3/29/2013

Om, Om, Om, Om

om_wall.jpg

 

  Om Om Om Om Om Om

 

Om in the Bhagavad Gita.


Om is widely mentioned in the Bhagavad Gita where the mantra Om is an essential part of its teachings and practice.

Krishna tells Arjuna (verse 7.8) :
‘O Arjuna, I am the taste of pure water, and the light of the moon and the sun. 
I am the essential nature of the mantra Om mentioned in the holy scriptures, 
the sound in ether, as well as the courage and virility of human beings.’


Krishna, who symbolizes underlying intelligence or consciousness, is the essence of Om. Om, as sound vibration, is an expression of this underlying Consciousness. Therefore, by practising Mantra or Gyana Yoga (or even Bhakti Yoga ) we can trace Om back to its source. In this way, we are enabled to realize the nature of consciousness. 
Krishna talks of death and the importance of chanting Om at the time of death (verse 8.13) :

‘The mantra Om symbolises Reality. At the time of death, repeat Om and 
you will go forth from the body and attain the Supreme Goal.’

From the Yogic viewpoint, death is not just the time of disintegration of the physical body, but also a golden opportunity of directly realizing our immortal essence. Chanting Om at the point of death can be a valuable part of this process.


Krishna also says that all spiritual practices should be initiated with Om (verse 17.24):
‘Before starting sacrifices, holy practices and austerities (as prescribed by the scriptures), serious spiritual seekers should chant Om.’


How to do AUM chanting

Aum is a universal mantra for all people and one not need the initiation of a master or guru to reap it’s endless benefits. Sit comfortably either in Padmasana or Artha Siddhasana or Sukhasana. Place your hands upon your thighs, and palm’s facing upwards. Hold Yoga Mudra in both hands and eyes should be closed. Inhale slowly through your nose, once your lungs is full exhale from your mouth by pronouncing AUM until your full breath come out from the lungs. All three word chanting should be approximately equal in time. While chanting Aaaaaa focus vibration one inch below your navel. It is the Manipura Chakra, one of the seven chakra in human body. When you chant Uuuuuu focus vibration in chest area. It is the Anahata Chakra. After that close you mouth and chant Mmmmmm. When chanting focus vibration in your throat and nose. Similarly continue deep inhalation by nose and exhalation through mouth with chanting AUM. For better health benefit this chanting to be done 15 minutes in morning and 15 minutes in evening.
 

Science and OM

Scientists and yogis agree that at the molecular level, our bodies are systems of vibrating atomic partials. Each part of the body, each cell, gland and organ resonates with a frequency. We could say that we are composed of sound vibrations. Even the difference between solids, liquids, gases, sound and light are merely a difference in their vibratory rates.
The body as a system vibrates at a rate of approximately 7.8 - 8 cycles (Hertz) a second when it is relaxed and calm. The Alpha waves, which correspond to a state of relaxation, are also in the 8 cycles per second range. The Earth itself vibrates at the same vibrational frequency of 8 cycles per second. When we practice OM Healing, we feel that every thing has the same vibration and we can truly experience the unity of life.

3/27/2013

The story of the Brazilian healer Arigo

 
 
The story of the Brazilian healer Arigo, one of the most mystifying figures in the history of occult medicine, began with dreams, headaches, and a political campaign. It ended with a crowd of some 20,000 mourners and a controversy as unresolved today as it was when Arigo was alive.

Arigo’s given name was José Pedro de Freitas. He was a farmer’s son, born in the Belo Horizonte district of Brazil in 1918. His nickname, Arigo, by which he was known, was given him while he was still a child; it can be roughly translated as “country bumpkin.”

When he was at school, Arigo was occasionally troubled by strange hallucinations. He would see a blinding light and sometimes he would hear a voice speaking in a strange language. As a young man, Arigo went to work in one of the nearby iron mines and by the time he was 25 he had been elected president of the union local. After leading a strike in protest against the brutal working conditions, he was fired. Arigo next began to earn his living as the manager of a bar in the mining town of Congonhas do Campo.

The dreams that now began to plague him nightly, often leaving him with a severe headache, were more difficult to deal with than those of his adolescence. In them he saw the operating room of a hospital, where a stout, baldheaded man addressed a group of doctors and nurses in the same guttural voice that he had first heard as a child. Deeply disturbed by the insistence of the dreams and headaches, Arigo often went to pray for help at the church of Bom Jesus do Matosinho.

Then the dream doctor revealed his identity. He was Dr. Adolpho Fritz, he told Arigo, and he had died during World War I. His own work had been cut short by his death, and he had chosen Arigo, who was, he knew, a compassionate man, to continue it for him. Henceforward, he said, Arigo would only find peace by helping the sick and distressed people around him.

