Sunday, December 20, 2020

Understanding who is a sanyasi

 


Write down a heading 'Who I am’.

Under that make two columns titled ‘With reference to the body’ and ‘With reference to the mind'.

Write below the columns respectively all the labels including roles you give to your self.

After that, write down another heading titled ‘What I own or possess or have'

Under that make two columns again titled ‘External to the body'  and  ‘Within me’.

Write below the columns respectively all that you think you possess either externally or within yourself.

The fire of knowledge, the teaching of Vedanta, requires you to be very honest, and ask yourself a couple of questions about all the items you have written under these columns

1. Are they objects of your knowledge/ consciousness?

2. Are they dependent or independent?

3. Are they temporary?

Now imagine this roaring fire of knowledge – offer into it  all that you have written down which fits into the category of ‘object of knowledge’, ‘dependent’, ‘temporary’. Visualize them burning to ashes and being blown away by some huge wind of understanding.

What remains? Maybe some items still remain. If so, again put the three questions to them...if any of the categories pertain to them, offer them into that roaring fire of knowledge and see them burnt to ashes and blown away.

Is there anything remaining? 

Who knows what remains? What is the essence of the knower? The one who recognizes this and remains as this, is a sanyasi.


Saturday, December 19, 2020

Vedanta’s perspective on physical pain/ physical limitations....an introspection

 



Usually our attention is focussed on something we can objectify...our thoughts, feelings, memories, sensations, breath, the external world.

However, for now, let’s just close our eyes and allow our awareness to be vast and spacious in front of us, boundless behind, infinite on the sides, immeasurable below and limitless above.

Let your heart be as vast and spacious as the sky ...a vast open sky of all acceptance.

It is in this vast spacious, self-evident awareness that you are, that all perception takes place.... hearing takes place....seeing takes place, tasting, smelling, sensation takes place, even action takes place....breathing, eating, walking, bathing, writing, reading ...all of this takes place... They are all objects of your consciousness ....

The consciousness that you are illuminates and enlivens them all. They are perceived to change ...the consciousness that you are does not change ...ever. They are not really separate from your consciousness ....they arise and fall like waves in the ocean of Consciousness that you are.

Physical pain, physical discomfort is a sensation that is illumined and enlivened in the Consciousness you are. You can be totally present to it, without resistance, totally accepting of it ...when you are totally present to anything ....without any resistance, in total acceptance, what you discover is that you are there as a stillness, a witness to the discomfort ...you discover there is some dimension of you ...your consciousness, that is not really touched by it. This is a very exhilarating discovery....painful, uncomfortable at level of body-mind, yet exhilarating for you at another level.

And when you stop equating physical discomfort, physical pain or physical limitations with your self, you enjoy freedom...freedom from dislike and fear ....it’s a huge freedom.

The teaching of Vedanta points out that the consciousness you are is SATYA – and anything that is an object of consciousness is MITHYA....including physical pain and discomfort. Physical pain and discomfort are objects of our consciousness ...they have no power to affect the consciousness we are.  

The secret to owning up this truth in our own being, is our non-resistance to life, our acceptance of both the ups and downs of life situations. What initially helps us to accept life as it is, is our understanding of Ishvara as the abhinna-nimmita-upadana karana, the karma-phala daataa....and our non-resistance to Ishvara....that’s the emotional evolution, the transformation that truly liberates.


Om Tat Sat


Friday, December 18, 2020

Stillness - some thoughts

 



The reflection of consciousness in the mind, is the awareness that we are familiar with, usually engaged in thinking, remembering, feeling, imagining, perceiving, visualizing....always engaged in objectifying in some form or the other.

When we are advised, be present, live consciously ...we are still engaged in objectifying ... very consciously ...free of imagination and visualization, free of thoughts of the past, free of thoughts of the future...we just engage with the immediate present...it is a type of meditation you can say.

When the mind is fully present there is a stillness experienced ..true. Is there a division between the experiencer of stillness and the stillness? It is not that the mind has stopped. Perception is taking place, action is taking place ...and yet there is this still infinite presence. The experienced stillness is an expression of the motionless self. 

This stillness is an expression of myself in the mind. I can use it to understand my timeless nature. Does the stillness have any boundaries? Is it not of the nature of infinite timeless consciousness in whose vast, spacious ever-presence, every perception takes place, every action takes place,  every perception and action is illumined and enlivened.

Sat – timeless existence of the nature of cit – consciousness that is Ananta – infinite ...that alone I am ...

Infinite in time is ever-present, changeless, indestructible

Infinite in space is everywhere, indivisible

Infinite in object is  formless, no dual or plural

Never an object of thought – but the very essence of thought, from where thought emerges, is sustained and goes back

Never the knowing ego

Totally free of the mind, even the Cosmic mind

Recognizing as oneself, pure infinite presence ...there is nothing to do, nothing to learn, nothing to achieve, nothing to succeed, nothing to fail, nothing to be....no object whatsoever ...soham..citsvarupoham...cinmayoham.... satcit-ananda-svarupoham ...soham


Thursday, December 17, 2020

What is there in any moment?

 


What is there in any present moment?

The very isness, beingness of the moment which is the awareness of it, which is oneself .....and whatever one is aware of.

This beingness of the moment ..any moment ..is a vastness, a spaciousness, a stillness, an awareness, Consciousness ...the very womb or essence of every changing perception, in whose ever unchanging presence, every perception, every thought, feeling, sensation, breath takes place and is illumined and enlivened.

This beingness of any moment is called Om and it is oneself ...OM.....OM....OM ..infinite, indivisible, indestructible Consciousness.

Om Tat Sat


Wednesday, December 16, 2020

Do physical limitations have to cause emotional suffering?

 


There is poverty, sickness, physical pain ....all kinds of physical limitations. Do physical limitations have to cause emotional suffering?

We are conditioned to believe that physical limitations must cause emotional suffering. Does the discomfort and physical pain that is felt have to cause emotional suffering?

Emotional suffering is caused when there is identification with the physical discomfort as ‘I am the discomfort’ or ‘my discomfort or pain’. If there is clear assimilation of the fact revealed by Vedanta, that I is just pure consciousness, infinite, indestructible, unchanging, in whose ever-presence, different ever-changing energy states which appear and disappear,  are illumined and recognized to be projections only ...then physical limitations and physical pain will not cause emotional suffering. गुणा गुणेषु वर्तन्ते इति मत्वा न सज्जते।

Before this kind of firm assimilation can happen a lot of emotional cleansing needs to take place. All the buried stuff in the unconscious needs to be aired, accepted, forgiven and let go off. 

