Swami Ramananda, who has been a part of the Sidhabari ashram for many years, passed away peacefully on August 2, 2015. He was one of the founding members of Chinmaya Mission, Hubli. On Pujya Gurudev’s request, he moved to Sidhabari with his wife in the mid-eighties and served for more than two decades as the manager and then CEO of the ashram. He received sannyasa diksha in 2005 and continued to lead a quiet and retired life in Sidhabari. He will be remembered for his gentle ways and calm demeanour, his selfless service and deep devotion.
Author Archives: Web Master
YEP AMERICA 2016
YEP is an initiative by Chinmaya Yuva Kendra (CHYK), the global youth wing of Chinmaya Mission. YEP was designed and conducted in 2003, especially for young adults, to learn the principles of Vedanta, serve the community, and grow as dynamic, positive contributors to society. Graduates of YEP are known as Yuvaveers. Since 2003, more than 350 Yuvaveers have graduated the program. Inspired by YEP India, YEP America was initiated. A total of 51 Yuvaveers have graduated from Yep America 2013 and 2014. In both India and the US, the YEP program has followed the age-old gurukula system of learning, where students live and learn in the ashram with their teachers.
YEP will be conducted in Chinmaya Mangalam, Barry, Texas, from June 6-July 27th, 2016 under the guidance of His Holiness Swami Tejomayananda (Head of Chinmaya Mission Worldwide). The program will be led by Swami Sarveshanandaji (Resident Acharya of CM Dallas-Fort Worth and National Director of CHYK West), Swami Ramakrishnanandaji (Acharya of Chinmaya International Foundation), Acharya Vivek Guptaji (Deputy Director of CHYK West) and other Acharyas from Chinmaya Mission West. Visiting faculty will also be drawnfrom management industries.
The application and more information can be found online at: https://www.chykwest.com/yep/
There are 2 options for payment and service:
For those who choose to serve full-time, taking time off from work or school to serve for 10 months in India, there will be no cost for the course.
For those who choose to serve part-time alongside their studies or work, the cost will be $1500 if the application is received before August 30th and $2000 if it is received before May 31st.
May 31st is the final deadline, and after April 2nd there will be no refunds.
Please find our poster attached.
Contact us at yep@chykwest.com with any questions.
Performing The Right Action
Online link : http://www.speakingtree.in/
We have no choice but to perform action. So it becomes important to know what we should do and what we should not do. The choice is between the types of actions to be performed. Swami Chinmayananda’s call was ‘We Can We Must’. But in this respect it is necessary to use our discrimination. We should not do everything we can. We can tell lies, steal, cheat, loot, and even kill. All this we can, but that does not mean we must.
First understand what we should do. Next, figure out what is possible to do and then act. In Chapter 3 of the Bhagawad Geeta Bhagavan first explains the types of actions which we should not do. First, we can just sit quietly and foolishly, refusing to act because of laziness or escapism; second we can perform actions which are immoral, unethical, illegal or unconstitutional – prohibited actions (nishedha karma).Third we can perform actions prompted by selfish desire for material gains (sakama karma). It is true that nobody can act without thinking of the gains, but if the desire is always for something material or gross, it becomes a problem. Like the person who in return for working for a spiritual organization expects to receive some monetary compensation! A story will better illustrate this point. Once a peon sitting outside an office was asked if the officer was inside. In response he stretched out an open palm! Only after the necessary amount was placed in it, did he answer the question. This is an example of a prohibited action as well as a selfish one.
By remaining inactive one may end up suppressing desires which can cause untold problems, or one can perform wrong actions and go to jail, or only continue to fulfill selfish desires, thereby creating more desires and greed. A selfish person though not engaged in illegal actions, only seeks material gains, nothing higher or nobler. Once a materialistic person asked his friend, given to fasting, the reason for doing so. The friend replied that he was fasting to acquire merits to go to heaven and there feast. He was fasting now to feast later! Even while fasting, his mind was on the feast. The other person said “You better feast now – how can you be sure you will go to heaven!” So all these are self-centred activities.
Bhagavan says that though all these karmas are possibilities, we should not perform such actions. The only actions we should do are the duties enjoined on us. Duties are wonderful – we don’t have to go in search of them, they find us! We have duties towards the family we are born in; duties associated with the school and college we attend. A job along with rights, salary and working hours, brings with it duties as well. So we have duties at home, to our educational institutions, in the workplace, in addition to social obligations, civic duties, and religious duties.
