Thursday, December 1, 2011

Passion For Service

Hari Om,

Swami Chidanandaji was once travelling in a taxi with two of his colleagues from the Ashram. It so happened that on the way they found some one lying on the road, badly injured all over the body. The taxi driver, of course, would take no notice of it and rushed forward in his usual speed. But Sri Swamiji quickly observed the scene and asked the driver to stop the vehicle. They got down and on enquiry found that the man was injured due to some accident and was lying in a helpless condition. Sri Swamiji was ready immediately to lift the patient into the vehicle so that he might be taken to the nearest hospital. But the driver would not allow it for he feared that the police would regard him as the culprit and haul him up under the impression that his own vehicle might have been the cause of the accident. What was the alternative for Swamiji? He offered the driver the fare due to him and asked him to go his way, preparing himself with his two companions to lift the patient and go walking to the nearest hospital, whatever the distance. The incident needs no comment. The driver was touched to the core and consented to take the patient in the taxi. 


Om Namoh Bhagavathe Sivanandaya !

Om Namoh Bhagavathe Chidanandaya !

Tuesday, November 1, 2011

Swami Sivananda's Skanda Shasti Message, 1946

Hari Om,


Beloved Immortal Selves!

Skanda Shasthi is the six-day-worship of Lord Skanda or Karttikeya. He is the spiritual son of Lord Siva. Lord Skanda is worshipped with intense devotion by a very large section of people throughout Southern India and Sri Lanka as well. 

The origin of Lord Skanda, the purpose of His Avatara and its significance are of much importance to all seekers after Truth. During the battle between the Asuras and the Devas, the latter were defeated several times by the former. The Devas were unable to resist the onslaught of the Asuric forces. Then, in despair, they approached Lord Siva and entreated Him to give them an able Leader under whose heroic lead they might obtain victory over the Asuras. They surrendered themselves completely and prayed to Lord Siva sincerely. The gracious Lord granted their request by creating the Mighty Divine Warrior, Lord Skanda, out of His Divine Power or Achintya Sakti. This great son of Lord Siva at once assumed leadership of the celestial forces, originated them, inspired them and attacked the Asuric forces. The Asuras were routed and a glorious victory was gained by the Devas. Thus it was through the able guidance and leadership of Lord Skanda that the Divine forces obtained victory over the demoniacal. 

The inner life of the spiritual aspirant is precisely such a constant struggle between the divine and the demoniacal aspects in him. The seeker’s Sadhana is this determined battle against the Asuric forces that try to drag him down into deeper darkness and take him away from his ideal. At times he becomes so totally helpless under the violent attacks of his lower nature that it seems as if all hope of progress is doomed to failure. He feels that he has fallen, never to rise again. But, let all Sadhakas take heart that the compassion and grace of the Divine Lord is never-failing. It will never let you down. ‘Nil desperandum’ should be your guiding motto, for, the eternal law is “darkness cannot stand before light.” Make a whole-hearted surrender at the feet of the Divine even as the Devas surrendered to Lord Siva. And like them pray earnestly with Bhava and sincerity. The divine help will surely come, and in your heart there will spring up the routing torrent of Divine Sakti. The Lord’s grace will become manifest to you in the form of inner Soul-force. This power is the Skanda manifest in inner being to aid in your battle against the lower Asuric self with its devilish minions like passion, anger, greed, jealousy, falsehood, deceit, cruelty and thousand other aspects of evil. No more are you helpless! The descent of the Divine Grace with this Atma Bala, with this Skanda Sakti, will vanquish all the undivine forces that attack you on the spiritual path and emerge triumphant and victorious. You achieve your life’s goal. 

Therefore Lord Karttikeya is the very embodiment of the Divine Grace. He is the personification of the Daya Sakti, or Kripa Sakti of the Lord. The grace of the compassionate Lord, when prayerfully and sincerely invoked, manifests as such irresistible Divine Power that all Asuric forces fly away in holy terror at its mere approach. The Lord’s Grace is the ultimate resort and unfailing support in the inner warfare of everyone’s spiritual life, of all struggles. The significance and the spiritual message embodied in Skanda Avatara is the message of Supreme importance of self-surrender, the Supreme efficacy of sincere prayer and the unfailing compassion of the Lord. If you truly surrender yourself to the Lord with Bhava, He will at once shower His Grace upon you. No real prayer from the bottom of your heart will remain unanswered. If you obtain the Lord’s grace, you will certainly succeed and overcome all obstacles and annihilate the force of darkness, that stand against you. There is no force that can stand against the Supreme Power of Divine Grace. 