To understand Vedanta is not difficult. To own it up can be extremely difficult, if the stored emotional garbage is not compassionately processed and let go of. 

Om Tat Sat



Tuesday, December 15, 2020

Unconscious pain an obstacle to effective nididhyasana

 



Basically, we are scared to feel uncomfortable feelings like fear, anger, grief, hurt, guilt, shame etc. So they stay in the unconscious and get triggered and come out in present day situations. Not only that, also based on some uncomfortable experiences certain  limiting conclusions were formed – and they too remain in the unconscious and govern our lives.

Purifying the inner instrument, the mind involves not only becoming aware of the uncomfortable emotions that are stored in the unconscious, it involves letting them go, without clinging onto them....without clinging onto the storyline attached to them. We also need to become aware of the limiting beliefs and let them go too...without clinging onto them. 

Healing emotional pain thus involves both becoming aware and letting go. 

Becoming aware of the feelings lurking in the unconscious needs lot of Grace in form of a safe environment ...because we are scared to face them and allow ourselves to feel them, without clinging to the story line, without acting on them. Letting go is possible only when we have forgiven -others and ourselves.

Nididhyasana can be effective only after getting past the kashaya. Usually in attempting nididhyasana, if heavy unconscious is there, one knocks against kashaya, and can’t proceed ahead ...it is too scary and painful. Or the mind finds a way of dodging/denying the kashaya and stays in just words. 

So learning to process the kashaya in the form of traumatic memories, feelings and getting past the limiting beliefs is very important to be able to successfully sit for nididhyasana.



Sunday, October 11, 2020

Upasana - smiling to Ishvara in the heart centre

 This is a very relaxing and uplifting prayer meditation, in which you keep smiling to Ishta Devata, in the altar of your heart centre, and pray for antahkarana shuddhi. It fosters a deep sense of connect with Ishvara, at an emotional level.  It is adapted from Irmansyah Effendi's Open Heart Meditation.


https://youtu.be/IafAi7Ris-g




Om Tat Sat

Tuesday, June 30, 2020

Guru Parampara - most sacred

 नमः शिवाय गुरवे सच्चिदानन्द मूर्तये ।
निष्प्रपञ्चाय शान्ताय निरालम्बाय तेजसे ॥


Tuesday, May 5, 2020

Wisdom with reference to the breath - prana



 ॐ गं गणपतये नमः
There is air all around this body
There is air inside this body.
Like a fish lives in water
This body lives in air....through breathing.
With every inhalation, the breath strengthens every cell in the body
With every exhalation every cell in the body relaxes.
This is an ongoing divine process ...let us be aware of it ...
I am grateful to Ishvara, for the breath - without breath, the body perishes.

This breath is a form of prana, the life-force that is vibrating in every cell of the body - enlivening every cell.

I am conscious of breath.

I am a simple conscious being - illumining the breathing process, the prana.

I know it's presence - I experience it's presence, I observe it's presence....
I am indeed different from what I know and experience.
I am a simple conscious being - aware of prana, independent of prana
Prana is not seperate from me. Indeed, I-consciousness, as the Cosmic Being manifests it.

What can I give to prana, the life-force coursing through this body, enlivening all the physiological functions of the body?

My grateful keen awareness of it's presence during pranayama and through the day. And plenty of water.

I honour the prana in this body.
It is the same prana in all the beings, coursing through them, enlivening all their physiological functions - from the tiniest unicellular being to the largest living being in the entire universe.
I honour the prana in all beings.

I am a simple conscious being, aware of prana - independent of prana - illumining and enlivening prana.
Prana is not seperate from me. Indeed, I ss cosmic consciousness, manifests it.

I take a deep breath, hold it and release it slowly.
I take sips of breath savouring each sip, deeply aware of the breath at the nostrils.

I assimilate deeply that
Consciousness that shines here as self-evident, self-revealing I,  is independent of prana.
Consciousness that shines here as self-evident, self-revealing I, is changeless and ever-present. Prana is continually changing.
While consciousness I am the drshta, the Seer, prana is ever the seen, an object of my knowing, dependent on consciousness for manifesting it.

I take a deep breath, hold it and release it slowly.
I take sips of breath savouring each sip, deeply aware of the breath at the nostrils.
I relax
I let go my notions about myself
I repose in my Self

Om Tat Sat

Sunday, May 3, 2020

Wisdom with reference to the body


ॐ गं गणपतये नमः
I honour this body - it is it is in order being inseparable from the divine order.
I respect and accept this body. It is a precious gift from Ishwara. It is a precious instrument with which I interact with the world and gain different types of experiences.

I acknowledge that I observe, experience, know this body.
I call it 'my' body even as I say 'my' pencil. So I am different from this body- I am a simple conscious being in whose awareness this body shines.
This body is not separate from me the conscious being. I enliven and illuminate it - indeed as the Cosmic Consciousness, I manifest it.

The body is an object of my awareness.
It is material in nature.
It has different attributes.
It is constantly changing ...and though it has life-force coursing through it now,  one day it will die....in fact next moment it can die.
So this body is a temporary rented residence whose lease will end I don't know when.

I am independent of the body - a simple conscious being. The consciousness that I am is not a part, property or product of this body-mind complex. I am independent. The body is ever dependent. It is dependent on many local factors of cause and effect. It is dependent on me, the consciousness that manifests as the life-force that breathes life into it. It is illumined in my awareness.
I am the subject - the one who knows, experiences, observes the body - different from it. I am the seer, the body is the seen.
I, the conscious being am not material (or energy) in nature. I, consciousness, am not restricted by time or space.
I, the conscious being am free of all attributes
I, the conscious being do not change - ever.
I, the conscious being am the only permanent entity in life.

I use this body respectfully as an instrument given by Ishvara.
I am a trustee for this body - in it's lifetime, it is in my care. I am grateful for it. I give back to it food and water, shelter, clothes, medicine, clean environment, exercise (yoga asanas). I give back to it my keen awareness of it...through which it can relax.

ॐ गं गणपतये नमः


Tuesday, April 21, 2020

Namah - I surrender




Just one Consciousness
Appearing to manifest
As One Cosmic Energy
That expresses thru different bodies.

