Awakening is a stage when initially a seeker starts getting access in God for self realization…!!!

Bhagavad Gita sings:

या निशा सर्वभूतानां तस्यां जागर्ति संयमी ।
यस्यां जाग्रति भूतानि सा निशा पश्यतो मुनेः ॥२- ६९॥
*
yā niśā sarvabhūtānām
tasyām jāgarti sanyamī,
yasyām jāgrati bhutāni
sā niśā paśyato muneḥ (69)


“The true worshipper (yogi) remains awake amidst what is night for all creatures, but the perishable and transient worldly pleasures amidst which all living creatures stay awake are like night for the sage who has perceived reality.”

The transcendental Spirit is like night for living beings because God can be neither seen nor comprehended by thought. So HE is like night, but it is in this night that the spiritually conscious man remains awake because he has seen the formless and known the incomprehensible.

The seeker finds access to God through control of senses, peace of mind, and meditation. That is why the perishable worldly pleasures for which living beings toil day after day is night for God’s true worshiper.

The sage alone, who beholds the individual Self and the Universal Self and is indifferent to desire, succeeds in his enterprise of God-realization. So he dwells in the world and is yet untouched by it.

Hence awakening is a stage when initially a seeker starts getting access in God for self realization and finally attains the ultimate bliss..

Humble Wishes!!!

As expounded by Swami Adgadanand Paramhans,most revered Gurudev.


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Walk upon this path…!!!!

The real base of the body is constituted by sanskar, the merits-the influences and impressions-earned during a previous existence. And sanskar rests upon the mind.

Perfect subjugation of the mind, so that it can be changeless, firm, and constant, and the dissolution of the last sanskar, are all different aspects of the same process.

The disintegration of the last crust of this sanskar marks the end of physical existence. To bring about this dissolution we have to undertake aradhana, worship and adoration, of the desired God.

Sri Krishn has named it action (karm) or the Way of Selfless Action (Nishkam Karm Yog).

Walk this path and come up gradually dear blessed souls.Though difficult but it is not impossible to achieve..

Humble Wishes!!!

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Supreme Vision…!!!!

Vision,                                                                                                            
which is a result
of
passing out through seven successive stages of yog…….. :

virtuous aspiration,
discrimination,
refinement of spirit,
inclination to truth,
disinterestedness,
advancement on the spiritual path towards union with God
and
along with them the moulding of the four faculties
of
mind,
intellect,
thought
and
ego
in accordance with the demands of yog
is
Supreme vision……

and is a creations
of
Sri Krishn’s will.

This supreme vision is like sun light which is itself invisible, transparent and colourless.

Humble Wishes!!!

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A true and blessed yogi….!!!

That man in this world is a true and blessed yogi who, even before the death of his mortal body, acquires the ability to withstand the onslaughts of passion and anger, and conquers them for ever.

He is the real man (nara=na+raman)-one who is not given to physical dalliance.

Even while he is living in the mortal body, he is capable of facing the fierce urges of passion and anger, and of destroying them. He has achieved selfless action in the world and he is happy. He has won the happiness of identity with God in which there is no grief.

According to divine ordinance, this happiness is acquired in this mortal, worldly life itself and not after the death of the physical body. This is what Sant Kabir intends to convey when he counsels his disciples to place their hope in this life. The assurance that salvation comes after death is false and given only by unworthy and selfish teachers.

Bhagavad Gita sings that the man who succeeds in overcoming his passion and anger in this life itself is the doer of selfless action in this world, and he is blessed with everlasting happiness. Passion and anger, attraction and repulsion, desire for the touching of objects by the senses, are our mortal enemies whom we have to vanquish and destroy.

The man who knows his Self and whose happiness and peace lie within merges into God, and he attains to the final beatitude that lies in him.

The man, who is joyous within, at peace within, and illumined within by his perception of the Self and the identical Universal Spirit, is a realized sage who is united with God and who attains to his ineffable state.

In other words, there is first destruction of perversions-alien impulses such as attachment and aversion, then the emergence of perception, and finally submersion in the all-pervading ocean of final beatitude.

Humble Wishes!!!

As expounded by Swami Adgadanand Paramhans,most revered Gurudev.

 

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The one and only name of God is recited at four levels: baikhari, madhyama, pashyanti, and para……!!!

Bhagavad Gita sings:

“As some offer their exhalation to inhalation,
others offer their inhaled breath to the exhaled breath,
while yet others practise serenity of breath
by
regulating their incoming and outgoing breath.”

