Thursday, April 30, 2015

RAJA YOGA MESSAGE 11

Raja Yoga, Message 11




Change the mental attitude. You will have heaven on earth. You will be established in celibacy. This is an important method for being a true brahmachari. See the Atman in all women. Reject all names and forms and take only the underlying essence — existence, knowledge, bliss absolute — sat-chit-ananda. All names and forms are unreal like a shadow, water in a mirage and blueness in the sky.

In common parlance brahmacharya is single life. In yogic parlance it is restraint of, not only the sex urge, but of all senses. All senses contribute their own share to sexual excitement. Food strengthens the sex impulse, as tongue and genitals are born from the same source. Sight raises impure thoughts. Hearing of love talk, touch and smell all excite passion. Therefore, all senses must be controlled.

Lustful gazing at women; talking on love matters and about women; gluttony; too much sleep; shaking of the body; aimless wandering and a desire to be in the company of women, to talk to them openly and in private and to hear their music, to use scents of all sorts and sandal-paste, to wear garlands of flowers, to beautify the skin with cosmetics, to wear gaudy dress and jewellery etc., to read novels and use soft beds, to walk with ladies, to look at pictures of women with lust, to look at ladies in a nude or half-nude state, to look in the mirror very often, to dress the hair in different ways are all forms of lust. Abandon all these. Practise purity in thought, word and deed.

Repression or suppression of sex-energy will not help much in the practice of celibacy. What is wanted is sublimation. Sex-energy must be entirely converted into ojas or spiritual force. In transformation the gross form assumes a subtle form. The gross semen becomes a subtle force. This is not enough. Only sublimation gives full protection.

If semen is preserved by the observance of celibacy and transmuted into ojas, the spiritual and intellectual power will increase. This is the fundamental qualification of an aspirant. Celibacy is the most important virtue for Self-realisation.

There are four processes in the practice of brahmacharya. First, control the sex impulse and sex desire through control and withdrawal of senses. Then, practise conservation of sex energy. Shut up all holes through which energy leaks. Then divert the conserved energy into the proper spiritual channels through japa (mental repetition of a mantra), kirtan (chanting), selfless service, pranayama and study, vigilance, self-analysis, introspection and enquiry into the nature of the Self. Then have conversion or sublimation of the sex energy. Let it be converted into ojas through constant meditation on Brahman, and the Lord's grace.

Whenever desire troubles you, try to attain discrimination by looking into the defects of sensual life. Cultivate dispassion or indifference to sensual pleasures. Think that enjoyment produces pain and various troubles and that everything is perishable. Withdraw the mind again and again from the objects and fix it on the immortal Self or the picture of the Lord. When the mind attains a state of equanimity, when it is freed from distractions, do not disturb it.

A vedantin diverts his mind through the assertion: "I am purity. I am sexless Atman, Om, Om, Ora." A bhakta diverts his mind through japa, kirtan, service of guru, service in a temple and study of scriptures like Bhagavatam, Ramayana, etc. A karma yogi diverts the mind through selfless service. He keeps his mind ever occupied in some kind of useful service or other. A hatha yogi converts the sex energy into ojas shakti through asanas, bandhas, mudras and pranayama. A raja yogi diverts the sex energy through the method of kriya yoga, concentration and thinking of chastity.

Practice of Brahmacharya 

Sit alone in your meditation room in padma, siddha, svastika or sukha asana. Close your eyes. Slowly repeat again and again the following formulae mentally.

1. I am all purity … OM OM OM

2. Sexless Atman I am … OM OM OM

3. There is neither lust nor sexual desire in Atman or Brahman … OM OM OM

4. Lust is a mental modification, I am witness of this modification … OM OM OM

5. I am unattached … OM OM OM

6. My will is pure, strong and irresistible … OM OM OM

7. I am fully established in physical and mental brahmacharya now … OM OM OM

8. I am feeling the purity now … OM OM OM

Saturate the mind with the above ideas. Your heart, mind, intellect and soul should feel the purity. Have the word image OM PURITY clearly before the mind. Visualise the mental image. Your whole system — flesh, blood, bone, nerves, cells, molecules, atoms and electrons — should powerfully vibrate with the above ideas.

You can have a sitting at night also. Sit for ten minutes. Increase the period to half an hour. Keep up the feeling during work also. Write down on a piece of paper in bold type OM PURITY six times. Keep the paper in your pocket. Read it several times during the course of the day. Fix it in a prominent place in your house. Remember daily the celibate saints like Swami Vivekananda and Swami Dayananda and their powerful actions. Think about the multifarious advantages of brahmacharya and disadvantages of an impure life. Never leave the practice. Be regular and systematic. Gradually you will become purer and purer and ultimately you will become an urdhvareta yogi. Be patient.

Pray for purity, thus: "O loving Lord of compassion, the soul of my soul, the life of my life, the mind of my mind, the ear of my ear, light of lights, sun of suns! Give me light and purity. Let me be established in physical and mental brahmacharya. Let me be pure in thought, word and deed. Give me strength to control my senses and observe celibacy. Protect me from all worldly temptations. Let all my senses be ever engaged in Thy sweet service. Wipe out the sexual tendencies and desires. Annihilate lust from my mind. Let me be chaste in my look. Let me always walk in the path of righteousness. Make me as pure as Swami Vivekananda, Swami Dayananda, Bhishma, Hanuman or Lakshmana. Forgive all my mistakes. I am Thine, I am Thine. Protect me, protect me. Guide me, guide me. OM OM OM. Enlighten my understanding."

Here are some prescriptions for celibacy: 

1. Sirshasana (headstand): 5 mins
Sarvangasana (shoulderstand): 10 mins
Fasts (on ekadasi days or on alternate Sundays)
Japa: 1 hour
Study of Bhagavad Gita: 1 hour
Meditation: 1/2 hour

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2. Siddhasana: 45 minutes
Pranayama 1/2  hour
Milk and fruits at night
Uddiyana bandha morning and evening

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3. Kirtan: 1/2  hour
Prayer 1/2  hour Satsang 1 hour
Atma-vichara meditation 15 minutes

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4. Tratak (gazing) on OM or Lord Krishna 10 mins
Maha mantra (bhajan) 1/2  hour
Krishna mantra japa 1/2  hour
Keep the mind fully occupied by reading and gardening

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If one method does not help you in keeping up your brahmacharya you should take recourse to a combination of various spiritual practices (sadhanas) such as prayer, meditation, pranayama, satsang, sattvic diet, solitude, enquiry (vichara), sirshasana, sarvangasana, uddiyana-bandha, nauli, asvini mudra, yoga mudra, etc. Then only you will be successful.

Aparigraha — Non-covetousness 

"When abstinence from greed is established, comes the knowledge of the how of existence of births." (II-39)

This is the fifth limb of yama. Parigraha is covetousness or greed to possess and enjoy objects of the senses. Aparigraha is the opposite of parigraha. This is non-covetousness or non-acceptance of gifts conducive to luxury. It is not mere non-acceptance of gifts, it is the absence of craving to possess and enjoy sensual objects. It is a mental state or attitude wherein the sensual craving is dead. Parigraha leads to anxiety to preserve, fear of loss, sorrow in loss, hatred, anger, untruthfulness, stealing etc. Aparigraha puts an end to all these defects and bestows peace, contentment and satisfaction.

One should not keep or try to get possession of anything beyond the very necessities of life. Gifts from others affect the mind of the receiver. As people are extremely selfish, they make presents with various motives. These motives affect the receiver. The mind of the receiver becomes impure by receiving gifts.

Non-covetousness is indeed an aid to the practice of nonviolence, truth and non-stealing. When the craving is not satisfied you become angry, you hate the man who stands in the way of your attaining and possessing things. You harm him in different ways, you speak untruth, you begin to steal things. The mind is ever in a state of agitation, restlessness, dissatisfaction and discontentment. Non-covetousness removes all these defects. Dispassion, discrimination, self-control and withdrawal of the senses are aids to the practice of non-covetousness. Aparigraha is the common foundation for all yogas, just as it is the common meeting point. It is a virtue to be practised not only by aspirants, but by all persons in the world. He who has no faith in the grace of the Lord will not practise it.

The practice of non-covetousness has wonderful benefits. At one stroke it removes fear, attachment, disappointment, anxiety, agitation, restlessness, hatred, jealousy, anger, lust, greed, cares, worries, despair and depression. Therefore practise aparigraha and become a dynamic yogi.

"Who was I? How was I? What is this? What shall I be? How shall I be?" In this way the knowledge of his own experiences in the past, present and future comes to one who is established in non-covetousness. He becomes independent and free. His mind becomes pure and everything becomes quite clear to him. He gets a memory of past life also.

                                                                         NIYAMA 

"The observances are the practice of internal and external purity, contentment, austerity, study of scriptures and worship of God (or self-surrender)." (II-32)

Niyama is the second accessory of yoga. It consists of five limbs or angas, viz., saucha, santosha, tapas, svadhyaya and ishvara pranidhana. Saucha is purity, internal and external. Santosha is contentment. Tapas is austerity or control of senses, or meditation. Svadhyaya is study of scriptures, and it means also the chanting of mantra or spiritual enquiry. Ishvara pranidhana is self-surrender to the Lord. It is the consecration of one's work as an offering to the Lord.

There is an intimate relation between yama and niyama. Niyama safeguards yama — if one has internal purity or freedom from lust, hatred, anger and greed, he can get established in ahimsa, brahmacharya, etc. Internal purity is an aid to the practice of yama. It is an adjunct or auxiliary to yama.

Niyama overcomes all vice and implants virtues. It weeds out all evil traits and implants godly qualities.

Niyama regulates habits, and aims at giving the spiritual aspirant mastery over his behaviour. Instead of being a slave to habits he now controls his conduct and develops certain habits by determined will.

The practise of niyama is intended to attenuate the afflictions and prepare the mind for entering into samadhi. It is for the purpose of purifying the mind of its impurities and destroying distractions.

Saucha — Purity 

"By purification comes the disgust for one's own body and cessation of contact with others." (II-40)
Saucha is internal and external purity. External purity generates pure thoughts. When the body is impure, you purify it. Again it gets impure. Again you purify it. You want to keep the body always pure but it constantly gets impure. Gradually you get disgust for the body which is full of impurities. Since the same dirt and impurity is in the body of others, you cease contact with others. Slowly the body idea drops as you always think of the ever-pure Atman. Attachment for the body vanishes. Lust disappears.

Physical, external purity alone is of no value. Much time must not be wasted in attending to external washing. By so doing you forget the eternally pure Atman. Take a bath in the early morning and wear simple clean clothes. You will get the meditative mood quickly.

