
Divine Fury: Recollections of a Renegade Guru
By Robert E. Svoboda
"Life is just a memory," the Aghori Vimalananda liked to muse. "Bitter or sweet, it is nothing but memory."
I can still hear Vimalananda, the man who became my mentor, underscoring
for me the need to be able both to remember and to forget. To remember
with gratitude the good done to me, and forget the slights I am shown.
To reinforce by remembering them the noble sentiments that uplift my
humanity, and to weaken by forgetting them my personal human debilities,
born of selfishness and insecurity. When Vimalananda thought of
remembering he remembered Jean Valjean, the protagonist of Victor Hugo's
novel Les Miserables, the man who never forgot that when he was
caught stealing the bishop's candlesticks the bishop protected him from
the police instead of denouncing him. Jean Valjean carried the memory of
that single incident with him for the rest of his life; it changed him
permanently.
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Vimalananda taught those who came to him to transform their lives by
remembering the single certainty that life offers each of us: the
sureness of our eventual death. The more you become aware of death's
certitude, he would say, the more urgently you will strive to live an
impeccable life, to seek a healthy relationship with that infinite and
permanent reality that lies beyond our world of the temporary and the
mundane.
Vimalananda, who remembered his own impending death every morning of his
eventful life, believed that forgetting to merge one's awareness with
external things is the very first step in spirituality, for we can
remember the Infinite only to the extent that we have forgotten
everything else. Vimalananda dedicated his life to a one-pointed pursuit
of the Absolute by offering up all his externals on the altar of
Aghora.
Aghora (literally, "non-terrifying") is the spiritual path that seeks to negate all that is ghora
("terrible, terrifying") in life. The ghora encompasses all those
experiences that most people find intolerable, for almost everyone is as
ready to enjoy life's pleasures as they are to avoid misery. Most
spiritual advisers admonish their devotees to shy away from the ghora,
but aghoris (practitioners of Aghora) embrace the ghora fervidly, for
what most terrifies an aghori is the prospect of becoming mired in
duality. Aghoris go so far into the ghora that the ghora becomes
tolerable to them; diving deeply into darkness, an aghori finally
surfaces into light. No means to awakening is too disgusting or
frightening for an aghori, for Aghora is the Path of the Shadow of
Death, the path that forcibly separates an individual from attachment to
every ordinary self-descriptor.
Aghora's temple is the smashan (cremation ground), where aghoris
worship death, the Great Transformer, with a savage, all-consuming love.
Those who are enslaved by their cravings think aghoris mad for
displaying such ferocity in their quest for knowing. They condemn
Aghora's outwardly repugnant practices because they cannot see beneath
their ritual skin. If they could but peep into an aghori's heart they
would find there an ache for Reality so fierce that no means could be
too extreme to achieve it. This ache drives the divine fury, the
passionately unrestrained non-attachment to absolutely everything, that
is Aghora's hallmark. Aghoris earn their illumination by incinerating
themselves moment by moment in their own internal fires, laughingly
consuming any substance and performing any activity that might further
enkindle their awareness. They seize every moment of life that God
offers to them, even a trip to the toilet, as a fresh opportunity to
surrender to the One. Good aghoris takes their temples with them as they
wander the world, ceaselessly amazed to witness the universe consuming
itself in the fires of an ongoing cosmic cremation.
Aghora like alchemy substitutes for a set recipe of self-development an
outline whose details differ for each practitioner. Each aghori and his
customs are unique, and in truth all one aghori has in common with
another is their degree of intensity and determination. Aghoris become
so desperate in their quests that they channel their every thought and
feeling into a super-obsession, a single-minded quest to achieve the
Beloved. They endeavour eternally to dismember their restricted selves
fully, that God may have a free hand to remember them completely. They
die day by day while they are still alive, that by dying to their
limitations they can be reborn into the eternal life of Reality.
