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Q&A Toronto?

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> Does anyone have the Toronto Q&A?

>

>

 

Sorry I wasn't taking notes during "Question Period"

(to use the Canadian parliamentary term), but I am

sure someone will oblige you.

 

BTW, I miss having the meditation/Q&A outdoors, like

they used to during the Bryant College retreats.

 

Keval

 

 

 

 

 

 

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The Toronto Q&A was notable for this funny translation/wording leela

between Amma and Big Swami. He'd start in, and then she'd stop him

and explain something, and he'd try again, and this was repeated

several times. Brs. Dayamrita and Shantamrita (Shaktamrita?) both

tried to help with wording, but to no avail... it was really quite

funny.

 

I can only help with the first question, because the second question

wasn't answered, and after that I had to duck out to get into the

dinner line right away, so I could be back in the hall as soon as

possible to help people line up for darshan (I was doing a lot of

line entry seva.)

 

Working from memory here...

 

The first question took up about 40 minutes. It was:

Amma, is it all just karma, or is it compassion that gives us

suffering to lead us to the goal?

 

This question, as I said, took about 40 minutes to answer, and the

short version is:

You can think of it as karma or you can think of it as compassion.

The slightly longer version is that whatever we suffer is due to our

actions. But there is a story.

There was a man who heard a loud noise and took off running in the

forest. While he was running, he stepped on a thorn. After that, he

slowed down and became very careful. Then he saw a deadly cobra in

his path ahead of him. Because he had slowed down and become

careful, he did not run into the snake and get bitten.

(There was some back and forth on whether there was a cobra, or a big

deep hole, or both... finally Swamiji said "Ok, there was a poisonous

snake, there was no big hole.")

The point is that the suffering we endure is small suffering that

enables us to avoid much bigger suffering.

 

The second question was about how we have our consciousness focussed

outward, but when we're around Amma it does a 180º flip and goes

inward - and if she has any advice on how we can keep it flipped that

way. But, again, there was some leela going on with wording and

clarity, and the question stumbled a bit - such that Swamiji said

"I'm sorry, what was the question?" Amma told the questioner to

write it down and she would answer it later.

 

Hopefully someone else has whatever came next!

 

 

On 28-Jul-06, at 11:58 PM, Mike Brooker wrote:

 

>

> > Does anyone have the Toronto Q&A?

> >

> >

>

> Sorry I wasn't taking notes during "Question Period"

> (to use the Canadian parliamentary term), but I am

> sure someone will oblige you.

>

> .

>

>

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Ammachi, "ckeniley2003" <ckeniley2003

wrote:

>

> Does anyone have the Toronto Q&A?

>

> Thanks!

>

 

Hi C,

I missed the Q & A myself due to seva but a friend very kindly took

notes for me. Laura's already covered the first question, so I'll

post what I've got for the other one that was answered. (I think

there was one question in the middle that Amma said she would answer

later). And thanks K for taking the notes!

At Her feet,

Nirmala.

 

Q. For a long time cultures lived peacefully- will there ever be

justice for these peaceful cultures we have lost?

 

A. Amma says we cannot blame God for that, it is our fault. It's like

a drunk driver getting in an accident and blaming the petrol. It is

we who destroy, not God. We should try to bring back those old

cultures. When we are in a car we must fasten our seatbelts; that is

the dharma of the road. Mother says we should have strong

determination to revive old cultures. We have the capacity to revive

this dharma. We must try to restore the harmony of nature by bringing

back this old dharma (right action). When we are successful we call a

press conference. When we fail we like to blame someone else.

It is very practical to nurture nature. If we don't do this, nature

will react and we will have to go through the consequences.

Earthquakes, tsunamis, floods- all because we don't protect the laws

of nature. In olden days our ancestors worshipped nature. The

ancients had compassion, we think only of our own existence. The

ancients supported all living beings. As a child Amma saw poor

fishermen taking only some of the turtle eggs that had been laid in

order to protect the species.

There are 3 types of people:

1. Instinctive type- they only consider themselves

2. They eat what they get plus what everyone else gets

3. They share with others

Unfortunately, we are going backwards; we are getting very greedy. We

could create a change by being generous and giving to others. In

today's world we are falling apart even though technology and science

have advanced-for example not all can afford a transplant. We have

eradicated some diseases, yes, but now we have bigger problems.

Divine grace alone can restore us. We should plant more trees and

become more alert to nature. Don't blame God. The real question is

not whether God exists or not. We should become practical. God helps

those who help themselves- in a practical, logical, sensible way.

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