All these put together are called niyata karma. Niyata karma can be classified into two kinds: nitya karma or daily duties and naimittika karma, duties on special occasions. These occasional duties take precedence over daily duties. In general we all know our daily duties, yet we don’t do them properly because of our personal likes and dislikes. When we allow our likes and dislikes to interfere with the performance of our duties they become stronger. So much so that when faced with a difficult situation we are unable to determine our duty.
Summing up, Bhagavan says that action is a must. For a person who sits down doing nothing, even healthy living is not possible. Yet we have a great love for sitting idle. A simple story will illustrate this: in a classroom a teacher asked the students to write an essay on “If I were to become a millionaire”. She noticed that one student was not writing anything. When she questioned him, he answered, “That is what I would do if I were a millionaire – nothing!”
To clear our misconceptions, Sri Krishna has clearly explained the actions to be avoided and the actions to be performed.
Swami Swaroopanandaji’s visit to San Jose
Glimpse of Swami Swaroopanandaji’s Hanuman Chalisa lectures and Story telling with children of San Jose.
The Senses – Are You in Command?
Online link : http://www.speakingtree.in/
Lord Krishna explained and proved to Arjuna the inevitability of action. It is not possible to give up action so long as one is living. The consequences of remaining physically still while allowing the mind to dwell on sense pleasures were also spelt out by the Lord.
What happens to a person who while acting in the physical plane, keeps his senses under control?
We have wrong notions of control. We think restrain or control means not to see, not to hear, and not to touch. To control a thing does not mean ‘not to use’ it. This is like saying ‘I have perfect control over my car; it has never met with an accident – because I never use it!’
The best example of mastery is sited in the Bhagavad Gita itself. A turtle has the ability to withdraw its limbs into its hard shell the moment it senses danger; once the threat has passed it continues walking on its path. Learning from the turtle, control or mastery should be understood as the ability to withdraw the senses from non-conducive and unfavourable environments; conversely, to engage them in positive pursuits. A good driver is one who can steer his car through traffic jams, slow down or speedup as the situation requires. Such a person has control over his car. This is mastery.
For the driver of any kind of vehicle it is of the utmost importance that the vehicle remains under control under all circumstances. Once a man riding a horse lost control. As the horse galloped, he was seen desperately hanging onto its neck. Another horseman passing by asked him, “Where are you going?” He replied “Ask the horse!” So too our senses are taking us for a ride. We have no control over where they are dragging us. Sense organs are meant for experiencing the world of objects, but we should know which objects to perceive and enjoy; most importantly, which objects to avoid. The senses should be controlled by right thinking. In the prayer bhadram karnebhisrunuyam…..it does not say ‘may we not see anything ‘, it says ‘may we see and hear what is auspicious’. The senses are meant to be used but use them correctly.
A person who has gained mastery over his senses by controlling them with his mind (that is, by right thinking) is advised to engage in action with the attitude of karma yoga, without attachment. For such a person Bhagavan says there is no suppression only an unfoldment of the personality. He excels. His mind reaches a higher level of thinking and he evolves. Even while remaining engaged in activity his mind is not polluted nor is he bound by his actions.
Shravana Sadhana Series – Saarathi No Sathvaro
Shravana Sadhana Series – Saarathi No Sathvaro (Series of Bhagvad Geeta Jnana Yajnas)
As a part of Pujya Gurudev’s Birth Centenary Year Celebrations, under the leadership of Br. Atharvana Chaitanyaji, Chinmaya Mission – Ahmedabad concluded a series of Geeta jnana yajnas under the title of “Saarthi no Sathavaro” (Company of the Divine Charioteer). The shravana sadhana series comprised of monthly jnana yajnas on one chapter each of Shrimad Bhagvad Geeta in different parts of Ahmedabad which was well attended by many curious seekers from across the city.
