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ANSWERS FOR SPIRITUALISING OUR DAY-TO-DAY LIFE

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BHAGAWAN SRI SATHYA SAI BABA ANSWERS FOR

SPIRITUALISING OUR DAY-TO-DAY LIFE

HUMAN VALUES

Q194) Swami! Very often, you keep referring to Human Values. Restoring these

values is, indeed, a task this avatar had set for itself. Kindly enlighten us

on how we may cognise their importance.

Bhagawan: A man lacking human values has only the semblance of the outer form,

and is not a man in action at all. The supremacy and the distinction of mankind

depend on human values, Man's birth has a purpose: cherishing his humanity and

rising to divinity Satya, dharma, s’anti, prema and ahimsa, these five may be

said to be the vital airs which together constitute the breath. Without the

vital airs prana, apana vyana, udana, samana,  there is no question of man's

existence, is there? Afraid that truth may land man in difficulty, he has moved

further and further away from satya. He is in such a sorry plight that he does

not know what dharma is. Actually, man should never abandon these values,

however troublesome the circumstances may be. Giving up these values so sacred

is tantamount to committing suicide.

When truth is given up, it amounts to losing one of the five vital airs. The

dictum, satyam vada, dharmam cara (Speak the truth, Act righteously), is the

foremost in the culture of Bharat, and crucial to spiritual advancement. What

is the principal cause of today's turmoil? It is the total abandonment of

Sathya and dharma. That is why Prema is fast vanishing. In the absence of

Sathya, dharma, Shanthi and Prema, himsa, violence, is on the rampage. In the

home and the village, in the city and the state, even in the nation at large,

we witness orgies of violence. Terrible, cruel, and heinous crimes are being

committed. Human life has become empty. Even now, through faith in God, we can

cultivate our human values. Like a parent grieving over a dimwitted child,

Mother India is crying over the dearth of human values in its citizenry.  

Moral, religious, and spiritual values have sunk to the bottom. Note how

different King Dushyanta, educated in the city, lacking all values; is from his

son, Bharata, who imbibed human values through education in an ashram. Education

for livelihood is not worth the name. True education trains pupils to cognize

the highest goals of life, and spurs them to realise human values.

 Q195)  Swami! Why do we need human values? What is their role in our lives?

Bhagawan: In this world every individual and every material has a value. Each

one has his or its own value. There is nothing in this world that has no value.

Unfortunately in the present day world it is only man who has lost his value.

His life is spent without any value. Hence, man has become worse than an

animal. Even the body of a bird or a small animal like a rabbit, even after it

is killed, has a value. Its flesh or meat is useful. But man, even if he were

an emperor, has no value soon after he dies. So, there is every need to live

with values. You should fill your lives with values. You should live a valuable

life.

Q196)  Swami! How can we acquire human values?

Bhagawan: It is not enough if you repeat like a parrot, the five human values -

Sathya, Truth, dharma, Righteousness, Shanthi, Peace, Prema, love, and ahimsa,

Non­violence. It is not enough if you give lectures on human values. It is

absolutely useless if you read books on human values. They have to be

practiced.

Just as ice is cold and fire is hot, a human being also should have human

values, in a natural way. If you limit these values to mere lectures, they lose

their value. An ounce, of practice is better than a ton of precepts. Your

looking at the map of India doesn't amount to your going round the country,

does it? So also, by reading or lecturing on human values, you do not gain

anything. If you sincerely practise any one of them, the rest will follow. A

tree has the dharma of a tree. An animal has an animal dharma. Then should not

a human being follow human dharma?

The qualities expected of a human being are called `human values'. In my

opinion, if you develop prema all the other values will follow. Love is the

chief quality. Love is God, God is love. Love is life. You have love no doubt,

but it is narrow. It is limited to you and your family, I and mine only. Love

is not contraction as you have now. It is expansion. Love is selflessness, self

is lovelessness. Be he a theist or an atheist, there is none in this world

without love. You can win God's grace only by love. It is the bond of love that

exists between you and God.

What had made Lord Rama pleased with that squirrel in the Ramayana?

What scholarship had the boatman Guha that pleased Rama?

What status and riches had Sabari to win the love of Rama?

What accomplishments had the Gopis of Brindavan to become so close?

and intimate to Lord Krishna?

In all these instances, it was only pure love that made them enjoy proximity to

God. Love excels physical strength, intelligence, wealth and authority. God

looks for love in a devotee. Where there is love, there is truth.

For instance, if your son, after playing in the field returns home with his

friend and asks you for a laddu, you may be tempted to say that there is no

stock of sweets at home. But, if your son comes home all alone and asks for a

sweet, you will immediately get into the kitchen and bring the whole tin of

sweets for him to eat as many as he likes. See the difference! In the

beginning, you denied a single sweet and later you placed the whole tin of

sweets. Why? It is the love that you have for your son that made you speak the

truth.

