Yoga and Meditation
Journey of Self Discovery 5:1. - Meditation Through Transcendental
Sound
Lecturing at Boston’s Northeastern
University in the summer of 1969, Çréla Prabhupäda introduces
a meditation system renowned for its extraordinary power and the fact that
it can be easily practiced almost anywhere and at any time. “If you take
up this simple process,” he says, “chanting Hare Kåñëa,
Hare Kåñëa, Kåñëa Kåñëa,
Hare Hare/ Hare Räma, Hare Räma, Räma Räma Hare Hare,
you are immediately elevated to the transcendental platform.” He adds,
“No other meditation is possible while you are walking on the street.”
My dear boys and girls, I thank
you very much for attending this meeting. We are spreading this Kåñëa
consciousness movement because there is a great need of this consciousness
throughout the world. And the process is very easy—that is the advantage.
First of all, we must try to understand
what the transcendental platform is. As far as our present condition is
concerned, we are on various platforms. So we have to first of all stand
on the transcendental platform; then there can be a question of transcendental
meditation.
In the Third Chapter of Bhagavad-gétä,
you’ll find an explanation of the various statuses of conditioned life.
The first is the bodily conception of life (indriyäëi paräëy
ähuù). Everyone in this material world is under this bodily
concept of life. Someone is thinking, “I am Indian.” You are thinking,
“I am American.” Somebody’s thinking, “I am Russian.” Somebody’s thinking
he is something else. So everyone is thinking, “I am the body.”
This bodily standard of conditioned
life is called the sensual platform, because as long as we have a bodily
conception of life we think happiness means sense gratification. That’s
all. This bodily concept of life is very prominent at the present moment—not
only at the present moment, but since the creation of this material world.
That is the disease: “I am the body.”
Çrémad-Bhägavatam
says, yasyätma-buddhiù kuëape tri-dhätuke: Thinking
we are the body means we have a concept of ourself as a bag of skin and
bones. The body is a bag of skin, bones, blood, urine, stool, and so many
other nice things. So when we think, “I am the body,” we are actually thinking,
“I am a bag of bones and skin and stool and urine. That is my beauty; that
is my everything.” So this bodily concept of life is not very intelligent,
and improvement of the body is not a right calculation of self-realization.
Those who are too engrossed with
the bodily concept of life are recommended to practice the dhyäna-yoga
system, the yoga of meditation. That is mentioned in the Çrémad-Bhagavad-gétä.
In the Sixth Chapter, verses 13 and 14, Kåñëa explains,
“One should hold one’s body, neck, and head erect in a straight line and
stare steadily at the tip of the nose. Thus, with an unagitated, subdued
mind, devoid of fear, completely free from sex life, one should meditate
upon Me and make Me the ultimate goal of life.”
Earlier Lord Kåñëa
gives preliminary instructions on how one should practice this transcendental
meditation. One has to restrict sense gratification, especially sex. One
has to select a very solitary place, a sacred place, and sit down alone.
This meditation process is not practiced in a place like this, a big city,
where many people are gathered. One must go to a solitary place and practice
alone. And then you have to carefully select your sitting place, you have
to sit in a certain way... There are so many things. Of course, those things
cannot be explained within a few minutes. If you are very much interested,
you’ll find a full description in Bhagavad-gétä, in the chapter
called “Dhyäna-yoga.”
So from the bodily concept of life
one has to transcend, to the spiritual platform. That is the goal of any
genuine process of self-realization. I began by saying that at first we
are all thinking we are the body. Indriyäëi paräëy
ähuù. Then, one who has transcended the bodily concept of life
comes to the platform of mind. Indriyebhyaù paraà manaù.
The word manaù means “mind.” Practically the whole population of
the world is under the bodily concept of life, but above them are some
people who are under the mental concept of life. They are thinking they
are the mind. And a few people are on the intellectual platform: manasas
tu parä buddhiù. Buddhiù means “intelligence.” And when
you transcend the intellectual platform also, then you come to the spiritual
platform. That is the first realization required.
Before you practice transcendental
meditation, you have to reach the transcendental platform. That transcendental
platform is called brahma-bhütaù. Perhaps you have heard this
word—Brahman. The transcendentalist thinks, “Ahaà brahmäsmi:
I am not the body; I am not the mind; I am not the intelligence; I am spirit
soul.” This is the transcendental platform.
We are talking of transcendental
meditation. So, by transcending the bodily concept of life, transcending
the mental concept of life, and transcending the intellectual concept of
life, you come to the real, spiritual platform, which is called the brahma-bhütaù
stage. You cannot simply say some words—“Now I have realized Brahman.”
There are symptoms. Everything has symptoms, and how you can know if someone
has realized transcendence, Brahman, is explained in Bhagavad-gétä
[18.54]: brahma-bhütaù prasannätmä. When one is on
the transcendental platform, the brahma-bhütaù stage, his symptom
is that he’s always joyful. There is no moroseness.
And what does joyful mean? That
is also explained: na çocati na käìkñati. Someone
on the transcendental platform does not hanker after anything, nor does
he lament. On the material platform we have two symptoms: hankering and
lamenting. The things we do not possess we hanker after, and the things
we have lost we lament for. These are the symptoms of the bodily concept
of life.
The whole material world is hankering
after sex. That is the basic principle of hankering. Puàsaù
striyä mithuné-bhävam etam. Mithuné-bhävam
means sex. Whether you look at the human society or the animal society
or the bird society or the insect society, everywhere you will find that
sex is very prominent. That is the materialistic way of life. A boy is
hankering after a girl, a girl is hankering after a boy; a man is hankering
after a woman, a woman is hankering after a man. This is going on.
And as soon as the man and woman
unite, the hard knot in the heart is tied. Tayor mitho hådaya-granthim
ähuù. They think, “I am matter, this body. This body belongs
to me. This woman or man belongs to me. This country belongs to me. This
world belongs to me.” That is the hard knot. Instead of transcending the
bodily concept of life, they become still more implicated. The situation
becomes very difficult. Therefore Kåñëa recommends in
Bhagavad-gétä that if you are at all interested in practicing
yoga and meditation, in trying to rise to the transcendental platform,
you must cease from sex.
But in the present age that is not
possible. So in our method, Kåñëa consciousness, we don’t
say, “Stop sex.” We say, “Don’t have illicit sex.” Of course, what to speak
of transcendental life, giving up illicit sex is a requirement of civilized
life. In every civilized society there is a system of marriage, and if
there is sex outside of marriage, that is called illicit sex. That is never
allowed for people in any civilized society, what to speak of those trying
for transcendental life. Transcendental life must be purified of all mental
and bodily concepts of self.
But in this age of Kali, where everyone
is disturbed, always full of anxieties, and where life is very short, people
are generally not interested in any transcendental subject matter. They
are interested only in the bodily concept of life. When one is always disturbed
by so many anxieties, how can he ascend to the platform of transcendental
realization? It is very difficult in this age. It was difficult even five
thousand years ago, when Arjuna took instruction on meditation from Kåñëa
in Bhagavad-gétä. Arjuna was a royal prince; he was very much
advanced in so many ways. Yet on the Battlefield of Kurukñetra he
said, “My dear Kåñëa, it is not possible for me to practice
this transcendental meditation, this dhyäna-yoga process. I am a family
man; I have come here to fight for my political interest. How can I practice
this system, in which I have to go to a solitary place, I have to sit down,
I have to cease from sex? It is not possible.” Arjuna was so much more
qualified than we are, yet he refused to practice this meditation process.
So, reaching the transcendental
platform by the haöha-yoga or dhyäna-yoga system is not at all
possible in this age. And if somebody is trying to practice such so-called
meditation, he is not actually practicing transcendental meditation. You
cannot perform this transcendental meditation in the city. It is not possible.
That is very clearly stated in Bhagavad-gétä. But you are living
in the city, you are living with your family, you are living with your
friends. It is not possible for you to go to the forest and find a secluded
place. But Kåñëa says you must do this to practice transcendental
meditation.