Take shelter at the Lord’s feet Pray to Him earnestly and invoke His aid and obtain His grace and compassion. Emerge triumphant and victorious. Attain the lofty and glorious spiritual state of freedom, perfection and bliss. Upon this joyous occasion of Skanda Shashthi, when you are all celebrating the victory of the Lord over the demon, Tarakasura, the powerful leader of the Asuras, remember these great truths and be courageous. Surrender yourself afresh at His feet. 

May the glorious Lord, Skanda, inspire you all and infuse in you with inner spiritual strength! May He lead you all to victorious triumph against the demons of nescience and worldliness!!

May He bless you all!!! 

 Source : Swami Sivananda's Lord Shanmukha and His Worship 

Om Namoh Bhagavathe Sivanandaya !

Om Namoh Bhagavathe Chidanandaya !


Friday, October 14, 2011

Sri Sridhar Rao

Hari Om,

In 1944 or 1945, Sri Kashiram Gupta, a Marwadi devotee of Swami Sivananda and father of Sri Ram Niwas Gupta, who was very close to Sri Gurudev, came to the Ashram on a visit. Swami Sivananda called him to his Ganga bank Kutir. When Sri Kashiram Gupta entered the Kutir, Gurudev told him to be seated and enquired whether he was well-accommodated and comfortable. After Sri Kashiramji, an elderly person, assured him that he was perfectly at home, Gurudev suddenly looked at him and told him: "O jee! My successor has already come!" Sri Guptaji was somewhat surprised and asked Swami Sivanandji who that successor was. At that time Sri Sridhar Rao (later Swami Chidananda) had gone to the river bank and taken his dip and was drying himself, with a towel around his waist. Swami Sivananda pointed a finger in the direction of Sridhar Rao and told Sri Gupta: "Look there! See that young man on the riverbank? That is my successor." So, it seemed that already Swami Sivananda had made up his mind about his successor. It was indeed Pujya Swamiji's sankalpa which inspired student Sridhar Rao on the spiritual path and later drew him irresistibly to Rishikesh, to the feet of the Master. Sridhar Rao was conferred Sannyas by Gurudev six years after he arrived in Sivananda Ashram, in 1948, on Guru Purnima day, and thus was born Swami Chidananda Maharaj.



Om Namoh Bhagavathe Sivanandaya !

Om Namoh Bhagavathe Chidanandaya !

Thursday, October 6, 2011

Spiritual Significance of Navaratri

Hari Om !


Swami Sivananda describes in detail the spiritual significance of Navaratri in his book Hindu Fasts and Festivals . Here is an excerpt from the chapter on Durga Puja or Navaratri.

The central purpose of existence is to recognise your eternal identity with the supreme Spirit. It is to grow into the image of the Divine. The supreme One embodies the highest perfection. It is spotless purity. To recognise your identity with That, to attain union with That, is verily to grow into the very likeness of the Divine. The aspirant, therefore, as his initial step, has to get rid of all the countless impurities, and the demoniacal elements that have come to cling to him in his embodied state. Then he has to acquire lofty virtues and auspicious, divine qualities. Thus purified, knowledge flashes upon him like the brilliant rays of the sun upon the crystal waters of a perfectly calm lake.

This process demands a resolute will, determined effort, and arduous struggle. In other words, strength and infinite power are the prime necessity. Thus it is the Divine Mother who has to operate through the aspirant.

Let us now consider how, on the first three days, the Mother is adored as supreme power and force, as Durga the Terrible. You pray to Mother Durga to destroy all your impurities, your vices, your defects. She is to fight with and annihilate the baser animal qualities in the spiritual aspirant, the lower, diabolical nature in him. Also, She is the power that protects your spiritual practice from its many dangers and pitfalls. Thus the first three days, which mark the first stage or the destruction of impurity and determined effort and struggle to root out the evil tendencies in your mind, are set apart for the worship of the destructive aspect of the Mother.

Once you have accomplished your task on the negative side, that of breaking down the impure propensities and old vicious habits, the next step is to build up a sublime spiritual personality, to acquire positive qualities in place of the eliminated demoniacal qualities. The divine qualities that Lord Krishna enumerates in the Gita, have to be acquired. The aspirant must cultivate and develop all the auspicious qualities. He has to earn immense spiritual wealth to enable him to pay the price for the rare gem of divine wisdom. If this development of the opposite qualities is not undertaken in right earnest, the old demoniacal nature will raise its head again and again. Hence, this stage is as important in an aspirant's career as the previous one. The essential difference is: the former is a ruthless, determined annihilation of the filthy egoistic lower self; the latter is an orderly, steady, calm and serene effort to develop purity. This pleasanter side of the aspirant's Sadhana is depicted by the worship of Mother Lakshmi. She bestows on Her devotees the inexhaustible divine wealth or Deivi Sampath. Lakshmi is the wealth-giving aspect of God. She is purity itself. Thus the worship of Goddess Lakshmi is performed during the second set of three days.

