“What exactly is meditation… does it mean simply sitting silent and inwardly thinking of your work…….!!!

Non-violent but severe austerities such as:

*restraint,
*religious observance,
* the appropriate posture of sitting,
*serenity of breath,
*withholding of the mind along with the physical organs,
*retention,
*meditation
and
* perfect absorption of thought in the Supreme Spirit,
are
indicated as the eightfold features of yog.

Meditation is just last but one stage to perfect absorption of thought in the Supreme Spirit. This can be reached after attaining all the six conditions prior to this as mentioned above.

The man, who has balanced his pran and apan, conquered his senses, mind and intellect, freed himself from desire, and fear and anger, perfected contemplative discipline, and taken refuge in salvation, is ever-liberated and achieves the stage of meditation.

That sage is liberated for ever through meditation who shuts out of his mind all objects of sensual pleasure, keeps his eyes centered between the two brows, regulates his pran and apan, conquers his senses, mind and intellect,
and whose mind is fixed on salvation.

Such Yogi crosses the six stages of eightfold features of yog and then reaches to the point of meditation which leads to perfect absorption of thought in the Supreme Spirit.

Bhagavad Gita sings:

“The yogi, who has purified his heart and mind through several births...by intense meditation and thus rid himself of all sins, attains to the ultimate state of realizing God.”

  • Only an endeavour made over a number of lives effects this ultimate accomplishment.
  • The yogi who practices diligent meditation is well rid of all kinds of impiety and then attains to the final beatitude. This is the way of attainment.
  • Setting out on the path of yog with but a feeble effort and initiated into it when the mind is yet restless, he is admitted to the family of an accomplished teacher and, with the undertaking of meditation in life after life, he at last arrives at the point called salvation-the state in which
    the Soul is merged into God.
  • Lord Krishn says that the seed of this yog is never annihilated. If we just take a couple of steps, the merits earned from them are never destroyed.
  • A man of true faith can embark upon the ordained action in every circumstance of worldly life.

Whether one is a woman or a man, of whatever race or culture, if one is simply a human being, can achieve this stage.

As expounded by Swami Adgadanand Paramhans,
most revered Gurudev.

Blank mind_/l\_
Humble Wishes!!!

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Action will be brought to an end only by yog….!!!

Action cannot enslave the man
whose deeds are dissolved in God by the practice of yog,
whose doubts have been resolved by perception,
and who is united with God.

Action will be brought to an end only by yog.
Only true knowledge will destroy doubts.

Humble Wishes!!! 

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Like the great Creator, is my eight-propertied primal nature, the womb of which I fertilize with the seed of consciousness…!!!

Sings Sri Krishn in Bhagavad Gita:

“I am the creator of all nature
with its eight divisions-earth, water, fire, wind,
ether, mind, intellect, and ego.

“This nature, O the mighty-armed,
is
the lower, insensate nature,
but against it there is my conscious,
living nature which animates the whole world.
Know that all beings arise from these two natures
and that
I am both the creator and the end of the whole world.”

God, has arisen nature with all its components.
This nature with its eight parts is the lower nature.
The nature with eight parts is God’s lower nature,
dull and insensible.

But, along with this, there is his conscious nature
which
impregnates and gives life to the whole world.
But the individual Soul too is “nature”
because
it is associated with the other,
lower nature.

All beings spring from these animate and inanimate natures.
These are the two sources of all life.
God is the root of the whole universe,
both its creator and destroyer.
It springs from him and is also dissolved in him.

He is the spring of nature as long as it exists,
but he is also the power that dissolves nature
after a sage has overcome its limitations.

But this is a matter of intuition.

Lord Krishn adds:

bījam mām sarvabhūtānām viddhi pārtha sanātanam
buddhirbuddhimatāmasmi tejastejasvināmaham

“Since l am also the intellect in wise men
and
the magnificence of men of glory,
know you,
O Arjun,
that I am the eternal fountain-head of all beings.”

God is the seed from which all creatures are born.

 Lord  Krishn further sings:

“pitāhamasya jagato mātā dhātā pitāmahah”

“And I too am the bearer
and
preserver of the whole world
as also
the giver of rewards for action;
father, mother and also the grandsire…….!!!

And then:

aham sarvasya prabhavo mattah sarva pravartate
iti matvā bhajante mām budhā bhāvasamanvitāh

“Aware of the reality that I am the source of all creation
as
also the motive that stirs it to effort,

and
possessed of faith and devotion,

wise men remember
and
worship only me.”

yaccāpi sarvabhūtānām bījam tadahamarjuna
na tadasti vinā yatsyānmayā bhūtam carācaram

“And, O Arjun,
I am also the seed from which
all beings have sprung up,

because
there is nothing animate or inanimate

which is without my maya.”

There is nothing, no being,
in the whole world who is devoid of God
because he pervades all.
All beings resemble him and are close to him.