A word spoken with Prema, love, is Sathya, truth. Any action that you do with

love is dharma. All the unjust and unrighteous deeds that are happening today

are only due to the absence of love. But an action done with love is bound to

be righteous. When there is love, you enjoy peace. It is said that the face is

the index of the mind. We shall know if one is peaceful, disturbed, or agitated

by looking at one's face. Sathya is spoken; dharma is done, while Shanthi is

experienced. So, experience of love is peace. You will not be affected by blame

or criticism. Your peace will be of that order, above negativity and accusation

when it is supported by love. This is the understanding you will have in due

course, with your heart full of love, and you will never hurt anybody in any

manner. This is ahimsa, non‑violence. Understanding with love is

non‑violence.

So, there is nothing in this world that you cannot attain with love. You will be

an embodiment of all the human virtues and values once you develop this divine

universal love.

Q197) Swami! Now we understand that the defect of teaching lies somewhere in our

schools, colleges and universities. Education is certainly not imparted in these

institutions the way you are teaching. Where does the fault lie in our

educational system?

Bhagawan: The knowledge you are acquiring from these educational institutions is

not properly channelised and utilised. You have to nicely "skill" your

knowledge. Then only there will be perfect balance between "knowledge" and

"skill" in our education system. Today you do not "skill" the knowledge, but

you "kill" it. So, the balance is lost. This is the main defect in modern

education.

Q198) Swami! To what extent are parents responsible for the degradation of values among children?

Bhagawan: My opinion is that parents are solely responsible for spoiling

children. Many parents behave like Dhritarashtra, the blind king of the

Mahabharata. He never opposed or prevented his sons, the Kauravas, from doing

any type of mischief, or misdeed. What happened to the king at the end? He was

left with none to perform even his last rites or obsequies, though he had as

many as a hundred sons. He ruined himself completely. Why? It was only his

attachment to his sons that brought about his fall. The whole clan fell into

disrepute due to his attachment.

It appears as though modern parents do not know how to bring up their children.

As the son watches the T.V., the mother brings food from the kitchen, and

serves it there. Keeping the plate in front of the T.V., the parents don’t

teach them good manners and good behaviour. One with good manners is a man. The

one with discipline is a devotee. The rest are only children.

Parents constantly think of career-oriented and highly promising education with

prospects of going abroad. They want their children to settle in big positions,

earn money, go abroad, and marry rich women and so on.

There is also another category of parents. When their children by chance go to a

temple, they prevent them saying, “Are you going to the temple now? Why, at this

age? You are very young. Should you be so religious at your age? You can be so

after sixty.” Sometimes you also come across a father who asks his son to tell

everyone who comes to see him that he is not home. What do you expect the son

to learn from such a father?

In the modern age there are many children who are not fortunate enough to be

brought up by the loving, sweet, and tender care of their mothers! Mothers are

busy with their avocations, and spend their time in ladies clubs, in the market

place, shopping, visiting friends, and so on and so forth, with the result that

a child weeps only when the servant-maid dies and not when its own mother is

lost. Why? The reason is that children haven’t known the love of a mother, only

that of a servant-maid. This is the shameful situation today.

Who made emperor Sivaji great? Who made Gandhi a Mahatma? It is only his mother.

It is entirely the responsibility of parents to mould their children into ideal

citizens. If a girl is spoiled, the mother has to be blamed. If a boy is

spoiled, the father must be held responsible. Parents should shape children in

such a way as to win the appreciation of everyone. They should get a good name

for their schools, society and country in general.

Q199) Swami! Price hike is a common experience everywhere. People find it

difficult to make both ends meet because of spiraling prices. We are eager to

know Swami's views on this issue of rising prices.

First of all you should know that man is more valuable than all the wealth in

the world. Prices have gone up as man has gone down in human values. The day

human values go up, the prices of commodities will come down. In fact,

properties like land, jewellery, money, and houses, and physical comforts and

conveniences have value only because of man. Since man is utilizing them, they

are valuable; if not, they are useless.

For example, there is vast land available in a forest. It is very cheap to buy

and own land there. You can easily go in for a plot or a site, whereas in

cities like Bombay and Delhi, the cost of the land is so high that it is not

within the reach of the common man. To get a plot of land there, even a small

plot, costs a few Lakhs. Why? Because many reside in the city. It is thickly

populated. Every inch of land is fully utilised. But in a forest, hardly a few

people live and as such the value of land is low there. Who is then responsible

for the high cost of land? It is only man himself. If no one buys silver and

gold, would you still call them valuable? No. It is man who makes the

commodities, articles and properties either valuable or valueless. Since man

has lost his own value, prices of various

commodities have gone up. In order to bring down the prices, the value of man

should be raised high by practicing human values.

Q200)  Swami! You know everything. It is very true that we as parents must be

blamed. You have pointed out exactly where our mistakes lie. However, today we

do not see children respecting their parents. They do not follow instructions.

