Saturday, November 5, 2016

On Turning-Point Hill

 (from Goddess and the Guru):



Though based in Bombay, Guruji’s work took him all over India, meeting with scientists, industrialists and intellectuals across the country. One seemingly typical business trip in 1977 found him in Hyderabad, visiting the Electronics Corporation of India for discussions on mini-computer programs. But back in his hotel room near Nampally Station (a local name for Hyderabad Deccan Station), Guruji felt inexplicably restless. After tossing and turning through several hours of fitful sleep, Guruji finally gave up and decided to step outside for some fresh air.

“I went out at about 4 a.m. and started walking aimlessly,” he recalled. “It was quite cool. I eventually arrived at a stairway on a hill made by the Birlas, called Naubath Pahad (‘Turning-Point Hill’).1 There was a temple of Balaji glowing brightly on top;2 on the way up there was a Hanuman Temple. My early childhood flashed by like a film reel in my mind’s eye.”

Guruji was reminded of the old Hanuman Temple opposite the Prabhat Talkies Theater in Vizag, where he used to go with his friends for prasadam (a divinely blessed food offering) as a child. He had never really frequented temples since those days, and now, in his mid-40s, he maintained no particular religious beliefs or practices. “I was not exactly an atheist,” he said. “Rather, I was neutral—I considered religion as ‘not my domain.’ I had developed, let us say, a highly questioning attitude toward it, almost bordering on the irreligious, to the point where I was unable to identify myself with any rituals or activities like that. I used to think, ‘What is the need to believe in something that is a fact? You only need to believe in something if it is not a fact.’ I also used to think, ‘Why should I believe something that I don’t experience? God is not verifiable! I don’t see God, do I? So why should I believe in God?’ Such was my attitude. Pure arrogance of science.”

Amma recalled that when their daughter Radha was born in 1963, “she was a blue baby and Guruji’s mother was afraid. She prayed to Lord Venkateswara, saying, ‘If you make her well, I will come to Tirupati!’ Guruji got annoyed and said, ‘Why do you always try to bargain with God?’ Even when his mother finally completed her promised visit to Tirupati almost 12 years later, Guruji was still not interested in entering the temple. But then, in 1977, Balaji himself called him inside…”
Indeed, Guruji suddenly felt almost as if he were being pushed from behind as he mounted the steps toward the brightly lit temple above. Halfway up, at the Hanuman Temple, “I took the vermillion, put it on my forehead and continued further up,” he said. “It was 5:30 or 6 a.m. by that time; early morning, misty. Music was playing. There were, I think, four or five people ahead of me waiting for darshan [the ritual viewing of a deity]. An old man prostrated before Balaji—who is a female goddess in a male form; female on the inside, male on the outside—and for some reason I was prompted to prostrate also. The old man’s gesture acted as a trigger for me to do the same. It was quite unusual for me. I was not the type to prostrate before an icon, a symbol. I did it without consciously knowing what I was doing.”


As he did so, however, a sensation gripped him like nothing he had ever experienced before.
“I felt a thrill passing through me that lasted about 10 or 15 minutes, I think,” he said. “I really lost all sense of time. You know how sometimes you get an experience of horripilation, where every hair stands on end? This thrill ran even deeper than that; it was something entirely new. Every atom in my body was thrilling. I was transported to a different plane of existence—an ecstatic state.”

As he had in his first childhood vision, Guruji experienced the entire universe spinning rapidly around him in a broad vortex, steadily drawn into him at its center. Before he could even begin to process what was happening, Balaji appeared before him, saying in a soft but clear voice, “I am Lord Venkateswara; I am Bala, Balaji and Bala Tripurasundari” (the final appellation usually referring to the child form of the goddess Lalita, who is central to the Sri Vidya tradition that Guruji would later embrace). Balaji then intoned:

oṁ pūrṇam adaḥ pūrṇam idaṁ
pūrṇāt pūrṇam udacyate
pūrṇasya pūrṇam ādāya
pūrṇam evāvaśiṣyate

From the whole arises the whole,
From the complete arises the complete.
Deducting the whole from the whole,
The whole alone remains

When the vision ended, Guruji slowly stood and looked around himself, somewhat disoriented and only gradually realizing that less than half an hour had elapsed since he entered the sanctum. Nonetheless, he felt profoundly changed. Something revelatory had happened, some sort of epiphany—but he was at a loss to say exactly what it was. “If I told someone else about it, they might have shrugged it off, like, ‘Come on, you must be kidding,’” he said. “But the experience was undeniable to me. I knew Balaji had come to me, and I considered it as diksha, a formal initiation. At that moment, it is fair to say, Bala became my first spiritual guru.”

Lost in the wonder of the moment, Guruji walked out of the temple and slowly made his way back down the stairs to the street. “I made a mental note to myself,” he said. “Yes, maybe I am missing something by not worrying about my religion and ignoring the spiritual aspects of life. I must look into it.”

With the benefit of hindsight, many of Guruji’s disciples today point to his experience at Balaji Temple as the pivotal moment that transformed him from scientist to spiritual teacher. Guruji did not entirely disagree: “Then and there,” he would later affirm, “I decided that whatever life was left in me I should utilize for the welfare of everyone, and definitely not for destruction.”

But at the time, there were few outward signs to indicate that any change had happened at all. “Strangely, there was nothing much,” Amma said. When Guruji told her about the incident, “all I could think was, ‘Oh, he did a full prostration to Balaji? That’s odd. He would usually never do that.’”

But perhaps it is more accurate to say that the Balaji Temple experience marked the beginning of an internal shift that would gradually transform the way in which Guruji related to the world. “In some sense, it added fuel to the fire of an inward-looking process, which began around that time,” he said. “So it did indeed mark a turning point in my life, from a search for truth in the external direction to a search for truth in an inward direction. Perhaps moments of enlightenment only really come when there is a deep conflict.”

In the years that followed, Guruji would continue to experience frequent visions of Lord Balaji, albeit usually in the female form of the child goddess Bala Tripurasundari. But while these encounters would open his mind to vast depths of spiritual experience, Guruji said, his original vision at Hyderabad was the primary goad, intensifying his sense of dissatisfaction with his life and priorities as they then stood.

“At the Balaji Temple,” he said, “I was given an experience—a jolt that made me question my attitudes. Why had I devoted so much time, passion and energy to my profession, and so little to my spiritual life? I thought, ‘Why don’t I investigate what is happening in my mind?’”
In a way, he reasoned, meditation was just another form of structured scientific observation, but with one major difference.

“Unlike in scientific investigation, the object wasn’t something ‘out there’; it was me I was observing,” Guruji explained. “The observer is me—but the observed is also me. And the fact that I am observing would, in turn, make the observed observe me back. In other words, I have a say in what I am observing. The object and subject being the same, I can change the object even as the object is changing me.”

