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Saturday, November 9, 2013

Emptying the Mind


The following is my COMMENT to the video titled Empty Mind by Brahmarshi Patrion the Speaking Tree: 

This is a great explanation. Very great Patri Ji. 

Being empty means not to have preconceived ideas. Being empty means not to have a prejudiced mind. Being empty means to have an attitude of receptivity and learning. 

Patri Ji says learning, learning, learning, ............. Even in an astral body we are learning. This is really great !! But there are many fake Gurus, Swamis, and Pandits who claim to be great learned ones. They claim to be knowledgeable. This is a sheer stupidity. They have arrived at a dead-end. Enlightenment is a beginning of true learning. Enlightenment means now there is only knowing and there is no knower. You are a pure witness. You are a “Shuddha Chetana”. You are a pure consciousness. And this experience is enlightenment.

The literal meaning of Veda is knowing. It is a state when the knower is no more but only a pure state of knowing. On the path of learning there are three things: Learn, Unlearn, and Relearn. If the learning is new and fresh, and if there is no space in the mind, then empty the mind to relearn. So, these three things, that is, learning, unlearning, and relearning have to happen continuously and simultaneously. 

This is where Socrates says, “The only thing I know is that I know nothing”. And what do we do? We poison him. When we kill a genius we kill ourselves. We must never forget this. 

Patri Ji says not to waste our time. See, if we are interested to experience timelessness or eternity then we can not afford to waste our time. We should neither waste our time nor should waste other’s time. Everybody is free to be ignorant or wise. It is everybody’s choice. 

I learn only when I have the courage to say that I don’t know. This is being empty, and always. Thanks :)

Saturday, October 26, 2013

Tantra, Mantra, and Yantra


The following is my COMMENT to the article titled “Definitely Orgasmic, But Not Sexual” by “Sadhguru Jaggi Vasudevon the Speaking Tree: 

There are three ways: Tantra, Mantra, and Yantra. 

Tantra means transforming through the body. Mantra means transforming through the mind. And Yantra means transforming through the vehicle. 

Tantra means transforming through the body. That is, using all the energy centers of the body including the sex center. One energy center is a stepping-stone to the other other energy center. It is an upward movement of the energy. The energy moves from Muladhara (Sex Center, Root Center) to Sahasrara (Crown Center). As the energy moves up, we experience a higher dimension of the consciousness. At the highest level, that is, at the crown center, the energy becomes the consciousness. Consciousness means a purest form of energy. Now there are no divisions and identifications. An individual experiences the Shuddha Chetana. This is the ultimate state of a climax. After this there is nothing. This is the state of a Sachitananda

Mantra means transforming through the mind. The gateway is through Dhyana or Meditation. Though this process also starts with the body but not necessarily in union with the other body. So, Yoga can be of a great help here. Yama is to start with the body and Samyama is to discover the unity of the body with the divine body. My body is a subset of the divine body. My mind is a subset of the divine mind. And my soul is a subset of the divine soul. And everything is connected. It is only the identification of the mind that creates compartments. And in Samadhi all these divisions are dissolved. In Samadhi we experience a state of no-mind. In a state of no-mind we experience silence. And in a silent state of the mind we experience the divine

The third path is that through Yantra

Yantra means transforming through the vehicle. This is a path to those who are part of an adventure sport. For example, you can not transform Arjuna without a bow and an arrow. You can not transform Bheema without a wrestling match. You can not transform Ekalavya without a bow, an arrow, and a statue of a Guru. And in a near death situation they may experience the glimpse of the divine. And this experience could be a turning point in their lives. And they may then walk on either of the above two paths. 

Only in three situations an individual experiences a state of no-mind or thoughtlessness. And this experience is divine, and this experience is blissful. And these three situations are: (1) a state of no-mind through Dhyana or meditation, (2) a state of ultimate climax through sex, (3) a state of an almost death through a vehicle or an equipment or Yantra

All paths ultimately culminate towards the center of the divine. It is just like how a dewdrop slips from a lotus flower and merges into a pond and becomes one with the pond. There is now no difference between the dew drop and the pond. It is just like how all the rivers fall into an ocean, meet and merge with the ocean and become one with the ocean. Now there is no division between the rivers and the ocean. It is just like how in a silent state of the ocean all the waves disappear in the ocean and become one with the ocean. Now there is no difference between the waves and the ocean. 