They are most ungrateful. Kindly tell us how children should conduct themselves

in the presence of their parents and how they should treat them.

Bhagawan: You know the Vedic injunctions, matr devo bhava, pitr devo bhava,

i.e., Mother is God and Father is God. One must follow these injunctions. The

Epics also cite many instances of this direction.

The culture of Bharat demands that everyone should respect, love and serve his

or her parents, and be very grateful because blood, head, duddu (Tamil word for

`money') and God are only parent's gifts. If you neglect your parents, you will

face the same situation at the hands of your own children. As is the fruit you

eat, so you belch. If you eat cucumber, you don't belch the odour of a mango.

If you sow a mango seed, do you expect a neem tree to grow from it? As is the

seed, so is the tree. Everything comes back to you as reaction, reflection, and

resound. This is as sure as anything. You can never escape the consequences. If

you make your parents shed tears, your children will pass on to you the same

fate.

Here is a small story. There lived a man by name Gopichand who had two sons. One

day he was traveling in a train along with his wife. He wrote a letter to his

sons asking them to meet him and his wife at the station. Both the sons came to

the station accordingly. The eldest one did Namaskar, salutation, to both the

parents and enquired when they started, how the journey was, and if they wanted

anything. The second son, on the other hand, did not greet them at all. His

attitude to his father was rather arrogant. After some time, Gopichand said to

his wife, "See! How our elder son greeted us and made enquiries, while the

younger one did not!" His wife, then, said, `Don't find fault with the second

one like that. After all, he is young. He will change as he grows older. Don’t

be angry with him.”

Years passed. What happened finally? The eldest son who did prostration to his

parents became a Judge in a court and was greeted honorably by everybody in

society. The second at them? How do you expect them to be the recipients of

God’s love and mercy?

Son got the job of a peon in the same court and had to receive everyone and

greet all and sundry with folded hands! This is the difference. Those who

respect their parents will be respected by all. The one who doesn’t will not be

respected by anyone.

The same lesson is that taught in our epics. In the Mahabharata, at the end of

the battle of Kurukshetra, all the Kauravas died, and Queen Gandhari, wife of

the blind king, Dritarashtra started blaming Krishna. She said, “Oh Krishna!

You are very partial to the Pandavas. Now that my sons have all died in battle

are you happy?” then Krishna said to her, “See, Gandhari! Did you ever see your

sons with your own eyes? (Gandhari blindfolded herself to be like her husband

who was born blind). Did they at any point of time pay heed to your words of

counsel? How do you expect them to be blessed by God when their own mother

never cast a glance?

The same is the teaching of the Ramayana also. Kusa and Lava, the twin brothers,

could fight Lord Sri Ramachandra with all their valor and might. Why and how?

The reason is, Lava and Kusa enjoyed the blessings of their mother Sita, and as

a result, they could heroically face Lord Sri Ramachandra, their father. That is

the power inherent in the blessings of parents.

Everyone must serve parents. You need their blessings all the time. You know

what your parents like, you know what to do to please them, and you know that

you have been with them since you were born. If you can’t please them, how do

you expect to please God who you have never seen, nor know what He wants you to

do and what you ought to do? Parents are divine.

Q201) Swami! We know that we should cultivate good qualities right from our

childhood. But,   now, at this hour, how are we to cultivate them? 

Bhagawan: First of all, you should fully realize the need to acquire good

qualities and        cultivate     them sincerely. You should also know to what

exalted heights of nobility they would take you. Then you should find out your

own faults. The day you shed your bad qualities, you can fill your life with

good qualities, just as you fill a tumbler with milk after emptying the water

inside it. Otherwise, if the tumbler still retains water inside it, it will not

be possible to fill it with milk. So, always remember that the removal of

immortality is immortality. First, begin the process by correcting yourself.

Swami! Many people emphasize the importance of character. But, they interpret

character in many different ways. So, what exactly is character? Let us know

from you.

Bhagawan: Character is the most important thing. Life without character is like

a pot full of holes. Water can never be retained in a pot with holes. So, the

essential human quality will never be retained in the life of a person without

character. This is what Prahlada too remarked. One day he saw a beautiful lady

leaving his palace. He asked her, "Who are you?" She said. "I am your kingdom".

He kept quiet. After some time, he saw another very beautiful woman coming out

of his royal palace. He asked her, "Who are you?" She said, "I am your wealth".

Again, after some time, he saw an angel coming out of his palace. He asked her,

"Who are you"? She responded saying, "I am your reputation." He kept quiet.

This time, he saw a woman with a brilliant face and with heavenly effulgence

all around her, the like of whom he had never seen before, leaving his palace.

He asked her, "Who are you?"

She said, "I am your character". Immediately Prahlada fell at her feet and

repeatedly pleaded with her not to leave his palace. She obliged him and went

back. The others reputation, wealth and kingdom, immediately followed her.