The series was concluded in a grand manner by organising the final jnana yajna on Chapter 18 of Bhagvad Geeta at Tagore Memorial Hall, Ahmedabad on – 1st to 9th August 2015. This yajna was hosted by a total of 100 fortunate Yajamanas who offered their generous contributions unto Pujya Gurudev and also performed Samashti Guru Paduka Puja on 2nd August. Everyday more than 400 listeners revelled in the talks on this special chapter summarising the entire Bhagvad Geeta. Br. Atharvanaji’s talks on the beautiful verses of the holy text in his unique style and a very simple language were very well appreciated by the seekers and were also well covered by media. On the last day of the yajna, the seekers also participated in Sampoorna Geeta Parayana and watched a small presentation by the members of Chinmaya Yuva Kendra. Throughout this series of yajnas, all – the organisers, sevaks and Mission members were overwhelmed by having got the opportunity to experience Pujya Gurudev’s presence and grace in abundance.
Chinmaya Lifestyle Series – Workshops for Chinmaya Setukaris: Chinmaya Setukaris Ahmedabad organized a workshop titled “Drishti” on 26th July 2015, for the young adults of the city at ParamDham. Around 50 enthusiastic bridge builders got together on a rainy Sunday and reflected on the burning questions of life and sought answers to those under the guidance of Br. Atharvana Chaitanyaji. Through interactive games and activities, the seekers found the answers to all their doubts and discovered a way to develop the vision of Oneness. While the parents were learning lessons to correct their vision of life, special activities were conducted for the children by the sevaks of CHYK and study groups. Forgetting the stress and pangs of one’s everyday routine life, spending half a day filled with fun and knowledge with like minded people, returned with inspired and rejuvenated minds.
Independence Day 2015
Pujya Guruji’ s message on this Independence Day Independence is happiness. Work for peace, prosperity & happiness. When these are there security will be there.
In world total independence not possible psychologically we have to be independent. We pay homage to freedom fighters who allowed us to stand here today. Jai Hind!
‘Action – The Inescapable Law of Life’
Online link :http://www.speakingtree.in/public/spiritual-blogs/masters/science-of-spirituality/action—the-inescapable-law-of-life
In the Bhagavad Gita Bhagavan explains to Arjuna that it is not possible to give
up action. No one can remain even for a moment without performing action. We
are all compelled to act by the qualities of Prakriti.
What is action? Any kind of activity at the level of the body, mind or intellect is
considered to be an action. Even if we say that I will just sit and not move that
too requires effort – but that is also doing. Even during periods of physical
inactivity, we do not stop breathing or thinking. All the physiological activities
of the body continue. When hunger, thirst or sleep overtakes us, we are forced
to act. Try to stop a sneeze or a yawn. It is not possible. These are only natural
responses. Apart from these, our desires, likes and dislikes prompt us into
action. In short, it means is that as long we are alive, we cannot remain without
actions.
Some people believe that the philosophy of Gita preaches that we
perform karmas, actions. This is clearly not its message. When the Gita says
that you cannot remain without acting, to say ‘do karma’ is meaningless. Do’s
and don’ts apply only when there is an option. For example a human being can
be told to, ‘be a vegetarian’. This instruction is possible, because man can
exercise the choice of being either a vegetarian or a non-vegetarian. But can you
tell a lion or tiger to be a vegetarian? Tigers are pre-programmed to be
carnivores. They have no options. Similarly, to do nothing is not an option for
man. Act he must. The Gita instructs man on the kind of karmas to perform and
the attitude with which to act.
That nobody can remain without action is an undeniable truth. However, some
may feel that they can remain without doing any action and so restrain all the
organs of action, but what about the mind of such a person? From our
experience, especially while trying to meditate, we know that the mind cannot
be stopped from wandering and remembering things from the past. That is
because to remember is one of the functions of the mind. Our memories are
related to the world of sense objects, of form, smell, touch, taste and sound.
They lie dormant in the mind; when the organs of action are restrained they
surface. The mind indulges and takes pleasure in these memories.
Bhagavan says that a person who remains physically still but indulges in
sensuous memories is a person of false conduct or a hypocrite. Outwardly he is
not indulging in activity but mentally he is. Though not cheating anybody else,
he is certainly cheating himself. Such a person who restrains all physical action
but continues to brood over pleasures will one day be forced by those desires
into action. We know that desires in our mind arise not just when we see objects
but also when we dwell on objects. These desires force a person into action.
Physically restraining the body but allowing the mind to dwell on various
pleasures and objects enjoyed in the past can lead to indolence, suppression,
false/wrong conduct and eventually one’s own destruction.