So here, in this age, if you want
to rise to the transcendental platform, then you must follow the recommendations
of the Vedic literature: kalau tad dhari-kértanät. In this
age, simply by chanting the holy name of God one can reach all perfection.
We are not introducing this chanting system by our mental concoction, to
make things very easy. No, Lord Caitanya Mahäprabhu introduced this
process of transcendental meditation five hundred years ago. Also, the
Vedic literature recommends it, and it is practical. You have seen that
my disciples, these boys and girls, immediately experience a transcendental
feeling as soon as they begin chanting Hare Kåñëa. If
you practice, you will also see how you are rising to the transcendental
platform. So chanting Hare Kåñëa, Hare Kåñëa,
Kåñëa Kåñëa, Hare Hare/ Hare Räma,
Hare Räma, Räma Räma, Hare Hare is the easiest process of
transcendental meditation.
This transcendental sound vibration
will immediately carry you to the transcendental platform, especially if
you try to hear so that your mind is absorbed in the sound. This Hare Kåñëa
sound vibration is nondifferent from Kåñëa, because Kåñëa
is absolute. Since God is absolute, there is no difference between God’s
name and God Himself. In the material world there is a difference between
water and the word water, between a flower and the word flower. But in
the spiritual world, in the absolute world, there is no such difference.
Therefore, as soon as you vibrate Hare Kåñëa, Hare Kåñëa,
you immediately associate with the Supreme Lord and His energy.
The word Hare indicates the energy
of the Supreme Lord. Everything is being done by the energy of the Supreme
Lord. Parasya brahmaëaù çaktiù. Just as the planets
are a creation of the energy of the sun, so the whole material and spiritual
manifestation is a creation of the energy of the Supreme Lord. So when
we chant Hare Kåñëa we are praying to the energy of the
Supreme Lord and to the Supreme Lord Himself: “Please pick me up. Please
pick me up. I am in the bodily concept of life. I am in this material existence.
I am suffering. Please pick me up to the spiritual platform, so that I
will be happy.”
You haven’t got to change your situation.
If you are a student, remain a student. If you are a businessman, remain
a businessman. Woman, man, black, white—anyone can chant Hare Kåñëa.
It is a simple process, and there is no charge. We are not saying, “Give
me so many dollars, and I shall give you this Hare Kåñëa
mantra.” No, we are distributing it publicly. You simply have to catch
it up and try it. You’ll very quickly come to the transcendental platform.
When you hear the chanting, that is transcendental meditation.
This process is recommended in all
the scriptures of the Vedic literature, it was taught by Lord Caitanya
and followed by His disciplic succession for the last five hundred years,
and people are achieving good results from it today, not only in India
but here also. If you try to understand what this Kåñëa
consciousness movement is, you’ll understand how transcendental meditation
is possible. We are not sentimentalists; we have many books: Bhagavad-gétä
As It Is, Çrémad-Bhägavatam, Teachings of Lord Caitanya,
Éçopaniñad. And we have our magazine, Back to Godhead.
It is not that we are sentimentalists. We are backed up by high philosophical
thought. But if you take up this simple process—chanting Hare Kåñëa,
Hare Kåñëa, Kåñëa Kåñëa,
Hare Hare/ Hare Räma, Hare Räma, Räma Räma, Hare Hare—you
are immediately elevated to the transcendental platform, even without reading
so much philosophical literature. This Hare Kåñëa mantra
is Lord Caitanya Mahäprabhu’s gift to the conditioned souls of the
present age, in accordance with the Vedic sanction.
So our request is that you give
it a try. Simply chant, at home or anywhere. There is no restriction: “You
have to chant this Hare Kåñëa mantra in such-and-such
a place, in such-and-such a condition.” No. Niyamitaù smaraëe
na kälaù. There is no restriction of time, circumstances, or
atmosphere. Anywhere, at any time, you can meditate by chanting Hare Kåñëa.
No other meditation is possible while you are walking on the street, but
this meditation is possible. You are working with your hands? You can chant
Hare Kåñëa. It is so nice.
Kåñëa is the perfect
name for God. The Sanskrit word kåñëa means “all-attractive.”
And räma means “the supreme pleasure.” So if God is not all-attractive
and full of supreme pleasure, then what is the meaning of God? God must
be the source of supreme pleasure; otherwise how could you be satisfied
with Him? Your heart is hankering after so many pleasures. If God cannot
satisfy you with all pleasures, then how can He be God? And He must also
be all-attractive. If God is not attractive to every person, how can He
be God? But Kåñëa actually is all-attractive.
So the Hare Kåñëa
mantra is not sectarian. Because we are chanting these three names—Hare,
Kåñëa, and Räma—someone may think, “These are Hindu
names. Why should we chant these Hindu names?” There are some sectarian
people who may think like that. But Lord Caitanya says, “It doesn’t matter.
If you have some other bona fide name of God, you can chant that. But chant
God’s name.” That is the instruction of this Kåñëa consciousness
movement. So do not think that this movement is trying to convert you from
Christian to Hindu. Remain a Christian, a Jew, a Muslim. It doesn’t matter.
But if you really want to perfect your life, then try to develop your dormant
love for God. That is the perfection of life.
Sa vai puàsäà
paro dharmo yato bhaktir adhokñaje. You may profess any religion,
but to test whether your religion is perfect or whether you are perfect,
you have to see whether you have developed your love for God. Now we are
distributing our love among so many things. But when all this love is concentrated
simply on God, that is the perfection of love. Our love is there, but because
we have forgotten our relationship with God, we are directing our love
toward dogs. That is our disease. We have to transfer our love from so
many dogs to God. That is the perfection of life.
So we are not teaching any particular
type of religion. We are simply teaching that you should learn to love
God. And this is possible by chanting the Hare Kåñëa
mantra.
Journey of Self Discovery 5.2:
The Way of Yoga
We generally regard yoga merely as a
form of physical exercise. But in the following lecture, delivered in February
1969 in Los Angeles, Çréla Prabhupäda reveals the inner
meaning and nature of yoga as taught and practiced in India for centuries.
He explains how expert yogés can—by practicing austerities—travel
to any planet in the universe. But, he concludes, at the time of death
the most successful yogés transfer themselves to “the spiritual
world and enter into the Kåñëaloka, or the Kåñëa
planet, and enjoy with Kåñëa.”
sarva-dväräëi saàyamya
mano hådi nirudhya ca
mürdhny ädhäyätmanaù
präëam
ästhito yoga-dhäraëäm
“The yogic situation is that of detachment
from all sensual engagements. Closing all the doors of the senses and fixing
the mind on the heart and the life air at the top of the head, one establishes
himself in yoga.” [Bhagavad-gétä 8.12]
There are different kinds of transcendentalists,
or yogés: the jïäna-yogé, the dhyäna-yogé,
and the bhakti-yogé. All of them are eligible to be transferred
to the spiritual world, because the yoga system is meant for reestablishing
our link with the Supreme Lord.
Actually, we are eternally connected
with the Supreme Lord, but somehow or other we are now entangled in material
contamination. So the process is that we have to go back again. That linking
process is called yoga.
The actual meaning of the word yoga
is “plus.” Now, at the present moment, we are minus God, minus the Supreme.
But when we make ourselves plus, or connected with God, then our human
form of life is perfect.
By the time death comes, we must
reach that stage of perfection. As long as we are alive, we have to practice
how to approach that point of perfection. And at the time of death, when
we give up this material body, that perfection must be realized. Prayäëa-käle
manasäcalena. Prayäëa-käle means “at the time of death.”
For instance, a student may prepare two years, three years, or four years
in his college education, and the final test is his examination. If he
passes the examination, then he gets his degree. Similarly, if we prepare
for the examination of death and we pass the examination, then we are transferred
to the spiritual world. All that we have learned in this life is examined
at the time of death.
So here in the Bhagavad-gétä,
Lord Kåñëa is describing what we should do at the point
of death, when we are giving up this present body.
