SHARING AN EXPERIENCE



Dr. Patanjali J. Yogendra

Mick Kelly was a young vibrant girl with a passion for music. She lived in a large mansion with her parents. They had put up a boarder, a Mr. Singer who was a bank clerk and lived in the Kelly house for a small rent. Mick and Mr. Singer over a period of time grew to be close friends. Mick wanted to share with Mr.Singer the joy that she found in music. But the problem was that Mr. Singer was deaf and dumb from birth. However, one day, Mick brought her record player to Mr. Singer’s room and put on a record of Mozart.

As the music played she gestured with her hands and arms trying to give Mr. Singer an idea of what the music was doing. She made big sweeping gestures as the volume of the music increased. Subtler gestures as the music got softer. Mr. Singer just sat there and nodded and smiled as he watched Mick. The record got over but Mr. Singer kept nodding and smiling at Mick as if it were still on.

Mick at that time realized that she could not really communicate to him all that she experienced in the music. She could only convey a vague idea of what it was all about. But she did it because she loved the music and because she loved Mr. Singer and wanted to share with him the most important things in her life. Mr. Singer knew what she was trying to do but he also knew that there was more to it than he was equipped to grasp.
Isn’t this episode similar to the experiences of mystics and saints throughout history, who having experienced God wanted to help others reach that state? It is also true for all of us in our daily lives when we wish to communicate our feelings to others and hope that they understand us as we wish them to.

Objectively speaking, it is a hopeless exercise. But nonetheless with care, compassion, love and patience who knows we may succeed.

Nothing in life can compare with the thrill of knowing God and loving God and above all knowing that he knows and loves you too. 


Published in the September 2011 edition of Yoga & Total Health Magazine


EVIL BEGETS EVIL, GOOD, GOOD

Shri Yogendraji

This rule holds true always. If you indulge in wrong behavior or negative tendencies, the results will continue to be of a pathological and depraving kind. Evil etches a groove for itself in our memory. A complete change occurs in our personality. The pure spectrum of our consciousness enters into denser areas. The poor quality of our awareness and understanding manifests variously including in diseases  - physical and psychological. Here are stories in circulation in ancient asramas – the final resort for the sick and the suffering ones.
 
First thoughts, their impressions and their behavior, seems to be the sequence in all our behavior in life. The desire to steal leads to such a behavior also. The philanthropist thinks in a charitable way and acts so. The sick continues to remain sick just as a greedy individual remains greedy all his life. In fact when indulging thus in a certain way as a result of old tendencies, one comes to like that kind of behavior. As Emerson has said: “It is easy for a strong person to be strong and for a weak one to be weak’. In fact the man with positive feelings is so imbued with this spirit that he maintains such an outlook all his life.    

It was a winter day, cold had just set in. People felt the severity of winter as much as birds and animals. A sadhu arrived in a village, lighted afire, sat and got lost in his devotion. The severity of winter did not affect him. Nearby stood a merchant who was pious at heart and gave away in charity whatever he could to saintly individuals. He had purchased recently a beautiful kashmiri shawl for the winter. On seeing the sadhu seated without protective clothes on him, the merchant ran down to his house and brought the shawl. He went up to the sadhu, quietly covered him with the shawl and stood respectfully at a distance after that. The sadhu recognized the sincere devotee in the merchant and while blessing him said; “Child, you continue to act thus always.” The merchant was very pleased and went his way.  

A thief was standing at a distance from the sadhu. No sooner the merchant departed he moved towards the holy man. “The shawl is indeed very expensive and can provide me for the winter. What will this poor sadhu do with such expensive piece? In fact this piece is not his earning and moreover what has a sadhu to do with a shawl? The thief was just voicing a popular feeling that a holy man need no comforts or even necessities.

The thief assured himself thus and was sure that if he chose to steal the stuff there was no fear of any kind – law would not interfere, the holy man would not get angry, there was also no fear of a chase. He therefore decided on a trick. He went over to the sadhu, pretended to be his disciple saying, “Sir I am blessed by being in your presence. Meeting with holy men removes one’s sins, one’s pains and one’s poverty.” He then praised the quality of the shawl on the holy man and desired to see the texture of the beautiful piece. He drew away the shawl from the sadhu to himself and after a while announced, “Forget it that you will ever get this shawl again” and just walked away. He heard the holy man saying to him, “Child you continue to act thus always.”

This last sentence of the sadhu intrigued the thief. He could not fathom this. The holy man said similarly to the philanthropist as he just told him. Why does this man bless people like this – asked the thief to himself. The curiosity led to a pause, a desire for understanding. This became a new tendency in him and it led him back to the holy man. He fell at the feet of the sadhu, asked for his pardon and mentioned his very deep-seated urge to understand what the sadhu said and did. “You bless the merchant that he continues to act always in the same way as he acted with you, and you blessed me also that I continue to act the way I did.” The holy man explained: “Child good people maintain their goodness always. The wicked continue according to their nature. Be sure the evil doer will enjoy a life of evil deeds all along. The merchant is a man of noble feelings, love and and so I blessed him to continue thus. You saw the shawl and had the perverted desire to steal the shawl. So I blessed you that you are creating evil tendencies and as a result would act thus all your life. “            
                                                 
                                                                         (In Paramahamsa ni Prasadi.)

Published in the November 2010 edition of Yoga & Total Health Magazine