Gurudev on LAW OF KARMA – From the Souvenir of Gnana Yagna – Kuwait , 1971
The Law of Karma has been often misunderstood as the Law of Destiny. There is indeed a lot of difference between the Law of Karma and the Law of Destiny. Had our Law of Karma been equal to the Law of Destiny, the Hindu civilization would have been long ago ended like the Roman or the Egyptian civilization. The Law of Destiny has a corroding effect upon the human heart and in a short time it renders its followers to be more in-effectual lotus-eaters. If a nation depends entirely upon the Law of Destiny to guide it, it shall fall and become a country of narrow-minded, inactive animals.
On the other hand, a people believing in the Law of Karma and who live up to it become a generation of spiritual giants and dynamic citizens. The Law of Karma is based upon the final conclusion that this life is not an end in itself but is just one of the little incidents in the Eternal Existence of each of us. Among us, each one is a type and has a life different from the other. The destiny of one is obviously different from that of the other. Had this been the very first and the last of our births; we should have had a more uniformity of experience in life.
Let us suppose that we have just ‘fallen’ from Truth or Reality into this momentous and calamitous misunderstanding, then we should not have such a dissimilar scheme, of each Ego living its own life of special joys and woes. When we enquire, with the causes of great differences among human beings we are driven to the conclusion that, having risen from different ’causes.’ each of us should manifest as a different ‘effect.’ Effects depend upon their causes. This life in which we are living is only one of our incar-nations. We have had many incarnations in the past, and probably, many more shall come to our lot. From birth to death and from death to birth, the whirl goes on, but we do not appreciate it or understand it because we are viewing life from a very circumscribed point of view.
We think that fife means the period spent by us between our birth and our death. and what we see and experience around during this interval is life. Supposing there hangs a picture painted on a canvas. In order to see the entire picture painted on it, we have to step back to some distance, and only then can we see the entire view, the rhythm of the colours, the beauty of the curves, etc. Similarly, when Life is viewed, in its nearer perspective, we find that it is illogical, unrhythmic, etc. In detachment we will have to move away from our present Life to view the whole Life and understand it as such.
Some of us blame the Creator for our unfortunate lives, and despair by saying ‘it is all our FATE.’ You should understand that there is a Rhythm in the Universe, in that the planets ‘move’ regularly, the stars ‘ride their appointed paths, etc. Everywhere there is the Law of Rhythm, and everything conforms to that Law. Only when we come to the subject of Life, we say “there is no Rhythm and there is no logic or system in it.”
It is not so. We are the various ‘effects’ rising from different ’causes.’ The ’causes’ being different, the ‘effects’ are different. Thus, each of our actions of the past has its own reactions, and each of us must have a treasure-house of the entire-past-actions. This is called the Sancita Karma. We all should understand that at the end of living the ‘fruits’ allotted for the life are called Prarabdha; on departing, each should take the next form ac-cording to the pattern ordained by the ripened ones in our total Sancita Karma
Let me explain it more clearly. Suppose I have a piece of land divided into plots. In one, I plant coconut seedlings, in the second seeds of lady’s-finger and in the third mango seeds. In order to germinate, grow and yield fruit, each seed would take its own time. This is very well known to us. Similarly, each of our action has got its own time limit for its fruition. Every action has got its own reaction; certain actions give their reactions immediately, while others will provide their reactions only after an inter-val.
To enjoy and suffer the reactions of the past actions, each of us need certain joys and sorrows, and in order to bring forth these required experiences, each must have a definite ‘field’ of his own experiences. The word Loka does merely indicate its generally accepted meaning: the world. Loka means the special world in which I live my own inner experiences, the external world-of-objects remaining almost the same for all. Loka etymologically means a field of experience.
Again, people misunderstand the real meaning of Prarabdha when they take the word to mean all the failure, impotence and weakness in them. If we are to be guided by this delusion, the Prarabdha, in every act of ours, there is no room for self-improvement through self-effort. There are some who console themselves by saying that, ‘I have no faith or love in God, and it is my ‘Prarabdha.’ This is a defeatist mentality. So far as we entertain and live in a defeatist mentality we cannot expect any progress. Without a personal morale we cannot work for our progress.
