Saturday, March 2, 2013

Direct Path - Nisargadatta Maharaj


Sri Nisargadatta Maharaj

Go deep into the sense of 'I am' and you will find. 
Focus your mind on 'I am' which is pure and simple being. 
Take the first step first.
All blessings come from within.
Turn within.
'I am' you know.

Be with it all the time you can spare 
until you revert to it spontaneously.

There is no simpler and easier way. 
Before all beginnings, after all endings -- I am.

All has its being in me, in the 'I am' 
that shines in every living being. 
On a deeper level my experience is your experience.

Dive deep within yourself 
and you will find it easily and simply.

Go in the direction of 'I am'.


When I met my Guru, he told me:
"You are not what you take yourself to be.
Find out what you are.
Watch the sense 'I am', find your real Self."

I obeyed him, because I trusted him. I did as he told me.
All my spare time I would spend looking at myself in silence.
And what a difference it made, and how soon!

My teacher told me to hold on to the sense 'I am' tenaciously 
and not to swerve from it even for a moment.
I did my best to follow his advice 
and in a comparatively short time 
I realized within myself the truth of his teaching.
All I did was to remember his teaching, 
his face, his words, constantly.



This brought an end to the mind; 
in the stillness of the mind I saw myself as I am -- unbound.
I simply followed (my teacher's) instruction 
which was to focus the mind on pure being 'I am'
and stay in it.

I used to sit for hours together
with nothing but the 'I am' in my mind 
and soon peace and joy and a deep all-embracing love 
became my normal state.
In it all disappeared -- myself, my Guru, 
the life I lived, the world around me.
Only peace remained and unfathomable silence. 

My Guru ordered me to attend to the sense 'I am' 
and to give attention to nothing else.
I just obeyed.
I did not follow any particular course of breathing, 
or meditation, or study of scriptures.

Whatever happened, I would turn away my attention from it 
and remain with the sense 'I am'.
It may look too simple, even crude.
My only reason for doing it was that my Guru told me so.
Yet it worked!

Obedience is a powerful solvent of all desires and fears.
There is no sense of purpose in my doing anything.
Things happen as they happen -- 
not because I make them happen, 
but it is because I am that they happen.
In reality nothing ever happens.

When the mind is restless, 
it makes Shiva dance 
like the restless waters of the lake make the moon dance. 
It is all appearance, due to wrong ideas. 

In whatever role I may appear 
and whatever function I may perform 
I remain what I am: 
the 'I am' 
immovable, unshakable, independent. 

When I say 'I am'
I do not mean a separate entity with a body as its nucleus. 
I mean the totality of being, 
the ocean of consciousness, 
the entire universe of all that is and knows.

I have nothing to desire for I am complete forever.
Words betray their hollowness.
The real cannot be described, it must be experienced.
I cannot find better words for what I know.

What I say may sound ridiculous.
But what the words try to convey is the highest truth.
All is one, however much we quibble.
And all is done to please the one source and goal of every desire
whom we all know as the 'I am'. 

Just like the sun is reflected in a billion dew drops, 
so is the timeless endlessly repeated.
When I repeat: 'I am, I am', 
I merely assert and re-assert an ever-present fact.

You get tired of my words 
because you do not see the living truth behind them.
Contact it and you will find the full meaning 
of words and of silence -- both.

I trusted my Guru.

What he told me to do, I did.
He told me to concentrate on 'I am' -- 
I did. 
He told me that I am beyond all perceivables and conceivables -- 
I believed.
You may choose any way that suits you; 
your earnestness will determine the rate of progress.


First of all, establish a constant contact with your self, 
be with yourself all the time. 

Into self-awareness all blessings flow. 

Begin as a centre of observation, deliberate cognizance, 
and grow into a centre of love in action. 

'I am' is a tiny seed which will grow into a mighty tree -- 
quite naturally, without a trace of effort. 

Establish yourself firmly in the awareness of 'I am'. 
This is the beginning and also the end of all endeavour. 

Hold onto the sense of 'I am' to the exclusion of everything else. 
When thus the mind becomes completely silent, 
it shines with a new light and vibrates with new knowledge. 

It all comes spontaneously, you need only hold on to the 'I am'. 
Refuse all thoughts except one: the thought 'I am'. 

The mind will rebel in the beginning, 
but with patience and perseverance it will yield and keep quiet. 