Meditators on the Self, sacrifice vital air to apan and similarly apan to pran. Going even higher than this, other yogi restrain all life-winds and take refuge in the regulation of breath (pranayam).

That which Krishn calls pran-apan, Mahatma Buddh has named anapan. This is what he has also described as shwas-prashwas (inhaling and exhaling).

Pran is the breath that is inhaled, whereas apan is the breath which moves out. Sages have found by experience that along with breath we also imbibe desires from surrounding environment and, similarly, transmit waves of inner pious as well as impious thoughts with our exhalations.

Non-assimilation of any desire from an external source is the offering of pran as oblation, whereas suppression of all inner desires is the sacrifice of apan, so that there is generation of neither internal desire nor grief because of thoughts of the external world.

So when both pran and apan are properly balanced, breath is regulated. This is pranayam, the serenity of breath. This is the state in which the mind is supreme, for restraint of breath is the same as restraint of mind.

Every accomplished sage has taken up this subject and there is mention of it in the Ved (Rig, 1.164.45 and Atharv, 9.10.27). This is what the revered Gurudeo also uses to say. According to him, the one and only name of god is recited at four levels: baikhari, madhyama, pashyanti, and para.

Baikhari is that which is manifest and audible. The name is pronounced in such a way that we as well as other men sitting around us may hear it.

Madhyama is muttering the name at a medium pitch, so that the worshiper alone, but not even the man sitting beside, may hear it. This articulation is made within the throat. There is thus the gradual generation of an unbroken stream of harmony.

When worship is yet more refined, the stage is reached when the worshiper develops the capacity to visualize the name. After this the name is not recited, because it has now become an integral part of the life-breath. The mind stands as an onlooker and just views what the breath shapes.

When does it come in? And when does it go out? And what does it say?

Sages of perception tell us that it articulates nothing except the name. Now the worshiper does not even recite the name; he just listens to the melody of the name arising from his breath. He just watches his breath and that is why this stage of breath-control is called pashyanti.

At the stage of pashyanti, the mind is set up as a witness-an onlooker. But even this is not needed when there is yet further refinement.

If the desired name is just imprinted on memory, its melody will be heard spontaneously. There is no need of recitation now, for the name rings in the mind by itself. The worshiper does not recite any longer and neither does he have to compel the mind to hear the name, and yet the recitation goes on.This is the stage of ajapa, of the unrecited.

It will be a mistake to think, however, that this stage is reached without commencing the process of recitation. If it has not been initiated; there will be nothing like ajapa. Ajapa means that recitation which does not desert us even though we do not recite. If only memory of the name is firmly setup in the mind, recitation begins to flow through it like a perennial stream.

This spontaneous recitation is named ajapa and this is the recitation by transcendental articulation (parvani). It takes one to God who is the essence beyond nature. There is no variation in speech after this, for after providing a view of God it is dissolved in him.This is why it is called para.

In the quoted verse,Sri Krishn has only told Arjun to watch his breath, whereas later he himself has stressed the importance of intoning OM.

Gautam Buddh too has dwelt upon inhalations and exhalations in Anapan Sad.

After all, what does the Yogeshwar really intend to say?

In truth, beginning with baikhari, then progressing on to madhyama, and going even further than this, at the stage of pashyanti, one attains control over breath. At this stage recitation is integrated with breath. And what is there to recite now when the worshipper has just to watch his breath?

It is for this reason that Sri Krishn speaks only of pran-apan rather than telling Arjun to “recite the name.” This is so because there is no need to tell him this. If he says it, the worshiper will go astray and begin to grope about in the dark alleys of nether levels.

Mahatma Buddh, my noble Godlike teacher, and all those who have trodden this path say the same thing. Baikhari and madhyama are the portals by which we enter into the sphere of recitation. It is pashyanti that provides access into the name. The name begins to flow in an unbroken stream in para, and the internal, spontaneous, intoning of the name never abandons the worshiper after this.

The mind is linked with breath. That is the state of victory of the mind when the eye is set on the breath, when the name is incorporated into breath, and no desire of the external world can enter into the worshiper. With this the final outcome of yagya emerges.

Sri Krishna adds further:

“Yet others who subsist on strictly regulated breath
and
offer their breath to breath,
and
life to life,
are all knowers of yagya,
and the sins of all who have known yagya are destroyed.”

