Sunday, September 4, 2011


Sai and Swami Sivananda on Hearticulture

Sai Ram. Again the Sadguru in various forms is sending very important and relevant messages. It is also interesting to note that Sai Maharaj (Sai Baba of Shirdi) prepared the present Samadhi Mandir very arduously for a few years, removing all weeds, stones etc. and growing beautiful fragrant flowers thus showing us how to prepare our minds / hearts. Here is an excerpt from Chapter 5 of Sri Sai Satcharitra: 

"In his young days, Sai Baba grew hair on His head; never had His head shaved. He dressed like an athlete. When He went to Rahata (3 miles from Shirdi), He brought with Him small plants of Merry Gold, Jai and Jui, and after cleaning, he planted and watered them. A devotee by name Vaman Tatya supplied Him daily with two earthen pitchers. With these Baba Himself used to water the plants. He drew water from the well and carried the pitchers on His shoulders. In the evening the pitchers were kept at the foot of the Neem tree. As soon as they were placed there, they were broken, as they were made of raw earth and not baked. Next day, Tatya supplied two fresh pitchers. This course went on for 3 years; and with Sai Baba’s toil and labour, there grew a flower-garden. On this site, at present, stands the big mansion - Samadhi Mandir of Baba, which is now frequented and used by so many devotees."

He also showed that Sadguru can weed out / uproot the deep rooted desires (His uprooting the pillars when devotees were working on the extension to the Masjid - See Chapter 6 of Sri Sai Satcharitra, a brief excerpt is given below:

"In 1911, the Sabha - Mandap (court - yard) was also put in order with great labour and effort. The open space in front of the Masjid was very small and inconvenient. Kakasaheb Dixit wanted to extend it and put on it a roofing. At great expense, he got iron-posts, and pillars and trusses and started the work. At night, all the devotees worked hard and fixed the posts; but Baba, when he returned from Chavadi next morning, uprooted them all and threw them out. Once it so happened that Baba got very excited, caught a pole with one hand, and began to shake and uproot it, and with the other hand caught the neck of Tatya Patil. He took by force Tatya’s Pheta, struck a match, set it on fire and threw it in a pit. At that time, Baba’s eyes flashed like burning embers. None dared to look at Him. All got terribly frightened. Baba took out a rupee from his pocket and threw it there, as if it were an offering on an auspicious occasion. Tatya also was much frightened. None knew what was going to happen to Tatya, and none dared to interfere. Bhagoji Shinde, the leper devotee of Baba, made a little boldly advance, but he was pushed out by Baba. Madhavrao was also similarly treated, he being pelted with brick pieces. So all those, who went to intercede, were similarly dealt with. But after some time, Baba’s anger cooled down. He sent for a shopkeeper, got from him an embroidered Pheta and Himself tied it on Tatya’s head, as if he was being given a special honour. All the people were wonderstruck to see this strange behavior of Baba. They were at a loss to know, what enraged Baba so suddenly and what led Him to assault Tatya Patil, and why His anger cooled down, the next moment. Baba was sometimes very calm and quiet and talked sweet things with love, but soon after, with or without any pretext, got enraged. Many such incidents may be related; but I do not know which to choose and which to omit. I, therefore, refer them as they occur to me."

It is interesting to note that Sai removed the mamakaaram (I, my, sense) from Tatya in the form of his pheta and after burning it (the my sense), gave him a new embroidered Pheta (representing Guru's grace). Sai Ram. 

Now let us take up Sadguru Swami Sivananda's message on hearticulture - how to develop a pure heart.

SIVANANDA DAILY READING FOR 31 AUGUST 2011 - HEARTICULTURE (How to cultivate the heart as a good fertile land that gives sweet fruits instead of poisonous weeds) -

You must have a pure mind if you want to realise the self. Unless the mind is set free, unless the mind casts away all desire, craving, worry, delusion, pride, lust, attachment, likes and dislikes, it cannot enter the domain of supreme peace.

