Guest guest Posted April 13, 2006 Report Share Posted April 13, 2006 Two cents even though unsolicitated! If you look at traditional literature -- it would seem that it was a well mentored and well-proctored reality back then with teachers and support systems not just available but essential and mandatory, some would proclaim. We really do not have accounts of history in terms of what actually was, few thousands of years ago, though I have the gut feeling that what we consider as tradition was not just thousands of years even older than proclaimed (and debated by a few) but even older, almost as if there was a gene jump at some point. If we knew that that really happened,despite intermittent seemingly total annihilations, then the meaning of 'Shashwat' may dawn more urgently and significantly on our perceptions. To some this may smack of mythology and mythical. Let them enjoy their moment of glory! So, history, really ancient history must be perceived, recreated almost based on no evidence, no documents that survived -- that were not meant to survive perhaps, because the UNIVERSE, the Shashwat Universe seems to believe in reboots! Minor reboots include natural calamities, the latest examples being the Tsunamis but the real and scary *atlantis* of modern times being NEW ORLEANS. One of the biggest annihilative challenges thrown in the face of humanity in recent times. Total wipeout! Will it emerge? Will Atlantis reemerge? For those who may know, Mardi gras is a big tradition of New Orleans and Texas took upon it this year while New Orleans recuperates slowly -- just so that the tradition does not die. I translate that to say: So that human spirit as we know it does not die. And really, that is what tradition is about, dear friends. Not crumbling books, or buildings that are falling to pieces and rituals too in some settings, but the HUMAN SPIRIT! Bravo New Orleanians! Through your misery and personal losses you have demonstrated to us the power of human spirit and that the ATLANTIS EXPERIENCE was not a myth. Atlanteans had much psychic powers and pyramids, some say. We as a world community have lost Atlantis but this world has perhaps retained everything that was magnificient and great and covetable and worthy of retention. True it looks a bit like a war zone, like a disaster zone but it is all there. All that was worthy of living on, though some details may have gone missing. Jyotish aussi! The current reality is, like it or not -- coffee/tea arriving or not in bed -- not structured and mentors and teachers though galore and arriving in baker's dozen (13 to a dozen for anyone not familiar with that idiom) are suspect, for the most part. This is not my judgment but just ask around privately. Lot of people shy away from stating things like that publicly. Those that do and question get beaten up! Even history and historical myths and glib, undocumented, unsubstantiated claims and pronouncements about history must be questioned and challenged. A few individuals a few years were seriously questioning about the aryan-dravidian 'history' that most of us were taught and take for granted, taught by europeans who had the "point of power" in terms of how history was written and propagated in the last few hundred years (at least in India) and even how MAPS were made worldwide and regions depicted MISPROPORTIONATELY (the different projections, for instance, mercator and so on). I am not a scholar in these matters but know enough and am alert enough to raise doubts so that the wary and scholars may wake up, unless they are not already. I am really doing their job -- why they are so complacent? There seem to be too many of them around and should have really made some changes and stirred the place up? Unless they all agree and endorse that History as we were taught in schools from say 1930 onwards, at least in India is all hunky dory and endorsed by the cogniscenti of India! So Aryans came from Asia minor on horsebacks and drove the dravidians down to the south and end of story. I am from the east, genetically, in this lifetime anyway, but somehow this story sounds too simplistic -- even given nothing as basic as jyotish. And if one studies the other Aryan scriptures, the history somehow seems even less plausible. Creators of Vedas, Puranas and Samhitas, mere horseback riders trying to chase the darker races south, just for the heck of it? Seems more like the Europeans invading the native americans in their land, overthrowing and sequestering their culture and mostly 'oral tradition' into remote reserves! Or Europeans doing the same to natives of Africa. I do not wish to start a riot or more importantly hurt any european brothers and sisters on this forum but just to bring out the simplistic and almost unbelievable similarity of such assumptions that some make in the name of tradition. This is a general remark and not necessarily something I read on this forum, so please keep your danders down, friends and attack the premise and not the MESSENGER, yet again! RR , "jyotish" <jyotish.bh wrote: > > Respected Sir > > with due respects and apologies, > > Should we really have same chapters of gita implemented same way though the kurukshetra and the rules of game stand much different? > > Need we not ask for the benefits after we put in years of sincere efforts in the job/business? > or leave it for our rivals/colleagues? > > Will our next generation of IT ..listen to us? > > do we have today any great gurus/Sai Shirdi/Mahapurush that we offer all our crop and we are sure we get back anything. > WE need more acclimatised rules and regulations and still gain spiritually? > > regards > Rps > > - > surya > > Wednesday, April 12, 2006 7:10 PM > Re: Bonds hindering spiritual progress > > > dear sir > > The scriptures say that your sacrifice of money is highest. > > 1) In the very beginning itself (second Adhyaya), Gita says that the > fruit of the work must be sacrificed (Karmajam Buddhi Yuktahi Phalam > Tyaktva Maneeshinah). This means that realized scholars sacrifice > the fruit of the work. Gita keeps sacrifice of the fruit of the work > on the top most level. Gita says `Jnanat dhyanam visishyate, Dhyanat > Karma Phala Tyagah'i.e., Bhakti (devotion) is better than Jnana > (knowledge) and sacrificing the fruit of your work (money) is better > than Bakthi. > > 2) Gita says `Sarva karma Phala tyagam', `prahuh tyagam > vichakshanah' i.e., if you can give the fruit of the entire work to > the Lord, then that is real sacrifice. > > 3)`Na karmana, Na prajaya, Dhanena, tyage naike Amritatvam Aanasuh' > i.e., you cannot attain God by selfish work or the children. You > can attain God only by sacrificing your money for God's work. > > 4)The first words of the first Upanishath (Easavaasyam) says, `Tena > tyaktena Bhunjeedah' `Ma gradha ha kasyasvit Dhanam' i.e., this > entire world is the money of the Lord. Take whatever you require > from His wealth; don't take extra which is not permitted by the > God. If you have taken, you are a thief. Return it back to the > Lord. > > 5) Veda says `Samvidha' `Shraddhayaa' `Hriya' `Bhiya dheyam', i.e., > return the extra to the Lord in human form after recognizing Him > through His Jnana. Wait patiently till you recognize the Lord in > human form. When you are donating your money to Him (actually you > are giving Him His own money) you should give it with fear and feel > shy. > > 6) In Yoga Vasistha the Guru Vasista says to Rama (Dhanamarjaya) > i.e., bring money and offer it to me as Guru Dakshina before I can > teach you the Jnana. > > Shirdi Sai used to ask Guru Dakshina from everybody to teach this > important sacrifice. He criticized a merchant who came for Brahma > Jnana but was not giving even Rs.5/- from his pocket. Mr. Patil, a > farmer used to donate the entire yearly crop to Baba and took back > whatever Baba gave back to him. > > at the lotus feet of shri datta swami > surya > www.universal-spirituality.org > > > vattem krishnan <bursar_99@> wrote: > > Sir, > > since money is the root of this whole `samsara'. This may be a > narrow approach if we consider 'karmabhoomi" as janmabhoomi.All > things have been programmed in shrishti(creation).what matter is > what we choose and the spirit involved in the choice. > > hence the sarcasm"Dhanam moolam idam jagat".Ther are many people > (can be said jyotish way)who may not be having the same philosophy > and know the eluding aspects of shristi and reconcile > > krishnan > SURRENDER JOYFULLY TO THE WILL OF THE ULTIMATE DIVINITY AND RELISH THE TASTE OF ABSOLUTE BLISS. > > > > > > -- ---------- > > > a.. Visit your group "" on the web. > > b.. > > > c.. Terms of Service. > > > -- ---------- > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 13, 2006 Report Share Posted April 13, 2006 The past has ceased to exist and only the recorded version od the events past survives. This past, is however, not immutable and does not present the same appearance always and everywhere.. It looks different at different times and places, and either an increase or a decrease in our information changes the picture. Our view of the relations of past events to each other, of their relative importance, and of their significance, changes constantly in consequence of the constant change of the fugitive present. History is what the historian sees. The same past viewed by the same person in different periods is different. Yet, the more things change or appear to change, they remain the same. This is the lesson of jyotish to me.The reboots are the beginning of a subsequent cycle of time. I will hesitate to use the word ''new '' cycle because the cycle is not really new, it is new only to us who define time in terms of past, present and future. The chronological time is maybe just a fraction of time! regards rishi --- crystal pages <jyotish_vani wrote: > Two cents even though unsolicitated! > > If you look at traditional literature -- it would > seem that it was a > well mentored and well-proctored reality back then > with teachers and > support systems not just available but essential and > mandatory, some > would proclaim. > > We really do not have accounts of history in terms > of what actually > was, few thousands of years ago, though I have the > gut feeling that > what we consider as tradition was not just thousands > of years even > older than proclaimed (and debated by a few) but > even older, almost > as if there was a gene jump at some point. If we > knew that that > really happened,despite intermittent seemingly total > annihilations, > then the meaning of 'Shashwat' may dawn more > urgently and > significantly on our perceptions. To some this may > smack of mythology > and mythical. Let them enjoy their moment of glory! > > So, history, really ancient history must be > perceived, recreated > almost based on no evidence, no documents that > survived -- that were > not meant to survive perhaps, because the UNIVERSE, > the Shashwat > Universe seems to believe in reboots! Minor reboots > include natural > calamities, the latest examples being the Tsunamis > but the real and > scary *atlantis* of modern times being NEW ORLEANS. > One of the > biggest annihilative challenges thrown in the face > of humanity in > recent times. Total wipeout! Will it emerge? Will > Atlantis reemerge? > For those who may know, Mardi gras is a big > tradition of New Orleans > and Texas took upon it this year while New Orleans > recuperates > slowly -- just so that the tradition does not die. I > translate that > to say: So that human spirit as we know it does not > die. And really, > that is what tradition is about, dear friends. Not > crumbling books, > or buildings that are falling to pieces and rituals > too in some > settings, but the HUMAN SPIRIT! Bravo New > Orleanians! Through your > misery and personal losses you have demonstrated to > us the power of > human spirit and that the ATLANTIS EXPERIENCE was > not a myth. > > Atlanteans had much psychic powers and pyramids, > some say. We as a > world community have lost Atlantis but this world > has perhaps > retained everything that was magnificient and great > and covetable and > worthy of retention. True it looks a bit like a war > zone, like a > disaster zone but it is all there. All that was > worthy of living on, > though some details may have gone missing. Jyotish > aussi! > > The current reality is, like it or not -- coffee/tea > arriving or not > in bed -- not structured and mentors and teachers > though galore and > arriving in baker's dozen (13 to a dozen