For several years the vivid nightmares and fierce headaches continued. Then, in 1950, events passed out of Arigo’s control.

Elections were being held that year, and one of the campaigners to visit Congonhas was Lúcio Bittencourt, a supporter of the iron miners in their struggle for better conditions. In Congonhas he met Arigo and was so impressed by his passionate advocacy of the miner’s cause that he invited him to attend a political rally in Belo Horizonte, the nearest city. When the rally was postponed, Bittencourt invited Arigo to spend the night at the hotel where he was staying, the Hotel Financial.

Unknown to Arigo, Bittencourt was suffering from lung cancer and his doctor had advised an immediate operation in the United States.

As Bittencourt was about to fall asleep that night, the door of his room opened and someone put on the light. It was Arigo; his eyes were “glazed,” and he was holding a razor. Strangely enough, Bittencourt was unafraid. Arigo began to speak in a thick German accent and in a tone quite unlike his ordinary voice. There was an emergency, he said; there would have to be an operation. Then Bittencourt lost consciousness.

When he came to, he found that his pajama jacket was slashed and bloodstained and that a neat incision had been made toward the back of his ribcage. He dressed and went into Arigo’s room.

At first Arigo thought Bittencourt was drunk. But in Bittencourt’s room he saw the incision and bloodstained pajamas and realized that an operation of some kind must have taken place. He had no memory, however, of going to Bittencourt’s room and denied having had any part in the bizarre affair. Shaken, Bittencourt caught the first available plane to Rio de Janeiro to see his doctor.

Now Arigo was afraid. Perhaps he had performed the operation while in some kind of trance; perhaps this was what the dreams and voices had been leading to. He could only pray that Bittencourt had come to no harm.

He did not have to wait long for news. The doctor had taken X-rays and was highly satisfied with the result of what he presumed was American surgery. The tumour had been removed, he explained to an astonished Bittencourt, “by a technique unknown in Brazil,” and the patient’s chances of recovery were now excellent. Then Bittencourt told his doctor what had happened, and not only his doctor but anyone who would listen. Newspapers all over Brazil carried the story.

In Congonhas, Arigo’s priest, Father Pernido, took the story seriously enough to warn him to perform no more operations. But how could he stop doing something he had no memory of having done, Arigo asked. Local spiritists hailed him as a genuine medium, but though he rejected their acclaim, the persistent visions of Dr. Fritz continued.

During the next six years Arigo saw as many as 300 patients a day and, to contain the crowds, had to move his “clinic” from his house to an empty church across the street. Then in 1956, under pressure from the medical establishment and the Catholic Church, he was charged with practicing “illegal medicine.”

“How do you go about your practice?” Judge Eleito Soares asked him.

“I start to say the Lord’s Prayer,” Arigo answered. “From that moment, I don’t see or know about anything else. The others tell me I write out prescriptions, but I have no memory of this.” He spoke earnestly.

“What about the operations?” the judge asked.

“It is the same with them. I am in a state I do not understand. I just want to help the poor people.”

“But you are doing what you are charged with, are you not?”

“I am not the one who is doing this,” Arigo replied. “I am just an intermediary between the people and the spirit of Dr. Fritz.”

The judge was unimpressed. Could Arigo make this Dr. Fritz appear in the courtroom for questioning? All over Brazil newspapers carried reports of the trial and numerous testimonies on Arigo’s behalf. According to J. Herculano Pires, a professor of the history and philosophy of education, it was “simply ridiculous to deny that the phenomenon of Arigo exists. Medical specialists, famous journalists, intellectuals, prominent statesmen have all witnessed the phenomena at Congonhas. We cannot possibly deny the reality of his feats.”

Despite the favourable publicity, Arigo was sentenced to 15 months in jail and fined 5,000 cruzeiros (approximately $270). The court of appeals later reduced the sentence to eight months and allowed Arigo a year of probation before beginning his imprisonment. During this period he would be allowed to leave Congonhas only with the judge’s permission and would have to stop his practice completely.

For a time he did stop his practice, and the headaches began again. After a while, since the local police seemed to look the other way, he began to see his patients covertly but, at least at first, refrained from operating. In May 1958 President Juscelino Kubitschek granted Arigo a presidential pardon.

In 1961 Kubitschek was no longer in office, and the religious and medical authorities again pressed for legal action against Arigo. But witnesses willing to testify on the prosecution’s behalf were hard to find, and for months the new investigation made little headway. Then, in August 1963, Arigo performed surgery on an American investigator, Dr. Andrija Puharich. The operation brought him back into the national headlines.