Once the aspirant succeeds in routing out the evil propensities, and develops Sattwic or pure, divine qualities, he becomes competent to attain wisdom. He is now ready to receive the light of supreme wisdom. He is fit to receive divine knowledge. At this stage comes the devout worship of Mother Saraswathi, who is divine knowledge personified, the embodiment of knowledge of the Absolute. The sound of Her celestial veena awakens the notes of the sublime utterances of the Upanishads which reveal the Truth, and the sacred monosyllable, Om. She bestows the knowledge of the supreme, mystic sound and then gives full knowledge of the Self as represented by Her pure, dazzling snow-white apparel. Therefore, to propitiate Saraswathi, the giver of knowledge, is the third stage.

The tenth day, Vijaya Dasami, marks the triumphant ovation of the soul at having attained liberation while living in this world, through the descent of knowledge by the Grace of Goddess Saraswathi. The soul rests in his own Supreme Self or Satchidananda Brahman. This day celebrates the victory, the achievement of the goal. The banner of victory flies aloft. Lo! I am He! I am He!

This arrangement also has a special significance in the aspirant's spiritual evolution. It marks the indispensable stages of evolution through which everyone has to pass. One naturally leads to the other; to short-circuit this would inevitably result in a miserable failure. Nowadays many ignorant seekers aim straight at the cultivation of knowledge without the preliminaries of purification and acquisition of the divine qualities. They then complain that they are not progressing on the path. How can they? Knowledge will not descend until the impurities have been washed out, and purity is developed. How can the pure plant grow in impure soil?

Therefore adhere to this arrangement; your efforts will be crowned with sure success. This is your path. As you destroy one evil quality, develop the virtue opposite to it. By this process you will soon bring yourself up to that perfection which will culminate in identity with the Self which is your goal. Then all knowledge will be yours: you will be omniscient, omnipotent and you will feel your omnipresence. You will see your Self in all. You will have achieved eternal victory over the wheel of births and deaths, over the demon of worldliness. No more pain, no more misery, no more birth, no more death! Victory, victory be yours!

Glory to the Divine Mother! Let Her take you, step by step to the top of the spiritual ladder and unite you with the Lord!

Om Namoh Bhagavathe Sivanandaya !

Om Namoh Bhagavathe Chidanandaya !


Friday, September 2, 2011

Story of a Bania

Hari Om,
A Bania once approached a Sadhu for initiation. The Sadhu said: “I will initiate you when I meet you next time.” The Bania pressed the Sadhu again and again on several days for quick initiation. The Sadhu totally declined. He returned to the Bania after a couple of years. He placed in his Bhiksha-bowl some mud, hair, urine and excreta and approached the Bania for alms. The Bania brought nice sweet-meats, Kheer, Halwa, etc., for the Sadhu. He prepared nice dishes as he thought he would be initiated this time by the Sadhu. The Sadhu said to the Bania: “Put everything in my bowl.”

The Bania said: “How can I place them, Swamiji, in this dirty bowl. Kindly clean the bowl and bring it to me. I will place all the preparations in it.”
 
The Sadhu replied: “When such is the case with this bowl how can I place the pure Lord in your heart which is filled with various impurities like lust, anger, pride, greed, etc. How can I initiate you now, when your mind is very dirty like this bowl?”
 
The Bania got vexed and went away in shame. He purified himself through charity and selfless service and got himself initiated by the same Sadhu after some time. The ground (mind) must be prepared first. Why do you bother much about Upadesha? Purify yourself, and get the moral qualifications, Brahmacharya, etc. The initiation will come by itself.

Source : Swami Sivananda's Practice of Karma Yoga

Om Namoh Bhagavathe Sivanandaya !

Om Namoh Bhagavathe Chidanandaya !


Tuesday, August 9, 2011

Swami Sivananda's Personality

Hari Om,

Here is an excerpt from Dr.Devaki Kutty Mataji's lecture on  Swami Sivananda's personality :

" I will tell you another instance which shows what a wonderful person He was. I had come on holiday from my college. An elderly blind man had arrived. I do not know whether he was really blind, but he sang beautifully. And any good quality meant that Gurudev would take him in. So there he was, singing every night at the Satsang. He sang beautiful Bhajans. Then after four or five days he told Gurudev: “Swamiji, this harmonium is not very good, I would like to have a better harmonium.” And this man had come to the Ashram only four or five days earlier. In those days Rishikesh was a small town, and nothing was available here. So Gurudev asked him: “Where do we get good harmoniums?” And the man said: “In Lucknow.” And you know, Lucknow is far from here. Swamiji called a man and said: “Oh jee, go to Lucknow tomorrow and get him a harmonium according to his specifications.” So this fellow went and within three or four days he came with a beautiful harmonium. And for four days we had beautiful music on that harmonium. On the fifth day the man disappeared from the Ashram with the harmonium. At the Satsang somebody went to Gurudev and said: “Gurudev, that man, you were so good to him, that man has taken the new harmonium and has gone!” Gurudev smiled and said: “But there is one thing. How will he sing without the tabla? He should have taken the tabla also and not only the harmonium.” Look at this! Many of us were furious, my blood was boiling. I thought: “Look at this stupid man! How good was Gurudev to him. And he took the harmonium and went away.” But nothing worried Gurudev. And look at His attitude. He should have taken the tabla also, not only the harmonium. He could have made a living by it. This is the attitude towards life we have to develop. It is far beyond us, but we have to develop it."

