WESAK 2008 - New Age Festival of Spiritual Unity and Blessings
Lectures, Teaching & Meditation On 17th,18th May 2008,9:30 am to 5:30 pm
venue: The auditoriam of the Indian Society of International Law, opposite the supreme Court 9, Bhagwan Dass Road, New Delhi.
Moon Light Meditation
19th May 2008, 6:30pm to 9:30pm Venue:97-A Eastern Avenue, Sainik Farm,New Delhi. For Reg:Poonam Sharma: 919313034752,Snigdha Nanda: 919818291375. More Detail>>
When we pursue happiness, it eludes you. However, when you recognise that happiness is the natural state of the soul, all you need is to eliminate all that comes between your happiness and you.
Apart from giving a person an identity, names also shape personalities
and affect personal growth in ways both subtle and strange. But while
some of us consciously realize it, others don't spare it any thought
I spent most of my life explaining the meaning and repeating
the spelling of my name, yet I would never consider changing it.
Quirky, difficult, exotic, but I fell my name is an intrinsic part
of me.
"Vedic rishis believed that a name defined the child's character-its
face, figure, temper, morals, tastes and profession," writes ManekaGandhi in thePenguin Book of Hindu Names. For example,
the name Anamika (literally 'without a name') means that the child's
future is what she wants to make it, since she is not hedged in by any
preordained limitations. Similarly, Prophet Mohammed taught that
children should be given good names, while those with unsavory
connotations should be avoided.
In ancient India, children were named after gods and goddesses,
going by the Vedic concept of naam-roop abhed, that which
believes in the unity between name and form. Islam
also considers it a child's right to be invested with a good name, so
that it can benefit from the barakah (blessing) associated
with it. It is believed that reciting Vishnu's 1000 names (sahasra
naam) or Allah's 99 names could recreate the same qualities in
the reciter.
Psychologists too apprehend the effect a person's name has on his
or her life. In his book Relationships, psychologist Andrew
Lake writes: "Your personality is identified by your
name. But when you were born, you were unaware of having a name
and it had to be chosen for you by your parents. When they decide what
you should be called, what were they saying about what they hoped you
would become?
Ma Prem Usha, tarot reader, believes that since a name is
a vibration, which strikes you several times a day, it can profoundly
affect your destiny. She says: "When I took sanyas (monkhood)
in the '70s, Bhagwan
Rajneeshchanged my name. All women were given the
prefixes Ma Prem, to recognize the maternal instinct and
love intrinsic in all women. And most sanyasins (nuns) epitomize
these two qualities."
Nowadays, however, people look for phonetically pleasing names and hardly
give any thought about their significance. Indian names like Minna
(fat), Ambika (little mother), Mina (fish) don't hold much meaning,
while Anita, Rina, Tina, mean nothing. Similarly,
the Phul, Sona, Pyar families of Indian names (Phulvati,
Phulrani, Sona, Sonam) have no roots in Sanskrit or
any other classical Indian language. Even the 'Behari' in
our Prime Minister, Atal Behari Vajpayee's name is a distortion
of Vihari (traveler). Muslim names like Rukhsanah
(shining) and Reshma (silk thread) are actually of Persian origin.
Others are foreign derivatives like Zareena (from the Russian Czarina)
or Rubina (ruby).
Poonam Nagpal, holistic healer and teacher, advises: "Use
the name that is in the horoscope to address your child,
because it is important to use the samename all the time
or you contribute to the lack of harmony in a child's life. Add
the suffix 'angel' to the name and you will have an angel. Yad bhaavam
tad bhavathi (As you feel or think, so it will be)."
Talking about his unusual name, Jug Suraiya, columnist and author
says; "I was going to be named Jagannath since I was born at Jagannath
Puri, but thanks to my mother's protests, we settled for Jagdish." However,
they had a servant by the same name. So, to avert confusion, his sister
named him Jug and the name stuck. Of course there are benefits. "People
can't call me Mr. Jug or Jugji as is the norm, which makes for more informal
encounters," says Jug.
Saniyasnin Khan, publisher of Delhi-based Al-Risala group of magazines,
hasn't given his name much thought other than having people mispronounce
it all the time. His name means 'second of the two' and refers to a Quranic
sura (Al Tauba) in which the Prophet and his companion Abu
Bakr are guided by Allah to remain in a cave when their enemies are in
hot pursuit. In the sura, Aaabu Bakr is referred to as the
second of the two, and since Saniyasnain is also the second born, the
name seemed apt.
Traditionally, people believe that names influence a child's personality.
Why else would parents go to such pains in finding the perfect name
for their unborn child?
Disabled activist Javed Abidi is a case in point. Born three years
into their marriage, his parents were overjoyed to have him just when
their longing for children was verging on desperation. But there was a
catchtheir son was born with a condition in which a portion of his
spine was protruding through the back. The doctors gave him only 20 days
to live. Stung by this ultimatum, his father named him Javed, one
who lives on. Today at 34 and with a demanding career as scholar,
journalist and activist, Javed says: "Somehow I had the
feeling that I must live to prove my father's faith."
One of the aims of occult sciences is to seek out and enumerate anything
that has the power, however slight, to sway a person's destiny.
Not least among them is an individual's name.
"It is within reason to expect that a name whose meaning
is favorable can exert an auspicious influence on its owner while
the bearer of a name sordid or evil in its association may be handicapped
in his moral or spiritual development. In time, therefore, the name
may materially affect the character of the person who bears
it," says The Handbook of Fortune.