Great Being, I'm Yours 
Great Being, there is no I other than You
Namah - I surrender.
 🙏🏻

Monday, March 30, 2020

A Prayer

ॐ गं ॐ
ॐ गं गणपतये नमः

O Lord, You are the ocean of consciousness,
Partless, Whole, All-pervading, Formless, All- Knowledge and All-powerful, Invincible
Ever present, ever the same,
Free of Attributes
Yet full of auspiciousness
You are cit svarupa
You are ananda svarupa
You are shanti svarupa
As Your own reflection, You appear as me
Your reflection as me, the jiva is just an appearance, a costume of yours
In reality, You alone are effortlessly shining here as I
Even when I take myself to be a jiva and I appear as just a drop in You,
That seeming drop  is nothing but cit svarupa, ananda svarupa, shanti svarupa.

Thank you for my Gurus
Thank you for making me understand that even when I take myself to be an individual, I am totally connected to You,  I cannot stand apart from you or this world, which belongs to you
You pervade me as Divine Order, making me who I am, as an individual
Thank you for making me understand that in Your Divine Order, I am in Order
You pervade this body-mind as the very substance of which it is constituted, as well as the intelligence that makes everything what it is

Thank you for making me understand that essentially I am You ....self-evident, effortlessly shining, indestructible, all-pervading, formless, pure, independent, auspicious ever-present  changeless consciousness-existence ...illumining, blessing, enlivening this body-mind sense complex. As pure consciousness I am purna.

This whole universe, which includes all bodies, all things, belongs to you
This body- mind is a wonderful instrument gifted  by You, with which transaction with the rest of the universe takes place, by Your laws
As a trustee for this body-mind complex, I care for it's safety and health
And use this beutiful instrument of body-mind to nourish  and protect thru thought, word and deed, all the beings and the environment.
By Your Grace may this sense of 'I' be fully firmly merged in You.

Whatever these hands do, may they be an offering unto You, an expression of purnatvam
Wherever these feet go, may it be a tirtha yatra to You, recognizing your all pervasiveness
Whatever words are spoken may they be in praise of You, acknowledging Your ever-presence, Your fullness
Whatever thoughts, feelings, memories are entertained, may they reflect Your ever-presence, Your fullness
Please let your Grace shower on me such that I never forget You, never forget that You are the antah-sakshi, that that you alone are permanent, that You pervade the universe as Divine Order, that everything including this body belongs to You.
In gratitude, may this life be ever dedicated to You expressing the fullness that You are.

By Your Infinite compassion and grace may all beings love and respect each other and live harmoniously with each other, recognizing, loving and respecting You, who are in each. May each of us, who are from different religions mutually recognize and honour the truth of Your divine presence in each and every one.

May all beings recognize the divinity within and be free.

ॐ गं गणपतये नमः
ॐ गं ॐ




Saturday, March 28, 2020

Sadaa Purno'ham - Ever Full am I


Om Gam Ganapataye Namah

I am the Consciousness that does not have to do anything, that does not have to know anything...
Naturally identified with the bms owing to karma
Yet free of ignorance of my true nature, I choose to identify with the bms, and
I choose to do. I choose to know.
When I drop all efforts to do something, to know something, I easily see myself as I am - purna
Purnata that is the self, does not go, does not disappear  when I do, or know....that is knowledge. Sadaa purno'ham.
I am the Consciousness that does not have to do anything, that does not have to know anything.....to be purna.
I am purna.Sadaa purno'ham

Om Tat Sat

Sunday, March 15, 2020

You can't be casual about Vedanta study



Vedanta is so easily available now. So many blogs, websites, YouTube videos .....all presenting Vedanta. So many teachers desperate to impart the knowledge. However, many teachers are half-baked and many a time the seekers are not ready.

So there could be a certain casual attitude towards it's study...taking it for granted. The price you pay for that is you don't gain much ...just some lip-service knowledge.

In Katha Upanishad we see

नायमात्मा प्रवचनेन लभ्यो न मेधया न बहुना श्रुतेन । यमेवैष वृणुते तेन लभ्यस्तस्यैष आत्मा विवृणुते तनूंस्वाम् ॥ २३
This Atma is not recognized through talking about it,  or  through much use of intellect,
or by listening to many talks. This Atma is recognized by the one who chooses it. For such a one, Atma reveals its own nature.

You have to choose to know - you have to prioritize. You can't be casual. If you are casual, atma-jnanam will by-pass you!

Om Tat Sat




Friday, March 13, 2020

Two important useful sadhanas for a sadhaka of Vedanta

ॐ गं ॐ
I am in reality, direct, immediate self-evident, changeless independent consciousness, time-free, space-free, object-free. Identifying with the body-mind, I as though become a personality - confined to the boundaries of the changing body and mind. Then engaging with the various thought forms taking place in the mind, I believe myself to be the different roles assumed, or different thoughts or emotions or memories...and then am more often than nought, overwhelmed by them.

To really be able to understand and assimilate that my real nature is ever auspicious, peaceful, non-dual Consciousness that is ever free of the triad of experiencer-experiencing thought-experienced object, the sadhana of japa followed by being a simple impartial observor is very useful.

Using the sadhana of japa,one disengages with all of one's roles, and assumes the role of a simple devotee, who simply lovingly occupies the mind with the name of his beloved Lord - the Lord, who is the invariable Consciousness, the Divinity within,  that is always with him/her. One loves to chant His name, because one recognizes Him as the one who is always there in the background, in the past, in the present, in the future - illumining and enlivening by His mere presence, one's inner and outer life...only one has been so engaged in one's own private world of one's endless masks, stories, likes and dislikes that one never noticed His silent auspicious peaceful ever-presence.

As one disengages from every other role, and simply remains as a devotee, chanting His name, one begins to assimilate all that one learned in satsang and one begins to love Him and chant His name.

One loves to chant His name, because one recognizes that He pervades every thought, every feeling, every breath, every cell, every thing in space, as the intelligence that manifests and permeates everything, as the very essence, making everything what it is. One loves to chant His name, because one recognizes He is all this that was, is, will be....and yet He is free. One loves to chant His name because one recognizes He alone is nitya, and one cannot stand apart from Him even if one wants to. Now, one loves to disengage from every other role and remain as a devotee, simply chanting His name.

As one continues with this japa sadhana, the mind becomes very quiet...very peaceful. Now one stops chanting and assumes the role of an observor - an impartial kind observor.... Simply observing sounds, breathing, thoughts and emotions that come up and pass by. Now it's easy to recognize that observor is also a role that assumed in the ever-presence of the Consciousness that shines both the I-thought and the object of the I-thought.