For Guruji, the revelation was ultimately life-altering.
“It was quite a new feeling,” he said. “It’s not at all the way we generally interact with the outside world. It was more like a mirroring participation between the seer and the seen. It felt like, ‘I am a part of the world, and the world a part of me. But how can the part also be the whole?’ That bit was bothering me. So anyway, I decided to explore my inner world.”

In the days and weeks that followed, Guruji commenced a regular practice of meditation, usually sitting late at night after the family had gone to sleep, and continuing until long after midnight. As an initial goal he tried to reaccess the transcendent sound he remembered from childhood, and was both surprised and pleased when it returned almost at once—if anything, stronger than ever.
“I would sit up on my bed at night, meditating at 2 o’clock in the morning while my wife was sleeping next to me,” he said. “I’d just listen to that humming sound coming from within me, which started out like the sound of a radio before the station comes on air, around 300 hertz, and then gradually went up into sharper frequencies, increasing in pitch as I observed it. I remembered hearing those sounds as a young boy, but now I realized that it wasn’t just a single frequency—it was a spectrum of audible frequencies, passing over into visible experiences.”
Guruji saw this image and commented on it, "Can You imagine how much violence exists in this picture of creating galaxies?
For the first two days of these meditations, “nothing much happened; a little calm and peace descended upon me.” On the third night, however, he lost consciousness—then awoke to a sensation of terrifying disruption. “As I was waking from unconsciousness, there was suddenly a huge blast,” Guruji recalled. “I felt as if a bomb had been placed in my heart, and that—with a tremendous noise and unbearably bright light—I had exploded into bits and pieces, every particle of my body thrown off to the ends of the galaxies.”
The terrifying vision was, however, accompanied by what seemed almost certainly to be the message he had been seeking. “At the same moment, I saw a sort of screen before me, upon which about 10 Sanskrit stanzas were written. But before I could read even half of the first line—I remembered only that it was ‘Isavasyam idam sarvam’—it vanished, and I blanked out. When I woke up, I was really scared. I thought, ‘How could such a dangerous explosion take place in meditation? What would happen to my wife and daughters if I died? Who would look after them?’ Remember, I had lost my father at an early age, so I was thinking in those terms. And I decided then and there to stop all such dangerous activities.”
The sheer intensity of his visions made Guruji decide not to share them with his wife in any great detail just yet; he did not want to worry her unnecessarily. As a result, Amma said, she initially underestimated the transformation he was undergoing—because outwardly, once again, he was simply not showing any significant changes at all.
“Yes, sometimes he would awake from his meditations and say he was afraid,” she noted. “But I would usually tell him, ‘Just drink a little water and try to go back to sleep.’”

Effects of Repressing and Suppressing Sexual Drive



Q—What are the various effects of repressing or suppressing the sexual drive?

Guruji: Repressing—comes out as unconscious motivation taking the person towards self-defeating activities—destruction (anger), violence, domination, control of the other/environment.

Suppressing—comes out as constant internal conflict and anxiety, that then has to be shut into the hard shell of the ego (otherwise the anxiety would not allow day-to-day functioning, dealing with the world). Ego, in turn, generates its own effects, such as making the person cut off from any source of energy (stops one from merging).

Love, as understood by many other traditions that apparently ask one to “set aside” the sexual desire (and are thereby held with a certain esteem in society), is to do with merger, with connectivity, with expanding one’s consciousness, making it vast, letting it go into all objects and things. Often this is to be brought about by the act of complete attention.

Sexual activity is a way of doing the same meditations, only here the substance is the sexual drive. (An interesting aspect is to do with why only sex, and not envy or greed, be the substance… (sex is double-edged).) Furthermore, becoming vulnerable, dissolving the ego shell, opening up to energy, unclogging perceptual filters are all things that define any process or method of meditating/Being/Loving.

To use the sexual drive as a way of meditating is not only an excellent or beneficial idea, but also essential to free the individual of any repressions related to this inescapable fact of us/all life. (Kāma—neglected…)

Usual talk by Guruji to visitors: Life, Power, and the Meaning of Worship


There are many who say that Devī pūjā is not for ordinary people, or outright dangerous if mahānaivedyam is not offered daily, etc. Why do people say She is an angry Goddess, and those who worship Her end up having many difficulties? Also, many people accuse, “Is it necessary to do such long pūjās? You must be intending harm to someone.” Naturally, people are frightened and do not even think of doing Devī pūjā. Also, why is Lalitā Sahasranāma made out to be secret, and people are advised by some who ought to know better that Viṣṇu Sahasranāma is “safe,” implying that Lalitā is unsafe? Is there any truth in such fears?

Most of these fears about Devī pūjā, Śakti pūjā, and Tantra are rooted in ignorance, I think. The reality is quite different from the fears. Let us try to understand who is Devī, why we should worship Her, and what happens if we do and what if we don’t. The word Devī literally means “that which lights up the world.”

Now what is it that has the power to create, sustain, and destroy the world? Let me give an example.
Suppose there is a dark room, in which we see no objects at all. It has been dark for millions of years, say. We don’t know what is in it. Now suppose we take a lighted candle into it. We start seeing the objects in it. We may think: how can this little candle have the power to remove the darkness that has been for millions of years? What would you say? It has, or it does not have the power? You will agree that light has power over darkness. Darkness does not have power over light. Light is knowing. Ignorance is not knowing.

The world has been a dark room for me for millions of years. I never knew what was in it till the little light of life came into me. I did not know the Sun, Moon, fire, or any living or non-living objects in this wide world till I was born, and life started helping me to see. So the word Devī really means life, which helps us to know, see, feel, touch, smell, etc. Life is the little candle which lights up the mighty universe that has been unseen, unknown, unexperienced. This little candle is mightier than the whole universe! So Devī means life. My life, your life, every living being’s life.

Now what is there to be afraid of life? If I am worshipping life, I am worshipping Devī. If you receive love, you are happy, are you not? Devī pūjā really means to make myself happy, loving myself. I am doing pūjā to myself when I am doing Devī pūjā.

If I have the means, I will offer Her in golden plates courses of sixty-four delicacies prepared in the most extravagant manner. I will offer Her a perfumed bath worthy of Gods. I will give Her a massage She will remember for life. If I don’t have the means, I will be happy with just bread and peanut butter. What do I care as long as I am happy? Being happy is the real Devī pūjā. Neither Devī cares, because She is my life, She is in me, She is me. She is in every limb of me.

The real point to remember in Devī pūjā is that it is for your life that the pūjā is being done. So whatever it takes to make you happy, all that undoubtedly is pūjā. Whatever makes you unhappy is not pūjā, because pūjā means adoration, love, and happiness. And Devī pūjā is adoring life, pro-life, not anti-life. It is not against life, so it does not hurt anyone.