Aghoris achieve laser-like focus by learning to awaken and cultivate
that evolutionary power that the Tantras call Kundalini. Vimalananda
comments, "Ahamkara, your 'I-creating' faculty, continuously
remembers you by self-identifying with all the cells in your body and
all the facets of your personality. Ahamkara is your personal shakti
(power); she integrates the many parts of you into the individual that
you are. You develop spiritually when you can cause ahamkara to realise,
little by little, that she is actually She: the Kundalini Shakti. This
growing realization gradually awakens Kundalini, and as She awakens She
forgets to self-identify with your limited human personality. Then She
is ready to recollect something new."
After his Kundalini was awakened during a midnight ritual performed atop
a human corpse, the Aghori Vimalananda developed a wonderfully fresh
and vital recollection of reality. Kundalini took for him the form of Smashan Tara
("The Savioress of the Cemetery"), the Tantric goddess Who causes the
living to cross the frontier that separates them from the reality of
death. After incarnating within him as Smashan Tara, Vimalananda's
Kundalini traversed the boundaries of his ordinary human awareness, and
created within him a multi-dimensional personality.
Ever the iconoclast, Vimalananda never permitted himself to be
pigeonholed, even as an aghori. A stereotypical aghori is an wild-eyed
madman skulking about the cremation ground, cooking his food in a human
skull, flinging filth at anyone who might dare to disturb him.
Vimalananda, who spent part of his life playing that role, eventually
became so conversant with the aghori frame of mind that he came to be
able to drag it along wherever he went. While ordinary aghoris define
themselves by the external smashan, superior aghoris like Vimalananda
create a smashan wherever they sit, that they may maintain simultaneous
awareness of all versions of reality. After choosing who to be at a
given moment, Vimalananada would portray that self with consummate
skill, transforming all the while his every act into a sadhana, a spiritual discipline.
Vimalananda's peers acknowledged him as an expert in astrology,
medicine, cookery, horseflesh, dance, vocal and instrumental music, and
wrestling. Beneath the mundane accomplishments of his versatile
erudition, visible only to a select view, simmered his striking
spiritual attainments. Genuine aghoris crave only to fill their hearts
with tears for the Beloved, and count external appearance as nothing
more than "the dressing up of a corpse." To some this means swathing
themselves in human ashes; to Vimalananda it meant wearing whatever
costume a situation called for without ever becoming fixated on that
dress. Whether leading his brave troops as a gung-ho army officer,
toiling next to his workers as a hard-working quarry owner and dairy
farmer, playing the equine game as an avid owner of thoroughbred race
horses or roving the countryside as a naked ascetic, Vimalananda donned
the right skin for the job. He threw himself wholeheartedly into each
role, becoming "as hard as diamond and as soft as wax" as required, the
yearning within augmenting all the while. Aghoris live to overdo, and
the events of Vimalananda's life document again and again how readily he
overdid in his search for his Beloved. He really overdid things on the
day he lost his temper with his penis for disturbing his sleep with its
regular erections, and read it the riot act with the help of a thick
layer of green chili paste. What a fiery lesson that was! Most people
would think him as insane for trying such a stunt as he thought them
insane for obsessing over everything except the One Thing in life that
is worth obsessing over.
Vimalananda found divinity's highest expression in the Motherhood of
God. Kundalini was to him his Ma, his Beloved Mother who consented to
protect and preserve Her child from all dangers, no matter what errors
he might commit, so long as he remained safe within Her lap. That his
sex organ healed scarless after its chili massage is tribute to how
cockeyed Mother Nature was to him. Like a good aghori he always followed
his spontaneous ardour, and like an indulgent mother She always
protected him from his own fervour.
He knew well, however, that he was protected by the intensity of his
devotion to Her, and that few others who tried to imitate his actions
would escape unscathed. Year after year of sitting in the Divine Lap
taught him to love every plant, animal and rock in the Universe as his
own child, and to wish for all beings only what was in their best
interests. No matter how fanatical Vimalananda the aghori became about
his sadhana, Vimalananda the maternal mentor never permitted anyone to
slavishly emulate his practices.