Om Namoh Bhagavathe Sivanandaya !

Om Namoh Bhagavathe Chidanandaya !


Tuesday, July 19, 2011

Sannyasa-a Mental State

Hari Om,


Sannyasa is a mental state only. It is Gerua or colouring of the heart and not of cloth alone. He is a veritable Sannyasin who is free from passions and egoism and who possesses all the Sattvic qualities, even though he lives with the family in the world. Chudala was a queen-Yogini-Sannyasini, though she was ruling a kingdom. That Sannyasin who lives in the forest, but who is full of passions is worse than a householder and a worldly-minded fool. Sikhidhvaja was a worldly man, though he lived in the forest naked for very many years.

True renunciation is the renunciation of all passions, desires, egoism and Vasana. If you have a stainless mind, a mind free from attachment, egoism and passion, you are a Sannyasin-no matter whether you live in a forest or in the bustle of a city, whether you wear white cloth or an orange-coloured robe, whether you shave the head or keep a long tuft of hair.

Shave the mind. Someone asked Guru Nanak, "O saint, why have you not shaved your head? You are a Sannyasin." Guru Nanak replied, "My dear friend, I have shaved my mind." In fact, the mind should be cleanly shaved. Shaving the mind consists in getting rid of all sorts of attachments, passions, egoism, Moha (infatuation), lust, greed, anger, etc. This is the real shaving. External shaving of the head has no meaning so long as there is internal craving, Trishna.

Many have not understood what true renunciation is. Renunciation of physical objects is no renunciation at all. The real Tyaga (renunciation) consists in the renunciation of egoism (Ahankara). If you can renounce this Ahankara, you have renounced everything else in the world. If the subtle Ahankara is given up, Dehadhyasa (identification with the body) automatically goes away.

Vedanta does not want you to renounce the world. It wants you to change your mental attitude and give up this false, illusory 'I'-ness (Ahamta) and mineness (Mamata). The snake-charmer removes only the two poisonous fangs of the cobra. The snake remains the same. It hisses, raises its hood and shows the teeth. In fact, it does everything as before. The snake-charmer has changed his mental attitude towards the snake. He has a feeling now that it has got no poisonous fangs. Even so, you must remove the two poisonous fangs of the mind, viz., Ahamta and Mamata only. Then you can allow the mind to go wherever it likes. Then you will have always Samadhi only.

You must renounce the Tyagabhimana also. The Tyagabhimana is very deep-rooted. You must renounce the idea, "I have renounced everything." "I am a great Tyagi"-this Abhimana of the Sadhus is a greater evil than the Abhimana of householders, "I am a landlord; I am a Brahmin, etc." 

Source : Swami Sivananda's Mind -Its Mysteries and Control 

Om Namoh Bhagavathe Sivanandaya !

Om Namoh Bhagavathe Chidanandaya !

Thursday, July 14, 2011

Life is a Dream


Hari Om,

I have heard many a times from the words of sages, saints and philosophers that ‘Life is a Dream’. I have never been able to comprehend how it could be, until yesterday when I read Swami Sivananda’s 'Philosophy of Dreams'. I am not sure if I have understood it completely, but some insights did dawn in me, and I like to share it on this blog. Well, when we are awake, the dreams we see in our sleep seems so ‘unreal’. When we are dreaming, the state when we are awake seems so ‘unreal’. The mind is a common factor which functions during our wakeful and dreaming states; the only difference is the mind functions along with the senses in our wakeful state and the mind alone functions (without senses) during our dreaming. Both the states are ‘unreal’ relatively. Probably, this is the reason why life which we perceive as ‘real’ during our wakeful state is nothing but a long dream. Even, in the wakeful state, what has passed in our life is a ‘dream’ or the future which we perceive in our minds in also a ‘dream’. What seems real is only the present moment. The present moment seems real since it is limited by a time factor. Once time advances, this ‘present’ also becomes a ‘past’ and becomes a ‘dream’. Remove the time factor, the present is also a dream. Life thus in totality is nothing but a long dream.

Om Namoh Bhagavathe Sivanandaya !

