Sunday, February 6, 2011

Remain divine by continuously forgiving and loving as God does.


Remain divine by continuously forgiving and loving as God does.


Once upon a time a powerful emperor of a country got drunk. Disguised, he went into a tavern belonging to his estate and in a quarrel broke another man's leg. The innkeeper took him to a judge who had been appointed to his post by the king. As the judge was about to pass sentence, the king suddenly threw off his disguise and exclaimed, "I am the king who appointed you as the judge, and I have the power to throw you into prison. How dare you convict me?

In a similar way, the perfect soul, when it is identified with the body, may commit an evil and be deemed guilty according to the judge - or law of karma. But when that soul can identify its consciousness with God, the Creator of the law of karma, that royal soul cannot be punished by the judging law.

One can escape the law of karma by identifying himself with God. Once he is able to do that, he should forgive his brothers who sin against him. But if that soul, who found divine forgiveness from his own karma by meditation, is unforgiving toward his sinning brothers, then he again identifies with human lifeand becomes governed by the inscrutable laws of limiting karma. Every soul, therefore, should remain divine by continuously forgiving and loving as God does.

According to the laws of a county, a judge may sentence a young criminal to three years in a reformatory school. But the judge also has the privilege to pardon the young offender if the youth repents and promises to behave well in future. So, according to the law of karma, a person who acts evilly must reap the consequences of his actions. But if that evil-doer appeals to God for pardon by intense prayer and meditation, then God, being the Maker of the law of karma, can grant him amnesty from punishment

For will power directs energy, and energy in turn acts upon matter.


For will power directs energy, and energy in turn acts upon matter.


If we accept the principle of cause and effect in Nature, and of action and reaction in physics, how can we not believe that this natural law extends also to human beings? Once consciousness is understood as basic to everything the question begs to be asked: Do not humans, too, belong to the natural order?

Such is the law of karma: As you sow, so shall you reap. If you sow evil, you will reap evil in the form of suffering. And if you sow goodness, you will reap goodness in the form of inner joy.

To understand karma, you must realize that thoughts are things. The very universe, in the final analysis, is composed not of matter but of consciousness. Matter responds, far more than most people realize, to the power of thought. For will power directs energy, and energy in turn acts upon matter. Matter, indeed, is energy.

Every action, every thought, reaps its own corresponding rewards. Human suffering is not a sign of God's, or Nature's, anger with mankind. It is a sign, rather, of man's ignorance of divine law.

The law is forever infallible in its workings.

Success has a relation to the satisfaction of the sou..


Success has a relation to the satisfaction of the sou..


Success has a relation to the satisfaction of the soul in the context of the environment in which one lives; it is a result of actions based on the ideals of truth, and includes the happiness and well-being ofothers as part of one's own fulfillment. Apply this law to your material, mental, moral, and spiritual lifeand you will find it a complete, comprehensive definition of success.

People think of success in different ways, depending on their aim in life. You ever hear of it in connection with stealing: "He was a successful thief"! This shows that not all kinds of success are desiresable. Our success must not hurt others. Another qualification of success is that we not only bring harmonious and beneficial results to ourselves, but also share those benefits with others. 

Suppose a wife engages in the spiritual practice of prolonged silence, and at such times refuses to talk even to her husband and children. Though she may succeed in keeping silent, and thereby gain some degree of personal inner peace, her behavior is selfish and detrimental to her family's happiness. She is not truly successful unless the accomplishment of her good intention also benefits those to whom she has a responsibility.

Likewise, the attainment of material success means more than that we are individually entitledto enjoy our prosperity; it means that we are morally obligated to help others to create abetter life as well. 

Anyone who has the brains can make money. But if he has love in his heart, he will never be able to use that money selfishly; he will always share with others. Money becomes a curse to the miserly, but to those who have heart it is a blessing.

Henry Ford, for example, makes a lot of money, but at the same time he doesn't believe in charity that simply encourages people to be lazy. Rather, he provides work and a livelihood for many. If Henry Ford makes money by giving others prosperity too, he is successful in the right way. He has greatly helped the masses; American civilization owes much to him.

Even the greatest of saints are not fully redeemed until they have shared their success, their ultimate experiences of God-realization, by helping others toward divine realization. This is why those who have that attainment are dedicated to giving understanding to those who don't understand.