Puharich, an investigator of psychic phenomena who had a medical degree from Northwestern University in Illinois, had heard stories of Arigo’s remarkable cures and had come to Congonhas to see for himself. Arigo told him that he and his three companions were welcome to observe him for as long as they wished and to interview any of his patients.

On the first day of their investigation Puharich and his friends found a crowd of nearly 200 people waiting for Arigo to open his clinic at 7 a.m. After they had all filed into the abandoned church, Arigo told them that although it was Jesus who effected the cures he was credited with, he had no interest in the religious beliefs of those present. “All religions are good. Is this not true?” he said, then asked everyone to join him in repeating the Lord’s Prayer. After this, he withdrew into a private cubicle for a few moments.

When Arigo reappeared, Puharich was struck by the change in his manner. His bearing was now formal and commanding and his speech sharp. The interpreter noticed a heavy German accent in his Portuguese and a “sprinkling” of simple German words and phrases. Arigo summoned the investigators into his treatment room. “Come,” he said. “There is nothing to hide here. I am happy to have you watch.”

What Puharich saw that day staggered him. The first patient was an elderly man whom Arigo brusquely pushed against the wall. He then took a four-inch-long stainless steel paring knife and inserted it between the man’s left eyeball and eyelid, scraping and pressing upward into the socket with a forcefulness that Puharich found shocking. But the patient seemed quite unperturbed. At length Arigo withdrew the knife, noted a smear of pus on the blade, and told the old man he would get well. Then he wiped the blade on his shirt and summoned the next patient. Puharich examined the eye. He found no bleeding and no wounds. The operation had taken less than a minute.

Throughout the morning Arigo worked in this manner, never using an anesthetic or taking any precautions against infection. As far as the investigators could see, he employed no form of hypnotic suggestion. Bleeding was invariably minimal, and the patients appeared to feel no pain. More often than not, the treatment consisted only of the writing of a prescription, which Arigo did at high speed and without hesitation. At 11 a.m. he announced that the session was over and that he would be back that afternoon after he finished working his regular job in the government welfare office (so far as is known, Arigo never accepted payment of any kind for his medical work). As soon as he left the clinic, the German accent and imperious manner left him and his usual down-to-earth amiable character emerged again.

That evening Puharich and a journalist from São Paulo, Jorge Rizzini, set up a movie camera in the treatment room. If Arigo was a sleight-of-hand expert, they would try to catch his deception on film. That night Arigo worked until 1 a.m. In a single day he had treated some 200 people.

Puharich was completely baffled. He knew that a convincingly thorough study of this amazing man’s work would require far more time, money, and equipment than was presently available. What other tests could he make before he returned to the United States? On the inside of his right elbow was a small tumour, benign but annoying, known as a lipoma. Tomorrow, he decided, he would ask Arigo to remove it. He would be his own guinea pig.

Arigo unhesitatingly agreed to perform the operation. “Of course,” he said. “Has anyone here got a good Brazilian pocketknife to use on this Americano?” Several were offered, and Arigo quickly chose one. Puharich felt a sudden chill of alarm, but there was no way now for him to withdraw. He looked to see if Rizzini had the movie camera ready.

“Just roll up your sleeve, Doctor.”

Puharich did as he was told and braced himself to watch Arigo make the incision. Arigo, however, told him to look the other way.

Less than 10 seconds later Puharich felt Arigo slap something wet and slippery into his hand. It was the excised lipoma. Glancing down at his forearm, he saw a neat half-inch slit oozing the barest trickle of blood. There had been no pain at all.

That afternoon the Americans left Congonhas. Puharich kept a careful watch on the wound in his arm; Arigo had used no antiseptics, and he was on the alert for the first signs of blood poisoning. They never appeared. Despite the unhygienic conditions and the fact that no stitches had been used to close the incision, it healed quickly and cleanly.

In São Paulo, Puharich and his friends watched the movies Rizzini had taken. They could find no evidence of trickery in them. Soon the newspapers were again buzzing with Arigo’s name and details of his operation on the American doctor.

Now the courts were spurred into action, and on November 20, 1964, Arigo was sentenced to 16 months in jail. He was allowed to leave the courtroom only to say good-bye to his wife and children, for the sentence was to begin immediately. He went home, made his farewells, and waited for the police to come.

But not a single man in the Congonhas police force was willing to take Arigo to jail, and the state police were reluctant to drive through the crowd that had gathered outside his house. As the evening wore on, Arigo became impatient and finally walked over to the prison by himself.