Om Namoh Bhagavathe Chidanandaya !

Wednesday, July 13, 2011

Parable of The Boy and The Angel

Hari Om,

There was a very hard-working student who used to study till late in the night. He was very poor. He had to exert much for getting books and oil for his midnight studies. One day, being much tired, he fell asleep at night, while he was at his studies. He saw in his dream a strange vision. A celestial being appeared to him and said: "O boy, open your mouth and I shall put into it a pill of all the knowledge of the universe. Thus be relieved of all your troubles, and rest in peace." But the boy said: "I want not all the knowledge of the universe to be spat into my mouth. Be gracious enough to provide me with oil for my studies." Thus, the vision ended and the boy, by his self-exertion, became one of the greatest men of the age. 

A Sadhaka, too, must have the same spirit of self-exertion. Then alone will he evolve quickly and attain to the peak of knowledge. A mother can give food to the son, but she cannot herself digest it for him. He has to digest it himself. A Guru or guide can show one the right path, but one has to tread it oneself. 

Expect not to acquire knowledge without any exertion on your part, for verily such knowledge is mere dream. Right exertion alone can enable you to draw grace from Guru or God. One who flies away from difficulties can never be relieved of them. But one who faces them boldly will afterwards be able to cross them and will attain supreme Peace and Bliss even in this very life. 

Source : Swami Sivananda - Parables of Sivananda 

Om Namoh Bhagavathe Sivanandaya !
Om Namoh Bhagavathe Chidanandaya !

Friday, July 8, 2011

Seeing God

Hari Om, 

An American philosopher, Dr. Thompson, asked Sivananda a straight question: “Have you seen God, Swamiji?” “I see nothing but God”: replied the Master, “in the food I take, in the water I drink, in the people I greet, in the animals I meet—and in you, Dr. Thompson, I see nothing but God”.
 
 
Source : Swami Sivananda - A Modern Sage

Om Namoh Bhagavathe Sivanandaya !

Om Namoh Bhagavathe Chidanandaya !

Thursday, June 9, 2011

Swami Sivananda on Idol Worship

Hari Om, 
“A reputed baron of New York came to me one evening for an interview. During the course of conversation the baron said, ‘Swamiji, I have no faith in image-worship. It is all foolishness. The private secretary of the baron who was also with him had a photo of the baron in his pocket-diary. I took the photo and asked the private secretary to spit on it. The secretary was struck aghast. He hesitated and looked at the baron. I again commanded him, ‘Go on, spit at the picture. Quick’. The secretary said, ‘Swamiji, the baron is my master. I serve him. How can I spit at the picture? This is his image. I cannot do this ignoble act. I respect him in this picture’. I said to him, ‘This is only a paper. This is not the real baron. It cannot talk, move or eat’. Then the secretary said, ‘Anyhow I see my baron in this picture. This mean act would affect my feelings as well as wound the feelings of my master. I cannot spit’. I said to the baron, ‘Look here, my friend! Your secretary loves and respects your photo. He associates your presence with the picture although it is just a bit of paper. Is this not image-worship? Even so the devotee associates the attributes of God with the image and feels His presence or immanence there. He finds it easy to concentrate his mind on the image. The mind wants a concrete prop to lean upon in the beginning stage of practice. Do you see the point now, my dear baron? The baron replied, ‘Revered Swamiji! You are quite right. My eyes are opened now. I am quite convinced. Pray, pardon me’”.
 
Source : Yvonne Lebeau's This Monk from India

Om  Namoh Bhagavathe Sivanandaya !

Om Namoh Bhagavathe Chidanandaya !
 

Monday, June 6, 2011

The Human Quest

Hari Om,

Swami Sivananda does not preach from a podium. He comes down to the level of the common man and asks him what he wants. Bang comes the reply: “Happiness!”. Happiness is what everyone is after. From cradle to grave, it is the one ceaseless human quest. The new-born baby seeks comfort in its mother’s bosom. The dying man seeks solace in a last look at his close relatives crowding round his cot. During their earthly sojourn, different people look for happiness in different places, but their goal is common.

Some call it happiness. Others call it peace. Sivananda sees everyone striving for it, each in his own way, but not getting it. Happiness, the most sought-after goal of all human endeavours, is also the most elusive. Worldly happiness is like the will-o’-the wisp. Just as one seems to secure it, it eludes one’s grasp. Even when secured, it does not last. It is fleeting. It is momentary. Not only that, it is invariably mixed with pain. Lasting happiness thus becomes a never-ending chase.