He punctuated this message by flaunting his unconventionality. Open
indulgence in alcohol and other intoxicants and frank acknowledgment of
his enthusiastic sex life served to drive all but the most persistent
postulants from his unmarked door. He followed in this the ancient
example of Guru Dattatreya, the first aghori, who in order to weed out
through disgust those of his disciples who could not look beyond their
guru's outer 'clothes' took to drinking wine while a beautiful naked
female sat atop his lap. The world's skin, the superficial image of
reality that we call in Sanskrit maya, is a barrier that few
people find easy to dismantle. Vimalananda wanted to be remembered
solely by those people who would remember the "him" beneath his skin,
the him of a heart that was as big as all outdoors.
A man of action who cared little for the opinions of others on what
Aghora might or might not be, Vimalananda resisted all attempts to paint
him as a 'classical' aghori. He ignored all recognized Aghora sects as
assiduously as he disdained all organized religion. When asked his creed
he would reply, "None! I believe in sampradaha (incineration), not sampradaya
(sect). All sects have limitations, and what is really necessary is to
cremate all your limitations, to burn down everything that stands in the
way of your perception of Reality." He valued practice over theory, and
instruction from a guru over textual injunction. He accepted approved
Hindu doctrine whenever it pleased him to do so, or he would cheerfully
remix it until it did, even when such experiments (such as performing
devotional worship after consuming intoxicants) dismayed the
puritanical.
Wherever he looked Vimalananda saw both God's imminence in every morsel
of the Universe (the One-in-All) and God's transcendence beyond every
material concretion (the All-in-One). He knew that, there being but one
Reality, any distinction between the mundane and the spiritual can only
be one of degree. When the orthodox questioned his purity and sincerity
he would tell them in response, "Show me where God, and thus purity, is
not!" Aghoris know how to worship in the ways that conventional priests
worship, but they also learn how to go beyond convention. They learn to
make "gutter water into Ganges water," transforming even human brain or
feces into a sacrament by so consecrating it with their devotion that it
too becomes redolent with the fragrance of God.
But Vimalananda refused even to limit himself to this sort of
definition, and turned all his energies into a quest for the holy grail
of continuous, God-fired self-redefinition. Never did any ego-promontory
resist within him for long being eroded by his devotion, for he counted
no aghori successful until he or she had gone so far into sadhana that
nothing remained but love, the devotion (bhakti) that was the
source of all his power. Vimalananda followed even the most grotesque of
sadhanas to its bitter end, and donated whatever shakti he obtained
from them to the Great Shakti Who sheltered and nourished him. He
climbed to the apex of aghoridom and stood there, dissolving and
recoagulating himself moment by moment, his motto an eternal shout of navinam navinam, kshane kshane ("Newness, newness, at every moment!").
Genuine aghoris have always been far fewer than their imitators, people
who blacken Aghora's name by performing garish ceremonies in public to
attract the attention of the gullible public. Vimalananda never sought
to capitalize on his capabilities by soliciting public recognition.
Instead he so successfully promoted his anonymity that many of his
oldest compadres never even suspected that he had any interest in
spirituality.
I entered Vimalananda's life in 1975 when I tried to interview him in
Poona. I requested him to take a questionnaire, and was impressed when
after refusing it he answered all my questions anyway without my ever
having to ask them. One thing led to another, and soon I was one of his bacchas,
his 'spiritual children.' Vimalananda, who insisted that a real guru
always treats a disciple as a spiritual son or daughter, both refused to
call his devotees 'disciples' and refused to call himself a guru. He
believed that a guru's attitude of claiming to know something shuts him
or her off from anything new. Instead he daily prayed that Ma would keep
a student throughout his life, to keep him eternally open to learning
new things. He advised his spiritual 'children' to do the same.