Even in jail Arigo managed to carry on his work. After he quelled a riot, the warden gave him the freedom to leave whenever he wished. Arigo took advantage of this dispensation only rarely and always to visit the sick. While the guards looked the other way he began treating sick prisoners and then the crowds of people who waited in the alley outside.

Arigo was released from jail in November 1965. Soon afterward Puharich returned to Congonhas with a research assistant. His plan was to test Arigo’s ability to diagnose his patients’ complaints, an activity not likely to rouse the anger of the Brazilian Medical Society. In the test Arigo gave an immediate verbal diagnosis of each patient who stepped in front of him. Of 1,000 such patients, chosen at random, 545 had brought their official medical records with them. In 518 of these cases Arigo’s spontaneous diagnosis matched that of the patient’s own doctor.

How could he possibly make such diagnoses and state them in modern medical terminology, Puharich asked. “That’s easy,” Arigo said. “I just listen to what the voice of Dr. Fritz tells me and repeat it. I always hear it in my left ear.”

More tests of Arigo’s ability followed, this time employing a battery of instruments—an electroencephalograph, an electrocardiogram, X-ray and blood typing equipment, a microscope, tape recorders and cameras. Tests were made on the patients before, during, and after their treatment, and Arigo’s surgical technique was demonstrated for the cameras on a variety of tumours, cysts, cataracts, and other complaints.

The press discovered what was going on, and a horde of reporters and cameramen descended on Congonhas. It was impossible to continue the research. Puharich returned to São Paulo with his evidence and showed it to a number of interested professionals, including an ophthalmologist, a nuclear physicist, a medium, a psychiatrist, and a cardiologist. They could only agree that Arigo’s cures were a fact.

When he returned to New York, Puharich showed colour films of Arigo’s surgery to Dr. Robert Laidlaw, former director of psychiatry at Roosevelt Hospital. Laidlaw observed that Arigo’s face assumed a quite uncharacteristic expression when he operated, that his hands and fingers moved with astonishing speed and dexterity when he worked, even when he was looking elsewhere, and that the incisions he made seemed to “glue” themselves together without stitches. Laidlaw could not explain how Arigo had acquired surgical skills that were beyond the abilities of many trained surgeons. He too was baffled.

Against the possibility that Arigo was a skilled magician are the following facts: that he indisputably cured numerous people (or, to be quite precise, that numerous people experienced cures immediately or soon after his treatment); that he made real incisions, which bled little and healed despite the unhygienic conditions attending them; that his patients experienced little or no pain during or after his surgical procedures, despite the lack of anesthetics; that he was able to diagnose illnesses at a glance and write accurate prescriptions, despite having had little formal and no medical education; and that, so far as is known, he never accepted money for his medical work but supported his family by working at an ordinary job.

José Pedro de Freitas, known to the world as Arigo, died in a car accident on January 11, 1971.

3/17/2013

Yogi Ramsuratkumar


Yogi Ramsuratkumar
Yogi Ramsuratkumar
Yogi Ramsuratkumar Jaya Guru Raya !!!





" Om Sri Ram Jai Ram Jai Jai Ram "

" This beggar prays to his Father to bless you all who have come here. My Lord Rama blesses you - My Father blesses you. Arunachaleswara blesses you".