Thus, if you find joy and pleasure in the culture of your mind to achieve true success, not only do you insure your own happiness, but that of others as well.

Atma Shatakam - śivo'ham śivo'ham.... śivo'ham śivo'ham..... śivo'ham śivo'ham


śivo'ham śivo'ham.... śivo'ham śivo'ham..... śivo'ham śivo'ham


Atma Shatakam



The Atma shatakam is also known as Nirvana Shatakam , and by other variations of these names. It is a shloka in six stanzas written by Adi Sankara summarising the basic teachings of Advaita Vedanta, or the Hindu teachings of non-dualism.
The speaker of the poem is nominally Shiva, but it is generally seen as a statement by a knowing person of identity with Shiva or brahman. The speaker lists in the earlier verses what he (or brahman) is not. He is not body or mind, nor the things that attach them to each other and to the world, including the intellect, the senses, the practices of life, the occurrences of life such as birth and death. In the last verse he says that he permeates through the universe, and that he is consciousness, bliss and the soul, and by implication, the atman and brahman.



manobuddhyahahkāra cittāni nāhah
na ca śrotrajihve na ca ghrāhanetre
na ca vioma bhūmir na tejo na vāyuh
cidānandarūpah śivo'ham śivo'ham
na ca prahasajño na vai pahcavāyuh
na vā saptadhātur na vā pahcakośah
na vākpāhipādah na copasthapāyu
cidānandarūpah śivo'ham śivo'ham
na me dveşarāgau na me lobhamohau
mado naiva me naiva mātsaryabhāvah
na dharmo na cārtho na kāmo na mokşah
cidānandarūpah śivo'ham śivo'ham
na puhyah na pāpah na saukhyah na dukhyah
na mantro na tīrthah na vedā na yajña
ahah bhojanah naiva bhojyah na bhoktā
cidānandarūpah śivo'ham śivo'ham
na me mhtyuśahkā na me jātibhedah
pitā naiva me naiva mātā na janmah
na bandhur na mitrah gurunaiva śişyah
cidānandarūpah śivo'ham śivo'ham
ahah nirvikalpo nirākāra rūpo
vibhutvāca sarvatra sarvehdriyāhah
na cāsangata naiva muktir na meyah
cidānandarūpah śivo'ham śivo'ham

Guru and Divine Grace - Guru is a channel for spiritual knowledge.


Guru and Divine Grace  -  Guru is a channel for spiritual knowledge.


In the effort to understand life and approach death meaningfully, vairagya [non-attachment] and abhyasa [practices] are the responsibility of the seeker. When these two are truly undertaken, another help follows. That help comes in the form of guru and grace, each linked to the other, each so beautiful and comforting, each so powerful. Unfortunately, each is so frequently misunderstood.


Western culture, which has increasingly welcomed and embraced traditions from the East in the last thirty years, has too often understood guru to mean simply a teacher. In the West guru is frequently considered to be merely someone who is trained in philosophy, meditation, and hatha yoga. From this point of view, the guru is expected to share this knowledge with the students, training them in scriptures and various spiritual disciplines. While the western student may become dependent on the teacher and have high expectations about what the teacher should do on behalf of the student, the guru is nonetheless viewed as a teacher only.


In ancient times students received formal education in guru-kulas. The students lived with their guru from an early age and were given not only instruction on an intellectual level, but also were guided in spiritual development and in the maintenance of physical health. The guru had a very close relationship with the students and knew their habits and level of inner strength.


In today's life there is no spiritual environment in which a seeker can fully concentrate on learning the language of silence in order to find inner fulfillment. It is very difficult for the student not to be distracted by the temptations of the external world. Modern education focuses on memorizing facts of the external world, and ignores the growth and development of the inner being. The guru-kula system of ancient times is not practical in today's world, but a more holistic approach to education can be adopted. Such an approach emphasizes spiritual growth along with the development of the intellectual aspects of the mind, and also includes guidance in how to maintain the fitness and health of the physical body. In the eastern tradition guru is much more than a teacher. He or she represents the special energy that is guiding individuals toward their fulfillment as human beings, toward perfection. Grace is the impulse of that energy.


