Friday, 27 May 2022
SOULS WHO CAME BY IN MY LIFE - 1
SOULS WHO CAME BY IN MY LIFE - 3
The reason I moved on to start another blog Siddha Heartbeat 2.0 was that there began to appear a lot of anomalies or inconsistencies in my writings on this original blog, which covered a part (since Sunday, 28 July 2013) of my journey of 20 years (2002 to 2022) on the path of the Siddhas. I did not want readers to become confused and question why observations made in the earlier posts defer with the latest. A reader had questioned me in my earlier days of writing this blog as to why I had deferred on the subject of karma. The young student had written to me in 2015, having followed my posts,
"saw ur blog when i searched "siddha heartbeat charity". charitable thoughts come only when u have done good deeds. what does that "only" mean? i thought we could reduce our karma by helping others...i thought it was voluntary. does agathiar mean that u r fated to do charity?"
On another note, she wrote,
"did agasthiar himself say that one is fated to read the nadi. if it is so then u r fated to change your fate. in short fate rules. this cant be right. and also in another writing on ur blog u mentioned that agasthiar told that 3 peoples karma was dissolved. and they would go to a temple as per fate. how is fate prevalent even after karma is dissolved? i m asking these questions with a sincere approach and humbly to know more about the siddhas. please reply dad."
"i would like to ask in which nadi reading has agathiar mentioned that he has taken birth many times?( i was reading age of siddhas 2)is it d same one where he said that he and ramalingam adigal r one? what was the wording? was it 'me and ramalingam are one' or ' i took birth as ramalingam adigal'?i mean when he said we r one he might mean that they are of same type...both in the form of light."
"i emailed tavayogi ji and asked him some doubts. he clarified and i think there should be an article on siddha heartbeat on these topics. he explianed that god is nothing but nature. god is not a person at all but just nature. and hence we are also part of him. thus none of shiva brahma or vishnu are god but all three are parts of god. this is what he told me...and this knowledge should be availble for all. it wud b grt if u could write a article on this.he also said that when agathiar says that we all are one it means that we all are of the same type...aathmas. it does not mean that we are one soul...but it means that we r all souls...same in all aspects."
She eventually came around to understanding many things and dropped in a note.
"thank you...it was lovely conversing with tavayogi ji by email and also on phone. u have been forever supporting...cant thank u enough. thanks agasthiar also. wherever he is i know he is listening to me. i started with confusion and ended in bliss. it was a tough journey but the end couldnt be more perfect. thanks for writing ur wonderful blog and for replying to my every mail and comment. i know i have been very rude sometimes...and i am extremely sorry for it. my best wishes with u n anyone and everyone related to kallar ashram AVM and siddhas. i will pray for everyone always. thanks for the 24 min short potri. it worked! ...immediately. i listen to the moola mantra everyday on youtube. it is pacyfying and beautiful. u may not reply to this mail....as i know u r forever by my side. and i have agathiar standing behind me to catch me if i fall..thank u again."
Indeed someone had questioned Osho too as to why he said something earlier and was saying something else now. Ramana too had praised music to someone who performed before him and asked another to do something useful with his life rather than taking up music. Tavayogi too had explained the need to handle oneself with care and control if he was to carry the sacred Rudraksha on his body but soon turned to me and said "We do not need this, son." Why the difference in approach to each soul?
As a result, though I was very careful not to confuse readers I had to deliver the numerous messages that came across regarding even my earlier understanding of things and happenings. I pointed this out as a message in the cross-column HTML/JavaScript that was carried on each post. This message was only visible to readers viewing the web version and not the mobile version though.
We have moved. Please do follow us at Siddha Heartbeat 2.0. at https://gnanakottam.blogspot.com henceforth. As we step into the twentieth year of worship on the path of the Siddhas, we have had new insights, perspectives and understanding of many subjects taught and followed by the Siddhas. Our understanding, approach, practices, and even the tools have changed. Much of what was written at the beginning of this blog, except for the biographies, has been corrected, modified, enhanced, or made to drop by Agathiyar. Looking at the readership pattern, very few readers follow the current postings, keeping up to date with these changes. Many readers go back to review previous postings, or new readers might have dropped in on these past postings in their search for answers on the net. I fear that they then shall read and understand, and believe and adopt that as the gists and substance of the matter when it has gone through many changes. Hence there is a need to bury the earlier and past understanding and arise anew. This blog shall be public for a couple of days before it goes into oblivion. We shall continue the journey with Siddha Heartbeat 2.0. Thank you for following us all these years. Please do follow us at Siddha Heartbeat 2.0. at https://gnanakottam.blogspot.com henceforth.