Yogi Ramsuratkumar was born in a village Nardara near Kashi on December 1, 1918. In his childhood, he loved very much to meet the yogis and monks. He was befriended by a number of holy men who built their huts on the Ganges shore or simply wandered nearby.
He grew up as a Grihasta but eventually, the tugs of spirituality in his heart took over. In search of his "guru", he visited and spent time in the ashrams of both Sri Aurobindo and Ramana Maharishi. He later moved to Kerala at the ashram of Swami Ramdas. In his own assessment, Sri Aurobindo gave him Jnana, Sri Ramana Maharshi blessed him with tapas and Swami Ramdas gave him the nectar of Bhakti. Swami Ramdas initiated him into the holy mantra : " Om Sri Ram Jai Ram Jai Jai Ram ", by pronouncing it thrice in his ears. Yogi Ramsuratkumar often refers to this instance as his "death", since from this moment on, his ego no longer existed, and he had a profound spiritual experience.
'This beggar wandering here and there, tired of wandering but having no home - Arunachalesvara, in the form of this hill, had mercy on this miserable sinner. So he gives thanks, a thousand thanks, to this holy hill, this holy temple. Oh, the magnanimity of the Lord! He has given me shelter for twenty long years. Whereas others who come are enabled to stay only days or weeks . . . For thousands of years the hill has given shelter to so many dirty sinners like me - and Arunachala will give us shelter for thousand of years to come.'
When Yogi Ramsuratkumar used to walk around the Hill, out of humility, he would always walk in the opposite direction of all the other pilgrims.
Many times Yogi Ramsuratkumar would say: 'The mountain helps us.' He himself spent many years wandering on the mountain, taking shelter in its caves. Based on his own comments, his transformation seems to have been connected in part to his subtle relationship to the divine force within Arunachala.
Where is the Fire?
The Fire is there on the hill there.
But I don't see it there.
You can see it if you are really bent upon seeing it.
Are you afraid of being engulfed by it?
Then you can't see it
Have courage, no fear
You are sure to see it
Yogi Ramsuratkumar
The 'Fire' referred to by Yogi Ramsuratkumar (as poet) is the mystical Fire of Creation, the light that is perceived burning within Mount Arunachala as the embodiment of Shiva:
'This holy Fire burned at the core of the beggar's absolute certainty: his faith in a Power that governs everything, controls everything.'
Yogi Ramsuratkumar
Yogi Ramsuratkumar loved his devotees. He loved laughter. He loved conversation. He loved human company. He was always extremely available and accessible and open and communicative, and at the same time there was something of the magician about him. During these years he was available to 'friends' at almost any time of the day or night near the Temple Chariot, at the corners of the roads or under the trees at the Temple.
Subsequently, accepting the entreaties of devotees, he moved into a house with a small room and veranda on Sannadhi street near the Arunachaleswarar Temple. People started to visit and spend hours discussing spiritual and personal problems with him. Yogi Ramsuratkumar resided at this house until autumn of 1994, when he became ill and thereupon accepted an alternative offer of shelter at Sudama House in Ramana Nagar some miles west of the Temple.
When his fame began to spread, large crowds started to gather waiting for his darshan. The influx of devotees grew steadily in size creating the need for an ashram. Yogi who always verbally refused the role of Guru of Teacher, had previously refused offers of an ashram, but to fulfil the desire of devotees, in 1993 Swamiji acceded to the acquisition, enabled by contributions, of a site of 3½ acres once called Agrahara Collai close to the Sri Seshadri Swamigal and Ramana Ashrams.
The construction of an Ashram started once the land was cleaned and prepared. Yogi Ramsuratkumar was involved in every step of the large building programme which at one point involved the participation of up to 250-300 workers working long hours. The first Ashram structure to be completed was a small stone thatched-roof darshan mandir which could sit 200 people. It was located by the front gate of the developing Ashram and was the location of Yogi Ramsuratkumar's regular darshans.
The plans for the Ashram were elaborate and included a huge Temple, 350 feet long and 150 wide which would be big enough to accommodate 5,000 people, a kitchen and dining hall, cottages for ashram residents and guests, meditation hall, library, several buildings devoted to worship, and a Veda Patashala, which Yogi Ramsuratkumar was to say would be the 'heart of the Ashram', and was intended to be a place where visiting pandits and scholars could stay and conduct Vedic research.
