Guest guest Posted January 24, 2005 Report Share Posted January 24, 2005 Sai Ram Light and Love Swami teaches... (24 January 2005) The Role of Good Company (Ancient sages developed the skill to direct their visions as "beyond the brain''. By Upanishads there was the Universe inside a human being. It was as light within oneself. The good company illuminates as many spiritual lights within what through experience from "the material to the spiritual" lead every member of company to the eternal Atmic Unity*). Birth is the result of the karma done before death. This is no religion of despair; it is a religion of hope, of assurance, of encouragement to lead an active, useful, beneficent life. For the future is in your hands; tomorrow can be shaped by today, though today has already been shaped by yesterday. That is the reason why the biggest section of the Vedhas is called 'Karma Kaanda' and deals with various types of Karma. The Thaittireeya Upanishadh takes the student from the gross to the subtle, step by step, in its effort to teach him the Divine Principle. When Bhrigu, the son of Varuna, approached his father, saying, "Teach me Brahman," he was told in a general way, "Brahman is that from which all this originates, that in which they live, and that in which they enter when they depart," and he was asked to investigate it through meditation himself. Bhrigu declared that 'Food was Brahman,' and when asked to proceed with the investigation, he proceeded to the next hypothesis, that Brahman was Praana (life); later, he found that Manas(will, sankalpa, ichchaashakthi) was Brahman; then he reached the stage when he could declarethat Brahman was Vijaana (intelligence); the next step was reached when he identified Brahmanwith Aanandha (bliss); thus the Upanishadh teaches the subtle, supreme, non-dual Bliss, hiddenin the cave of the heart. >From the material to the spiritual - that is the process of Upanishadhicteachings. The lasts are experiencing through good company. Avoid the bad company, what causes misfortune to you. Once there was a hunter who had captured a baby bear and who brought it up as his pet withgreat love and care. The bear too reciprocated his love and behaved like a good friend for many years. One day, when he was traversing the jungle with his pet, who had grown up into a hefty beast, he felt overcome by sleep; so he laid himself down on the grass, asking the bear to see that he is not disturbed. The bear kept watch very vigilantly. It noticed a fly that flew round and round and settled on the nose of the master. The fly went off when it waved its thick heavy hand; but, it came again, and settled on the nose. The bear got enraged when repeated waves of the hand did not teach the fly that his master's nose was not the fly's resting place. At last, the bear could not bear the insolence any longer! His heavy palm came down with a thump on the nose, a devastating whack! The master died on the spot! That is the consequence of keeping company with the wild and the foolish. However affectionate they are, their ignorance will land you into disaster. When the mental resolutions take a bad turn and when you are then in the company of a bad one, your condition becomes worse on account of plus getting added to plus. The result is disaster. When your intentions and resolutions are good, and when you join the company of the good, you can progress faster. The company of the good is like the noon-time shadow. It is short in the beginning but lengthens as the evening comes on. The company of the bad one is like the morning shadow. It is long when the day dawns, but becomes shorter as noon approaches. The comradeship and conversation of the undesirable appear sweet and profound in the early stages, but the effect is only pollution of minds and hearts. Shankaraachaarya has emphasised the value of the company of the good to persons on the spiritual path, for it leads man to immortality. From Good company to No-company, From No-Company to No-Desire, From No-Desire to Un-moving Truth, From Un-moving Truth to Eternal Liberation. "Immortality can be attained, not by ritual deeds, nor by birth, nor by wealth, but only by sacrifice and renunciation". This is the declaration of the Vedhas. Giving up the little 'I' is what renunciation or thyaaga means. Thyaaga does not mean running away from hearth and home into the jungle. It means sublimating every thought, word and deed as an offering to God, and saturating all acts with Divine intent. Seva is the highest Saadhana for, God Himself takes human form and comes down to serve mankind and lead it to the ideals it has ignored. Therefore consider how delighted God will be when human being serves human being! Life is short, it is liable to be cut short any moment. The body may fall and release you, without notice. So while you can, you must dedicate the heart to Him who gave it to you. Your heart is your witness; question it whether you have obeyed the directions of the Lord. A thousand persons may swear that you have not, but if your conscience affirms that you have, you need not fear. You may ask, "Swaami! When you find a person behaving wrongly, viciously, how can we love him? How can we revere him, as you want us to?" In such a situation consider one thing: Who is it who committed that wrong? What is it that prompted the act? Who did the deed? The body did it. What prompted the body? The mind. Why was he forced to do it? Through the influence of his karma, the cumulative effect of his activities and attitudes through many lives in the past. The Aathma in him is unattached, to any deed or motive. That Aathma is Divine; love that, revere that. That is My answer. The human heart is an ocean, whose depth none can gauge nor can anyone limit its horizon. The ocean has countless pearls and precious corals but it has also sharks and crocodiles. One has to explore continuously and boldly for the gems and pearls of good thoughts and feelings, and cultivate them more and more. There are two obstacles which prevent person in this valuable effort. The first is the tendency to compare yourselves with others. This is very wrong. No two things or no two persons are identical. Even identical twins grow in distinct ways of life. Each with his distinct nature, quality, potentiality and destiny. How, then, can any one compare himself with another and either exult or despair? We are proud that we are better than others. All this is very silly when we come to think of it. Secondly, we are in the habit of justifying our faults, rationalising our errors and avoiding theresponsibility of facing them squarely and correcting them. These two attitudes thicken man:signorance and breed further failings. Every one has God as the source. No one is higher or lower. (Reet's compilation from: Sathya Sai Baba. Sathya Sai Speaks: Vol. 7, "Not Loka but Lokesha," Chapter 5 and "The wet wick", Chapter 39. Vol. 15, "Two kingdoms with one king," Chapter 36 and "Eternal harmony," Chapter 8. Vol. 16, "The daily prayer," Chapter 2). * My comments always in brackets in black. Namaste - Reet Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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