Further says Sri Krishn:

“vistabhyāhamidam krtsnamekāmśena sthito jagat”

“O Arjun,
just remember
that I am here

and
I bear the whole world with
just a fraction of my power….!!!”

And now Sri Krishn sings:

mama yonirmahad brahma tasmingarbhah dadhāmyaham
sambhavah sarvabhūtānām tato bhavati bhārata

sarvayonisu kaunteya mūrtayah sambhavanti yāh
tāsām brahma mahadyoniraham bījapradah pitā

“Like the great Creator,
O Bharat,
is
my eight-propertied primal nature,
the womb of which I fertilize
with the seed of consciousness
by
which all beings are shaped.

The eightfold nature,
O son of Kunti,
is
the mother that bears all the beings
of
different births
and
I am the father that casts the seed.”

God’s eight-part primal nature,
is the womb in which he sows
the seed of consciousness,
and
all beings are born from this union
of
the insensate and the conscious.

There is no other mother except this primal nature,
and
no other father except God.
No matter who the root is,
there will be births so long as there is meeting
of
the insensate and the conscious.

But why is the conscious Self bound to insensible nature?

Sri Krishn replies:

“The three nature-born properties
(sattwa, rajas, and tamas),

O the mighty-armed,
bind the imperishable Self
to
the body.”

Now sings Sri Krishn:

“There are two kinds of beings in the world,
the mortal
and
the immortal:

whereas
the bodies of all beings are destructible,

their Souls are said to be imperishable.”

The person male or female,
who has restrained his senses along with the mind,
that is,
whose body of senses is steady,
is
said to be imperishable.

The “perishable” person exists today,
but may not exist even tomorrow.
But this too is Soul in a particular condition.
There is, however, another Self
beyond
these two.

Adds Lord Krishn:

“But higher than both of them
is
the one

who pervades the three worlds to support
and
sustain all,

and
who is named the eternal God
and
Supreme Spirit
(Ishwar).”

The unmanifest God, the imperishable,
and
the Supreme Being are some other names
by which he is known.
But truly he is different and inexpressible.

He represents the ultimate state
beyond
the mutable and the immutable
(the perishable and the imperishable).

He is directed by the Supreme Spirit,
but
he is different and beyond words.
Sri Krishn introduces himself as a Soul in such a state.

Further Sri Krishn sings:

“Since I am supreme by virtue
of
being beyond both the perishable ( body)
and
the imperishable (Soul),
I am known as the Supreme Being ( Purushottam )
in the world as well as in the Ved.
The all-knowing man, who is thus aware of my essence,
O Bharat,
as the Supreme Being,
always worships me with perfect devotion.”

He is reputed as the Supreme Being
in both the world and the Ved
because
he has transcended the destructible, mutable kshetr
and
even gone higher than the immutable, imperishable,
steady Soul.

~Revered Gurudev Swami Adgadanand Jee Paramhans~

Om 47_/l\_
Humble Wishes.

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“Whenever, O Bharat, righteousness (dharm) declines and unrighteousness is rampant, I manifest myself.”…….Lord Krishna..!!!

Sings Sri Krishna in Bhagavad Gita:

यदा यदा हि धर्मस्य ग्लानिर्भवति भारत ।
अभ्युत्थानमधर्मस्य तदात्मानं सृजाम्यहम् ॥

yadā-yadā hi dharmasya
glānir bhavati bhārata,
abhyutthānam adharmasya
tadā’tmānam sṛjāmy aham
*
“Whenever, O Bharat,
righteousness (dharm) declines
and
unrighteousness is rampant,
I manifest myself.”

Sri Krishn tells the devout Arjun that when hearts fall into inertia in regard to the Supreme Spirit, the most sublime dharm, and when the pious are unable to see how to cross safely to the other bank, he begins to shape his form in order to manifest himself.

Such a feeling of weariness had come to Manu. Goswami Tulsidas has written of his grief-laden heart because his life had passed without contemplation of God.

When despairing tears flow from the eyes of loving worshippers because of their overpowering feeling of helplessness at their inability to steer across unrighteousness, God begins to mould his form into a manifest shape.

But that also implies that God manifests himself to only loving worshippers and only for their well-being.

God’s incarnation comes about only within the heart of a blessed worshiper. But what does the manifest God do?

Adds Sri Krishna:

परित्राणाय साधूनां विनाशाय च दुष्कृताम् ।
धर्मसंस्थापनार्थाय सम्भवामि युगे युगे ॥

paritrāṇāya sādhūnām
vināśāya ca duṣkṛtām,
dharmasansthāpanārthāya
sambhavāmi yuge-yuge
*
“I manifest myself from age to age to defend the pious, destroy the wicked, and strengthen dharm.”

God manifests himself as a saviour of saintly men. He, the adored, is the one God after attaining whom there is nothing else to contemplate.Sri Krishn assumes a manifest form from age to age to destroy impediments that obstruct the smooth flow of righteous impulses such as wisdom, renunciation and restraint, as also to annihilate the demoniacal forces of passion, anger, attachment and repugnance, and to reinforce dharm.

