īkṣeta vibhramam idaḿ manaso vilāsaḿ
dṛṣṭaḿ vinaṣṭam ati-lolam alāta-cakram
vijñānam ekam urudheva vibhāti māyā
svapnas tridhā guṇa-visarga-kṛto vikalpaḥ
iksheta -- one should see; vibhramam -- as illusion or mistake; idam -- this (material world); manasah -- of the mind; vilasam -- appearance or jumping; drishtam -- here today; vinashtam -- gone tomorrow; ati-lolam -- extremely flickering; alata-cakram -- just like the moving red line created by whirling a fiery stick; vijnanam -- the spirit soul, by nature fully conscious; ekam -- is one; urudha -- in many divisions; iva -- as if; vibhati -- appears; maya -- this is illusion; svapnah -- merely a dream; tridha -- in three divisions; guna -- of the modes of nature; visarga -- by the transformation; kritah -- created; vikalpah -- variety of perception or imagination.
The Lord now describes an additional process for transcending the illusory interaction of the material mind and material sense objects. Lasa means "jumping" or "dancing," and thus manaso vilasam here indicates that the material mind is jumping superficially from one conception of life to another. Our original consciousness, however, is one (vijnanam ekam). Therefore, one should carefully study the flickering "here today, gone tomorrow" nature of the material world and detach oneself from the illusory variety of maya.