People ask, “Can we keep Devī in home and do pūjā?” She is already there in you as life. So the question is, “Can you stay in your home?” Surely you can. Can you do pūjā? The question is saying, can you be happy? Why not? You can do pūjā, Devī pūjā most definitely. It is for your own prāṇa, life, that pūjā is really taking place. So go ahead, by all means. Power flows to you by loving yourself. Pūjā is expressing your love to yourself and to all life.

Although life is one, it manifests as different powers in different places. Life in my eyes is the power to see, in ears to hear, in tongue to taste and talk, in skin to touch and feel, in hands to grasp, in feet to run, in genitals to reproduce, in breasts to give milk, and so on. If life is missing in a foot, like a polio patient, he cannot walk. So power comes from life. Power is life.

The concept of Śakti Pīṭhas flows from this idea. There is the great Purāṇic story of how Satī, the adorable wife of Śiva, got angry when Her father did not invite Śiva for a fire ritual he was performing. He insulted Śiva, saying, “He is the erect male genital. What is so great about worshipping it?” So Satī got angry and left Her body by yoga. Śiva hears this, becomes angry, and keeping Her corpse on his shoulders, is out to destroy the world. Gods pray to Viṣṇu to save the worlds from Śiva’s anger. Viṣṇu sends his discus, which cuts the body of Satī into various pieces. They all fell at different places and became Śakti Pīṭhas, where power resides alive.

There are two lessons we have to draw from this great story. The first is that in every limb there is a Śakti Pīṭha, a seat of power. We can access, arouse, and enhance this power through attentiveness, adoration, and love. The second lesson is that when Śiva is insulted, Śakti becomes angry, and when Śiva has no chance to have intercourse (his wife, the yoni, is dead) he becomes angry. Their anger is capable of destroying the world.

Saying it in another way, sexual energy frustrated from expression destroys the world. Most of our neuroses have to do with suppressing seeking variety in sex. We want variety in food, dresses, perfumes, and environment. Why not in fun? So we should treat sex with love and adoration, not with contempt.

Hindu Tantric culture places a high value on worship of genitals in the form of Śiva, the erect male liṅga, and Śakti, the vagina. Most ancient cultures in the world do accept sex as sacred to the Goddess. There was sacred prostitution everywhere, and orgies were not uncommon. We consider Their eternal intercourse as symbolic of peace, pleasure, and bliss. We incorporate desire for sex, kāma, as the third great object of life, the others being duty, wealth, and liberation. Liberation is like living in an eternal orgasm, like Śiva-Śakti, or brahmānanda, the bliss of utter creativity.

Amṛta

Sri Meru — The Living Sri Chakra Temple of the Nude Goddesses


Devipuram at night, 2014

This is a unique tantric temple. Here Goddess is on top of Śiva enjoying sex with him, giving life to the world. She is surrounded by yoginīs and siddhas in a Śrī Chakra. Whenever five yoginīs and four siddhas join in a ritual, a tantric Śrī Chakra is said to be formed. They form on some special days.

All the Goddesses here are spiritual guides to help you on your way. Please get their help. All have life. Adore the ones which you like.

Goddess creates life. Life and sex are sacred to Her. So She is pleased by worshipping genitals. Lalitā Sahasranāma has many references to such pūjās. Arousal is normal here. It is Her desire which you are feeling.

She is the sum total of all powers in the world. She is time itself. Time and space unite creating the world. Śiva is space consciousness.

Why do we have so many Goddesses? And what is the reason for their nudity?

Life works in different forms in different organs. In the eyes it is the power to see; in the tongue, the power to taste, and so on. Eyes can see, but they cannot see behind walls, or at far-off distances, or into future and past. Such power is limited, covered, or clothed. When the power is unlimited, we call it uncovered, opened, or unclothed.

All the powers of life are carved here as the attendants of the Goddess of life. Some are inviting you to worship their breasts and genitals to give you protection, abundance, and to manifest your intense desires. The clothed powers have less to give; the unclothed ones can give unlimited powers. Nudity is not only acceptable but desirable in Devī pūjā.



Shame prevents you from what you really want to be. Letting go of shame gives you the ability to love yourself for being just what you are. We are looking at the nude Goddesses and making comments on them. Are they ashamed in the least by our comments? They are unaffected by what others say about them.

Your being yourself is the real meaning of being open, uninhibited, free, and liberated.

We dared adverse public opinion to open up the hidden secrets of Goddess worship which empowers people. Previously only high caste people had access to such rituals. Now they are being opened up to you.

How can you make use of the opportunities presented here for the first time so openly?

Don’t be ashamed. Sit in front of each idol. Meditate on each part with concentration. Each Devī has a special boon to offer to you. You can probably guess it by Her name. Pay attention to each of Her body parts for three minutes, for a total of thirty-two minutes. Ask the Devī to be with you always. Request Her protection and guidance at every step. She will do so.

Here we give a few examples of how to do it:

  • Brahmī is lust. She helps you convert lust into love, overcome impotence, enjoy sex for long, and have great orgasms.

  • Māheśvarī is anger. She helps you feel anger coming out of helplessness, control it, and ultimately be detached from it.

  • Kaumārī is possessiveness. She lets you possess people and wealth, and also teaches how to let go of them.

  • Vaiṣṇavī is obsession. She lets you have obsession for any person, power, or knowledge. She also helps you overcome it.

There are about a hundred such Goddesses to fulfill your every possible desire. This is the uniqueness of this temple. In other temples, only a few icons are available for worship. Here, every power is there to help you.





This temple is the place where you learn how to do pūjās.

There is another temple called Kāmākhyā nearby. It is the place where you receive empowerment through a ritual called Kālāvāhana, performed by the Guru once. Then you can get pūjās done to yourself by others. You can group yourselves into circles of devotees called Śrī Chakras. You may stay in the āśram here to perform your meditations and rituals under the guidance of Gurus.

Philosophy of the Goddess

As time flows, present goes into past, and future comes into present. The first is destruction, and the second is creation. Goddess time is called by various names like Sarasvatī, who creates knowledge, and Kālī, who destroys ignorance. All words like future, past, life, death, experience, and energy describe only the power of time to change old into new.


9. SRI MERU

This unique temple is built to tell you that you are goddesses and gods. If you like, you can be like them too. You are free here. Nobody stops you.

All the powers shown here are dormant in you. Your sādhana consists in bringing them out to use them for loving yourself, improving yourself, and all those around you.

You gain nothing by leering or laughing at the Goddesses here.
You gain everything by understanding your own nature reflected by them.

You are beautiful, lovable, just as you are.
You are erotic. Nothing wrong!
You can create your identity and future.
You are not powerless.
You don’t have to be what others tell you to be.

We are with you in empowering you to be yourself.

Sit in front of the icons. Talk to them. Listen to the answers in your mind.