“Age”, as used by Sri Krishn here, does not refer to historical ages like the Golden Age (Satyug) or the Iron Age (Kaliyug). It rather alludes to the stages of rise and fall, of the waxing and waning, of dharm through which human nature has to pass. These are stages of dharm and the human heart has to progress through them.

Goswami Tulsidas has written about it in Ram Charit Manas (7. 10)- the devotional retelling and translation of the Indian epic, Ramayan from Sanskrit into the language of the people by the poet Tulsidas.

The stages of dharm undergo variation in every heart at all times, not because of ignorance but because of the operation of the divine power of maya.

This is what has been named atm-maya in the sixth verse of the chapter four of Bhagavad Gita. Inspired by God, this knowledge is the one which makes the heart a veritable dwelling of God. But how can one know through which Stage one is passing at the moment?

When virtue and moral goodness (sattwa) alone are active in the heart, when passion and ignorance have subsided, when all fears are stilled, when there is no feeling of repulsion, when there is the necessary strength to rest firmly on the signals that are received from the desired goal, when the mind is overflowing with happiness-then alone is one enabled to enter into the Golden Age.

On the other hand, when the forces of darkness (tamas), combined with passion and moral blindness (rajas), are sweeping through, when there are animosities and conflicts all around, the worshipper is passing through the Iron Age (Kaliyug).

When there is predominance of ignorance and abundance of lethargy, slumber and procrastination, that is the stage of the Kaliyug of dharm. The man passing through this stage does not do his duty even though he knows it. He knows what he is forbidden to do, and yet he does it.

These stages of dharm, of its ascent and descent, are determined by innate properties. These stages are the four ages (yug) according to some, the four classes (varn) according to others, and the four levels of spiritual seeking-excellent, good, medium, and low-according to yet others.

In all the stages God stands by the worshipper. Nevertheless, there is a plenty of divine favour at the highest stage, whereas the assistance appears to be meagre at the lower stages.So Sri Krishn tells Arjun that a worshipper who is earnestly devoted to his ultimate goal is a sage, but he can be saved only when the flow of divine impulses such as wisdom, renunciation, and self-restraint, which provide access to the object, is unimpeded.

Similarly, doers of wicked deeds are not undone just by the destruction of their nonexistent mortal bodies, because they will be reborn with the same wicked impressions (sanskar) they had earned in the previous life, and do the same evil which they had done before. So Sri Krishn manifests himself in all ages to destroy moral perversions and to strengthen dharm.

Installation of the one changeless God alone is the final destruction of evil.In brief,Sri Krishn has said that he manifests himself again and again, in all circumstances and categories, to destroy evil and foster good, and to strengthen faith in the Supreme Spirit. But he does this only if there is profound regret in the worshippers’ heart.

So long as the grace of the worshipped God is not with us, we cannot even know whether evil has been destroyed or how much of it still remains. From the beginning to the moment of final attainment, God stays by the worshipper at all stages. He manifests himself only in the devotee’s heart.

Humble Wishes!!!!

As expounded by Swami Adgadanand Paramhans,most revered Gurudev.


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Doubtlessly nothing in the world is more purifying than this spiritual knowledge…!!!

Sings Bhagavad Gita:

न हि ज्ञानेन सदृशं पवित्रमिह विद्यते ।
तत्स्वयं योगसंसिद्धः कालेनात्मनि विन्दति ॥४-३८॥

na hi jñānena sadṛśam
pavitram iha vidyate,
tat svayam yogasamsiddhaḥ
kālenā’tmani vindati (38)


“Doubtlessly nothing in the world is more purifying than this spiritul knowledge and your heart will realize it spontaneously when you have attained to perfection on the Way of Action.”


Nothing in this world purifies as this knowledge does. And this knowledge will be manifest to the doer alone, not to anyone else, when his practice of yog has reached maturity, not at its inception, not in the middle, not externally but within his heart-within his Self.

Humble Wishes!!!

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Fully restrained mind of a yogi….!!!

Sings Bhagavad Gita:

यथा दीपो निवातस्थो नेङ्गते सोपमा स्मृता ।
योगिनो यतचित्तस्य युञ्जतो योगमात्मनः ॥६- १९॥

yathā dīpo nivātastho
ne’ngate so’pamā smṛtā,
yogino yatacittasya
yuñjato yogam ātmanaḥ (19)


“An analogy is (usually) drawn between the lamp whose flame does not flicker because there is no wind and the fully restrained mind of a yogi engaged in contemplation of God.”

When a lamp is kept where there is not a whiff of air, its wick burns steadily and the flame goes straight up-it does not tremble. So it is used as a simile for the subdued mind of a yogi who has completely given himself up to God.

Humble Wishes!!! 

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