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Hello Jyotsna

Thanks so much for your call the other day. I'm feeling pretty down in the

dumps about not knowing where home is and living temporarily (for a year and a

half now) in a rental in Kirkland. I've gotten it into my head the Bellingham

is a "hip" place and that maybe it could be home.

 

Do you know of any devotees up there that I might call to chat about that neck

of the woods?

 

Thanks so much

Namah Shivaya

carolyn

 

 

---

Received: Tue, 10 Aug 2004 10:55:49 PM PDT

"E. Lamb" <jyotsna2

ammachi

Story

 

> For a change of pace, here's a story I hope you enjoy:

>

> One day Krishna and Arjuna were walking down a path. Towards the evening

they became tired and saw a house. In the house was a mean old man. Through

some

> method he had acquired a lot of money. He was very mean. They knocked on

the

> door. The mean old man came to the door and said, "What do you want?" And

> Krishna said, "May we have lodging for the night and food to eat?" Usually

the

> mean old man would have shut the door in their face, but he realized it was

 

> Krishna and Arjuna, so he reluctantly let them in. He had a scrumptious

dinner

> for himself, but he gave Krishna and Arjuna only bread crumbs to eat. And

he

> had a comfortable bed, but he made Krishna and Arjuna lie down in the

corner

> in the mud to sleep for the night. When morning came, Krishna and Arjuna

> were about to leave. Krishna put his hand on the old man's head and

blessed

> him and he said, "May you prosper abundantly." And they left.

>

> Evening came again, and they came to another house. In this house live a

pious,

> wonderful, beautiful old man whose only possession was a cow. They knocked

> on the door, and when the old man opened the door and saw Krishna, he

> prostrated himself and he said, "What a blessing I've got to have Krishna

and

> Arjuna come to my home! My home is yours." He gave them his dinner. He

> made them sleep in his bed, and he slept on the floor. And he praised them

> all night. When morning came, Arjuna and Krishna were about to leave, and

> Krishna put his hand on the old man's head and he said, "May your cow drop

> dead!," and left.

>

> Arjuna didn't say a word, but he was thinking about this all day. Finally

he

> had the nerve to ask Krishna, "Master, I don't understand your message.

> The other night when we came into the house and this old man treated us

> poorly, was mean to us, you blessed him and told him, may he prosper

> abundantly. And last evening, when we came to this old man, pious

> old man who was wonderful to us, gave us dinner and his bed, you cursed

> him and said, may his cow die, drop dead. What is the meaning of this?"

>

> Krishna explained, "My ways, Arjuna, are not your ways. And your ways

> are not my ways. You may see me do many things which you do not

> understand. Never judge me by what you see me do. Only love me.

> You see, when I cursed the first man, and told him, may he prosper

> abundantly, I realized he would come back many times, many incarnations,

> and have a lot of money, and his relatives would haunt him to get some

> money. The IRS would come after him, and his relatives would want

> his money. He will have many lives to work this out. He will suffer many

> lives because of his greed. Now when I went to the other old man, I

> realized he was giving up everything for God. His only possession was the

> cow. And this was holding him back from Self-Realization. So when I

> removed the cow from him, then he will be Self-Realized. This is the game

> I play with people."

>

> The same is true with us. Never believe the Sage thinks like you or does

> the things that you do. A Sage may appear to you to be an ordinary

> person just like yourself. But that's where the similarity ends. Never

try

> to understand a sage, his methods, or what he does. Again, just love him.

> That's all you have to do. If you can really learn to love the sage,

> immediately you will see results in your spiritual life.

>

> Robert Adams in "The Silence of the Heart"

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

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Hi Carolyn,

 

I think there's one called Mary Snowden, but I can't find her address or phone.

You might try the local satsang list. A lot of Washington state devotees are

on our list.

 

Good luck,

Jyotsna

 

Carolyn Hallett <carolynhallett wrote:

 

Hello Jyotsna

Thanks so much for your call the other day. I'm feeling pretty down in the

dumps about not knowing where home is and living temporarily (for a year and a

half now) in a rental in Kirkland. I've gotten it into my head the Bellingham

is a "hip" place and that maybe it could be home.