Once you are quiet, 
things will begin to happen spontaneously and quite naturally, 
without any interference on your part. 




Just keep in mind the feeling 'I am', 
merge in it till your mind and feeling become one. 

By repeated attempts 
you will stumble on the right balance of attention and affection 
and your mind will be firmly established in the thought-feeling 'I am'. 

Whatever you think, say, or do, 
this sense of immutable and affectionate being 
remains as the ever-present background of the mind. 

To know what you are 
you must first investigate and know what you are not. 
And to know what you are not 
you must watch yourself carefully, 
rejecting all that does not necessarily go with the basic fact: 'I am'. 

Separate consistently and perseveringly 
the 'I am' from 'this' or 'that', 
and try to feel what it means to be, 
just to be, 
without being 'this' or 'that'. 

Give up all questions except one: 'Who am I'? 
After all, the only fact you are sure of is that you are. 
The 'I am' is certain. 
The 'I am this' is not. 
Struggle to find out what you are in reality. 

Cling to one thing that matters, 
hold on to 'I am' and let go all else. 
This is sadhana. 


cling to one thing that matters


In realization there is nothing to hold on to and nothing to forget. 
Everything is known, nothing is remembered. 
Just remember yourself. 
'I am' is enough to heal your mind and take you beyond. 
Just have some trust. 

Stop searching, and see -- it is here and now -- 
it is that 'I am' you know so well. 
You cannot meaningfully say 'this is what I am'. It just makes no sense.
'I am' is first-hand and needs no proofs. Stay with it.
Be content with what you are sure of. 
And the only thing you can be sure of is 'I am'. 
Stay with it, and reject everything else. This is Yoga. 

Go back to that state of pure being, 
where the 'I am' is still in its purity 
before it got contaminated with 'this I am' or 'that I am'. 

Your burden is of false self-identifications -- abandon them all. 

Don't you see that it is your very search for happiness 
that makes you miserable? 
Try the other way: indifferent to pain and pleasure, 
neither asking nor refusing, 
give all your attention to the level on which 'I am' is timelessly present. 
Soon you will realize that peace and happiness 
are in your very nature and it is only seeking them 
through some particular channels that disturbs. 

Give your heart and mind to brooding over the 'I am', 
what is it, how is it, what is its source, its life, its meaning. 
It is very much like digging a well. 
You reject all that is not water till you reach the life-giving spring. 
The 'I am' that pursues the pleasant and shuns the unpleasant is false; 
the 'I am' that sees pleasure and pain as inseparable sees rightly. 

Those who practise the sadhana of focussing their minds on 'I am' 
may feel related to others who have followed the same sadhana and succeeded.


You need not worry about your worries. 
Just be. 
Do not try to be quiet; 
do not make 'being quiet' into a task to be performed. 
Don't be restless about 'being quiet', miserable about 'being happy'. 
Just be aware that you are and remain aware.
Don't say: 'yes, I am; what next?' 
There is no 'next' in 'I am'. 
It is a timeless state.



On waking up, 
was it not the sense 'I am' that came first? 
The sense 'I am' is always with you, 
only you have attached all kinds of things to it -- 
body, feelings, thoughts, ideas, possessions, etc. 
All these self-identifications are misleading. 
Because of them you take yourself to be what you are not. 

What is mine is mine 
and was mine even when God was not. 
Of course, it is a very tiny little thing, a speck -- 
the sense 'I am', the fact of being. 

The light by which you see the world, which is God, 
is the tiny little spark: 'I am', 
apparently so small, 
yet the first and the last in every act of knowing and loving. 

Without the 'I am' there is nothing. 
All knowledge is about the 'I am'. 
Outside the Self there is nothing. 
All is one and all is contained in 'I am'.


Give it all up and be ready for the real to assert itself. 
This self-assertion is best expressed in words: 'I am'. 
Nothing else has being. Of this you are absolutely certain. 

Instead of seeing things as imagined, 
learn to see them as they are. 
When you can see everything as it is, 
you will also see yourself as you are. 
It is like cleansing a mirror. 
The same mirror that shows you the world as it is 
will also show you your own face. 
The thought 'I am' is the polishing cloth. 

'I am' is ever afresh. 
You do not need to remember in order to be.
At present your being is mixed up with experiencing. 
All you need is to unravel being from the tangle of experiences. 
Once you have known pure being, 
without being this or that, 
you will discern it among experiences 
and you will no longer be misled by names and forms. 