Saucha helps one to maintain celibacy (brahmacharya). The practice of celibacy, kindness, love, mercy, patience, japa and meditation will purify the heart and eradicate jealousy, cruelty, hatred, anger and lust.

Removal of these constitutes internal purity. Internal purity is more important than external purity. Internal purity makes the mind one-pointed and bestows serenity, cheerfulness, joy, strength, harmony, poise and happiness. It instills love, patience and magnanimity. Therefore develop internal purity through diligent and vigilant efforts.

"From such purity arises cheerfulness of mind, one-pointedness of mind, conquest of the senses and fitness for the realisation of the Atman." (II-41)

The fruit of mental purity is described here. The mind becomes inward as a result of the conquest of senses.

As the distractions drop away there is concentration of mind. By getting internal purity the mind becomes fit for realisation of the Atman.

Santosha — Contentment 

"Supreme happiness is obtained through contentment." (II-42)

Increase in sattva (purity) causes cheerfulness. Tamas (inertia) produces gloom. If there is always cheerfulness, remember that you are progressing in yoga. This is an important sign of spiritual growth. Many yoga practitioners put on 'Sunday faces' or 'castor oil faces' when they come outside to give interviews to visitors. They are under the delusion that people will take them for advanced yogis. There must always be joy and a smile on the face of yogis. Then only can they radiate joy to others. Radiance on the face indicates contentment. Joy is the very essence of the Purusha. Contentment brings a fullness of life, happiness and peace. A man of contentment is always peaceful and serene. If there is no contentment the mind is always restless and ruffled and naturally the spiritual practices become impossible.

You will find in Yoga Vasishtha that santosha (contentment), shanti (peace), vichara (enquiry) and satsanga (company of the wise) are the four sentinels to the door of liberation (moksha). If you have contentment the other three will come by themselves. Contentment is one of the most important virtues for an aspirant. Riches and poverty are not counted by the amount of wealth one keeps. A king, if he keeps too many desires and if he wants more, is considered to be a beggar. A beggar, if he is contented with what he has, is really a king.

From contentment comes supreme happiness. If a man has no contentment his mind will always be wandering. It will be impossible to do concentration and other yoga practices. Therefore contentment should be developed by all aspirants.

Contentment cuts at the roots of all desires. It gives success in the practice of niyama. It gives peace, one-pointedness of mind, serenity and eternal satisfaction. Divine light will descend in a contented mind. A contented man is satisfied with his lot. He is happy in whatever condition he is placed and does not crave for things he has not. Contentment is a mystic stream of joy that cools the three fires of worldly life and joins the ocean of immortal bliss. Therefore develop contentment (the highest of all divine virtues), the companion of satsanga (company of the wise), spiritual enquiry and peace.

Knowledge of the Self will arise only in a man who is endowed with contentment. There is no cooling tonic more efficacious than contentment to cool the ever-increasing fire of greed of worldly-minded persons. He who is not desirous of what he has not got, who is quite unaffected by what he has or has not got and who is free from elation and dejection is said to be a contented man. Glory to such exalted souls!

Supreme peace is the quest of your life. Peace, liberation and immortality are convertible terms. Mental reaction to pleasure and pain will cease when you attain this state. All kinds of likes and dislikes will vanish in toto when you realise this state of absolute quietude.

When you feel extremely drowsy at night, when you wish to retire to bed, you will not eat even if a very delicious dish is offered at that moment. You will not care to attend any musical performance also. What you want is peaceful resting. This clearly proves that the mind wants rest and not objects. Worldly people do not know where to find rest and how to get it. They try to get this rest or peace from external objects. They hopelessly fail at each step. Eternal rest or perennial peace can be had within one's own Self only, through Self-realisation.

If you are in possession of peace you will be able to radiate it to others. You must lead a life of peace. You must live in it. You must feel it. You must establish it in your own heart. Then only will you be a blessing to the world. Wherever you go, those who come in contact with you will be affected by your spiritual vibrations. They will be inspired and elevated. In your sweet presence all discordant vibrations will disappear. All dissensions will come to an end. All jarring noises will be transmuted into sweet melodious music. In your presence irritable people and sickly people will get new strength, fresh hope and wonderful joy.

Tapas — Austerity 

"Through tapas — austerity — due to the destruction of impurities, arise psychic powers in the body and senses." (II-43)

Tapas — austerity of the mind and body — means that you should be able to bear heat and cold, physical discomfort and fatigue; as well as insult, injury, persecution and any sort of humiliation. You should always be able to keep your mind and the senses ever pure and carefully guarded.

That which purifies the impure mind is tapas. That which regenerates the lower animal nature and generates divine nature is tapas. That which cleanses the mind and destroys lust, anger, greed, etc. is tapas. That which destroys diabolical nature is tapas. That which destroys tamas and rajas and increases sattva is tapas. That which steadies the mind and fixes it on the eternal is tapas. That which arrests the outgoing tendencies is tapas. Desire moves the senses. Desire can be controlled only if the senses are curbed. That which destroys desires, egoism, likes and dislikes and generates dispassion, discrimination and meditation is tapas.

Tapas is spiritual discipline. It is one of the three items of kriya yoga. It is also control of senses and meditation. The aspirant blazes like fire. His eyes become brilliant, his voice sweet and forcible, his body shining and beautiful. All are attracted towards him, he is like a magnet. All these are due to his practice of tapas (tapascharaya). Tapas is of three kinds, viz., physical, mental and verbal.

Conventionally, eating bitter neem leaves, standing in water, sitting in the hot sun, bearing heat and cold, standing on one leg with raised hands, etc., are considered as tapas. People speak of such persons as tapasvins. They say: "Ram Brahmachari is a great tapasvin, he lives on leaves and has no clothing; he sits in the midst of four fires having the hot sun as the fifth-fire in mid- summer." Perambulating round Govardhan Hill with prostrations (namaskara) is another form of tapas. Tratak on the sun, walking barefooted, living naked in snowy regions, fasting, vow of silence, vigils, etc. are different forms of physical tapas.

Celibacy, service of guru and saints, practice of non-violence are also tapas of the body. Through the power of celibacy Bhishma and Hanuman did marvellous deeds. Through the power of chastity Damayanti burnt the hunter, Anasuya converted the Trimurtis into babies and Savitri brought Satyavan back from death.

To speak the truth, to observe the vow of silence, not to hurt others by unkind words or harsh words, to speak words that are beneficial and to study the scriptures are all tapas of speech. Mauna is verbal tapas.

One who is observing the vow of silence (mauna) is a mauni. Some maunibabas are more talkative than a worldly, talkative person. They develop a form of lingual diarrhoea through 'ha', 'hu' gestures and clapping their hands. They become centres of nuisance, and boring. One cannot remain in their company even for a few seconds. They cannot help others through beneficial words, nor get knowledge through sublime discussion. After some years they cannot talk even a few words. The tongue gets partially paralysed on account of disease. The mauni is proud that he is a great tapasvin because he has been observing mauna for twelve years. Speaking measured words is much better than such a sort of mauna. Observe perfect mauna for one or two hours, this is quite sufficient. Always keep the balance. When the opportunity comes, talk freely for half an hour and help the aspirants, then become silent. Exercise control over speech through vigilance and discipline. Control through force is not beneficial.

Mental' tapas is more powerful than physical tapas. He who bears heat and cold does physical tapas. He increases his power of endurance, but he may not be able to bear insult, he will be easily upset by a harsh or unkind word, he may take revenge and do 'tit for tat'. He has no control over the mind, he has disciplined only his physical body. To keep a balanced mind in all conditions of life, to bear insult, injury and persecutions, to be ever serene, contented and peaceful, to be cheerful in adverse conditions, to have fortitude in meeting danger and to have presence of mind and forbearance are all forms of mental tapas.
Poise, mental restraint, purity of nature, one-pointedness of mind, mental happiness, cheerfulness and cleanliness of life are all tapas of mind.

Philosophically, meditation is the highest form of tapas. Fixing the wandering mind on God or Brahman is great tapas. Enquiry and deep meditation are the highest tapas. Sense control, pranayama, concentration and samadhi, practice of contentment, peace, enquiry and company of the wise, the nine modes of bhakti and yama and niyama are great tapas.
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ESSENTIALS ARE THE SAME

                    Essentials Are the Same 
The essentials or fundamentals of all religions are the same. Only non-essentials differ. 'The Noble Eightfold Path' corresponds to 'The Sermon on the Mount' of Lord Jesus, and to the practice of sadachara (right conduct) of the Hindus. Every religion shows the correct path to God-realisation.

Every religion emphatically declares: "One can attain eternal bliss, immortality (God-realisation). To do this one must speak the truth, observe purity or self-restraint, love others, and practise concentration and meditation."
An intolerant man cannot attain God-realisation. As his intellect becomes clouded on account of intolerance, he cannot grasp the truth. All prophets are the messengers of God. They are great yogis who have divine intuitive perception of God. Their words are infallible and sacred.

Had it not been for these prophets and their writings, there would be no hope for the salvation and betterment of man. Each prophet helped mankind by the dissemination of knowledge and the founding of the religion which would be most suited to the people amongst whom they flourished. Glory to these prophets and their writings. May their blessings be upon you all!

Beloved Friends! Behold the unity or oneness of all religions. He who knows the truth, who has grasped the essence of all religions, will never again enter into heated debates.

Realise your identity and intimate relationship with all beings - with ants and dogs, with elephants and tigers, with Muslims and Jews, with Hindus and Christians. There is only a degree of difference in manifestation or expression. All forms belong to God or Saguna Brahman.

May you all live happily, with one heart! May you all understand the essential unity of all religions! May the blessings of all the founders of all the religions be upon you! May you all attain God-realisation in this very life!

Om Peace! Om Peace! Om Peace!

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WHAT IS RELIGION ?

                         What is Religion? 


Religion is the very foundation of civilisation in all its aspects. It is an applied science that takes man to his highest goal. Religion comprises of non-injury, self-control and austerity.

Religion tries to bring you to God and to make you divine. Its purpose is to release the ultimate values of life - the transcendental - truth, beauty, goodness and love.

Religion is a dynamic force. It is both the science and the art of life. Religion is not merely life transcending, it is life transforming. It is a process of purification and transformation.

Know thyself and be free. Religion teaches tolerance and peace. Religion is essentially an eternal going out in search of completeness, fullness, and wholesomeness.

Believe in the existence of God and life hereafter. Believe in right conduct, unconditional surrender to God, meditation and union with God. These are all the essentials of religion. The union of the individual soul with the divine soul, the lover with the beloved - this is true religion.

