He rests in the sun, represented by the vyahriti Suvah; he rests in Brahman, represented by the vyahriti Mahah. He attains self-rule. He attains the lordship of the mind; he attains the lordship of speech; he attains the lordship of sight; he attains the lordship of hearing; he attains the lordship of intelligence. Furthermore, he becomes this – he becomes Brahman, whose body is space, whose nature is true, who delights in life and rejoices in the mid, who abounds in peace, who is immortal. Thus do thou, O Prachinayogya, contemplate.
Sri Ramakrishna Says —
MASTER (to M.): “I was meditating inside the net. It occurred to me that meditation, after all, was nothing but the imagining of a form, and so I did not enjoy it. One gets satisfaction if God reveals Himself in a flash. Again, I said to myself, ‘Who is it that meditates, and on whom does he meditate?'”
M: “Yes, sir. You said that God Himself has become everything — the universe and all living beings. Even he who meditates is God.”
MASTER: “What is more, one cannot meditate unless God wills it. One can meditate when God makes it possible for one to do so. What do you say?”
M: “True, sir. You feel like that because there is no ‘I’ in you. When there is no ego, one feels like that.”
MASTER: “But it is good to have a trace of ego, which makes it possible for a man to feel that he is the servant of God. As long as a man thinks that it is he who is doing his duties, it is very good for him to feel that God is the Master and he God’s servant. When one is conscious of doing work, one should establish with God the relationship of servant and Master.”
M. was always reflecting on the nature of the Supreme Brahman.
MASTER (to M.): “Like the akasa, Brahman is without any modification. It has become manifold because of Sakti. Again, Brahman is like fire, which itself has no colour. The fire appears white if you throw a white substance’ into it, red if you throw a red, black it you throw a black. The three gunas — sattva, rajas, and tamas — belong to Sakti alone. Brahman Itself is beyond the three gunas. What Brahman is cannot be described. It is beyond words. That which remains after everything is eliminated by the Vedantic process of ‘Not this, not this’, and which is of the nature of Bliss, is Brahman. (BG 13.31, Katha Upanishad 2.2.9) (Source: Gospel of Sri Ramakrishna)