"Never take what I say as gospel truth," he would say. "I am human,
which means that I make mistakes. Always first try out what I say,
experience it yourself, and then you will know whether or not it
actually is the truth. Because you are human you too make mistakes; that
is inevitable. Just always make sure that you make different mistakes
each time. Then you will never cease to progress."
Making mistakes is usually easier than coping with their consequences,
particularly in a world in which Tantric information which once remained
unspoken because of its potential for misinterpretation is being freely
published, often wholly shorn of context. To grab such lore and seek to
wield it indiscriminately is to invite calamity into your life. "If you
give a monkey a razor," Vimalananda would ask, "do you think he will
shave himself or chop his neck?" To preserve your neck while performing
Tantric sadhana a good guru is indispensable. Such a mentor will
evaluate your personal temperament and capacity to comprehend before
tailoring a program specific to you. A compassionate Tantric guru never
speaks knowledge that can be misused to people who are not truly
qualified to manage that wisdom well. A good guru rather dedicates
himself to task of extricating his disciples from bondage to the Ashta Pasha
("Eight Snares"). These are the "nooses" that bind us to the world of
karma: lust, anger, greed, delusion, envy, shame, fear and disgust. Free
yourself from these snares and you will find yourself well down the
path to union with the infinite.
It was because he knew human nature so well that Vimalananda excoriated
most "gurus" for failing to acknowledge their own limitations. He
insisted on pointing out to his own gurus, whom he loved with a
limitless love, their own occasional oversights. He flayed yet more
resolutely those spiritual dilettantes who assert that gurus have become
unnecessary, maintaining that only the personal ministrations of a
powerful guru can insure that you will survive the awakening of
Kundalini in Her full glory. A good guru destroys her disciple right
down to the ground before re-creating him from the ground up. This
process of dying and being born again truly turns the disciple into the
guru's child, in every way. "You will only learn how to love God," said
Vimalananda over and over, "after you have learned how to love your
guru."
The guru comes only when the disciple is ripe enough to love him or her
without any limits or preconditions, and Vimalananda spent much of his
time preparing his 'children' by experimenting with ways to remove their
personal limitations. It was impossible not to respect the sincerity
with which he played about with us, fed us, and loved us, turning each
incident in his life into an excuse to move someone's mind a little
closer toward God. Working tirelessly to author his own reality,
Vimalananda created within those of us who succeeded in reaching him the
memory of the version of him that he wanted us to retain. Though he was
unafraid to tread on toes if he thought that such a step might arouse
someone from their slumber, he taught all his lessons with love. He
loved people for their future value, for what they had the potential to
become, not what they happened to be, and he never confused what they
preferred in sadhana with what they required. He insisted that "the real
purpose of yoga is to make every home a happy home," and inevitably
exhorted his 'children' to clean up their personal lives before they set
out to practice yoga, perform rituals or proceed on pilgrimage.
When he did become inspired to elucidate spiritual philosophy or
practice he was a marvel of a teacher, his discourses ramifying
effortlessly into often unexpected but always engaging insights and
affiliations. While the two salient principles of his teaching were
eternal compassion for all beings and eternal awareness of rnanubandhana,
the bondage of karmic debt, he never devised any system of spiritual
practices. "Carve out your own niche" was the message he preached to all
those who asked his spiritual advice.
Vimalananda combined an outstanding ability to convey wisdom to people
when they least expected it with an unshakable determination to be true
to himself and to his vision of reality. Everyone who was interested in
hearing him was free to come, and anyone who couldn't stand his heat was
free to leave his smashan. Those who stayed enjoyed the privilege of
having him remember them not as they were but as they could be, to
remember them with every fibre of his being as they would someday be,
awake to the sun of the Self.
Vimalananda always tested when least expected, that he might have an
accurate idea of how we really knew, and always taught people what he
was convinced they needed to know. He advised against the slightest
complacency, and regularly reminded us all to spend each of our moments
as if it were our last. He never hesitated to teach lessons whenever he
became satisfied that they were called for. When he worked with those
who had a sincere desire to learn (including his penis) he never
hesitated either to make them suffer, or to suffer himself on their
behalf, if he felt that suffering was necessary to embellish a valuable
lesson. A good aghori never flinches when a lesson is to be taught or
learned.