The word guru is a compound of two words, gu and ru. Gu means darkness and ru means light. That which dispels the darkness of ignorance is called guru. The energy and action of removing darkness are guru. Guru is not a person, it is a force driven by grace.


There is an intelligent momentum that pervades
the universe that is moving all human beings
toward the perfection we call God.
Guru is that intelligence.



To put this another way, there is an intelligent momentum that pervades the universe that is moving all human beings toward the perfection we call God. Guru is that intelligence. Everyone's receptivity to that intelligence varies. It depends on preparation, which includes the development of vairagya or nonattachment, and abhyasa or practice. In other words, guru is always there, but the student may not be ready to receive what the guru has to offer. When the student is prepared, the guru always arrives to help the student do what is necessary to progress in removing the veil of ignorance. It is said that when the wick and oil are properly prepared, the master lights the lamp.


Guru is not a person, but guru can be represented in a person. One who has developed his or her own spiritual awareness to a very high level can guide others, and is considered to be guru. Only one who is finely attuned to the inner guide can inspire the awakening of the inner guide in another. Guru is not a physical being. If a guru begins thinking this power is her or his own, then they are no longer a guide. The guru is a tradition, a stream of knowledge.


In India guru is a sacred word that is used with reverence and is always associated with the highest wisdom. The guru is unique in a person's life. The relationship between disciple and guru is like no other relationship. It is said that guru is not mother, father, son, or daughter. The guru is not a friend in any conventional sense. It also is sometimes said that the guru is father, mother, son, daughter, and friend all in one; the guru is sun and moon, sky and earth to the disciple.


The truth is that the relationship of guru to disciple is indescribable. The relationship extends to the realm beyond the world, transcends death, and stretches far beyond the limited karmic bonds associated with family and friends. A mother and father help sustain the body of their child, and nurture and guide the child through the formative years of life to adulthood. Guru sustains, nurtures, and guides a soul through lifetimes to ultimate liberation.


The relationship with the guru is based on the purest form of unconditional love. There is complete openness with the guru. The disciple should hold nothing back from the guru. This is why in the tradition, a student goes to the guru and offers a bundle of sticks to burn. The bundle symbolizes that everything the disciple has is offered unconditionally to the guru. Everything is offered to the guru so the guru can do the work of shaping the student spiritually. The disciple comes with full faith and entrusts his whole life to the guru. The guru takes that life and chops it and burns what is not necessary, and then carefully carves what remains into something sacred.


In this chopping and burning, the guru is merciless. The guru's job is not to hold hands with the disciple and wipe away tears, but to cut into pieces the disciple's ego and all that stands between the disciple and freedom. The guru does not allow dependence. If the disciple becomes too dependent on the guru, the guru pushes the disciple away, insisting on independence. It is a remarkable expression of the deepest love.



Guru is that force moving
a soul toward enlightenment.


To be on a spiritual path with a guru is not an easy thing. It is not pleasant. The guru tests the disciples, puts them in the most difficult situations, and creates obstacles for them. All the tests, difficulties, and obstacles are meant to train and expand the consciousness of the disciple.


That is the sole work of the guru. The guru wants nothing from the disciple. Guru is that force moving a soul toward enlightenment. The guru's actions are from pure compassion. As the sun shines and lives far above, the guru gives spiritual love and remains unattached.



Guru is a channel for spiritual knowledge.



Guru is a channel for spiritual knowledge. Jesus repeatedly reminded his disciples of this. "I have not spoken of myself, but the Father which sent me." The Father is that stream of pure knowledge. Jesus, as an enlightened being, was attuned to that knowledge.


No human being can ever become a guru. Guru is not a human experience, or, better said, guru is not a sensory experience. It is a divine experience to be a guru. A human being allows herself or himself to be used as a channel for receiving and transmitting by the power of powers. Then it happens. Then guru manifests. To do that, a human being must learn to be selfless, must learn to love. Real love expects nothing. That is how genuine gurus live. Selfless love is the basis of their enlightenment, and the basis of their roles as channels of knowledge.


Guru is not the goal. Anyone who establishes himself as a guru to be worshipped, is not a guru. Christ, Buddha, and other great persons did not set up any such example. Guru is like a boat for crossing the river. It is important to have a good boat and it is very dangerous to have a boat that is leaking. The boat brings you across the river. When the river is crossed the boat is no longer necessary. You don't hang onto the boat after completing the journey, and you certainly don't worship the boat.