For the dhyäna-yogés
the prescription is: sarva-dväräëi saàyamya mano
hådi nirudhya ca. In the technical language of the yoga system, this
process is called pratyähära. Pratyähära means “just
the opposite.” For example, suppose my eyes are engaged in seeing worldly
beauty. So I would have to refrain from enjoying that external beauty and
instead engage in meditation to see the beauty within. That is called pratyähära.
Similarly, I would have to hear oàkära—the sound representation
of the Lord—from within. And in the same way, all the senses must be withdrawn
from their external activities and engaged in meditation on God. That is
the perfection of dhyäna-yoga: to concentrate the mind on Viñëu,
or God. The mind is very agitating. So it has to be fixed on the heart:
mano hådi nirudhya. Then we have to transfer the life air to the
top of the head: mürdhny ädhäyätmanaù präëam
ästhito yoga-dhäraëäm. That is the perfection of yoga.
A perfect dhyäna-yogé
can choose his own destination after death. There are innumerable material
planets, and beyond the material planets is the spiritual world. Yogés
have information about all the different planets. Where did they get this
information? From the Vedic scriptures. For instance, before I came to
your country, I got the description of your country from books. Similarly,
we can get the descriptions of higher planets and the spiritual world from
the Çrémad-Bhägavatam.
The yogé knows everything,
and he can transfer himself to any planet he likes. He does not require
the help of any spaceship. The scientists have been trying to reach other
planets for so many years with their spaceships, and they will go on trying
for one hundred or one thousand years. But they’ll never be successful.
Rest assured. This is not the process to reach another planet. Maybe, by
scientific progress, one man or two men can succeed, but that is not the
general process. The general process is that if you want to transfer yourself
to any better planet, then you have to practice this dhyäna-yoga system—or
the jïäna system. But not the bhakti system.
The bhakti system is not meant for
attaining any material planet. Those who render devotional service to Kåñëa,
the Supreme Lord, are not interested in any planet of this material world.
Why? Because they know that regardless of what planet you elevate yourself
to, the four principles of material existence will still be there. What
are those principles? Birth, death, disease, and old age. You will find
these on any planet you go to. On some higher planets your duration of
life may be very, very much longer than on this earth, but still, death
is there. Material life means birth, death, disease, and old age. And spiritual
life means relief from these botherations. No more birth, no more death,
no more ignorance, and no more misery. So those who are intelligent do
not try to elevate themselves to any planet of this material world.
Now the scientists are trying to
reach the moon planet, but it is very difficult for them to gain entrance,
because they do not have a suitable body. But if we enter into the higher
planets by this yoga system, then we will get a body suitable for those
planets. For every planet there is a suitable body. Otherwise, you cannot
enter. For example, although we cannot live in the water with this body,
we can live in the water with oxygen tanks—for fifteen or sixteen hours.
But the fish, the aquatic animals, have a suitable body—they are living
their whole life underwater. And of course, if you take the fish out of
the water and put them on the land, they’ll die instantly. So you see,
even on this planet you have to have a suitable kind of body to live in
a particular place. Similarly, if you want to enter into another planet,
you have to prepare yourself by getting a particular type of body.
In the higher planets, our year
is equal to one day and night, and you live for ten thousand of such years.
That is the description in the Vedic literature. So you get a very long
duration of life undoubtedly. But then there is death. After ten thousand
years, or twenty thousand years, or millions of years—it doesn’t matter.
It is all counted, and death is there. But you, the spirit soul, are not
subject to death—that is the beginning of Bhagavad-gétä. Na
hanyate hanyamäne çarére: you are an eternal spirit
soul.
Why should you subject yourself
to this birth and death? To ask this question is a sign of real intelligence.
Those persons who are in Kåñëa consciousness are very
intelligent. They aren’t interested in promotion to any planet where there
is death, regardless of how long you live. They want a spiritual body,
just like God’s. God’s body is sac-cid-änanda-vigraha: éçvaraù
paramaù kåñëaù sac-cid-änanda-vigrahaù.
Sat means “eternal,” cit means “full of knowledge,” and änanda means
“full of pleasure.” If we leave this body and transfer ourselves to the
spiritual world—to live with Kåñëa Himself—then we get
a body similar to His: sac-cid-änanda—eternal, full of knowledge,
and full of bliss. Those who are trying to be Kåñëa conscious
have a different aim of life than those who are trying to promote themselves
to any of the better planets in this material world.
You are a very minute, spiritual
particle within this body, and you are being sustained in the präëa-väyu,
or life airs. The dhyäna-yoga system—the ñaö-cakra system—aims
to get the soul from its position in the heart to the topmost part of the
head. And the perfection is when you can place yourself at the top of the
head and, by rupturing this topmost part of the head, transfer yourself
into the higher planets, as you like. A dhyäna-yogé can transfer
into any planet—wherever he likes.
So if you like—just like you are
inquisitive about the moon planet—become a yogé and go there. A
yogé thinks, “Oh, let me see what the moon planet is like. Then
I shall transfer myself to higher planets.” It is the same with ordinary
travelers. They come to New York, then go to California, then go to Canada.
Similarly, you can transfer yourself to so many planets by this yoga system.
But anywhere you go, the same systems—visa system and customs system—are
there. So a Kåñëa conscious person is not interested
in these temporary planets. Life there may be of a long duration, but he
is not interested.
For the yogé there is a process of giving up this body:
oà ity ekäkñaraà
brahma
vyäharan mäm anusmaran
yaù prayäti tyajan dehaà
sa yäti paramäà
gatim
At the time of death—“Oà. ..
” He can pronounce oà, the oàkära. Oàkära
is the concise form of transcendental sound vibration. Oà ity ekäkñaraà
brahma vyäharan: If he can vibrate this sound, oàkära,
and at the same time remember Kåñëa, or Viñëu
(mäm anusmaran), he can enter into the spiritual kingdom.
The whole yoga system is meant for
concentrating the mind on Viñëu. But the impersonalists imagine
that this oàkära is the form of Viñëu, or the Lord.
Those who are personalists do not imagine. They see the actual form of
the Supreme Lord. Anyway, whether you concentrate your mind by imagining
or you see factually, you have to fix your mind on the Viñëu
form. Here mäm means “unto the Supreme Lord, Viñëu.” Yaù
prayäti tyajan deham: Anyone who quits his body remembering Viñëu—sa
yäti paramäà gatim—he enters into the spiritual kingdom.
Those who are actual yogés
do not desire to enter any other planet in the material world, because
they know that life there is temporary. That is intelligence. Those who
are satisfied with temporary happiness, temporary life, and temporary facilities
are not intelligent, according to the Bhagavad-gétä: antavat
tu phalaà teñäà tad bhavaty alpa-medhasäm.
I am permanent. I am eternal. Who wants nonpermanent existence? Nobody
wants it.
Suppose you are living in an apartment
and the landlord asks you to vacate. You are sorry. But you’ll not be sorry
if you go to a better apartment. So this is our nature: Wherever we live,
because we are permanent, we want a permanent residence. That is our inclination.
We don’t wish to die. Why? Because we are permanent. We don’t want to be
diseased. These are all artificial, external things—disease, death, birth,
miseries. They are external things.
Just like sometimes you are attacked
with fever. You are not meant for suffering from fever, but sometimes it
comes upon you. So you have to take precautions to get out of it. Similarly,
these four kinds of external afflictions—birth, death, disease, and old
age—are due to this material body. If we can get out of this material body,
we can get out of these afflictions.
So for the yogé who is an
impersonalist, the recommended process is vibrating this transcendental
sound, oà, while leaving this body. Anyone who is able to quit this
material body while uttering the transcendental sound oà, with full
consciousness of the Supreme Lord, is sure to be transferred to the spiritual
world.