One of his fiercest lessons to me was his dying in my arms on December
12, 1983. That heartbreak was itself a reprise of his first lesson,
delivered within the first days of our friendship more than eight years
before, when he had predicted that I would cremate him. He had said
then, "An aghori's profoundest expression of love is the phrase, 'You
will cremate me,' and it was only after his death that I finally
understood what he meant. The wide range of unpleasant realities into
which his demise and incineration forced me at the time have in fact
proven invaluable tutorials in the University of Life, however much I
might have preferred to avoid living through them.
Before his death Vimalananda had made me "Boswell to his Johnson," and
charged me with presenting him to the world, warts and all. He had
spoken for years of writing a book himself, which he would have called Siddha Anubhava Karo!
("Perfect Your Experience!"), but never did so, to preserve his own
peace and quiet. He did ask me, however, to spread his views after death
to anyone willing to listen, as much to organize my own knowledge and
refine my understanding as to instruct others. He also wanted me to have
something solid to remember him by, something that would permit me to
abide with him again whenever I turned its pages.
It has been a real jolt to me to discover how grossly some readers have
misunderstood Vimalananda, how dismissive others have been with their
doubts that he ever even existed, and how curious yet other readers are
over whether the events that Vimalananda described actually took place
or not. Vimalananda himself always attributed to the Great Goddess the
many unusual things that I and others experienced when in his vicinity,
and never claimed that any of his remarkable capabilities came from
anywhere except Ma. His experiences, which were real to him, can be
equally real for anyone who is open to the possibility of their being
so, just as both he and his experiences remain real for me whenever I
re-collect them. Whenever I go to the smashan I remember how Vimalananda
loved the place, and in that moment of remembrance he sits together
with me again as I envision the eventual burning of my own corpse. In
the smashan his teachings come to life for me, for there it is much more
difficult to be deluded by maya's skin. There it is far easier to recall how all the world eventually ends up on a funeral pyre.
Vimalananda was in every way the most remarkable man that I've met, and
one of the most spiritual, in the true and real senses of that term.
When I have lived by his precepts I have prospered, and when I have not I
have had rueful occasion to remember these his words: "It is always
best to live with Reality, Robby, because when you do not Reality will
definitely come to live with you." The savour of the many realities he
served me as he flavoured our life together with his singing, his
cooking, and his "talks" continues to satisfy my palate.
I remember lots of little things about him, like his earthy sense of
humour and his comic timing; like the way he would sometimes, just for
fun, adjust his eye colour to match mine (for he could change his eye
color at will). But most of all I recollect his truly unparalleled love.
After sipping the essence of Aghora from all its bizarre practices he
had seen that the only way to truly live with Reality is to melt your
heart for God. He always taught that the world's best intoxicant is
free, easy to use, and available at a moment's notice; it is, of course,
the sweet name of God. I best remember Vimalananda sitting bliss-filled
with the sweet name of God spilling from his smiling lips.
Perhaps his greatest gift to me was the understanding that great joy and
great misery are the two sides of life's coin, that the one cannot
exist without the other. Sincere lovers of God know that the pleasure of
the Divine Presence is intensified exponentially by the pain of
separation therefrom. From my youth I have understood this truth
intellectually, and after Vimalananda's death I came to know it from
experience. Though I am in some sense pleased that Vimalananda is not
here today to see how thoroughly Tantra is being degraded, I miss him
something terrible. My longing reminds me that it is now my turn to
"re-member" him after all the remembering he has done for me. Like Jean
Valjean's memory of the bishop, my memory of Vimalananda continues to
remind me to continue transforming my life. It is a blessing for which I
daily offer him my heartfelt thanks.
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