The 'I am' in movement creates the world. 
The 'I am' at peace becomes the Absolute.
In the immensity of consciousness a light appears, 
a tiny point that moves rapidly and traces shapes, 
thoughts and feelings, concepts and ideas, 
like the pen writing on paper. 
And the ink that leaves a trace is memory. 
You are that tiny point 
and by your movement the world is ever re-created. 
Stop moving and there will be no world. 

Look within and you will find that the point of light 
is the reflection of the immensity of light in the body, 
as the sense 'I am'. 

There is only light, all else appears.


The 'I am' is at the root of all appearance 
and the permanent link in the succession of events that we call life. 
Human beings die every second, 
the fear and the agony of dying hangs over the world like a cloud. 
No wonder you too are afraid. 
But once you know that the body alone dies 
and not the continuity of memory and the sense of 'I am' reflected in it, 
you are afraid no longer. 

People differ, but all are faced with the fact of their own existence. 
'I am' is the ultimate fact; 
'Who am I?' is the ultimate question 
to which everybody must find an answer. 

Delve deeply into the sense 'I am' 
and you will surely discover that the perceiving centre is universal, 
as universal as the light that illumines the world. 
All that happens in the universe happens to you, the silent witness. 

On the other hand, whatever is done, 
is done by you, 
the universal and inexhaustible energy. 

Before the mind -- I am. 
'I am' is not a thought in the mind; 
the mind happens to me, I do not happen to the mind. 
And since time and space are in the mind, 
I am beyond time and space, eternal and omnipresent. 

You are not this, 
there is nothing of yours in this, 
except the little point of 'I am'.
'I am this, I am that' is dream, 
while pure 'I am' has the stamp of reality on it. 

You have tasted so many things -- all came to naught. 
Only the sense 'I am' persisted -- unchanged. 
Stay with the changeless among the changeful, 
until you are able to go beyond. 

When the 'I am myself' goes, 
the 'I am all' comes. 
When the 'I am all' goes, 
'I am' comes. 
When even 'I am' goes, 
reality alone is...



There are many starting points -- 
they all lead to the same goal. 
You may begin with selfless work, 
abandoning the fruits of action; 
you may then give up thinking 
and in the end giving up all desires. 
Here, giving up (tyaga) is the operational factor. 

Or, you may not bother about any thing you want, 
or think, or do 
and just stay put in the thought and feeling 'I am', 
focussing 'I am' firmly in your mind. 

All kinds of experience may come to you -- 
remain unmoved 
in the knowledge that all perceivable is transient, 
and only the 'I am' endures.

What do you love now? 
The 'I am'. 
Give your heart and mind to it, think of nothing else. 
This, when effortless and natural, is the highest state. 
In it love itself is the lover and the beloved.

Before the world was, consciousness was. 
In consciousness it comes into being, 
in consciousness it lasts 
and into pure consciousness it dissolves. 

At the root of everything is the feeling 'I am'. 
The state of mind: 'there is a world' is secondary, 
for to be, I do not need the world, the world needs me.

Go home, 
take charge of your father's business, 
look after your parents in their old age. 
Marry the girl who is waiting for you, 
be loyal, be simple, be humble. 
Hide your virtue, live silently. 

The five senses and the three qualities (gunas) 
are your eight steps in Yoga. 
And 'I am' is the Great Reminder (mahamantra). 
You can learn from them all you need to know. 
Be attentive, enquire ceaselessly. 
That is all.

Everything is a play of ideas. 
In the state free from ideation (nirvikalpa samadhi) 
nothing is perceived. 
The root idea is: 'I am'. 
It shatters the state of pure consciousness 
and is followed by the innumerable sensations and perceptions, 
feeling and ideas, 
which in their totality constitute God and His world. 

The 'I am' remains as the witness, 
but it is by the will of God that everything happens.

In my world nobody is born and nobody dies. 
Some people go on a journey and come back, 
some never leave. 
What difference does it make since they travel in dreamlands, 
each wrapped up in his own dream. 
Only the waking up is important. 

It is enough to know the 'I am' as reality and also love.

As it is natural for the incense stick to burn out, 
so it is natural for the body to die. 
Really, it is a matter of very little importance. 
What matters is that I am neither the body nor the mind. 
I am.