But those who are not personalists
cannot enter into the spiritual planets. They remain outside. Just like
the sunshine and the sun planet. The sunshine is not different from the
sun disk. But still, the sunshine is not the sun disk. Similarly, those
impersonalists who are transferred to the spiritual world remain in the
effulgence of the Supreme Lord, which is called the brahmajyoti. Those
who are not personalists are placed into the brahmajyoti as one of the
minute particles.
We are minute particles, spiritual
sparks, and the brahmajyoti is full of such spiritual sparks. So you become
one of the spiritual sparks. That is, you merge into the spiritual existence.
You keep your individuality, but because you don’t want any personal form,
you are held there in the impersonal brahmajyoti. Just as the sunshine
is small molecules, shining molecules—those who are scientists know—similarly,
we are tiny particles, smaller than an atom. Our magnitude is one ten-thousandth
of the tip of a hair. So that small particle remains in the brahmajyoti.
The difficulty is that, as a living
entity, I want enjoyment. Because I am not only simply existing. I have
got bliss. I am composed of three spiritual qualities: sac-cid-änanda.
I am eternal, and I am full of knowledge, and I am full of bliss. Those
who enter into the impersonal effulgence of the Supreme Lord can remain
eternally with full knowledge that they are now merged with Brahman, or
the brahmajyoti. But they cannot have eternal bliss, because that part
is wanting.
If you are confined in a room alone,
you may read a book or think some thought, but still you cannot remain
alone all the time, for all the years of your life. That is not possible.
You’ll find some association, some recreation. That is our nature. Similarly,
if we merge into the impersonal effulgence of the Supreme Lord, then there
is a chance of falling down again to this material world. That is stated
in the Çrémad-Bhägavatam [10.2.32]:
ye ’nye ’ravindäkña
vimukta-mäninas
tvayy asta-bhäväd aviçuddha-buddhayaù
äruhya kåcchreëa
paraà padaà tataù
patanty adho ’nädåta-yuñmad-aìghrayaù
It’s just like the astronauts who go
higher and still higher—twenty-five thousand or thirty thousand or a hundred
thousand miles up. But they have to come to rest on some planet. So coming
to rest is required. In the impersonal form the resting place is uncertain.
Therefore the Bhägavatam says, äruhya kåcchreëa paraà
padaà tataù. Even after so much endeavor, if the impersonalist
gets into the spiritual world and remains in that impersonal form, the
risk is patanty adhaù, that he will come down into material existence
again. Why? Anädåta-yuñmad-aìghrayaù: Because
he has neglected to serve the Supreme Lord with love and devotion.
So, as long as we are here we have
to practice loving Kåñëa, the Supreme Lord. Then we can
enter the spiritual planets. This is the training. If you are not trained
in that way, then by impersonal endeavor you can enter into the spiritual
kingdom, but there is the risk of falling down again—because that loneliness
will create some disturbance, and you’ll try to have association. And because
you have no association with the Supreme Lord, you’ll have to come back
and associate with this material world.
So better that we know the nature
of our constitutional position. Our constitutional position is that we
want eternity, we want complete knowledge, and we want pleasure also. If
we are kept alone, we cannot have pleasure. We’ll feel uncomfortable, and
for want of pleasure we’ll accept any kind of material pleasure. That is
the risk. But in Kåñëa consciousness, we’ll have full
pleasure. The highest pleasure of this material world is sex life, and
that is also perverted—so diseased. So even in the spiritual world there
is sex pleasure in Kåñëa. But we should not think that
this is something like sex life in the material world. No. But, janmädy
asya yataù: unless that sex life is there, it cannot be reflected
here. It is simply a perverted reflection. The actual life is there, in
Kåñëa. Kåñëa is full of pleasure.
So the best thing is to train ourselves
in Kåñëa consciousness. Then at the time of death it
will be possible to transfer ourselves to the spiritual world and enter
into Kåñëaloka, Kåñëa’s own planet,
and enjoy with Him.
cintämaëi-prakara-sadmasu
kalpa-våkña-
lakñävåteñu
surabhér abhipälayantam
lakñmé-sahasra-çata-sambhrama-sevyamänaà
govindam ädi-puruñam
tam ahaà bhajämi
These are the descriptions of Kåñëaloka.
Cintämaëi-prakara-sadmasu: The houses are made of touchstone.
Perhaps you know touchstone. If a small particle of it is touched to an
iron beam, the iron will at once become gold. Of course, none of you have
seen this touchstone, but there is such a thing. So all the buildings there
are touchstone. Cintämaëi-prakara-sadmasu. Kalpa-våkña:
The trees are desire trees. Whatever you like, you can get. Here, from
mango trees you get only mangoes, and from apple trees you get apples.
But there, from any tree, anything you like you can have. These are some
of the descriptions of Kåñëaloka.
So the best thing is not to try
elevating ourselves to another material planet, because on any material
planet you enter, you find the same principles of miserable life. We are
accustomed to them. We have been acclimated to birth and death. We don’t
care. The modern scientists are very proud of their advancement, but they
have no solution to any of these unpleasant things. They cannot make anything
that
will check death or disease or old age. That is not possible. You can manufacture
something that will accelerate death, but you cannot manufacture anything
that will stop death. That is not in your power.
So, those who are very intelligent
are concerned about finding a permanent solution to these four problems—janma-måtyu-jarä-vyädhi:
birth, death, old age, and disease. They are concerned about attaining
their spiritual life, full of bliss and full of knowledge. And that is
possible when you enter into the spiritual planets. As Kåñëa
states in Bhagavad-gétä [8.14]:
ananya-cetäù satataà
yo mäà smarati nityaçaù
tasyähaà sulabhaù
pärtha
nitya-yuktasya yoginaù
Nitya-yuktaù means “continuously
in trance.” This is the highest yogé: one who is continuously thinking
of Kåñëa, who is always engaged in Kåñëa
consciousness. Such a perfect yogé does not divert his attention
to this sort of process or that sort of yoga system or the jïäna
or dhyäna systems. Simply one system: Kåñëa consciousness.
Ananya-cetäù: without any deviation. He’s not disturbed by
anything. He simply thinks of Kåñëa. Ananya-cetäù
satatam. Satatam means “everywhere and at all times.”
For example, my residence is at
Våndävana. That is the place of Kåñëa, where
Kåñëa advented Himself. So now I am in America, in your
country. But that does not mean I’m out of Våndävana, because
if I think of Kåñëa always, it is as good as being in
Våndävana. I am in New York, in this apartment, but my consciousness
is there in Våndävana. Kåñëa consciousness
means you already live with Kåñëa in His spiritual planet.
You simply have to wait to give up this body.
So this is the process of Kåñëa
consciousness: ananya-cetäù satataà yo mäà
smarati nityaçaù. Smarati means “remembering”; nityaçaù,
“continuously.” Kåñëa declares that He becomes easily
available to someone who is always remembering Him. The highest, most valuable
thing becomes very inexpensive for one who takes up this process of Kåñëa
consciousness. Tasyähaà sulabhaù pärtha nitya-yuktasya
yoginaù: “Because he’s continuously engaged in such a process of
yoga, bhakti-yoga—oh, I am very cheap. I am easily available.”
Why should you try for any hard
process? Simply chant Hare Kåñëa, Hare Kåñëa,
Kåñëa Kåñëa, Hare Hare/ Hare Räma,
Hare Räma, Räma Räma, Hare Hare. And you can chant twenty-four
hours a day. There are no rules or regulations. Either in the street or
in the subway, at your home or in your office—there is no tax, no expense.
Why don’t you do it?
Thank you very much.
Journey of Self Discovery
5.3: Making Friends with the Mind
Is the mind the ultimate reservoir of
human resources? Or is there a greater source of knowledge beyond our minds?