This is a journey of evolution. Concepts, thoughts, ideas, knowledge, learning, practice, etc change over time as we gain more experiences on this journey. Much of what we had upheld earlier has been shattered by both Tavayogi and Agathiyar over time. Concepts do not hold water. Experiences wash away all the illusion that we have come to build around us over time. This is the time I believe Tavayogi Thangarasan Adigal should be around in the physical form for me to check and verify the numerous changes both in thought and the body that is taking place. I really need him now. But though he is not with us in the physical form he comes through others to convey his messages regularly. So do Agathiyar and the other Siddhas too, not excluding the pantheon of Hindu Gods. It has been an exciting journey to this day.
When Kalaichelvan dropped by at my home, AVM recently after the numerous lockdowns that disabled us to come together, he told me that he had observed that I had started Siddha Heartbeat 2.0 now. I went on to explain the reason as mentioned above. But he told me something that made me realize that though we have come some distance there are many who need to start somewhere. Hence the need for readers to read the earlier posts too. It made sense to me.
There is no shortcut on this path. Each and everyone has to go through the regime of Soul advancement. We have to learn from our experiences. We have to get soiled and dirty. We have to burn ourselves. We have to make enemies. We have to make friends too. All these will make us mature and wise person. This is what Ramalinga Adigal told me that even the bitter experiences will bring on Gnanam or Jnana in us and asked that we bear with it.
So I shall take Kalaichelvan's word as that of Agathiyar and stay with this blog, the original. I shall bring in the several posts that I had aired on Siddha Heartbeat 2.0 and continue henceforth posting on both blogs.
Saturday, 29 January 2022
A NEW NORM
January 25, 2022
As we step into the twentieth year of worship to the Siddhas in following their path, we began to get insights and new perspectives and understanding of many subjects taught and followed by the Siddhas over those years. Our understanding, approach, practices, and even the tools have changed. Much of what was written from the earliest times in this blog, except for the biographies, has been corrected, modified, enhanced, or made to drop by Agathiyar. Looking at the readership pattern very few follow the current postings keeping up to date with these changes. Many go back to review previous postings or might have dropped in on these past postings in their search for answers on the net. I fear that they then shall read and understand and believe and adopt that as the gists and substance of the matter when it has gone through many changes. Hence there is a need to bury the earlier and past understanding and arise anew. This blog shall be public for a couple of days before it goes into oblivion.
We shall continue the journey with Siddha Heartbeat 2.0. Thank you for following us all these years. Please do follow us at Siddha Heartbeat 2.0. at https://gnanakottam.blogspot.com/2022/01/a-new-norm.html henceforth.
Tuesday, 25 January 2022
CONNECTING TO NATURE
Is the pandemic teaching us to appreciate nature? When we are forced to stay indoors, is it teaching us to appreciate the feel of the bare ground that we miss? (Earth). When we find it difficult to breathe is it teaching us to appreciate the breath that we take for granted? (Air). When we are forced to stay indoors, is it teaching us to appreciate the wide space of the outdoors that is beyond our reach? (Space). When we are forced to stay indoors, is it teaching us to appreciate the sun and its natural light and heat? (Fire). When we are forced to stay indoors, is it teaching us to appreciate the dew, mist, and wet grass in the plains and a dip in the river and sea? (Water).
Why do we rejoice in stepping outdoors into the open field, under the open skies, and taking a swim in the lake or ocean? When the Atma that is a portion of the Akaayam (Space) in us connects with the larger counterpart, as when two buddies meet after a long absence, naturally rejoice in dance. The body that is constituted of Earth, Air, Space, Fire, and Water connects with its cousins in nature, rejoicing having met up with them again. We are indeed connected to nature as in a blood relationship.