Why is this so? Sivananda says that it is because man searches for happiness in the wrong place. To illustrate his point, the Master tells a story:

“A simpleton was passing through a dark tunnel. A coin he was holding in his hand slipped down on the ground. He came out of the tunnel and started vigorously searching for it all over the place just outside the tunnel. People got curious. They questioned him. He said, ‘I have lost my money. I am not able to find it, though I have been searching for it all day’. ‘Where did you lose it?’ asked a bystander. ‘Inside that tunnel’ came a reply. ‘And why are you searching for it here?’ asked the amazed friend.‘Because it is dark inside the tunnel and bright here!’”

“Who will not laugh at such foolishness?” asks Sivananda, “And yet, such truly is the case with numberless men and women today. They all want peace. They realise that they have lost it. They are frantically searching for it. But where? Where they are able to see. Not where it is, where they lost it!”.

Peace lies in God. Happiness lies in God, from whom man has descended. When man separated from God, he lost his happiness. He can regain that happiness only when he returns to God. “Happiness comes when the individual merges in God,” says holy Master Sivananda in his last sentence, dictated just three weeks before his Mahasamadhi. Once man is merged in God, there is no coming back to this world of woes.

Source : Sri N.Ananthanarayanan's book 'What does Swami Sivananda Teach'

Om Namoh Bhagavathe Sivanandaya !

Om Namoh Bhagavathe Chidanandaya !


Thursday, April 28, 2011

Parable Of The Butter Hidden In The Milk

Hari Om,
The young daughter had gone to her village home for the first time from her city-dwelling. At night before retiring to bed, her mother opened a pot in which there was good cow's milk and poured a little buttermilk. The girl asked her mother: "Mother, that was butter milk; and why have you mixed it with Milk? The milk may be spoiled!" "Child," answered the mother, "that is the way to prepare the milk in order that we might get butter out of it." "But where is butter in it, mother?" "It is in every drop of the milk, dear; but you can't see it now. I will show you in the morning." In the morning the daughter saw that what was liquid the night before had become solid overnight. Mother put a churning rod into it and started churning the curd vigorously. Butter began to float on the surface of the curd. Then she gathered it all up and presented it to the astonishment of the daughter. The mother explained: "The addition of the buttermilk curdles the milk. Milk is transformed into curd. Then you have to churn it. By this process the butter which was all-pervasively hidden in the milk is obtained. At first you were not able to see it; it was hidden. From where has it come now? From the milk only. Therefore you understand now that it was there all the time. It awaited the process of churning to reveal itself to your great joy." The daughter, too, followed the same process and got the butter, for herself.

Similarly, a worldly man approaches a Mahatma and asks him: "O Sadhu, why have you renounced the world, and poured this new element of Vairagya and Tyaga into your life? Why don't you let the life take its natural course?" The Sadhu replies: "Brother, I do so in order to realise God?" "Where is God?" "He is all-pervading." The worldly man does not see and is not convinced. The Sadhu then explains how the inner personality which is fickle and outflowing should be made solid and firm. Then the churning rod of one-pointed concentration and meditation should be taken hold of, and this solid Antahkarana should be very well churned. Then God is realised. He is all-pervading, in every atom of creation. But He is not visible to the naked eye nor is He realisable by a man except through this process called Sadhana.

Just as a mother was necessary for her daughter to learn that butter exists in milk and that churning will bring it out, even so a Guru is necessary for a man to know that God is, that He is all-pervading, and that He is attained through Sadhana. If the aspirant follows the Guru's instructions, he too, can realise God. 

Source : Swami Sivananda's Parables of Sivananda


Om Namoh Bhagavathe Sivanandaya !

Om Namoh Bhagavathe Chidanandaya !



Tuesday, March 22, 2011

Heaven and Hell

Hari Om,


This is a Sufi story extracted from Swami Krishnananda's book 'Sadhana - The Spiritual Way', Chapter on Mind Control

There was a great mystic called Jalaluddin Rumi in the Middle Ages. He had many followers. He recited an instance of how a person can change himself by changing his circumstances.

There was a Sufi guru who had several followers and disciples, many of whom were poor Arabs, but very devoted to their master.

One of them came in the early morning to pay homage to his master. The master asked, "How are you, my dear boy?"

"Master, I am living in hell." 

"What is the trouble with you?" 

"I have one room only, which is a small area where I have my family, my wife and two children. There inside I cook my food. I have a camel which brays continuously, and there is a dog barking all night. We cannot sleep. You can imagine our condition. Don't you think, Master, that this is veritable hell?". 

The master said, "There is no problem; I can solve this difficulty." 

The obedience of disciples to the master was so amazing, especially in ancient times, that they would not argue with the guru. Though his suggestions may look funny, irrational, and sometimes unusual, the devotion and submission to the guru supersedes rationality. The guru told the disciple, "Tonight you tie the dog inside your house when you go to bed." The man could not understand what kind of solution this was, but obedience is obedience. 