 

Do you know of any devotees up there that I might call to chat about that neck

of the woods?

 

Thanks so much

Namah Shivaya

carolyn

 

 

---

Received: Tue, 10 Aug 2004 10:55:49 PM PDT

"E. Lamb" <jyotsna2

ammachi

Story

 

> For a change of pace, here's a story I hope you enjoy:

>

> One day Krishna and Arjuna were walking down a path. Towards the evening

they became tired and saw a house. In the house was a mean old man. Through

some

> method he had acquired a lot of money. He was very mean. They knocked on

the

> door. The mean old man came to the door and said, "What do you want?" And

> Krishna said, "May we have lodging for the night and food to eat?" Usually

the

> mean old man would have shut the door in their face, but he realized it was

 

> Krishna and Arjuna, so he reluctantly let them in. He had a scrumptious

dinner

> for himself, but he gave Krishna and Arjuna only bread crumbs to eat. And

he

> had a comfortable bed, but he made Krishna and Arjuna lie down in the

corner

> in the mud to sleep for the night. When morning came, Krishna and Arjuna

> were about to leave. Krishna put his hand on the old man's head and

blessed

> him and he said, "May you prosper abundantly." And they left.

>

> Evening came again, and they came to another house. In this house live a

pious,

> wonderful, beautiful old man whose only possession was a cow. They knocked

> on the door, and when the old man opened the door and saw Krishna, he

> prostrated himself and he said, "What a blessing I've got to have Krishna

and

> Arjuna come to my home! My home is yours." He gave them his dinner. He

> made them sleep in his bed, and he slept on the floor. And he praised them

> all night. When morning came, Arjuna and Krishna were about to leave, and

> Krishna put his hand on the old man's head and he said, "May your cow drop

> dead!," and left.

>

> Arjuna didn't say a word, but he was thinking about this all day. Finally

he

> had the nerve to ask Krishna, "Master, I don't understand your message.

> The other night when we came into the house and this old man treated us

> poorly, was mean to us, you blessed him and told him, may he prosper

> abundantly. And last evening, when we came to this old man, pious

> old man who was wonderful to us, gave us dinner and his bed, you cursed

> him and said, may his cow die, drop dead. What is the meaning of this?"

>

> Krishna explained, "My ways, Arjuna, are not your ways. And your ways

> are not my ways. You may see me do many things which you do not

> understand. Never judge me by what you see me do. Only love me.

> You see, when I cursed the first man, and told him, may he prosper

> abundantly, I realized he would come back many times, many incarnations,

> and have a lot of money, and his relatives would haunt him to get some

> money. The IRS would come after him, and his relatives would want

> his money. He will have many lives to work this out. He will suffer many

> lives because of his greed. Now when I went to the other old man, I

> realized he was giving up everything for God. His only possession was the

> cow. And this was holding him back from Self-Realization. So when I

> removed the cow from him, then he will be Self-Realized. This is the game

> I play with people."

>

> The same is true with us. Never believe the Sage thinks like you or does

> the things that you do. A Sage may appear to you to be an ordinary

> person just like yourself. But that's where the similarity ends. Never

try

> to understand a sage, his methods, or what he does. Again, just love him.

> That's all you have to do. If you can really learn to love the sage,

> immediately you will see results in your spiritual life.

>

> Robert Adams in "The Silence of the Heart"

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

 

 

 

 

 

Aum Amriteswarayai Namaha!

 

 

Ammachi/

 

Ammachi

 

 

 

 

 

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The local satsang list...that sounds like a good thing to have. Where might I

find it?

thanks for all your help

warmly

carolyn

 

---

Received: Fri, 17 Sep 2004 04:25:25 PM PDT

"E. Lamb" <jyotsna2

Ammachi

Re: Bellingham devotess

 

> Hi Carolyn,

>

> I think there's one called Mary Snowden, but I can't find her address or

phone.

> You might try the local satsang list. A lot of Washington state devotees

are

> on our list.