The knower/observor is mithya ....dont carry a subtle form of observor in understanding of consciousness that one essentially is..the observor disappears in understanding of consciousness...one cannot retain oneself as an observor ....in consciousness there is no real observor.

In confirming the nature of consciousness, the one who confirms disappears ...that  consciousness is not an object ...is understood by the buddhi ...and the pramata, the knower-status resolves in understanding the mithyatvam of the knower.

Visualize that as a new-born baby, at that time you are just simple immediate conscious presence - there is no identification with anything - now ask these questions :-
Does self evident consciousness have size, shape, weight, form, colour, movement, change, modification, growth, retardation boundary? If your answer is yes it means there is identification with body or mind. Use the atma-anatma rule to seperate Atma from anatma and ask yourself the same question again.
Does self-evident immediate consciousness have feelings, thoughts, physiological functions, sensations, breathing? If your answer is yes it means there is identification with body-mind ....
Does self-evident immediate consciousness have ego, memories, history, ignorance? If the answer is yes for you it means there is identification with body-mind.

Are there two things then- consciousness and body-mind?

No two things - Shastra says ekam Eva advitiyam. Consciousness alone is ...changelessly ever present

Then what is body-mind?

An appearance alone that does not have power to change or hurt consciousness because they are not the same order of reality ...can my shadow hurt me?

All this is to be deeply assimilated. So be a devotee first and gain samatvam. Be a simple observor and confirm for oneself what one has studied through Shastra pramanam.

Om Tat Sat

Friday, March 6, 2020

Bhuta Yajna - Pujya Swami Govinddev Giri


Bhuta Yajna
After this our scriptures have described one more type of yajna. That is bhuta yajna. My life is that of a human being. My family is a community of humans. I am not alone in this creation. Nor is  this creation peopled only by human beings. It is inhabited by many different creatures. My mind should think about them too daily. May I desire the well-being of all creatures.This is the difference between our vision and that of the West. In the West, animals are meant only for using (and consuming).

In the West, cows are reared.  There is a basic difference between the rearing of cows in the West, and the worship of cows that we have here. In the West cows are reared, much like sugarcane is farmed. Lakhs of cows are fed.They cannot leave their sheds. They are well-nourished. All efforts are made to improve their milk production and increase their flesh. All kinds of methods are used for that purpose. They are not allowed to roam around or run.They just get big. There is no scope for any other development for them. As they grow to their full size, they are cut up,k for consumption. Just as there is farming of crops (for consumption),so too there is farming of cows ( purely for consumption). That is their vision, their outlook. The universe is for consumption - that is their outlook. Whereas the vision of the Rishis is that the universe is one family. 

अयं निजः परो वेति गणना लघुचेतसाम्।
उदारचरितानां तु वसुधैव कुटुम्बकम्।।
He is mine, he is another - not mine- such are the thoughts of narrow-minded people. For the noble-minded, the whole world is a family.

We consider this entire creation as our family. We will think of the whole creation later. Nearby the home in which I live, there might be some dogs, or a cow - maybe a cow in my own family compound.  May I remember that cow daily. May I remember the dog daily. May I remember the crow too.The crow is considered the most common bird. Yet food is offered even to the crow. A dog is considered the commonest animal. Yet, everyday, bread (roti) is taken out for it. There is bali everyday for it - there is an arrangement made daily for feeding even the dogs. 

Here our Shastras are giving us a vision of life, that humans are not the only living beings in this creation. When I was travelling through America, one thing made me quite sad. We saw some beautiful gardens. We saw many jungles. Yet, nowhere did we see any birds. We did not see any insects anywhere.They had all been killed. They had all been destroyed. Even if there were birds there, they would only have been in the zoos - nowhere else.

It is not only man who has the right to exist on this earth. Others too have freedom. They too have their own life. So I should respect and honour  life - it's different expressions. I did not see this kind of thinking in the West.

Understand the vision of the Rishies of Bharat. Atmavat sarva bhuteshu - I will live, but I will live without causing harm to others. I will live and live well and I will live ensuring that other can also prosper. They have their rights, and I will respect and honour those rights. And as far as possible, from my bread, I will keep a piece for that dog, for that crow. Here the word dog or crow or cow are general symbols to convey a vision. Our Rishies, want to convey to us,  a vision of life. When a man, daily keeps aside some food for a dog or crow or cow, then his mind becomes sensitive to all the beings in creation.

I have seen such fine Mothers, who inspite of living in cities where no cow is to be found near their homes, yet who follow consistently the rule that I will go and personally feed the cow, roti with my hands, and only then I will eat. The cow is a well-fed healthy cow, yet this old Mother feels 'I must go personally, in the car, taking roti, feed her and then return and only then eat my meals'. 

There is no doubt that this observance of hers has a deep impact on her own vision of life. And when small children observe that our grandmother has so much eagerness to feed roti to the cow, then in their minds also a feeling or attitude is created that there should be love towards all animals,all beings of this creation. It is not that I will just use these for my own benefit. I will remember all the beings before my meals. Remembering them, I also learn to contribute something towards their well-being. 

This attitude of contribution towards other creatures well-being is bhuta yajna. You would have heard the word bhuta-daya. Bhuta word means a living being. May the feeling of compassion towards all living being always be alive in us. Not just for humans.

....Translated excerpt from book Yajnamaya Jivan

Thankful Offerings To Ancestors - Pujya Swami Govinddev Giriji


Pitr Yajna
May we do something for our ancestors. We have come to to the physical plane on this earth. We have not come just like that. We have a lineage and we are connected to that lineage. We are also connected to our ancestors who have departed. Our Shastra reveals that we are connected to at least three generations of ancestors. Their blessings and grace become fruitful in our life. Therefore remembering all their benevolent actions, we perform pitr-tarpan in the form of simple offering of water. What is so big about it? This is called as- yajna. All that is offered in this pitr-yajna is just a palm full of water along with sesame seeds in it. The main attitude here is that I am remembering my ancestors. Through that rememberance I am acknowledging my gratitude towards them. Because of the strong shraddha involved it is  called as pitr-yajna. This is the minimum that I may necessarily do for my ancestors - daily. May there be remembrance of my ancestors in my daily life so that their blessings may continue in my life. Acknowledging with gratitude, whatever they had done for our families, may we make this small but necessary effort to free ourselves from our debt to them.

