Sunday, December 25, 2011

Our Addiction to the Cosmic TV

It might seem like the TV appeared on the face of this earth only a few decades ago. Not quite. The TV has been here for as long as the “here” has been here. Clearly, I am not speaking about the tiny box (not so tiny these days) in most urban households the world over. I am referring to the huge box spanning our mind and the senses. It is so huge that not only can we not think outside the box, but we cannot even see beyond it.

Tuesday, December 20, 2011

Bathing the Lord

When I was offering the ritual bathing water (snāna) during the worship some days ago, a thought came to my mind. Water can be seen as representing matter (since its potentiality is identified with one of the five primal elements) and the offering of snāna, besides being water for bathing, represents also a material sheath to cover the Spiritual Being, who is of the nature of pure consciousness. Only when clothed in matter can God become tangible and accessible to the human mind and senses.

Wednesday, December 14, 2011

Krishna: The Stealer

Through charming stories, songs, and anecdotes, the baby Krishna is depicted as a stealer of butter. His personality is so endearingly lovable and it is so easy to fall in love with him that he is also often called a stealer of hearts.

Wednesday, December 7, 2011

The Consciousness of Consciousness

I wouldn’t be able to see the chair unless I was conscious that I was seeing the chair. There cannot be any perception without consciousness. I am conscious of the chair in front of me, but am I conscious that I am conscious of the chair in front of me? Do I have consciousness of the consciousness of the chair? Can I experience consciousness itself?

Thursday, December 1, 2011

The Pseudo Atmans

It made me very happy when I received an email about three years ago in which a friend wrote: “One thing is crystal clear: the Annamaya Kośa is all about decay and death.” How very true!

Thursday, November 24, 2011

The Truth in Me

Besides the obvious truth (“I am a human being”) and the spiritually yet-to-be experienced truth (“I am pure consciousness, free and eternal”), what is the truth in me now, at this moment?—this is an important question that every spiritual seeker has to grapple with.

Thursday, November 17, 2011

Where Are You Parked?

It may be helpful to think of our consciousness as a car and the different parts of our personality as parking lots. The body is one parking lot, the mind another, the ego yet another, and so on. It is obvious that my car will be directly impacted with whatever happens at the lot where it is parked. If there is fire at the lot, my car is in danger. If I hear of the fire, I’ll be anxious and rush to get my car out of that place. On the other hand, if there is fire in some other parking lot, I wouldn’t care so much, for I won’t be affected by it.

Sunday, November 13, 2011

Responsibility for our Actions

About a year ago, one of the students sent me this question:
"We are instructed to forget the bad done to us by others - the idea being that this was something we had coming to us (karma, taking responsibility for our past actions). My question is, what about the reverse? One could argue if we do bad to others, that we should forget that because it was something that they had coming to them, which, of course, does not sound right. I am wondering your thoughts on that."
And this is what I wrote in reply:

Thursday, November 3, 2011

Death, Silence, Space

Last December I got an email from a dear friend informing me that his father had passed away peacefully at 92. I went to the shrine and offered a special prayer for his father and his family. Not surprisingly, I remembered my own father––and specifically the moment when I had received a call late at night informing me of my father’s peaceful passing almost exactly a year after I came to Boston. I remember that moment vividly, as if it happened this morning. As soon as I had heard the news, I had experienced a sudden void, a deafening silence within me, and it had lasted for several hours.

Friday, July 15, 2011

A Presence Etched in My Heart

Today is Guru Purnima, the day when spiritual seekers turn their minds and hearts to their Guru in a special way. Sri Ramakrishna taught that God alone is the teacher of all. It is God’s power and wisdom that is passed on from one generation to the next through the unbroken link of Guru-Disciple lineage. I have often been asked to share my memories of my Guru, Swami Vireswaranandaji Maharaj (1892-1985), who was a disciple of Holy Mother Sri Sarada Devi.

Wednesday, July 6, 2011

Stepping Back

How much of our life is circumscribed by who we are and where we are! Who we are--more accurately, who we think we are--and where we are determine our relationships, our attitudes, and our behavior patterns.

Tuesday, June 21, 2011

Getting Along With People

It is easy to get along with those with whom we feel comfortable and somehow connected. It is natural that we may not feel the same level of comfort and connection with some others. Is there some way that spiritual seekers can learn to get along with everyone, connection or no connection, comfort or no comfort? In a spiritual community this question becomes especially important both for collective harmony and individual peace of mind.