Many times students come to the guru with a preconceived idea of what the guru should be like. They come with expectations of what the guru is there to do for them. Perhaps the students think the guru should give them much attention, or make decisions for them, or take on troubles they have created for themselves. Sometimes the students think the guru should behave in a certain way. When these expectations and preconceived images are not met, the student becomes upset and may even leave the guru.


This is not the proper way to approach a teacher. A student should not be filled with expectations and preconceived images, but with a burning desire to learn, and with firm determination. Then there will be no difficulty. The guru and the disciple can then do their work accordingly.


The spiritual seeker should not worry about who the guru is, or what the guru will do. The seeker's first concern is getting prepared, organizing her or his life and thoughts in a spiritually healthy way, and then working toward a way of life that simplifies and purifies. At the right time the master will be there.


Once the guru has arrived, the methods and behavior of the guru should not be the disciple's concern. The disciple's work is to act on the instructions and teachings of the master, and at the same time, work toward more and more selflessness, and surrender of the ego. It is the ego that is the principle barrier to enlightenment.


A spiritual master's ways of teaching are many and sometimes mysterious. To one student the guru may show much attention, spending much time with a student, even doting on a particular student. Another student may be utterly ignored by the master. It doesn't matter. Each student is getting a teaching, and because of the insight of the master, just the right teaching at the right time. The guru is not in a student's life to give the student what the student thinks she wants, but rather to give what is needed to progress spiritually.


Jesus' parable of the prodigal son illustrates this. Briefly retold, a man had two sons. One day one son asked for all the property and wealth that would come in his inheritance. Then he went away and lived a wild, sensory life of rich foods, drink, gambling, and women. When all of that wealth was spent, the son returned. The father ran to his son when he saw him, and hugged and kissed him. He gave him expensive clothes to wear and ordered a feast to be held.


Meanwhile, the other son had remained all this time with his father, working for him and beside him, always respectful and devoted. When the devoted son saw all the attention given to the wayward and reckless son, he asked his father how this could be.


"I've been here all these years with you, always serving you, obeying every commandment, and you've never so much as given me a goat to throw a party for my friends. Now my brother returns after squandering all that wealth and living a wild life, and you treat him like a king and make a grand celebration for him."


The father's response was essentially that the wayward son needed this attention at this time, and the devoted son did not. Each son was given what was right for his spiritual growth at the right time.


The guru does not operate from what seems fair, or outwardly appropriate. He is not constrained to such cultural amenities. He can seem harsh, even brutal. He will put students in situations that make no sense, or are very uncomfortable. He will say things that won't make any sense for months. He will ask things of students that students think are impossible. Everything the guru is doing is for the growth of the student. The student need only have faith in that fact.


The guru also teaches without words or actions. As the disciple learns to surrender and move the ego out of the way, and grows more selfless, the ability to learn intuitively from the guru grows. The student learns in the cave of silence. It is like tuning into the guru's frequency or plugging into that stream of knowledge. The guru is always working from there. The disciple's role is to gradually learn to also work from that place. The disciple learns this by doing all duties with love, by being nonattached, and by surrendering. The disciple should always be striving to purify and prepare for more and greater knowledge. Then God will say, "I want to enter this living temple that you are." Remove the impurities and you will find that the one who wants to know reality is the source of reality.


Grace is the impulse or the impetus of
the energy to dispel darkness.



There is also the activity of grace. Grace is the impulse or the impetus of the energy to dispel darkness. There is the grace of the scriptures, from the wisdom that has passed down from others. There is the grace of the teacher, who imparts that wisdom and helps bring it to life in the student. There is the grace of God, or pure consciousness, that is alive and ever present in everyone's life. Integral to these three graces is the grace of oneself, having the will to undertake a purposeful journey in life, to do the spiritual work of life, and to prepare oneself.


How do we get this grace? It comes of its own when a seeker has made maximum effort. When all efforts have been made, and all efforts have been exhausted, then grace comes.


