Aptavani-2 Aptavani-02 | Page 486

Aptavani-2 437 ‘file’ shows up and will alert you, by reminding you of the Agnas of the Gnani Purush. It keeps you in Gnan, as the Self and it will increase your awareness and help You to settle your files with equanimity. Pragnya is a part of the Soul (the Self), which makes a connection between the Soul and the external world i.e. between the Self and the non-self. The Shuddhatma is pure anyway, but what does pragnya do? It keeps You and the process of the worldly life separate. It keeps the real and the relative self separate. Pragnya constantly keeps the Self away from the worldly life and takes one towards moksha. There are infinite regions (pradesh) of the Soul, but all of them are covered with a veil of ignorance. Day by day these veils become destroyed with the Gnan that ‘we’ have given you, and the light of the Self will increase and You will begin to see your own mistakes. These faults begin to leave as You ‘see’ them. This formed complex (putadu; the physical body) is full of faults; You will attain moksha when these faults go away. After acquiring Gnan, Chandubhai and You become separate and then Chandubhai’s faults become apparent with pragnya. Whatever faults You ‘see’ will be shed. In the absence of Gnan, you have done nothing but accumulated faults even when you did not want to. Now after Gnan, the faults begin to leave and You begin to become vitarag as they leave. Ultimately You have to become parmatmaswarup (the supreme Self), but you cannot attain the real understanding until the Self is attained. The vitarag Lords had attained Self-realization, and through correct understanding they became free from faults and attained final liberation. A fraction of Kevalgnan (absolute enlightened state), is what we call pragnya. Each and every Atma has an ability to illuminate the entire universe. Meaning if the Soul leaves the body in a state free of any veil of ignorance over it, it has the ability to illuminate the whole universe. That is why followers of Vedantas call the Atma, omnipresent (sarvavyapi). But in what