for anyone > not familiar with > that idiom) are suspect, for the most part. This is > not my judgment > but just ask around privately. Lot of people shy > away from stating > things like that publicly. Those that do and > question get beaten up! > > Even history and historical myths and glib, > undocumented, > unsubstantiated claims and pronouncements about > history must be > questioned and challenged. A few individuals a few > years were > seriously questioning about the aryan-dravidian > 'history' that most > of us were taught and take for granted, taught by > europeans who had > the "point of power" in terms of how history was > written and > propagated in the last few hundred years (at least > in India) and even > how MAPS were made worldwide and regions depicted > MISPROPORTIONATELY > (the different projections, for instance, mercator > and so on). > > I am not a scholar in these matters but know enough > and am alert > enough to raise doubts so that the wary and scholars > may wake up, > unless they are not already. I am really doing their > job -- why they > are so complacent? There seem to be too many of them > around and > should have really made some changes and stirred the > place up? > > Unless they all agree and endorse that History as we > were taught in > schools from say 1930 onwards, at least in India is > all hunky dory > and endorsed by the cogniscenti of India! So Aryans > came from Asia > minor on horsebacks and drove the dravidians down to > the south and > end of story. > > I am from the east, genetically, in this lifetime > anyway, but somehow > this story sounds too simplistic -- even given > nothing as basic as > jyotish. And if one studies the other Aryan > scriptures, the history > somehow seems even less plausible. Creators of > Vedas, Puranas and > Samhitas, mere horseback riders trying to chase the > darker races > south, just for the heck of it? > > Seems more like the Europeans invading the native > americans in their > land, overthrowing and sequestering their culture > and mostly 'oral > tradition' into remote reserves! Or Europeans doing > the same to > natives of Africa. > > I do not wish to start a riot or more importantly > hurt any european > brothers and sisters on this forum but just to bring > out the > simplistic and almost unbelievable similarity of > such assumptions > that some make in the name of tradition. This is a > general remark and > not necessarily something I read on this forum, so > please keep your > danders down, friends and attack the premise and not > the MESSENGER, > yet again! > > RR > > > > , "jyotish" > <jyotish.bh > wrote: > > > > Respected Sir > > > > with due respects and apologies, > > > > Should we really have same chapters of gita > implemented same way > though the kurukshetra and the rules of game stand > much different? > > > > Need we not ask for the benefits after we put in > years of sincere > efforts in the job/business? > > or leave it for our rivals/colleagues? > > > > Will our next generation of IT ..listen to us? > > > > do we have today any great gurus/Sai > Shirdi/Mahapurush that we > offer all our crop and we are sure we get back > anything. > > WE need more acclimatised rules and regulations > and still gain > spiritually? > > > > regards > > Rps > > > > - > > surya > > > === message truncated === Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 13, 2006 Report Share Posted April 13, 2006 Dear Friends, Seeking spirtuality by moving with mobiles,in limousine cars and dwelling house where seasons have no meaning for a modernite. This recalls me to recollect Rajaneesh acclaimed osho philosophy.people may agree that this philosophy has meaning and convictions brought out by seers by making several sacrifices.we all know in those old and golden(?)people have limited avocations compared to the modernite who needs robbot controlled places.Throgh click of mouse we wish to link to the past and yet explore value scinces which were more theoritical in orientation and less acceptance statistically.Probably East known for their orientation to explore nature through observations and offering complex formulas through vedic mathematics have partially succeeded in enticing even the modern man to slip into past histories and attempt in his own way to find meaning in these days of changed habitats. what really striked the ambition of modern man and race through mechanical life is memorise past histories and find values of those theories.There are less number populations who were not attached God's feeling and have reverence to vedic preachings.is it that even today the age old convictions have significance and difficult to negate them.is it that modern man finds more botherations in electronic controlled atmosphere.Difficult however to find a logical solutions.The only plausible answer is however a modern man finds his tagged to his past actions and acclaim good or bad experiences as prarabdha and willing to proceed and make strides. we may disagree to live in through the past teachings however nascent they are,prepare ourselves to take a leaf out of them. Today various chapters of geeta are not difficult to understand as the availabilty of these preaching has become extensive through the advent of electronic media.what matters however has to bother atleast some of us is self orientation in choosing what is ideal for him only and ignore all other aspect of social animal. here i may take initiative and quote an incident. I met prof D.P.Tripathi a sanskrit scholar involved in teaching and counselling through jyotish has to face a more or less a modernite.when i understand modernite let me also clarify that he is one who can not forsake comforts and yet offering from a distance his obeissence to idols consecrated in temples.Intends to be be identified through arya samaj(may not worship different forms of Gods and idols) and seeks way to come out of the mess in which he was inolved either through his family or through his profession.Denies for elaboarate poojas and sanskars as he belongs to different convictions and wants pariharas to come out of the rut. My friend though he does not belong to the generation of siddhantis(capable of interrpreting classicals and advise) yet advocates pariharas to overcome bad situations. Accordingly he fixed days to perform shanti poojas and men to recite mantras suitably for the modernite.My friend more concerned with brevity and feeling that any money spent on these pariharas is to be limited actual cost of materials but not willing to offer any gurudaksina for the priests willing to toil and perform remedies.This divergence is ambiguous as he believes that the bad days are possible to overcome through mantras and wants to be performed sincerely "just so that the tradition does not die" we chase the past whether it is madri or something else in New orleans ot some where. This clinging to past is not accidental as it is well orchestrted effort to find himself more comfortable to life in metros. Thus programmable present times carry the meaning as cited by RRJI"this world has perhaps retained everything that was magnificient and great and covetable and worthy of retention.so waht matters most is how we can be selective to choose what really meets our needs but not the entire conventional wisdom. jyotishies of modern times have to wake up and not to teach BHPS of varahamihira alone but make attempt through eccletical approach of futuristic studies. So karma siddhanta whether taught thorugh "Geeta" or old testments have real control and influence on today's metrosexual. Finally is it spirtulism has it's own place in society but has also to be programmed through e-methods.This progress of spirtualish though not holistic has to deliver goods to benifit the modern man. Are we ambiguous to advocate "Trisanku" world?what is it we want to convey when bonds do not hinder spirtual progress>is this new psalm of life which was not known to wordsworth of earlier genaration krishnan crystal pages <jyotish_vani wrote: Two cents even though unsolicitated! If you look at traditional literature -- it would seem that it was a well mentored and well-proctored reality back then with teachers and support systems not just available but essential and mandatory, some would proclaim. We really do not have accounts of history in terms of what actually was, few thousands of years ago, though I have the gut feeling that what we consider as tradition was not just thousands of years even older than proclaimed (and debated by a few) but even older, almost as if there was a gene jump at some point. If we knew that that really happened,despite intermittent seemingly total annihilations, then the meaning of 'Shashwat' may dawn more urgently and significantly on our perceptions. To some this may smack of mythology and mythical. Let them enjoy their moment of glory! So, history, really ancient history must be perceived, recreated almost based on no evidence, no documents that survived -- that were not meant to survive perhaps, because the UNIVERSE, the Shashwat Universe seems to believe in reboots! Minor reboots include natural calamities, the latest examples being the Tsunamis but the real and scary *atlantis* of modern times being NEW ORLEANS. One of the biggest annihilative challenges thrown in the face of humanity in recent times. Total wipeout! Will it emerge? Will Atlantis reemerge? For those who may know, Mardi gras is a big tradition of New Orleans and Texas took upon it this year while New Orleans recuperates slowly -- just so that the tradition does not die. I translate that to say: So that human spirit as we know it does not die. And really, that is what tradition is about, dear friends. Not crumbling books, or buildings that are falling to pieces and rituals too in some settings, but the HUMAN SPIRIT! Bravo New Orleanians! Through your misery and personal losses you have demonstrated to us the power of human spirit and that the ATLANTIS EXPERIENCE was not a myth. Atlanteans had much psychic powers and pyramids, some say. We as a world community have lost Atlantis but this world has perhaps retained everything that was magnificient and great and covetable and worthy of retention. True it looks a bit like a war zone, like a disaster zone but it is all there. All that was worthy of living on, though some details may have gone missing. Jyotish aussi! The current reality is, like it or not -- coffee/tea arriving or not in bed -- not structured and mentors and teachers though galore and arriving in baker's dozen (13 to a dozen for anyone not familiar with that idiom) are suspect, for the most part. This is not my judgment but just ask around privately. Lot of people shy away from stating things like that publicly. Those that do and question get beaten up! Even history and historical myths and glib, undocumented, unsubstantiated claims and pronouncements about history must be questioned and challenged. A few individuals a few years were seriously questioning about the aryan-dravidian 'history' that most of us were taught and take for granted, taught by europeans who had the "point of power" in terms of how history was written and propagated in the last few hundred years (at least in India) and even how MAPS were made worldwide and regions depicted MISPROPORTIONATELY (the different projections, for instance, mercator and so on). I am not a scholar in these matters but know enough and am alert enough to raise doubts so that the wary and scholars may wake up, unless they are not already. I am really doing their job -- why they are so complacent? There seem to be too many of them around and should have really made some changes and stirred the place up? Unless they all agree and endorse that History as we were taught in schools from say 1930 onwards, at least in India is all hunky dory and endorsed by the cogniscenti of India! So Aryans came from Asia minor on horsebacks and drove the dravidians down to the south and end of story. I am from the east, genetically, in this lifetime anyway, but somehow this story sounds too simplistic -- even given nothing as basic as jyotish. And if one studies the other Aryan scriptures, the history somehow seems even less plausible. Creators of Vedas, Puranas and Samhitas, mere horseback riders trying to chase the darker races south, just for the heck of it? Seems more like the Europeans invading the native americans in their land, overthrowing and sequestering their culture and mostly 'oral tradition' into remote reserves! Or Europeans