceding functions is to liberate the soul. As opposed to

Vaishnava view that this world is his playground, and the Lord's functions are his play activity,the Siddhantist says that Siva by his five functions creates this universe for the soul to enjoy the

fruits of karma, bring the Malas to a ripe state (ripe Malas fall like ripe fruits), obscures soul's

vision of knowledge long enough for the soul to eat its fruits in the Sakala state and then conferArul (Grace) in Suddha state. This is the soul's journey from Kevala to Sakala to Suddha state.

Every soul takes a birth in a body from inorganic and organic entities to the highestearthly human being 8,400,000 times. One, then, would consider that human body is the most

difficult to come by. It is mind-boggling to think that we as human beings have gone through

possibly around 8.4 million births before we came to this stage. This is the evolution of the soul

from the lowliest of 8,400,000 organisms to the highest--human. Devas are intermediate between

Isvara, the inner controller and human beings. Gods and goddesses take birth among humans:Avatars, Parvati etc.

Our birth history:

Inorganic births: 3 million births (30 lakhs, 1 lakh = 100,000)

wrigglers (worms): 1 million births (10 lakhs)

Birds: 1.1 million births (11 lakhs)

Beasts: 2.4 million births (24 lakhs)

Human beings: 400,000 births ( 4 lakhs)

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 The question comes up whether we really went through 8.4 million births. It should be

understood that this is revealed wisdom; we are not in a position to accept or refute the revelation

with the aid of worldly intelligence. We are like a newborn infant, who has no capacity tounderstand its existence before conception, at conception, gestation, birth and postnatal period.

In like manner we do not have the special Consciousness to know and realize that we went

through 8.4 million births. Our physical memory of past lives ceases at death and birth. It is

RAM memory. Our ROM is zilch. Our soul retains the ROM memory in its subtle body, whichwe cannot access. Rishi's Superconsciousness has received revelations from the Great Self about

these events. Human consciousness is several levels below the Pure Consciousness of Brahman;

in like manner the sentience of a worm is several levels below the human sentience. Worm hasno knowledge of our existence, but we ourselves do of us and the worm. We are endowed with

enough consciousness to think and it cannot leap out of our ambit of understanding and

intelligence. We are like the flightless winged bird which sees the eagle soar high into the sky;

our clipped consciousness cannot soar high enough to understand the mysteries beyond our sight.Atīndriya = Ati + Indriya = Beyond + Sensesxtramundane spiritual knowledge which is beyond

reason and argument. That is where Sastras (sacred texts) come. Our world and being is

corrupted by Avidya (ignorance) and Maya (illusion). Superconsciousness takes the Sadhaka farbeyond the limitations of Avidya and Maya to see what has never been seen, hear what has never

been heard, and experience bliss. Our intelligence (consciousness) is like the optical microscope,

while Superconsciousness is like the Electron Microscope. Our consciousness is like a pair of 

eyeglasses, while Superconsciousness is like Chandra X-Ray Observatory.Maya, the Mouse, and the mousetrap by Ramakrishna. Paraphrasing from His sayings of 

 Ramakrishna, saying 9, page 24, the mouse and the soul are similar. Mouse has a granary to feedon and also fried rice (Mouri) placed in the mousetrap to relish. Granary is an endless supply of 

feed, while fried rice is an attractive flavorful feed. The mouse in its ignorance goes for the fried

rice in the mousetrap and invites death. Similarly the embodied soul is faced with the attractivepetty pleasures of the world and the threshold of Divine Bliss which is million times greater than

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the petty pleasures. By choosing the petty pleasures of the world, it falls into the trap of Maya,

the great illusion and dies therein. 

In rebirth, Siva Sakti makes the body as the deeds demand; but his input overrides

Karma, in the choice of the body for the soul.

Sthulasarira, gross body that we own and use, takes it origin from Sukshmasarira (subtle body)by the will of Supreme Siva, Karma playing a secondary role. Subtle body originates from

Asuddha Maya which again takes its origin from Bindu, Nada, Siva, and Sakti, the Tetralogy of Saiva Siddhanta. Go to TATTVAS-36. 

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Annamaya Kosa = food sheath; Pranamaya Kosa = vital airs (breath); Manonmaya Kosa =

Mind sheath; Vijnanamaya Kosa = intellectual sheath; Ananadamaya Kosa = Bliss sheath.