...Translated excerpt from book Yajnamaya Jivan

Saturday, February 29, 2020

The Wise-Man's characteristics, his teaching, his self-recognition

ॐ गं ॐ
निराशता निर्भयता नित्यता समता ज्ञता।
निरीहता निष्क्रियता सौम्यता निर्विकल्पता।।
धृतिर्मैत्री मतिस्तुष्टिः मृदुता मृदुभाषिता ।
हेयोपादेयनिर्मुक्ते ज्ञे तिष्ठन्त्यपवासनम्।।

Cessation of fears, freedom from fear, eternality, inward equanimity, self-recognition,  cessation of emotional dependence, (knowledge of self being) actionlessness, gentleness, doubt-freeness, resoluteness, genuine friendship with one and all,  contentment of heart, softness, soft-spokenness, freedom from withdrawing (from what is unpleasant) and grasping it chasing (what is pleasant)- these are the qualities that dwell in a knower of truth.

मनसैव मनश्छित्त्वा कुठारेणेव पादपम्।
पदमं पावनमासाद्य सद्य एव स्थिरो भव।।
Cut asunder the mind (see it's mithyatvam) using mind itself,as one would a tree with an axe. And immediately recognizing the immaculate abode within, remain unshakeable always.

Om

That, effortless, immediate, direct,  ever-present, conscious presence, the underlying reality of the experiencer-experience- experienced am I.

Indeed, I am That, effortless, immediate, direct, independent, limitless, consciousness, the underlying reality, whose ever-presence, manifests as though, the experiencer-the experience-the experienced, illumining and enlivening them.

I am indeed, that absolute non-dual reality, the absolute Self, of the nature of consciousness.

That ever-present limitless existence-consciousness principle, the underlying reality of the universe am I.

That, effortless, immediate, direct,  ever-present, conscious presence, the underlying reality of the experiencer-experience- experienced am I.

Indeed, I am That, effortless, immediate, direct, independent, limitless, consciousness, the underlying reality, whose ever-presence, manifests as though, the experiencer-the experience-the experienced, illumining and enlivening them.

Om

Tuesday, February 18, 2020

Consciousness is neither external nor internal- Swami Viditatmanandaji



There is nothing external or internal in consciousness as such. With reference to an object like pot, we can say 'the space within the pot' and 'the space outside the pot'. But from the standpoint of space, there is no external or internal.

Suppose that out of ignorance, space somehow has the notion that 'I am confined to the pot'; 'I am only as big as the pot'. Then the space existing outside the pot would be called 'external space' and the space existing within the pot will be called 'internal space'. But in reality, from the standpoint of space, there is no external and no internal. 'External' and 'internal' are imagined based on the boundary of the pot.

night that, we have this ideas of external and internal based on the boundary of the body. But just as there is no external or internal from the standpoint of space, there is also no external or internal from the standpoint of consciousness. however, the mind imagines external and internal. Because the mind thinks that the body is the self, if there four things that whatever is outside the body is external and whatever is within the body is internal.

Therefore, it is the mind that goes out; the consciousness does not go out. Consciousness does not have anywhere to go. Atma has nowhere to go. Don't think that Atma departs this body and goes to another body. Atma is sat-cit-ananda: it is consciousness; it is everywhere. There is no movement of Atma. when a pot moves in space, the pot space does not move, but to us it looks as do the pot space is moving because our attention is on the walls of the pot. So also, when the subtle body departs and travels from one embodiment to another, we think Atma also is travelling. Atma, consciousness does not have any movement. Consciousness has no going, no change no modification, nothing external, nothing internal.

however, we superimpose the modifications taking place in the mind upon consciousness and we say 'external consciousness'. What is externally focused is the mind, but because consciousness is identified with the mind, we say 'external consciousness' with reference to the external objects. Therefore, we say the waker's consciousness is external meaning he is experiencing the external objects. 

Saturday, February 15, 2020

Effortless immediate ever-presence I am



ॐ गं गणपतये नमः

We constantly try to define ourselves by what we do, by the roles we play, by what we experience through the sense-organs or through the mind. So our  self-defining statements are 'I am a teacher', 'I am a sister', 'I am short-sighted', 'I am angry', 'I am tall' ....and so on and so forth.

All of this is fine...they try to define me in relationship to what I know,  what I experience.  But is there a me who is  independent of whatever I experience, who is ever-present in and through all that is experienced and yet independent? If such a me is actually there, it means I am free.

Wow! It would mean that I am actually free of all the limitations I define myself by!

To be able to recognize the me who is free of all that I define myself by, we can use the simple rule given by Shastra, to seperate the invariable me, from whatever it is that I experience. The rule is very simple..., I am not what I experience.

Going by that rule I am not this body or mind. I am not the qualities of body or mind. I am not the physiological functions. I am not the roles played. I am not sensations or breath  feelings or thoughts or memory or ego.

So what is left?  Only 'I am'. I am is an effortless, immediate, self-evident, ever-present  independent conscious presence, in whose invariable presence,all that is experienced is illumined and enlivened.

See this fact clearly...again and again. We need to assimilate it well.

Then Shastra pramanam points out that
the effortless, immediate, self-evident, ever-present presence that shines as I am ...is limitless ...is Brahman. Ayam Atma brahman'....this self is limitless. Idam sarvam khalu brahman' ...all that is here is the limitless. This self alone appears as all that is.

Om Tat Sat

Tuesday, February 11, 2020

Some important stipulations for Yajna - Pujya Swami Govinddev Giri

Bhagavan Manu wishes for us happiness in this life and immortality in the hereafter.  इहलोके सुखं भुक्त्वा परलोकेऽमृतं व्रजेत् . I don't want to live a life of sorrow. I want to make this life also joyous. It is everyone's birthright to receive happiness. Therefore if one  expects happiness, that is not wrong. Bhagavan Manu exhorts us - इहलोके सुखं भुक्त्वा परलोकेऽमृतं व्रजेत् - having gained joy in this world,may one gain immortality in the hereafter. May I gain happiness in this life  - I will gain my own happiness, happiness from family and happiness from society. Together with this, may my antahkarana be so free of the hold of impressions, may my antahkarana be so mature that desires melt from it, and consequently, may moksha take place effortlessly, naturally.

May yajna based actions be in keeping with scriptural injunctions

However, the yajnas that we do for the purpose of gaining this happiness, are dependent upon certain rules. The Lord draws attention to those rules by saying :

विधिहिनमसृष्टान्नं मन्त्रहीनं अदक्षिनम्।
श्रद्धा विरहितं यज्ञं तामसं परिचक्षते।।

The Lord, through this sloka, points out that yajnas performed without heed to the stipulated rules, would make it difficult to gain the full result of the yajna.