doing the same to natives of Africa. I do not wish to start a riot or more importantly hurt any european brothers and sisters on this forum but just to bring out the simplistic and almost unbelievable similarity of such assumptions that some make in the name of tradition. This is a general remark and not necessarily something I read on this forum, so please keep your danders down, friends and attack the premise and not the MESSENGER, yet again! RR , "jyotish" <jyotish.bh wrote: > > Respected Sir > > with due respects and apologies, > > Should we really have same chapters of gita implemented same way though the kurukshetra and the rules of game stand much different? > > Need we not ask for the benefits after we put in years of sincere efforts in the job/business? > or leave it for our rivals/colleagues? > > Will our next generation of IT ..listen to us? > > do we have today any great gurus/Sai Shirdi/Mahapurush that we offer all our crop and we are sure we get back anything. > WE need more acclimatised rules and regulations and still gain spiritually? > > regards > Rps > > - > surya > > Wednesday, April 12, 2006 7:10 PM > Re: Bonds hindering spiritual progress > > > dear sir > > The scriptures say that your sacrifice of money is highest. > > 1) In the very beginning itself (second Adhyaya), Gita says that the > fruit of the work must be sacrificed (Karmajam Buddhi Yuktahi Phalam > Tyaktva Maneeshinah). This means that realized scholars sacrifice > the fruit of the work. Gita keeps sacrifice of the fruit of the work > on the top most level. Gita says `Jnanat dhyanam visishyate, Dhyanat > Karma Phala Tyagah'i.e., Bhakti (devotion) is better than Jnana > (knowledge) and sacrificing the fruit of your work (money) is better > than Bakthi. > > 2) Gita says `Sarva karma Phala tyagam', `prahuh tyagam > vichakshanah' i.e., if you can give the fruit of the entire work to > the Lord, then that is real sacrifice. > > 3)`Na karmana, Na prajaya, Dhanena, tyage naike Amritatvam Aanasuh' > i.e., you cannot attain God by selfish work or the children. You > can attain God only by sacrificing your money for God's work. > > 4)The first words of the first Upanishath (Easavaasyam) says, `Tena > tyaktena Bhunjeedah' `Ma gradha ha kasyasvit Dhanam' i.e., this > entire world is the money of the Lord. Take whatever you require > from His wealth; don't take extra which is not permitted by the > God. If you have taken, you are a thief. Return it back to the > Lord. > > 5) Veda says `Samvidha' `Shraddhayaa' `Hriya' `Bhiya dheyam', i.e., > return the extra to the Lord in human form after recognizing Him > through His Jnana. Wait patiently till you recognize the Lord in > human form. When you are donating your money to Him (actually you > are giving Him His own money) you should give it with fear and feel > shy. > > 6) In Yoga Vasistha the Guru Vasista says to Rama (Dhanamarjaya) > i.e., bring money and offer it to me as Guru Dakshina before I can > teach you the Jnana. > > Shirdi Sai used to ask Guru Dakshina from everybody to teach this > important sacrifice. He criticized a merchant who came for Brahma > Jnana but was not giving even Rs.5/- from his pocket. Mr. Patil, a > farmer used to donate the entire yearly crop to Baba and took back > whatever Baba gave back to him. > > at the lotus feet of shri datta swami > surya > www.universal-spirituality.org > > > vattem krishnan <bursar_99@> wrote: > > Sir, > > since money is the root of this whole `samsara'. This may be a > narrow approach if we consider 'karmabhoomi" as janmabhoomi.All > things have been programmed in shrishti(creation).what matter is > what we choose and the spirit involved in the choice. > > hence the sarcasm"Dhanam moolam idam jagat".Ther are many people > (can be said jyotish way)who may not be having the same philosophy > and know the eluding aspects of shristi and reconcile > > krishnan > SURRENDER JOYFULLY TO THE WILL OF THE ULTIMATE DIVINITY AND RELISH THE TASTE OF ABSOLUTE BLISS. > > > > > > -- ---------- > > > a.. Visit your group "" on the web. > > b.. > > > c.. Terms of Service. > > > -- ---------- > > > > > SURRENDER JOYFULLY TO THE WILL OF THE ULTIMATE DIVINITY AND RELISH THE TASTE OF ABSOLUTE BLISS. Vedic astrology Astrology chart Astrology software Visit your group "" on the web. Messenger with Voice. Make PC-to-Phone Calls to the US (and 30+ countries) for 2¢/min or less. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 13, 2006 Report Share Posted April 13, 2006 Rishi, one point if I may -- Past never ceases to exist as long it is in one's memory! Human beings, as opposed to other animals perhaps, have been blessed (drused?) with the faculty of memory that is acute and detailed. Perhaps that is the key, the first step in the journey of thousand steps! RR , rishi shukla <rishi_2000in wrote: > > The past has ceased to exist and only the recorded > version od the events past survives. This past, is > however, not immutable and does not present the same > appearance always and everywhere.. It looks different > at different times and places, and either an increase > or a decrease in our information changes the picture. > Our view of the relations of past events to each > other, of their relative importance, and of their > significance, changes constantly in consequence of the > constant change of the fugitive present. > History is what the historian sees. The same past > viewed by the same person in different periods is > different. > Yet, the more things change or appear to change, they > remain the same. This is the lesson of jyotish to > me.The reboots are the beginning of a subsequent cycle > of time. I will hesitate to use the word ''new '' > cycle because the cycle is not really new, it is new > only to us who define time in terms of past, present > and future. > The chronological time is maybe just a fraction of > time! > regards > > rishi > > --- crystal pages <jyotish_vani wrote: > > > Two cents even though unsolicitated! > > > > If you look at traditional literature -- it would > > seem that it was a > > well mentored and well-proctored reality back then > > with teachers and > > support systems not just available but essential and > > mandatory, some > > would proclaim. > > > > We really do not have accounts of history in terms > > of what actually > > was, few thousands of years ago, though I have the > > gut feeling that > > what we consider as tradition was not just thousands > > of years even > > older than proclaimed (and debated by a few) but > > even older, almost > > as if there was a gene jump at some point. If we > > knew that that > > really happened,despite intermittent seemingly total > > annihilations, > > then the meaning of 'Shashwat' may dawn more > > urgently and > > significantly on our perceptions. To some this may > > smack of mythology > > and mythical. Let them enjoy their moment of glory! > > > > So, history, really ancient history must be > > perceived, recreated > > almost based on no evidence, no documents that > > survived -- that were > > not meant to survive perhaps, because the UNIVERSE, > > the Shashwat > > Universe seems to believe in reboots! Minor reboots > > include natural > > calamities, the latest examples being the Tsunamis > > but the real and > > scary *atlantis* of modern times being NEW ORLEANS. > > One of the > > biggest annihilative challenges thrown in the face > > of humanity in > > recent times. Total wipeout! Will it emerge? Will > > Atlantis reemerge? > > For those who may know, Mardi gras is a big > > tradition of New Orleans > > and Texas took upon it this year while New Orleans > > recuperates > > slowly -- just so that the tradition does not die. I > > translate that > > to say: So that human spirit as we know it does not > > die. And really, > > that is what tradition is about, dear friends. Not > > crumbling books, > > or buildings that are falling to pieces and rituals > > too in some > > settings, but the HUMAN SPIRIT! Bravo New > > Orleanians! Through your > > misery and personal losses you have demonstrated to > > us the power of > > human spirit and that the ATLANTIS EXPERIENCE was > > not a myth. > > > > Atlanteans had much psychic powers and pyramids, > > some say. We as a > > world community have lost Atlantis but this world > > has perhaps > > retained everything that was magnificient and great > > and covetable and > > worthy of retention. True it looks a bit like a war > > zone, like a > > disaster zone but it is all there. All that was > > worthy of living on, > > though some details may have gone missing. Jyotish > > aussi! > > > > The current reality is, like it or not -- coffee/tea > > arriving or not > > in bed -- not structured and mentors and teachers > > though galore and > > arriving in baker's dozen (13 to a dozen for anyone > > not familiar with > > that idiom) are suspect, for the most part. This is > > not my judgment > > but just ask around privately. Lot of people shy > > away from stating > > things like that publicly. Those that do and > > question get beaten up! > > > > Even history and historical myths and glib, > > undocumented, > > unsubstantiated claims and pronouncements about > > history must be > > questioned and challenged. A few individuals a few > > years were > > seriously questioning about the aryan-dravidian > > 'history' that most > > of us were taught and take for granted, taught by > > europeans who had > > the "point of power" in terms of how history was > > written and > > propagated in the last few hundred years (at least > > in India) and even > > how MAPS were made worldwide and regions depicted > > MISPROPORTIONATELY > > (the different projections, for instance, mercator > > and so on). > > > > I am not a scholar in these matters but know enough > > and am alert > > enough to raise doubts so that the wary and scholars > > may wake up, > > unless they are not already. I am really doing their > > job -- why they > > are so complacent? There seem to be too many of them > > around and > > should have really made some changes and stirred the > > place up? > > > > Unless they all agree and endorse that History as we > > were taught in > > schools from say 1930 onwards, at least in India is > > all hunky dory > > and endorsed by the cogniscenti of India! So Aryans > > came from Asia > > minor on horsebacks and drove the dravidians down to > > the south and > > end of story. > > > > I am from the east, genetically, in this lifetime > > anyway, but somehow > > this story sounds too simplistic -- even given > > nothing as basic as > > jyotish. And if one studies the other Aryan > > scriptures, the history > > somehow seems even less plausible. Creators of > > Vedas, Puranas and > > Samhitas, mere horseback riders trying to chase the > > darker races > > south, just for the heck of it? > > > > Seems more like the Europeans invading the native > > americans in their > > land, overthrowing and sequestering their culture > > and mostly 'oral > > tradition' into remote reserves! Or Europeans doing > > the same to > > natives of Africa. > > > > I do not wish to start a riot or more importantly > > hurt any european > > brothers and sisters on this forum but just to bring > > out the > > simplistic and almost unbelievable similarity of > > such assumptions > > that some make in the name of tradition. This is a > > general remark and > > not necessarily something I read on this forum, so > > please keep your > > danders down, friends and attack the premise and not > > the MESSENGER, > > yet again! > > > > RR > > > > > > > > , "jyotish" > > <jyotish.bh@> > > wrote: > > > > > > Respected Sir > > > > > > with due respects and apologies, > > > > > > Should we really have same chapters of gita > > implemented same way > > though the kurukshetra and the rules of game stand > > much different? > > > > > > Need we not ask for the benefits after we put in > > years of sincere > > efforts in the job/business? > > > or leave it for our rivals/colleagues? > > > > > > Will our next generation of IT ..listen to us? > > > > > > do we have today any great gurus/Sai > > Shirdi/Mahapurush that we > > offer all our crop and we are sure we get back > > anything. > > > WE need more acclimatised rules and regulations > > and still gain > > spiritually? > > > > > > regards > > > Rps > > > > > > - > > > surya > > > > > > === message truncated === > > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 13, 2006 Report Share Posted April 13, 2006 dear friends relating to all the messages on this thread, i