The highest offering you can make to anyone is yourself.
This is exactly what the Goddesses are doing. They have nothing to hide.
They are parts of you. They love you. That is why they have no shame.
They are not afraid of what others say about them. You can be like them.

You have made a special attempt to come here. We love you.
Thank you for your visit. We hope you enjoyed the graceful offering of themselves the Goddesses have given you.

Ask for free pamphlets.

Amrita

Devipuram questions and answers

An aerial photo of the Sri Meru Nilayam temple at Devipuram during the Third Mahā Kumbhābhiṣēkam


Q: We don’t understand this. Will you please explain?

Guruji: This temple is made in the form of Śrī Chakra.

Q: What is Śrī Chakra?

Guruji: Śrī Chakra is the abode of the Mother Goddess Lalitā and Her retinue.

Q: Who is Lalitā?

Guruji: Lalitā is the Tantric form of Gāyatrī. Anyone can worship Her. She represents Life in all of Nature.

Q: In Hindu religion we have too many Gods. That is our confusion, is it not? Will not one God do?

Guruji: Well, it is a problem — and its solution also. Let me explain.

We know that life is one. But when it is in our eyes, we see; in our ears, we hear. Seeing and hearing are totally different. The same life is given different names in different organs because it is doing different things. What is wrong with that?

It is also the same life which is manifesting as you and me. So we have different names. It reduces confusion to have different names for different functions.

Let me answer why we need many Gods.

Every time your house pipe leaks, will you call the president to come and repair it? You will call a plumber.

In the same way, we don’t have to go to the Supreme God for every small job. We can go to a Sarpanch for village problems.

Appropriateness is the key to diversity.
Grandeur is the key to unity.
They are the same.

So, there is only one Goddess — the Life of all.

And there are also many Goddesses — the lives in each of us, and the life in each organ of us.

Life is the same, but it is called by different names in different persons, organs, places, times, and cultures.

Views of the new Khaḍgamālā Devis of the Sri Meru temple, 2015

 

Q: Why are there only Goddesses here?

Guruji: We worship God as Mother Lalitā here. We worship, adore, and protect Nature — ours as well as that of our environment. Nature is our mother who created us.

Q: But the male is also needed for creation.

Guruji: That is true, but the prime role is that of woman. In creating life, man’s role is only pleasure. Woman’s role begins there. She labors for nine months, gives birth to the baby, nourishes it for twenty-seven months at her breasts, and teaches it for seven years more.

Sex is man’s preoccupation, while compassion is woman’s preoccupation.
Aggression belongs to men; patience belongs to women.

Given our nuclear bombs, which can destroy the whole world 27,000 times over, we do not need to adore aggression anymore. Womanly patience and compassion are the needs of the hour to protect our little world. Therefore, we prefer the compassionate female form of Goddess to the aggressive male form of God here.


Q: Why are the Goddesses shown nude here?

Guruji: Nudity is a symbol of purity. All of Nature is nude. Are not flowers pure? Are they not the genitals of trees? Do we recognize them as genitals and condemn them as obscene public display?

There is a deeper reason than just purity for showing nude icons here.

All powers are in a half-awakened state in people. Vedas and Tantras teach that your body itself is a temple in which Goddesses live. All parts of your body are the real seats of power — Śakti Pīṭhams.

This is the secret of the Purāṇic story of Satī.

When Dakṣa insults Śiva, saying, “Why should we worship the erect male genital, Śiva?”, Satī is unable to bear it and dies. With Her body on Him, the enraged Śiva wants to destroy the world. To save the world, Her body is cut into bits and pieces by Viṣṇu to pacify Him. The places where these pieces fell are the Śakti Pīṭhams, the homes of Goddesses.

The story clearly identifies Śakti Pīṭhams as body parts. By worshipping the organs, we awaken the Śaktis there.

There is also another lesson here.

Śiva is angry because of the dead Śakti. Worshipping a dead yoni leads to anger. This is a pointer to the dangers of deadening Eros — the love of life.

Of all body parts, the female genital is the most potent life-giver. It is the greatest generator of power. If we worship that, we are assured of awakening all powers latent in us.

It is the basis (Ādhāra), the ground of all.


Q: Won’t lust be provoked in worshipping the genitals? Won’t it enhance sexual crimes?

Guruji: Yes, provocation of lust will be there. But that is the natural first reaction, due to our suppressing nudity in public. Who tells us to go against our own Nature? If we really worship women, the lust will be replaced by kindness sooner or later.

The fear that public nudity enhances sexual crime is baseless. There are many tribal people who go completely nude. In these societies, people are not aroused by nudity. Sexual crime is practically unknown there. Sexual crime increases by suppression, not by expression. It is extinguished by expression, not enhanced by it.

In Scandinavian countries, sex is open; rape is rarely heard of. Blue films are sold in every store; people hardly take any interest in them.

Men realize that the approach to woman's sexuality is not through lust. She has ten times the capacity for sex pleasure than man, as Vātsyāyana points out in the Kāma Sūtras. Her sex is distributed all over her body, unlike that of men, in whom it is concentrated in the liṅga.

That is why the Liṅga Purāṇa says Śiva is to be worshipped only in the liṅga, not his body. And how? By Rudrābhiṣeka. For what purpose? Mahānyāsa says: “Rudrasya antarhityai” — to defuse anger. It does not say to provoke lust.

Lalitā Sahasranāma advocates the worship of yoni and sex:
Bhagārādhyā, Kula-kunda-ālaya, Yoni-nilayā, Rati-priyā, Kāma-keli-taraṅgitā, Vīra-goṣṭhī-priyā, etc.
“Worship Her genital. She resides as Mother there. She resides in the vagina. She is fond of sex. She enjoys lusty intercourse. She is pleased by group worship of heroes and heroines.”

Lalitā Aṣṭottara says: “Mahādeva-ratotsukyā Mahādevyai Namaḥ.”
“Salutations to the Great Goddess who longs for union with Mahādeva, the great phallic God.”

Khadgamālā says: “Upastha-indriya-adhiṣṭhāyī Varuṇa-Āditya ṛṣiḥ.”
The waters of life and their shine in the vulva are the sages who reveal Her.

The pūjā of Lalitā describes giving sixty-four intimate services to the Goddess, including complete body massage with scented oils, followed by abhyanga snāna — pouring milk, rubbing curds, slippery ghee and sticky honey, pouring fruit juices, erotically satisfying the senses, and finally bathing with scented waters while reciting Vedic mantras for hours. It is indeed a great feeling to be worshipped like that by many people around.

She is worshipped in a married woman (suvasinī-archana-prītā). The śāstras clearly state that all body parts contain Devīs. They should all be worshipped without exception.

And She should be worshipped with fun, gaiety, music and dance.