Therefore, where there is character, the rest will follow automatically. So, I

often tell our students:

                                 Politics without Principles

Science without Humanity

Commerce without Morality, and

Education without Character

Are not only useless but also dangerous

                I repeatedly tell you: ‑

The end of Education is Character,               

The end of Culture is Perfection,

The end of Knowledge is Love,

The end of Wisdom is Freedom.

What is character? Perfect harmony in thought, word, and deed is character:

manasyekam vacasyekam karmanyekam mahatmanam. Whatever you think, say it and do

it. Your thought, word and deed must be one and the same. This is character.

Manassanyat vacassanyat karman anyat duratmanam, it is only the wicked that

think, say and act differently. This was very well demonstrated by Hanuman in

the Ramayana. Rama commanded him to go in search of Sita, crossing the mighty

sea. He did so with His infinite blessings. Given this divine assignment,

Hanuman said, "Yes," and immediately jumped from the top of that Mahendra

Mountain.

Here three points are to be noted. Hanuman decided to do his Lord's bidding.

This decision is the first thing. Then he declared on the mountaintop of

Mahendra that he was proceeding on His mission. This declaration is the second

thing. Thereafter, immediately he started his journey flying across the sky

over the sea. Action followed the declaration. This is the third thing. In

Hanuman, we find these three, `decision, thought', `declaration ‑word'

and `action ‑ deed' or the three "H's" ‑ "Head'. `Heart ` and

`Hand" in perfect harmony and integration. This is Character.

There is another important thing you should always keep in mind to guard your

character. I give you `Watch' as the `watch‑word'. Here every letter has

a message and an instruction. `Watch' is a word with five letters. The first

letter `W' stands for the `words' that we use. So, `Watch your words'. The

words should be filled with truth. You speak truth. So, watch that your words

express truth. The second letter is `A' which stands for `action'. `Watch your

actions'. They should be dharmic. The third letter is `T' and represents

`thoughts'. `Watch you thoughts'. They should be calm, never disturbing and

agitating. So, let your thoughts be of Shanthi. The fourth letter is `C',

`Watch your character'. Throughout your life, your character should be perfect.

This is possible if you have pure Prema. Love will make you achieve everything

in this world. Human character is

based on selfless, pure and divine love.

The fifth letter is `H'. It represents `Heart'. `Watch you Heart'. `Heart' in

Sanskrit is h daya. This is hrt together with daya.  'Daya' is compassion. The

one with 'daya' is hrdaya. Where there is violence, there is no daya,

compassion. You should not be violent in your words, thoughts, or deeds. You

should not harm people by your looks, words, thoughts and actions. You can

watch your Heart with full understanding of your thoughts, words, and deeds so

that your Heart is full of ahimsa. Ahimsa can be achieved by understanding.

So the five letters of this word ‘watch’ represent Satya (w-Words), Dharma

(a-Actions), s’anti (t-thoughts), Prema (c‑Character) and Ahimsa

(h-Heart). These values constitute `Character'. It is character that takes

humanity to Divinity. Without character, a man falls to the level of a beast.

In certain respects, even animals are much better than human beings as they

have a season and a reason for their behaviour.

We can view character from two angles. One is Individual character and the other

is National character. Individual character emphasises the code of conduct. The

second is National character. Everyone is to act in the national interest.

Today, we have leaders with neither of the two, or both missing. This is the

cause of the present sad plight of the country. When students have these two,

they will mould themselves into ideal citizens of the country. Nitiye jati, adi

vadilitivo koti kante hinudavu:

A true nation should have character. Without that, you are worse than a monkey.

So character is most essential and prevails when there is total unity and

harmony in the 3‑H's, as I often say for our EHV. (Education in Human

Values) programme, `Head -word', `Heart ‑ thought' and `Hand

‑action'.

Q202)    Bhagawan! We are indeed very grateful to you for telling us so clearly

and vividly the way we should view life in general. What are those essential

qualities you wish we develop?

Bhagawan: Unless the foundation is strong, a building cannot stand firm and last

long. So, the foundation is very important. You can construct any number of

floors basing on a firm foundation. Self

confidence is the foundation. These days many do not have self‑confidence.

They do not even attempt to do anything worthwhile as they have no confidence in

themselves. How do you expect them to be successful? If a person has no

confidence in himself, what can be done for his progress? On the foundation of

self‑confidence are erected the walls of self-satisfaction. A man with

self‑confidence alone can have self‑satisfaction. A man without

confidence can never have satisfaction in his lifetime. So, the walls of

self‑satisfaction rest on the foundation of self-confidence. Then the

roof must be laid. Self‑sacrifice is the roof. Gaining satisfaction out

of confidence, one prepares oneself for sacrifice. You cannot live in a

building without a roof. The roof rests on walls, and the walls, in their turn,

stand on the foundation. Then, we live in the house. Life

in such a house is self‑realisation. So, everyone must develop these four

`S's' ‑ Self‑confidence, Self‑satisfaction,

Self‑sacrifice and Self‑realisation.