A Sanskrit word for grace is shaktipata. Shakti means energy, and pata means bestowing. Shaktipata means "bestowing the energy" or lighting the lamp. Sometimes shaktipata is translated as "descent of power." A power comes from above, of its own, to a vessel that is cleaned, purified, and is prepared to receive it. When the instructions from the guru have been completed, the seeker has become strong in selflessness and surrender, and the samskaras have been burned, grace comes.


In my own life, since I was a small child I was raised and guided by my master. I had done all that he asked of me. Grace had not come and I grew frustrated. So one day I went to my master and said, "You have not done shaktipata for me. That means either you don't have shakti or you don't intend to do it."


I told him, "For so long now I have been closing my eyes in meditation and I end up with nothing but a headache. My time has been wasted and I find little joy in life."


He didn't say anything, so in my exasperation I continued talking.


"I worked hard and sincerely," I said to him. "You said it would take fourteen years, but this is my seventeenth year of practice. Whatever you have asked me to do I have done. But today you give me shaktipata or I will commit suicide."


Finally he said to me, "Are you sure? Are you really following all the practices I have taught you? Is this the fruit of my teaching, that you are committing suicide?"


Then he waited a moment and said, "When do you want to commit suicide?"


"Right now," I said. "I am talking to you before I commit suicide. You are no longer my master now. I have given up everything. I am of no use to the world, I am of no use to you."


I got up to go to the Ganges, which was near, and was prepared to drown myself.


My master said, "You know how to swim, so when you jump in the Ganges, naturally you will start swimming. You'd better find some way so that you will start drowning and not come up. Perhaps you should tie some weight to yourself."


"What has happened to you?" I asked him. "You used to love me so much."


I went to the Ganges and with a rope I tied some big rocks to myself. When I was ready to jump, my master came and called, "Wait. Sit here for one minute. I will give you what you want."


I did not know if he meant it, but I thought I could wait at least a minute. I sat in my meditation posture and my master came and touched me on the forehead. I remained in that position for nine hours and did not have a single worldly thought. The experience was indescribable. When I returned to normal consciousness I thought no time had passed.


"Sir," I said to my master, "please forgive me."


With that touch my life was transformed. I lost fear and selfishness. I started understanding life properly. I wondered if this experience came about because of my effort or my master's.


His answer was simply, "Grace."


"A human being," he explained, "should make all possible sincere efforts. When he has become exhausted and cries out in despair, in the highest state of devotional emotion, he will attain ecstasy. That is the grace of God. Grace is the fruit that you receive from your faithful and sincere efforts."


Grace is only possible with a disciple who has gone through a long period of discipline, austerity, and spiritual practices. When a student has done these practices and followed the teacher's instructions with all faithfulness, truthfulness, and sincerity, then the subtlest obstacle is removed by the master. The experience of enlightenment comes from the sincere effort of both master and disciple. When you have done your duties skillfully and wholeheartedly, you reap the fruits gracefully. Grace dawns when action ends. Shaktipata is the grace of God transmitted through the master.


Guru is the disciple's guide through life, through the mysterious terrain of the spiritual heart, and into and beyond the realm of death.



Shakti – The Divine Power of God


Shakti – The Divine Power of God


“The female deities we worship in Hinduism are Shaktis, divine powers. Though we worship them outside, they are really powers lying within us. Some of you may know from the Kali temples and their worship, how the Shakti expresses itself in visible form. People jump, dance, sing, walk on fire and say things. The Shakti is seen in a very expressive way. But the Shaktis operate at various levels.  When the yogis go deeply into meditation, they invoke a higher Shakti within bringing bliss and intoxication inside. 


The divine power of God that we see in those female deities are powers within you. We worship these deities to invoke those powers inside of ourselves. The goal of worship is to become the deity. In any worship, the goal is to become one with the deity and feel the power of the deity in you.


In worshipping Shiva, we are given the mantra ‘Shivoham’, meaning ‘I am Shiva.’ Our devotion has to reach the level where we actually feel that we are Shiva. We begin by worshipping Shiva outside not realizing we are worshipping the power that is really within us.


 As we continue in the worship, we begin to feel this power inside until we ourselves begin to say ‘Shivoham, Shivoham, Shivoham’ and when we sit we feel like Shiva, when we talk we feel like Shiva and when we walk we feel that Shiva is walking. That is when we become the deity. This power of God we worship in so many different ways lies inside of us.