share some thoughts mentioned in another group below: light is knowledge and darkness is ignorance. knowledge as per lexicon means "to know". in our vedic concept, knowledge means to seek and know the truth and reality. knowing truth ultimately make you realised when you come to know what is reality. when you got by rote what is written in your school books that rama killed ten headed ravana, chandra married twenty seven stars and all mythical stories, why even mythical stories even medieval stories of kings, dynasties, wars etc, you just cram what was written, at the best refer the oldest book written on that subject (only to check what you read already has any reference or basis and no way it is knowing the truth) and write the same and lo, you pass the exam and you are given a certificate of excellence in that subject. did you verify whether they are true or not, logically questioned whether they are comprehensible at all in the first place. no because you are interested only in passing the exam and get a certificate. this is what all humans do till they are realised. a person having quest for knowledge or knowing more keeps querying till he reaches the truth and find the reality, which is loosely called "realisation". once a person REALISES what the truth is and what the reality is, that person seeks no more, asks no more and wants no more, for he realised the truth. Gita says, for a reliased person, vedas are meaningless. It means not belittling the vedas but if a person achieves "realisation" stauts, that person needs to know no more or positively put the realised person knew what all is written in vedas and much more. i positively hope that one should continue to throw more light on "truth" and "reality" instead of injunctions on scriptures. however, when we deal with unrealised people, craving more material needs and wanting us to do or advise something as to how to get these material goodies more, we advise this or that remedy. this reminds me of an unrealised person getting the darshan of the god and when asked to seek a boon, he asks that whatever he touches shall become gold. lo, he touches his wife and children they become gold. he touches food and it becomes gold. then he realises the realiity and become a realised person. the logic behind god granting whatever the sadhaka asks is simple. you get what you want till you are realised. you would remain at the receiving end till you are realised. once you are realised, you are not dependant on any one or any thing and are only in the giving end. sarvam paravasam dukham, sarvam atma vasam sukham e tad vidyaat samasena lakshanam sukha dukhayo. this is how sukham and dukham are defined. may jupiter's light shine on all. with best wishes arjun , vattem krishnan <bursar_99 wrote: > > Dear Friends, > Seeking spirtuality by moving with mobiles,in limousine cars and dwelling house where seasons have no meaning for a modernite. > This recalls me to recollect Rajaneesh acclaimed osho philosophy.people may agree that this philosophy has meaning and convictions brought out by seers by making several sacrifices.we all know in those old and golden(?)people have limited avocations compared to the modernite who needs robbot controlled places.Throgh click of mouse we wish to link to the past and yet explore value scinces which were more theoritical in orientation and less acceptance statistically.Probably East known for their orientation to explore nature through observations and offering complex formulas through vedic mathematics have partially succeeded in enticing even the modern man to slip into past histories and attempt in his own way to find meaning in these days of changed habitats. > what really striked the ambition of modern man and race through mechanical life is memorise past histories and find values of those theories.There are less number populations who were not attached God's feeling and have reverence to vedic preachings.is it that even today the age old convictions have significance and difficult to negate them.is it that modern man finds more botherations in electronic controlled atmosphere.Difficult however to find a logical solutions.The only plausible answer is however a modern man finds his tagged to his past actions and acclaim good or bad experiences as prarabdha and willing to proceed and make strides. > we may disagree to live in through the past teachings however nascent they are,prepare ourselves to take a leaf out of them. > Today various chapters of geeta are not difficult to understand as the availabilty of these preaching has become extensive through the advent of electronic media.what matters however has to bother atleast some of us is self orientation in choosing what is ideal for him only and ignore all other aspect of social animal. > here i may take initiative and quote an incident. > I met prof D.P.Tripathi a sanskrit scholar involved in teaching and counselling through jyotish has to face a more or less a modernite.when i understand modernite let me also clarify that he is one who can not forsake comforts and yet offering from a distance his obeissence to idols consecrated in temples.Intends to be be identified through arya samaj(may not worship different forms of Gods and idols) and seeks way to come out of the mess in which he was inolved either through his family or through his profession.Denies for elaboarate poojas and sanskars as he belongs to different convictions and wants pariharas to come out of the rut. > My friend though he does not belong to the generation of siddhantis(capable of interrpreting classicals and advise) yet advocates pariharas to overcome bad situations. > Accordingly he fixed days to perform shanti poojas and men to recite mantras suitably for the modernite.My friend more concerned with brevity and feeling that any money spent on these pariharas is to be limited actual cost of materials but not willing to offer any gurudaksina for the priests willing to toil and perform remedies.This divergence is ambiguous as he believes that the bad days are possible to overcome through mantras and wants to be performed sincerely > "just so that the tradition does not die" we chase the past whether it is madri or something else in New orleans ot some where. > This clinging to past is not accidental as it is well orchestrted effort to find himself more comfortable to life in metros. > Thus programmable present times carry the meaning as cited by RRJI"this world has perhaps retained everything that was magnificient and great and covetable and worthy of retention.so waht matters most is how we can be selective to choose what really meets our needs but not the entire conventional wisdom. > jyotishies of modern times have to wake up and not to teach BHPS of varahamihira alone but make attempt through eccletical approach of futuristic studies. > So karma siddhanta whether taught thorugh "Geeta" or old testments have real control and influence on today's metrosexual. > Finally is it spirtulism has it's own place in society but has also to be programmed through e-methods.This progress of spirtualish though not holistic has to deliver goods to benifit the modern man. > Are we ambiguous to advocate "Trisanku" world?what is it we want to convey when bonds do not hinder spirtual progress>is this new psalm of life which was not known to wordsworth of earlier genaration > krishnan > > crystal pages <jyotish_vani wrote: > Two cents even though unsolicitated! > > If you look at traditional literature -- it would seem that it was a > well mentored and well-proctored reality back then with teachers and > support systems not just available but essential and mandatory, some > would proclaim. > > We really do not have accounts of history in terms of what actually > was, few thousands of years ago, though I have the gut feeling that > what we consider as tradition was not just thousands of years even > older than proclaimed (and debated by a few) but even older, almost > as if there was a gene jump at some point. If we knew that that > really happened,despite intermittent seemingly total annihilations, > then the meaning of 'Shashwat' may dawn more urgently and > significantly on our perceptions. To some this may smack of mythology > and mythical. Let them enjoy their moment of glory! > > So, history, really ancient history must be perceived, recreated > almost based on no evidence, no documents that survived -- that were > not meant to survive perhaps, because the UNIVERSE, the Shashwat > Universe seems to believe in reboots! Minor reboots include natural > calamities, the latest examples being the Tsunamis but the real and > scary *atlantis* of modern times being NEW ORLEANS. One of the > biggest annihilative challenges thrown in the face of humanity in > recent times. Total wipeout! Will it emerge? Will Atlantis reemerge? > For those who may know, Mardi gras is a big tradition of New Orleans > and Texas took upon it this year while New Orleans recuperates > slowly -- just so that the tradition does not die. I translate that > to say: So that human spirit as we know it does not die. And really, > that is what tradition is about, dear friends. Not crumbling books, > or buildings that are falling to pieces and rituals too in some > settings, but the HUMAN SPIRIT! Bravo New Orleanians! Through your > misery and personal losses you have demonstrated to us the power of > human spirit and that the ATLANTIS EXPERIENCE was not a myth. > > Atlanteans had much psychic powers and pyramids, some say. We as a > world community have lost Atlantis but this world has perhaps > retained everything that was magnificient and great and covetable and > worthy of retention. True it looks a bit like a war zone, like a > disaster zone but it is all there. All that was worthy of living on, > though some details may have gone missing. Jyotish aussi! > > The current reality is, like it or not -- coffee/tea arriving or not > in bed -- not structured and mentors and teachers though galore and > arriving in baker's dozen (13 to a dozen for anyone not familiar with > that idiom) are suspect, for the most part. This is not my judgment > but just ask around privately. Lot of people shy away from stating > things like that publicly. Those that do and question get beaten up! > > Even history and historical myths and glib, undocumented, > unsubstantiated claims and pronouncements about history must be > questioned and challenged. A few individuals a few years were > seriously questioning about the aryan-dravidian 'history' that most > of us were taught and take for granted, taught by europeans who had > the "point of power" in terms of how history was written and > propagated in the last few hundred years (at least in India) and even > how MAPS were made worldwide and regions depicted MISPROPORTIONATELY > (the different projections, for instance, mercator and so on). > > I am not a scholar in these matters but know enough and am alert > enough to raise doubts so that the wary and scholars may wake up, > unless they are not already. I am really doing their job -- why they > are so complacent? There seem to be too many of them around and > should have really made some changes and stirred the place up? > > Unless they all agree and endorse that History as we were taught in > schools from say 1930 onwards, at least in India is all hunky dory > and endorsed by the cogniscenti of India! So Aryans came from Asia > minor on horsebacks and drove the dravidians down to the south and > end of story. > > I am from the east, genetically, in this lifetime anyway, but somehow > this story sounds too simplistic -- even given nothing as basic as > jyotish. And if one studies the other Aryan scriptures, the history > somehow seems even less plausible. Creators of Vedas, Puranas and > Samhitas, mere horseback riders trying to chase the darker races > south, just for the heck of it? > > Seems more like the Europeans invading the native americans in their > land, overthrowing and sequestering their culture and mostly 'oral > tradition' into remote reserves! Or Europeans doing the same to > natives of Africa. > > I do not wish to start a riot or more importantly hurt any european > brothers and sisters on this forum but just to bring out the > simplistic and almost unbelievable similarity of such assumptions > that some make in the name of tradition. This is a general remark and > not necessarily something I read on this forum, so please keep your > danders down, friends and attack the premise and not the MESSENGER, > yet