Religion lays down the laws of life. Religion teaches us how to live a divine life. Man cannot progress spiritually without religion, just as a tree cannot grow without manure and water. Religion is the support that helps us to climb the steep and narrow ladder of emancipation. It is the most important factor that helps the earnest student to understand the principles of oneness - the oneness of life and universal love.

We can attain eternal bliss, immortality and everlasting peace by attaining God-realisation. All religions admit this, unanimously. This is essential to all religions.

To realise God, one should develop universal love; one should have ethical perfection, self-restraint, the spirit of self-sacrifice, good conduct, devotion to saints and to God. One should study the holy scriptures and have perfect faith in the existence of God, in the scriptures and in the words of the guru. All religions admit this unanimously. This is essential to all religions.

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WHO IS GOD ?

                             Who is God? 
God is the source of all light. God is the source of everything. He upholds the earth and the heavens.
God is spirit. God is love. God is the source of all. God is the destroyer of ignorance. God is beyond all understanding.

God is the remover of all calamities. God is the granter of all prosperity. To the unenlightened man who depends on his senses for all final judgments, God remains unknown and therefore non-existent.

God is the one source of every action and every movement. God is the sustainer of all, the giver of all good and the bestower of all blessings. God is the eternal amongst fleeting things. He is the one in the midst of many. He is absolute consciousness.

God is the fulfiller of the desires of every man. The Lord is all effulgence, divine, the fulfiller of desires and the granter of insight and intuition.

Who is God? God is God. He who is universal consciousness, who is eternal, who himself witnesses all that passes in every heart, who exists immutably throughout the universe and who is ever free, independent and immortal is God.
Where is God? In his own glory. Seek him there. God has form and he is formless too. The Lord reveals himself even in a single leaf, in a blade of grass, in a drop of water.

God reveals himself only to the pure, the humble and the simple. He is the first and the last, the manifest, and the hidden. God cannot be defined. He has to be felt, seen, realised and lived in.

Religion is the link between God and man. Every religion establishes a relation between man and God. Religion should give shelter even to the worst type of sinner. It must be perfectly tolerant, broad minded and catholic.

The essence of religion is love. There is only one religion and that is the religion of love divine, which transcends all creeds and all scriptures. Behold the one essence in all. Love all.

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SEE GOOD IN ALL HEALING AGENTS

               See Good in All Healing Agents 
Brahman or the eternal is infinite. His expressions are also infinite. Allopathy, homeopathy, hydropathy, chromopathy, electropathy, naturopathy, ayurveda, unani - all are his manifestations. All these systems differ. Temperaments also are different, so are natures. Therefore different systems of treatment suit people of different natures.

It is only the prejudiced man who says, "Oh, allopathy is useless   homeopathy is the best system". Or, "Nature cure is good and ayurveda is bad". For some people ayurvedic medicines are good, for some unani medicines are good, and so on.

Sun's rays, water, herbs, green leaves, steam, mud - all are medicines. They are all products of nature. Only the names are different. The very fact that different systems exist shows that there is something good in each.

Even atoms, molecules and corpuscles have their loves and hates, likes and dislikes, attractions and repulsions, affinities and non-affinities. Everybody has his own whims and fancies, his own eccentricities.

A naturopath hates and condemns an allopath. An allopath dislikes naturopathy. But a large hearted doctor, a man with equal vision and tolerance, who has practical knowledge of vedanta, can find good in every system. He can appreciate the beauty of variety of divine expression. He can behold unity in diversity and thus use every system to the best advantage.

Every system has its own advantage and bright side. Every system has come from the one divine source. Do not fight with one another. Do not try to prove the superiority of your system.

Take the good in everything. Be tolerant. Become wise and happy. Lead a healthy life. Attain God-realisation through the instrument of the body - the healthy, strong body.

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If you have a powerful will and a strong power of endurance, then you will not feel pain. By constant thinking of disease, pain and trouble, you augment the suffering. Pain is in the mind. Atman is full of bliss.

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Wednesday, April 29, 2015

SECRET OF LIVING

                           Secret of Living 
Disease is not a condition that ought to frighten you. It is not brought about by agencies outside yourself. Disease is the result of the kickings of life. Health alone exists. It is life alone that makes a man live. Disease is only a sign of health. It is the reaction of life to the entry of foreign matter into the system.

Life's cleansing process is called disease. There is only one disease and that is dis-ease, or no ease. This means it is the struggle of life to get rid of foreign matter. This disease ought not to be suppressed with toxic drugs. Leave nature to get rid of it in her own way.

The first and foremost aid is fasting. Digestion of food is one of the greatest charges on the vital economy. If you put food into the stomach during disease, the vital power - which is in the process of cleansing the system of foreign matter - is diverted from its function and is made to digest the food! The only result is a worsening of the condition.

Food does not maintain life. Life eats the food and produces the energy necessary for its digestion and elimination. That is all. Life lives by itself. Food is necessary only for life to build and repair the body.

Satvic (pure) food such as fruits, vegetables, whole cereals, nuts, green leafy vegetables and milk, nourishes the body and helps life. It does not need to be eaten with appetisers, which act as aeroplanes to carry the food to the stomach, since such food is not demanded by the life-fire within.

This life fire is God Himself. Man should wait for the appearance of this God within and only then offer Him some food. But nowadays people mistake the cravings of the palate for hunger. Perhaps hunger is a joy they have never experienced.

Real hunger, as it is in the form of the Lord Himself, is indescribable in its nature, even as God Himself is. To know this one has to experience it. One cannot be told by another.

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WAY TO RADIANT HEALTH

                    Way to Radiant Health
Health is joy. Health is wealth. Health is the elixir of life. Without health life becomes a burden. 
Nature tries to keep us healthy but we bring on sickness by continuous violation of the laws of nature. Natural laws are relentless. There is no mercy.

In the animal kingdom there is seldom any sickness because animals do not violate the laws of nature. Before the age of machinery, man's life was more natural. Persons of the past generations were much stronger and healthier.

Life in the twentieth century is becoming more and more artificial. Hence there is much deterioration in health and strength. In spite of the innumerable doctors and the latest medical discoveries our health is still deteriorating.

"A sound mind in a healthy body", as the saying goes. The mind controls the body, so try to keep your mind as cheerful as possible, under all circumstances. A strong mind wards off ill health and it also helps us to preserve good health.

Run in the open air. Wear simple, light clothing. Take only simple, light, nourishing food. Do not go to doctors. Endeavour to qualify yourself as your own doctor. Take lots of exercise. Take sun baths and cold baths. Inhale ozone.

Observe moderation in food, drink and copulation. Lead a pious life. Develop right thinking, right feeling, right speaking, right action, right belief, right knowledge, right conduct. Do not employ servants. Rely on yourself in all things.

If you want radiant health, return to nature. Then you will have a blooming face and a charming personality. Avail yourself of all the healing agencies in nature. Avail yourself of the healing properties of the sun, the water, the air, the earth, fasting, herbal plants and so on.

Observe the laws of nature in all things. Eat, drink, sleep, think, conduct yourself in the way laid down by the ancient sages.

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THE TEMPLE OF GOD

                        The Temple of God 
This mysterious human body, the temple of God, the nine gated city of Brahman, is a marvellous palace for the immortal indweller, or soul. The body is a product of the prarabdha karma (the karma that determines this present life for this individual soul). It belongs to the jiva (individual soul) and the virat (the physical world) also. The sum total of all physical bodies is virat purusha (the deity presiding over the universe).

The body is the most marvellous and delicate machine in the world. It is a highly complex mechanism. Even the most eminent doctors in the world have not yet completely understood its structure and working. One virulent microbe can destroy it in an instant. The body is surrounded on all sides by enemies - and yet man lives. This is a very great mystery. This is due to the grace of the Lord. The force of prarabdha protects and nourishes it.

A spermatozoan, which is a millionth part of a drop, and an ovum, joined together, give rise to the formation of this body. What a great mystery. That subtle essence, which is the source for this, that which sustains these, is thy own self. That is truth. That is soul. Thou art That.

Realise this and free yourself from the cage of bone and flesh. The growth of the body, with all its limbs, organs, etc., from this tiny speck of sperm, proclaims the omnipotence of the Lord.

- - -

God is that wonderful architect who has built this wonderful body palace. The architect of this marvellous body has shown the greatest skill. He is the architect of all architects. The arches of buildings are nothing when compared to the arches of the body, which are a few fragile bones, joined together to form the arch of the foot, which supports the weight of the body. One tiny nerve moves the muscles of the face. The face then expresses the emotions of the mind - what a grand marvel! Look at that delicate organ of the eye. One small aperture which allows a mountain to enter! This greatest architect is the Lord who dwells in the chamber of your heart. Glory to him. Prostrations to this great architect.

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A SAINT

                                 A Saint 
God dwells in those who have no lust, anger, pride, arrogance, delusion, greed, hatred and deceit. A sage realises his unity, his spiritual oneness with others. He sees their suffering and out of compassion, devotion and love, he stays on the earth plane   to serve and to suffer for all creatures - until they become purified and attain illumination.

He is a saint who has conquered the senses, who is endowed with righteous conduct, who speaks sweet words even to those who are crooked by nature, and whose heart is always softened by tender feelings for others. He is a saint who has shaken off all attachments, who is never swayed by lust, greed or anger, who is constantly established in righteousness, who is wise, humble, modest and forgiving.

A saint is compassionate - he is free from violence, greed, hypocrisy and duplicity. He regards earthly riches as poison. A saint is forbearing. He has a generous heart and possesses great fortitude and discrimination. A saint is free from egoism and selfishness   he is liberated.

A saint is the one to be worshipped. He is a paramahamsa. He has shaken off everything. Each saint proclaims the same truth but his teachings are adapted to suit the requirements of his time and area of influence.

He who looks upon everything with an equal eye, who is perfectly calm and serene, who does not covet anything, and who is the friend of all - he is a real saint.

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Sri Vasishta tells Rama: "An acharya's (preceptor's) grace, if it becomes en rapport with his disciple, will of itself, in a mysterious manner, enable the disciple to perceive directly the Brahmic Principle within, though it is impossible for the guru to point to Brahman as 'this' or 'that', or for the disciple to understand how it is, prior to his direct perception. Each should cognise it within himself, through his own jnana (intuition) and with the aid of the acharya (preceptor) and an understanding of the true significance of the many scriptures. It is indeed very rare to attain that state without the help of a guru and spiritual book. Should all three combine - that is, an acharya, jnana shastra (scripture dealing with self-knowledge) and a true disciple, then it is certain that the seat beyond all bondage will be attained."