The five Kosas or sheaths enclose the soul; some call them a prison for the soul. Maya is

the material cause of these sheaths. The king (soul) lives in this palace (body) enclosed by five

courtyards. As the king returns to his palace from a visit to his kingdom, one attendant stays at

each of the five gates; and the king enters his room by himself and stays there alone. The vitalbreath is the closest guard near his room. As the king would wander into any one of the five

courtyards, the soul may go to any one of the five sheaths, kosas or bodies. Each body (sheath)

has organs; soul's activity depends upon the organ it visits; soul's condition also varies according

to the organ it visits. There are five such states (Avastha) corresponding to the fivefold body.

The five states are

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1. Jagara Avastha around the chest with 35 organs,

2. Svapna Avastha in the larynx with 25 organs,

3. Susupti Avastha around the heart with three organs,

4. Turiya Avastha around the navel with two organs, and

5. Turiyatita Avastha in Muladhara Chakra, where the soul remains alone by itself.

Jagra Avastha Svapna Avastha Susupti Avastha Turiya Avastha Turiyatita Avastha

Purusha (soul) Purusha (soul) Purusha (soul) Purusha (soul) Purusha (soul)

Citta

four Antakarana four Antakarana

five Jananedriyas

five Karmendriyas

five Tanmatras five Tanmatras15 organs (10 vital

breaths plus five

motor functions:speech,

ambulation, grasp,

evacuation and

reproduction.)

10 vital breaths,five motor

functions.

Prana (main life

breath)Prana

Total 35 organs. Total 25 organs Total three organs Total two organs Soul alone by itself 

Chest Larynx Heart Navel Muladhara Chakra

Jagra Avastha Svapna Avastha Susupti Avastha Turiya Avastha Turiyatita Avastha

For more information on Indriyas, Tanmatras, Citta, Antakarana, go to BG Chapter 2

Samkhya Theory. 

All the organs noted above in each of these states are active in their respective avasthas. The

soul without the body was in Kevala state; when it moves into a physical body, it enters Sakalastate, in which are present five different levels of activity ranging from Turiyatita Avastha to

Jagra Avastha. The soul, when it occupies the body, settles down first in Muladhara Chakra,

which is the stepping stone for higher areas. This is the lonely state of the soul, practically shutout from the outside world. Turiyatita Avastha5 in Muladhara is practically not any different

from the static Kevala state, because there is not even a breath; it is suffocation with no action orknowledge of the body, the world, or God. Anava Mala is dominant and recalcitrant. The soul

settles down in Muladhara Chakra at the base of the spine, then looks around to escape from thelonely place and goes up to the Navel area where it experiences Turiya Avastha4. It is a breath

of fresh air; the soul finds itself showing some signs of life. In terms of embryology, It appears

that the soul-body has moved from embryonic one-celled state to a fetus that can breath. Yet, itcannot think, act or feel; it is like being unconscious and yet breathing. The soul looks around

and moves to the heart station and goes into deep sleep like a fetus that sleeps most of the time.

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What else is there to do? This is Susupti Avastha3 or deep sleep state. Now the soul gets some

basic faculty like Citta, with which the soul understands in a limited way what happens aroundit. Deep sleep goes on to dream sleep, when the soul moves to the throat area, starts breathing,

thinking with Antakarana, feeling, touching, grasping, tasting and hearing and acting out

without using the motor organs. That is Svapna Avastha2 or the dream state of the soul. The

soul has come a long way and snaps out of the dream sleep; it has some awareness, it thinkssomewhat vaguely, and the senses show some function. It has all organs and it is awake, but not

completely and this is Jagrat state1 or waking state.

The soul gets cloaked with a body; its progress matches with that of the embryo in the womb

which grows from one embryonic cell to a fully formed viable fetus. It does not breathe in airbecause it is confined and its lungs are budding; the mother provides the vital air (prana or

oxygen) via the umbilical cord and it does not drown as the breathing movements of the chest

sucks in the amniotic fluid into his budding lungs. It does not eat though it makes eatingmovements. It opens the eyes, looks around, sees darkness, kicks, yawns, grasps slippery

umbilical cord, sucks its thumb, urinates, swallows the urine-laden amniotic fluid, passes it back 

into the amniotic fluid, floats, and swims. It grows by leaps and bounds; it has the full

complement of functioning organs; it dreams a while, sleeps a lot and thinks; what he thinks, noone knows.