In ancient times, even public sex was considered service to the Goddess. This was true not only in India, but throughout the world. Temples of Goddesses had sacred prostitutes who taught the arts of love to initiates. In India they were called Devadāsīs. They sang and danced for the Goddess. Temple walls show sculptures of group sex, and governments today proudly promote tourism to these erotic places of worship — such as Khajurāho and Konārk.



Q: Many men may object to this. They may say you are destroying women’s morals and are a dangerous Tantric.

Guruji:
They have a right to think like that. The same was said about Buddha. They will continue to think like that until the truth dawns on them. They are important people; they have an image to protect. Fortunately, I am not important, so I have nothing to lose except my identity by exposing myself.


Q: Is this the only path in Śakti Pūjā? What is your path?

Guruji:
I am not an expert nor a Siddha. I am a seeker.

As far as I know, there are four basic paths in Śakti Pūjā:

  1. Samaya – Fire as symbol

  2. Dakṣiṇa – Idol or Yantra as symbol

  3. Kaula – Living person as symbol

  4. Vāma – Dead person as symbol

The first two are guided by Dakṣiṇāmūrti. The last two by Dattātreya.

Samayācāra is traditionally reserved for Brahmins:
– High caste Brahmin
– Learned in Vedas and Vedāṅgas
– Maintain four sacred fires daily
– Renounce sex except for procreation on prescribed days
– Treat every woman as mother

It considers base and sex chakras unworthy of worship.

Dakṣiṇācāra is for Brahmins, Kṣatriyas and Vaiśyas. It uses icon or yantra.
Milk, ghee or honey are used depending on caste. Pūjā is done to a married woman as Goddess. If she demands, sex can occur, except for Brahmins.

Here, latent powers can be awakened.

Nude Goddess sculptures help awaken these powers.

They teach: be affectionate to all.
Removing clothes alone is not nudity. Opening the mind is nudity.

Learn to worship Śakti and Śrī Chakra as Dattātreya taught Prahlāda and Paraśurāma.

Know the secrets of ancient rituals to change destructive attitudes, dissolve anger, benefit yourself first and then society.

Discover how to love yourself.

Sex is worship because it is the highest offering of self.
Worship it in temples where it belongs.

Learn fine arts expressing love to Divinity in temples.

To make relationships pleasant, we must pull down our egos.
Then others will do the same.
Then harmony happens.

Opening our mind for others to read — that is nudity.

Amrita


Nudity and Desires: Suppression or expression?


Any kind of desire suppressed creates tension.
The more we suppress, the more the tension.
Over time, tension builds up to lack of patience,
anxiety, anger, hatred, and finally destructive violence.
This temple shows your subconscious desires to you openly.
Which you do not want to admit because society looks down on it.
You want to be known as not interested in desires.
So you suppress your deepest desires. For sex. For affection. For kindness.
Vested interests make money out of your suppressed desires by flesh trade.
There is another way. By looking on desire with respect and adoration.
As life's lovely expression. In calm contemplation of your own nature.
By converting lust into affection.
The nude goddesses here teach you precisely that.
Are they worried whether you laugh at them or look at their private parts?
They are saying, "look this is how I am. I have nothing to hide.
In God's creation, there is nothing impure, even the genital.
I am in tune with my nature. I love myself for being just what I am.
I love you. I love all living beings.
You don't have to love me. I still love you. My love has no conditions."
"I am the fresh lotus that opens up to the light of love.
You are the light. Even if you don't believe it now.
I tell you, your nature is divine. You are God.
And I am your Nature. Lovely, full breasted, caring, self offering.
I am yours. I am your nature. You think I am not yours. So you desire me.
I am unveiling myself, so that you can see your own nature.
I am the gate from which you came.
I am the gate through which you will realise that you are God."
"I want to teach you how to be kind, affectionate. If you allow me.
I share every thing I have with you. My most precious thing, even modesty.
I offer myself to you completely. All my powers to do good.
Power to think good thoughts. Power to speak them out. Power to do them.
I cant teach you how to be greedy, aggressive, angry or violent.
They do not belong to divine nature. They are human emotions.
There is no trading in love."
Do not think that these ideas are not our culture, that it is imported.
Our culture worships Kama, desire, as the third Purushartha.
This is not imported culture. What we import is exploitation, slavery.
We import titillating excitement and sensuality, not adoration.
Our own culture is supposed to worship and respect woman.
Especially if she is from low class. Like a washer woman or a tribal girl.
This is our tantric and vedic heritage.
It is our tradition to worship Siva Linga.
Siva Linga is the union of universal male with universal female.
We respect sex to take away its bad influences.
It is our tradition to worship Gayatri or any Devi.
Gayatri is the life giving power coming from the Sun.
She wakes you up every morning from sleep with Her life force.
Gayatri is a Vedic Goddess, accessible only to a few Brahmins.
However, Her tantric Devis here are accessible to all castes equally.
Brahmins worship Her with milk. Kshatriyas with ghee. Vysyas with honey.
Others with liquor. Brahmins offer Her vegetarian dishes and abstain from sex.
All other castes offer Her meat and engage in ritual sex on specific days.
Brahmins worship Her in a fire pit or in a Sri Chakra.
Sri Chakra is really a circle of devotees who are doing sadhana together.
Four males and five females together constitute one Sri Chakra.
Kaulas worship Devi in the genitals of females.
Choose your path according to your own inclinations.
We are with you.

Amrita

Guruji about nudity


Q: Why are there only women Goddesses, and why are some of them nude? Why are they all so similar?

Guruji: We Indians consider the life-giving energy of Nature, Prakṛti, as female. Nature is full of energies: some erotically enticing, some ferocious, some aesthetically peaceful. The Goddesses in this temple represent the harmonious energies of Nature which move a person from being human to being a divine personality.

What is the nature of divine beings?
To express love towards all beings and all life, irrespective of man-made caste, class, race, or country distinctions. Their love knows no bounds. It is all-pervasive.

This unconditional love pervading all of Nature is shown as the nudity of the icons here.

Nudity does not mean removing clothes alone. It also means removing all patterns of thinking that separate one person from another. It means getting rid of ideas like “these are my people” and “this is me” — in other words, the sense of I and mine, called ego. It means expanding one’s love to all people.

It may help to illustrate these ideas with a story from the Bhāgavatam.

Once, some divine nymphs were bathing nude in a lake. The hundred-year-old sage Vyāsa was passing by. They felt a sense of shame and covered their breasts with their hands.

After a little while, his son Śuka, a sixteen-year-old male, was passing by, totally nude and absorbed in Nature. They did not even notice him. They were playing and laughing.

Vyāsa noticed this and came back to them and asked:
“I am a hundred-year-old sage without any sexual passions. I was clothed. When I was passing, you felt shame. How come you did not feel shame when my son, exhibiting his nudity, was passing by? I do not understand this strange behaviour of yours.”