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HOW TO ERADICATE HATRED

                   How to Eradicate Hatred


No samadhi (union with God) is possible when hatred, prejudice, jealousy, anger, lust, etc., exist in the mind. Remove these defects by love, endurance, contemplation of the infinite, vision of the self, good company, and enquiry. Love is the greatest power on earth. Compassion is the greatest sadhana (spiritual practice).

Karuna (compassion) is to relieve pain where it is and not to give pain to others. He who gives charity to a poor man, gives it to himself. For there is nothing else save his own Self in the universe.

He who hurts, hates, abuses, another man - he hurts, hates and abuses himself only. When thoughts of hatred and revenge arise in the mind, try to control the physical body and speech first. Do not utter evil and harsh words. Do not censure. Do not injure others. If you can do this for several months, the thoughts of revenge, having no scope for manifesting outside, will die of themselves.

Constant vichara (enquiry) and development of the opposite virtues of prema, daya, karuna (that is - love, compassion and sympathy or commiseration will eradicate these two violent passions.) Serve the man you hate. Share with him what you have. Give him something to eat. Prostrate to him sincerely. Your hatred will subside. Your hatred will leave you. And he will begin to love you. Gifts and kind words tame the untamed man.

Serve all. Serve the Lord in all. Respect all. Have equal-vision. All kinds of hatred will disappear.

The sadhana (practice) of equal vision is extremely difficult but strenuous efforts will bring about success eventually. Aspirants who wish to abolish the dividing line should develop love for a very dear person first. After that he should develop love for an indifferent person. Then after that, he should develop love for an enemy.

In doing this, in each compartment, they should make the heart tender and loving. And this should immediately afterwards induce meditation.

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Tuesday, April 28, 2015

LOVE ALL

                                 Love All 
Love is happiness. Love is life. Love is energy. Love is immortality. Love is wisdom. Love never fails.

Love is success. Love is victory. Love is eternal sunshine. Love alone creates and unites.

Love is the moving principle of all forms of fellowship. When you realise your oneness with a man, you can really love him whole heartedly. The world can only be united for common welfare through unselfish, pure, divine love.

Love dissolves hatred and animosity. Love promotes understanding. To love all as one loves oneself is the succinct statement of dharma. Universal love is the mark of saintliness. Without love there is no life.

God resides in all creatures. God is immanent in all forms. Therefore love all. Be compassionate to all creatures. This gives the greatest joy to God. Love all in the one love divine. Modern civilisation is complicated and artificial. Simple folk live in a world of love and peace. Let no one hate another or harm another.

Look not at the defects of your neighbours. Look at your own shortcomings and imperfections. Love one another. When these principles govern an individual's life, then man is happy, peaceful and joyful.

Love is the basis of all real and permanent happiness, of all real and permanent peace. Love is the supreme gift; it is the greatest thing in the world. Love never fails. Perfect love casts out fear. Love lends impetus and incentive to life. It makes one daring, courageous and strong.

Love makes one generous, unselfish, patient, merciful and forgiving. Love discloses the sublimest meaning and purpose of life. Love makes one have good will towards his neighbour, loyalty towards his friends, and it gives compassion for the enemy.

To love is to suffer. Love and suffering always go together.

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TRUE LOVE OF GOD

                         True Love of God 
My child, you have been extremely fortunate in getting this human birth. Have intense devotion to God and commune with Him. Kindle the light divine within your heart and maintain its flame of devotion through your constant remembrance of the Lord. It is true devotion that counts; it does not matter which deity you worship.

The marks of devotion are love, faith, confidence, humility, service. God accepts all forms of prayer and worship through which man expresses his love and devotion for Him. Bhakti or devotion is the natural affinity between the devotee and the Lord.

As iron that is touched by the touch stone turns to gold at once, as the water of the roadway mixed with that of the Ganges becomes pure at once, even so, the heart of the devotee, though greatly soiled by many great sins, becomes pure if attached with devotion to the Lord.

To remove the afflictions and sorrows of the devotees gives the greatest happiness to the Lord. No evil can touch the devotee whose devotion is sincere, and whose faith is genuine. Put your little seed of faith in your heart, water it with love and devotion. Then the great tree of bhava samadhi (the culmination of devotion) will grow.

- - -

The company of devotees is a priceless asset. It invigorates the mind. It is only through God's grace that man feels the desire to be in the company of saints. A devotee does every action for the sake of the Lord. He hates none, he loves God only. He who is internally and externally pure, compassionate, truthful, forgiving, free from likes and dislikes, and is given to investigating the truth about God, is a real devotee.

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MAN OF VIRTUE

                             Man of Virtue 
He who is virtuous, who is kind on all occasions, and who is filled with compassion, obtains great contentment. He ascends the superior path of virtue. Harmlessness, forgiveness, peacefulness, contentment, agreeable speech, control of passions and excitements, the service of virtuous people, and actions in accordance with the injunctions of the sacred scriptures, constitute the superior path of virtue. He who daily worships the virtuous, can reach the eternal abode of wisdom.

He who has no liking for what is agreeable and no dislike for what is disagreeable, who practises self-restraint, who regards pleasure and pain as same, who injures no creatures and destroys no life - he is considered good and virtuous.

He who is devoted to the well-being of all, who sacrifices his very life for others, who has truth for his refuge, who gives but does not take, who has mercy, who adores his elders, gods and guests, to whom good conduct is always dear, and who has no fear of the next world - he is regarded as good and perfect.

Such a promoter of virtue cannot be seduced from the path of virtue. He is fearless, tranquil, serene, full of mercy. He is adored by all the good people wherever they are. Such a man is not attached to worldly objects. Fear, lust, anger, restlessness and sorrow do not live in him.

Such a promoter of virtue never deviates from righteousness. He is not attached to anything. He is free from pride. He regards all impartially. Gain and loss, happiness and misery, the agreeable and the disagreeable, life and death, all are held in equal estimation by him. O man, always respect such a good and virtuous person. Serve him. Seek instruction from him.

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Can you serve like Florence Nightingale? Can you obey like a soldier on the battlefield? Can you be generous like Ranti Deva? Can you spend sleepless nights in devotion to the Lord, like Mira? Can you do tapas (penance) like Dhruva? Can you stick to your convictions like Mansoor and Shams Tabriez? Can you be fearless like the sage who met Alexander the Great on the banks of the river Indus?

If you can say, 'Yes', to all these questions, you will have Self-realisation this very second. You will have contact with avataras (divine incarnations) and full blown yogis, this very second. First deserve and then desire.

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AN EXERCISE FOR DEVELOPING VIRTUE

            An Exercise for Developing Virtue 


Examine your character. Pick up the defects you find in it, and find their opposites. Let us say that you suffer from irritability. The opposite of irritability is patience. Try to develop this virtue by meditating on the abstract virtue of patience.

Regularly, every morning, at 4 a.m. sit down in the lotus posture. Sit in a solitary place for half an hour - think of patience. Think of its values, think of its practice under provocation.

Thus, take one point each day. Think about that point steadily, without letting the mind wander. Think of yourself as perfectly patient, a model of patience. End the meditation with a vow that "This patience, which is my true self, I will feel and show, today and every day".

For a few days there may be no perceptible change. You may still show and feel irritability. But go on practising. You will see that soon, thoughts of patience will arise simultaneously with the irritable impulse and the irritation will be checked.

Go on practising. The irritable impulses will grow more and more feeble, until you find that irritability has disappeared and patience has become your normal attitude towards annoyance.

In this manner you may develop various other virtues, such as sympathy, self-restraint, purity, humility, benevolence, nobility and generosity.

Concentration of the mind on God, after its purification, gives real happiness and knowledge. You are born for this purpose only. Dive deep. The divine flame, the Light of lights is burning there. Merge within.

- - -

You have passed through millions of wombs,

You had countless births,

You had countless fathers and mothers,

You had numberless brothers and sisters, millions of wives and children,

And yet your desires have not perished.

You live to eat, drink and make merry.

But birth is painful, death is painful, all is painful.

Listen to me brother   kill passion.

Enthrone Lord Rama in your heart

Then sound the trumpet of triumph.

---So Says Sivananda.
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GARDEN OF VIRTUE

                          Garden of Virtue


Forgiveness is the greatest virtue which shines forth in all its splendour in the devotee. Courage and patience are the twin qualities of a real aspirant. Humility is the highest of all virtues. God helps you only when you feel truly humble. Humility is not cowardice. It is meekness and not weakness. Humility and meekness are indeed spiritual powers. Make patience thy strength. Assert it. Feel it. Will it.

Non-attachment comes very slowly. It gives a new sense of freedom and peace. Anger is the worst fire. Lust is an all-consuming fire. Both will scorch you. Extinguish these fires through love and purity. Meditate. Think: "I am the fearless, immortal soul". Then fear will vanish.

True love is the greatest power on earth. It rules without a sword and binds without a cord. To love God is to love all. To love all is to love God. Spread the message of love. Practise cosmic love. Love all. Embrace all. Be kind to all. This will remove jealousy, hatred, etc. To love all is the secret of Self-realisation and liberation.

The four fundamental virtues are patience, adaptability, kind speech and pure conduct. Justice, temperance, courage and wisdom are also great virtues. Virtue is the golden key which opens the gate to the abode of eternal bliss.

Cultivate divine virtues such as purity, courage, humility, self-restraint, non-violence truth, mercy, faith, etc.
Be virtuous. You are on the way to wisdom. In the garden of your heart plant the lily of love, the rose of purity, the champaka of courage, the mandara of humility and the lady of the night of compassion.

- - -

Virtue is knowledge. Virtue is excellence. Knowledge is the ripe fruit of the fine flower of virtue. Think well.
All saints teach that you must do good in thought and word and deed. This is the principle of morality.

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Monday, April 27, 2015

RAJA YOGA , MESSAGE 9 & 10

                      Raja Yoga, Message 9


How to Remove Likes, Dislikes and Clinging to Life

"They (the afflictions) are to be destroyed when they are in subtle state by raising the opposite modifications." (II-10)

The afflictions (kleshas) have two states, gross and subtle, When they are in a state of samskara (tendency or impression) they are subtle. When the yogi enters into samadhi they are destroyed like burnt seeds and are dissolved along with the mind in the Purusha (Supreme Spirit) through the fire of knowledge. This takes place when the mind moves inward towards the Purusha and gets laya (dissolution) in the Purusha during asamprajnata Samadhi*.
* See Chapter 20

By raising opposite thoughts, the subtle samskaras of afflictions should be destroyed. Hatred ceases not by hatred but by love. This is the method suggested in this sutra. This is pratipaksha bhavana (thinking of the opposite) method. Habituate the mind to contraries. Do always virtuous actions. Develop sattvic qualities. These good samskaras will act as antidotes to the samskaras of afflictions.

