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.
Andrew Cohen is an Indian style guru based in the USA. This article is
based on a talk he gave at India Habitat Centre in New Delhi, India, courtesy
Full Circle
The goal of spiritual life is to live free of the mind. The spiritual
life boils down to two things: meditation and contemplation.
Meditation is the experience of being beyond the mind, free of thought,
which is a revelation for the individual because normally, we are habituated
to a constant thought stream. Meditation is being conscious, aware, free
of the mind. Then I realize that I'm not what I thought I was because
I see thoughts out there.
Contemplation is intense, focused pursuit of truth. Here we use the mind
to help us discriminate between true and false.
Meditation is willingness to become simple, letting everything be. During
meditation, everything slows down-reaching deep within, we experience
bliss, peace, joy. And an infinite space.
Enlightenment dawns when we want nothing. Normally, there is a tyranny
of wanting. But, clearly, no object can give us eternal happiness. Liberation
is stopping the endless seeking of gratification.
The spiritual questions are: Who am I, beyond personality, beyond gender?
How shall I live? In deep meditation when I need nothing, I know nothing,
that is what I really am. But human life demands action. As long as we
breathe, we have to act, live in the world of cause and effect, make choices.
A spiritually minded person cares about the right thing for its own sake,
not for personal merit. This is where contemplation comes in.
How to do the right thing? There are five tenets of spiritual life which
help in making the right choice.
1. An intense
desire to be free more than anything else I want
to be liberated, be sane in an insane world. If so, this desire should
be more important than spouse, children, success, wealth. Make it your
anchor. The desire to know the truth should be cultivated to the extent
that it determines all choices. It takes courage to not conform to the
status quo.
2. Consciously
renouncing the victim mentality We're
not victims of our experience. Secretly or not, we feel like victims,
even those who in the world's eyes have been very fortunate: "Oh, I've
had such a hard time." But even if we suffered, in the present moment
we decided to be free. A victim is helpless. It is a neurotic habit to
take refuge in victim consciousness. A person who wants to be free rejects
it and takes full responsibility for all life, all karma. Only one person
makes choicesMe. I'm the only one doer.
3. Face everything and avoid nothing
This is very demanding. Normally we face little and avoid a lotlike
a horse with blinkers on. It needs stoicism and great courage to face
everything and avoid nothing.
4. Every aspect of our personal experience is impersonal
Over the years in my experience as a spiritual teacher I have met so many
people. But I have come to realize that there is only one person, only
one human condition. We imagine that what we experience is unique to us.
But experiencewhether of love or fear or lustis identical
with everybody, though the intensity may vary. Experience is universal.
So, if we step back, we stop identifying with our experience. Then, nothing
personal is left. The awareness of universal nature of life leads to universal
consciousness.
5. Giving up the materialistic relationship to life
Generally I live for myself. Even spiritual growth I want for myself.
I want my enlightenment for myself. In fact, many seekers are, if not
more, as materialistic and self-centered as non-spiritual people. True
spirituality is to give up everything and live for the sake of the whole.
We normally want freedom from suffering, but there is more to spiritual
life than bliss.