Bindu,
art director of a newspaper, agrees, having observed a definite link
between his name and its origin-the moon. Originally named Vimalendu
(vimal means clean, indu is the moon) since
he was born on an exceptionally beautiful full moon night, his name
was abbreviated in his school days. He remembers being ragged by schoolmates
for having not only a girlish name, but one that was shared by
a yesteryears' vamp from Indian cinema.
In college, Bindu dropped his surname and discovered his penchant
for art during a college festival. Bindu feels his life is closely
linked to the moon: he feels rejuvenated in terms of moods and
sexual energies when the moon is waxing and tends to feellow
when it wanes. He also notices a strong feminine element in him,
being more emotional and sensitive, and suspects he possesses a feminine
sixth sense that has helped him in many situations.
Meenu, Delhi bureau chief of an Indian, women's magazine, follows
her in-laws' policy of not using surnames. She says: "People think there's
a feminist angle to it, but I am simply doing in Rome as Romans do.
In any case, I feel that since a name is an identification
and a link to the outside world, and one ought to shed links to the
world as one grows, I think of it as the first step towards merging
myself with the Whole."
Although Meenu herself doesn't believe in the importance of names,
she feels that her son's name has had a bearing on his personality.
She says: "When I was expecting my first son I used to read the Bhagavad
Gita. There, I came across the word concept of Saatvik
(the ascetic, the pure), and decided to give my son that name.
And he has really turned out that wayvegetarian and the most honest
kid I've ever seen! Sometimes its disconcerting to see him being so
good."
Contrarily, people who consider their names unwieldy find it
difficult to integrate their personality until they come to terms
with it. Premlata Gupta, businesswoman and personal growth enthusiast,
always hated her name and refused to identify with it, preferring
to call herself Prema instead. She now feels: "you may think
that your name is arbitrary, but I believe that a name
is about as arbitrary as the parents you are born to. There is
usually a karmicreason behind it: both are basesaround which you evolve. Today, I find myself linked to
the concept of a 'vine of love', after years of being uncomfortable
with my name. It's almost as if I have decided to live up to
it."
People often change their names to reflect an altered sense of
self or mind. While being initiated into sanyas(monkhood),
monks are always given differentnames, signifying
the death of their oldself. Ghulam Rasool Santosh,
a Kashmiri Muslim Tantric painter, adopted his
wife Santosh Chopra's first name to signify his sense of unity
and the inseparable nature of their union.
Sultan Shahin, columnist and New Ager, took numerological
considerations into account when he adopted his name in his early'20s.
He says: "My adopted name Shahin refers to a mythical royal falcon in
Iqbal's (an Urdu poet) poetry, a metaphor for dignity, self-reliance
and self-respect. Later, when I studied numerology. I discovered
that the traditional way of spelling Shaheen adds up to the number 29,
which is perhaps the worst vibration one can give oneself. Shahin,
on the other hand, adds up to 24, considered one of the most auspicious
vibrations. So unknowingly, I balanced myself and christened
myself correctly."
Numerology also plays an important part for people who rename
themselves in mid-life or spell their names unconventionally (Rashme,
Rushme, Rashmee, Rashmi, Rshmi). Usually, people in the entertainment
business rename themselves for instant identification with
the masses. So, Yusuf Khan, the Pathan lad from Lahore, now in Pakistan,
turns Dilip Kumar, a nondescript Norma Jean Baker becomes the glamorous
Marilyn Monroe and Anne Rosenbaum, a Russian Jew becomes the individualist
Ayn Rand. Other considerations are names with a particular syllable
or letter, like Subhash Ghai's fetish for heroines with names starting
with M.
Karma, image, behaviorall are connected to
what you are called. So, when confronted by a disparaging 'what's
in a name' don't despairactually, there's lots in a name!
SEARCH
FOR MEANING
Sigmund
Freud,
the father of modern psychoanalysis, often began his sessions
by asking a person about his name. You can also get to
know more about yourself through these queries:
1. Imagine your parents discussing what name to give you a week
before you were born. Was your sex known at that time? Did they
want a boy or a girl? Some couples want their first born to be
a boy and their second a girl. In the choice of first names,
parents sometimes express these wishes.
2. Some babies are named after other people-either relatives
or famous personalities. Were you named after anybody?
If so, who and why? Has it had any effect on your personality?
3. Many children are named after legendary heroes. Later
in childhood, their stories are retold to the children to identify
with their heroic deeds. Can you remember stories you have heard
as a child which include your own name?
4. Nearly all nameshavemeanings. Were your
parents aware of the meaning of the names they gave you? When
did you find out what your name means? Who chose your name?
If your parents chose it for its meaning, what does this
tell you about the way they felt about your arrival in their lives?
5. You may have adopted a new first name for yourself that
may fit into the concept of what you want to be or how you want
to be perceived. Do you have a nickname? Do you remember
when and why you started preferring it?
6. How and by whom were your parents named? Have you noticed
any relation between their name and their personality?
How old were you when you first learnt their names?
7. Do people make, or have they ever made jokes about your name?
You may have been taught to be proud of it, or you may feel ashamed
of it for some reason. A tendency to joke about the name
of a person may result from a need to compensate for shyness,
so you can get to know the name instead of knowing the
person.