again! > > RR > > > > , "jyotish" <jyotish.bh@> > wrote: > > > > Respected Sir > > > > with due respects and apologies, > > > > Should we really have same chapters of gita implemented same way > though the kurukshetra and the rules of game stand much different? > > > > Need we not ask for the benefits after we put in years of sincere > efforts in the job/business? > > or leave it for our rivals/colleagues? > > > > Will our next generation of IT ..listen to us? > > > > do we have today any great gurus/Sai Shirdi/Mahapurush that we > offer all our crop and we are sure we get back anything. > > WE need more acclimatised rules and regulations and still gain > spiritually? > > > > regards > > Rps > > > > - > > surya > > > > Wednesday, April 12, 2006 7:10 PM > > Re: Bonds hindering spiritual progress > > > > > > dear sir > > > > The scriptures say that your sacrifice of money is highest. > > > > 1) In the very beginning itself (second Adhyaya), Gita says that > the > > fruit of the work must be sacrificed (Karmajam Buddhi Yuktahi > Phalam > > Tyaktva Maneeshinah). This means that realized scholars sacrifice > > the fruit of the work. Gita keeps sacrifice of the fruit of the > work > > on the top most level. Gita says `Jnanat dhyanam visishyate, > Dhyanat > > Karma Phala Tyagah'i.e., Bhakti (devotion) is better than Jnana > > (knowledge) and sacrificing the fruit of your work (money) is > better > > than Bakthi. > > > > 2) Gita says `Sarva karma Phala tyagam', `prahuh tyagam > > vichakshanah' i.e., if you can give the fruit of the entire work > to > > the Lord, then that is real sacrifice. > > > > 3)`Na karmana, Na prajaya, Dhanena, tyage naike Amritatvam > Aanasuh' > > i.e., you cannot attain God by selfish work or the children. You > > can attain God only by sacrificing your money for God's work. > > > > 4)The first words of the first Upanishath (Easavaasyam) says, > `Tena > > tyaktena Bhunjeedah' `Ma gradha ha kasyasvit Dhanam' i.e., this > > entire world is the money of the Lord. Take whatever you require > > from His wealth; don't take extra which is not permitted by the > > God. If you have taken, you are a thief. Return it back to the > > Lord. > > > > 5) Veda says `Samvidha' `Shraddhayaa' `Hriya' `Bhiya dheyam', > i.e., > > return the extra to the Lord in human form after recognizing Him > > through His Jnana. Wait patiently till you recognize the Lord in > > human form. When you are donating your money to Him (actually > you > > are giving Him His own money) you should give it with fear and > feel > > shy. > > > > 6) In Yoga Vasistha the Guru Vasista says to Rama (Dhanamarjaya) > > i.e., bring money and offer it to me as Guru Dakshina before I > can > > teach you the Jnana. > > > > Shirdi Sai used to ask Guru Dakshina from everybody to teach this > > important sacrifice. He criticized a merchant who came for > Brahma > > Jnana but was not giving even Rs.5/- from his pocket. Mr. Patil, > a > > farmer used to donate the entire yearly crop to Baba and took > back > > whatever Baba gave back to him. > > > > at the lotus feet of shri datta swami > > surya > > www.universal-spirituality.org > > > > > > vattem krishnan <bursar_99@> wrote: > > > Sir, > > > since money is the root of this whole `samsara'. This may be > a > > narrow approach if we consider 'karmabhoomi" as janmabhoomi.All > > things have been programmed in shrishti(creation).what matter is > > what we choose and the spirit involved in the choice. > > > hence the sarcasm"Dhanam moolam idam jagat".Ther are many > people > > (can be said jyotish way)who may not be having the same > philosophy > > and know the eluding aspects of shristi and reconcile > > > krishnan > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > SURRENDER JOYFULLY TO THE WILL OF THE ULTIMATE DIVINITY AND > RELISH THE TASTE OF ABSOLUTE BLISS. > > > > > > > > > > > > -------------------------------- --- > ---------- > > > > > > a.. Visit your group "" on the web. > > > > b.. > > > > > > c.. Terms > of Service. > > > > > > -------------------------------- --- > ---------- > > > > > > > > > > > > SURRENDER JOYFULLY TO THE WILL OF THE ULTIMATE DIVINITY AND RELISH THE TASTE OF ABSOLUTE BLISS. > > > > > > > Vedic astrology Astrology chart Astrology software > > > > > > Visit your group "" on the web. > > > > > Terms of Service. > > > > > > > > > > Messenger with Voice. Make PC-to-Phone Calls to the US (and 30+ countries) for 2¢/min or less. > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 13, 2006 Report Share Posted April 13, 2006 Dear Friends, All 12 signs(making 360 deg) have been broadly divided into:Chara(1,4,7&10)sthira(2,4,5&11)ubhaya(3,6,9&12) This age old classificationwhether hold good in today is a point jyotishis through their present experiences has to be analysed. The modern man thinks of the by relating to present times.No doubt he is more dual than the other two categories. Past definetely is past and is frozen.certainly immutable.Future ceratinly is only dualism,a secular feeling in rehan and sahan. No body likes to sthira as categorised but would like to be chara or ubhaya.I think even astrologers too without any reference to their identity should not also be fixed and advocate only mutable..that way we are emphasising need to changes.we need to link to future make duality as the main platform.temples therefore signify God.But God's do not signify temples.Today houses are becoming more as temples with emphasis and stress on religious out look.I find more and more and more adopting to e-poojas and e-bhajans.where God's are believed to have been located and reverred have become places to mop up un accounted money. spitual progress today is dual in nature and is trisanku. Define the past is half hearted exercise and defining present is more comforts and future? jyotish is not an easy science to promise except advocate karma siddhanta.Past for ever remained as past from the point of view present hardships being experienced in different ways.To list these hardships is to heckle at our selves as we are neither in the present nor in the past krishnan crystal pages <jyotish_vani wrote: Rishi, one point if I may -- Past never ceases to exist as long it is in one's memory! Human beings, as opposed to other animals perhaps, have been blessed (drused?) with the faculty of memory that is acute and detailed. Perhaps that is the key, the first step in the journey of thousand steps! RR , rishi shukla <rishi_2000in wrote: > > The past has ceased to exist and only the recorded > version od the events past survives. This past, is > however, not immutable and does not present the same > appearance always and everywhere.. It looks different > at different times and places, and either an increase > or a decrease in our information changes the picture. > Our view of the relations of past events to each > other, of their relative importance, and of their > significance, changes constantly in consequence of the > constant change of the fugitive present. > History is what the historian sees. The same past > viewed by the same person in different periods is > different. > Yet, the more things change or appear to change, they > remain the same. This is the lesson of jyotish to > me.The reboots are the beginning of a subsequent cycle > of time. I will hesitate to use the word ''new '' > cycle because the cycle is not really new, it is new > only to us who define time in terms of past, present > and future. > The chronological time is maybe just a fraction of > time! > regards > > rishi > > --- crystal pages <jyotish_vani wrote: > > > Two cents even though unsolicitated! > > > > If you look at traditional literature -- it would > > seem that it was a > > well mentored and well-proctored reality back then > > with teachers and > > support systems not just available but essential and > > mandatory, some > > would proclaim. > > > > We really do not have accounts of history in terms > > of what actually > > was, few thousands of years ago, though I have the > > gut feeling that > > what we consider as tradition was not just thousands > > of years even > > older than proclaimed (and debated by a few) but > > even older, almost > > as if there was a gene jump at some point. If we > > knew that that > > really happened,despite intermittent seemingly total > > annihilations, > > then the meaning of 'Shashwat' may dawn more > > urgently and > > significantly on our perceptions. To some this may > > smack of mythology > > and mythical. Let them enjoy their moment of glory! > > > > So, history, really ancient history must be > > perceived, recreated > > almost based on no evidence, no documents that > > survived -- that were > > not meant to survive perhaps, because the UNIVERSE, > > the Shashwat > > Universe seems to believe in reboots! Minor reboots > > include natural > > calamities, the latest examples being the Tsunamis > > but the real and > > scary *atlantis* of modern times being NEW ORLEANS. > > One of the > > biggest annihilative challenges thrown in the face > > of humanity in > > recent times. Total wipeout! Will it emerge? Will > > Atlantis reemerge? > > For those who may know, Mardi gras is a big > > tradition of New Orleans > > and Texas took upon it this year while New Orleans > > recuperates > > slowly -- just so that the tradition does not die. I > > translate that > > to say: So that human spirit as we know it does not > > die. And really, > > that is what tradition is about, dear friends. Not > > crumbling books, > > or buildings that are falling to pieces and rituals > > too in some > > settings, but the HUMAN SPIRIT! Bravo New > > Orleanians! Through your > > misery and personal losses you have demonstrated to > > us the power of > > human spirit and that the ATLANTIS EXPERIENCE was > > not a myth. > > > > Atlanteans had much psychic powers and pyramids, > > some say. We as a > > world community have lost Atlantis but this world > > has perhaps > > retained everything that was magnificient and great > > and covetable and > > worthy of retention. True it looks a bit like a war > > zone, like a > > disaster zone but it is all there. All that was > > worthy of living on, > > though some details may have gone missing. Jyotish > > aussi! > > > > The current reality is, like it or not -- coffee/tea > > arriving or not > > in bed -- not structured and mentors and teachers > > though galore and > > arriving in baker's dozen (13 to a dozen for anyone > > not familiar with > > that idiom) are suspect, for the most part. This is > > not my judgment > > but just ask around privately. Lot of people shy > > away from stating > > things like that publicly. Those that do and > > question get beaten up! > > > > Even history and historical myths and glib, > > undocumented, > > unsubstantiated claims and pronouncements about > > history must be > > questioned and challenged. A few individuals a few > > years were > > seriously questioning about the aryan-dravidian > > 'history' that most > > of us were taught and take for granted, taught by > > europeans who had > > the "point of power" in terms of how history was > > written and > > propagated in the last few hundred years (at least > > in India) and even > > how MAPS were made worldwide and regions depicted > > MISPROPORTIONATELY > > (the different projections, for instance, mercator > > and so on). > > > > I am not a scholar in these matters but know enough > > and am alert > > enough to raise doubts so that the wary and scholars > > may wake up, > > unless they are not already. I am really doing their > > job -- why they > > are so complacent? There seem to be too many of them > > around and > > should have really made some changes and stirred the > > place up? > > > > Unless they all agree and endorse that History as we > > were taught in > > schools from say 1930 onwards, at least in India is > > all hunky dory > > and endorsed by the cogniscenti of India! So Aryans > > came from Asia > > minor on horsebacks and drove the dravidians down to > > the south and > > end of story. > > > > I am from the east, genetically, in this lifetime > > anyway, but somehow > > this story sounds too simplistic -- even given > > nothing as basic as > > jyotish. And if one studies the other Aryan > > scriptures, the history > > somehow seems even less plausible. Creators of > > Vedas, Puranas and > > Samhitas, mere horseback riders trying to chase the > > darker races > > south, just for the heck of it? > > > > Seems more like the Europeans invading the native > > americans in their > > land, overthrowing and sequestering their culture > > and mostly 'oral > > tradition' into remote reserves! Or Europeans doing > > the same to > > natives of Africa. > > > > I do not wish to start a riot or more importantly > > hurt any european > > brothers and sisters on this forum but just to bring > > out the > > simplistic and almost unbelievable similarity of > > such assumptions > > that some make in the name of tradition. This is a > > general remark and > > not necessarily something I read on this forum, so > > please keep your > > danders down, friends and attack the premise and not > > the MESSENGER, > > yet again! > > > > RR > > > > > > > > , "jyotish" > > <jyotish.bh@> > > wrote: > > > > > > Respected Sir > > > > > > with due respects and apologies, > > > > > > Should we really have same chapters of gita > > implemented same way > > though the kurukshetra and the rules of game stand > > much different? > > > > > > Need we not ask for the benefits after we put in > > years of sincere > > efforts in the job/business? > > > or leave it for our rivals/colleagues? > > > > > > Will our next generation of IT ..listen to us? > > > > > > do we have today any great gurus/Sai > > Shirdi/Mahapurush that we > > offer all our crop and we are sure we get back > > anything. > > > WE need more acclimatised rules and regulations > > and still gain > > spiritually? > > > > > > regards > > > Rps > > > > > > - > > > surya > > > > > > === message truncated === > > > > > > > SURRENDER JOYFULLY TO THE WILL OF THE ULTIMATE DIVINITY AND RELISH THE TASTE OF ABSOLUTE BLISS. 