Yoga Vashishtha 3.79.1–11
(These verses present deep philosophical questions about the nature of Ultimate Reality, often called Brahm or the Self )
श्रीवसिष्ठ उवाच।
इत्युक्त्वा राक्षसी प्रश्नान्सा वक्तुमुपचक्रमे।
उच्यतामिति राज्ञोक्ते तानिमान्शृणु राघव ॥ १॥
राक्षस्युवाच।
एकस्यानेकसंख्यस्य कस्याणोरम्बुधेरिव।
अन्तर्ब्रह्माण्डलक्षाणि लीयन्ते बुद्बुदा इव ॥ २॥
किमाकाशमनाकाशं न किंचित्किंचिदेव किम्।
कोऽहमेवासि संपन्नः को भवानप्यहं स्थितः ॥ ३॥
गच्छन्न गच्छति च कः कोऽतिष्ठन्नपि तिष्ठति।
कश्चेतनोऽपि पाषाणः कश्चिद्व्योम्नि विचित्रकृत् ॥ ४॥
वह्नितामजहच्चैव कश्च वह्निरदाहकः।
अवह्नेर्जायते वह्निः कस्माद्राजन्निरन्तरम् ॥ ५॥
अचन्द्रार्काग्नितारोऽपि कोऽविनाशः प्रकाशकः।
अनेत्रलभ्यात्कस्माच्च प्रकाशः संप्रवर्तते ॥ ६॥
लतागुल्माङ्कुरादीनां जात्यन्धानां तथैव च।
अन्येषामप्यनक्षाणामालोकः क इवोत्तमः ॥ ७॥
जनकः कोऽम्बरादीनां सत्तायाः कः स्वभावदः।
को जगद्रत्नकोशः स्यात्कस्य कोशो मणेर्जगत् ॥ ८॥
कोऽणुस्तमःप्रकाशः स्यात्कोऽणुरस्ति च नास्ति च।
कोऽणुर्दूरेऽप्यदूरे च कोऽणुरेव महागिरिः ॥ ९॥
निमेष एव कः कल्पः कः कल्पोऽपि निमेषकः।
किं प्रत्यक्षमसद्रूपं किं चेतनमचेतनम् ॥ १०॥
कश्च वायुरवायुश्च कः शब्दोऽशब्द एव कः।
कः सर्वं न च किंचिच्च कोऽहं नाहं च किं भवेत् ॥ ११॥
Sage Vasistha said:
3.79.1
> After speaking thus, the demoness began to ask her questions. When the King said "please tell", O Raghav, listen to these questions.
The demoness said:
3.79.2–11
> Who is that one Being who appears as many, like atoms in the ocean? Inside him, lakhs of universes dissolve like bubbles.
> What is Space and what is not space? What is Nothing and what is something? Who am I who has become all this? Who are you who exists as me?
> Who moves yet does not move? Who stands yet does not stand? Who is Conscious yet like a stone? Who creates wonderful things in the sky?
> Who has given up the quality of fire yet is fire itself, and is a fire that does not burn? Why does fire continuously arise from what is not fire, O King?
> Who is the indestructible light-giver even without moon, sun, fire or stars? From where does this light come without eyes, and why does it arise?
> For creepers, shrubs, sprouts and also for those born blind and others without eyes, what is that excellent light?
> Who is the Creator of the sky and other things? Who gives Existence and Nature to all? Who is the jewel-mine of the World, and whose jewel-mine is this world?
> Who is the tiny atom that is both darkness and light? Who is the tiny atom that both exists and does not exist? Who is the tiny atom that is far yet not far? Who is the tiny atom that is itself a great mountain?
> Who makes a moment into a full Cosmic age, and who makes a Cosmic age into a moment? What is direct perception that has an unreal form? What is Conscious that is unconscious?
> Who is wind that is not wind? Who is sound that is not sound? Who is everything and also nothing? Who am I who is not I? What could this be?
Summary of the Teachings:
These verses start the sequence of seventy questions of the demoness Karkati, which are hard for the unlearned but too plain to the wise. They point to a single, Infinite Consciousness that appears as countless forms and Universes, much like an ocean containing many waves or bubbles. The questions challenge the mind to see beyond ordinary divisions like one and many, Existence and non-existence, showing that the True Self is the Unchanging ground in which all worlds appear and dissolve.
The verses explore paradoxes of perception and Existence. They ask about movement and Stillness, light without sources, and Awareness without sense organs. This teaches that True Consciousness is not limited by physical bodies or senses. Even plants, the blind, and inert objects share in the same illuminating Awareness, revealing that the light of Knowledge is inherent and not dependent on external conditions or eyes.
Creation, Space, Time, and elements like fire, wind, and sound are questioned as illusions arising from the One Reality. The verses highlight how opposites coexist in the same essence – fire that does not burn, atoms that are mountains, moments that are eons. This points to the teaching that the World is a play of Consciousness, where distinctions are only apparent, not Real.
The questions about "who am I" and "who are you" dissolve the sense of separate identity. The King and the questioner, the Self and the other, are shown to be the same underlying Reality. Everything is interconnected as expressions of one Being, urging the seeker to Realize Unity beyond individual ego.
Overall, these verses guide the reader toward non-dual understanding. By pondering these riddles, one recognizes the world as a dream-like appearance in the vast Consciousness. The teachings encourage letting go of limited views to rest in the peaceful, all-encompassing Self that is beyond all descriptions yet the Source of all.