The soul learns and knows through sense organs, karma, time, body, people, and books; onits own it knows nothing. What the soul knows through intermediaries actually comes from the

grace of God. The soul needs the grace of God to know, but God does not need anything,

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anyone, any organ, or any known or unknown entity to know. He is all knowledge and all

consciousness; uses Iccha, Jnana, and Kriya; creates, maintains, and destroys; pervades all inthis universe; and remains as the life principle in all beings. He is extant in all things. All souls

endowed with bodies receive knowledge and consciousness from him. He makes sure that

Tattvas go to build bodies, organs, mind and other faculties through which he imparts

knowledge of spirit and matter to the soul. Siva and Sakti are the essential elements infunctioning of body, organs, faculties including physics, chemistry, and mechanics of matter.

Nothing moves or functions without his Grace. As the sun is the source of light for the crystal,

God is the source of knowledge of the soul.

The soul comes under the influence of Antakarana (inner organ) consisting of Manam,Buddhi, Cittam, and Ahamkaram (Mind, Intuitive intellect, Determinative faculty, and Ego).

The soul receives ambiguous knowledge from Manam, discerning knowledge from Buddhi,

superficial knowledge from Citta, and questionable knowledge from Ahankaram.

Soul is the king; Buddhi is the prime minister; Ahamkara, Manam, and Cittam are cabinetmembers; then come down the line the five karmendriyas, five jnanedriyas, five Tanmatras and

five Bhutas. The bhutas (earth, water, fire, air, and ether) and objects made of them exude

tanmatras (sound, touch, color and form, taste, and smell). Tanmatras go beyond their

preceding characterization in that they cover vibrations coming from Bhutas and their objectsand beings. Janendriyas (sense organs) perceive Tanmatras by way of hearing, tactile sense,

sight, taste, and smell. These impressions from Tanmatras and sense organs are passed on to

Antakarana, the inner organ, which consists of  Manam, Buddhi, Cittam, and Ahamkaram(Mind, Intuitive intellect, Determinative faculty, and Ego). The sense organs are limited in the

sense that each has a specific function. But God or Siva Sakti has no physical eyes and yet can

see, hear.... 

Jnanendriyas: Sense organs: Ear, skin, eye, tongue and nose

Karmendriyas are motor organs, voice box, hands, feet, rectum and genitals, causing

speech, grasp, locomotion, evacuation, and generation.

Janendriyas are sensory organs, ear, skin, eye, tongue and nose. 

Buddhi: Reason, power of discernment or judgment, one of the four species of antakkara – 

am

Antakarana = அநதகரண = Inner seat of thought, feeling, and volition, consisting of 

four aspects: ம1, பத2 , சத3, அகஙகர4 (Mind1, Buddhi or Intellect2,

Determinative Faculty3, Egoism4 ; உடகவ = utkaruvu = Inner Organ.

Cittam = Determinative faculty

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Tanmatirai: தனமதர = Rudimentary or subtle elements, viz., ஓச, ஊ,

ஒள, வ, ற = sound27, touch28, form29, taste30, odor31 from which the Great

elements came: ether32

, air33

, fire34

, water35,

earth36

.

The above definitions are obtained from Tamil Lexicon.

The soul receives ambiguous knowledge from Manam, discerning knowledge from Buddhi,superficial knowledge from Citta, and questionable knowledge from Ahankaram.  Cittam 

receives the impressions of all the sense organs and integrates them for presentation to other

faculties. Manas analyses information from Cittam, formulates hypothesis and makessuggestions to Ahankara. Ahankara, the egotistical element in the chain, views the presentation

in relation to I, Me, Mine and Mineness. The next element in the chain is Buddhi (the chief 

minister) who elucidates the material from sense organs colored by the Mind and Ahankara and

makes informed judgment. Buddhi is the link between all the distal elements and the soulwhich apprehends the object and the outside world by the elements mentioned above.