Tonight in kirtan (chanting the divine names) you have the opportunity to feel the power that comes up so easily inside you by chanting, music and song. I want you to respect this power when it arises within you. It is God’s power inside of you. Respect it, honour it and you will see it will rise even more within you. This Shakti is on a journey from the base of the spine to the top of the head.


In some worship there is much shaking and moving when the Shakti begins to move up. Some may feel that they are at the height of worship when this energy comes to them…but it is the beginning of worship. All the siddhis you see at that particular level are in the beginning of your worship. As the energy gets higher and higher, you become more drawn within to the Maha Siddhi or the Great Siddhi - Self-realization - is the greatest Siddhi.


The Great Ones


The energies of the great self-realized beings are so high, so deep inside. Their minds are so absorbed in the Self that they never want to interfere with the scheme of things. When you go for healing they only bless you because they do not want to interfere with the Karma. If you take that blessing with you and make use of it, your own good karma would work.


When you come and have a prayer or a desire for something, all the Great Beings do is bless you but there is a lot of Shakti coming from that…and your faith in them brings about a miracle. The greatest beings are so absorbed inside that they never want to change the world around. The world changes around them without them doing anything. They are in that Maha Siddhi. It is said that the Siddhi becomes the servant for those who live in God’s Consciousness completely. They have to do nothing, everything miraculous happens around them. 


Kriyas


As the energy moves higher and higher within, you become more and more quiet…the body shakes less and less. The bad kriyas stop and they become more subtle and internal. Kriyas are the expression of the Shakti when it begins to cleanse you.



The greatest beings are so absorbed inside that they never want to change the world around. The world changes around them without them doing anything.


It can happen as intellectual kriyas where you wrestle with problems inside of you, emotional kriyas where you cry and laugh, physical kriyas where you dance, jump and you might feel heat in the body. All these kriyas come within you but the deeper you go within, the more subtle they become.


If you feel the power within you while chanting and meditating this evening, observe it. If the hands start to clap by themselves, that is one of the kriyas. If a sweet, joyful feeling comes within you, that is one of the kriyas - the heart center opening. If you begin to cry, let the tears come - that is a kriya for cleansing. If you begin to laugh, let the laughter come. If you begin to breathe heavily, in and out, let it happen. This beautiful energy knows exactly what you need for its upward movement. Let the energy flow and you will feel the movement from the base of the spine traveling along the spinal column to the top of the head.


Chakras


There are seven centers inside where the Shakti moves. The Shakti begins its journey at the base of the spine and goes to the second chakra, called the Swadhisthana Chakra, just above the sexual organ, then to the navel, called Manipura Chakra, to the heart, called Anahata Chakra, to the throat, called Vishuddha Chakra, to the eyebrow, called Ajna Chakra, then to the top of the head, the Sahasrara Chakra.


These are real! I have experienced all of these in my spiritual practice. That is why it is a joy for me to share, because it is very, very real for me. When you begin to experience the shaktis within you, a whole new world opens. And these shaktis can be awakened inside of you just by chanting.


Anahata Chakra


When the Anahata Chakra wakes up, you have so much love within you. You do not beg for love anymore. You feel so loved and sweet inside and the whole world appears to be full of love. Wouldn’t you like to feel like that? We all are looking for love and begging for love but when this opens up we feel this sweet, sweet love inside of us.


Throat Chakra


When the throat chakra opens you feel power from your voice. You feel so much power inside of you when you talk, that people have to listen. Sometimes you see when you talk that your voice has no power. You feel weak, you cannot say anything, you feel ashamed to talk sometimes, you feel powerless because this chakra is not open. When opened, you feel so much power to speak, sing and communicate.


Eyebrow Chakra


When the eyebrow chakra opens you feel such strength of mind that you could sit for hours and hours and concentrate…and the mind is so powerful. When you want to transmit your thoughts, you just think of someone and you feel they are right here and you are talking with them. You can transmit your thoughts powerfully.


Sahasrara Chakra


When this energy moves to the top of the head, you are so lost in devotion that the world seems to disappear. You are in beautiful oneness with God. When this Shakti inside begins to move from chakra to chakra it brings amazing and wonderful experiences.