What are the injunctions involved in different types of yajnas? We should know these things, some of which are general, like the purity of the materials, the proper time, purity of the place where yajna is being conducted, purity of the body, purity of mantras. When all these aspects are there together, then the yajna is complete. Just by sitting down somewhere and offering some things into the fire does not constitute a yajna

The land where yajna is to take place should be pure. For that the land should be properly selected. There are certain samskaras pertaining to the land. The materials being used for the yajna also influence the yajna. The yajaman is the one who has initiated the yajna. His own punya (accrued unseen merit) will also influence the yajna. Thus all these matters influence the yajna

In the Shrimad Bhagavat, there is a small description of an incident, in which a miracle took place in Parikshit's yajna, which did not take place in  Yudhisthira's yajna. When the priests invoked the devatas in the ashwamedha yagya conducted by King Parikshit,verily the devatas would manifest themselves there. This had never happened before, at any time. It did not happen at the time of King Yudhisthira's yajna either. 

So, a question was raised, as to  why did this not happen? The answer given was that it was the result of the yajamana's punya. King Parikshit's punya was responsible. The purity of his mind, the purity of his body, the purity of his intention, all these had influenced the yajna

When I perform a yajna, the purity of the land, the purity of the materials being used, my body's purity, the disciplines that I follow etc. all are important.  Along with that another important matter is there- the purity of the life of the acharya through whom I am getting this yajna done, as well as the purity of the mantras being uttered by them. 

If the right time is not chosen for performance of yajna, it will not be a good yajna. Our traditions give a lot of importance to the aspect of time. If the time is not favourable, then in spite of all our efforts, the yajna will not be successful. Therefore we should understand the principle of time. We should understand what the purity of time means. Astrology that is centred around yajna was created only for the sake of knowing which yajna should be performed at which time.

When we do any scientific process, following the necessary steps, in the sequence prescribed, then automatically the expected result accrues. Similarly, for example, if yajna for increasing wealth is done by a competent person, with the proper chanting of the appropriate mantras and required number of offerings into the fire, at the proper time,  then definitely the expected result of increase in wealth will take place.

Traditionally, our Kings used to perform these kind of yajnas. Even the public used to perform these yajnas. Thus there was  a continuous flow of efforts which gained the grace of the devatas, which resulted in a continuous flow of success in life.  

The Lord himself says, that the full result will not accrue for yajnas in which the scriptural injunctions are not followed. Some result may accrue, but it will be  diminished.

असृष्टान्नं - the yajna in which there is is no distribution of food, will not be a successful yajna. Distribution of food is an integral part of yajna.  The distribution of food is in proportion to the number of offerings made. When this is ensured along with other stipulations,  the yajna will be successful.

The importance of the injunctions with reference to mantras.

After that the Lord says - मन्त्रहीनं. Has the yajna been performed using proper mantras, chanted at the right time properly, by trained scholars? Yajna is scriptural activity whose primary basis is the knowledge of mantras.  Our tradition is replete with philosophies that do not believe in God. Even then the Rishies acknowledged those philosophies. In the Nyaya-vaisheshikas, the Vaisheshikas philosophy does not believe in Ishvara. In the Shankya-Yoga philosophies, the Sankhya philosophy does not consider Ishvara to be necessary. Amongst the Purva Mimamsa and Uttara Mimamasa, the Purva Mimamsakaras do not consider Ishvara to be necessary.   Out of the six respected philosophies of Sanatana Dharma, three do not consider Ishvara necessary. 

Let us pay attention to this. Even though three philosophies of Sanatana Dharma do not consider Ishvara necessary, why are they not still considered as 'aastika' (believer)? This is because they accept the Vedas. 

We do not define 'aastika' on the basis of acceptance of Ishvara. Accepting Vedas or not accepting Vedas, is the basis for being called as 'aastika' or 'naastika'  philosophy. Even though, the Rishis who propounded these philosophies do not consider Ishvara as  necessary, still because they accept the Vedas, they are accepted as Rishis. By saying that Ishvara is not necessary, they tried to draw our attention to the importance of the Vedic mantras, as these mantras  are quite capable of giving the desired results by themselves.

Analysis of the Veda mantras takes place in different ways. One is that the Veda mantras  are analysed in a general manner and their word meaning is taken in the form of teaching. We get different type of lessons from the Veda mantras. For example 'मा हिंस्यात् सर्वा भूतानि।, संगच्छध्वं सः वदध्वं।' - these are primarily mantras that teach something. In these mantras, lessons are there for the public, with reference to their conduct, their thought processes. This is the first use of the Veda.  No matter in which way you write and speak these mantras, you will still derive some lessons from it.

The second point, is the effect of vibrations generated from the proper chanting of the mantras. The whole universe is pervaded by vibrations - it is nothing but vibrations. Therefore, let us choose specific mantras, whose vibrations are beneficial in our life, which are favourable to our life.  Thus those Veda mantras should be selected, by whose continuous chanting our life automatically becomes joyous. 

You people must have heard about the greatness of the effect of vibrations. Music, which is properly played, which may not even have any words to it, but which is harmonious, and soothing influences our mind - this is something we have all experienced. Many incurable diseases have been cured through the medium of music. Music has been used to cure the sick successfully. In America, I have seen a hospital where arrangements for special music are made for patients. These arrangements for music were made so as to keep the patients in a particular mood. It was found that  if the patients experience a specific mood, then the health benefits are speeded up. So even though we may not use words, the vibrations caused by the use of music does influence our life and change the state of our mind. We can use those vibrations and bring about favourable progress in our lives. The Vedic mantras have this kind of immense power to propel us towards success. These Vedic vibrations have been greatly used in foreign countries. In olden times, it was famous here, in Bharat, too.