The existential experience of this union is a part of spirituality. Thanks :)

Wednesday, July 3, 2013

Speaking Tree is Speaking


What is the speaking tree speaking? How is it relevant to enlightenment and spirituality? The value of the speaking tree came to prominence only after Buddha. It derived its significance and meaning after Buddha’s enlightenment under the Bodhi Tree. The whole credit goes to Buddha. It seems as if existence itself wants to speak. The whole existence itself expresses something through all its expressions - trees, birds, mountains, etc. The whole of the existence wants to speak to us. May be we do not understand the true meaning hidden in all its expressions. In the last Tsunami the maximum destruction happened to people and their properties and least damage has happened to the animals. The damage that happened to the animals was almost negligible. The reason was very simple and natural that the animals moved to mountains and other places of higher altitude because they could feel the Tsunami much in advance. That means the existence emits signals just like our mobile phone signals. The animals could feel and know this in advance because they are very closer to the nature unlike the human beings. As we are advancing in science and technology we are moving away from the nature. The blockbuster english movie Avatar is somewhat on these lines. The existential truth is that the existence is our first Guru.

Let us move now to the Speaking Tree or the Bodhi Tree. The legend is that Buddha used to meditate under the Bodhi Tree. One day he looked at the Bodhi Tree. As he moved deeper, it was a great amazement. He was not able to make out the beginning and the end of the tree. This is a speciality and mystery of the Bodhi Tree. When the Bodhi Tree grows older and older its roots travel from the ground to the top of the tree to various branches and from the top again to beneath the ground. It does not stop there. The roots from top and bottom also surround the trunk. Separate roots go from the ground to the branches and some other from the branches to the ground. Over a period of time they become thicker and thicker. The hanging roots sometimes appear more bigger than the trunk. In an age-old tree it becomes very difficult to recognize which is a trunk and which are the roots. Some Bodhi Trees are hundreds of years old. The biggest confusion that arises is, which is a trunk and which are its roots? The biggest confusion is, where is the beginning and where is the end? To Buddha this was the first glimpse into the nature of the Universe that it is beginningless and endless. This was a first insight to him of the nature of Brahma. That it is ever expanding, infinite, and beginningless and endless. Buddha resolved in that moment that he will get up from his Dhyana or Meditation only after knowing this truth and not before. He went deeper into meditation and attained to Buddhahood. And this was the beginning of his enlightenment. He attained and again became natural. His innocence is reclaimed. He arrived and it was a great home-coming. He became absolutely natural and started living in tune with nature. He became one with the Cosmos. His heartbeat started beating in tune with the heartbeat of the whole Universe. He became absolutely one with the whole. For the first time in his life he became whole and holy. This was the greatest truth that the existence has revealed to him.

The insight of the quantum physics today is that the Universe is an unbroken wholeness. The Universe is neither discrete nor continuous. We are all an integrated parts of one whole and one entity. The quantum physics has for the first time revealed a far greater and deeper truth that we can never behave as distinct and separate entities. The separation and silos only speak of our very narrow and rigid view. This only indicates that we are not moving, changing, expanding, and growing. According to the quantum physicists the Universe is now called a participative Universe. It is an interdependent, inter-twined, interrelated, and interconnected Universe. We must all take a quantum leap and understand that transcendental truth.

Let us bow down to the Speaking Tree. Let us bow down to the Bodhi Tree. Let us bow down to the nature. Let us bow down to the existence. Let us pray and seek the deeper insights. Let us bow down to the eternal Guru. Let us be the true seekers. Let this be our prayer. Let this be our true Karma. And let this be our true Dharma.

This is my blog on the Speaking Tree published on 20-March-2011.

The following are some of the replies to the COMMENTS on the blog:

There is no nature of Brahma. Brahma itself is nature. Nature means Brahma. Existence means Brahma. There is no separate Brahma. Nature and Brahma are not two separate things. When we become natural, we become Brahmic or Nirvanic

The second part, that is, bowing down to God and not the Bodhi Tree. I have come across a beautiful Sufi proverb. It says, “I searched for God and found only myself. I searched for myself and found only God”. If we are this end then God is the other end. You are saying why should we bow down to the tree. We should actually bow down to God. But we don’t know the other end. Where is God? Who is God? How is He? How to pray or bow down to Him? There is no map. There is no address. There is no landline number. There is no fax number. There is no mobile number. There is no email. There is no website of God. How to reach? This is a big problem. Buddha used to say that our Body is a door to our Buddhahood. We can see our body. We can see and feel our thoughts and emotions. We can feel the stillness of our mind. We can know the bliss of our inner silence. So, this end is easy to see. By knowing this end we may know the other end, who knows? By knowing ourselves we may know God. To me the best thing is to start from the known. Known to unknown, and then to the unknowable is the life journey. Thanks :) 

21-March-2011