Tonight, I want you to enjoy what is happening to you. Marvelous things will happen, if you open your heart to the movement of this great, beautiful power. All my spiritual experiences came through this power…mostly through chanting.          


The Power of the Guru


For many years I had searched for God as a thirsty person looking for water. My thirst for God was quenched only after meeting Guru and being touched by the energy of Guru.


The power of Guru is magnificent. Guru has only to look at you and that inner Shakti can be awakened. Guru can only think of you and that inner Shakti can be awakened. Guru can simply say one or two words to you and your inner Shakti can be awakened. Guru can simply touch you and your inner Shakti can be awakened. That is how powerful Guru is. We all need Guru in our lives.


All the Gurus in the world ought to be honoured. We should never think that one Guru is higher than another. Every Guru is a servant of God, an instrument of God. They have come with a particular teaching and a particular blessing; let us honour all of them. They are all blessings to the world. Never think of who is higher or lower. Think that they are all instruments of one God, all servants of one God.”


A period of chanting followed which began by honouring all gurus, and Sri Vasudeva continued,


As we chant tonight I want all of you to become involved in the chanting, and become part of the chanting. Chant with your whole heart, your whole mind and your whole soul. As we chant the names of God I want you to feel the divine vibration that comes when chanting. The Sanskrit language is very powerful and all these words are blessed. All are divine sounds. I want you to chant these sounds and feel the power that comes from within you as you chant.”


Guided meditation followed.


He continued speaking,


Let this Satsang Continue – Do not Lose it


“Observe for a moment what you have gained from being here. If you analyze carefully, you will see that you are more silent within, there is more peace within you, you feel more of God’s presence inside of you. Would it not be nice to keep this all the time.


It is a challenge…facing the world with this feeling. I want you to try today to keep this feeling for as long as you can. What you feel now is always inside of you even in the worst of times, when you are angry, lonely or have low self-esteem, because this is the feeling of the soul, the Atman. Your soul or Atman is said to be Sachidananda, it is eternal, it is blissful being, consciousness always within you.


Anger is not me, pride is not me, greed is not me, jealousy is not me.


When the world challenges you, have the strength to say ‘anger is not me, pride is not me, greed is not me, jealousy is not me. They are in me but they are not me.’ It is the beginning of change the moment you think differently about yourself. When you cannot see the difference in yourself…that is when you get caught up, become consumed, drained. Do you see what happens when you become angry? You get charged up, hyper…and when you cool down, you are weakened and you tremble.


Anger, hate, jealousy and pride are your enemies, not your friends; they take away your peace, your love and your joy. When they visit you, they will visit all of you. Remember, they are your enemies, not your friends! You would not allow a burglar or a vagabond in your home, yet you allow anger, hate, greed and pride to be your friends. You dine with them and you sit with these feelings. See them as different from you, see them as your enemies!


Remain silent and reflect


As you go back to your cars remain silent and reflect, chant again or talk about it. Do not let the thoughts drift away to normal worldly thoughts. If you do the energy will drop. Keep this with you and the Satsang will continue. When you go to sleep tonight, let the chant play in your mind again and feel it inside your mind.


During the year I was a teacher at Palo Seco Secondary School I used to travel from Claxton Bay to Palo Seco. Every morning I would be at the taxi stand at 6:00 a.m. as it was almost an hour’s drive away. I would sit in the car and meditate with my eyes closed. At Carnival time calypso music would play on the car radio. While meditating I would hear the calypso rhythm playing but it did not matter to me. When I went to bed at night to sleep though, these rhythms would come back in my mind. I had not even thought about them much yet they were coming back - how subtle these things are inside.


The chants are deep within you


The chants you sang here tonight are deep within you. When you go to bed bring your mind back to the temple and replay them. See how they come back in your mind and enjoy that as you go to bed. You will wake up as a child, full of joy for a new day, as if you have a new life within you. Go to sleep remembering this.


As you mingle with each other and as you leave, remember that you can best keep this state in silence. If some of you have not met for awhile, speak in soft, loving tones, avoiding worldly talk.


Let us leave this temple with a beautiful feeling. Let us take it into our cars, and into our homes and see how the beauty of this Satsang will continue. My words to you are ‘let this Satsang continue.’ ”