• 23Dec

    When the Ego comes into alignment with the Higher Self, it ‘disappears’.

    It doesn’t just happen one day all at once, you don’t just suddenly realize that it’s gone.  It happens moment by moment, one day at a time, one mini-realization after another…  that it isn’t there when it has been in the past, struggling, forcing, trying to do instead of letting go.  And in some moments you feel fear, find yourself wondering where it went and a little scared of this new place.  This is actually the Mind, with its attachments to the past and ‘how it used to be’ inside You, trying to measure, process, describe, compartmentalize, define (and thereby limit) the experience.  It can’t find the Ego, because it has merged with, and become indistiguishable from something bigger…  the limitless Higher Self (the Shiva (Consciousness)Soul), which is continuous with cosmic Consciousness, the Divine, Shiva.

    But you sit with it and the fear goes away by itself - you fall back into the Flow.  Because you’ve already had tastes of Bliss and know the rewards are AWESOME compared with what you knew and what you were before…

    Om namah Shivaya!

    NAMASTE

    • Share/Save/Bookmark
  • 31Aug

    We’ve been working hard for more than 5000 years… too hard.

    The goal of Yoga is to expand our Consciousness and allow the Divine (Love) to flow freely through us, so that we ultimately heal ourselves, realize our full potential and become One with everything around us. Yogis have been battling their bodies, and their minds, for millenia, and with very few exceptions, sabotaging their very ability to achieve this Goal. This is because, many thousands of years ago, the paths of Yoga and Ayurveda diverged.

    The Chakras and the five Elements (earth, water, fire, air, space) - the fusion of Ayurvedic and Tantric wisdom.

    The Chakras and the five Elements (earth, water, fire, air, space) - the fusion of Ayurvedic and Tantric wisdom.

    Ayurveda is a framework created by the Consciousness of yogic masters (rishis), but few yogis know that today. Let’s just say, it’s the missing link for not only raising Consciousness on the Planet, but saving it too. The integration of Ayurveda’s deep understanding of everything around us with the Yogi’s path holds the key to enabling the organic, compassionate and permanent evolution of human consciousness that will heal both ourselves and our Earth.

    It’s a lot simpler than it may seem, but still too complicated to put in one blog ;-)

    Let’s talk…

    NAMASTE

    • Share/Save/Bookmark
  • 29Aug

    This question I do not ponder anymore.  I have lived at both ends of the financial spectrum…  and the answer is Happiness.  But I use a capital H for a reason…

    Lakshmi, Goddess of Abundance, embodies the eternal union of spiritual and material wealth.

    Lakshmi, Goddess of Abundance, embodies the eternal union of spiritual and material wealth.

    Everything is relative.  In North America, poverty has a different context - different criteria and a different environment - from the context it has in India.  For example, in North America the poor have to face the burden of a culture and society much more disconnected from Nature and sources of bodily and spiritual nourishment, as well as the energy of extreme fear of poverty that this creates in the people who observe their condition.  In India, the nature of poverty differs at the material level greatly and there is much more connectivity, sense of community and connection with Nature and spiritual nourishment.

    We could go further into the details…  they would be endless, going in circles and never answering the question.  Just as it is pointless (and negative energy) to compare one life to another, it also serves no purpose to compare poverty in one context to poverty in another.  But it IS important to observe the differences…  using Discernment, rather than judgement.  Judgement comes from illusion and covers the True nature of the object of judgement with false qualities that come from our fears and ignorance.  Discernment comes from the Heart, and allows us to discriminate one thing as being different from another, unveiling Truth.  Discernment comes when we shed our samskaras (the ‘mud’ or ‘dirt’ on our lotus that comes from cultural programming) - through yoga, Ayurvedic ritucharya and meditation.  Most importantly, Discernment frees up our energy to see WHY there is poverty in the world, why there is suffering…  and DO something about it.

    (written in response to a blog posting on UnitedYogis.com - read the full blog here)

    • Share/Save/Bookmark