Sri Arunachala Stuti Panchakam (Five Hymns to Sri Arunachala) composed in Tamil by Bhagavan Sri Ramana Maharshi, with word-for-word meaning and English translation by Sri Sadhu Om and Michael James. Though expressed in the language of dualistic devotion, these verses include both prayers for the non-dual state of true self-knowledge and teachings to guide aspirants who are seeking that state, which can be attained only by self-investigation (atma-vicara, scrutinising oneself to know 'who am I?') and self-surrender (relinquishing one's ego).
Excerpt:
Bhagavan Sri Ramana taught us that the only means by which we can attain the supreme happiness of true self-knowledge is atma-vichara – self-investigation or self-enquiry – which is the simple practice of keenly scrutinising or attending to our essential self-conscious being, which we always experience as ‘I am’.
However, he also described this practice as the path of self-surrender, because we cannot truly attend to our real self without giving up our false individual self. Our individual self or mind rises by imagining itself to be a physical body, and it sustains its imaginary existence by constantly attending to thoughts or objects, which it experiences as other than itself. Without attending to otherness, we cannot continue imagining ourself to be this mind. Therefore when we turn our attention away from all otherness towards our own essential self, our mind will subside and lose its existence as a seemingly separate entity.
Since our true nature is not thinking, doing or knowing anything other than ourself, but is just self-conscious being, we will become clearly conscious of our true nature only to the extent to which we willingly surrender our constantly thinking, doing and object-knowing mind. The reason why we think and know objects other than ourself is because we love to do so, and we love to do so because we wrongly imagine that we can obtain happiness thereby. Therefore we will surrender our thinking mind and remain as our true self-conscious being only when we understand that happiness does not exist in anything other than our own real self, and when our love just to be our real self thereby becomes greater than our love to think or know any other thing.
Guru Vachaka Kovai
Sri Ramanopadesa Noonmalai
Happiness and the Art of Being