Adi Da Samraj – 1999 Excerpt from Torque
         of Attention Yoga Nidra ADI DA SAMRAJ: What else? DEVOTEE: Master, I would like to know about the nidra
         state during meditation. ADI DA SAMRAJ: Yoga nidra? We were actually talking about
         it earlier, I didn’t use the term. DEVOTEE: But, where does that fit in? ADI DA SAMRAJ: “Nidra” means “sleep”. The term Yoga is
         usually added to it to mean something more than the usual
         sleep. DEVOTEE: Is that at the beginning of the process of the
         transition? ADI DA SAMRAJ: Yes, as I was describing it earlier. Its
         an in-depth equanimity of attention, in which the transition
         could be made to the Witness. You go through sleep, or
         through objectless attention through and beyond that. So
         Yoga nidra could be associated with that in-depth objectless
         meditation. That is something like sleep, but its attentive.
         But the phenomenon of Yoga nidra could occur anytime. Do you remember I always used to mention this about
         Patricia even from years ago? You would observe her in the
         meditative setting or even on other occasions, where she did
         become meditative, but she would look like she was asleep.
         You know that nodding and then jerking back and all that
         kind of thing. Well, that’s an example of Yoga nidra, but it doesn’t
         necessarily result in Awakening to the “Perfect Practice”,
         you see. Doesn’t usually, until there is that unique
         capability. So it is a kind of objectless deep meditation
         though. So externally it also looks like the person is
         sleeping. If it’s Yoga nidra, the person is attentive. If
         its just plain old sleep, the person is not attentive, and
         not aware of being attentive. And feels unconscious. When
         you get up the next day, you say you got a good nights
         sleep, you see. But that’s simply because you became
         objectless and relatively unconsciousness. So Yoga nidra can be basically just like that, just a
         temporary rest, but with attentiveness at its core. And its
         a relatively deep state of meditation. But it can be
         associated even with the beginning of practice, so, in
         itself, is not associated with the transition to the
         “Perfect Practice” necessarily. That comes with all of the
         other aspects of practice, all coming to the same point, you
         see. So, no matter what is arising, you are the Witness, even
         now. But if you somehow associate that with the generalized
         sense of the body just very generalized, basically just
         noticing that you’re bodily here, without moving attention
         about, just this general awareness well, you’re asleep.
         [Devotees chuckle.] If you close your eyes, you are asleep. But you are
         attentive, so you are responding to Me. But notice this state. It is identical to sleep. Fundamentally, in your conscious experience, you are
         always asleep. You don’t just go from one state to the next
         sleeping, dreaming, waking, waking, dreaming, sleeping, so
         forth you are always in all three of them. And at the root, you are asleep, just aware attentive,
         but without body-mind association. Your always asleep. But you are noticing that you are asleep now, because you
         Stand as the Witness. That is the fourth. Enter deeply into that to the point of transcending
         “difference”, you Realize the fifth. So all the time you are asleep, all the time you’re
         dreaming too, you do intentional thinking. But notice: Apart
         from your intentional thinking, there’s just thinking and
         memories, or internal perceptions. There’s a reverie process
         that goes on all the while in the mind, and that is the
         dream state. If you relax deeply into it right now, you
         would experience basically what you experience when
         dreaming, you see. And you’re also awake all the time. You do guard the
         body. So there is that component. And even now, while waking
         certainly awake, in the body you are, if you experience
         yourself altogether, not only awake in the body, as the
         body, you are dreaming in the reverie aspect of your mind,
         and you’re sound asleep. All right now. Once you’re awake, you’re also dreaming and sleeping. If
         you’re not awake with the body, and you’re dreaming, then
         you’re still asleep also. And if the mind is relaxed beyond,
         then you are simply asleep. Remarkably, you’re always asleep, and yet able to
         function, dream-wise and waking-wise. And you never truly
         become unconscious, because you are Always Already the
         Witness. But you can have experiences of being unconscious,
         when attention becomes so steady it has no object. Then when
         you wake up, you have nothing to refer to. So you assign it
         the label “unconsciousness”. But you are the Witness of sleep. You tend to want to
         make a life, a philosophy, an understanding of Reality out
         of the waking state. And in the tradition of Advaita
         Vedanta, a great deal of effort is spent to argue to this
         point. Its argued over and over again in that tradition, all
         of your presumptions, everything else, are based on waking
         state matters. For some reason or other you don’t want to
         take into account dreaming and sleeping in your view of
         Reality. You want to have all of your mental constructs and
         so forth be associated with the waking state, body-based
         consciousness. But in all this making your presumptions about Reality,
         what about the fact that you dream also you enter into the
         dream state? What about the fact that you enter into the
         sleep state? And yet theory all you. And what is the condition then, in which the sleep state
         arises, the dream state arises, and the waking state arises?
         Whatever your point of view about it all, it must take into
         account not only waking but dreaming and sleeping. And the
         fact that you Witness all three.