They replied:
“O venerable sage, we know your greatness. But when you were passing by, we felt that there was a human observer. When Śuka was passing, it was like a bird flying in the sky, like tree leaves rustling, like water flowing over our very bodies. We did not feel that there was anyone observing us. When there is no one else observing, and we are all by ourselves, how and why would we feel a sense of shame? Are we ashamed of ourselves?”

Vyāsa realised that he was not fully absorbed in his true nature; he still felt a separation from it.

The whole of Nature — and billions of living forms in it — are all nude. Only humans cover themselves with their shame.

When Adam ate the apple, he felt ashamed of his and Eve’s nudity. That was the original sin: being ashamed of nudity. Nudity itself was not sin. They were nude before eating the apple, and they were not sinful then.

Shakti: Tantric temple of nude goddesses


Dakshina Kalika vigraham in Devipuram temple
In this Temple, Kali is sitting on top of Siva. It means that Life is coupled to Time manifesting all that we see. All powers of Life are arranged around Her in the form of a sacred Sri Chakra.
All the lively powers you see here are latent in you. Your body is a temple. In it, every limb has some power. To expand the latent powers in your organs, you have to pay attention to them.
We are all born through the female genital. Life is manifesting primarily through it. Pay attention to it, adore it, worship it; the doors of all lives open up to you. Vemana became a Yogi by like that. He attained alchemic powers to change base metals to gold; meaning changing humans into Gods.
We were all protected and nourished by milk from Mother. These powers are called Sri Devi and Bhu Devi, located in the two breasts. Suprabhatam sings " Oh Vishnu! You worshipped Lakshmi's breasts with Kumkum, and got all powers to protect and nourish the world." You are Vishnu or Lakshmi when you were married. So you can also give or get such powers by receiving or doing it.
Face is where Saraswati resides. Worship Her smile, and She will shower all knowledge, and a firm resolve to you. Worshipping Mother's feet is the the surest way to get release from all bondages. Thus adoring the limbs of a woman give all attainments. This is Shakti tantra.
Tantra means technology. Tantra is the technique of worship which removes limits to what you can know or do. We hear, touch, see,taste, smell. These powers are all limited to our bodies, senses and intellect. We don't know what is happening elsewhere, or in the future. These limits are like clothes,
limiting our awareness; "you extend only upto this, no more". When a power is limited, we call it a Devi like for example, "Netra Devi" or "Astra Devi"; when unlimited, Shakti. Tantra uncovers, unleashes the power in a Devi, to convert Her into Energy, a Shakti. This uncovering is like
removing clothes. So we adore Devis clothed; Shaktis are necessarily nude.
Lajja Gauri

This is the secret of some nude icons here. Nudity is a saying, "I have nothing to hide, I am not ashamed, because you are a part of me." It is a symbol of unconditional love. Also it is detachment to others opinions, of self reference. "My happiness does not require your approval". It is a symbol of nature; all of nature is nude, except some civilised humans. It is a symbol of innocence, like in a child. Nudity is art.
So, nudity of icons here is not intended to disrespect women but to tell how to unconver limited consciousness.
Khajuraho Temple

In the cults of Mother Goddess all over the world, sex has been and will continue to be considered sacred, whether for enjoyment or for yoga. Wine, meat and sex are the common ways of pleasing Mother Goddess. On special festive days like valentines, sex orgies used to be offerred to Goddesses and Gods; we can see their relics on the sculptures showing them in temples. What has sex to do with temples? Every thing, says Tantra. Worship the genitals, as Siva lingam; the degrading influence of sadistic, angry, hurtful sex disappears. Sex ought to be coupled to sacredness instead of sin, like in olden days in temples. Why? Temples are places where evil influences are less likely, and desires have no chance for turbulence. Anger, neroses, and aggression diminish in society leading to peace.
Peace is godly; war is demonly.

So instead of condemning our tantric culture as uncivilised, let us rethink, see where we have gone wrong, and be willing to correct it if necessary. We enjoy variety in food, music, art and in science. Given the perception that we have one life to live, should we look down upon our curiosity which
seeks variety in sex? Why is there two billion dollar porno industry and the world's oldest trade, flesh trade? Should sex be denied even when it is an offering of self in love? Should ascetic continence be prescribed as the norm for every one? Give honest answers to these questions yourself, not worrying what others say about your answer.




Who are more civilised: nude tribes where sex related crimes are unknown or our clothed civilisation which makes us neurotically develop the sinful magic of total destruction of not only ourselves but our whole world of all living beings with weapons of mass destruction? Who gave us the right to destroy other forms of life enmass? Have we created them?
Energy is energy, it is the same. When in excretory organs, it manifests as fear; in genitals as desire for sex; in the navel as power; in the heart as love; in the throat as communication across distances; in eyes across time zones; in the crown as a spiritual fountain of wonder and delight. Like music, life plays these emotions. You have a choice, of where to play. Let us respect women. Not in theory but in practice. We only talk of advaita. Let us practice it. Let us be truly be guided by the dictum, "All is Brahman indeed" Let us alow conditions which move from aggression to love. That is the message of the nude Shaktis here.

Amrita

Astrology and the Environment



A discourse by Guruji Sri Amritananda Natha
May 2006, at Devipuram

You can change the future, but you cannot know it. You can know the past, but you cannot change it. The present is the interface between knowing and changing, between knowing and acting. The past is history, the future a mystery. The past is His-story and the future is Her-story. The future belongs to the Mother and the past belongs to the Father.

It would be nice to know the future. All fear is caused by not knowing what the future holds. So people try to dispel its mystery by various means, such as astrology. And astrology can sometimes be a convenient thing, too! Say somebody has made a marriage proposal to your daughter. You don’t like the match, but you don’t want to take the blame for rejecting it. So you say, “The stars are bad; what can we do?”

As a result, many people conclude that astrology is based on myth. And it seems like a pretty good conclusion, doesn’t it? Think about it: “What is your time of birth?” Well, what does that mean? Is it the time when the sperm meets the egg? Or is it when life occurs in the womb, which is the third month? Or is it when the head comes out of the womb? Or when the whole body comes out? Or when you cut the umbilical cord? What is the precise time of birth? Nobody specifies. What for? That’s why they call astrology a pseudo-science.

But if we understand that every human being has a life, and that every planet has a life, and that each life interacts somehow with all other lives and therefore exerts some influence – well, then we can begin to understand astrology. The solar system has a life. And within that living entity, each planet is influencing the system’s other entities in subtle ways that don’t depend upon distance. To understand these interactions, or to get the right intuition about them, you need to do sadhana. For sadhakas, astrology works 100 percent. For people who want to earn money, it’s all bunkum. There is a science and a non-science to astrology. And that is the difference between them.

So you do your sadhana. And once you realize that you are the Truth, what need have you to do more? Once you realize that all efforts take you away from yourself, then you can remove all the effort and just be what you are. What sadhana am I doing? I’m sitting and talking. I’m not doing japa. I’m not doing anything, just easing myself into a state of peace. That is what I’m doing.