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Guest guest Posted April 13, 2006 Report Share Posted April 13, 2006 RRji, The human memory, atleaast the consciously aware portion of the memory, is also a function of time, it fades away, it is selective . To draw an analogy with the computer memory, it needs upgrading, defragmentation and at times, formatting where all old data is gone and the conscious memory is ready to be filled up again with fresh human experiences. Maybe, that is what is all regarding rebirths, God takes a consciousness, a form of energy and reformats it, sends it rolling down back to the world to be fitted in a new model, a processor, a new monitor and a new life begins. But what about the unconscious awareness of that same very memory?? regards rishi --- crystal pages <jyotish_vani wrote: > Rishi, one point if I may -- > Past never ceases to exist as long it is in one's > memory! Human > beings, as opposed to other animals perhaps, have > been blessed > (drused?) with the faculty of memory that is acute > and detailed. > > Perhaps that is the key, the first step in the > journey of thousand > steps! > > RR > > > , rishi > shukla > <rishi_2000in wrote: > > > > The past has ceased to exist and only the recorded > > version od the events past survives. This past, > is > > however, not immutable and does not present the > same > > appearance always and everywhere.. It looks > different > > at different times and places, and either an > increase > > or a decrease in our information changes the > picture. > > Our view of the relations of past events to each > > other, of their relative importance, and of their > > significance, changes constantly in consequence of > the > > constant change of the fugitive present. > > History is what the historian sees. The same past > > viewed by the same person in different periods is > > different. > > Yet, the more things change or appear to change, > they > > remain the same. This is the lesson of jyotish to > > me.The reboots are the beginning of a subsequent > cycle > > of time. I will hesitate to use the word ''new '' > > cycle because the cycle is not really new, it is > new > > only to us who define time in terms of past, > present > > and future. > > The chronological time is maybe just a fraction of > > time! > > regards > > > > rishi > > > > --- crystal pages <jyotish_vani wrote: > > > > > Two cents even though unsolicitated! > > > > > > If you look at traditional literature -- it > would > > > seem that it was a > > > well mentored and well-proctored reality back > then > > > with teachers and > > > support systems not just available but essential > and > > > mandatory, some > > > would proclaim. > > > > > > We really do not have accounts of history in > terms > > > of what actually > > > was, few thousands of years ago, though I have > the > > > gut feeling that > > > what we consider as tradition was not just > thousands > > > of years even > > > older than proclaimed (and debated by a few) but > > > even older, almost > > > as if there was a gene jump at some point. If we > > > knew that that > > > really happened,despite intermittent seemingly > total > > > annihilations, > > > then the meaning of 'Shashwat' may dawn more > > > urgently and > > > significantly on our perceptions. To some this > may > > > smack of mythology > > > and mythical. Let them enjoy their moment of > glory! > > > > > > So, history, really ancient history must be > > > perceived, recreated > > > almost based on no evidence, no documents that > > > survived -- that were > > > not meant to survive perhaps, because the > UNIVERSE, > > > the Shashwat > > > Universe seems to believe in reboots! Minor > reboots > > > include natural > > > calamities, the latest examples being the > Tsunamis > > > but the real and > > > scary *atlantis* of modern times being NEW > ORLEANS. > > > One of the > > > biggest annihilative challenges thrown in the > face > > > of humanity in > > > recent times. Total wipeout! Will it emerge? > Will > > > Atlantis reemerge? > > > For those who may know, Mardi gras is a big > > > tradition of New Orleans > > > and Texas took upon it this year while New > Orleans > > > recuperates > > > slowly -- just so that the tradition does not > die. I > > > translate that > > > to say: So that human spirit as we know it does > not > > > die. And really, > > > that is what tradition is about, dear friends. > Not > > > crumbling books, > > > or buildings that are falling to pieces and > rituals > > > too in some > > > settings, but the HUMAN SPIRIT! Bravo New > > > Orleanians! Through your > > > misery and personal losses you have demonstrated > to > > > us the power of > > > human spirit and that the ATLANTIS EXPERIENCE > was > > > not a myth. > > > > > > Atlanteans had much psychic powers and pyramids, > > > some say. We as a > > > world community have lost Atlantis but this > world > > > has perhaps > > > retained everything that was magnificient and > great > > > and covetable and > > > worthy of retention. True it looks a bit like a > war > > > zone, like a > > > disaster zone but it is all there. All that was > > > worthy of living on, > > > though some details may have gone missing. > Jyotish > > > aussi! > > > > > > The current reality is, like it or not -- > coffee/tea > > > arriving or not > > > in bed -- not structured and mentors and > teachers > > > though galore and > > > arriving in baker's dozen (13 to a dozen for > anyone > > > not familiar with > > > that idiom) are suspect, for the most part. This > is > > > not my judgment > > > but just ask around privately. Lot of people shy > > > away from stating > > > things like that publicly. Those that do and > > > question get beaten up! > > > > > > Even history and historical myths and glib, > > > undocumented, > > > unsubstantiated claims and pronouncements about > > > history must be > > > questioned and challenged. A few individuals a > few > > > years were > > > seriously questioning about the aryan-dravidian > > > 'history' that most > > > of us were taught and take for granted, taught > by > > > europeans who had > > > the "point of power" in terms of how history was > > > written and > > > propagated in the last few hundred years (at > least > > > in India) and even > > > how MAPS were made worldwide and regions > depicted > > > MISPROPORTIONATELY > > > (the different projections, for instance, > mercator > > > and so on). > > > > > > I am not a scholar in these matters but know > enough > === message truncated === Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 13, 2006 Report Share Posted April 13, 2006 Krishnanji, In this rapidly moving world...the veda says... "kaalo ashwato bahati"...time moves as swiftly as a horse; isnot it a boon to find something not chara or ubhaya...something which is sthira. Something which even in the flow of time retains its energy. Yet, if it is too sthira then the world , passes it by, that is why everything becomes relative. The grahas act in relation to each other. The most saatvik of grahas at its deepest exaltation becomes powerless if it is not supported by other grahas. regards rishi --- vattem krishnan <bursar_99 wrote: > Dear Friends, > All 12 signs(making 360 deg) have been broadly > divided > into:Chara(1,4,7&10)sthira(2,4,5&11)ubhaya(3,6,9&12) > This age old classificationwhether hold good in > today is a point jyotishis through their present > experiences has to be analysed. > The modern man thinks of the by relating to > present times.No doubt he is more dual than the > other two categories. > Past definetely is past and is frozen.certainly > immutable.Future ceratinly is only dualism,a secular > feeling in rehan and sahan. > No body likes to sthira as categorised but would > like to be chara or ubhaya.I think even astrologers > too without any reference to their identity should > not also be fixed and advocate only mutable..that > way we are emphasising need to changes.we need to > link to future make duality as the main > platform.temples therefore signify God.But God's do > not signify temples.Today houses are becoming more > as temples with emphasis and stress on religious out > look.I find more and more and more adopting to > e-poojas and e-bhajans.where God's are believed to > have been located and reverred have become places to > mop up un accounted money. > spitual progress today is dual in nature and is > trisanku. > Define the past is half hearted exercise and > defining present is more comforts and future? > jyotish is not an easy science to promise except > advocate karma siddhanta.Past for ever remained as > past from the point of view present hardships being > experienced in different ways.To list these > hardships is to heckle at our selves as we are > neither in the present nor in the past > krishnan > crystal pages <jyotish_vani wrote: > Rishi, one point if I may -- > Past never ceases to exist as long it is in one's > memory! Human > beings, as opposed to other animals perhaps, have > been blessed > (drused?) with the faculty of memory that is acute > and detailed. > > Perhaps that is the key, the first step in the > journey of thousand > steps! > > RR > > > , rishi > shukla > <rishi_2000in wrote: > > > > The past has ceased to exist and only the recorded > > version od the events past survives. This past, > is > > however, not immutable and does not present the > same > > appearance always and everywhere.. It looks > different > > at different times and places, and either an > increase > > or a decrease in our information changes the > picture. > > Our view of the relations of past events to each > > other, of their relative importance, and of their > > significance, changes constantly in consequence of > the > > constant change of the fugitive present. > > History is what the historian sees. The same past > > viewed by the same person in different periods is > > different. > > Yet, the more things change or appear to change, > they > > remain the same. This is the lesson of jyotish to > > me.The reboots are the beginning of a subsequent > cycle > > of time. I will hesitate to use the word ''new '' > > cycle because the cycle is not really new, it is > new > > only to us who define time in terms of past, > present > > and future. > > The chronological time is maybe just a fraction of > > time! > > regards > > > > rishi > > > > --- crystal pages <jyotish_vani wrote: > > > > > Two cents even though unsolicitated! > > > > > > If you look at traditional literature -- it > would > > > seem that it was a > > > well mentored and well-proctored reality back > then > > > with teachers and > > > support systems not just available but essential > and > > > mandatory, some > > > would proclaim. > > > > > > We really do not have accounts of history in > terms > > > of what actually > > > was, few thousands of years ago, though I have > the > > > gut feeling that > > > what we consider as tradition