The ashram began to flourish. When it was first being built, Yogi Ramsuratkumar said that it was not just for Tiruvannamalai or India, but it was universal - a place of pilgrimage for all races and religions.
From 1996 Yogi Ramsuratkumar started experiencing continuous bouts of ill health which included high blood pressure, stomach ulcers and diabetes. In July 1999 although he was diagnosed to have a tumour he refused to allow allopathic treatment or tests of any kind. Despite the tremendous suffering he was undergoing, he maintained his close supervision of various projects within the ever-growing Ashram. In spite of the pleadings of many of his devotees, Yogi Ramsuratkumar stood firm in his refusal to allow allopathic treatment to prolong his life, he consistently pronounced, 'Father will take care of this body'.
By early August 2000 his health reached a crisis point and those who were caring for him felt he would die very soon without medical intervention. So on 17th August, after he had given a reluctant consent, he was taken to a hospital at Chennai (Madras) and surgery took place on 11th September. A devotee, Vijayalakshmi wrote about this time:
'In this period of one year, Bhagavan's enormous reserves of strength were tested again and again. The peace and love which he continued to radiate through the months of illness, was phenomenal. During the months of recover, while at the hospital in Chennai, there was daily satsang. Bhagavan's quotation from Tulasidas, Kabirdas, Mahaperiyaval etc., anecdotes from the lives of saints were feasts, which left one hungry for more. His cheerfulness and peace through all the extreme pain and suffering made one increasingly aware of this enormous presence in the form of Bhagavan. Perfect strangers were immediately attracted by him and wanted to serve him. His reiteration that one is not the body began to be understood' [2]
He finally return to Tiruvannamalai on November 23, 2000. The surgery which doubtlessly prolonged his life for six months, also prolonged his suffering.
'Yogi Ramsuratkumar was a very long way from the ecstatic years on the streets when he was a hidden beggar saint, free to move and work as he wished. The story becomes thick with pathos . . . Perhaps if his destiny had not cast him into the hands of the world in the way it did, he would have simply lain down under a tree . . . and passed away from his body, but was obligated to act out his last days bound in the golden case of love. All this too was the will of God, the beggar's manifest destiny. The final result was that it gave a short reprieve from his impending death and made it possible for the enactment of the final play of his vast lilas.'
By mid December, 2000, Yogi Ramsuratkumar gave his last two public darshans in the Temple where he was able to consciously interact with devotees. The last two months of his life were spent in an apartment open to the view of all. His devotees were allowed to come and stand outside the glass wall of his room and take his darshan whilst he lay on his bed amidst a plethora of tubes, nursing attendants and medical apparatus.
Over the next weeks his condition quickly declined, until by mid-February it was clear that his physical death was imminent. Hearing of his serious condition many devotees came to say goodbye.
For days Yogi seemed to hover back and forth between death and life. A few days before his mahasamadhi, while several devotees sat at his bedside, he suddenly opened his eyes, looked his devotee Ma Devaki in the eyes and said, 'I am everyone, everything, here, there, everywhere. I alone exist.'
On February 20, 2001 at 3:19 a.m. in his Ashram at Tiruvannamalai, Bhagavan Sri Yogi Ramsuratkumar attained mukti. His body was kept in the vast hall of the Temple on the day of February 20 and thousands of people thronged the Ashram to pay their respects. The next day, February 21st at 3 p.m., his body was carried on a bier in circumambulation around the Ashram. Afterwards it was anointed with sacred substances, dressed and lowered, sitting in the lotus position, into the samadhi site at the Ashram Temple.
'. . . And so a great beggar, a true Godman, was gone from this world in his physical form and reborn in the unseen worlds beyond the fives senses. His effulgent presence filled the vast sky and pulsed in the hearts of those who loved him. There was never a cessation of the communion of his heart with those who were receptive. To hear, in joyful silence, the sound of the beggar's laughter, which would resound in the world forever. His body, exuding the splendour and sanctity of the life that was lived, was laid in state in the temple, while thousands of people came to pay homage to a beloved son of Mother India, and to the great treasure that was his life - as one devotee said, “His life! His wonderful life, mother! Such a glorious life, you know1”
**************************************************