In the following lecture, recorded in February 1969 in Los Angeles, Çréla
Prabhupäda explains why the mind must be brought under the control
of spiritual energy. His theme is based on the following famous verse from
India’s most widely read and respected scripture, the Bhagavad-gétä:
bandhur ätmätmanas tasya
yenätmaivätmanä jitaù
anätmanas tu çatrutve
vartetätmaiva çatru-vat
“For one who has conquered the mind,
the mind is the best of friends, but for one who has failed to do so, the
mind will be the greatest enemy.” [Bhagavad-gétä 6.6]
The whole purpose of the yoga system
is to make the mind our friend. The mind in material contact is our enemy,
just like the mind of a person in a drunken condition. In Caitanya-caritämåta
[Madhya 20.117] it is said, kåñëa bhuli’ se jéva
anädi-bahirmukha ataeva mäyä täre deya saàsära-duùkha:
“Forgetting Kåñëa, the living entity has been attracted
by the Lord’s external feature from time immemorial. Therefore, the illusory
energy [mäyä] gives him all kinds of misery in his material existence.”
I am a spiritual soul, part and parcel of the Supreme Lord, but as soon
as my mind is contaminated I rebel, because I have a little independence.
“Why shall I serve Kåñëa, or God? I am God.” When this
idea is dictated from the mind, my whole situation turns. I come under
a false impression, an illusion, and my whole life is spoiled. So, we are
trying to conquer so many things—empires and so on—but if we fail to conquer
our minds, then even if we conquer an empire we are failures. Our very
mind will be our greatest enemy.
The purpose of practicing eightfold
yoga is to control the mind in order to make it a friend in discharging
the human mission. Unless the mind is controlled, the practice of yoga
is simply a waste of time; it is simply for show. One who cannot control
his mind lives always with the greatest enemy, and thus his life and its
mission are spoiled. The constitutional position of the living entity is
to carry out the order of the superior. As long as one’s mind remains an
unconquered enemy, one has to serve the dictations of lust, anger, avarice,
illusion, and so on. But when the mind is conquered, one voluntarily agrees
to abide by the dictation of the Personality of Godhead, who is situated
within the heart of everyone as the Supersoul (Paramätmä). Real
yoga practice entails meeting the Paramätmä within the heart
and then following His dictation. For one who takes to Kåñëa
consciousness directly, perfect surrender to the dictation of the Lord
follows automatically.
jitätmanaù praçäntasya
paramätmä samähitaù
çétoñëa-sukha-duùkheñu
tathä mänäpamänayoù
“For one who has conquered the mind,
the Supersoul is already reached, for he has attained tranquillity. To
such a man happiness and distress, heat and cold, honor and dishonor are
all the same.” [Bhagavad-gétä 6.7]
Actually, every living entity is
intended to abide by the dictation of the Supreme Personality of Godhead,
who is seated in everyone’s heart as Paramätmä. When the mind
is misled by the external energy, one becomes entangled in material activities.
Therefore, as soon as one’s mind is controlled through one of the yoga
systems, one is to be considered as having already reached the destination.
One has to abide by superior dictation. When one’s mind is fixed on the
superior nature, one has no alternative but to follow the dictation of
the Supreme from within. The mind must admit some superior dictation and
follow it. The effect of controlling the mind is that one automatically
follows the dictation of the Paramätmä, or Supersoul. Because
this transcendental position is at once achieved by one who is in Kåñëa
consciousness, the devotee of the Lord is unaffected by the dualities of
material existence—distress and happiness, cold and heat, and so on. This
state is practical samädhi, or absorption in the Supreme.
jïäna-vijïäna-tåptätmä
küöa-stho vijitendriyaù
yukta ity ucyate yogé
sama-loñöräçma-käïcanaù
“A person is said to be established
in self-realization and is called a yogé, or mystic, when he is
fully satisfied by virtue of acquired knowledge and realization. Such a
person is situated in transcendence and is self-controlled. He sees everything—whether
it be pebbles, stones, or gold—as the same.” [Bhagavad-gétä
6.8]
Book knowledge without realization
of the Supreme Truth is useless. In the Padma Puräëa this is
stated as follows:
ataù çré-kåñëa-nämädi
na bhaved grähyam indriyaiù
sevonmukhe hi jihvädau
svayam eva sphuraty adaù
“No one can understand the transcendental
nature of the name, form, qualities, and pastimes of Çré
Kåñëa through his materially contaminated senses. Only
when one becomes spiritually saturated by transcendental service to the
Lord are the transcendental name, form, quality, and pastimes of the Lord
revealed to him.”
This is very important. Now, we
accept Kåñëa as the Supreme Lord. And why do we accept
that Kåñëa is the Supreme Lord? Because it is stated
in the Vedic literature. The Brahma-saàhitä, for example, says,
éçvaraù paramaù kåñëaù
sac-cid-änanda-vigrahaù: “The supreme controller is Kåñëa,
who has an eternal, blissful, spiritual body.” Those who are in the modes
of passion and ignorance simply imagine the form of God. And when they
are confused, they say, “Oh, there is no personal God. The Absolute is
impersonal or void.” This is frustration.
Actually, God has a form. Why not?
The Vedänta-sütra says, janmädy asya yataù: “The
Supreme Absolute Truth is that from whom or from which everything emanates.”
Now, we have forms. And not only we but all the different kinds of living
entities have forms. Wherefrom have they come? Wherefrom have these forms
originated? These are very commonsense questions. If God is not a person,
then how have His sons become persons? If my father is not a person, how
have I become a person? If my father has no form, wherefrom did I get my
form? Nonetheless, when people are frustrated, when they see that their
bodily forms are troublesome, they develop an opposite conception of form,
and they imagine that God must be formless. But the Brahma-saàhitä
says no. God has a form, but His form is eternal, full of knowledge and
bliss (éçvaraù paramaù kåñëaù
sac-cid-änanda-vigrahaù). Sat means “eternity,” cit means “knowledge,”
and änanda means “pleasure.” So God has a form, but His form is full
of pleasure, full of knowledge, and eternal.
Now, let’s compare our body to God’s.
Our body is neither eternal nor full of pleasure nor full of knowledge.
So our form is clearly different from God’s. But as soon as we think of
form, we think the form must be like ours. Therefore we think that since
God must be the opposite of us, He must have no form. This is speculation,
however, not knowledge. As it is said in the Padma Puräëa, ataù
çré-kåñëa-nämädi na bhaved grähyam
indriyaiù: “One cannot understand the form, name, quality, or paraphernalia
of God with one’s material senses.” Our senses are imperfect, so how can
we see the Supreme Person? It is not possible.
Then how is it possible to see Him?
Sevonmukhe hi jihvädau: If we train our senses, if we purify our senses,
those purified senses will help us see God. It is just as if we had cataracts
on our eyes. Because our eyes are suffering from cataracts, we cannot see.
But this does not mean that there is nothing to be seen—only that we cannot
see. Similarly, now we cannot conceive of the form of God, but if our cataracts
are removed, we can see Him. The Brahma-saàhitä says, premäïjana-cchurita-bhakti-vilocaneëa
santaù sadaiva hådayeñu vilokayanti: “The devotees
whose eyes are anointed with the love-of-God ointment see God, Kåñëa,
within their hearts twenty-four hours a day.” So, we require to purify
our senses. Then we’ll be able to understand what the form of God is, what
the name of God is, what the qualities of God are, what the abode of God
is, and what the paraphernalia of God are, and we’ll be able to see God
in everything.
The Vedic literature is full of
references to God’s form. For example, it is said that God has no hands
or legs but that He can accept anything you offer: apäëi-pädo
javano gåhétä. Also, it is said that God has no eyes
or ears but that He can see everything and hear everything. So, these are
apparent contradictions, because whenever we think of someone seeing, we
think he must have eyes like ours. This is our material conception. Factually,
however, God does have eyes, but His eyes are different from ours. He can
see even in the darkness, but we cannot. God can hear, also. God is in
His kingdom, which is millions and millions of miles away, but if we are
whispering something—conspiracy—He can hear it, because He is sitting within
us.