The Power of Mantras

There is also a third aspect. Specific mantras have specific applications. Every mantra is accompanied by it's seer ( Rishi), meter( chandas), deity (devata), application (viniyoga). We should know these four aspects. Without knowing the rishi, devata, chandas and viniyoga of the mantra, it cannot be used for a specific purpose. Every mantra is accompanied by it's Rishi, devata, chandas and viniyoga. Saying that I am using this mantra for this purpose, when one uses the mantra in a proper manner, then specific siddhis ( specials powers) are gained through the grace of the mantra devatas.  This knowledge was with our Rishies, and it was based on this knowledge that King Vishvamitra also had to say धिक् बलं क्षत्रिय बलं ब्रह्मतेजोबलं बलं । King Vishwamitra tried very hard to defeat Muni Vasishtha. He used the entire army, but Sage Vasishtha was not defeated. Sage Vasishtha's cow named Kamadhenu prevented any defeat. After that Vishvamitraa acquired divine weapons and again tried to defeat Sage Vasishtha. He used those divine weapons on Vasishtha. Vasishtha simply placed a blade of dry grass in front of them. Even greatest of divine weapons would return back from that blade of grass. They were unable to proceed forward. At last Vishwamitra had to concede ' धिक् बलं क्षत्रिय बलं ब्रह्मतेजोबलं बलं । Oh! The real power in this universe is the brilliant power of the Vedas. The mantras of the Veda are the real power and therefore I will gain knowledge of that'. Saying this the king renounced his kingdom and went away to become a Brahmarishi. King Vishwamitra had physical power. Sage Vasishtha had mantra power. King Vishwamitra's physical power was totally overpowered  and powerless in front of Vasishtha's mantra power. Vishwamitra was totally overthrown. So in this way, Sage Vasishtha used mantra power.

In our country we have vast detailed knowledge about the appropriate application  and use of different types of mantras. This knowledge of mantras has been blessing the people. They fulfill the desires of people. Keeping in mind, the kind of lack felt by someone, the appropriate mantra is applied, with the aim of removing that lack and attaining fulfillment. When there is a deficiency of any vitamin in the body we have to to take the vitamin. Similarly in keeping with each person's destiny there is some deficiency or lack in the life, and in keeping with that, appropriate mantra can be used to remove that deficiency. In this way the Rishis brought about a  prosperous and healthy society. 

The law of mantras is such that, as long as the proper mantras are not used, the success of the yajna is doubtful.Therefore the Lord says विधिहिनमसृष्टान्नं मन्त्रहीनं. It is important to see if the mantras have been properly used in a yajna.

Discipline and Austerity are required

It is important to note that the use of mantras is not meant to be undertaken by merely  reading books. It's not enough to just repeat them two or three times. The use of mantras should be accompanied by  purity of the body.  

Let us revisit a particular episode in the story of Lord Rama. King Dasaratha went to Maharishi Vasishtha. He requested blessings for begetting a son. Maharishi Vasishtha said 'King! You will definitely get a son, I know that. However for removing the obstacles for those, two yajnas need to be performed'. King Dasaratha told Vasishtha to please go ahead and perform them.  Maharishi Vasishtha said 'No. For that, you will have to invite an excellent Rishi whose name is Rshysrnga'. King Dasaratha asked that 'why is it necessary that we should call only him?' Maharishi Vasishtha said 'it is indeed rare to find anybody with mantra-siddhi (the capacity to manifest the powers of a mantra) like him.'  

The same mantra can be chanted  by any Rishi or it can be chanted by Sage Rshyashrnga. What is the difference? The mantra is chanted properly by the other also. But Maharishi Vasishtha said that call Rshyasringa only. Therefore we will have to consider the life of Sage Rshyasringa. Maharishi Vashisht placed great faith in Sage Rishyasringa because Rshyashringa's entire life was one of sacrifice, austerity. He lived the life of a solitary sage. His father had arranged that from his childhood he had never in come in contact with any lady. He had no idea what the female species was. The Valmiki Ramayana has a long description of this.

Our scriptural teachers have said that the powers which are there within the human being are scattered (wastefully)  into many different avenues. So if anybody desires to unfold the powers of a mantra, they should protect themselves from three things. 
जिह्वा दग्धा परान्नेन हस्तौ दग्धौ परिग्रहात्। नेत्रौ दग्धौ परस्त्रीभिः मन्त्रसिद्धिः कथं भवेत्? 
If tongue is  ruined by eating food supplied by others, hands are burnt by accumulating wealth, eyes are burnt by desiring other women, how  mantra siddhi would happen?

These three things are to be avoided.  I have studied mantra with pure heart. I can chant the mantra. However if the body that is chanting the mantra, as well as it's vital energies are not in proper condition, then the chanting of the mantra will be without any power.  That mantra will devoid of life. Therefore that mantra will no more be as useful as it could be. 

Maharishi Rshyashringa was free of these defects. Therefore in childhood itself, he had become an excellent siddha (the one who wielded different powers). Excellent Brahmins who have aggrandized much, who have accepted whatever was offered to them, fall in their stature. The scriptural teachers do not consider them to be excellent. जिह्वा दग्धा परान्नेन - a Brahmin who always accepts the food given by others cannot be considered excellent. He will not be able to properly protect the knowledge of mantra within himself.

The one who lives by his own effort considering, the food given by others as not to be eaten, the one who uses his discrimination at the time of accepting charity carefully considering what am I accepting, for what purpose am I accepting, how much am I accepting, that person's mantra power can remain protected. But a person who thinks that let these things keep coming, he may acquire many things, but he loses everything inside.

In the Valmiki Ramayana there is a very beautiful adjective used while describing the brahmanas- संयताश्च परिग्रहे। The one who hesitates to take anything. The wealth that one receives comes with its own defects. And whoever receives the wealth gets associated with those defects. Therefore, earlier,people would think a lot before accepting any wealth. The people who have protected their life's spiritual brilliance by refraining from accepting such wealth, can use (unleash a mantra's potential) a mantra successfully. The use of mantra is not about  just reading a few verses. नेत्रौ दग्धौ परस्त्रीभिः। If one does not lead a life of discipline, one cannot be successful in invoking the power of mantras. Thus it is only by following all these restrictions and having a regular, consistent daily practice of chanting a chosen mantra, a set number of times, as a result of which the individuality is transformed and the whole body is vibrant with the power of the mantra, that a person can invoke the mantra's power.

The power of purity of the body
Is everybody's body the same? Is the body of of any person and the body of Shree Bhagavan Ramkrishna  (Thakur) the same? The state of the consciousness within that body and the influence of that consciousness on it's goal are all different matters. Outwardly we may look the same, however the state of the vital energies are different. When Thakur undertook any spiritual discipline (anushthana), then in how many days did he achieve success in that? In just three days. If he undertook any spiritual discipline, on the third day it would be successful. Why? Because his mind was extremely pure. He did not require any external purity. 