Consciousness is the privileged possession of the soul, which other elements do not have. Soul

may reject the advice of Buddhi and take that of Cittam, Manam or Ahankara, which are the

qualities of animal or man deprived of Buddhi, which is the exclusive possession of manamong beings. Soul has an oppressive overhang, Anava Mala; therefore, five Tattvas come to

aid it. They are the fivefold Pancakancukam (panca + kancukam = five + vestures). They

are Kālam, Niyati, Kalai, Vidyai, and Arāgam (Sanskrit: Kāla, Niyati, Kala, Vidya, and Rāga;English: Time, Destiny (karma), Aptitude or Creativity, Knowledge, and Desire). Endowed

with these five Tattvas, the soul knows and explores the outside world; these faculties provide

the soul to think, speak, and act in ways that cause Karma. From Maya come in a linear

fashion the following tattvas in a father-son descent: Kāla, Niyati, Kalā, Vidya, Raga andPurusa, the last being the soul. Desire (Arāgam) is the father of the soul, Knowledge (Vidyai)

the grandfather, Aptitude or Creativity the great grandfather, Order the great great grandfather,

and Time is the great, great great grandfather. Desire has the immediate influence on the soul,causing it to enjoy the world of objects and is the cause of Karma. Vidya or knowledge is a

complement to will and action. Aptitude (Kalai) helps the soul remove some of Anava Mala.

Order or Destiny (Niyati) makes sure that the soul consumes (resolves) its Karma. Time (Kāla),the patriarch of the said Tattvas, brings karma to its end, fruition or holds it in reserve for the

future. The five tattvas or vestures serve the soul also called Purusa. Saiva philosophy here

differs slightly from the Sankhya philosophy. Go to BG Chapter 2 Samkhya Theory.Siva Sakti

provides the soul all the elements needed for embodiment, and enjoyment in this world. Sivapervades all that exists; he animates it; his Sakti operates in all animate and inanimate objects.

The powers of beings and elements trace their origin to Siva Sakti, which is the highest of all

Saktis. All combined Saktis of this universe is miniscule compared to Siva Sakti.

The soul obtains knowledge of objects and world from sense organs to which a susceptible

soul falls prey. This is compared to an young prince who is waylaid and abducted by thieves.Living and growing up with and among thieves (sense organs), the prince learns their ways

which are unworthy of a prince. In like manner, the senses hijack the soul and takes it to the

world of Asat; the soul, though of divine origin from Sakti, wallows in sensual pleasures andpursuits, which accumulate Karma. Siva is Sat and Cit and the the soul is mired in a world of 

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Asat and Acit. Once the soul comes under the influence of Sat, Siva Sakti, it moves away from

matter and obtains liberation.

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Saiva Siddhantist believes that souls of other religions should excel and achieve the native

blessedness of that particular religion; thus, no religion can give the ultimate release thatSaivism gives. When the soul is ripe in its own religion, it will be born in Saivite religion. That

is not the end of the road; within Savism there are subdivisions or inner religions; once the soul

attains excellence in the inner religions, the soul has to take birth in Saiva Siddhanta. Now the

soul has to perform Chariyai, Kriyai, and Yogam. These are set in a ladder pattern to reach Siva.The soul has to excel in Dasamarga, Kriyamarga, Sakhamarga and Sanmarga. The above chart

illustrates the various Margas, a Sadhaka in Saiva Siddhanta should follow to obtain release.

Dasamarga is the path of servant, Kriya Satputramarga, the way of a child, Sakhamarga, thepath of friend, Sanmarga-Sadhanamarga, the path of wisdom.

One may progress from one stage to the next to the highest and attain salvation in one

lifetime; that is rare. More commonly one lifetime is spent in Dasamarga and the soul is born

again and again to pursue other paths and eventually merges with Siva.

Dasamarga. Dasa = servant or slave. Marga = path. Path of the servant. Service to the Lord

with one's body. The devotee serves the Lord as a servant. He keeps the temple clean, spotless,

and shiny; he collects flowers and makes garlands for the Lord; he keeps the flame of the lights

alive all the time; he tends the flower gardens; he praises and sings glories of the Lord; heworships and honors him; he calls himself a loyal dog of the Lord, waiting to do his bid.