The naturalist John Muir once wrote about the Sierra Nevada Mountains of California: “We are now in the mountains and they are in us, kindling enthusiasm, making every nerve quiver, filling every pore and cell of us.” (https://greatergood.berkeley.edu/article/item/what_happens_when_we_reconnect_with_nature)
We also learn that from the article that,
Over 100 studies have shown that being in nature, living near nature, or even viewing nature in paintings and videos can have positive impacts on our brains, bodies, feelings, thought processes, and social interactions. In particular, viewing nature seems to be inherently rewarding, producing a cascade of position emotions and calming our nervous systems. These in turn help us to cultivate greater openness, creativity, connection, generosity, and resilience.
We learn that even if we are not able to venture out, sitting on the couch and watching documentaries on nature get us connected.
For example, in one study participants either viewed a few minutes of the inspiring documentary Planet Earth, a neutral video from a news program, or funny footage from Walk on the Wild Side. Watching a few minutes of Planet Earth led people to feel 46 percent more awe and 31 percent more gratitude than those in the other groups. This study and others like it tell us that even brief nature videos are a powerful way to feel awe, wonder, gratitude, and reverence
Brian Mertins shares the upliftment to his soul in connecting with nature at https://nature-mentor.com/about/,
When I was 15, I had an experience of sudden lucid clarity while hiking in the woods. I became aware of my senses in a way I had never before experienced. The trees seemed to shimmer as sounds of rushing water & bird song filled my ears. The air entering my lungs was electric. I realized that something about being in that environment had stimulated my mind into an altered state of consciousness where I could think more clearly. Every moment we spend in nature is an opportunity to make amazing discoveries about ourselves and the world we live in.
Nature is possibly the world’s best teacher of how to be truly present & have awareness in daily life. All you have to do is sit quietly & observe your surroundings. One of the biggest lessons I ever learned from nature was that it’s possible to increase the capacity of human sensory awareness. Along with the increases in overall awareness that come from being surrounded by nature, you’ll notice that your ability to focus will also really improve. One of the simplest things to do outside is be still & meditate.
Nature teaches authenticity by giving you opportunities to be alone with yourself in a truly non-judgemental environment. But immersing our senses in nature is an opportunity to bring back that genuine sense of amazement and magical wonder. Nature teaches us how to be grateful and appreciate the positive things in life. Sometimes when life gets overwhelming, the best solution is simply to take a break and go connect with nature. Nature is the essence of simplicity. As you become more sensitive and empathetic to nature, your interpersonal relationships also improve. Being surrounded by nature provides a mental spaciousness & opportunity for self healing. Nature teaches unconditional love by allowing you to be yourself without judgement.
"And now the true journey starts." With that statement, Tavayogi turned back to look at me with a smile on his lips and a sparkle in his eyes as he led me on a life-changing journey to various Siddha spots and samadhis. Though he was supposedly 69, and I was 46 years of age then, Tavayogi, I noticed took larger steps and never panted for his age as he went much ahead of me as if being pulled by a magnetic force that emerged from nature in the jungles, hills, and caves he took me to. He simply got connected to nature the moment we alighted from the car and began the walk into the interiors of the jungles not looking back even a second to see if I was following. He began pointing me to all of nature and the impression it had made on him during his earlier travels on the discovery of his Self.
Pico Iyer quotes Henry David Thoreau at https://tricycle.org/magazine/long-road-sitting-still/ ,
... the very act of taking off on a journey speaks for a kind of openness and ripeness that is in fact the first step on the road to transformation. It’s a public recognition that you don’t know everything and that some of those things can come to you as readily on the road as on the mat; it’s a way of setting your senses at the level marked “ON,” slapping yourself awake and trying to join that much larger sense of self—or non-self—we sometimes lose when we’re sleepwalking through our lives.
I am glad Agathiyar set me off on this pilgrimage of a different kind and had Tavayogi bring me places. He told me later upon my return from the pilgrimage of his abodes that he wanted me to get to know him better. Just as Yogi Ramsuratkumar traveled seven times throughout the length and breadth of India, Tavayogi too took a long walk of discovery. He showed me the small and narrow cave that could hardly fit both of us in Uthiyur hills. Ramalinga Adigal who left home at 12 came back to his Chennai home when 24. Where did he go? Tavayogi brought me to a cave in the jungles of Kutralam where Ramalinga Adigal had meditated. He too had traveled vastly though there is no record of it. After taking long strides in nature, they all came out of their enclosure and hibernation at some point in time to be with society. I guess having stayed close to nature they imbibed the very energy in nature and became vessels of transmission of these energies to people in society. Agathiyar tells travelers on the Siddha path, that on reaching the destination "Puranamum Kude Pesum", that would translate loosely to mean Nature then speaks to you. Rather than imply that we have control of Nature, which would show our arrogance to control and rule everything under the sky and even the skies now, that shows our superiority over Nature, I would say that Nature abides by our wishes when we begin to align with it. Nature cooperates with us. Nature works with us in unison. That is the nature of a Siddha. This was the lesson shown to me at the end of my travels with Tavayogi.