They who partake of restricted food offer as oblation their breath to breath-life to life. My noble teacher, the revered Gurudeo, uses to say that the food, posture of sitting, and sleep of a yogi should be steady. Regulation of food and pleasure is a necessity.

Many yogi who observe such discipline renounce their breath to breath, concentrating on inhalations and paying no heed to exhalations. With each incoming breath they hear OM. Thus men whose sins have been destroyed by yagya are men of true knowledge.

Sri Krishna says:

“O the best of Kuru,
the yogi who have tasted the nectar flowing from yagya
attain
to the eternal supreme God,
but how can the next life of men bereft of yagya be happy
when
even their life in this world is miserable?”

What yagya generates-what results from it, is nectar the substance of immortality? A direct experience of this is wisdom.The one who feeds on it becomes one with the eternal God.

So yagya is something which with its completion unites the worshiper with God. According to Sri Krishn, how can the next world bring happiness to men bereft of yagya when even the mortal, human birth is beyond their reach?

It is their inevitable lot to be born in lower forms and nothing better than them. So the observance of yagya is a necessity.

By practicing this in light of any enlightened sage, mind and senses get restrained totally.

~Revered Gurudev Swami Adgadanand Jee Paramhans~


Humble Wishes.
~mrityunjayanand~


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Is really Bhagavad Gita “an extremist” literature and a literature spreading “social discord”?

Sings Sri Krishna in Chapter Eleven,Verse Fifty five of Bhagavad Gita:

मत्कर्मकृन्मत्परमो मद्भक्तः सङ्गवर्जितः।
निर्वैरः सर्वभूतेषु यः स मामेति पाण्डव॥११-५५॥
*
matkarmakrnmatparamo madbhaktah sangavarjitah|
nirvairah sarvabhūtesu yah sa māmeti pāndava||11-55||
*
“This man, O Arjun, who acts only for my sake (matkarmah), rests on and is dedicated to me alone (matparmah), in complete detachment (sangvarjitah) and freedom from malice towards all beings (nirvairah sarvbhooteshu), knows and attains to me.”
*
The four essential requirements of the evolutionary discipline by which a man can achieve spiritual perfection or transcendence (of which human life is the means) are indicated by the terms: “matkarmah,” “matparmah,” “sangvarjitah,” and “nirvairah sarvbhooteshu.”

“Matkarmah” means performance of the ordained act-the act of yagya. “Marparmah” is the necessity of the worshipper’s taking refuge in Sri Krishn and of complete devotion to him. The required action is impossible to accomplish without total disinterestedness in worldly objects and the fruits of action (sangvarjitah). The last but not the least requirement is “nirvrairah sarvbhooteshu”: absence of malice or ill-will towards all beings.

Only a worshipper fulfilling these four conditions can attain to Sri Krishn. It hardly needs saying that if the four ways urged by the last verse of the chapter are observed, the resulting state is one in which external war and physical bloodshed are simply out of the question. That is one more instance that the Geeta is not about external fighting. There is not one verse in the poem that supports the idea of physical violence or killing. When we have sacrificed ourselves through yagya, remember only God and no one else, are completely detached from both nature and the rewards of our action, and when there is no malignity in us towards any being, with whom and for what shall we fight?

The four observances lead a worshipper to the stage at which he stands entirely alone.If there is no one with him, who shall he fight? According to Sri Krishn, Arjun has known him. This would not be possible if there were even the slightest touch of malice about him. So it is evident that the war waged by Arjun in the Geeta is against fearful enemies such as attachment and repulsion, infatuation and malice, and desire and anger, that rise up in the way of the worshipper when he engages in the task of single-minded contemplation after having achieved an attitude of detachment to worldly objects as well as rewards.

In Chapter Fifteen,Verse Seven of Bhagavad Gita,Sri Krishna sings:

ममैवांशो जीवलोके जीवभूतः सनातनः।
मनःषष्ठानीन्द्रियाणि प्रकृतिस्थानि कर्षति॥१५-७॥
*
mamaivāṁśo jīvaloke jīvabhūtaḥ sanātanaḥ|
manaḥṣaṣṭhānīndriyāṇi prakṛtisthāni karṣati||15-7||
*
“The immortal Soul in the body is a part of mine and it is he who attracts the five senses and the sixth-the mind-that dwell in nature.”

Now with the above exposition,let us analyse : Is really Bhagavad Gita “an extremist” literature and a literature spreading “social discord”?

Humble Wishes.

As expounded by Swami Adgadanand Paramhans,most revered Gurudev.

 

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