One of the first books I read in the Ramana tradition, 26 years ago or more, was No Mind — I am the Self by David Godman. It describes the lives and teachings of two people who are, I think, Self-realized in the same way Ramana was Self-realized.
No Mind was the first book David wrote although not the first he published. The title seemed weird to me with its unusual em dash when I encountered the book a quarter of a century ago, but now that I know more about Ramana and the tradition that emerged from his example, I believe it states with perfect clarity two of the aspects of Ramana’s state that distinguish it from enlightenment as understood in other traditions. (There are more distinctive aspects than just those two including “aware of the Self 24/7”, “irreversible”, and “constant”, but I suppose there’s a limit to how many em dashes will fit in a title.)
I knew little about Ramana when I read the book in 1999 and wasn’t sure what to make of it. Some parts seemed ridiculous and uninteresting to me, other parts like gems. In recent years I often wanted to reread it to see how it would strike me now that I know more, but I couldn’t reread it because a digital edition was never published and nowadays my vision is too poor to read paper books.
No Mind has been out of print for years. I think this is unfortunate. There are unauthorized ebooks on the shadow library sites but they are god awful scanned PDFs that are even harder to read than paper books. Last week I searched the shadow libraries and was delighted to see a high quality version on Z-Lib — not a scan but a carefully made genuine digital edition.
I reread the book last week and want to tell you my reaction. I think it is one of the most important, most valuable spiritual books ever written. I say this because if you read it carefully, you can learn more from it than any other book I know about the following questions:
1. How does Ramana’s state differ from enlightenment as understood in other traditions?
2. What is the process like of attaining that state? How are the instructions applied? What is the experience like?
David did something almost unique in this book. He interviewed two genuinely enlightened people at incredible length and documented everything he could that might shed light on how they came to be Self-realized and what advice they offer other people. He probably erred on the side of including too much information, and that’s why parts of the book seemed unnecessary to me (and still seem that way to me), but that’s better than erring in the other direction.
The only similar books that I can think of are also written or edited by David: Nothing Ever Happened and Living by the Words of Bhagavan, but I think No Mind, although rougher around the edges (like I said, it was David’s first book), contains more valuable information.
Here’s a link to the free epub of No Mind–I am the Self on Z-Library.
Thanks very much for the recommendation and for supplying the link. I do have the paper copy of it, but have never read it, though have read lots of other of Ramana’s words.
A favourite is Conscious Immortality (Ramana’s conversations) by Paul Brunton.
Two others that David Godman helped produce seemed outstanding to me:
– Padamalai (Ramana’s teachings recorded by Muruganar)
– The Power of the Presence (2 vols) previously unpublished encounters in English with Ramana
Another David was involved with is No Mind, I Am the Self – the story of Lakshmana Swamy and Sarada.
Hi Brian. To clarify what I wrote: The book that I linked at the bottom of the post is No Mind–I am the Self by David Godman about Lakshmana Swamy and Mathru Sri Sarada. I just added the name of the book to the link to make this clear.
About Conscious Immortality: I agree that this is very good. It’s an edited version of a manuscript by Brunton and Munagala Venkataramiah (editor of Talks with Sri Ramana Maharshi). The manuscript can be downloaded for free from the Brunton Foundation. I suggest that people who are extremely interested in Ramana consider reading the manuscript instead of Conscious Immortality because it contains at least one important thing that was left out by the editors. Here’s the link to the manuscript: Commentaries by Sri Ramana Maharshi.
Thanks for clarifying what the link is to.
Also appreciated the link to the fuller Conscious Immortality. I have a worn first edition printed in 1984 in Tiruvanamalai and I note the contents page in what your link has includes a few more chapters and a couple of chapters either missing or with different names.
While I will enjoy exploring these differences, let me know if there was something specific – that one important thing – you felt worth seeing in the e-version.
BTW, very happy someone else notices the em dash.