A friend who was a chartered accountant and had held many regional managerial posts in several companies had traveled to Kailash in the Tibetan Himalayas in 2011. He told me he felt insignificant and small before the majesty of nature. He realized that he who moved people and organizations felt helpless once there as he could not even move a single boulder. He saw himself as an infant before the surging mountains that had stood the test of time. It should teach us to be resilient too to all the tests we face in life.
Just like him,
In one study, participants who spent a minute looking up into a beautiful stand of eucalyptus trees reported feeling less entitled and self-important.
A friend whose home was inundated by the recent flood waters is back on his feet in high spirits ready to continue or rather build from scratch his life. Nature showed its force that day. If the latter came through the covid infection unscathed, the former was "critically ill with multi-organ involvement." Both of them came through their ordeal with fighting spirit. That is the way to go.
Fear sets in many a time in our lives for numerous reasons and also for no reason at all. Here we should learn to emulate nature. We should be like the river as Khalil Gibran says.
Similarly sitting alone in meditation brings on fear, fear of the unknown, fear of the unexpected, fear of losing our "I", etc. Maybe there was a reason our saints chose to go deep into the jungles to confront the fears in them that arise out of isolation. Does nature become a support group to us as we spend time with it? Gnana Jothiamma was asked by Agathiyar to sit at a cemetery and chant the Mrityunjaya mantra to help her lose her fear. She did just that. Has this mantra the capacity to align our thoughts and emotions to the larger divine presence that shall then come to soothe the pain and calm the nerves? Do the vibrations that go out in reciting mantras realign us to the source?
Monday, 24 January 2022
THE LILA
This Sanskrit mantra can be practiced to attain freedom (moksha) from Samsara – the “Karmic Wheel” that keeps us bound to cycle after cycle of incarnations. This liberation mantra is a karmic eraser.
"Vettaveli represents the blissful samadhi state, the space of consciousness, of transcendental awareness, the awareness of Being itself."
“The uncreated space” refers to vettaveli, the Siddhas’ favorite metaphor to describe the indescribable Absolute: vast, luminous space."
He refers to Boganathar telling us that "ultimately there is nothing but formless, blissful Consciousness – vettaveli."
Tavayogi continues. The vettaveli is known by another name too - Param. He goes on to say that in that vettaveli a color was seen. It was known as Shiva Rupam. It was seen as a Jothi. It was known as Shivan. From that Shivan came forth a sound known as Shivam that gave rise to an energy Shakti. These gave rise to further energy forms namely Sadasivam, Maheswaran, Uruthiran, Tirumaal, and Ayan. These constituted the very first vibrations. The force that moved these seven to merge was known as Paramashivam. From this Akaayam or space came forth. Akaayam split into two halves. The first half became the Atma. And so the rest of the 95 tattvas came to be. If there is any flaw in the writing it is entirely my flaw in reading and understanding his work and not that of Tavayogi's.
To think that we are in charge and in control is the greatest flaw. We need to realign with God and his creations. The only way is to look up to him to throw a starter kit from where we can begin the journey of transformation in all ways. The starter kit given to me was a book of the names of all the Siddhas to recite. As we progress we shall receive "more books" to help us on our journey.
Sunday, 23 January 2022
UNDERSTANDING THE TATTVAS AGAIN IN A NEW LIGHT
Just like the Buddhist monks who painstakingly spend hours creating a mandala only to destroy it after it is worshipped, Agathiyar who build a mini-empire that came to be known by various names destroyed it too. Coming into my home, my home became his Vanam. With rituals and charity undertaken, it became his Tapovanam. Then he called it a day. He brought the shutters down, except for a handful who remained to stay. Coming within us as the Mouna Guru, it became Gnanakottam. In all this series of events he broke my attachment to the organization and that of others too, just as the monks broke their attachment to their creation.