How to Remove Evil Thoughts 

"When obstructed by improper or evil thoughts, take to thinking on the contrary good thoughts." (II-33)

This is a practical exercise for spiritual development. If lust troubles you when you are practising brahmacharya, entertain counter divine thoughts. Think of the glory of brahmacharya and its marvellous benefits and the troubles brought about by lust. If a desire arises to injure anyone, think of love and its benefits. If the habit of telling lies again manifests, think of the advantages of speaking truth and disadvantages of uttering falsehood. In this way you can remove all defects by developing counter virtues or habituating the mind to contraries.

What is Pratipaksha Bhavana?

"When evil thoughts arise such as injury, falsehood, etc. whether done, caused to be done or approved of through greed, anger or delusion, of slight, medium or great intensity and in infinite ignorance and misery, take to the method of thinking contrary good thoughts, or habituate the mind to contraries." (II-34)

If you hurt another man, cause another to commit injury to others or even approve of another doing so, it is sinful. Action and reaction are equal and opposite. If you injure another it is bound to react on you whether in this moment or at a future date. When thoughts of injury come to you, think of the benefits of non-injury. If you entertain contrary thoughts, all evil thoughts that obstruct yoga will die.

You may fail in your attempt twenty times, but slowly you will gain inner spiritual strength. If you send a strong current of anger towards another, it will harm your enemy and pass even to the corners of distant lands and pollute the atmosphere there and come back again to you and harm you.

For destroying the following evil vrittis, raise the opposite good vrittis given against each:

1. Lust... Celibacy, intense longing for liberation.

2. Anger… Love, forgiveness, mercy, compassion, friendliness, peace, patience, non-injury.

3. Pride… Humility.

4. Greed… Honesty, disinterestedness, generosity, contentment, non-covetousness.

5. Jealousy... Nobility, magnanimity, complacency.

6. Delusion... Discrimination.

7. Vanity, hypocrisy... Simplicity.

8. Arrogance...Politeness, modesty.

9. Cunningness, crookedness... Straight-forwardness.

10. Harshness... Mildness.

11. Attachment... Discrimination.

12. Insincerity... Faith.

13. Fickleness... Determination.

Root of Afflictions 

"The impressions of works (karmas) have their root in afflictions, and are experienced in this life and in unseen future births." (II-12)

The afflictions are responsible for actions (karmas). They goad a man to do works and thereby enjoy the fruits of his actions. Suppose you do a very charitable act in this birth. The impression of this act is imbedded in a subtle form in the subconscious mind. It will give you fruit either in this or in any future birth. These impressions become ripe for fruition, either good or bad, when it is their time.

Karmas are beginningless. In the Bhagavad Gita you will find: "Mysterious is the path of action." (IV-17) The Law of Karma is inscrutable. It is difficult to say what sort of karmas will cause leprosy or epilepsy and whether the fruit that you enjoy now is the result of one karma or a combination of several karmas.

A powerful karma, good or bad, may bring fruits in this very birth. All karmas do not produce their results all at once, nor does one karma succeed another. From the accumulated works (sanchita karma) a certain portion is taken out for being worked out or exhausted in one birth. This forms the prarabdha or fructescent karmas of the present life. The works that you do now (current works or agami) are added to the sum total of works. The granary store of a merchant represents sanchita karma. The things that are kept in his shop correspond to the prarabdha. The things that are sold daily represent agami karma. This is a rough analogy to illustrate our point. As a merchant closing the year's ledger and opening a new one does not enter in the new all the items of the old, but only its balance, so does the spirit hand on to the new brain his judgements on the experiences of a life that is closed, the conclusions to which he has come, the decisions at which he has arrived. This is the stock handed on to the new life, the mental furniture for the new dwelling, the real memory.

Ripe karmas produce fruits in the same birth under proper circumstances. Intense austerity brings fruits at once.

For instance, Nandikeshwar, Vishvamitra and Markandeya did a lot of austerity and enjoyed the fruits in the same birth. Nehusa attained the position of Indra on account of his good deeds in his previous birth; but he was transformed into a serpent in the same birth on account of his sinful deeds in that birth. The Law of Karma is inexorable.

"The root being there, its fruition comes through class, life and experience." (II-13)

The root means the root in the form of afflictions. The results of karma are three-fold. They are class or species, life and experience of pleasure or pain. If there are afflictions, only then will you enjoy the fruits of karma.

From this it is inferred that the yogi who has destroyed the afflictions will not have the fruits of karma. Just as the paddy loses its power of sprouting when the husk is removed, so also the karmas lose their power of bringing fruits when the afflictions (husk) are destroyed by the yogi. The yogi destroys these by getting discrimination between matter (prakriti) and spirit (Purusha).

It is not that one action is the cause of one life only. As we see different sorts of experiences, happy and painful, in our lives, we infer that many ripe karmas amongst the accumulated sanchita join together and bring one life. One important karma will direct the course of this life. It will be the ruling factor of this life. Many small karmas will bring sometimes pleasure and sometimes pain. If you do any action, the tendency to repeat such actions (or subtle desires to goad you to similar actions) are formed. If the tendencies are good you will have to increase them through discrimination. If the tendencies are bad you will have to restrain them through dispassion.
You must try to do virtuous actions. The jiva can do actions in the other worlds also to a small extent. But generally, heaven is a world for enjoyments only. This world of death alone is the world of actions.
Fruits of Afflictions

"They (class, life and experience) have pleasure or pain as their fruit according to the cause, virtue or vice." (II-14)

In Sutra II-13 it is stated that the fruit of afflictions comes through class, life and experience. Virtuous and vicious actions cause class, life and experience. As soon as these three are formed the experience of pleasure and pain takes place according to virtue or vice. Karma has its origin in afflictions. Fruition has its origin in karma.

"Their modifications (five afflictions of mind) are to be destroyed by meditation." (II-11)

In Sutra II-10 instruction is given to destroy the subtle form of afflictions (kleshas) which are in the form of tendencies (samskaras). Here, the way to destroy the gross form of afflictions which are in the form of thought-waves, is described. The gross dirt of a cloth is removed by applying Fuller's-earth. The fine dirt is removed by the application of soap. There may be traces of subtle dirt in the cloth so long as the cloth is not destroyed.
Even so, the gross dirt of the mind — the afflictions — is removed by kriya yoga. The gross thoughts are destroyed by meditation. In samadhi, even the subtle form of tendencies are destroyed along with the destruction of the mind. Regular systematic meditation is necessary. It must become habitual.

"Actions of a yogi are neither virtuous nor vicious; for others they are of three kinds." (IV-7)

A yogi is not affected by his karmas because he has no attachment. He is absolutely desireless. Karmas cannot bind him. He works without expectation of any fruits for his actions. He has reached perfection. He works for the upliftment of humanity. Yogis acquire no impressions from their actions. For worldly persons actions are virtuous, vicious and mixed (a mixture of good and evil actions).

Karma and Environment 

"From these (three kinds of karmas), there is manifestation of those desires alone for which the environment is favourable." (IV-8)

When one has taken the body of a celestial (deva), the desires and tendencies of a human being will be in abeyance for the time being. Only those desires which are favourable for the suitable environment in which he lives will manifest. The animal desires and human desires will be checked when one has taken the body of a celestial. When one takes again the body of an animal, only the animal desires will manifest at that time. The latent tendencies and desires of a celestial will be under check for the time being. The impressions and desires for which the conditions are not favourable will lie dormant till their time comes for sprouting or expression.

"To the man of discrimination, all is painful indeed due to consequences, anxiety and impressions, and also the contradiction of the functioning of the gunas (qualities)." (II-15)

Pleasure is in reality pain only. In the Bhagavad Gita you will find: "The delights that are contact-born are verily wombs of pain, for they have a beginning and an end, O Kaunteya. The wise do not rejoice in them." (V-22) Pleasure is mixed with pain, sin and fear. Enjoyment increases the thirsting for objects. This gives pain. The mind becomes more restless by tasting sensual pleasure. There is fear of loss of happiness.

Sensual pleasure is imaginary. It is mental creation. It is no happiness at all. For a man of discrimination only the happiness that is derived from Self-realisation through asamprajnata samadhi only, is the ever-lasting real bliss. The very experience of pleasure creates a desire for more. Desires are endless. When the desires are not gratified there is uneasiness, disappointment and misery. The anxiety that is caused in taking care of the objects of pleasure brings great pain. The impression of pleasure that is left in the mind creates desire through memory of pleasure, and brings pain.

Another cause for pain is the natural opposition which exists between the individual actions of the three qualities, sattva, rajas and tamas. Rajas brings tossing of mind and distraction. Tamas causes delusion, carelessness, laziness, etc. Therefore, everything brings pain for the discriminating. Enjoyment cannot bring satisfaction of desires. Just as ghee when poured over fire aggravates it, so also enjoyment augments the desires. Pain comes if the desired object is not attained. Even if the object is obtained, one gets pain if the sense organ is weak and he is not able to enjoy. Can a multimillionaire enjoy palatable, rich dishes if he suffers from pain in the stomach?

Hatred comes towards persons who stand in the way of enjoyment. Too much enjoyment brings diseases. The yogi is afraid of subtle desires and tendencies that are created during enjoyment. This gives him more pain. A worldly man who has a gross, impure mind is not conscious of the pain.
Avoid Misery

"The misery that has not yet come should be avoided." (II-16)

The avoidable is only the future pain. The pain which has passed away has already been explained. That which is being experienced now cannot be the subject of consideration here. Just as in medicine the nature of diseases, their symptoms, prognosis, diagnosis, therapeutics, methods of treatment, prophylaxis, convalescence, etc., are considered in the treatment of diseases, so also, the nature of misery, its cause, strength, source and the means to avert it are to be investigated.

The Cause of Misery 

"The junction of the Seer and the seen is the cause of the pain which is to be avoided." (II-17)

The cause for misery is the connection between the Seer and the seen. As the power of consciousness (chaitanya shakti) of the Purusha enters the intellect, the Purusha, who is only a witness and supremely indifferent, appears as the Seer. The Seer constitutes all objects that are seen and also the instrument (or intellect) through which it is seen — the senses, elements, etc. Intellect is very near to Purusha. It is very subtle. Purusha is ever-free and full of bliss. When conjunction takes place between the Purusha and the intellect it appears to feel pleasure and pain through reflection. By this conjunction, through ignorance the body, mind, senses and intellect are mistaken for the real Purusha. Because of its close contact with the Purusha, as it is very subtle and as the energy of Purusha has magnetised it, the intellect appears like Purusha, just as the reflection of sun in water appears similar to the real sun. This is avidya, the root-cause for all miseries. Liberation comes when this delusion is removed. If the conjunction between intellect and Purusha is removed, all miseries will terminate.