Don't identify yourself with an idea. 
If you mean by God, the Unknown, 
then you merely say: 'I do not know what I am'. 
If you know God as you know yourself, you need not say it. 

Best is the simple feeling 'I am'. 
Dwell on it patiently. 
Here patience is wisdom; don't think of failure. 
There can be no failure in this understanding.

That which makes you think you are human is not human. 
It is but a dimensionless point of consciousness, 
a conscious nothing; 
all you can say about yourself is: 'I am'. 

You are pure being, awareness, bliss. 
To realize that is the end of all seeking. 
You come to it when you see 
all you think yourself to be as mere imagination 
and stand aloof in pure awareness 
of the transient as transient, 
imaginary as imaginary, 
unreal as unreal.


You assert yourself to be what you are not
and deny yourself to be what you are.
You omit the element of pure cognition,
of awareness free from all personal distortions.
Unless you admit the reality of consciousness,
you will never know yourself.

Behave as if what I say is true
and judge by what actually happens.
All I ask is the little faith needed for making the first step.
With experience will come confidence
and you will not need me any more.
I know what you are
and I am telling you.
Trust me for a while.



Ramana's Direct Path





All beings desire happiness always,
happiness without a tinge of sorrow.

To attain that natural happiness
one must know oneself.
For that, self-enquiry, ‘Who am I?’,  
is the chief means.

Happiness is the nature of the Self.
They are not different.

The only happiness there is,
is of the Self.
That is the truth.
There is no happiness in worldly objects.
Because of our ignorance
we imagine we derive happiness from them.

One must realize his Self 

in order to open the store 
of unalloyed happiness.



When unceasingly the mind
scans its own form,
there is nothing of the kind.
For everyone
this path direct is open.

Thoughts alone make up the mind;
and of all thoughts 
the ‘I’ thought is the root.
What is called mind
is but the notion ‘I’.

Seeing oneself free of all attributes
is to see the Lord,
for He shines ever as the pure Self.

For He shines ever as the pure Self ...
Everybody will go after 
only what gives happiness to him.
Thinking that happiness comes 
from some object or other,
you go after it.

See from whence all happiness,
including the happiness you regard 
as coming from sense objects,
really comes.
You will understand all happiness 
comes only from the Self,
and then you will always abide in the Self.

Pleasure and pain are aspects of the mind only.
Our essential nature is happiness.
But we have forgotten the Self
and imagine that the body or the mind is the Self.
It is that wrong identity that gives rise to misery.

What is to be done?
This mental tendency is very ancient
and has continued for innumerable past births.
Hence it has grown strong.
That must go before the essential nature,
happiness, asserts itself.

'No want' is the greatest bliss.
It can be realized only by experience.
Even an emperor is no match
for a man with no wants.


How shall I pray to God?
There must be 'I' who prays to God.
'I' is certainly immediate and intimate,
whereas God is not thought so.
Find out that which is more intimate
and then the other may be ascertained
and prayed to if necessary.


It is grace which makes you ask "Who am I?".
There is no answer to "Who am I?".
The asking is the answer.

Seek for the Self through meditation in this manner.
Trace every thought back to its origin,
which is only the mind.
Never allow thought to run on.
If you do, it will be unending.

Take thought back to its starting place 
-- the mind --
again and again,
and thought and the mind will both die of inaction.
The mind only exists by reason of thought.
Stop that and there is no mind.

As each doubt and depression arises,
ask yourself, 'Who is it that doubts?
What is it that is depressed?'
Go back constantly to the question,
'Who is the "I"? Where is it?'

Tear everything away 
until there is nothing
but the Source of all left.
And then --
live always in the present and only in it.
There is no past and future,
save in the mind.

For all thoughts
the source is the `I-thought'.
The mind will merge only by Self-enquiry 
`Who am I?'
The thought `Who am I?'
will destroy all other thoughts
and finally kill itself also.


If other thoughts arise,
without trying to complete them,
one must enquire
to whom did this thought arise?

What does it matter
how many thoughts arise?
As each thought arises
one must be watchful and ask
to whom is this thought occurring?
The answer will be `to me'.


If you enquire`Who am I?'
the mind will return to its source.
The thought which arose will also submerge.
As you practise like this more and more,
the power of the mind to remain at its source is increased.