Frank Alexander in his book "In the Hours of Meditation", Advaita Ashrama, Calcutta, 1993, writes,
"No organization can save thee. Thy must save thyself. Generally speaking, organizations however spiritual and unsectarian their intent, degenerate into worldliness."
"So deep-rooted is Ahamkara that like the cause of a deep-seated disease it is most difficult to discover. It disguises itself under myriad forms, but of all its disguises none is so treacherous and so evil as the spiritual disguise."
"As for organizations appreciate their usefulness, the greatness of the ideas they embody, but remain thou unidentified. The religious life is purely personal and subjective. It may be born in a church, but it must outlive it."
He echoes the words of Tavayogi asking us "not to die in the temple." To have us realize this the Siddhas brought us from Sariyai introduced by our parents to Kriyai and Yoga that was introduced with the coming of the guru. Then they removed the support. Seeing us groping in the dark they came as the effulgence to light up the dark cave within us. Now they ask that this effulgence should shine through us and engulf others too.
The guru echoes further the words of Tavayogi. "Be always true and loyal to the source from which thou hast received thy inspiration." Tavayogi showed us to Agathiyar and stepped aside. Agathiyar in turn passed us on to Ramalinga Adigal to connect directly with the Prapanjam. That is the greatest thing a guru could do for his student, to show him directly to the source for all his needs, rather than have him cling to the guru forever. The Siddhas never spoon-feed us. They showed us to fish rather than feed us the fish. They had us work for our meal. They asked us to read up the guru's writings on the 96 tattvas and on the Atma. In event, we cannot comprehend after numerous readings, they would come to clarify. So I took up reading Tavayogi's "Andamum Pindamum" and "Atma Gnanam." When I had failed to understand the nature of the body, breath and soul or Udal, Uyir and Atma, and threw a tantrum at not able to differentiate the three, Agathiyar clarified through a short memo. But it required another seven posts to understand the subject clearly. As I was still unclear about the connection if there was one, between the Atma and the tattvas, or were the tattvas applied solely to the composition of the body, revisiting Tavayogi's writings today, I realized that he had included the Atma as the very first component arising from one of the Butham or element, Akaayam or space. Tavayogi says Akaayam or space or ether was split into two halves, with the first half becoming the Atma.
When Ramalinga Adigal came and asked us to hug him several days back, he transferred an enormous amount of energy or sakti that traversed through all of us who held on to him. Every cell in us experienced the bliss that was a result of the intense vibration created by the divine energy transferred onto us to sample. Though he had done this several times on his earlier visits, I suppose this time we could truly and fully absorb the intense energy, vibration and bliss. He did say something that he never told us before. If earlier he had asked us to connect with the Prapanjam and take in its energy, and had on numerous occasions helped us bring the Prapanjam and its energy within, this time he uttered that we had connected with the Atma. This surprised us. Later Agathiyar told us the same that Ramalinga Adigal had connected us to the Atma.
Figuring what took place then and recalling both Agathiyar's and Ramalinga Adigal's statement and looking up Tavayogi's book, I gathered the following. The energy that was passed on to us was so intense that it had the very cells in us vibrate and touched the Atma as never before. If previously the bliss was felt through engaging with our senses, touch, hearing, sight, smell, and taste, this time around it went beyond the senses and so deep within the core and touched the Atma bringing on Atma Darisanam of sorts I suppose.
As he had earlier told us that we can never actually pinpoint the specific location of the Atma in our body, ஆத்மா உறையும் இடம் இங்கு தான் என்று சொல்ல இயலாது I guess that the Atma takes residence in these spaces throughout our body. The intense energy reverberated within the very core of the cells and was felt by the Atma that contains the rest of the 95 tattvas. We recall Agathiyar telling us in his earlier memo that the Atma keeps both the Udal and Uyir under its control and scrutiny in a secretive, subtle manner. ஆன்மா உடலையும் உயிரையும் தனது கட்டுப்பாட்டுக்குள் வைத்துக் கொள்ளும் ஒரு சூச்சமம். With the Pindam or embryo explained clearly in his earlier memo, and Uyir stated clearly as the breath, I put forward my understanding of the placement of the Atma in our body as occupying the Akaayam or space. Only Agathiyar and Ramalinga Adigal should come to either endorse my understanding or tell me otherwise if I had erred. Please bear with me if I am wrong about it. I shall wait for Agathiyar to correct me.
