Guest guest Posted August 23, 2007 Report Share Posted August 23, 2007 This is from Talks by Swami Paramatmananda Vol 5, pg 204: Some people come up to Amma and complain about others. Instead of looking at themselves and how ugly their own egos are, they always look at others and other's faults. They're way off the mark, because that itself is an ugly fault, to be looking at other's faults. What does Christ say? Trying to remove the dust particle in someone else's eye, you are missing the log that's in your own! That's not the purpose of coming to the ashram. Try to see the good thing in others, or try to see God in them. Go from small g to capital G. That's a big jump for most people. Atleast, see the good, and if you can, see the God. And if you can't see the good or the God, at least, don't look at the bad, because that's also bad. There's a way to do this, a very interesting way. You've probably never heard of this way. It's called inverse paranoia. I'll try to explain. Paranoia is when you think that everybody's out to find fault with you, out to get you. This creates a certain kind of reaction, a kind of behavior and mentality. Inverse paranoia is to think that everyone is out to make you happy instead of miserable. Think, 'This person is trying to make me happy.' Just try it. Imagine that everyone you meet is trying to bring happiness into your life. Then you try to do the same thing for them. It works. It completely changes your whole wiring. Some people say, " Swamij i, you're telling all these abstract ideas, but you never give any practical advice. They are all ideas, but practically, what do I do with this problem? " Here's a way you can pray: " 0 Amma, " or if you don't believe in Amma, " 0 God, I offer all my attachments to You. I offer all my aversions to You. I offer my fears and my false ego to You. Burn all these in the fire of knowledge. Take these and purify me. Remove all these things which are making me restless and miserable. " We've created these habits by reacting to people and circumstances in a certain way-ways that we learn from our parents, from society, or just from our previous tendencies. These reactions leave deep lines in our brain. It's not enough to think in terms of philosophy. You really have to verbalize it, and that's the whole purpose of prayer. It goes against the grain of these habits on their own ground. Prayer is a very necessary part of purifying the mind. Mantra japa has its limitations. Prayer takes you right there. It's like taking an eraser in your hand, and erasing these lines of habits that are in the brain, but you have to do it again and again. Don't think that if you pray once to Amma, everything's just going to vanish. Having drawn a line a thousand times with a pencil, it won't go away with just one erasing. It has to be done again and again and again. However, the mind will always find a way to keep those bad habits alive. That's its job. No bad habits, no mind. The mind doesn't want to die. It may read Vedanta. It may know that if it just keeps quiet, bliss will dawn, but it doesn't want to keep quiet unless it goes to sleep. Before then, it will try every trick in the book to stay alive. Once a person came to a guru when he was drunken. Don't laugh; I've seen drunken people come to Amma. The guru said, " Son, whisky is your worst enemy. " The man replied, " But Swamij i, didn't you tell us last Saturday to love our enemies? " The guru said, " Yes, but I didn't say anything about swallowing them! " When you become full of God, then all you can see outside is God. Put on red sunglasses and you will see a red world. When you become full of God, then you will see everything as God. But now, we see everything as separate. We like some things, and don't like others. But when we become full of God, then we gain equal-vision; we see everything as That. Then we don't have any selfishness, and will lose our sense of being a small self. Not that we lose our identity. We regain our real identity, which is something very big, something grand. We don't need anything to make us happy. We are happiness itself. When we don't have a small self, we don't feel anger either, because anger belongs to the selfish, little 'I'. When its territory is stepped on, when its desires are thwarted, anger comes. But when the small self dissolves into the big Self, why should there be any anger? Most people think a Mahatma is a person who has siddhis. They can read our mind, they know everything, they can do everything. If we tell them our problems, our problems will evaporate by their blessings. All those things may be true. But the greatest miracle of a Mahatma is that they've got rid of their small self; their lower self is gone. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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