You need to cultivate three `D's' also. You must know that a VIP, like the

Rashtrapati, the President of India will always be followed by two bodyguards

one on either side. The first `D' is duty that stands for Rashtrapati. He is

accompanied by two `D' s one on each side, `discipline' and `devotion'. To

discharge duty ably, discipline is very essential. Without discipline, you will

never be successful.

Normal body temperature is 98.4°C. One's normal blood pressure is 120/80. If

there is deviation from the normal rate, you are sick. Changes in blood

pressure lead to heart complaints also. So, our body is a limited company with

all the systems working in strict discipline. The eye can see the intensity of

light only up to a certain limit. If it crosses the limit, the retina of the

eye gets burnt. Similarly, the ear also can hear sound to a certain extent, and

if it is exceeded, the eardrum breaks. This is the lesson in discipline that the

body teaches.

The second thing that is required for performing one's duty is devotion. Devotion is Love.

Duty with Love is Desirable,

Duty without Love is Deplorable,

Love without Devotion is Demonic,

Love without Duty is Divine.

Everybody must be devoted to duty with discipline.

Q203)    Swami! We have to work for our own Moksha. But, how can we develop

spiritually the basic     human quality? Will spiritual awareness help us to be

more human and ultimately experience the divine?

Bhagawan: Today, everyone appears to be a human being by virtue of having a

human body. But, it is by virtue of your behavior and nature that you are a

human being. You should be a human being .You seem to have forgotten the value

of human life. Kaya, the body, kala, time, karma, the action, kartavya, duties,

and karana, the purpose of life are all either misused or misdirected or wasted.

Though there is considerable progress in science and technology, the basic human

values are lost. Everywhere there is the atmosphere of fear, anxiety, tension or

insecurity or agitation and restlessness.

To cultivate human values two qualities yama, restraint and niyama, regulation

and the five principles ahimsa, non‑violence, satyam, truth, asteyam, not

coveting others' property, aparigraham, not accepting or expecting anything from

anybody and brahmacaryam, celibacy are essential.

Ahimsa does not merely mean refraining from killing or hurting anybody. By

thought, word, or deed, no one should be hurt or pained. This is true ahimsa or

non‑violence. If you are harsh to anybody, it is violence. If you harbor

evil thoughts towards anybody, it is violence. If you cast bad looks on anyone,

it is violence. Therefore, non‑violence means not causing harm to anyone

and not hurting anybody either by thought, word or deed.

Then, the second principle is Sathyam, truth. In the ordinary sense, you think

that truth is telling exactly what you see, hear, and know. This is worldly

truth. Even scientific laws are not constant. They change from time to time

with new inventions, discoveries, observations and experiments. They may be

called scientific truths, or material truths. Newspapers convey facts and not

truth. Then what is truth? That which is permanent, eternal and changeless is

Sathyam, truth. Truth is God. You should speak truth in an acceptable and

pleasing way.

The third principle is asteyam, you shall not covet others' property. You shall

not steal. Asteyam in the true sense means not entertaining any thought to own

or possess others' property or that which doesn't belong to you.

The fourth one is aparigraha. Don't expect anything from anybody. Don't accept

anything from anybody. But, you can accept things from your parents, Guru and

God. You should not bother or pester your parents with demands they cannot

afford to meet. You should accept wisdom and grace from your preceptor. But

from God you must accept anything He gives you. Therefore, you are not

permitted to receive anything from anyone. You should not be become rnagrasta,

indebted to anybody. Give, but don't receive.

The fifth principle is brahmacarya, celibacy. Brahmacarya doesn't mean remaining

unmarried. A brahmacari is one who treads the brahmamarga.  Cariyuncuta (Telugu)

of Brahman is brahmacari or a celibate. Harmony in thought, word and deed is

brahmacarya.

Then, there are five niyamas. They are tapas, penance, saucam, cleanliness,

s'antos'am, contentment, svadhyayam, scriptural reading, and isvara 

pranidhanam, dedicating all deeds to God.

Saucam includes both outer and inner cleanliness. It is not enough if you are

clean outwardly, taking bath everyday and wearing ironed clothes. You should be

clean inwardly also. Attachment and hatred usually pollute your mind. You should

see that the mind is not polluted by these two evils. Therefore, both outer

purity and inner purity are necessary.

The second niyama is tapas, penance. Tapas does not mean that you should run

away from home leaving behind your property. It doesn't mean that you should

break your family ties and go to a forest or stand upside down with your head

on the ground and the legs up above. No, true penance means saying what you

think and doing it accordingly. In other words, the three "H's ‑ Head,

Heart and Hand" should be integrated by thought, word and deed. Giving up bad

thoughts and deeds is penance. Pining for God or yearning for God is penance.

Purging your heart with sacred thoughts is penance.