Mind is compared to a garden. Just as you can cultivate good flowers and fruits in a garden, by ploughing and manuring the land, by removing the weeds and thorns, and by watering the plants and trees - so too you can cultivate the flower of devotion in the garden of your mind, by removing the impurities of the mind (such as lust, anger, greed, delusion, pride, etc.), and watering it with divine thoughts.

Weeds and thorns grow in the rainy season and then disappear in summer. But their seeds remain underneath the ground and as soon as there is a shower, the seeds germinate and sprout. Even so, the vrttis (modifications of the mind), manifest on the surface of the conscious mind, then disappear and assume a subtle seed-state in the form of samskaras or impressions. The samskaras again become vrttis, either through internal or external stimuli.
If you want to keep the garden clean you will have to remove not only the weeds but also the seeds that lie underneath the ground, which will eventually germinate otherwise. Even so, you have to destroy not only the big waves of the mind, but also the impressions which are the seeds for birth and death, if you want to enter the super-conscious state.
Those who have removed the impurities of their minds by japa (repetition of God's name), service, charity, pranayama (yoga breathing), etc., will enter into meditation as soon as they sit for meditation. The pure, ripe mind at once burns with the fire of meditation.
Without the help of meditation you cannot obtain knowledge of the self. Without its aid you cannot grow into the divine state. Without it you cannot liberate yourself from the trammels of the mind and attain immortality. Tear the veil that covers the soul, by practising regular meditation.

Self-realisation is the aim of life. The means to it are living an ethical life and ceaseless meditation. Spiritual duty is far more important than worldly duty. Live to seek God. Live to serve humanity. Fulfil God's will. You will be blessed. You will be happy.



Guru Purnima - Significance

Sai Ram. Ashaadha Purnima is celebrated as Vyaasa Purnima and also as Guru Purnima. Sage Veda Vyaasa, who divided the Vedas into manageable portions, who wrote the 18 main and 18 sub puranas, Brahma Sutraas and the Epic, Mahabhaarata is considered to be an incarnation of Sri Vishnu and is worshipped as Guru on that day. In addition, all other Gurus, who are One with the ParaBrahma are worshipped on that day. For many Hindu Monks (Sanyaasis), the day marks the beginning of the Chaaturmaas period (4 months of Spiritual Saadhana at one place) and this period also coincides with the rainy season in most of India, making travel impracticable for them, esp. if they need to go by foot as originally envisaged.

The Sanskrit word Guru has quite a few meanings - teacher, preceptor, instructor, guide, Heavy, Massive, Destroyer of Darkness etc.

The Dhyaana Sloka for Guru's worship is:

"Gurur Brahma gurur Vishnu gurur devo Maheswarah
Guru sakshat parambrahmah tasmai sri gurave namah"

Guru is Brahma, the Creator, Guru is Vishnu, the Protector and Guru is Maheswara, Siva, the Destroyer. In fact, Guru is verily the Parabrahma (Ultimate Self, the fusion of the Trinity) and so I bow to Sri Guru. Sri indicates respect and Sri indicates wealth, here material and spiritual wealth!

For those who do not have a specific guru it is suggested to add the following verse for Guru Dakshinamoorti, i.e., Lord Shiva in his incarnation as the Guru of the world.

Nidhaye sarva vidyanam bhishaje bhava roginam
Gurave sarvalokanam Dakshinamoortaye namah

I bow to Dakshinamoorty, the treasure house of all knowledge, the doctor for removal of the bhava roga, that is illness caused by a sense of separate existence (ego or doer feeling) and Guru of all worlds.

Brahma, Vishnu, Siva, Dakshinamoorty, Dattatreya, Veda Vyasa, Krishna, Adi Sankara, Sai Baba... there are any number of Gurus, apart from many living Gurus.

It is said that when the disciple is ready, the Guru comes - when the wood is dry, even a small spark or a little friction with another wood will cause it to catch fire. Similarly a lamp will light up when the wick, oil etc. are all ready or when the circuit is properly made, at the throw of a switch). Deep yearning on our part, attracts the attention of the Guru, Who is always conscious of every thing that goes on in this universe.