So, we cannot avoid God’s seeing
or God’s hearing or God’s touching. In the Bhagavad-gétä [9.26]
Lord Kåñëa says,
patraà puñpaà
phalaà toyaà
yo me bhaktyä prayacchati
tad ahaà bhakty-upahåtam
açnämi prayatätmanaù
“If somebody offers Me flowers, fruits,
vegetables, or milk with devotional love, I accept and eat it.” Now, how
is He eating? We cannot see Him eat, but He is eating. We experience this
daily: When we offer Kåñëa food according to the ritualistic
process, we see that the taste of the food changes immediately. This is
practical. So God eats, but because He is full in Himself, He does not
eat like us. If someone offers me a plate of food, I may finish it, but
God is not hungry, so when He eats He leaves the things as they are. Pürëasya
pürëam ädäya pürëam evävaçiñyate:
God is so full that He can eat all the food that we offer and still it
remains as it is. He can eat with His eyes. This is stated in the Brahma-saàhitä:
aìgäni yasya sakalendriya-våttimanti. “Every limb of
the body of God has all the potencies of the other limbs.” For example,
we can see with our eyes, but we cannot eat with our eyes. But if God simply
sees the food we have offered, that is His eating.
Of course, these things cannot be
understood by us at the present moment. Therefore, the Padma Puräëa
says that only when one becomes spiritually saturated by transcendental
service to the Lord are the transcendental name, form, qualities, and pastimes
of the Lord revealed to him. We cannot understand God by our own endeavor,
but God can reveal Himself to us. Trying to see God by our own efforts
is just like trying to see the sun when it is dark outside. If we say,
“Oh, I have a very strong flashlight, and I shall search out the sun,”
we will not be able to see it. But in the morning, when the sun rises out
of its own will, we can see it. Similarly, we cannot see God by our own
endeavor, because our senses are all imperfect. We have to purify our senses
and wait for the time when God will be pleased to reveal Himself before
us. This is the process of Kåñëa consciousness. We cannot
challenge, “Oh, my dear God, my dear Kåñëa, You must
come before me. I shall see You.” No, God is not our order-supplier, our
servant. When He is pleased with us, we’ll see Him.
So, our yoga process tries to please
God so that He will reveal Himself to us. That is the real yoga process.
Without this process, people are accepting so many nonsensical “Gods.”
Because people cannot see God, anybody who says “I am God” is accepted.
No one knows who God is. Somebody may say, “I am searching after truth,”
but he must know what truth is. Otherwise, how will he search out truth?
Suppose I want to purchase gold. I must know what gold is, or at least
have some experience of it. Otherwise, people will cheat me. So, people
are being cheated—accepting so many rascals as God—because they do not
know what God is. Anyone can come and say, “I am God,” and some rascal
will accept him as God. The man who says “I am God” is a rascal, and the
man who accepts him as God is also a rascal. God cannot be known like this.
One has to qualify himself to see God, to understand God. That is Kåñëa
consciousness. Sevonmukhe hi jihvädau svayam eva sphuraty adaù:
If we engage ourselves in the service of the Lord, then we’ll become qualified
to see God. Otherwise, it is not possible.
Now, this Bhagavad-gétä
is the science of Kåñëa consciousness. No one can become
Kåñëa conscious simply by mundane scholarship. Simply
because one has some titles—M.A., B.A., Ph.D.—that does not mean he’ll
understand the Bhagavad-gétä. This is a transcendental science,
and one requires different senses to understand it. So one has to purify
his senses by rendering service to the Lord. Otherwise, even if one is
a great scholar—a doctor or a Ph.D.—he will make mistakes in trying to
find out what Kåñëa is. He will not understand—it is
not possible. This is why Kåñëa appears in the material
world as He is. Although He is unborn (ajo ’pi sann avyayätmä),
He comes to make us know who God is. But since He is not personally present
now, to know Him one must be fortunate enough to associate with a person
who is in pure Kåñëa consciousness. A Kåñëa
conscious person has realized knowledge, by the grace of Kåñëa,
because He is satisfied with pure devotional service. So we have to acquire
the grace of Kåñëa. Then we can understand Kåñëa,
then we can see Kåñëa, then we can talk with Kåñëa—then
we can do everything.
Kåñëa is a person.
He is the supreme person. That is the Vedic injunction: nityo nityänäà
cetanaç cetanänäm—“We are all eternal persons, and God
is the supreme eternal person.” Now we are meeting birth and death because
we are encaged within this body. But actually, being eternal spirit souls,
we have no birth and death at all. According to our work, according to
our desire, we are transmigrating from one kind of body to another, another,
and another. Yet actually, we have no birth and death. As explained in
the Bhagavad-gétä [2.20], na jäyate mriyate vä: “The
living entity never takes birth, nor does he ever die.” Similarly, God
is also eternal. Nityo nityänäà cetanaç cetanänäm:
“God is the supreme living entity among all living entities, and He is
the supreme eternal person among eternal persons.” So, by practicing Kåñëa
consciousness, by purifying our senses, we can reestablish our eternal
relationship with the supreme eternal person, the complete eternal person.
Then we will see God.
Through realized knowledge one becomes
perfect. Through transcendental knowledge one can remain steady in his
convictions, but with mere academic knowledge one can be easily deluded
and confused by apparent contradictions. It is the realized soul who is
actually self-controlled, because he is surrendered to Kåñëa.
And he is transcendental, because he has nothing to do with mundane scholarship.
For him, mundane scholarship and mental speculation (which may be as good
as gold to others) are of no greater value than pebbles or stones.
Even if one is illiterate, even
if he does not know the ABC’s, he can realize God—provided he engages himself
in submissive transcendental loving service to God. On the other hand,
although one is a very learned scholar, he may not be able to realize God.
God is not subject to any material condition, because He is the supreme
spirit. Similarly, the process of realizing God is also not subject to
any material condition. It is not true that because one is a poor man he
cannot realize God, or that because one is a very rich man he shall realize
God. No. God is beyond our material conditions (apratihatä). In the
Çrémad-Bhägavatam [1.2.6] it is said, sa vai puàsäà
paro dharmo yato bhaktir adhokñaje: “That religion is first class
which helps one advance his devotional service and love of God.”
The Bhägavatam does not mention
that the Hindu religion is first class or the Christian religion is first
class or the Mohammedan religion is first class or some other religion
is first class. The Bhägavatam says that that religion is first class
which helps one advance his devotional service and love of God. That’s
all. This is the definition of a first-class religion. We do not analyze
that one religion is first class or that another religion is last class.
Of course, there are three qualities in the material world (goodness, passion,
and ignorance), and religious conceptions are created according to these
qualities. But the purpose of religion is to understand God and to learn
how to love God. Any religious system, if it teaches one how to love God,
is first class. Otherwise, it is useless. One may prosecute his religious
principles very rigidly and very nicely, but if his love of God is nil,
if his love of matter is simply enhanced, then his religion is no religion.
In the same verse, the Bhägavatam
says that real religion must be ahaituké and apratihatä: without
selfish motivation and without any impediment. If we can practice such
a system of religious principles, then we’ll find that we are happy in
all respects. Otherwise there is no possibility of happiness. Sa vai puàsäà
paro dharmo yato bhaktir adhokñaje. One of God’s names is Adhokñaja.
Adhokñaja means “one who conquers all materialistic attempts to
be seen.” Akñaja means “direct perception by experimental knowledge,”
and adhaù means “unreachable.” We cannot understand God by experimental
knowledge. No. We have to learn of Him in a different way—by submissive
aural reception of transcendental sound and by the rendering of transcendental
loving service. Then we can understand God.
So, a religious principle is perfect
if it teaches us how to develop our love for the Godhead. But our love
must be without selfish motive. If I say, “I love God because He supplies
me very nice things for my sense gratification,” that is not love. Real
love is without any selfish motive (ahaituké). We must simply think,
“God is great; God is my father. It is my duty to love Him.” That’s all.
No exchange—“Oh, God gives me my daily bread; therefore I love God.” No.