"The seen consists of the elements and the senses, it is of the nature of illumination, action and darkness, and is for the purpose of experience (through enjoyment) and absolution." (II-18)

The nature of the seen is as follows: from ultimate matter (pradhana) downwards to the elements and their combinations, it is all the seen. Illumination, action and darkness are the functions of the three qualities sattva, rajas and tamas. If sattva increases, illumination manifests. If there is increase of rajas, action increases. If there is increase in tamas, there is more darkness, inertia. Intellect, ego, mind, subtle elements, the five sense organs, the five organs of action and the five gross elements are all modifications of pradhana (original substance) which takes the Purusha around this world and gives all sorts of enjoyments for his experience, and finally makes him free when he gets discrimination between the Purusha and prakriti. The real Purusha is ever pure and free. He is an embodiment of bliss, peace and knowledge. He is unchanging and immortal. He has no beginning, middle or end. He is unattached.

Get all experiences of this little world quickly. Do whatever you want to get experiences of this dream-world. But, cut the cycle of birth and death quickly in this very birth, nay in this very second. Now, or never. Never forget the goal, ideal and centre. The experiences will teach you that there is no essence in this physical life. It is all pain. It is all a long dream. There is no real love in this world. You will know that love here is selfish, hypocritical, changing and decaying, and that only knowledge of Purusha and Atman through asamprajnata samadhi can give real, undecaying bliss and eternal peace and immortality. Nature, the elements and this world are your best teachers. Be grateful to them. Quickly get out of the net spread by the illusory world appearance and realise the Self rapidly, with courage and cheerfulness.

Its cause is ignorance. (II-24)

Ignorance is the cause of the junction of the Seer and sight, nature and sight, nature and Purusha. The nature of this conjunction and its effects has been described. Now the cause is given. To blend or unite the Seer and the seen as one, and to think of this 'I', is ignorance. The jiva increases the feeling of 'I' and 'mine' by mistaking the body and mind to be the Self. The mind, which is saturated with the subtle impressions of ignorance, gets absorbed in matter during the deluge or cosmic dissolution and comes back again during projection of this world. Destroy this ignorance. Give up identification with this body and mind. Rise above body and mind and realise the Purusha who is beyond cause and effect, and who is therefore beginningless, endless and changeless. Apply yourself to spiritual practices and realise the Purusha. Do not make any delay or the monkey-mind will upset you.

The Means for Kaivalya 

"Kaivalya, independence of the Seer, is the removal of the conjunction of the Seer and the seen by the disappearance of ignorance." (II-25)

When you understand fully that the gunas have nothing to do with the Purusha and that the Purusha is ever free, ignorance vanishes and discrimination dawns. Then and then alone will you attain the state of kaivalya or moksha (liberation). The scientists try to understand the external physical forces of nature and to control them by suitable methods. The raja yogis attempt to control the internal psychic forces of the mind. Physical forces are gross and the inner mental forces are subtle. Those who have controlled the mental forces can very easily control the external physical forces.

                                                                   YAMA 

"Among these accessories, abstinence from injury and killing, truthfulness, abstinence from theft or falsehood, continence and abstinence from avariciousness or greed are the restraints." (II-30)
Yama is the practice of ahimsa (abstinence from injury or nonviolence), satyam (truthfulness), asteyam (abstinence from theft or earning through illegal methods), brahmacharya (continence) and aparigraha (abstinence from avarice or greed).

Yama is the very foundation of yoga, without which the superstructure of yoga cannot be built. Practice of yama is really the practice of sadachara (right conduct). The noble eightfold path of Buddha deals with the practice of yama only. Great emphasis is given in every chapter of the Bhagavad Gita to the practice of yama. In every religion you will find this to be the foremost teaching.

There is a deliberate order in the five parts or limbs of yama. Ahimsa comes first because man must remove his brutal animal nature first. Even satyam, brahmacharya and niyama proceed from ahimsa. For instance you tell a lie and thus hurt a person. You get the property of another man and thus hurt him. If you are established in non-violence, all other virtues will cling to you. Practice of non-violence culminates eventually in realisation of unity or oneness of life, of cosmic love and universal brotherhood and ultimately consciousness of that which has no second.

"These restraints are the great vows, universal, not limited by class, place, time and circumstances." (II-31)
Some people have certain conditions and exemptions in observing certain restraints. For instance, one may have a principle not to kill anything on new moon day. When such conditions and exemptions are laid down, then the practice of restraints is not considered to be perfect. They should not be limited by class, place, time or circumstances. The restraints should be practised at all times, in all places, by one and all, in all circumstances. They should be practised in thought, word and deed.

Yama is not a policy or company manners or courtesy, it is sticking to ideals and principles. It is the development of divine traits that will transform human nature into divine nature. It annihilates desires, cravings and evil qualities. It eradicates brutal instincts and brutal nature. It removes harshness, violence, cruelty and covetousness. It fills the heart with cosmic love, kindness, mercy, goodness, purity and divine light. It is the foundation of divine life or yoga, on which the superstructure of samadhi is built, it is the corner-stone of yoga, on which the edifice of super-consciousness is built.

The practice of yama and niyama removes impurities of the mind. Asana, pranayama and sense control (pratyahara) remove vikshepa or tossing of the mind.

Yama, niyama, etc., are the means to the end, viz., meditation. He who does meditation without ethical perfection, without the practice of yama, niyama, etc., cannot get the fruits of meditation. It is like baking a cake of sand in the fire. The sand will be hot but not useful for eating. Energy will leak just as water leaks from a pot with holes. Improvement in spiritual growth cannot be gained by merely sitting with crossed legs while the mind remains in an inert state. An actor can also imitate a saint, keeping a rosary, putting on a white beard, sitting doing japa and meditating, but he does not derive an iota of benefit. So is the meditator without the practice of yama, etc.

Ahimsa — Non-violence 

"Abstinence from injuring and killing being established, all hostilities are given up in the presence of the practitioner." (II-35)

In the regeneration and divinisation of man, the first step is to eliminate the beastly nature. The predominant trait in beasts is cruelty, therefore wise sages prescribed ahimsa (non-violence in thought, word and deed). This is a most effective master-method to counteract and eradicate completely the brutal, cruel traits in man. O earnest aspirant! Ponder the great significance and immense importance, value and blessings of non-violence, and start its practice now — this moment.

Non-violence is not merely non-killing as some think. It is perfect harmlessness and love also. It is to abstain even from the slightest thought of harm to any living creature — mentally, verbally or by deed. There is no excuse nor exception to the above rule.

The path of non-violence is very narrow, but if you practise in right earnest you can easily travel this path, since you cannot but get the divine grace at every step. The immanent Lord will back you up and guide you at all times. You may not get full success in the practice of non-violence within a short time, in two or three months.
You will be established in it only by a constant and vigilant endeavour. The practice involves continuous suffering, no doubt, and you will have to cultivate the practice with endless patience and forgiveness. The path of non-violence is like a blade or the edge of a razor. It is like walking on the edge of a sharp sword. If you are careless you will be seriously hurt, but if you are vigilant you cannot but attain immortality. You have to pay a heavy price indeed if you wish to have eternal life and perennial bliss.

Ahimsa is the means to an end. This end is the realisation of the Truth. The 'means' is as important as the 'end'. If you take care of the means, you must reach the end sooner or later. Keep the ideal before your mind always and stick to it tenaciously. In attempting to live up to your ideal you may falter or stumble down in the beginning several times, but eventually you will be established in the perfect state of non-violence and attain the highest, the only Truth. If you develop this one virtue all other virtues will cling to you by themselves. All sinful and wrong actions are committed by you when you are under the sway of anger. Anger can be easily subdued by practising non-violence. If anger is under your control you cannot do evil actions and you will enjoy supreme peace.

Non-violence is a wonderful quality of the heart. It is a rare virtue. It transmutes a man into divinity. He who is established in it is God himself. All the celestials (devas) and the whole world pay homage to him. Its power is greater than the power of the intellect. It is easy to develop the intellect but it is difficult to develop the heart. The practice of non-violence develops the heart in a wonderful manner.

Ahimsa is soul-force. Practice of ahimsa is practice of divine life. Hate melts in the presence of love. Hate dissolves in the presence of ahimsa. There is no power greater than ahimsa. Its practice will make you fearless. He who practises it with real faith can move the whole world, tame wild animals, win the hearts of all and subdue his enemies. He can do and undo things. Its power is ineffable; its glory is indescribable; its greatness is inscrutable. The force of ahimsa is infinitely more wonderful and subtle than electricity or magnetism.

Non-violence is never a policy. It is not mechanical. It is a sublime virtue. It is the fundamental quality of seekers after Truth. No Self-realisation is possible without it. Through its practice alone can you cognise and reach the Supreme Self or Brahman. Those with whom ahimsa is a policy may fail many a time. They will be tempted to do violent acts also. On the contrary, those who strictly adhere to the vow of non-violence as a creed, as a fundamental canon of yoga, can never take to violence. You must practice ahimsa in thought, word and deed. Practice of non-violence in thought and word is more important than the practice in action. He who has control over thoughts and who has developed cosmic love will be able to get success in this practice, though it takes a long time. Patient, continuous struggle is needed. Practice of ahimsa is really the practice of killing egoism. The practitioner becomes like a block of stone. He develops wonderful will-power.
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Raja Yoga, Message 10

(The section ‘Ahimsa — Non-violence’ continues from last week)

Ahimsa is the great universal vow. It should be practised by all people of all countries. It does not concern only the Hindus or Indians in general. Whoever wishes to realise the Truth must practise ahimsa. Whatever difficulties you encounter, whatever losses you sustain, you must not give up the practice of ahimsa. Trials and difficulties are bound to come in your way to test your strength. You should stand adamant. Then alone you will be crowned with sanguine success.

Absolute ahimsa is not possible even to the most conscientious sannyasin (renunciate). You cannot avoid killing countless creatures in walking, sitting, eating, breathing, sleeping, drinking, etc. You can hardly find a single 'non-injurer' in the world, but you can protect every living being by some means or other. Walk with the head bent low. Don't tread on small insects. Don't give pain to anybody. Feel compassion in your heart on seeing anyone in trouble. Try to relieve the sufferings of others as far as you can. Compassion is the highest spiritual practice.