For those who have complete nadi-shuddhi, the success of any anushthana or other spiritual discipline is not far off. Thakur had undertaken the sadhana of Islam, the sadhana of Christianity, the sadhana of madhura bhakti, the sadhana of loving devotion (vaatsalya bhakti). He had worshipped the Lord looking upon himself as a servant of the Lord. He had needed only  three or four days, at the maximum a week, in which he attained perfection in that sadhana. This was because his body was fully  qualified. His vital energies were such that he could accomplish any sadhana in a few days. In this way, until one's entire life is not made into a laboratory, till then our capacity for invoking the power of mantra will not be as great, as those of our Rishies and acharyas. Therefore mantra siddhi is not a matter for just reading about or teaching.

There is difference between chanting of a mantra by a layman, and chanting of a mantra by a scholar who has committed his life to spiritual practices and who has undertaken an anushthana of the mantra to complete a prescribed number of repeations of the mantra (called a purascharana) and through that who has purified the body and made it fit. 

What is the difference? Suppose you take out the bullets from a pistol and throw them. Will it have any effect?  It will have no effect at all. Suppose the bullets are the same, and you release those bullets through the pistol, then its effect is quite different. This is because, behind that action, there is now a power driving the bullets, because of which they are released with speed. The scriptural authors have revealed this very matter. The capacity to invoke the power of a mantra is there in life for one whose body, vital energies, behaviour, wealth, daily food - all these are disciplined. When a mantra is uttered by such a person then just one word works wonders.

Therefore Patanjali wrote in his Mahabhashyam एक शब्दः सम्यक् ज्ञातः संप्रयुक्तः स्वर्गे लोके  च कामधुग्भवति। Just know one word in your life. Do anushthana of one word. However सम्यक् ज्ञातः संप्रयुक्तः - understand it well and use it.  How should you use it in your life? Becoming one with the word, learn about how to use this body-machine to make it fit for the mantra. Then use that one word.

That one word will be the wish-fulfilling cow, both in this world and in the hereafter. Just one word. All the Vedas are also not required. Neither is the entire body of knowledge of mantras required. But for this it is necessary to keep the body pure. This body machine needs to be maintained in excellent condition. Many defects spoil this body machine.

 What is required in life, to be free of those defects? The shastras say that for this yajna is necessary. महायज्ञैश्च य‌ज्ञैश्च ब्राह्मीं क्रियते तनुः। If this personality is to rendered eligible for knowledge of Brahman', then worship through mahayajna and yajna is necessary. 

Mantra Siddhi
I remember a certain incident. This is something which happened in Andhra Pradesh. In Andhra, there is a place called Nizamabad. Once, Sant Samarth Ramdas was travelling through that place. When he arrived there walking, some scholars saw him. They were overwhelmed and thrilled by his darshan.They told him 'Maharaj, we are in great trouble. How can we come out of this?'. Swami Ramdas enquired as to what was the matter? They said that 'One emperor has made us prisoner here. It has been around 10 to 12 years since it has rained here. The emperor has told us to do anushthana properly and produce rain. He has said that if our anushthana does not result in rain, then we will not be permitted to return to our homes. The emperor said 'I give you a maximum period of 6 months. If within that period, if there is no rain inspite of your anushthana, I will never permit you to return to your homes.' 'We are here since years. Please bless us. We are unable to accomplish this work. We are doing anushthana as per the rules. We are following all necessary disciplines. Yet we are not meeting with any success'

Swami Ramdas said 'never mind. Do your anushthana now.' He saw a big stone. He placed his garment over the stone and then invoked Hanumanji there with mantras. Then he asked them to commence abhishekam on that stone. There was no idol there, only a stone. Those scholars commenced abhishekam on that stone. As the abhishekam was nearing the end, it began to rain. The rain clouds gathered and it rained. When those Brahmins lifted the cloth off the stone, they found that an idol of Hanumanji had manifested there. 

Amazing! How did that happen?

Sant Ramdas had sat there, looking at that stone and invoking Hanumanji in his mind, had projected Hanumanji on the stone. The image in our thoughts can be so powerful, that if with a focussed mind, we wish to imprint  it somewhere, then it's imprint has to materialize there. Now, I want to bring to your attention to the fact that inspite of so many pandits performing so much anushthana, they were unsuccessful. However one Samarth Swami appeared there and made the anshthanam successful. Why? That was the effect of the purified personility. It was the effect of the repeated chanting of the name of Lord Rama over many many years. Samarth Ramdas Swami had undertaken purascharana of Gayatri mantra three times, following strict disciplines. All this has an influence on one's speech. Therefore now when he invoked the mantra, then automatically the power of the mantra was unleashed. The devatas had to appear there.  They had to bless him.

महायज्ञैश्च य‌ज्ञैश्च ब्राह्मीं क्रियते तनुः।

After making this body- mind complex fit, when mantras are invoked, then their anushthana becomes successful. Then yajnas become successful. Lord has pointed out that, if such use of mantras is not made in yajnas, then the result of the yajna is reduced. 

विधिहिनमसृष्टान्नं मन्त्रहीनं अदक्षिणम्। The Lord declares that yajna to be tamasic, if anushthanam of the yajna is done, but no dakshina is given to please the Brahmins who performed the yajna. The Lord also mentions श्रद्धा विरहितं यज्ञं - the yajna that is done without reverential faith in it's capacity to produce result is tamasic. If the yajna is performed merely for show, or was performed for some other reason, or I had no faith but my wife wanted it to be performed- in this way yajna was performed for some other reason, without faith, then Lord says that it is as good as not performing. Therefore shraddha must also be there. Otherwise the result of the yajna will be reduced. The Lord, through this statement,has drawn our attention towards the shortcomings in performance of Vedic yajnas.

The Lord has also revealed how better yajnas may be performed. He said that if a yajna is performed keeping some goal or desire in mind, or it is performed merely for show, yet it's performance is done adhering to all other mentioned stipulations, then that yajna is a rajasic yajna. The Lord said that a yajna  performed,  with the attitude that 'performing yajna is my duty' is the best one. The scriptures have ordained that 'may you perform yajna as wealth has increased so much... therefore I must perform yajna.' Thinking thus, when yajna is performed in keeping with all stipulations, with a pleased mind imbued with shraddha, that yajna is called as a satvic yajna.

In this way, Lord has given us a vision of yajna, whereby avoiding the shortcomings of tamas and rajas yajnas, when there is performance of satvic yajnas in our life, then those yajnas give us two types of results. One is, it gives us fulfillment of all our worldly desires and the other is it grants us antahkarna shuddhi. Through antahkarana shuddhi we gain purity in life. It is only through the medium of chitta-shuddhi that I can climb the steps leading to spiritual progress. 

Om Tat Sat

Translated from book Yajnamaya Jivan