Earlier, we were made to understand that the records of our past karma were not carried in the Atma as widely spoken and thought of. So to the questions as to what or where these records are stored and if it was within us, or in the Akashic library beyond, he pointed us to P. Kamalakkannan's book on "Kunangkudiyaarin Gnana Vazhi", published by Vanathi Pathipakkam, Chennai, 1993. The author, referring to the Quran and Agathiyar's verses, explains,
ஒவ்வொரு மனிதனும் செய்கின்ற நல்வினை தீவினை யாவும் இரு கண்ணியமான எழுத்தாளர்களால் கவனிக்கப்பட்டு ஒரு புத்தகத்தில் பதிவு செய்யப்படுவதாகவும் அப்புத்தகம் ஒவ்வொரு மனிதனின் கழுத்தில் மாட்டப்பட்டிருப்பதாகவும் இறை மறையாம் திருமறை கூறுகின்றது. அது எவ்வாறு மாட்டப்பட்டுள்ளது என்று அகத்தியர் விளக்கம் கூறுகிறார். திருமறை கழுத்து என்று கூறியதை அகத்தியர் தெளிவாகக் கழுத்தின் உட்பகுதியில் அமைந்துள்ள அண்ணாக்கு என்று கூறியுள்ளார். ஒவ்வொரு மனிதனின் அண்ணாக்கிலும் காலப் பெட்டகம் இருக்கிறது. அவன் செய்யும் நல்வினை தீவினை யாவும் உடனுக்குடன் அங்கே பதிவாகின்றன. இதற்கு விதி என்று பெயர் என்ற உண்மை அகத்தியர் வாக்கால் வெளிப்படக் காண்கின்றோம்.
Each good and bad deed is watched and noted and recorded by "two accountants" in a book. This is fate. This book is hung around their necks according to the Quran. Agathiyar clarifies this as the Uvula. Agathiyar told us the same too later. Touching the throat, he said, "இங்கு அடங்கி இருப்பது கர்மா."
It is comforting to see that he gives support to all our endeavors. He is known to tell us, "நீ செய்து வரும் ஆராச்சியை தொடர்ந்து செய். முடிவில் நான் வந்து கூறுகிறான். He leaves us to read, hear, learn, and experience and also to think, ponder, research, and come to an opinion first before he comes in to endorse or reject, or correct and fine-tune our understanding.
We can figure out the placement of the Uyir or breath among the 96 tattvas quite easily though. Tavayogi wrote that the second half of Akaayam split further into four portions. The first quarter teaming up with Vaayu resulted in Manas; the next quarter became Buddhi and Arivu when teamed with Agni or Fire; the third quarter teaming with water gave forth to Siththam; and finally, Ahangkaaram came to be in coalition with Earth filling the fourth quarter.
Vaayu or air was split into two halves too. Viyaanan became the first half, while the second half was subdivided further into four variations. Vaayu with Akaayam became Samana Vaayu; Vaayu with Agni or Fire gave forth to Uthaana Vaayu; the third portion of Vaayu teamed up with Water to become Prana Vaayu. The fourth, Abaana Vaayu was a result of Vaayu teaming with Prithvi or Earth.
Agni or Fire too was split into two halves, the first half becoming the eyes, while the second half was split further into four. Teaming with Akaayam it gave rise to the ears; the second teamed with Vaayu to take on the form of the skin; the third teamed with Water to become the mouth and tongue and teaming with Earth, the nose was formed too.
Water split into two halves giving rise to the Tanmaathirai namely taste in the first half and split further into four portions in the second half. Teaming with Akaayam, the hearing came about. Teaming with Vaayu touch was sensed. Sight came to be, teaming with Agni, and finally, the smell came forth with the addition of Earth.
Earth too split into two halves. The first half became the Anus. The second half split further took on the following: Speech in combination with Akaayam; Hands were formed in combination with Vaayu; Legs came to be created combining with Agni; Teaming with Earth the organs of pleasure came to be.