From where does this Purusartha come in if Prarabdha orders every action? That we have been given by the Divine Being a limited freedom is the truth. For example, we cannot bend a piece of rail as it is, but supposing this rail-piece is beaten out and made into a chain, the rail-matter be-comes very easily pliable. Similarly, when a cow is tied to a rope in the centre of a pasture land, she is not free to graze the entire field but she can move freely within that circle drawn by that rope. • Similarly, man, though he has taken his body to live a fixed Prarabdha, can reach the Supreme Goal of life by living the freedom allowed to him from moment to moment.
No doubt, we have come here into this world to enjoy and suffer for certain of our past Karrnas, through the circumstances ordered by our Prarabdha. And there is provision for us to discriminate and act rightly. For example, is there not a certain amount of freedom in choosing whether we should go to a cinema or a Satsang? Every moment in our life there is a challenge posed by these lines: ‘Shall I do this or shall I do that.’ There are two ways to deal with each challenge. Two distinct paths are open to us – the Path of the Good and the Path of the Pleasant. We find ourselves from moment to moment standing at the junction of these two paths. Often we are at a loss to decide which path to pursue. There is a tussle between Satan and God in us at such a moment of trial. By adopting the Path of the Pleasant, man cannot get, in the long run, his full satisfaction. This is the experience of all. One who has adopted the path of the Good gains peace of mind. Slowly, the former, under the impact of repeated disappointments, comes to think that he should go through the Path of the Good.
The mind is made up of a soft matter, as it were. As each thought passes through it, an ‘impression’ is left, on the mind-stuff like a scratch and when similar thoughts are repeated, it deepens into a canal. Every subsequent thought wave has got a tendency to flow through that ready-made thought-canal. Thus, if the impression or the canal made is of good thought-waves, then a good character is maintained and strengthened by the subsequent thought-waves flowing irresistibly in that direction.
Let us take an example and examine the working of the mind. If you have got a tendency to get angry and want to nut out that tendency you should first of all feel sorrowful or repentant about it. Then you will have already suppressed the anger to some extent. Of course, pent-up anger will burst forth at a later date if you merely suppress ti. But, if you be intelligent, you should divert that anger-energy into some other profitable direction. You should not succumb to the anger-weakness, meekly saying, “It is my Prarabdha.”
Carve out a new canal in your mind with repeated good thought-waves. Repeat to yourself, ‘I love all,’ I am very very tolerant.’ Go on repeating the self-suggestive thoughts, ‘I am kind,’ I will never get angry,’ I am tolerant,’ etc., and in a very short time, you will observe that you have no anger at all in your mental make-up. First of all, you should cognize things. Be aware of your weakness. Be fully aware of them. Man is his mind. He is the very composition of his mind. When one performs some actions, repeatedly, one’s mind gets fixed with certain impressions. It is in a world of reactions related to the outer world-of-objects that we live. The quality of one’s experiences depends upon the quality of the mind which one brings up to undergo the experience. The mind, being what it is, is ordered and set by the various impressions, it has gathered in its different transactions in Life. Thus, when we control and chasten the motives and thoughts in the mind, we purify it. Each moment of our life, we are not only living the fruits of the past actions, but also creating those for tomorrow. Each moment we are pre-paring ourselves for the lives yet to come. Prarabdha is caused by the actions done in the past It is only the very self-effort of the past. So, if our Prarabdha be a sorrowful one now, let us do such acts today so that we can now determine or order a happier life for us in the future.
The Law of Destiny does not ex plain to us how, even while we live the preordained and Prarabdha-controlled pattern of circumstances, we can have in the immediate moments a freedom to create afresh. This idea is not explained in the Law of Destiny. So it shatters our morale and a soul-killing defeatist mentality comes to choke us. It takes away the fire, the enthusiasm, the grit in Man and makes him a dull inactive individual, a mere dumb animal
A happier morrow is built up only when we live today a Life Divine. Religion has been asking us to entertain and live such values of life so that while living them we shall be creating an ordered life of fuller joys for the morrow. Not only in this life but also in the next life we shall be able to enjoy the fruits of our Divine actions. Use the main righteous path; avoid the by-lanes, the narrow, thorny, unrighteous path. We must start and constantly keep on to the right path, to reach the Supreme, our Goal. If our course be in the right direction, then we shall certainly reach in time, our destination, the Supreme.
