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The Journey to Hell - Story of Kathopanishad (Nachiketa) | కఠోపనిషత్ కథ - నచికేతుడి పితృభక్తి! యమధర్మ రాజు నుండి అతి రహస్యమైన విద్యను ఎలా పొందాడు? | Voice of Maheedhar Planet Leaf (MPL) Videos Exclusive...
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Vājashravasa, desiring a gift from the gods, started an offering to donate all his possession. But Nachiketa, his son, noticed that Vājashravasa was donating only the cows that were old, barren, blind, or lame; not such as might buy the worshipper a place in heaven. Nachiketa, wanting the best for his father's rite, asked: "I too am yours, to which God will you offer me?". After being pestered thus, Vājashravasa answered in a fit of anger, "I give you unto Yamaraja Himself!"
Despite his father's repentance at his outburst, Nachiketa regarded his father's words to have a divine meaning, and consoling him, went to Yamaraja's home. Yama was out, and so he waited for three days without any food or water. When Yama returned, he was sorry to see that a Brahmin guest had been waiting so long without food and water. To compensate for his mistake, Yama told Nachiketa, "You have waited in my house for three days without hospitality, therefore ask three boons from me". Nachiketa first asked for peace for his father and himself, when he returned to his father. Yama agreed. Next, Nachiketa wished to learn the sacred fire sacrifice, which Yama elaborated. For his third boon, Nachiketa wanted to learn the mystery of what comes after the death of the body.
Yama was reluctant on this question. He said that this had been a mystery even to the gods. He urged Nachiketa to ask for some other boon, and offered him longevity, progeny, wealth, rulership of a planet of his choice, and all the apsaras of his choice instead. But Nachiketa replied that material things are ephemeral, and would not confer immortality. So, no other boon would do. Yama was secretly pleased with this disciple, and elaborated on the nature of the true Self, which persists beyond the death of the body. He revealed the knowledge that one's Self is inseparable from Brahma, the supreme spirit, the vital force in the universe. Yama's explanation is a succinct explication of Hindu metaphysics, and focuses on the following points:
The sound Om is the syllable of the supreme Brahma
The Atma, whose symbol is Om is the same as the omnipresent Brahma. Smaller than the smallest and larger than the largest, the Soul is formless and all-pervading
The goal of the wise is to know this Atma
The Atma is like a rider; the horses are the senses, which he guides through the maze of desires
After death, it is the Atma that remains; the Atma is immortal
Mere reading of the scriptures or intellectual learning cannot realise Atma
One must discriminate the Atma from the body, which is the seat of desire
The inability to realise Brahma results in one being enmeshed in the cycle of rebirths; Understandi