There is one existence. MY SUPREME FATHER is EXISTENCE :
Arunachala Shiva Arunaachala Shiva
Arunachala Shiva Aruna Jata,
Arunachala Shiva Arunachala Shiva
Arunachala Shiva Aruna Jata!


Blessings from Yogi Ramsuratkumar
Yogi Ramsuratkumar
Yogi Ramsuratkumar
Yogi Ramsuratkumar

-Partha.


3/07/2013

Swami Vivekananda




The mind cannot be easily conquered. Minds that rise into waves at the approach of every little thing, at the slightest provocation or danger, in what a state they must be! What to talk of greatness’ or spirituality, when these changes come over the mind? This unstable condition of the mind must be changed. We must ask ourselves how far we can be acted upon by the external world, and how far we can stand on our feet in spite of all the forces outside us. When we have succeeded in preventing all the forces in the world form throwing us off our balance, then alone we have attained to freedom, and not before.
If one read this one shloka ‘yield not to unmanliness’ o son of pritha ! ill doth it become thee. Cast of this means faintheartedness and arise, o scorcher of thy enemies! , – He gets all the merits of reading the entire Gita; for in his one shloka lies imbedded the whole message of Gita.
All begin great or small , are equally manifestations of god ; the difference is only in manifestation. The miseries of the world cannot be cured by physical help only. Until mans nature changes , these physical needs will arise , and miseries will always be felt , and no amount of physical help will cure them completely. The only solution of this problem is to make man kind pure. Ignorance is the mother of all the evil and all the misery we see. Let men have light , let them be pure and spiritually strong and educated, then alone will misery cease in the world not before.
The householders the centre of life and society . it is a worship for him to acquire and spend wealth nobly , for the householders who struggles to become rich by good means and for good purpose is doing practically . thus same things for the attainment of salvation as the anchorite does in his cell when he is praying , for in them we se only the different aspect of the same virtue of self – surrender and self sacrifice prompted by the feelings of devotions to god and all that he his.
Man is to become divine by realizing the divine. Idols, or temples or churches or books are only the supports , the helps , of his spiritual childhood but on an on he must progress
Our method is very easily described. It simply consists in reasserting the national life….. the secret lies there. The national ideals of India are renunciations and services intensify her in those channels, and the rest will take care of itself. The burner of the spiritual cannot be raised to high in this country. In it alone are salvations.
The idol man is he who in the midst of the greatest silence and solitude finds the intersect activity and the midst of the intense activity finds the silence and solitude of the desert he has learned the secret of restraint, he has controlled himself. He goes thought the streets of a big city with all its traffic , and his mind is as if he were in cave , where not a sound could reach him ; and he is intensely working all the time that is the idol of karma yoga and, if you have attained to that you have really learned the secret of work.
You may invent and image to thought which to worship god, but a better image already exits, the living man. You may build a temple in which to worship god and that may be good but a better one , a much higher one already exist the human body .
Inactivity should be avoided by all means resistance. Resist all evils, mental and physical; and when you have success in resisting, then will calmness come. It is very easy to say , ‘ hate nobody , resist not evil ‘ . But we know what that kind generally means in practice when the eyes of society are turned towards us we may make show off
Non-resistance …….this is hypocrisy and will serve no purpose.
May I be born again and again, and suffer thousand of miseries so that I may worship the only god that exits, the only god I believe, the sum total of all souls and above all, my god the wicked, my god the miserable, my god the poor of all races, of all species, is the special object of my worship.
This is the one question I put to every man, woman child, when they are in physical, mental or spiritual training: are you strong? Do you feel strength? – For I know it is truth along that gives strength. I know that truth alone gives life, and nothing but going towards reality will make us strong, and none will reach truth until he is strong.
All the strength and succor you want is within yourselves. Therefore, make your own future. ‘let the dead past bury its dead.’ the infinite future is before you, and you must always remember that each word, thought and deed, lays up a store for you and that as the bad thoughts and bad works are ready to spring upon you like tiger, so also there is the inspiring hope that the good thoughts, and good deeds, are ready with the power of a hundred thousand angels to defend you always and for ever.
Take up idea. Make that one idea your life; think of it; dream of it; live on that idea. Let the brain, muscles, nerves, every part of your body be full of that idea, and just leave every other idea alone. Thos is the way to success, and this is the way great spiritual giants are produced.
It is thought which the propelling force in us is. Fill the mind with highest thoughts, her them day after day, think them month after month. Never mind failures; they are quite natural, they are the beauty of life, these failures.
This is the one prayer, to remember our true nature, the god who is always within us, thinking of it always as infinite, almighty, ever-good, ever-beneficent, selfless, bereft of all limitations. And because that nature is selfless, it is strong and fearless; for only to desire for himself, whom does he fear and what can frighten him? What fear has death for him? What fear has evil for him?

-Partha.

வீரத்துறவி விவேகானந்தர் சிந்தனைகள்







ஜனவரி 12. 1863-ம் ஆண்டில் பிறந்த விவேகானந்தர் இளமையிலேயே பகுத்தறிவும், ஆராய்ச்சி மனப்பான்மையும் கொண்டவராக விளங்கினார். கடவுளைக் காண வேண்டும் என்ற தேடல் இறுதியில் குருதேவர் ராமகிருஷ்ண பரமஹம்சரின் சீடராக அவரை ஆக்கியது. இந்தியா முழுவதும் சுற்றுப்பயணம் செய்து மக்கள் படும் துயரங்களை நேரில் கண்ட விவேகானந்தர், அவர்களது துயர் தீர்ப்பதையே தமது வாழ்நாள் லட்சியமாகக் கொண்டார். அதற்காகவே உழைத்தார். தமது வாழ்க்கை முழுவதையும் தேச நலனுக்காகவே அர்ப்பணித்தார். அமெரிக்க நாட்டுக்குப் பயணம் செய்து சர்வ சமய மகாநாட்டில் கலந்து கொண்டார். தனது பேச்சால் அங்குள்ளவர்களைக் கவர்ந்தார். அதன் பின் ஐரோப்பாவின் பல பகுதிகளுக்கும் பயணம் செய்து, இந்தியாவின் புகழைப் பரப்பினார். ராமகிருஷ்ண மடத்தை நிறுவி அதன் மூலம் மக்கள் தொண்டாற்றினார். 1902 ம் வருடம், ஜூலை மாதம் நான்காம் தேதி விவேகானந்தர் மகா சமாதி ஆனார் என்றாலும் அவர் விட்டுச் சென்ற சிந்தனைகள் என்றும் நினைவு கூரத் தக்கவை.
சுவாமி விவேகானந்தரின் 150வது பிறந்த நாள் கொண்டாடப்படும் இந்த மாதத்தில் (ஜனவரி 12) அவரது சிந்தனைகள் சிலவற்றைப் பார்ப்போமா?
 