Two Brahmas: Zero and Infinite




Guruji:

  1. Dve brahma veditavye. Śūnyaṃ ca aśūnyaṃ ca.

Two types of Brahman are to be known: Zero and non-zero.

How did this phenomenal world of such great variety come into existence from nothing? That is the question we will ponder here.

Some say, there was Nāda, the primordial sound, from which everything has come into being. Nāda means a vibration. For vibration to exist, there must be something that is vibrating, and some space in which to vibrate. When nothing — Śūnya — was there, what vibrates in what space? Obviously, Nāda cannot be primordial. Bible says, “First there was the Word, and the Word was God.” I can’t make sense out of this.

How can anything come out of nothing? That is the fundamental question. Only nothing can come out of nothing. Here then is the clue: we ought to investigate the properties of nothing.

Zero, zero, zero. Can zero produce anything other than itself? How about, say, a pair? Well, it may be feasible. Hmm, let us see.

0 = 1 − 1
0 = 2 − 2
0 = 3 − 3
0 = 1.5 − 1.5

Looks like zero is very fertile in producing pairs. How about π − π? Why not? How about,

0 = x − x
0 = y − y
0 = z − z
0 = t − t

It looks like we can create “xyz” space and “t” time out of zero.

We have hit on the very clue to create a space-time interval, in which something can move — a vibration. Methinks, creation of space-time interval precedes the “word, the Nāda.” Physics tells us that space and time chasing each other creates matter, which is a vortex of space-time.

This pair — the subject and object, jñātṛ and jñāna, or mātṛ and meya — have to have an interval. So much space between what I see and me; so much time between the two of us. Together they constitute the triad, the tripuṭi, the tripurā: subject–object–interval. So, from zero the triad can come. Not two, but three. The object is the reflection of the subject in zero. It appears, zero is like the pinhole in the pinhole camera.

We have here the concept of the center, the source of all, the mother of cosmos, the yoni from which everything springs, the central triangle of Śrī Cakra. In its center is the bindu, the zero — a very fertile zero — the liṅga.

Śūnya, Aśūnya. What about that?

“A” means negation. Negating zero means something exists which is not zero.

After producing any large number of pairs equal and opposite, is the zero exhausted? No. It can produce more. You give me any number, however large. I will produce more pairs than that from the zero. This is exactly the concept of infinity — Aśūnya.

Both infinity and zero seem to have the same type of properties. They are both inexhaustible. One is smaller than the smallest; the other is larger than the largest.

You subtract infinity of all even numbers from all integers — infinity of all odd numbers remains. So infinity minus infinity is infinity. What about zero minus zero? Zero minus zero is zero.

Let us ask a few more questions. Is the central triangle of the Śrī Cakra equilateral? Is it completely symmetric?

The answer is no. Why?

I see myself in the mirror of my mind. I think I know what is happening in the mind of the mirror image. But wait a minute — there is a distance in time between me and my reflection. I can almost know, but not quite. What I can know depends on the time it takes for light to go to the mirror image and come back. So I can know what existed, but not what is currently going on.

It looks like my image is jaḍa, while I am caitanya. The interval is also creating the knowing and not-knowing. So there is an asymmetry preventing equilateral.

Now, pray who is going to decide whether I am real or my image is real? No one can, really. Any examples?

Well, if I stand on the sun, earth is going round me. On the contrary, if I am standing on the earth, the sun is going round me.

It looks like I am always the unchanging part — consciousness — and my image is always moving, changing consciousness. The “I” in me am always the unchanging awareness. Whatever I see or know is transient, limited in time, space, or matter.

Buddha called Brahman the Śūnya.
Hindus call it the Pūrṇa.

We are both talking of the same thing: the zero and infinite aspect of it. These are the two Brahmans that the sūtra talks about.

Spirituality is not dull and boring thing, it is Divine romance


Guru helps to connect to the power of the universe, i.e., Ādi Parā Śakti.
The function of any real Guru is to kill your ego first — die first — and then be reborn as the world. That is the algorithm. The Guru does that.

The connection to the circle and the dot is an empowering act, to becoming a winner.

In the history of every saint, they have gone through a transformation from their physical nature to astral nature.
If you take Ramana Maharshi, he enacted his death and was born spiritually.
Similarly Aurobindo wrote Savitri — the whole book is about the ascent and descent of Satyavan.
With Ramakrishna Paramahamsa, he did everything to kill his ego.

So the job of the Guru is to kill you — i.e., your concept of being only a physical entity.
You have body, mind, but you are not them.

The world is contained in you.

Job of the Guru is to tell you that you are an awakened being.
All you have to do is overcome limitations — that which binds you.

Spirituality is not a dull and boring thing.
It is Divine romance.
Loving all and being loved by all.

All the gopis (Krishna līlā) are modifications in our life.
Why do we love the world?
Because the world out there is your own impression.

The Guru tells you this.
You start experiencing that.

When you are improving, the world improves.
If you hate the world, the world hates you — it has no option.
It reflects you, since it is yourself.

If you move, the world moves.

If you have watched the movie Matrix, where a boy looks at a spoon — if he moves his head, the spoon also bends.
How does he manage?
The boy says there is no spoon there.
I am bending my mind, and the reflection of mind — i.e., the spoon — bends.

You have power to control destiny and make it as you want.
You can bend the world.

None of us makes the future alone.
All contribute to the future.

When you change, the world changes.

Leadership implies first committing to change in the way you want to.

When you understand that your ego is just a small, small part of the whole.

For Mahatma Gandhi, he had three enemies:

  1. British rule of India

  2. Attitude of Indians in depending blindly on karma theory

  3. Considered himself as an enemy — i.e., one’s own ego

Buddha told Ananda his last message:
“Don’t be guided by anything other than you. Be self-referential. Be proactive. Be a light unto yourself.”
This was when Ananda asked in tears for a last message.

Essence of Śrīvidyā is in the four Mahāvākyas — principles of Vedānta.

Vedānta says:
Yes, you are the world. The world is śūnya.

Tantra says:
You are the world. The world has power.
As long as you control Māyā, you can manifest power.

Bringing the conceptualization of universal principles into human realms is possible.

Prepare — Before the House Gets on Fire!



Prepare!
before the house gets on fire…

What is nectar? Food eaten when really hungry.
What is the best bed? Hard floor after hard work.
What is an impenetrable fort? Detachment from desires.
What is sex? Enjoying beauty and play.

What is darkness? Absence of light.
What is ignorance? Absence of knowledge.
What is hatred, immorality, corruption? Lack of love.

Why should I love others?
Because it is one solution to many problems.

Love prevents me from hurting my lover.
I can remain calm without anger or thoughts of revenge.
I can forgive my enemies.
I can even forget me, mine and others.
I can love myself.
I can love everyone as well as I love my family members.