However great a sinner one may be,
instead of lamenting
`I am a great sinner, how can I make any progress?'
one must completely forget the fact of being a sinner
and earnestly pursue meditation of Self.
He is then sure to succeed.

Controlling speech and breath,
and diving deep within oneself,
as a man dives into water
to recover something that has fallen there,
one must find out the source whence the ego rises,
by means of keen insight.


When we quest within our mind `Who am I?'
and reach the Heart,
`I' topples down
and immediately another entity will reveal itself
proclaiming `I-I'.
Even though it also emerges saying `I',
it does not connote the ego, 
but the One Perfect Existence.

All regard the unreal as real.
What is required
is that you give up regarding the unreal as real.
The object of all meditation or japa is only that,
to give up all thoughts regarding the non-self,
to give up many thoughts
and to hold on to one thought.

The object of all sadhana
is to make the mind one-pointed,
to concentrate it on one thought
and thus exclude our many thoughts.
If we do this,
eventually even the one thought will go
and the mind will get extinguished in its source.


When we enquire within `Who am I?'
the `I' investigated is the ego.
It is that which makes vichara also.
The Self has no vichara.
That which makes the enquiry is the ego.
The `I' about which the enquiry is made is also the ego.
As the result of the enquiry
the ego ceases to exist
and only the Self is found to exist.


Vichara is the process and the goal also.
‘I am’ is the goal and the final reality.
To hold to it with effort is vichara.
When spontaneous and natural, 
it is realisation.

If one leaves aside vichara,
the most efficacious sadhana,
there are no other adequate means whatever
to make the mind subside.
If made to subside by other means,
it will remain as if subsided but will rise again.


Self-enquiry is the one infallible means, 
the only direct one, 
to realise the unconditioned, absolute being 
that you really are.

Better than viewing Him as Other,
Indeed the noblest attitude of all,
Is to hold Him as the ‘I’ within,
The very ‘I’.


Whatever thoughts arise
as obstacles to one’s sadhana,
the mind should not be allowed
to go in their direction,
but should be made to rest in one’s Self
which is the Atman;
one should remain as witness
to whatever happens,
adopting the attitude
‘Let whatever strange things happen, happen;
let us see!’
This should be one’s practice.


In other words,
one should not identify oneself with appearances;
one should never relinquish one’s Self.
This is the proper means
for destruction of the mind
which is of the nature of seeing the body as Self,
and which is the cause of all the aforesaid obstacles.

The very purpose of Self-enquiry
 is to focus the entire mind at its source… 
it involves an intense activity of the entire mind
to keep it steadily poised
in pure Self-awareness.


That bliss of the Self
is always with you,
and you will find it for yourself,
if you would seek it earnestly.

The cause of your misery
is not in the life without;
it is in you as the ego.
You impose limitations on yourself
and then make a vain struggle to transcend them.
All unhappiness is due to the ego;
with it comes all your trouble.
What does it avail you
to attribute to the happenings in life
the cause of misery 
which is really within you?
What happiness can you get
from things extraneous to yourself?
When you get it, how long will it last?


If you would deny the ego 
and scorch it by ignoring it,
you would be free.
If you accept it,
it will impose limitations on you
and throw you into a vain struggle
to transcend them.

You should be capable 
of making use of even the dust,
while at the same time
you should also be ready
to reject the entire cosmos
as mere dust.


To be the Self that you really are
is the only means 
to realise the bliss that is ever yours.

Know then that true knowledge
does not create a new Being for you,
it only removes your `ignorant ignorance'.
Bliss is not added to your nature,
it is merely revealed as your true and natural state,
eternal and imperishable.
The only way to be rid of your grief
is to know and be the Self.

Know yourself
before you seek to decide
about the nature of God and the world.

Surrender itself is a mighty prayer.


God illumines the mind and shines within it. 
One cannot know God by means of the mind. 
One can but turn the mind inwards 
and merge it in God.

Abidance in pure being
transcending thought 
through love intense
is the very essence
of supreme devotion.


God is always the first person,
the I,
ever standing before you.
Because you give precedence to worldly things,
God appears to have receded to the background.
If you give up all else and seek Him alone
He alone will remain as the I, the Self.

There are no milestones in this path.
How can you be sure as to how far you have travelled?
Why don't you follow the first class passenger?
He informs the guard about his destination,
closes the door and sleeps soundly.
That is all that he need do.
The guard will wake him up at the correct station.