>

> Good luck,

> Jyotsna

>

> Carolyn Hallett <carolynhallett wrote:

>

> Hello Jyotsna

> Thanks so much for your call the other day. I'm feeling pretty down in the

> dumps about not knowing where home is and living temporarily (for a year and

a

> half now) in a rental in Kirkland. I've gotten it into my head the

Bellingham

> is a "hip" place and that maybe it could be home.

>

> Do you know of any devotees up there that I might call to chat about that

neck

> of the woods?

>

> Thanks so much

> Namah Shivaya

> carolyn

>

>

> ---

> Received: Tue, 10 Aug 2004 10:55:49 PM PDT

> "E. Lamb" <jyotsna2

> ammachi

> Story

>

> > For a change of pace, here's a story I hope you enjoy:

> >

> > One day Krishna and Arjuna were walking down a path. Towards the evening

> they became tired and saw a house. In the house was a mean old man.

Through

> some

> > method he had acquired a lot of money. He was very mean. They knocked

on

> the

> > door. The mean old man came to the door and said, "What do you want?"

And

> > Krishna said, "May we have lodging for the night and food to eat?"

Usually

> the

> > mean old man would have shut the door in their face, but he realized it

was

>

> > Krishna and Arjuna, so he reluctantly let them in. He had a scrumptious

> dinner

> > for himself, but he gave Krishna and Arjuna only bread crumbs to eat.

And

> he

> > had a comfortable bed, but he made Krishna and Arjuna lie down in the

> corner

> > in the mud to sleep for the night. When morning came, Krishna and Arjuna

> > were about to leave. Krishna put his hand on the old man's head and

> blessed

> > him and he said, "May you prosper abundantly." And they left.

> >

> > Evening came again, and they came to another house. In this house live a

> pious,

> > wonderful, beautiful old man whose only possession was a cow. They

knocked

> > on the door, and when the old man opened the door and saw Krishna, he

> > prostrated himself and he said, "What a blessing I've got to have Krishna

> and

> > Arjuna come to my home! My home is yours." He gave them his dinner. He

> > made them sleep in his bed, and he slept on the floor. And he praised

them

> > all night. When morning came, Arjuna and Krishna were about to leave, and

 

> > Krishna put his hand on the old man's head and he said, "May your cow

drop

> > dead!," and left.

> >

> > Arjuna didn't say a word, but he was thinking about this all day.

Finally

> he

> > had the nerve to ask Krishna, "Master, I don't understand your message.

> > The other night when we came into the house and this old man treated us

> > poorly, was mean to us, you blessed him and told him, may he prosper

> > abundantly. And last evening, when we came to this old man, pious

> > old man who was wonderful to us, gave us dinner and his bed, you cursed

> > him and said, may his cow die, drop dead. What is the meaning of this?"

> >

> > Krishna explained, "My ways, Arjuna, are not your ways. And your ways

> > are not my ways. You may see me do many things which you do not

> > understand. Never judge me by what you see me do. Only love me.

> > You see, when I cursed the first man, and told him, may he prosper

> > abundantly, I realized he would come back many times, many incarnations,

> > and have a lot of money, and his relatives would haunt him to get some

> > money. The IRS would come after him, and his relatives would want

> > his money. He will have many lives to work this out. He will suffer

many

> > lives because of his greed. Now when I went to the other old man, I

> > realized he was giving up everything for God. His only possession was

the

> > cow. And this was holding him back from Self-Realization. So when I

> > removed the cow from him, then he will be Self-Realized. This is the

game

> > I play with people."

> >

> > The same is true with us. Never believe the Sage thinks like you or does

> > the things that you do. A Sage may appear to you to be an ordinary

> > person just like yourself. But that's where the similarity ends. Never

> try

> > to understand a sage, his methods, or what he does. Again, just love

him.

> > That's all you have to do. If you can really learn to love the sage,

> > immediately you will see results in your spiritual life.

> >

> > Robert Adams in "The Silence of the Heart"

> >

> >

> >

> >

> >

> >

> >

>

>

>

>

>

> Aum Amriteswarayai Namaha!

>

>

> Sponsor

>

>

>

> Links

>

>

> Ammachi/

>

>

> Ammachi

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

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