ஏழைகளும் வறியவர்களும் படும் துன்பத்தையும் துயரத்தையும் கண்டு யார் உள்ளம் கசிந்து உருகுகிறதோ, யாருக்கு அவர்களுக்கு சேவை செய்ய வேண்டும் என்ற எண்ணம் உடனடியாக ஏற்படுகிறதோ அவர்களே உண்மையான தேச பக்தர்கள். தேச சேவை செய்வதற்குத் தகுதியானவர்கள். அவர்களே மகாத்மாக்கள்.
 
 கடவுள் ஒவ்வொரு ஜீவனிலும் இருக்கிறார். இதைத் தவிட தனியாக வேறு ஒரு கடவுள் இல்லை. மக்களுக்கு ஒருவன் செய்யும் சேவை அந்த மகேசனுக்கே செய்யும் சேவையாகும். இதுவே உண்மை.
 
 யார் ஒருவர் எதைப் பெறுவதற்கு தகுதியாக இருக்கிறாரோ அதை அடையவிடாமல் தடுப்பதற்கு, பிரபஞ்சத்தில் உள்ள எந்த சக்தியாலும் முடியாது.
 
 உண்மை, தூய்மை, சுயநலமின்மை இது மூன்றும் யாரிடமெல்லாம் இருக்கிறதோ அவர்களை நசுக்கக் கூடிய சக்தி விண்ணுலகு, மண்ணுலகு என எந்த உலகிலும் இல்லை. ஏன் பிரபஞ்சமே எதிர்த்து நின்றாலும் கூட அவர்களை வெல்ல முடியாது.
 
 உங்கள் வாழ்க்கை சிறந்ததாகவும், தூய்மை உள்ளதாகவும் இருந்தால் மட்டுமே நீங்கள் வாழும் சமுதாயம் தூய்மை உடையதாக இருக்கும். ஆகவே முதலில் உங்களை நீங்கள் எண்ணத்தாலும் செயலாலும் தூய்மைப் படுத்திக் கொள்வது அவசியம்.
 
 சிந்தித்து செயலாற்றத் தெரிந்தவன் அதன் வழிச் செல்கிறான். மற்றவன் விதியைக் குறை சொல்கிறான். நம் விதியை நாமே தான் வகுத்துக் கொள்கிறோம். ஆகவே அதற்குப் பிறரைத் தூற்றுவதில் பயனில்லை.
 
 நீ கடவுள் நம்பிக்கை உடையவனோ, அல்லது இறைப்பற்று இல்லாத நாத்திகனோ, எதுவாக இருந்தாலும் சரி, உன் சுக துக்கங்களையும் சுயநலத்தையும் மறந்து உன் கடமைகளை நீ சரிவரச் செய்து வந்தால் போதும். அதுவே மிகப் பெரிய தேச சேவையாகும்.
 
 இல்லறமோ துறவறமோ எதை வேண்டுமானாலும் நீ தேர்ந்தெடு. ஆனால் இல்லறத்தில் இருக்கும் போது பிறருக்காக வாழ். துறவியாகிவிட்டால் பணம், பந்தம், புகழ், பதவி என அனைத்திலிருந்தும் விலகி இரு.
 
 துன்பங்களைக் கண்டு அஞ்சாதே. பெரிய மரத்தின் மீது புயல் காற்று மோதத் தான் செய்யும். கிளறி விடுவதால் நெருப்பு நன்கு எறியத் தான் செய்யும். தலையில் அடிபட்ட பாம்பு முன்னிலும் வேகமாக படமெடுக்கத் தான் செய்யும். ஆகவே துன்பங்களைக் கண்டு துவண்டு விடாமல், உறுதியாய் எதிர்த்து நில். உன்னால் எதுவும் முடியும்.
 
 எப்பொழுதும் விரிந்து மலர்ந்து கொண்டிருப்பது தான் வாழ்க்கை. மாறாக சுருங்கி, மடங்கிக் கொண்டிருப்பதே மரணமாகும். தன்னுடைய சுயநலத்தை மட்டும் கவனித்துக் கொண்டு, சுக போகத்துடன் வாழும் ஒருவனுக்கு நரகத்திலும் இடம் கிடைக்காது.
 
 மற்றவர்களுக்கு நன்மை செய்வதே தர்மம். தீமை செய்வதே பாவம். வலிமையும் ஆண்மையுமே வீரம். பலவீனமும் கோழைத்தனமுமே மரணம். மற்றவர்கள் மீது அன்பு செலுத்துவதே புண்ணியம். பிறரை வெறுத்து ஒதுக்குவதே பாவம்.
-Partha.