Yet another way of looking at it and coming to the same conclusion is by reviewing life in the light of Time-flow, wherein the future, through the present, is ever becoming the past. Anything that is now in the future must in time arrive to become the present—and erelong should pass on to be the past.
We have already said that human intellect cannot rest without seeking the cause of things. This causation-hunting-urge in us is not generally investigated into seriously and thoroughly, by the students. If we do so, we shall discover certain facts in it which shall reveal to us the inner meaning and the deeper significances of the Law of Karma.
From the seed the tree comes: the seed is the cause, and the tree is the effect. From cotton the cloth is made: cotton is the cause, and cloth is the effect. Now, in all conceivable examples the cause is, like the father of a child, anterior, and the effect, like the child born, posterior, with reference to time: father was in existence before the son was born. Cause is thus that which was, and the effect is that which is. The past causes the present; the present will, therefore, cause the future!
In short, it is, therefore, said that the future is not a mystery—an un-known miracle that man must wait for its stunning revelations. The past modified in the present alone is the future. The things to come are not ordered by a mere continuity of the past it can never be. This freedom to modify the past, and thereby create a future, for the better or for the worse, is Purusartha: self-effort.
To illustrate: if down a river, running at 2 miles an hour, a log is floating, then it will also move at the same weed at which the river flows. But supposing, the log is fitted with a motor and manned by an intelligent driver; the log will have an independent movement of itself—no doubt, conditioned by the flow of the river. When the speedometer shows 10 miles an hour, the log will move 12 miles in an hour down the river, and only 8 miles an hour, if it is moving up stream. The flow of the river will always be there; but due to the machine and the intelligence of the driver, the log has developed a limited freedom’ of movement now.
Similarly, the plant and the animal kingdoms, like the log that floats down, irresistibly in the flood of the past, move, directed and guided by their natural instincts and mere impulses. But on reaching the human level, man acquires his reasoning capacity and is a captain in his discriminative faculty. Using these two, he can steer the ship of his life safely to his destination—the Goal, the Ideal.
Viewed carefully the present in itself has no existence; it is a mingling of the past and the future…the passage of the future to the past is the present. The living present is at once the tomb of the past and the womb of the future. This tomb-womb present has roots going deep into the past and branches spreading around everywhere into the future.
To consider, therefore, that the present is but a product of the past (Prarabdha) is undignified; to recognise then that the future is but a product of the present (Purusartha) is unintelligent. There is no slavery; nor is there full freedom. There is a limited freedom, which, if intelligently used, can redeem us from all entanglements.
Thus, the Law of Karma when correctly understood is the greatest force of vitality in Indian philosophy. It makes us the architects of our own future. We are not helpless pawns in the hands of a mighty tyrant—God, who, it is believed, has created us so weak and tearful to lead our lives of limitations and pains. If we are weak or sorrowful it is all because of our own wilful actions. In our ignorance, we in the past had pursued certain negative values of life, and like a Frankenstein, their fruits have come up now to give us the pattern of circumstances we are living today.
Never mind. Take heart. By living rightly today, the Divine values of love, kindness, tolerance, mercy, etc., we shall order a nobler pattern for our future. By careful self-policing, detect the wrong tendencies in us. Eliminate them through constant and wilful effort. Develop Positivity and thus come to be the God of your own future life. Be a GOD!
Live Streaming of Pujya Guruji’s Yajna in London
Chinmaya Mission UK is pleased to announce the live streaming of Pujya Guruji’s yagna in London titled ‘Timeless Questions, Eternal Answers’, key verses from Sri Rama Gita from the Ramacharitamanasa by Goswami Tulsidas.
The talks will be broadcast over 5 evening sessions from August 5 to 9 2015. The details are provided below:
Live video stream
The yagna is being broadcast via live video stream at 19.30 British Standard Time (BST) each evening from Wednesday 5 to Saturday 8 August 2015 and from 18.15 BST on Sunday 9 August, to include a special Hindustani and western classical fusion concert.
Link: http://chinmayauk.org/video-category/?cat=live-events
Audio replay
If you have missed a session, or would like to listen again to a particular portion of the talks, the audio recordings will be uploaded each day after the talks and are available for replay for a limited period only, until 16 August.
Link: http://chinmayauk.org/mp3-cat/?cat=ramagita
Please contact cmukvideos@gmail.com if you have any questions regarding the above.