According to Tilak's school of thought, if by the murder of a dacoit thousands of lives could be saved, it is not considered as violence. Non-violence and violence are relative terms. Some say that one can defend himself with instruments and use a little violence when he is in danger, and this is also not considered to be violence, but a sannyasin should not defend himself and use violence even when his life is in jeopardy.
English people generally shoot their dear horses and dogs when they are in acute agony and when there is no way of relieving their sufferings. They wish that the soul should be immediately freed from the physical body. Motive is the chief factor. It underlies everything.

You cannot understand the exalted state of high souls. They are unaffected or untainted even if they murder millions of persons. The Bhagavad Gita says: "He who is free from the egoistic notion, whose reason is not affected, though he slayeth these people, he slayeth not, nor is he bound." (XVIII-77). Ordinary worldly-minded persons judge others from their own standpoint. They also say: "We procreate and kill for the good of the world." This is a great delusion and a grave blunder. Even when they kill a goat for satisfying their own palate, they foolishly quote scriptures: "Weapons cleave him not, nor fire burneth him, nor waters wet him, nor wind driveth him away." (Bhagavad Gita: II-28) What a philosophy they preach! This is the philosophy of the demons. This is the philosophy of Virochana and Charvaka. There are many followers of this school of thought.

The law of non-violence is as much exact and precise as the law of gravitation. You must know the way to apply it intelligently with scientific accuracy. If you are able to apply it with exactitude and precision, you can work wonders. You can command the elements and nature also. The whole mystery of nature will be revealed unto you like a fruit in the palm of the hand.

Always remember the dictum or the authoritative sayings of the scriptures. Remember the wise utterance of Bhishma: "Neither was there nor will there be a higher gift than the gift of life." Practice of non-violence which is supreme virtue in your daily life, will help you to attain inner spiritual strength, serenity of the mind and the realisation of Truth.

In the sacred books of Jains you will find: "One should not destroy life nor permit or consent to others killing living beings, then he will be delivered from all misery. In thought, word and act, he should do nothing injurious to beings whether they move or not. (The movable beings are animals including men, fire and mind. The immovable beings are earth, water and plants.) A wise man should not act sinfully towards earth, water, fire, etc., nor cause others to act so, nor allow others to act so. Intoxicating drinks, meat, honey and fruit of milky trees must always be avoided by the good, intent upon sheltering immovable beings. With vegetarianism the guilt is as big as an atom and can be cancelled by penance, but with meat-eating it is as big as Meru — the king of mountains — and cannot be cancelled on account of its bigness."

In the Mahabharata (XIII-II3-47) it is said that these seven are guilty of violence by eating the flesh of an animal, viz., (1) he who brings the animal for being killed, (2) he who consents to the proposal, (3) he who kills it (4) he who buys the meat, (5) he who sells it, (6) he who prepares the meat, and (7) he who eats it.

Only the ordinary people think that ahimsa is not to hurt any living being physically. This is but the gross form of ahimsa. The vow of ahimsa is broken even by showing contempt to another man, by entertaining unreasonable dislike or prejudice for anybody, by frowning at another man, by abusing another man, by hating another man, by speaking ill of others, by back-biting or villifying, by harbouring thoughts of hatred, by uttering lies or by ruining another man in any way whatsoever.

If you practise ahimsa you should also put up with insults, rebukes, criticisms and assaults. You should never retaliate nor wish ill to anybody even under extreme provocation. You should not entertain any evil thoughts against anybody. You should harbour no anger. You should not curse. You should joyfully be prepared to give up even your life in the cause of Truth. The ultimate Truth can be attained through ahimsa.

You injure another man on account of ignorance. If you see God in every man and animal, and always bear in mind that God is seated in the hearts of all livings beings, you will not injure anybody. You begin to injure others the moment you forget to see God in others.

If you do mental sins, if you injure a man mentally, you also will suffer mentally. Action and reaction are equal and opposite. If you injure a man in speech, you will suffer through speech only. A man may abuse and villify you. If you injure a man physically, you will also undergo physical suffering. If you injure a man's eye and make him blind, you will also be rendered blind. If you cut a man's finger, your finger also will be cut. Understand this law of nature. Always do good actions. You will attain supreme peace and eternal happiness.

A worldly-minded man wishes to get praise from the world and tries to avoid censure. He thinks and acts in such a way that all people should praise him. Is this possible? No. Never. Nobody can please the world. You can shut the mouth of a vessel but you cannot shut the mouth of the many-tongued world. Some will praise you while others will censure you. You should have equanimity or a balanced mind. You should be above praise or censure. You should treat praise as the dung of the pig, or poison. You should attain the state of being beyond the pairs of opposites. Then only can you be always happy. Then only can you be really peaceful and joyful.

People have not spared even Sri Rama or Sita or Lord Siva or Lord Krishna. They speak ill of these great divine beings. They attach stigma to them. If such is their treatment of gods, what can be said as regards their treatment of ordinary men?

A white man dislikes a black man and vice-versa. A Samajist dislikes a Sanatanist and vice-versa. A South Indian dislikes a man of North India and vice-versa. A Saivite dislikes a Vaishnavite and vice-versa. A Protestant dislikes a Catholic and vice-versa. There is an inherent tendency in man to praise his own native place, his own country, his own family, his own clan or sect, his own mode of worship, his own religion and his own language, and to censure those of others. This is petty-mindedness born of ignorance. When the heart of man expands through spiritual culture, when he gets knowledge of the Self, these tendencies will perish. Mark how man is in a degraded and deplorable state on account of the influence of his innate tendencies. Still he will not try to destroy them.
He clings to them like a leech and thinks he is always on the right path, on account of delusion created by these tendencies. Though he is in the body of a human being, he does the actions of a horizontal being.

Lord Jesus said: "Love worketh no ill to his neighbour. Therefore, love is the fulfilling of the law." "Love your enemies, do good to them that hate you, bless them that curse you and pray for them that despitefully use you. Ye shall be the children of your Father which is in Heaven. Be ye therefore perfect, even as your Father in heaven is perfect, for He is kind to the just and the unjust." Do the Christians of present day follow the above teachings of Lord Jesus? Had they followed these precepts there would have been no wars. No nation would be manufacturing machine guns and building warships. True Christians and true Brahmins are very rare now. If Lord Jesus came here now he would weep bitterly when he witnessed the present state of Christians, His own children.

Root out vices. Plant virtues. Develop mercy, unselfishness, forgiveness, pure cosmic love, patience, perseverance, peace, etc. Lead an ideal life in God. Be good and do good.

Immortality can be attained only by performing acts of kindness continuously. Hatred, anger and jealousy are removed by continuous service with a loving heart. Lord Buddha still lives in our hearts. Why? Because he was extremely kind, he did immense service and he was an embodiment of compassion. You will get more strength, more joy, more satisfaction by doing kind acts. Your heart will be at rest even when you are about to face death. You will be loved by all. Practice of compassion, charitable acts and kind services purify and soften the heart, turn the heart-lotus upwards and prepare the aspirant for the reception of divine light.

A sympathetic man places himself in the position of the other man who is in difficulty or in a miserable state. Then he evinces true sympathy and tries to alleviate his sufferings. A sympathetic man actually feels the suffering himself when he sees anyone in a bad plight. Sympathy is a divine quality. Therefore develop and cultivate this virtue to a maximum degree.

Forgive your servants one hundred and eight times. Excuse their mistakes just as you would excuse your children.

Share with them whatever you eat. Develop equal vision. This is the essence of wisdom. Violence is a deadly enemy of wisdom. It separates and divides. It stands in the way of realising unity or oneness. Harsh words to beggars, servants or inferiors is violence. To fail to relieve pain or trouble in another is negative violence. To approve of another's harsh actions is against non-violence. Avoid strictly all forms of harshness, direct or indirect, positive or negative, immediate or delayed. Practise non-violence in its purest form, and become divine. Non-violence and divinity are one.

It is simple foolishness to think that you are separate from the rest of the world. You are one with all. In injuring another you injure yourself. In loving another you love yourself. Separation is death, unity is eternal life.

Ill-feelings cease not by ill-feelings, but by love. In thinking evil of others we injure ourselves. In loving others, we love our own selves. Understand the grand law and its working. You will be happy. The law is very subtle.

It is easy to remain without hurting others, but it is very difficult not to be hurt by others. One harsh word breaks the friendship of men who were united in love for a period of twenty years. A little sneering or frowning, a little laughter in contempt or a staring look, brings rupture amongst friends, brothers and relatives. How stiff is the ego! How strong is self-love and identification with this false body, a combination of five elements, a mixture of flesh, bones, skin, nerves, blood and pus. How powerful is this illusory power of the world.

If you want to practise non-violence you should practise self-control to a maximum degree. You must keep a calm mind even under the gravest provocation. You must keep the impulses under perfect control.

Ahimsa is a weapon not of the weak but of the strong. It is a shield not of the effeminate but of the potent. It is really for those made of sterner stuff. You will have to practise it carefully in your daily life. You may fail one hundred times in your attempt, but gradually you will gain strength. Ceaseless practice, strenuous struggle and rigorous discipline of the mind, speech and the body are necessary.
If you can be fully established in the practice of ahimsa, not injuring any creature in thought, word and deed, you are God. You are Brahman in truth.

All beings — men, animals, birds and poisonous creatures — can approach the practitioner of ahimsa without fear and do no harm to him. Their hostile nature disappears in his presence. The rat and the cat, the snake and the mongoose, being natural enemies to each other, give up their hostile feelings in the presence of the yogi who is established in ahimsa. Lions and tigers can never do any harm to such a yogi. The wolf and the lamb, the frog and the cobra will play in his presence. Such a yogi can give definite orders to lions and tigers. They will obey. This is obtainable by the practice of ahimsa. The practice of ahimsa will culminate eventually in realisation of unity and oneness of life, non-dual consciousness. It will enable one to obtain cosmic love.

Satyam — Truthfulness

"Speaking truth, when established, leads to the bestowal of fruits for actions." (II-36)

The second aspect of yama — truthfulness — is the most important qualification of a yogi. Truth is the symbol of God. God is truth. He can be realised only through unflinching adherence to truth in thought, word and deed.
Truthfulness, equality, self-control, absence of envious emulation, forgiveness, modesty, endurance, absence of jealousy, charity, thoughtfulness, disinterested philanthropy, self-possession and unceasing and compassionate harmlessness, are the thirteen forms of truth.