God gives daily bread even to the animals—the cats and dogs. God is the
father of everyone, and He supplies food to everyone. So, appreciating
God because He gives me bread—that is not love. Love without motive. I
must think, “Even if God does not supply me daily bread, I’ll love Him.”
This is real love. As Caitanya Mahäprabhu says, äçliñya
vä päda-ratäà pinañöu mäm adarçanän
marma-hatäà karotu vä: “O Lord, You may embrace me, or
You may trample me down with Your feet. Or You may never come before me,
so that I become brokenhearted without seeing You. Still, I love You.”
This is pure love of God. When we come to this stage of loving God, then
we’ll find ourselves full of pleasure. Just as God is full of pleasure,
we’ll also be full of pleasure. This is perfection.
Journey of Self Discovery
5.4: The Ultimate Yoga
In this 1969 discourse, Çréla
Prabhupäda focuses on the perfected stage of yoga practice. According
to ancient Vedic teachings, the yoga system—beginning with haöha-yoga,
präëäyäma (physical exercises and breath control) and
karma-yoga—culminates in bhakti-yoga, the yoga of devotion to the Personality
of Godhead. “If one is fortunate enough to come to the point of bhakti-yoga,
it is to be understood that one has surpassed all other yogas,” says Çréla
Prabhupäda. “And the test of one’s mastery of bhakti-yoga is based
on how much one is developing one’s love for God.”
yoginäm api sarveñäà
mad-gatenäntarätmanä
çraddhävän bhajate
yo mäà
sa me yuktatamo mataù
“And of all yogés, the one with
great faith who always abides in Me, thinks of Me within himself, and renders
transcendental loving service to Me—he is the most intimately united with
Me in yoga and is the highest of all. That is My opinion.” [Bhagavad-gétä
6.47]
Here it is clearly stated that out
of all the different kinds of yogés—the añöäìga-yogé,
the haöha-yogé, the jïäna-yogé, the karma-yogé,
and the bhakti-yogé—the bhakti-yogé is on the highest plat-form
of yoga. Kåñëa directly says, “Of all yogés, the
one with great faith who always abides in Me... is the most intimately
united with Me in yoga and is the highest of all.” Since Kåñëa
is speaking, the words in Me mean “in Kåñëa.” In other
words, if one wants to become a perfect yogé on the highest platform,
one should keep oneself in Kåñëa consciousness.
In this regard, the word bhajate
in this verse is significant. Bhajate has its root in the verb bhaj, which
is used to indicate devotional service. The English word worship cannot
be used in the same sense as bhaja. To worship means “to adore” or “to
show respect and honor to a worthy one.” But service with love and faith
is especially meant for the Supreme Personality of Godhead. One can avoid
worshiping a respectable man or a demigod and be called merely discourteous,
but one cannot avoid serving the Supreme Lord without being thoroughly
condemned.
So, worship is very different from
devotional service. Worship involves some selfish motive. We may worship
some very big businessman because we know that if we please him, he may
give us some business and we’ll derive some profit. The worship of the
demigods is like that. People often worship one of the demigods for some
particular purpose, but this is condemned in Bhagavad-gétä
[7.20]: kämais tais tair håta-jïänäù prapadyante
’nya-devatäù—“Those who have lost their sense and are bewildered
by lust worship demigods with a selfish motive.”
Thus when we speak of worship, there
is a selfish motive, but when we speak of devotional service, there is
no motive except the desire to please the beloved. Devotional service is
based on love. For example, when a mother renders service to her child,
there is no personal motive: she serves only out of love. Everyone else
may neglect the child, but the mother cannot, because she loves him. Similarly,
when there is a question of service to God, there should be no question
of a personal motive. That is perfect Kåñëa consciousness,
and that is recommended in Çrémad-Bhägavatam [1.2.6]
in the description of the first-class system of religious principles: sa
vai puàsäà paro dharmo yato bhaktir adhokñaje—“The
first-class system of religious principles is that which enables one to
develop one’s God consciousness, or love of God.” If one can develop one’s
love for God, one may follow any religious principle—it doesn’t matter.
But the test is how much one is developing one’s love for God.
But if one has some personal motive
and thinks, “By practicing this system of religion, my material necessities
will be fulfilled,” that is not first-class religion. That is third-class
religion. First-class religion is that by which one can develop one’s love
of God, and that love must be without any personal motive and without any
impediment (ahaituky apratihatä). That is first-class religion, as
recommended here by Kåñëa in this final verse of the
Sixth Chapter of Bhagavad-gétä.
Kåñëa consciousness
is the perfection of yoga, but even if one looks at it from a religious
viewpoint it is first class—because it is performed with no personal motive.
My disciples are not serving Kåñëa so that He will supply
them with this or that. There may be this or that, but that doesn’t matter.
Of course, there is no scarcity; devotees get everything they need. We
shouldn’t think that by becoming Kåñëa conscious one
becomes poor. No. If Kåñëa is there, everything is there,
because Kåñëa is everything. But we shouldn’t make any
business with Kåñëa: “Kåñëa, give me
this, give me that.” Kåñëa knows what we require better
than we do, just as a father knows the necessities of his child. Why should
we ask? Since God is all-powerful, He knows our wants and He knows our
necessities. This is confirmed in the Vedas: eko bahünäà
yo vidadhäti kämän—“God is supplying all the necessities
of the innumerable living entities.”
We should simply try to love God,
without demanding anything. Our needs will be supplied. Even the cats and
dogs are getting their necessities. They don’t go to church and ask God
for anything, but they are getting their necessities. So why should a devotee
not get his necessities? If the cats and dogs can get their necessities
of life without demanding anything from God, why should we demand from
God, “Give me this, give me that”? No. We should simply try to love Him
and serve Him. That will fulfill everything, and that is the highest platform
of yoga.
Service to God is natural; since
I am part and parcel of God, my natural duty is to serve Him. The example
of the finger and the body is appropriate. The finger is part and parcel
of the body. And what is the duty of the finger? To serve the whole body,
that’s all. If you are feeling some itch, immediately your finger is working.
If you want to see, your eyes immediately work. If you want to go somewhere,
your legs immediately take you there. So, the bodily parts and limbs are
helping the whole body.
Similarly, we are all part and parcel
of God, and we are all meant simply for rendering service to Him. When
the limbs of the body serve the whole body, the energy automatically comes
to the limbs. Similarly, when we serve Kåñëa, we get
all our necessities automatically. Yathä taror müla-niñecanena.
If one pours water on the root of a tree, the energy is immediately supplied
to the leaves, the twigs, the branches, and so on. Similarly, simply by
serving Kåñëa, or God, we serve all other parts of creation.
There is no question of serving each living entity separately.
Another point is that by serving
God, we will automatically have sympathy for all living beings—not only
for human beings, but even for animals. Therefore God consciousness, Kåñëa
consciousness, is the perfection of religion. Without Kåñëa
consciousness our sympathy for other living entities is very limited, but
with Kåñëa consciousness our sympathy for other living
entities is full.
Every living entity is part and
parcel of the Supreme Lord, and thus every living entity is intended to
serve the Supreme Lord by his own constitution. Failing to do this, he
falls down. Çrémad-Bhägavatam [11.5.3] confirms this
as follows:
ya eñäà puruñaà
säkñäd
ätma-prabhavam éçvaram
na bhajanty avajänanti
sthänäd bhrañöäù
patanty adhaù
“Anyone who neglects his duty and does
not render service unto the primeval Lord, who is the source of all living
entities, will certainly fall down from his constitutional position.”
How do we fall down from our constitutional
position? Once again, the example of the finger and the body is appropriate.
If one’s finger becomes diseased and cannot render service to the whole
body, it simply gives one pain. Similarly, any person who is not rendering
service to the Supreme Lord is simply disturbing Him, giving Him pain and
trouble. Therefore, such a person has to suffer, just like a man who is
not abiding by the laws of the state. Such a criminal simply gives pain
to the government, and he’s liable to be punished. He may think, “I’m a
very good man,” but because he’s violating the laws of the state, he’s
simply torturing the government. This is easy to understand.