Dasamarga takes the devotee of Siva to the world of Siva (Saloka) after death and he will bereborn again to pursue other paths. (loka = world)

Kriyamarga or Satputramarga. Kriya = service. Satputra = blessed child. The path of thechild. Service to the Lord with one's senses. This path is that of the child of the Lord. Does this

remind you of Jesus Christ? The devotee takes flowers to the Lord, lights up lamps with

fragrant oils, performs five purifications, sets up a prayer room with alter, picture of Siva andother aspects of worship, consecrates the picture, makes burnt offerings and praises the Lord.

This path of service is akin to that of son to his father (nearness, Samipya) and takes the soul to

Siva.

Sakhamarga. Sakha = friend. Path of friend. The five senses should be kept under control;

The Ida and Pingala Nadi should be controlled; meditation on a single object and channeling

Prana and Kundalini goddess to Susumna Nadi, merging of the yogi with Siva in SahasraraChakra, imbibing the ambrosia and going to the sphere of fire, sun and moon are the steps

towards Sakhamarga. This is the path of friend (intelligence) to the Lord. This path assures that

the devotee attains likeness to Siva (Sarupya).

The Journey of Soul beyond the borders of the body. The Path to Siva Bliss.  

There are Âdhāra centers in the body and NirÂdhāra centers are above Sahasrara Chakra. Adhara 

= support. Niradhara = without support; centers above the seventh Chakra. There are six AdharaCenters in the body: Muladhara, Svadisthana, Manipura, Anahata, Visuddhi, and Ajna each one

presided by a deity, Brahma, Vishnu, Rudra, Mahesvara, Sadasiva, and Apara Bindu. Adharayogam is accomplished by Kundalini yogi who ascends all six centers to reach the seventh

Sahasrara center in the crown presided by Paranada where he unites with Siva. Kundlini yoga is

Adhara yogam with support derived from the centers or chakras. Beyond the Sahasrara Chakra is

the Niradhara center without any apparent support; reaching it is Niradhara yogam. Jnana andPrana ascend beyond the seven centers and course through eighth, ninth, tenth, eleventh sthanas

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the soul by Grace (Saktinipātam). According to Unmai Vilakkam, the soul, Anava Mala, and

Pati still hold together in Mukti or liberation. How is that possible? Anava Mala has morphedfrom an obstructionist to a facilitator (transformation). Once Grace has pervaded the soul,

Anava Mala becomes the purveyor of Bliss in Suddha state; remember, once Anava Mala was

a purveyor of nescience in Kevala and Sakala state. Tirodhana Sakti, which is the veiling

power of the Lord, has morphed into Arul Sakti. Arul = Grace. The four events (Iruvinaiyoppu, Malaprapakam, Saktinipatam, and Oddukkam) caused the

soul to step into Suddha Avastha. The soul, thus optimized and purified, and penetrated by

Grace is at the doorstep of liberation; it also has transformed from the dual state of Sat-Asat to

Sat state; Asat dropped out with the fall of Malas; now it is one with Siva. Here oneness withSiva does not mean integral part of Siva.

Mukti (liberation) is union with God; Mukta (the liberated soul) in relation to Siva is likethe fruit and its essence, flower and its fragrance, fire and its heat and vina and its musical

sound. Saivites believe that Jivan mukti (liberation while alive) is achievable while

Vaishnavites (Ramanujacharya) believe in Videha Mukti (liberation after death).

The soul in mukti and Siva are indistinguishable like the rays of the moon and the sun. We

very often forget that the moon is there in the sky in daylight because the effulgence of the

sun subsumes the moon light. Though they are indistinguishable, Siva and the soul are distinctentities; for the soul to enjoy bliss from Siva, it has to be a distinct entity to receive bliss. Siva

(Siva Sakti) is like a nursing mother and the soul is like a suckling infant.

Sayings Sri Ramakrishna

Emancipated soul = Jivan Mukta. Corporeal liberation, liberation while alive is an

important tenet of Saivism. 953. How does the emancipated soul live in the world?

He lives in the world like the diver-bird. It dives into water, but the water does not wet its plumage; the

few drops of water which may possibly stick to its body are easily shaken off when it once flaps its

wings.

Comment: Water here means merits and demerits which accumulate karma with resultant rebirth. In

Jivan Mukti, the liberated soul does not accumulate karma, though he is engaged in worldly acts.

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