Then the world I experience becomes my loving family.

Our world will change drastically if everyone loves everyone.
There can be no poverty, or hunger or hoarding because we love to share whatever we have.
There can be no corruption because we are not seeking personal gains.
There will be no need for defense because there can be no wars.

Ask these questions to a blade of grass.
Listen to the answers you get:

  1. What is your name?
    What is a name?

  2. What is the purpose of my living?
    To move happily.

  3. How can I have better food?
    Food comes to me by itself.

  4. Better sex?
    What is sex?

  5. Better enjoyment?
    What is enjoyment? Isn’t life a joy?

  6. How can I make more money?
    Water is my money.

  7. Otherwise how will I fulfill such desires?
    Why do you need anything else?

  8. Who will support me?
    I don’t know, but it comes wherever I am.
    I can’t move.

  9. How can I live after my death?
    What is death?

The answers will work for you too.

Who are my guides? What do they teach me?

  1. Toothpick — remove impurities in me.

  2. Rubber band — extend without breaking down when problems confront me.

  3. Band-aid — heal wounds made by others immediately, without suffering or developing hatred.

  4. Eraser — erase mistakes I do. I should not criticize others who make mistakes like me.

  5. Pencil — write the names and blessings I received from others.

  6. Gemclip — keep us together without getting disorderly.

  7. Teabag — give away all to the hot water, the lives of people around me.

How did one gram of a seed planted in 20 kilos of mud make 100 kilos of pumpkins?
If you know, then you know that there is a great intelligence in the seed, mud and water.

That intelligence shows:
the big can come out of the small.
the world can come out of you.

How can you know that the world came out of you?
You can see or know only if you have consciousness.

What is consciousness?
It is the mirror reflecting you to yourself.

Because you are the world, you see the world.
When you stop seeing the world as different from you, and know that you are all,
then you know that you can make the world you want,
that you have a free will like God,
that destiny is what you can create.

You also know that you are the only person to consult when a decision is to be made.
That makes deciding an extremely simple process.

“I was good all my life. Why did I not get a ticket to go on a luxury ship?”
There is a ring of protection around you because you were good.
The ship’s name was Titanic.

A few take almost everything; all the rest take the remaining little.

Examples:
The human DNA takes everything; all the rest take a little.
Mass production takes everything; production by masses only a little.
Nuclear weapons can kill all; fist fights only some.
A few who get attention through media can displace hundreds of thousands who cannot.
A large dose of nonlinear luck makes a box-office movie; it promotes big money for a small number of actors, displacing others who may have more talent.
The movies and the team together make the actor, not the other way round.

Inequity comes when someone marginally better or in a position of power grabs the whole pie.
The gurus who go on the media grab all the attention; the silent yogis none.
Media can level a playing ground, but more often it creates unjust slopes.

— Sri Amritananda Natha Saraswathi

Harmonizing with the environment




A discourse by Guruji Sri Amritananda Natha
May 2006, at Devipuram

To live in these aggregates – to live in your environment – requires both cooperation and a competitive spirit. Competitiveness enhances our quality of life; so does cooperation – but they are still opposing forces. How much competitiveness is appropriate and how much cooperation is a balance that each society strikes in its own way: A capitalist society defines it in one way, a communist society in another; and a religious institution will define it in yet a third way. There are different degrees of balance required, depending upon each given setup or context. Moreover, what is right for one person at one point of time is wrong for another person at another point of time: In the U.S.A., it’s often wrong if you’re not dating; in India, it’s often wrong if you are.

So how do we harmonize our own personal values with those of the environment in which we must function? Must we sometimes forsake our personal values? Should we forsake them here and there, now and then, or should we not?

Let’s look at the example of an orchestral musical composition. There is harmony in the music because the conductor tells the individual musicians in the orchestra, “Okay, now you play the violin at this octave, and you play the cymbals at this frequency,” and so on. And in order to achieve harmony, the musicians follow the conductor’s orders. In other words, we might say, they suppress their individual freedom to some extent – because if they were all to simply do their own thing, it would spoil the harmony. Similarly, for the sake of maintaining harmony in the aggregate life of our society, we are expected to follow certain rules and regulations – though the dynamic of following them is necessarily a suppression of our individual freedom.

In the world of business, to be frank, profitable trade usually depends upon someone cheating somebody else: “Vyaparo dhroha chintanam.” You have to give something less than what you get in order to make a profit, and profit is the supreme goal of business. Thus, corruption – in the sense of illegitimate earning – is necessarily part of the corporate ethic. In the same way, at any given moment, there are certain cells within you that represent chaos and disease, and others that represent order and maintenance. There is a war constantly ongoing between these two. Sometimes the protective white cells die; sometimes the invaders die; it’s is a matter of life and death for the cells involved. Similarly, a company’s ethics represent the aggregate life of the corporate entity, whereas the personal ethics of an individual employee within that entity represent the life of the self. And these interests do diverge sometimes. They too can be at war.
Because it is a clash of values. An honest man in a corrupt society is a misfit: Either he becomes corrupt as well, or he perishes. That’s just the way things are. Say, for example, that you need to get a government official’s approval for some project and he lets you understand that a little money under the table will help make things happen. It’s called “expediting money.” Not corruption, of course.

What should you do? You’ve got to weigh the consequences – sometimes they’re in your favor and sometimes not. And then you make a decision.

Which decision? I’ll just say this: Peace of mind loses the battle when making money becomes the goal. People believe that money and the power are the means to achieving peace of mind. Then once they’ve accumulated these “means,” they reason that since they can get peace of mind eventually anyway, why worry about it today? So it doesn’t work – at the end of the day, you’ve got to ask yourself, “Look, do I want peace of mind? Or do I want power and money, which are the means to peace of mind?” If you choose the means, you forfeit the end: That’s the clash that exists.

You see, what’s wrong with the present paradigm is the equation that people make between possessions and happiness: The more you have, the happier you are, right? But that equation is valid only to certain extent: If you have a comfortable, air-conditioned house, what does it matter if that house has 60 rooms? You can only sleep in one of them. They say Bill Gates has a house with 120 rooms! But how many rooms can he live in?

What you enjoy is your wealth – what you don’t enjoy really isn’t yours at all. So this proportionality between possessions and peace flattens everything out. If I visit my friend’s home for the night and he gives me the master bedroom to sleep in, then it’s my house for the time I’m there. If you just let go of the concept of ownership, then all the houses in the world are yours. The concepts of “I” and “mine” are the problems.
The problem people have is failing to distinguish the point at which their wants and means are in proportion with one another. Because once you’ve crossed that equilibrium, it makes no difference whatsoever whether you have one million or 100 millions. Once you realize this truth, you’re free to say, “I’ve got enough. I don’t have to bend to anyone.”