Would I be wrong to deduce that these 96 tattvas formed the Udal or body, Uyir or breath, and Atma or the soul?
SHEDDING THE FALSE
All these writings are more of a reminder for me than for others. I have to keep myself under check. Life indeed is a battle. But once the "I" knows who is master it is subdued and toes the line. I am no saint. I am no teacher. I am no guru. I too am a student trying to comprehend life and its teachings. I too am trying to find myself and my way in this maze of life. If in the past I took up searching for new ways to enhance my Self to fit into the mold that those before us had left around us, dictating our path and ways, Agathiyar made me realize that it was not about fitting into others' shoes but dropping the layers of skin and standing stark naked. There is no becoming but to drop all and realize that we are already IT! Once this realization dawns upon us all effort towards self-realization drops. This is the lesson the past two years of staying in solitude most of the time taught me. Thanks to Mahindren he made me realize that spiritual evolution is not about adding on achievements but letting go. If we want Agathiyar to come in the form shown to us by many before as depicted in statues and paintings we would be disappointed. In truth, he comes as Mahindren, my wife, my children and grandchildren, and total strangers too to educate us. Dattatreya is said to have considered the entire Universe and its creations as his teachers. He "reached self-awareness by observing nature during his Sannyasi wanderings and treating these natural observations as his twenty-four teachers for each of them taught him something useful - such was his greatness and humility." The 24 are listed at https://www.dollsofindia.com/library/dattatreya/.
- Mother Earth taught him tolerance, patience, and forbearance;
- Water taught him to comfort others;
- Fire taught him not to be judgmental;
- Air taught him to be unfettered;
- Space taught him to be unattached;
- The Sun taught him to cheer up everyone;
- The Moon taught him to remain unaffected;
- The Ocean too taught him to remain unaffected;
- The Child taught him not to hold grudges;
- The Village Girl reminded him not to disturb others;
- The Arrow-maker taught him to focus on the work on hand and concentration;
- The Prostitute Pingala taught him dedication;
- The Butterfly touch him to be unattached;
- The Snake taught him to drop desires and ownership;
- The Python taught him to be flexible;
- The Dove taught him love and peace;
- The Fish taught him not to fall for temptation;
- The Honeybee taught him to labor;
- The Deer reminded him to be ever wary of people who exploit others;
- The Elephant taught him to remember;
- The Bumblebee reminded him not to hurt;
- The Eagle taught him not to hoard;
- The Spider taught him to remain free and unattached; and finally
- The Wasp taught him intent and perseverance.
When Sankara awakens his student Giri, who later came to be known as Totakacharya, on the knowledge of 14 subjects, by an act of will, Giri immediately sings of the guru, "On the supporting tree of the Acharya grows the creeper of devotion, taking its root at its own feet and watered by his grace."
Giri was obedient, industrious, and upheld righteousness. He served Sankara well anticipating what Sankara wanted and provided it even before he asked. He followed Sankara like a shadow, always walking behind the Guru, stopped when he stopped, listened attentively to what he had to say, and neither did he talk too much in his guru's presence. This is the ideal student. Watching devotees and students of present-day gurus I am taken aback when they keep talking even as the guru tries to explain. The venue at times becomes a battlefield. It is a far cry from the depiction of the guru-disciple relationship we see in the paintings of Lord Dhakshanamurti and his four students where silence prevails in the presence of the master and where all thought processes subside.
Life is a process. Only man expects to see results in every venture, even in spiritualism. Do not be bonded by results. Your efforts would stop there. Let the process go on, watch the flower bloom, wither and fall. It is a process. It goes on and on. So does all of life. It is only when we start to dictate the course that we become frustrated and disappointed.
Frank Alexander in his book "In the Hours of Meditation", Advaita Ashrama, Calcutta, 1993, wrote,
"Having done thy task, stand aside. Work to thine utmost, and then to thine utmost be resigned. Know that wherever there is worry and expectations in work, there is also the blindest form of attachment."
Saturday, 22 January 2022
THE SIDDHAS WE KNOW 2
Reading about the Siddhas makes us feel good. Talking about them makes us feel good. But it does not replace the state and experiences that the Siddhas are in. But when they decide to come and share it with us, we lose ourselves entirely. Only the experience remains. Bliss remains. But it is yet not possible to lose ourselves entirely. We are still aware of the witness, the "I" that at that moment takes a step backward and records the happenings.