The third niyama is s’antos'am. You are under the impression that by fulfilling

your desires, you will be satisfied and happy, No. Contentment lies in putting

a ceiling on your desires. Too many desires make your life miserable. You may

offer any number of objects and any amount of material to fire. It will burn

them all to ashes. Fire never says "no" or "enough" at any time. Like that,

desires also have no limit.

The fourth niyama is svadhyaya or study of the Holy Scriptures. You should read

everyday one Holy Scripture. This is called parayana, worshipful reading of a

religious book everyday. This cleanses your mind to some extent.

The fifth one is isvara pranidhanam. God is in you in the form of your

conscience. You should satisfy your conscience. This is most important.

Thus the five yamas and the five niyamas will help you achieve the objectives or

goals of life purusarthas and sustain your human values making you a true human

being.

Q204)     Swami! Our ancients gave top priority to satya, truth. It is not so

now. Is Sathya so very important?

Bhagawan: It is remarked that of all the values of life Sathya, truth is the

highest, Satyannasti paro dharmah.  All have truth as the basis. God is truth.

The entire creation came into existence from that truth and will ultimately

merge in truth.

Satyamunand undi sarvambu srstince

Satyamunananage sarva srsti

Satyamahimaleni sthalamedi kanugonna.

S’uddha sattva madiye cudarayya

                                                                                        

(Telugu poem)

So, understand that God is truth and that truth is God. So, live in truth. Truth

is the foundation of righteous conduct and the route to peace, which will make

your life one of love.

Why is the history of Harischandra remembered till this day? Because he adhered

to truth at any cost even sacrificing his wife, son and kingdom,

Those were the days when Prahlada was king. One day he saw a beautiful female

figure leaving the palace. He asked her, "May I know who you are?" She replied,

"I am your Character". Prahlada kept quiet. Next day he saw another beautiful

woman was coming out of the palace and when asked who she was, she replied, "I

am your Kingdom - Rajyalaksmi ". He remained silent. Next day he saw another

woman of matchless beauty coming out of the palace. He asked, "Mother! Would

you let me know who you are?” She said, “I am your reputation – yasas.” He

didn’t prevent her from leaving.

Next day he saw still another grand and majestic form, the like of whom he had

never seen in his lifetime, coming out of the palace. He gently and

reverentially asked her, “Mother! May I know who you are?” She replied, “I am

Truth.” Then Prahlada fell at her feet and pleaded with her not to leave the

palace. She finally agreed to get back into the palace and not to step out.

Then what happened? The other angels, Character, Kingdom and Reputation

followed her one after another back to the palace. It only means all will

follow you if you have truth.

Q205)    Swami! We do not have a precise idea of what dharma is and we are not

able to conduct ourselves according to the little knowledge we have. Scholars

expound dharma in a variety of ways. They designate one thing as dharma in one

context and quite another in a different context. This adds to our confusion.

Swami! Kindly explain dharma to us

Bhagawan: What our elders and scholars had taught about dharma needs to be

understood correctly. You should not hastily conclude that their views are

contradictory. Take for example the dictum, satyannasti paro dharmah. What is

to be chiefly noted here? The dictum means, ‘There is no dharma higher than

Sathyam,’ and more too. The deeper meaning is, ‘the foundation of dharma is

Sathyam.’ Now consider another dictum, ahimsa paramo dharmah. What does this

mean? Earlier it is Sathyam which is said to be the foundation of dharma. Now,

ahimsa, absence from violence, is called the highest dharma. Now ahimsa does

not mean only refraining from violence. Harming none through word, deed or

thought is true ahimsa. Here, it is seen that satyam has been touched upon

obliquely. Sathyam knows neither fear nor wrath. Satyagraha is

not a happy compound word. Where there is Sathyam, wrath does not exist. Sathyam

does not inflict pain. One, who is rooted in Sathyam, cannot undertake violence.

Rather he considers ahimsa as his dharma. It is also said, vedokhilo

dharmamulam. Veda which desribes yajnas, yagas and other rituals treats their

performance as dharma. It is our duty to perform the deeds enjoined on us by

Veda. Here, you have to consider dharma from the perspective of duty. You have

to perform your duty, fulfill your obligations. Therefore, it is said,

kartavyam  yoga  ucyate. In the verse from Gita,

svadharme nidhanam sreyah, paradharmo bhayavahah, you have to realise that

“svadharme” refers to atmadharma. On the other hand, the dharmas of the four

castes and of the four stages, of life are matters of birth. The population of

the world is a mixture of black, white, yellow, and brown hues and these are

to be found in all countries. The dharmas of the four stages of

life brahmacarya, garhastya, vanaprastha, and sanyasa are to be viewed as four

kinds of steps, four processes of sadhana to reach Brahman, after performing

the deeds enjoined as one's duty. Thus, dharma is very subtle. The life force

of satyam resides in utterance as does that of dharma in practice or action.

Q206)     Swami! Transformation of Man, how does this come about?

