Even if You Live with Your Guru in an Ashram, It Does Not Mean Anything!


Swami Muktananda: “I do not agree with those who identify the Guru with his physical body, or who mistake physical proximity to the Guru for inner realisation. When Lord Rama and Lord Krishna were here in this world, millions of people saw them, but I don’t think all of them were liberated. Sadhana is a discipline. The purer you are, the greater your sadhana is.

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What’s the point of mere physical closeness to the Guru if you’re not sensitive to him? If you do sadhana, you are transformed. If you do not do sadhana, what does it matter how long you were close to the Guru? Sadhana has its own end, its onw fruit. There are very few people who really do sadhana sincerely.

One must be worthy to gain the knowledge of Brahman, This worthuiness is acquired by service to the Guru. But in serving, one must also have an intense desire for liberation. Without this desire, even service to the Guru will not bear fruit. Many people did personal service to my Guru for many years, but who knows what they gained spiritually?

Source: 129-130, Bhagawan Nityananda of Ganeshpuri

Aren’t Ashram and Being with a Mahatma Safe?


Question: Is it true that people who move into an ashram to live with a mahatma are spiritually secure?

Answer: What we may not recognise is that fundamentally an ashram life can still be a worldly life. If there isn’t sufficient purification, the same desires for self-satisfaction — even though they may come in a more noble guise such as service — can be our objectives in an ashram just as they were in the world. So then, to develop a dispassion at a more subtle level, and to see that there is no lasting happiness in simply living an ashram life becomes essential. (pg. 101-102, Trust God by Swami Atmaswarupananda [Divine Life Society: Rishikesh)

Question: It has generally been said that being in the proximity of a Mahatma is sufficient for one’s liberation. Isn’t it true?

Answer: Many disciples think that all that is required is to (go) to a guru’s ashram, and (their) spiritual lives will look after themselves. This doesn’t seem to be borne out by experience. If we want our spiritual life to advance, then, more is required than surrender to the guru and service of the guru. (pg. 164, Trust God by Swami Atmaswarupananda [Divine Life Society: Rishikesh).

The seeker has to realise that in the ultimate analysis, “It all depends upon me.” There are so many cases of people spending years in the close proximity of a great spiritual teacher and yet not changing at all. The reason would seem to be that in those circumstances they never took responsibility for their own spiritual life. (pg. 133, Trust God by Swami Atmaswarupananda [Divine Life Society: Rishikesh)

Importance of Japa, scriptural studies and discipline


Don’t think that repetition is a small thing. Repetition is the whole key to Self-realisation. For example: mantra japa. We don’t even have to know the meaning of our mantra. That is why Amma says, “It is enough if you just repeat it. Don’t even bother about the meaning.” Just practise that repetition again and again and again. Gradually, it will purify the mind. It will decrease the thoughts, and then everything will start to reveal itself.
…If a mahatma tells me to do a thing, God is telling me to do that thing. That is how we should also interact with great souls. They they tell us to do a thing, don’t take it so lightly, as if somebody on the street has told you to do a thing. Take it that God Himself has told you to do that.
…If you take a book written by a mahatma like Tulasidas, or you take the Bhagavata, or the Mahabarata, or any book that is written by a rishi, a sage, and you go on reading it again and again and again, finally what happens? The Grace of that rishi starts to dawn in you, in spite of who or what you are; the divine knowledge comes: the Grace. And then, you get the bliss, and insight , ecstasy, and intuition. There is no other way. We can exercise our intellect any way, but we won’t get it. We have to get it only through Grace, and Grace is got through repetition and discipline. There is no other way. 
Mantras are like that also. Just go on repeating it, again and again, and the Grace will dawn.
Don’t think that habit and repetition are a bunch of nonsense. If Amma says to regularly repeat your mantra, or regularly do your meditation, she is not just saying it; it is not just to get a good habit. That is the way to get Grace, and you can’t get Grace in any other way. We have to develop that discipline and that habit.
(pgs. 122-123, 124, 125, Talks, Vol.3) 

Why Celebrate the Birthdays of Mahatmas?


Question: If the Soul is immortal, why does Swamiji celebrate his birthday which belongs to the body? 

Swami Sivananda: “I do not celebrate my birthday. It is the devotees who do it. Celebration of such birthdays is equal to worship of Para Brahman. Worship of the Guru is worship of Para Brahman. The devotees take delight in celebrating the birthday, and they are benefited, uplifted. A spiritual wave is created year after year when the birthday is celebrated, and more and more people get a chance of knowing the existence of the Divine Life Society and my teachings. The celebrations of the birthday is an annual reminder to the aspirants of the purpose of their life. It is a fillip to their Sadhana. The pious, receptive attitude prevalent on such an occasion draws forth the grace of the Guru and God upon the devotees. The thoughts of peace, love, devotion, etc., sent out by the innumerable devotees that assemble together to celebrate the birthday go a long way to promote peace, harmony and spiritual well-being in the land.

“It is not without purpose that the Hindus celebrate the birthdays of religious leaders, saints and sages, such as Buddha Jayanti, Sankara Jayanti, Mahavira Jayanti, etc. The Hindu calendar is spotted with many such Jayantis and other holy days, so that the observance of these Jayantis and holy days may give the needed spiritual impetus to people and they may strive with increased zeal for the attainment of the purpose of life, viz., God-realization. The more we have of such special, holy days, the more we have the chance of being inspired to intensify our spiritual progress.” (pg. 44, May I Answer That?) 