But as we go deeper into this relationship, a fear arises for no reason although we know that we are in safe hands. The fear of losing the "I" that was with us all this while. It would be nice to have the guru stay with us in the physical form in times like this. It would be comforting and reassuring.
When Jnana Jothiamma was placed in solitude she too had a fear crop up in her. She was asked to chant the Maha Mrityunjaya Mantra. When the pandemic reared its ugly head in December of 2019 and went on into 2020 we were wondering why Agathiyar had not spoken about it. Lord Shiva came and told us that it shall take time to go away. But as all of us were in a state of fear as we were battling an unseen enemy not visible to the naked eyes, he gave us the Maha Mrityunjaya Mantra to recite and the Dhanvantri mantra to act as a shield besides asking us to carry out homam in our homes that are known to clear and cleanse the air.
Yogapedia explains Maha Mrityunjaya Mantra,
Chanting the maha mrityunjaya mantra creates divine healing vibrations, promoting physical, mental and emotional health. It is also called a moksha mantra because it is believed to kindle the Divine within the yogi and remove the fear of death. In essence, it works by creating liberation from cyclical rebirth. During these times of stress and uncertainty your doshas may be unbalanced.
From https://templesinindiainfo.com/maha-mrityunjaya-mantra-in-english-and-meaning/ we learn that,
"it is sometimes known as the Mrita-Sanjivini mantra because it is a component of the “life-restoring” practice given to the primordial sage Sukracharya after he had completed an exhausting period of austerity."
I guess whenever fear sets in we could always depend on the Maha Mrityunjaya Mantra to raise our spirits.
THE SIDDHAS WE KNOW
The Theory of the Four Humours was an important development in medical knowledge which originated in the works of Aristotle. Hippocrates is credited with developing the theory. It then became a mainstay of medical belief for two thousand years. The Greeks believed that the body was made up of four main components or Four Humours. These Four Humours needed to remain balanced in order for people to remain healthy. These could be connected to the four seasons of the year: Yellow Bile with summer, black bile with autumn, phlegm with winter and blood with spring. (Source: https://schoolshistory.org.uk/)
Humorism began to fall out of favor in the 1850s with the advent of germ theory, which was able to show that many diseases previously thought to be humoral were in fact caused by microbes. (Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Humorism)
"Each individual is composed of a combination of the three types of doshas. These are further comprised of the five universal elements, namely, space, air, earth, fire, and water. Vata: A combination of air and space. Pitta: Made of fire with some water. Kapha: From water with a little earth. In Ayurvedic medicine, healers treat patients by balancing the three doshas, energies that maintain and protect a person’s entire system."
From https://www.britannica.com/science/Siddha-medicine, we learn that,
"According to the Siddha system, there are five elements that exist in nature: earth, water, fire, air, and ether, all of which form the original basis of all corporeal things. It is believed that there is an intimate connection between the macrocosm of the external world and the microcosm of the corporeal being. In the human body the element of earth is present in the bone, flesh, nerves, skin, and hair; the element of water is present in bile, blood, semen, glandular secretions, and sweat; the element of fire is present in hunger, thirst, sleep, beauty, and indolence; the element of air is present in contraction, expansion, and motion; and the element of ether is present in the interstices of the stomach, heart, neck, and head.""According to the theories of humoral pathology, all diseases are caused by the discordant mixture of vata, pitta, and kapha. Their proportions in the body govern a person’s physical and mental disposition. The elements form the connecting link between the microcosm (the human) and the macrocosm (the world). Thus, the external air corresponds to the internal vata, the external heat corresponds to the internal pitta, and the external water corresponds to the internal kapha. Under normal circumstances, according to Siddha theory, vata occupies regions related to the pelvis and the rectum, pitta occupies regions related to the stomach and the viscera, and kapha occupies regions related to breath, the throat, and the head. The presence and proportion of these humours within the system is indicated by the pulse, which is vital to correct diagnosis. Meditation on the elements, beginning with the “gross” and ending with the “subtle,” enabled the siddhars to gain mastery over the elements."




















