Even when extraneous thoughts sprout up
during such enquiry,
do not seek to complete the rising thought,
but instead, deeply enquire within,
'To whom has this thought occurred?'
No matter how many thoughts thus occur to you,
if you would with acute vigilance 
enquire immediately
as and when each individual thought arises
to whom it has occurred,
you would find it is to 'me'.

If then you enquire
'Who am I?'
the mind gets introverted
and the rising thought also subsides.
In this manner as you persevere more and more
in the practice of self-enquiry,
the mind acquires strength and power
to abide in its Source.


Self-enquiry dissolves the ego
by looking for it
and finding it to be non-existent,
whereas devotion surrenders it;
therefore both come to the same ego-free goal,
which is all that is required.

Your firm conviction brought you here, where is the room for doubt?

Who then is God?


The Self is God.
`I AM' is God.
If God be apart from the Self,
He must be a Selfless God,
which is absurd.

All that is required
to realise the Self
is to be still.
What can be easier than that?


When one enquires of oneself,
'Who am I, the bound one?'
the Self, Eternal, ever free, remains.


The fact is that the mind is only a bundle of thoughts.
How can you extinguish it 
by the thought of doing so or by a desire ...
Your mind is simply fattened by new thoughts rising up.
Therefore it is foolish to attempt to kill the mind
by means of the mind.
The only way to do it is to find its source
and hold on to it.


The Master is within.
Meditation is meant to remove the ignorant idea
that He is only outside.
If He be a stranger whom you await,
He is bound to disappear also.
Where is the use for a transient being like that?
But as long as you think you are separate
or that you are the body,
so long is the Master `without' also necessary,
and He will appear as if with a body.
When the wrong identification
of oneself with the body ceases,
the Master will be found
as none other than the Self.


Breath and mind arise from the same source 
and when one of them is controlled 
the other is also controlled. 
As a matter of fact, in the quest method 
— which is more correctly
`Whence am I?' 
and not merely `Who am I?' — 
we are not simply trying to eliminate, 
saying `We are not the body, 
nor the senses and so on', 
to reach what remains as the ultimate reality, 
but we are trying to find out 
whence the `I-thought' or
the ego arises within us.

The method contains within it,
though implicitly and not expressly,
the watching of the breath.
When we watch wherefrom the 'I-thought' arises,
we are necessarily watching the source of the breath also,
as the 'I-thought' and the breath
arise from the same source.

Simultaneously another luminous and infinite
'I-I' 
will emerge,
and it will be continuous and unbroken.
That is the goal.
It goes by different names --
God, Self,
Kundalini, Shakti,
Consciousness, etc.


Who am I is not a mantra.
It means that you must find out 
where in you the 'I-thought' arises,
which is the source of all other thoughts.


But if you find that the path of enquiry 
is too hard for you,
you go on repeating 'I-I'
and that will lead you to the same goal.
There is no harm in using 'I' as a mantra.
It is the first name of God.

First know who you are.
This requires no sastras or scholarship. 
This is simple experience. 
The state of being is now and here all along. 
You have lost hold of yourself 
and are asking others for guidance. 

Your business is to find the real nature of the mind.

Then you will know that there is no mind.
When the Self is sought,
the mind is nowhere.
Abiding in the Self,
one need not worry about the mind.
Hold yourself and the ego will vanish. 
Until then the sage will be happy saying, `There is', 
and the ignorant will be asking, `Where?'




What is destiny?
There is no destiny.
Surrender, and all will be well.
Throw all responsibility on God
and do not bear the burden yourself.
What can destiny do to you then?





Know and always hold onto the Self.
Disregard the body and the mind.
To identify with them is misery.

Your duty is to be

and not to be this or that.
'I am that I am' sums up the whole truth.
The method is summed up in 'Be still.'



And what does stillness mean?

It means `destroy yourself ';
because every name and form
is the cause of trouble.
`I-I' is the Self.
`I am this' is the ego.
When the `I' is kept up
as the `I' only,
it is the Self.
When it flies off at a tangent
and says `I am this or that,
I am such and such', it is the ego.

True love is shown by the certainty

that the object of love is in the Self
and that it can never become non-existent. 

Dive deep into the Heart,

the source of being and peace,
and establish yourself there.