Bhagawan: Actually transformation of man is transformation of mind. You wrongly

tend to call it    transformation of the heart. The heart is not the physical

heart located in the left side of the chest. The spiritual heart is quite

different and is all-pervasive. This is existence of awareness, and is not

subject to change. Transformation of the mind is truly important, for only the

one endowed with mind is to be called Man. An individual passes away, but his

mind survives. That is why it is said,

                                 mana eva manus yanam,

                                 karanam bandhamoksayoh

The mind alone is the cause of bondage or release of men. When the mind reaches

out, as it does in the Pravrttimarga, it gets saturated with desires, ideas,

and worldly concerns. But when it is withdrawn in   the nivrttimarga, all these

are subdued. This state is called amanaskam, disinterestedness, and facilitates

the experience of peace and joy. This is what is meant by transformation of the

mind. Then alone is transformation of men possible.

Q207)  Swami! How are we to comprehend the three‑fold path, karma, Bhakti and Jnana?

Bhagawan: You study your own wrist watches. Every watch has three hands ‑

the second, minute and hour, hasn't it? The second hand should go round sixty

times for the minute hand to move one place. Then the minute hand should go

round sixty times for the hour hand to move to the next place. Here the second

hand is karma marga, path of selfless action. The minute hand is bhakti marga,

path of devotion, while the hour hand is Jnana marga, path of wisdom.

I will give you another example. Most of you travel by train as you go home for

vacation. You have three ways of reaching your destination. You can board a

train, an express train that takes you to your place straight. You can also get

into a train where the coach in which you are seated will be connected to

another train at a railway junction. It is a through carriage and so you do not

have to get down anywhere in between and change. Then there is another way. You

catch a train and travel some distance, get down at a junction, and board

another train to reach your place. This is a passenger train.

These three ways of journey hold good in the spiritual path as well. The path of

selfless service, karma marga is travel by a passenger train. The path of

devotion, Bhakti marga is travel by a through carriage where the carriage will

be connected without your having to get down, to another train. Finally, the

path of wisdom, Jnana marga, is an express train that takes you straight to

your destination.

Q208) Swami! It is said that we cannot escape from the consequences of our

actions. It means we are responsible for both the good and the bad we

experience. The fruits of our actions, thus, are inescapable. Then, how does

devotion to God help us? Why should we be devoted to God at all?

Bhagawan: God created the whole world and gave it to man to be happy and to

utilise it freely. But, however, he gave it on one condition. "Oh Man! You do

whatever you want, but be prepared to face the fruits of your actions. You

cannot escape from the consequences of your actions. In full knowledge of this,

from now, you can enjoy and do whatever you wish to in this world".

So, for both good and bad, your actions are responsible. Then why should you be

devoted to God? How does it help you? You may decide to raise onions or

jasmines in your field according to your own liking, but you must pay the tax

for utilising the land accordingly. Similarly the tax of the result of your

actions is inescapable.

However you note one thing here. You pay income tax. You have to pay it

proportionate to your income. There is no way out. But there is a provision for

exemption. Be sure it is not definitely tax evasion. If you have paid some

amount as premium to the Life Insurance Corporation, if you have paid some

amount towards Provident Fund, you are eligible for some exemption out of the

total tax payable by you. So, your taxable amount is reduced. Similarly,

spiritual practices like daily prayer, service activity, meditation, worship,

help you to reduce the intensity and magnitude of the consequences of your past

actions which you face, karmaphala. They give you the courage and forbearance

needed to endure the suffering.

Q209)  Swami! God is omnipresent. There is no place or object or person without

divinity. All names as you have said are His. You have also said that all forms

are His. In such a case how are we to comprehend, visualise and experience God.

Bhagawan:

                  atmavat sarvabutani,

                  eko vasl sarvabhutantaratma .

Our scriptures say that God is the only one without a second. He has manifested

Himself as many according  to His will. `ekoham bahu syam,’ the one becoming

many, everything is divine. The plurality or multiplicity or diversity is due

to name and form.

You will notice that ` jnani,’ the one who inquires, ‘jneya’, the one to be

known and ‘jnana’ knowledge are one and the same. This is called `triputi',

trinity. Everything is out of that primordial principle of Atma or

consciousness.

The gross body, sthula, the subtle body, suksma, and the causal body, karana, of

everyone are out of the atma only. You know the tamarind fruit. Its outer green

covering, (physical, gross, sthula ), the middle soft pulp (subtle body,

suksma), and the inner hard stone like seed (astral body, karana) are formed

out of the original seed only. It is the seed that forms another seed in the

times ahead. So, all the three are only Atma.

I tell my students often, `you are not one, but three: the one you think you are

(physical body), the one others think you are (individual mind), and the one you

really are Atma, conscience. You are born with a question, koham? (Who am I?) If

the reply is aham dehosmi, I am the body, it represents the first step, the one

you think you are. To the same question koham, if the answer is aham, I am an

individual Jiva, it represnts the second step, the one others think you are.