Here are a few points that deserve reflection and, if they make sense to us, then remembering these things may help:

Thursday, June 16, 2011

Maya and God

About five years ago--in May 2006, to be more precise--I got an email from a student who wrote: “Everything is Māyā.” Given below is an extract from my response to this student:

Thursday, June 9, 2011

Life Above the Clouds

In June 2006 my flight from Houston was delayed because of rain and stormy conditions in Boston. We finally took off three hours behind schedule. The plane was flying above the clouds: it was a beautiful sight. The world above was full of light, quiet, tranquility. The sky was crystal clear. I could see the moon and a lone star. As Boston neared and the plane began to descend, the passage through the clouds was understandably bumpy. Once we landed, we encountered a world which was dark, rainy, windy, and crowded. The tranquillity that was so palpable when we were above the clouds was lost in a moment. Once we got involved in the world with our feet firmly planted on the earth, the life above the clouds was forgotten.

Tuesday, May 31, 2011

Absorbed into What's Out There

When we go to a movie, we get absorbed in the story and, assuming that the movie is well-made, we often forget that we are just watching the movie. The transition from being “observers” to being “participators” is unconscious and quick. When that happens, we get absorbed fully and unreservedly into whatever is happening on the screen.

Seldom, though, the movies are able to hold our attention without break from beginning to end. We generally shuttle back and forth between being observers (when we can lean back on our seats and know that we are watching a movie) and being participators (when we forget where we are and who we are).

Tuesday, May 24, 2011

The Art of Merging

We often read, Kaṭha Upaniṣad 1.3.13 for instance, of merging one thing into another. In meditation practices, it is sometimes recommended that the form of the guru must be merged into that of the Iṣṭa.

How does merging occur? What exactly needs to be done?

Tuesday, May 17, 2011

Is Middle Path the Best Path?


Today is Buddha Purnima: the day on which Buddha was born at Lumbini about 2500 years ago, the day on which he attained enlightenment under the Bodhi tree at Gaya, and the day he passed away when he was 80. We celebrated this thrice-blessed day with a special Satsang last Sunday at the Ramakrishna Vedanta Society (above). While reflecting on his life and teachings, an interesting question came up regarding the Middle Path.

Saturday, May 7, 2011

What Is God?


St. Paul’s Cathedral in downtown Boston organized an education program during the season of Lent, in March and April this year. Over lunch on five successive Thursdays (Mar 17 through Apr 14) they invited guests to present their thoughts, insights and experiences on the topic, “What is God?” It was a joy for me to visit the beautiful cathedral on April 7 and share my thoughts with a group of earnest people. Given below is a summary of what I shared. Rev. Jep Streit, the Dean at the Cathedral, taped my informal talk and it is up on their website. Now the summary:

Saturday, April 23, 2011

"I am the resurrection"

Jesus said unto her, “I am the resurrection, and the life: 
he that believeth in me, though he were dead, yet shall he live: 
And whoever liveth and believeth in me 
shall never die.” (John 11:25–26) 

Being the words of Jesus, it is easy to see that the “I” and the “me” refer to Jesus. Who was Jesus? This question can be answered in many ways. So let’s narrow it down to: Who was Jesus referring to when he used the pronoun “I”?

Tuesday, April 19, 2011

Our Pseudo-Freedoms

Many of us like to think of ourselves as “free” people. It cannot be denied that many of us enjoy considerable freedom at the social, economic, and political levels.
       But it would be foolish to imagine that we are free in every possible way. Moreover, all of our freedoms have their limits. As someone famously said, “Your freedom ends where my nose begins.” Our freedom is also restricted by factors related to time (the body does not last forever), capacity (the mind and the intellect have their limits), and the force of habit. Can we say in all honesty that we are absolutely free from jealousy, anger, hatred, dislike, and attachment?

Tuesday, April 12, 2011

Life as a Series of Dreams

We don’t have just one dream every night. Most of us have more than one dream. We effortlessly pass from one dream to the next, and usually it is the dream we had just before we wake up that we remember. When we pass from one dream to another, we don’t generally recall the earlier dream. Waking up is the only way for these series of dreams to come to an end.

Tuesday, March 29, 2011

ॐ Tat Sat

This is the first posting on this blog and I want to start it with what, in my opinion, is the most sacred sound (ॐ) and the most ignored truth: God alone is real. The Sanskrit, tat ("that") here refers to the Supreme Being or God, and sat means "real". Compared to the reality of God, everything else is at least "less" real, the way our dreams are less real than our waking experience. There will be enough opportunities in future postings to reflect on this in a philosophically more rigorous way.