The dog made matters worse. It went on barking inside the room and howled throughout the night. Nobody slept even for a minute. The disciple went to the guru the next morning. The guru The man said, "I cannot say anything. It is worse than construed hell. The dog did not allow us to sleep." 

"There is a solution for it. You have got a camel? Tie it inside.”

"He thought, "What is this? Am I going to be alive?" But the guru is guru, and he did not say a word against him. He tied the camel inside the room. There was no space to sit. The camel occupied the entire area, making kicks and jumps, and the dog was barking also, the fireplace was giving sparks, the children were crying, the wife was standing only, and he was also sitting. 

The next morning he went to the guru and said, "I cannot speak, Master. I am dying today. I think it is the last day for me. I thought it was hell; this is worse than hell." 

"I will find a solution for it," the guru said. "Tie the camel out; put the dog also out." 

He slept very well that night, - no noise, no disturbance of any kind. The next morning he went to the guru.

The guru asked, "How are you?” 

"Heaven, heaven!" he said. 

"Heaven? Hey! You came to me in the beginning, saying it is hell. Now how has it become heaven?" he asked. "Do not complain."


Om Namoh Bhagavathe Sivanandaya !

Om Namoh Bhagavathe Chidanandaya !

Om Namoh Bhagavathe Krishnanandaya !


Wednesday, March 16, 2011

Swami Sivananda’s Influence

Hari Om,
 This is an excerpt from Swami Krishnananda's article on 'The Guru-Disciple Relationship'.


I told you that Swami Vivekananda gave a new turn to the order of Sannyasa. Swami Sivanandaji Maharaj gave another turn to it. This is something very interesting. A few of us are very blessed in the sense that we lived with Swami Sivananda and studied all these things. We have never lived with Swami Vivekananda, and I have never even seen him. But we lived with Swami Sivanandaji Maharaj, so we know some of his peculiarities and his idea of Sannyasa.

A very difficult man was Swami Sivananda. Do not think that he was very soft, like butter. He was not. He used to tell us, “I am Vishnu and Rudra combined.” ‘Vishnu’ means very considerate, taking care of us. But ‘Rudra’ means that he will simply finish you! He used to say, “I am Vishnu and Rudra both.” He would chastise us before all people and make us cry, and then give us an apple or an orange. We would not know whether to laugh or to weep. He would say things that would make us feel ashamed, but afterwards he would say, “Take this orange, and do japa.” What a strange man! It is impossible to describe the training that he gave to us. These interesting things are not found in books. They will not be found in any biography or autobiography of Sivananda. They are only in my mind and the minds of some of his oldest disciples.

I came to the ashram in 1944, and I know almost everything from the beginning of this ashram’s foundation. There were very few people at that time—not even twenty people. Swami Sivananda chastened me very terribly. I now wonder how I stuck to this place. Without him, I would have run away. Some spirit made me stay here; otherwise, one cannot continue like that. An awful life it was. We had to do so much work. I remember having to work for fourteen hours a day, and I was suffering with asthma even then. Sivananda would purchase injections and give them to me, but I had to work also. “No asthma,” he would say. “Work!” I was in charge of all the departments. Now we have five people in each department, but at that time only one man, me, was doing the work of ten departments. I was in the Membership Dept., the Divine Life Magazine, the Vishwanath Mandir, and I was lecturing, etc.

Swamiji was very fond of lectures. He would say, “Today you will speak in Satsang.” “O God, what will I speak? I will have no sleep at all tonight.” Before all people he would say, “You speak.” “Swamiji, I don’t know,” we would say. “Nothing doing; today you will sit here and speak. Say something. Suppose you are angry, will you not be able to say something at that time? You have so many words to say when you are angry, but now you cannot utter even a few words? Will you speak after God-realisation? Now itself you must speak. You need not speak after God-realisation, but now you must. Today you start lecturing.” We could not utter even a few words. What could we speak? Ideas must come, and language must be there. If neither the language is there nor the ideas are there, what could we speak? But he was a great man. See how kind he was. Even in several lives I cannot pay the debt for the training that he has given to us. He has made us something not only in the eyes of people, but also something in our own hearts. When I first came, I was a small boy. The first thing that Sivanandaji said to me was, “Why did you come here?” I said, “I want to study yoga.” And he said, “Stay here till death. I will make ministers fall at your feet.” I was laughing, thinking that he was joking. Ministers did not even know my existence; how could they fall at my feet? But his words have slowly come true, to some extent. It is a great thing.