But to the question koham, if the answer is aham brahmasmi, I am God; it

conveys the real truth, the third step, the one you really are. This is your

real nature.

It is the same Atma that exists in all the three stages, jagrata, waking,

svapna, dreaming and the susupti deep sleep. Atmavaisvanara plays all the three

roles. Atmavaisvanara in the waking state operates in association with the body,

the mind and the intellect. Atma functioning in the waking state may be called

visva. Atmavaisvanara, functioning in a dream state, monitors the mind only.

There is no body in the dreaming state as it lies on the bed. The entire thing

is the creation of your mind only and the mind creates you when you pass

through dream experiences. This Atma of the dreaming state is known as taijasa.

The third stage of deep sleep susupti also has the very same Atma as in the

previous two. In susupti the body, mind and intellect do not exist. Atma

remains as an experiencer called prajna. So Atmavaisvanara left to

itself is a pure, unsullied, unpolluted, eternal and immortal truth in the state

of the ultimate turiya, expressed in the three levels of consciousness. In the

waking state it is vis'va, in the dreaming it is taijasa while in deep sleep it

is prajna. These are merely names given to the same Atma in these three states,

just as you know an actor playing three different roles. An actor by name

Mallaya (equal to Atmavaisvanara, turiya state) plays the role of Dharmaja in

one scene, visva, waking state, Arjuna in another scene, taijasa, dream state,

and Bhima in still another scene,  prajna , deep sleep state, while Mallaya

(Atma) remains the same basically.

So. in this universe everything is essentially Atma. The five elements, the five

senses of perception, the five senses of action, the five life breaths, the five

life sheaths and the body constitute one wide area or realm called bhutakas'a.

The impact, influence, and effects of all these components of the sphere of

bhutakas'a (drawn from the outer world) are contained in or imprinted on a

small sphere or field called chittakas’a, viz. the mind, citta. But then there

is atma which monitors and operates through the body, mind, intellect, the

sense of ego (I' ness) known as cidakas’a. These three are equivalent to the

gross (sthula ‑ bhutakas'a), the subtle (chittakas'a- suksma) and the

casual (cidakasa’ a ‑ karana ) forms.

This is what Christ also said in his first statement, "I am the messenger of

God”. This is dualism, dvaita. The next statement of Jesus was, “I sm the son

of God.” This is qualified non-dualism (visistadvaita). 

Finally on the cross, Jesus said, "I and my Father in Heaven are one". This is

non‑ dualism. In the Persian language too it is first said, "I am in the

light:” which is the state of dvaita, dualism. Later it is said, "The light is

in me", which is qualified visistadvaita, non‑dualism and finally, it is

stated, "I am the light", which is advaita, non‑dualism. We can find in

all these states unity in diversity. If you identify yourself with the body

(aham dehosmi), it is the one you think you are or, what Jesus said, `I am the

messenger of God' or it is bhutakasa which is dualism, dvaita. If you think you

are an individual, jivi, the one others think you are or aham jivosmi, it yields

the same meaning as in Jesus' statement, "I am the son of God," or the Persian

declaration, "The light is in me" or chittakas'a,

qualified non‑dualism. But the final experience lies in knowing what you

really are, aham brahmasmi, the same as what Christ said "I and my Father in

Heaven are one" or the Persian declaration, "I am the light", or cidakas'a

which is non‑dualism.

This is the one to be known and experienced. Hanuman said the same thing to

Rama, "Oh! Rama! If I think I am the body, I am your servant; if I think I am

an individual soul, jivi, you are my God, and if I think "I am Atma", you and I

are one. This is the path of enquiry that leads to the discovery of one's true

svarupa.

Q210) Swami! God's creation is absolutely good. Then, from where do we get

anything bad in life? When there is nothing bad in your creation how can there

be bad actions at all? Or do you say that there are both good and bad in your

creation? Kindly clarify this doubt.

Bhagawan: Creation is absolutely pure and good. There is no trace and scope for

the bad to exist in God's creation. It is only the factor of time that makes

you take things as good or bad. You eat today a phalam, good fruit. Tomorrow,

the very good fruit that you have eaten today transforms itself into malam,

faeces. Is it not the same fruit? Is it not time that has brought about the

change? Therefore, good and bad are present from your point of view. But to the

divine both are the same as he is nondual.

God created everything for you to enjoy. It is in use that good and bad arise.

For example, you brought all the necessary provisions from the market and kept

them in the kitchen. It is now left for you to cook properly with these

provisions. The taste depends on the way you cook, how and in what proportions

you mix the provisions: You have the needed utensils and the material. Now it

is up to you to cook your food properly and make it a delicacy. Similarly, God

has given you everything. Good and bad depend on the way you use the material

given to you.

Source: SATYOPANISAD VOL - II [Part-III, Chapter-VIII] by Anil Kumar Kamaraja 

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