
The Vachana exposes the instability and self-delusion of the unawakened mind, comparing it to a color-shifting lizard, a restless blind bat, and a blind dreamer imagining light. It concludes that only divine grace can steady this wavering state and allow true awareness to arise.
Spiritual Context
Core Spiritual Principle: The untrained mind, in its inherent instability and capacity for self-deception, is the primary obstacle to spiritual realization. True clarity is not a product of the mind but a state of grace-born awareness that stabilizes it.
Cosmic Reality Perspective: The Linga (Divine Consciousness) is the only unchanging realitythe steady, primordial light. The Anga (individual mind) is a transient, fluctuating phenomenon within that light. Realization occurs not when the mind “sees” the light, but when it surrenders its chaotic activity and becomes a transparent vessel for the Linga’s unwavering radiance.
Historical Reality (Anubhava Mantapa Context): This is a profound psychological introspection, democratizing spirituality by focusing on the universal, internal battle of the mind rather than external ritual purity. It calls for ruthless self-honesty, a cornerstone of the Sharana path, breaking the illusion of spiritual progress based on mere intellectual understanding or visionary experiences.
Interpretation
The Lizard: Represents the mind’s chameleonic nature, constantly adapting to and being colored by its environment (external stimuli, social pressures, sensory inputs). This signifies a lack of a stable, intrinsic Self-identity.
The Blind Bat: Symbolizes the mind’s fundamental ignorance (avidya) of its true nature. Its restlessness, both in “darkness and daylight,” shows that this confusion persists regardless of external conditions, indicating the problem is internal and ontological.
The Blind Dreamer: This is the most subtle and dangerous delusion. It represents the mind’s ability to generate convincing spiritual experiences, insights, and “light” from its own stored impressions (samskaras). This is the ego’s ultimate trick: pretending to be enlightened, mistaking a dream of light for the dawn of true awareness.
Practical Implications: The seeker must learn to distrust the mind’s narratives and transient states. Practice involves observing the mind’s shifts without identification (watching the lizard), accepting one’s fundamental “blindness” to truth without the Guru’s grace, and discerning between self-generated spiritual fantasies and the genuine, steady descent of grace.
The Cosmic Reality
Anga (Human Dimension): The mind-field (chitta) itself, characterized by vrittis (fluctuations)the colors of the lizard, the frantic flight of the bat, the dream-images of the blind. It is unstable, reactive, and deluded by its own creations.
Linga (Divine Principle): Koodalasangamadeva as the immutable, silent, and ever-luminous ground of awareness. It is the still wall upon which the lizard runs, the vast sky through which the bat flies blindly, and the actual sunlight that the dreamer can only imagine.
Jangama (Dynamic Interaction): The act of sincere prayer and surrender itself. The plea, “How can the divine rise within me?” is the Jangama catalyst. It is the turning of the mind away from its own chaos toward the source of stability, initiating the process where grace can enter and steady the fluctuations.
Shatsthala
Primary Sthala: Bhakta. The Bhakta stage is marked by this very struggle: the dawning recognition of one’s own inadequacy and the tumultuous nature of the mind, which leads to a heartfelt, dependent devotion and a cry for divine help.
Supporting Sthala: Maheshwara. The practices of the Maheshwara stageethical discipline, sense control, and purificationare the direct antidote to the mind’s instability. They are the training that begins to calm the lizard, guide the bat, and awaken the dreamer.
Practical Integration
Arivu (Awareness Practices): Practice Vipassana-style meditation: observing thoughts and emotions (the lizard’s colors) as transient, impersonal events. Before sleep and upon waking, set the intention to recognize the dream state, cultivating meta-awareness.
Achara (Personal Discipline): Cultivate stability in small things: a steady daily routine, mindful eating, completing tasks without distraction. This builds a foundation of external stability that can reflect inward.
Kayaka (Sacred Action): Engage in work that requires single-pointed focus, allowing the mind to absorb itself in the task rather than in its own chaotic narratives. Let the work itself be a meditation that stabilizes the color-shifting lizard.
Dasoha (Communal Offering): Share your struggles openly within the community. By confessing one’s “blindness” and mental instability, one breaks the illusion of solitary competence and invites the supportive, steadying energy of the collective Sangha.
Modern Application
The “Monkey Mind” amplified by digital distraction, social media personas (the modern lizard), information overload (the blind bat’s frantic flight), and the spiritual marketplace offering quick-fix experiences that often amount to the “vivid pictures of light” dreamed by a blind mind.
This Vachana is a call for digital and mental detox. It advocates for a spirituality of humble self-observation over the accumulation of peak experiences. It validates the modern seeker’s feeling of inner fragmentation and points them toward the only true solution: a grounding, grace-filled practice that stabilizes awareness from beyond the mind itself.
Essence
A mind of shifting hue and blind, frantic flight,
Dreams of a sun that escapes its sight.
In the confession of this unstable night,
Lies the plea for the One True Light.
The Deeper Pattern (A Quantum-Multidimensional View): This section connects the Vachana’s message to the fundamental laws of reality. The chaotic, unsteady mind exists in a state of quantum decoherence, where its countless potential states (vrittis, thoughts, emotions) collapse randomly, creating a “reality” of noise and interference. The divine grace or awareness sought is the coherent, zero-point field of consciousness. The spiritual journey is the process of tuning from this disordered state to the clear signal of ordered awareness, a fundamental shift facilitated by the “observer effect” of sincere seeking, which collapses the wave function of confusion into the particle of realized presence.
In Simple Terms: The core problem (e.g., a chaotic mind) is like a radio receiving all stations at oncea state of interference. The solution (e.g., grace) is the one, clear signal. The act of prayer or mindfulness is tuning the dial, allowing the noise to fall away so the signal of steady awareness can be heard. It’s moving from noise to music.
The Human Truth: This is the one, timeless lesson. You cannot think your way into peace. The very mind that is troubled is also the one creating the illusion of solutions. Lasting clarity arrives not from winning the internal battle, but from inviting a calmness that is deeper than the mind itself.

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