Well, I mentioned to you how Swami Sivananda gave training to us. His philosophy was the humility of Sannyasa. The Sannyasin is the cheapest of persons. Anybody can beat him without retaliation of any kind from him. A Sannyasin is the property of everyone, the humblest of persons, the last man to ask for anything and the first man to serve people. This is what he insisted upon. The Sannyasin is the last person to ask for anything and the first person to serve where the opportunity arises, all the while remembering the great goal of life. He used to impart to others his own methods of meditation. Some people used to ask, “Swamiji, how do you meditate? What is your technique?” He would give simple answers to these questions. Sometimes he would joke with us by saying, “Krishnananda Swamiji, do you know what sadhana I am doing?” I would reply, “I don’t know what sadhana you are doing.” This happened during later years, when he was physically incapacitated and could not walk. “The first man that I see in the early morning is the sweeper who comes to clean the bathroom,” he said. That sweeper is still in the ashram, and he served Sivananda for years together. “And what do I think at that time? That a sweeper has come to clean the bathroom? No. The Lord has come; I am seeing one of the heads of the Virat Purusha. And I throw a flower at his head and chant mantras from the Vedas which describe the Cosmic Being. How can the Cosmic Being exclude a sweeper? Can the Cosmic Being exclude a sweeper? It cannot. The sweeper is a part of the Cosmic Being. So do you know what I see? Not a sweeper. Then what do I see? I see His foot, and I offer a flower. Then what do I see? I get down from my bed and say, ‘Oh, I am keeping my foot on Mother Earth. I prostrate to you, my dear Mother; excuse me for keeping my foot on your chest.’ Then I go for bath and take three dips in the Ganga. Why do I take three dips? During the first dip I think in my mind: blessedness to all those that have left this world. Another dip: blessedness to all those that are in this world. And the third dip: salvation for this soul.”

The training we received is beyond explanation. You will understand what training we received only by seeing us here and observing our way of life. We cannot explain all this by writing articles. It is a life of several years of vicissitude, ups and downs, socially as well as psychologically. But we feel he is still alive spiritually. Otherwise, what strength do we have to run such an organisation and to attract you all? It is all a very difficult job. Why should you come here; who can attract you? You will go somewhere else. It is all a wonder.

Some devotees used to ask Gurudev: “Swamiji, how do you get so much money to run the ashram? Every day you are feeding so many; food is flowing like water. Wherefrom do you get money?” Generally the answer would be that donations come from outside, people send money, and so on; but his answer was something quite strange. He used to say, “Rain drops from the heavens. Uparse barasta hai: It drops from the skies.” His ideas were really wonderful. He did not say that it comes from people, and so on. And sometimes when we used to tell him, “It is very difficult to manage this ashram, Swamiji,” he used to say, “This is not your ashram. Who are you to manage it? This idea also must go. He who has started this ashram will run it. If he does not want it, he will close it. What is your botheration?” Even in great difficulties, he used to calm our minds by such answers. We would go to him in great distress, and this was the answer he gave. Then we would go back, and everything would become all right. He used to give very simple, homely and prosaic answers, in one sentence, and everything was calm.

Nowadays we do not have debts; but then we had debts. At that time, the income was very poor and the debt was more; a very awful situation it was. The Secretary would go to Swamiji and complain, but Swamiji would not say anything. Instead he would order for certain extra things and make matters worse, and the Secretary would be weeping because the shopkeeper would come only to the Secretary for payment, not to Swamiji. Gurudev used to tell us, “I will not allow any bank balance, because attachment will come afterwards. I won’t keep even one paisa in the bank, because otherwise you will be thinking of that. I don’t want you to think of it.” But he was very kind. When he was about to depart, he made some arrangements to clear the debts. That was another wonder. Suddenly the whole atmosphere of the ashram changed after he passed away. Many people thought that everything was over and that the ashram would close, that it was finished; who can manage it? But that did not happen. A month before his passing, all the debts were cleared, and he made all provisions for his burial, his consecration, feeding, and so on. Various types of help came, and the debts were cleared. Everything was stabilised, and only then did he leave. The ashram was stabilised in every sense.

So, this is the drama of monastic living, if you want to call it a drama, for the sake of God-realisation, and that idea Swami Sivanandaji drove into our hearts. In the midst of all these jokes and humour there is that concept, idea and notion that has been driven deep into our unconscious level, not merely the subconscious, that God-realisation is the goal of life. The first sentence in all his original books would be: “The goal of life is God-realisation.” Then he would go on saying so many things. He has told us this so many times that we can never forget it. The goal of life is God-realisation, and everything else is a preparation for it. Service of humanity, service of Guru, and everything else are preparations for it. They are not obstacles.

I must conclude by saying that God-realisation is the goal, and no other thought enters us except that. Even when we are suffering in any way—physically, socially, financially, or in whatever way—the idea that God-realisation is the goal of life does not leave us. That keeps us happy. The spirit of God is present in the worst of suffering. In the greatest calamity, God is present. God is great! God bless you.


Om Namoh Bhagavathe Sivanandaya !

Om Namoh Bhagavathe Chidanandaya !