If five thousand sacrifices performed by a monarch as a mark of his sovereignty over other kings and truth (satyam) are weighed in a sensitive balance, truth will undoubtedly outweigh them. That is the reason why the scriptures declare — "Truth alone triumphs but not falsehood." Even Yudhishthira had to see hell as once he had told a lie — a modified, twisted truth — in a dexterous manner.

A lie concealed by another lie leads to more lies. A sin concealed by another sin leads to more sins. A good or vicious action always brings its fruits. That virtuous man who always does virtuous actions without expectations of fruits, quickly has direct knowledge of God or becomes a jivanmukta.

Aspirants should sincerely endeavour to speak the truth at all times. If they are established in Truth, all other virtues will cling to them.

Brahman is Truth and one can realise Him by speaking the Truth. Even some seekers and monks speak terrible lies for little things to keep up prestige and position and to get respect in society.

This is a horrible mistake. Householders can be excused to some extent. Spiritual seekers can never be excused. If the mind is impure, Self-realisation cannot be attained even if you meditate for twenty hours daily.

The habit of telling lies co-exists with the habit of pilfering. Some aspirants tell lies even for trifling things.

The habit of telling lies has become ingrained in some persons. If the preceptor asks his disciple: "O Ram, have you taken quinine mixture this morning?" he replies: "Yes, Swamiji, I have taken already." Ram tells a lie for this trifling matter and on strict investigation he is found to be a liar. Many aspirants pose as great yogis when they know only a few asanas and mudras, when they have read only Vichar Sagar and Panchadasi. This is also another great obstacle in the path.

Speaking untruth even in jest is bad. Gossiping about others, even in a joking manner, is bad. Give up these two evil habits. You will shine in society. You will be revered.

By speaking the truth always in all circumstances the yogi acquires vak-siddhi: i.e. whatever he thinks or speaks turns out to be true. He can do anything even by mere thought.

Thoughts, words and acts should agree. This is satyam or truthfulness. The inner man should tally or agree with the outer man and his actions. Whatever you have seen or heard, speak it as it is, do not twist or modify. Fire burns everything — it is true to its nature. Water flows from a higher level to a lower, the seed sprouts and becomes a tree, the scorpion stings — these are all true to their nature; but man violates truth, he is ungrateful. He is not true to his essential nature. A wife poisons her husband; sons are not filial towards their fathers; sons murder their parents. This is not truth. They are not true to their essential natures. To manifest one's essential divine nature, to manifest divine virtues, is truth. To be true to one's own Self is truth.

A spiritual man, a worldly man and a moralist have different conceptions of truth. According to a spiritual man, Brahman is Truth, this world is unreal. A asks B: "Are you married?" If B replies: "I am a bachelor," when he is really married, this is an untruth according to the worldly man. If he says: "Yes, I am a married man," this is truth. A moralist cares for the result of truth. If a man can save the lives of many innocent persons by telling a lie, it is truth for a moralist, because untruth has brought greatest good.

Suppose an unrighteous king has ordered a sage to be hanged without any cause. If the life of this sage can be saved by uttering a falsehood, the falsehood is only truth. If the uttering of a truth brings greater harm to many persons, it is an untruth according to a moralist.

By the practice of speaking the truth, the mind is purified of its dirt. It shines like a clean mirror and reflects the divine form of the Lord with great effulgence.

Have ceaseless devotion to truth. Be ready to sacrifice your all for it. You will develop a strong will. You will become fearless. You will draw immense strength and courage from the Atman or the Supreme Self within. You will attain Self-realisation.

The man who can see his own faults as he sees those of others will soon become a great soul.

Do not brood on your past mistakes and failures. This will fill your mind with grief, regret and depression. Do not repeat them in future. Be cautious. Just think of the causes that led to your failures and try to remove them in future. Be vigilant and circumspect. Strengthen yourself. Arm yourself with new vigour and virtues. Develop your will slowly. You are bound to succeed in every attempt.

Every mistake brings its own lessons. Mistakes are our gurus or teachers. Correct your own short-comings. Do not look into the faults of others. It is not your business. Everybody is evolving. God only knows the exact position in which one stands.

Be on the alert. Be vigilant. Be bold. Be cheerful. Be pure. Be kind. Be humble. Be patient. Do not lose sight of the goal. Do not miss the ideal. Keep the vision of your goal clear before your eyes. Live every moment to realise the ideal in life. Correct your mistakes. Realise the Self through direct intuitive experience.

Asteyam — Non-stealing 

"Non-stealing or abstinence from theft, when established, all kinds of wealth approach." (II-37)
Asteyam is non-stealing. This is also another form of self-restraint. Why does a man steal? He wants something. When he. cannot get it by legitimate ways of earning, he begins to steal.

Desire, craving or want are the root-causes of stealing. This is a deep-rooted evil trait in man. Control desires and cravings, reduce your wants. Reflect and discriminate. Think of the evil results of stealing, — killing of conscience, dishonour, pin pricks, guilty conscience, unfitness for yoga, bad name in society, punishment through the law of karma and penal code. Think of the advantages of non-theft viz., honour, clean conscience, reward in heaven and fitness for the practice of yoga. You will at once stop this stealing habit.

Man is not very careful and conscientious. He steals some small things and says: "This is nothing." He drinks the milk that is kept for others, secretly, and says: "This is nothing. I work very hard, I am in need of this milk. I am also an inmate of this ashram. The whole ashram belongs to me. I am also Swamiji's disciple. I have every right to get what I want." His mind thinks up very clever arguments. Some secretly take from the library some old journals which contain some pictures or useful matter and say: "This is nothing. It is only old copy. It will only go to the hands of a shopkeeper for packing. I am utilising it for good purpose." But, he has removed it without the knowledge of the librarian. So it is theft.

Taking blotting paper, pins, paper, pencil, etc. from the office is stealing. Hoarding money is stealing. Eating too much or gluttony is stealing. Ever thinking of objects and increasing your wants is also stealing, in a comprehensive sense. Keeping more things than are actually necessary is also stealing.

The wife removes some money from her husband's pocket without his knowledge. The son also does the same. They argue: "He is my husband." or "He is my father." "We have every right to take it." Such clever arguments help them to continue stealing in a clever manner and kill their conscience completely.

Even a sensitive mind becomes blunt gradually. By continuous stealing we jump from stealing small things to big articles. If a drop of ink falls on a white cloth it will be seen very markedly, but even if a bottle of ink falls on a dirty cloth, it will not be noticed clearly. So is the mind. Even a little dirt, a little theft, seriously affects the mind of a yoga student. He will have to be very careful and vigilant. He must keep the mind as clean as a polished mirror. He must avoid even very little theft in any form. He has to be content with whatever he gets through honest means. He must completely abstain from illegal appropriation, confiscating another's property and other illegal ways of maintaining his livelihood. Then alone will he have success in yoga.

The pilfering nature should be completely annihilated. One should be satisfied with what one gets through honest means. Besides actual illegal appropriation (taking away the property or things of others) the very thought of any such gain should not enter the mind. Hoarding money is really theft. You should not keep anything more than the actual necessity. Eating more than what is actually necessary is also considered as theft. When a man has powerful senses and an uncontrolled mind, he wants many things for his own sensual enjoyment. If he cannot get the objects of enjoyment and satisfy his desires, then the pilfering nature enters his mind. By constant thinking he does the actual theft. Therefore the real cause for theft is too many desires and undisciplined senses. To abstain from theft one should slowly curb desires, discipline the senses and control the mind. If one can completely give up the evil habit of theft, then the desired things and all kinds of wealth will come by themselves.

Brahmacharya — Purity

"By the establishment of celibacy, vigour is gained." (II-38)

Brahmacharya is purity in thought, word and deed. The very idea of lust should not enter the mind. No spiritual progress is possible without the practice of celibacy.

The semen is a dynamic force. It should be converted into ojas or spiritual energy by pure thoughts, japa and meditation. Those who are very eager to have God-realisation should strictly observe unbroken celibacy.
Householders break their vows owing to their weakness and hence do not find much advancement in the spiritual path. They ascend two steps in the spiritual ladder and then fall down to the ground through lack of celibacy. This is a sad mistake. They should sleep alone. They should be very serious. They should understand clearly the gravity of the situation. Taking a vow is a very sacred act. It must be kept up at all costs. Man only is the real culprit. He violates rules and laws. Women have got greater self-restraint than men, though the scriptures say that they are eight times more passionate than men.

Remember the advantages of celibacy and the evils of loss of semen. Wastage of semen brings nervous weakness, exhaustion and premature death. The sexual act destroys vigour of mind, body and senses and annihilates memory, understanding and intellect. This body is meant for God-realisation. It must be well utilised for a higher spiritual purpose. It is very difficult to get a human birth. Remember those celibate saints who have earned undying reputation and glory. You can also achieve greatness if you preserve this vital energy and utilise it for divine contemplation. You are not crawling now. You have learnt to stand up and walk. You are a man. Behave like a real man. Observe the vow of celibacy strictly. Let your wife also realise its importance and glory. Get religious books for her daily study. Ask her to fast on Ekadasi and to do japa of any mantra 21,600 times daily. Take refuge in God's name and japa. All obstacles will be removed.

St. Paul said: "It is good for a man not to touch a woman." Lord Buddha said: "A wise man should avoid married life as if it were a burning pit of live coals."

Ojas is spiritual energy that is stored up in the brain. By sublime thoughts, meditation, japa, worship and pranayama the sexual energy can be transmuted into ojas shakti. This energy can be utilised for divine contemplation and spiritual pursuits.

Anger and muscular energy can also be transmuted into ojas. A man who has a great deal of ojas in his brain can turn out immense mental work. He is very intelligent. He has a magnetic aura in his face and lustrous eyes. He can influence people by speaking a few words. A short speech can produce a tremendous impression on the minds of hearers. His speech is thrilling. He has an awe-inspiring personality. Sri Sankara, a complete celibate, worked wonders through his power of ojas. He held heated debates in different parts of India with the learned scholars through his power of ojas. A yogi always directs his attention to the accumulation of this divine energy by unbroken chastity.

For a scientist a woman is a mass of electrons. For a philosopher of Sage Kanada's school of thought she is a conglomeration of atoms. For a tiger she is a prey. For the passionate husband she is an object of enjoyment. For a crying child she is an affectionate mother, who will give it milk, sweets and other comforts. For a jealous sister or sister-in-law she is an enemy. For a man of discrimination and dispassionate nature she is a combination of flesh, bone, urine, faecal matter, hair, pus, perspiration, blood, phlegm, etc. For a fullblown jnani she is sat-chit-ananda — existence, knowledge, bliss absolute. Names and forms are only mental creations like 'snake in the rope' or 'man in the post'.  


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