Swami Krishnananda: “The incarnations of God are supposed to come with a power of divinity,whereas the sages and saints are supposed to go with the power of divinity. As the one comes with Divine force, the other goes with that Divine force. This is why we lay much importance on the birthdays of Incarnations and the Mahasamadhi days of Siddhas and Masters. Such a holy occasion we observe every year on the Punyatithi Aradhana Mahotsava of revered Sri Swami Sivanandaji Maharaj.” (Chap. 9, Spiritual Import of Religious Festivals: Message given on the 3rd of August, 1972, the Ninth Punyatithi-Aradhana of H.H. Sri Swami Sivanandaji Maharaj)

Mata Amirtanandamayi: “…When we celebrate the birthdays of great souls like Christ, Krishna…, there is one prayer that we should never forget to recite, ‘Please bless us to realize the eternal ‘I’ in me.’ This prayer should be part and parcel of our spiritual life. Amma doesn’t want Her children to forget this prayer when they celebrate (them).” (24 December 2007 — Amritapuri: http://www.amritapuri.org/859/eternal.aum)Mata Amirtanandamayi: “Mother is happy to see her children happy, and happily undertaking service activities on the occasion of Her birthday. Mother gets no speacial joy beyond that from these celebrations. She has agreed to all these only to see the happiness of Her children. Children, what makes Amma truly happy is seeing you love one another and being compassionate to others. Amma is happier to see you clean a nearby dirty sewer than to see you wash Her feet and worship them… What makes Mother truly happy is when Her children consider Her birthday as the day for wiping the tears of those who are suffering.” (Birthday Message [1990], pg. 11, Lead Us to Light, Vol.2)

Force of Samskaras By Sri Swami Sivananda


Some time ago, there lived in Karur, a big mercantile town, in Trichinopoly District, a fully developed Raja Yogi, by name Sadasiva Brahman. He was as famous as Trilinga Swami of Benares. He used to sit in Samadhi for six months. He was a great Titikshu and a Vairagi. He used to have a Kowpeen only and sleep on bare ground. Once, there was a huge flood on the Cauveri River, and Sadasiva Brahman, who was in Samadhi, was carried away by the floods and deposited in some other place. One day, he was lying on the bare ground and had two pieces of bricks as his pillow. Some boys who were tending the cows mocked at him saying: “Look at this Mahatma; he has nothing except a Kowpeen and yet, he wants comforts. He wants a pillow. Can he not lie down without pillow?” This little word produced a sudden vibration in his mind and affected him a bit. He immediately threw away the bricks.

[Admin’s Note: Trilinga or Trailanga Swami lived to be around 300 years old. He was Sri Ramakrishna Paramahamsa’s contemporary. The latter had gone to see Him. And He very affectionately referred to Trilinga Swami as the “Walking Shiva of Varnasi”. In “Autobiography of a Yogi”, Paramahansa Yogananda, describes Trilinga Swami on pages 291-295: Lahiri Mahasaya had a very famous friend, Trailanga Swami, who was reputed to be over three hundred years old. The two yogis often sat together in meditation. Trailanga’s renown is so widespread that few Hindus would deny the possibility of truth in any story of his astounding miracles. If Christ returned to earth and walked the streets of New York, displaying his divine powers, it would cause the same awe among the people that Trailanga created decades ago as he passed through the crowded lanes of Benares. He was one of the siddhas (perfected beings) that have cemented India against the erosions of time. Swamiji attained mahasamadhi on  Monday evening of 26.12.1887]  

This goes to show that even great saints who can remain in Samadhi even for months together are liable to be affected by praise or censure. Such is the force of Samskaras. From time immemorial, praise and censure have produced their impressions of exhilaration and depression on the mind. Yajnavalkya also once cursed a man to death. It is said he had also minute traces of anger, subtle desire for money and cattle as was shown in the court of Janaka despite of his Brahma Jnana. There is a popular view that Jnanins also will have a slight trace of Raga, Dwesha, anger, etc. But this is Abhasamatra, for namesake only. Not real. The difference between a Jnani and a wordly man is that in the case of the former, it will be momentary as in the case of children, while in the latter it will be continuous. A Jnani will forget it immediately, but the worldly man will keep it in the heart for a very long time. The impression of anger that is produced in the mind of a Jnani may be compared to the impression produced in water by a stroke of a walking stick. It is not lasting. The wave dies instantaneously.

Most of the difficulties in our daily lives come from being unable to hold our minds in proper check. For instance, if a man does evil to us, instantly we want to react evil, to revenge, to pay him in the same coin, to extract tooth for tooth, tit for tat policy—to return anger for anger. Every reaction of evil shows that we are not able to hold the Chitta down. It comes out in waves towards the object and we lose our power. Every reaction in the form of hatred or evil is so much loss to the mind and every evil thought or deed of hatred, if it is controlled, will be laid in our favour. It is not that we lose by thus restraining ourselves but we gain infinitely. Each time we suppress hatred, or feelings of anger, it is so much good energy stored up in our favour and that energy will be converted into higher power. Anger, when controlled properly, becomes transmuted into an energy so powerful as to move the world.

The sum total of impressions always remains in the mind. Impressions, though they become latent for a time, remain in the mind all the same and as soon as they get the right kind of stimulus, manifest themselves. The vibrations of the Chitta subside externally, after each direct perception, but continue to go on in it like atomic vibrations, and when they get the right kind of impulse, come out again.

Only a word is uttered and we do not wait to consider its meaning, but jump to a conclusion immediately. It is a sign of weakness. The weaker the man is, the less he has the power of restraint. Measure yourself always with the standard of restraint.

When you are going to be angry or miserable on hearing some news, reason it out, for yourself and see how it has thrown your mind into such Vrittis. Restraint does not come in a day, but by long continued practice. Suppose, when you are passing through the bazar, a man comes and takes away forcibly your nice walking stick. That throws your Chitta immediately into the form of a wave, termed anger. Do not allow that wave to develop. If you can prevent the formation of that wave, you have strong will-power, renunciation and Vairagya.

(pgs. 116-119, God-Realisation)