So, any living entity who is not
serving Kåñëa is causing Him a kind of pain. And that
is sinful—to make Kåñëa feel pain. Just as the government
collects all the painful citizens and keeps them in the prison house—“You
criminals must live here so you can’t disturb people in the open state”—so
God puts all the criminals who have violated His laws, who have simply
given Him pain, into this material world. Sthänäd bhrañöäù
patanty adhaù: They fall down from their constitutional position
in the spiritual world. Again we may cite the example of the finger. If
your finger is extremely painful, the doctor may advise, “Mr. So-and-so,
your finger has to be amputated. Otherwise, it will pollute your whole
body.” Sthänäd bhrañöäù patanty adhaù:
The finger then falls down from its constitutional position as part of
the body.
Having rebelled against the principles
of God consciousness, we have all fallen down to this material world. If
we want to revive our original position, we must again establish ourselves
in the service attitude. That is the perfect cure. Otherwise, we shall
suffer pain, and God will be suffering pain on account of us. We are just
like bad sons of God. If a son is not good, he suffers, and the father
suffers along with the son. Similarly, when we are suffering, God is also
suffering. Therefore, the best thing is to revive our original Kåñëa
consciousness and engage in the service of the Lord.
The word avajänanti used in
the verse cited from Çrémad-Bhägavatam is also used
by Kåñëa in Bhagavad-gétä [9.11]:
avajänanti mäà
müòhä
mänuñéà
tanum äçritam
paraà bhävam ajänanto
mama bhüta-maheçvaram
“Fools deride Me when I descend in the
human form. They do not know My transcendental nature and My supreme dominion
over all that be.” Only the fools and rascals deride the Supreme Personality
of Godhead, Lord Kåñëa. The word müòha means
“fool” or “rascal.” Only a rascal does not care for Kåñëa.
Not knowing that he will suffer for this attitude, he dares neglect Him.
Without knowing the supreme position of the Lord, the rascals worship some
cheap “God.” God has become so cheap that many people say, “I am God, you
are God.” But what is the meaning of the word God? If everyone is God,
then what is the meaning of God?
So, the word avajänanti is
very appropriate. Avajänanti means “neglectful,” and it perfectly
describes the person who says, “What is God? I am God. Why should I serve
God?” This is avajänanti—neglecting God’s real position. A criminal
may have the same attitude toward the government: “Oh, what is the government?
I can do whatever I like. I don’t care for the government.” This is avajänanti.
But even if we say, “I don’t care for the government,” the police department
is there. It will give us pain; it will punish us. Similarly, even if we
don’t care for God, the material nature will punish us with birth, old
age, disease, and death. To get out of this suffering, we must practice
yoga.
The culmination of all kinds of
yoga practice lies in bhakti-yoga. All other yogas are but means to come
to the point of bhakti-yoga. Yoga actually means bhakti-yoga; all other
yogas are progressions toward this destination. From the beginning of karma-yoga
to the end of bhakti-yoga is a long way to self-realization. Karma-yoga,
executed without fruitive desires, is the beginning of this path. (Fruitive
activities, or karma, include sinful activities also. Karma-yoga, however,
does not include sinful activities but only good, pious activities, or
prescribed activities. This is karma-yoga.) Then, when karma-yoga increases
in knowledge and renunciation, the stage is called jïäna-yoga.
When jïäna-yoga increases in meditation on the Supersoul by various
physical processes, and when the mind is on Him, one has reached the stage
called añöäìga-yoga. And when one surpasses añöäìga-yoga
and comes to the point of serving the Supreme Personality of Godhead, Kåñëa,
one has reached bhakti-yoga, the culmination.
Factually, bhakti-yoga is the ultimate
goal, but to analyze bhakti-yoga minutely one has to understand these other,
minor yogas. The yogé who is progressive is therefore on the true
path of eternal auspiciousness, whereas one who sticks to a particular
point and does not make further progress is called by that particular name:
karma-yogé, jïäna-yogé, or añöäìga-yogé.
But if one is fortunate enough to come to the point of bhakti-yoga, it
is to be understood that one has surpassed all the other yogas. Therefore,
to become Kåñëa conscious is the highest stage of yoga,
just as, when we speak of the Himälayas, we refer to the world’s highest
mountains, of which the highest peak, Mount Everest, is considered the
culmination.
If someone practicing jïäna-yoga
thinks that he is finished, that is wrong. He has to make further progress.
For example, suppose you want to go to the highest floor of a building—say,
the hundredth floor—by walking up a staircase. You will pass the thirtieth
floor, the fiftieth floor, the eightieth floor, and so on. But suppose
when you come to the fiftieth or eightieth floor you think, “I have reached
my goal.” Then you are unsuccessful. To reach your destination you have
to go to the hundredth floor. Similarly, all the processes of yoga are
connected, like a staircase, but we shouldn’t be satisfied to stop on the
fiftieth floor or the eightieth floor. We should go to the highest platform,
the hundredth floor—pure Kåñëa consciousness.
Now, if somebody who wants to reach
the hundredth floor is given a chance to use the elevator, within a minute
he will be able to come to the top. Of course, he may still say, “Why should
I take advantage of this elevator? I shall go step by step.” He can do
this, but there is a chance he will not reach the top floor. Similarly,
if one takes help from the “elevator” of bhakti-yoga, within a short time
he can reach the “hundredth floor”—the perfection of yoga, Kåñëa
consciousness.
Kåñëa consciousness
is the direct process. You may go step by step, following all the other
yoga systems, or you may take directly to Kåñëa consciousness.
Lord Caitanya has recommended that in this age, since people are very short-lived,
disturbed, and full of anxiety, they should take up the direct process.
And by His grace, by His causeless mercy, He has given us the chanting
of the Hare Kåñëa mantra, which lifts us immediately
to the platform of bhakti-yoga. It is immediate; we don’t have to wait.
That is the special gift of Lord Caitanya. Therefore Çréla
Rüpa Gosvämé prayed, namo mahä-vadänyäya
kåñëa-prema-pradäya te: “O Lord Caitanya, You are
the most munificent incarnation because You are directly giving love of
Kåñëa.” Ordinarily, to attain love of Kåñëa
one has to pass through so many steps and stages of yoga, but Lord Caitanya
gave it directly. Therefore He is the most munificent incarnation. This
is the position of Lord Caitanya.
The only way to know God in truth
is through bhakti-yoga. In Bhagavad-gétä [18.55] Kåñëa
confirms this. Bhaktyä mäà abhijänäti yävän
yaç cäsmi tattvataù: “Only by devotional service can
one understand the Supreme Personality of Godhead as He is.” The Vedas
confirm that only through bhakti, or devotional service, can one attain
the highest perfectional stage. If one practices other yoga systems, there
must be a mixture of bhakti if one is to make any progress. But because
people don’t have sufficient time to execute all the practices of any other
yoga system, the direct process of bhakti-yoga, unadulterated devotion,
is recommended for this age. Therefore, it is by great fortune that one
comes to Kåñëa consciousness, the path of bhakti-yoga,
and becomes well situated according to the Vedic directions.
The ideal yogé concentrates
his attention on Kåñëa, who is as beautifully colored
as a cloud, whose lotuslike face is as effulgent as the sun, whose dress
is brilliant with jewels, and whose body is flower-garlanded.
Illuminating
all sides is His gorgeous luster, which is called the brahmajyoti. He incarnates
in different forms, such as Räma, Varäha, and Kåñëa,
the Supreme Personality of Godhead. He descends as a human being—as the
son of mother Yaçodä—and He is known as Kåñëa,
Govinda, and Väsudeva. He is the perfect child, husband, friend, and
master, and He is full with all opulences and transcendental qualities.
One who remains fully conscious of these features of the Lord is the highest
yogé. This stage of perfection in yoga can be attained only by bhakti-yoga,
as confirmed in all Vedic literature.
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