Where the mind is without fear and the head is held high;

Where knowledge is free;

Where the world has not been broken up

into fragments by narrow domestic walls;

Where words come out from the depth of truth;

Where tireless striving stretches its arms towards perfection;

Where the clear stream of reason

has not lost its way into the dreary desert sand of dead habit;

Where the mind is led forward by thee into ever-widening thought and action–

into that heaven of freedom, my Father, let my country awake. – Rabindra Nath Tagore

A lot. I got married to a beautiful lady. I am lucky my Karma Routes intersected with hers.

Sorry I have been away from Karma Blog for a while. Thank you for all the comments, Facebook  messages and emails. It will take me some time to respond to each personally. All I can say is that I have been overwhelmed by the love. I will soon post some videos of a small show that we had prepared for the reception.

I am very excited about some new associations at Karma Routes that we made at SATTE 2010. I will post the details very soon. There will be some great deals coming your way because of that.

I am personally also getting involved in a book project but it is a little premature to about it. I would soon be posting some excerpts to get your opinion on it from time to time.

All in all, it has been a hell of a year so far and it seems like I have just done the Surya Namaskar. The rest of the sequence is yet to unfold.

There’s an old Buddhist saying: ‘Before enlightenment, chopping wood and carrying water; after enlightenment, chopping wood and carrying water,’  but it’s a chopping and carrying from a very   different level of consciousness. What a contribution we could make to the world then! And remember that on the way there, as we improve, our joy, love, peace of mind, creativity and quality of expression improve apace.

The word ‘Yoga’ come from the Sanskrit yug, meaning, ‘yoke’ which indicates a joining together, a unity, a harmony, balance. The Physical practices harmonize the endocrine, neurological and immune systems, the meditation pracices harmonize our perceptions, thinking, emotions and behavior, etc.

Ultimately of course, according to teachings of Yoga, the result is harmony and unity of the person’s individual consciousness with the ultimate consciousness.

Thank you for being such great readers and commenters of Karma Blog. Starting from today we have our first guest post by Anita Dagar (dagaranita@gmail.com). If you would like to write a guest post for Karma Blog, please email at info@karmaroutes.com. Om.

to be

To be or not to be…. is an eternal dilemma of human existence. Every life has strokes of those aching ifs and buts which could change course of life drastically! Perplexed at almost every step of life wherever we have to make a choice/decision. Should I do this or that? Will this be a right decision? Scared of pain of failure and misery I find myself asking is there a perfect way of taking decisions? Where all happiness and no pain is guaranteed! May be yes and may be no! Depends how we understand life or rather I would say how we choose to understand life, at least that is what philosophers seem to say!

Jean Paul Sartre, a French philosopher had something very relevant to say for a situation like this. Life always offers more than one possibilities in every situation. It is up to us to make a choice. And whatever we may choose at some point we are bound to regret why I did not choose the other! This regret is inevitable element of human existence. Simply because human life is not a ready-made package, its like a shop of spare parts . You can assemble these parts in unlimited combinations. The possibilities are infinite but the fact that humans have a time limit for their stay on earth, makes it impossible for them to live all possibilities. You can live only a few. Which ones you live is of course your choice! (remember even when we say I was helpless it is actually that I chose to be helpless instead of say…not taking up the job and letting my parents suffer or getting married to a rich girl instead of the girl I loved because I did not want to hurt my parents. The fact is that you chose to give priority to something over the other and that is a choice!) Not making a choice is also making a choice!

Whether these choices were right or wrong is something you can leave on time to tell. You may take into account today all the right factors but whatever happens in future is not in your individual control. When you make a choice today; lets say you decide to marry your daughter to a well off Army officer, it might be that he leaves his job after six months or he is court marshaled or that particular battalion is dismissed for certain reasons and your son in law as a result is unemployed and your daughter is suffering because of that. Now the point is no one can know what future holds and hence what seems right today may appear wrong tomorrow.

Therefore, the points to drive home are:-

* I am a limited finite being, I can be at one place in one moment and after a certain time my stay on earth expires.

* Future holds endless possibilities and I can live only a few of them.

* What I live, I choose it to quite a large extent, knowingly or unknowingly.

* Whatever I may choose , its rightness cannot be guaranteed .

So what is in my hands is understand and accept the above and enjoy to the last bit the choices I make.

Would like to look at it from Indian perspective!

Compared to Jean Paul Sartre’s view Indian perspective is spiritual and mystic to quite some extent. It is more experiential and cyclic. In fact Hindu scriptures put it quite accurately how one should live and what is worth pursuing and what is not so significant in life. The ultimate end to be pursued is knowing oneself. That is knowing the true nature of self and liberating oneself from the cycle of birth and death. And there are three ways as described in Gita to know your true self and attain nirvana viz. Bhakti, Karma and Gyana. Depending upon one’s inclination one can choose anyone path (if one may say so!).

Speaking broadly human life is one of the endless possibilities that a soul goes through. Your life on earth is predestined (by your earlier karmic actions, desires) to quite a large extent but your actions/efforts or to put it accurately “Karma” can change the destiny as they say. So what is in human control is only do your karma and leave the rest to Him. Yes it is certainly easier said than done! One needs to practice it every moment to be able to reach that stage. Remember believing in the law of Karma is not being fatalist. In fact, it requires a deep understanding of your duties and courage and activeness to perform them. So you need to decide now how you would like to review your life. Though eventually it will come to some common similar issues, which can be summed up as following.

Life is a big leela /play created by God and though he has predestined major routes in your life but your actions can always change this route. (remember Savitri’s dialogue with lord Yama and bringing back her husband Satyavan back to life).

Your individual life is not existing in isolation so whatever actions you take are taken in a socio-political and economic structure and they will have reactions beyond your individual sphere of control. .

Only thing in human hands is doing one’s action/karma/duties.

And having realized this you can move on to two conclusions:-

First, whatever happened, you had no control over it, it had to happen and the same shall be the path for future. So let yourself float on the waves of life; Do not hang on to the rocks.

Secondly, if you would like to take responsibility for your existence, go and do your Karma and leave the rest to ‘him’. He will take care.

Bon Voyage!

A great Yoga Explanation of Mental Body in Practical Yoga Psychology by Dr.Rishi Vivekananda.

yoga psychology

Mental Body – Manomaya Kosha
The mental body consists of four parts which consistently interact with each other and really do form an efficient team to do the job required. They are :
Instinctive Mind (Manas) Its job is to make sense of the world as we experience it. it responds to our perceptions of the sensory input and comes to conclusions such as ‘What is it?’ ‘Is it good or bad for me?’ ‘Will it hurt me?’ ‘Is it a meal?’ ‘Is it a potential mate?’ if left to its own resources and if it thinks that it should respond to ‘that out there’, it will usually motivate one of what I call the ‘3F’ responses – fight, flight or friendship.

Sense of ‘I’-ness (Ahamkara). Obviously, if we are to protect ourselves from or benefit from the outside world, we must have a sense of self that sets us apart from it. we must be ever mindful of the ‘me‘ as separate from ‘that’. Thus is the sense of ‘I’-ness that the yogis call ahamkara.

Memory (chitta). Imagine an animal in the jungle – the eyes detect something moving that is separate from ‘me’. Manas (Instinctive Mind) wants to know ‘What is it?’ It immediately ‘asks’ the memory, ‘Have I seen one of these before?’ According to the reply, the mind may decide to run away or try to catch it and eat it, or go over and make friends with it. This is the role of memory at this level. Memory is the storehouse of our past encounters and the experiences we have had with them. This information is crucial to help us decide what to do in ‘this’ encounter.

The intellectual mind (buddhi)  At this basic level of functioning, buddhi lends an intellectual mode of helping manas to reach better decisions for our interaction with the world. Actually Buddhi is in action at much higher levels of mind, right up to the unerring wisdom of the bliss body (Anandmaya Kosha). But here we see Buddhi at its lower levels of rational thinking in the service of manas – far below its exalted abilities, but very valuable in handling our day-to-day activities.

evolve

Awareness – The journey of self-discovery is only done by humans. ‘Animals also know but do they know that they know?’ When we were animals we started our self-discovery with our body first. We then discovered workings of our mind and experienced spirit.

Which brings me to evolvement. Not evolution.

On our path of self-discovery, we evolved into more complex creatures. Yet, we crave and work on our evolvement – the realization that we can better the present levels of our thinking, feeling and doing.

So are we on our path to evolvement?

namaste

I honor the Spirit in you which is also in me.

eyes

There is a huge difference. Talking saps our energy and Saying re-energizes us.

The old mantra of ’silence is golden’ holds good when we are unsure of the situation. Silence is  discomforting to many and thus when we are unsure, instead of being silent, we talk. And talk.

So lets practice less of talking and more of saying. Lets say it with our silence. Lets say it from our hearts. Lets say it with our eyes and our whole body.