was not just > thousands > > > of years even > > > older than proclaimed (and debated by a few) but > > > even older, almost > > > as if there was a gene jump at some point. If we > > > knew that that > > > really happened,despite intermittent seemingly > total > > > annihilations, > > > then the meaning of 'Shashwat' may dawn more > > > urgently and > > > significantly on our perceptions. To some this > may > > > smack of mythology > > > and mythical. Let them enjoy their moment of > glory! > > > > > > So, history, really ancient history must be > > > perceived, recreated > > > almost based on no evidence, no documents that > > > survived -- that were > > > not meant to survive perhaps, because the > UNIVERSE, > > > the Shashwat > > > Universe seems to believe in reboots! Minor > reboots > > > include natural > > > calamities, the latest examples being the > Tsunamis > > > but the real and > > > scary *atlantis* of modern times being NEW > ORLEANS. > > > One of the > > > biggest annihilative challenges thrown in the > face > > > of humanity in > > > recent times. Total wipeout! Will it emerge? > Will > > > Atlantis reemerge? > > > For those who may know, Mardi gras is a big > > > tradition of New Orleans > > > and Texas took upon it this year while New > Orleans > > > recuperates > > > slowly -- just so that the tradition does not > die. I > > > translate that > > > to say: So that human spirit as we know it does > not > > > die. And really, > > > that is what tradition is about, dear friends. > Not > > > crumbling books, > > > or buildings that are falling to pieces and > rituals > > > too in some > > > settings, but the HUMAN SPIRIT! Bravo New > > > Orleanians! Through your > > > misery and personal losses you have demonstrated > to > > > us the power of > > > human spirit and that the ATLANTIS EXPERIENCE > was > > > not a myth. > > > > > > Atlanteans had much psychic powers and pyramids, > > > some say. We as a > > > world community have lost Atlantis but this > world > > > has perhaps > > > retained everything that was magnificient and > great > > > and covetable and > > > worthy of retention. True it looks a bit like a > war > > > zone, like a > > > disaster zone but it is all there. All that was > > > worthy of living on, > > > though some details may have gone missing. > Jyotish > > > aussi! > > > > > > The current reality is, like it or not -- > coffee/tea > > > arriving or not > > > in bed -- not structured and mentors and > teachers > === message truncated === Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 13, 2006 Report Share Posted April 13, 2006 Well said, Arjunji, one seeks the reality and for this one queries and stumbles on the path of life learning a bit here and a bit there. The point is, however, that what is the 'realisation'? Realisation, even if handed to us on a platter, we are often unable to realise that this is the realisation! For afterall,we are ordinary persons and keep seeking that elusive truth. Our rich heritage in terms of philosphical thought and religious values is there to guide us. As you have said, it consists of symbolic sets of thoughts. The question, for me, is how do I interpret this symbolic story. I can, either, take it on its face value or I can analyse it in terms of my own interactions or experiences. Each individual is at a given stage of life experiences and therefore, uniquely different. Blessed are those on the bhakti path for they immerse themselves in a given thought and cross this hourney of life.An ordinary bhakta may be more realised than the more well known seers. Who knows..the quest therefore continues as life goes on. regards rishi --- panditarjun2004 <panditarjun2004 wrote: > dear friends > > relating to all the messages on this thread, i share > some thoughts > mentioned in another group below: > > light is knowledge and darkness is ignorance. > knowledge as per > lexicon means "to know". in our vedic concept, > knowledge means to > seek and know the truth and reality. knowing truth > ultimately make > you realised when you come to know what is reality. > > when you got by rote what is written in your school > books that rama > killed ten headed ravana, chandra married twenty > seven stars and all > mythical stories, why even mythical stories even > medieval stories of > kings, dynasties, wars etc, you just cram what was > written, at the > best refer the oldest book written on that subject > (only to check > what you read already has any reference or basis and > no way it is > knowing the truth) and write the same and lo, you > pass the exam and > you are given a certificate of excellence in that > subject. did you > verify whether they are true or not, logically > questioned whether > they are comprehensible at all in the first place. > no because you > are interested only in passing the exam and get a > certificate. this > is what all humans do till they are realised. > > a person having quest for knowledge or knowing more > keeps querying > till he reaches the truth and find the reality, > which is loosely > called "realisation". > > once a person REALISES what the truth is and what > the reality is, > that person seeks no more, asks no more and wants no > more, for he > realised the truth. Gita says, for a reliased > person, vedas are > meaningless. It means not belittling the vedas but > if a person > achieves "realisation" stauts, that person needs to > know no more or > positively put the realised person knew what all is > written in vedas > and much more. > > i positively hope that one should continue to throw > more light > on "truth" and "reality" instead of injunctions on > scriptures. > > however, when we deal with unrealised people, > craving more material > needs and wanting us to do or advise something as to > how to get > these material goodies more, we advise this or that > remedy. this > reminds me of an unrealised person getting the > darshan of the god > and when asked to seek a boon, he asks that whatever > he touches > shall become gold. lo, he touches his wife and > children they become > gold. he touches food and it becomes gold. then he > realises the > realiity and become a realised person. the logic > behind god > granting whatever the sadhaka asks is simple. you > get what you want > till you are realised. you would remain at the > receiving end till > you are realised. once you are realised, you are > not dependant on > any one or any thing and are only in the giving end. > > sarvam paravasam dukham, sarvam atma vasam sukham > e tad vidyaat samasena lakshanam sukha dukhayo. > > this is how sukham and dukham are defined. > > may jupiter's light shine on all. > with best wishes > arjun > , vattem > krishnan > <bursar_99 wrote: > > > > Dear Friends, > > Seeking spirtuality by moving with mobiles,in > limousine cars and > dwelling house where seasons have no meaning for a > modernite. > > This recalls me to recollect Rajaneesh acclaimed > osho > philosophy.people may agree that this philosophy has > meaning and > convictions brought out by seers by making several > sacrifices.we all > know in those old and golden(?)people have limited > avocations > compared to the modernite who needs robbot > controlled places.Throgh > click of mouse we wish to link to the past and yet > explore value > scinces which were more theoritical in orientation > and less > acceptance statistically.Probably East known for > their orientation > to explore nature through observations and offering > complex formulas > through vedic mathematics have partially succeeded > in enticing even > the modern man to slip into past histories and > attempt in his own > way to find meaning in these days of changed > habitats. > > what really striked the ambition of modern man > and race through > mechanical life is memorise past histories and find > values of those > theories.There are less number populations who were > not attached > God's feeling and have reverence to vedic > preachings.is it that even > today the age old convictions have significance and > difficult to > negate them.is it that modern man finds more > botherations in > electronic controlled atmosphere.Difficult however > to find a logical > solutions.The only plausible answer is however a > modern man finds > his tagged to his past actions and acclaim good or > bad experiences > as prarabdha and willing to proceed and make > strides. > > we may disagree to live in through the past > teachings however > nascent they are,prepare ourselves to take a leaf > out of them. > > Today various chapters of geeta are not > difficult to understand > as the availabilty of these preaching has become > extensive through > the advent of electronic media.what matters however > has to bother > atleast some of us is self orientation in choosing > what is ideal for > him only and ignore all other aspect of social > animal. > > here i may take initiative and quote an > incident. > > I met prof D.P.Tripathi a sanskrit scholar > involved in teaching > and counselling through jyotish has to face a more > or less a > modernite.when i understand modernite let me also > clarify that he is > one who can not forsake comforts and yet offering > from a distance > his obeissence to idols consecrated in > temples.Intends to be be > identified through arya samaj(may not worship > different forms of > Gods and idols) and seeks way to come out of the > mess in which he > was inolved either through his family or through his > > profession.Denies for elaboarate poojas and sanskars > as he belongs > to different convictions and wants pariharas to come > out of the rut. > > My friend though he does not belong to the > generation of > siddhantis(capable of interrpreting classicals and > advise) yet > advocates pariharas to overcome bad situations. > > Accordingly he fixed days to perform shanti > poojas and men to > recite mantras suitably for the modernite.My friend > more concerned > with brevity and feeling that any money spent on > these pariharas is > to be limited actual cost of materials but not > willing to offer any > gurudaksina for the priests willing to toil and > perform > remedies.This divergence is ambiguous as he believes > that the bad > === message truncated === Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing 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Guest guest Posted April 14, 2006 Report Share Posted April 14, 2006 Rishi, As you can always count on me to disagree (and continue discussion!( here is my two naya paisey ... Memory becomes significant only when one becomes aware to it. Memory that remains below the iceberg and unaware is what keeps the psychologist happily employed! Drastic example! A well educated person very productive for many years and devoted to family and community -- was travelling on a highway in north america, husband, wife and infant child in the backseat. No one knows what happened, car had trouble, but that happened to be the buslane and a transit but driven by a careless driver rammed into the car and killed -- let us say everyone but the infant! Big national news story and all that! Why was this *drama* needed? There could be variations on the theme and outcomes. Many similar stories and slices of real life must exist, I am sure. If this or similar august body does not have all the answers what is the next step? I may be jumping the gun and there might be answers to all similar questions! RR , rishi shukla <rishi_2000in wrote: > > RRji, > The human memory, atleaast the consciously aware > portion of the memory, is also a function of time, it > fades away, it is selective . To draw an analogy with > the computer memory, it needs upgrading, > defragmentation and at times, formatting where all old > data is gone and the conscious memory is ready to be > filled up again with fresh human experiences. > Maybe, that is what is all regarding rebirths, God > takes a consciousness, a form of energy and reformats > it, sends it rolling down back to the world to be > fitted in a new model, a processor, a new monitor and > a new life begins. > But what about the unconscious awareness of that same > very memory?? > regards > rishi > > --- crystal pages <jyotish_vani wrote: > > > Rishi, one point if I may -- > > Past never ceases to exist as long it is in one's > > memory! Human > > beings, as opposed to other animals perhaps, have > > been blessed > > (drused?) with the faculty of memory that is acute > > and detailed. > > > > Perhaps that is the key, the first step in the > > journey of thousand > > steps! > > > > RR > > > > > > , rishi > > shukla > > <rishi_2000in@> wrote: > > > > > > The past has ceased to exist and only the recorded > > > version od the events past survives. This past, > > is > > > however, not immutable and does not present the > > same > > > appearance always and everywhere.. It looks > > different > > > at different times and places, and either an > > increase > > > or a decrease in our information changes the > > picture. > > > Our view of the relations of past events to each > > > other, of their relative importance, and of their > > > significance, changes constantly in consequence of > > the > > > constant change of the fugitive present. > > > History is what the historian sees. The same past > > > viewed by the same person in different periods is > > > different. > > > Yet, the more things change or appear to change, > > they > > > remain the same. This is the lesson of jyotish to > > > me.The reboots are the beginning of a subsequent > > cycle > > > of time. I will hesitate to use the word ''new '' > > > cycle because the cycle is not really new, it is > > new > > > only to us who define time in terms of past, > > present > > > and future. > > > The chronological time is maybe just a fraction of > > > time! > > > regards > > > > > > rishi > > > > > > --- crystal pages <jyotish_vani@> wrote: > > > > > > > Two cents even though unsolicitated! > > > > > > > > If you look at traditional literature -- it > > would > > > > seem that it was a > > > > well mentored and well-proctored reality back > > then > > > > with teachers and > > > > support systems not just available but essential > > and > > > > mandatory, some > > > > would proclaim. > > > > > > > > We really do not have accounts of history in > > terms > > > > of what actually > > > > was, few thousands of years ago, though I have > > the > > > > gut feeling that > > > > what we consider as tradition was not just > > thousands > > > > of years even > > > > older than proclaimed (and debated by a few) but > > > > even older, almost > > > > as if there was a gene jump at some point. If we > > > > knew that that > > > > really happened,despite intermittent seemingly > > total > > > > annihilations, > > > > then the meaning of 'Shashwat' may dawn more > > > > urgently and > > > > significantly on our perceptions. To some this > > may > > > > smack of mythology > > > > and mythical. Let them enjoy their moment of > > glory! > > > > > > > > So, history, really ancient history must be > > > > perceived, recreated > > > > almost based on no evidence, no documents that > > > > survived -- that were > > > > not meant to survive perhaps, because the > > UNIVERSE, > > > > the Shashwat > > > > Universe seems to believe in reboots! Minor > > reboots > > > > include natural > > > > calamities, the latest examples being the > > Tsunamis > > > > but the real and > > > > scary *atlantis* of modern times being NEW > > ORLEANS. > > > > One of the > > > > biggest annihilative challenges thrown in the > > face > > > > of humanity in > > > > recent times. Total wipeout! Will it emerge? > > Will > > > > Atlantis reemerge? > > > > For those who may know, Mardi gras is a big > > > > tradition of New Orleans > > > > and Texas took upon it this year while New > > Orleans > > > > recuperates > > > > slowly -- just so that the tradition does not > > die. I > > > > translate that > > > > to say: So that human spirit as we know it does > > not > > > > die. And really, > > > > that is what tradition is about, dear friends. > > Not > > > > crumbling books, > > > > or buildings that are falling to pieces and > > rituals > > > > too in some > > > > settings, but the HUMAN SPIRIT! Bravo New > > > > Orleanians! Through your > > > > misery and personal losses you have demonstrated > > to > > > > us the power of > > > > human spirit and that the ATLANTIS EXPERIENCE > > was > > > > not a myth. > > > > > > > > Atlanteans had much psychic powers and pyramids, > > > > some say. We as a > > > > world community have lost Atlantis but this > > world > > > > has perhaps > > > > retained everything that was magnificient and > > great > > > > and covetable and > > > > worthy of retention. True it looks a bit like a > > war > > > > zone, like a > > > > disaster zone but it is all there. All that was > > > > worthy of living on, > > > > though some details may have gone missing. > > Jyotish > > > > aussi! > > > > > > > > The current reality is, like it or not -- > > coffee/tea > > > > arriving or not > > > > in bed -- not structured and mentors and > > teachers > > > > though galore and > > > > arriving in baker's dozen (13 to a dozen for > > anyone > > > > not familiar with > > > > that idiom) are suspect, for the most part. This > > is > > > > not my judgment > > > > but just ask around privately. Lot of people shy > > > > away from stating > > > > things like that publicly. Those that do and > > > > question get beaten up! > > > > > > > > Even history and historical myths and glib, > > > > undocumented, > > > > unsubstantiated claims and pronouncements about > > > > history must be > > > > questioned and challenged. A few individuals a > > few > > > > years were > > > > seriously questioning about the aryan-dravidian > > > > 'history' that most > > > > of us were taught and take for granted, taught > > by > > > > europeans who had > > > > the "point of power" in terms of how history was > > > > written and > > > > propagated in the last few hundred years (at > > least > > > > in India) and even > > > > how MAPS were made worldwide and regions > > depicted > > > > MISPROPORTIONATELY > > > > (the different projections, for instance, > > mercator > > > > and so on). > > > > > > > > I am not a scholar in these matters but know > > enough > > > === message truncated === > > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 14, 2006 Report Share Posted April 14, 2006 You are not disagreeing at all, only strengthening what I said, the unaware to be made aware isnot that the quest? Why alone a psychologist, a philospher, a spiritual guru, a religious preacher, an occultist, a divinator, a research scientist, a jyotishi...arent they all trying in dissimilar ways to find ways of finding what is not known but they want to know regards rishi --- crystal pages <jyotish_vani wrote: > Rishi, > > As you can always count on me to disagree (and > continue discussion!( > here is my two naya paisey ... > > Memory becomes significant only when one becomes > aware to it. Memory > that remains below the iceberg and unaware is what > keeps the > psychologist happily employed! > > Drastic example! > > A well educated person very productive for many > years and devoted to > family and community -- was travelling on a highway > in north america, > husband, wife and infant child in the backseat. No > one knows what > happened, car had trouble, but that happened to be > the buslane and a > transit but driven by a careless driver rammed into > the car and > killed -- let us say everyone but the infant! Big > national news story > and all that! > > Why was this *drama* needed? > > There could be variations on the theme and outcomes. > > Many similar stories and slices of real life must > exist, I am sure. > > If this or similar august body does not have all the > answers what is > the next step? > > I may be jumping the gun and there might be answers > to all similar > questions! > > RR > > > > , rishi > shukla > <rishi_2000in wrote: > > > > RRji, > > The human memory, atleaast the consciously aware > > portion of the memory, is also a function of time, > it > > fades away, it is selective . To draw an analogy > with > > the computer memory, it needs upgrading, > > defragmentation and at times, formatting where all > old > > data is gone and the conscious memory is ready to > be > > filled up again with fresh human experiences. > > Maybe, that is what is all regarding rebirths, God > > takes a consciousness, a form of energy and > reformats > > it, sends it rolling down back to the world to be > > fitted in a new model, a processor, a new monitor > and > > a new life begins. > > But what about the unconscious awareness of that > same > > very memory?? > > regards > > rishi > > > > --- crystal pages <jyotish_vani wrote: > > > > > Rishi, one point if I may -- > > > Past never ceases to exist as long it is in > one's > > > memory! Human > > > beings, as opposed to other animals perhaps, > have > > > been blessed > > > (drused?) with the faculty of memory that is > acute > > > and detailed. > > > > > > Perhaps that is the key, the first step in the > > > journey of thousand > > > steps! > > > > > > RR > > > > > > > > > , rishi > > > shukla > > > <rishi_2000in@> wrote: > > > > > > > > The past has ceased to exist and only the > recorded > > > > version od the events past survives. This > past, > > > is > > > > however, not immutable and does not present > the > > > same > > > > appearance always and everywhere.. It looks > > > different > > > > at different times and places, and either an > > > increase > > > > or a decrease in our information changes the > > > picture. > > > > Our view of the relations of past events to > each > > > > other, of their relative importance, and of > their > > > > significance, changes constantly in > consequence of > > > the > > > > constant change of the fugitive present. > > > > History is what the historian sees. The same > past > > > > viewed by the same person in different periods > is > > > > different. > > > > Yet, the more things change or appear to > change, > > > they > > > > remain the same. This is the lesson of jyotish > to > > > > me.The reboots are the beginning of a > subsequent > > > cycle > > > > of time. I will hesitate to use the word ''new > '' > > > > cycle because the cycle is not really new, it > is > > > new > > > > only to us who define time in terms of past, > > > present > > > > and future. > > > > The chronological time is maybe just a > fraction of > > > > time! > > > > regards > > > > > > > > rishi > > > > > > > > --- crystal pages <jyotish_vani@> wrote: > > > > > > > > > Two cents even though unsolicitated! > > > > > > > > > > If you look at traditional literature -- it > > > would > > > > > seem that it was a > > > > > well mentored and well-proctored reality > back > > > then > > > > > with teachers and > > > > > support systems not just available but > essential > > > and > > > > > mandatory, some > > > > > would proclaim. > > > > > > > > > > We really do not have accounts of history in > > > terms > > > > > of what actually > > > > > was, few thousands of years ago, though I > have > > > the > > > > > gut feeling that > > > > > what we consider as tradition was not just > > > thousands > > > > > of years even > > > > > older than proclaimed (and debated by a few) > but > > > > > even older, almost > > > > > as if there was a gene jump at some point. > If we > > > > > knew that that > > > > > really happened,despite intermittent > seemingly > > > total > > > > > annihilations, > > > > > then the meaning of 'Shashwat' may dawn more > > > > > urgently and > > > > > significantly on our perceptions. To some > this > > > may > > > > > smack of mythology > > > > > and mythical. Let them enjoy their moment of > > > glory! > > > > > > > > > > So, history, really ancient history must be > > > > > perceived, recreated > > > > > almost based on no evidence, no documents > that > > > > > survived -- that were > === message truncated === Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 14, 2006 Report Share Posted April 14, 2006 I forgot to add even a poet searches for the same answers, in fact eaxh person in his/her own way searches.... --- crystal pages <jyotish_vani wrote: > Rishi, > > As you can always count on me to disagree (and > continue discussion!( > here is my two naya paisey ... > > Memory becomes significant only when one becomes > aware to it. Memory > that remains below the iceberg and unaware is what > keeps the > psychologist happily employed! > > Drastic example! > > A well educated person very productive for many > years and devoted to > family and community -- was travelling on a highway > in north america, > husband, wife and infant child in the backseat. No > one knows what > happened, car had trouble, but that happened to be > the buslane and a > transit but driven by a careless driver rammed into > the car and > killed -- let us say everyone but the infant! Big > national news story > and all that! > > Why was this *drama* needed? > > There could be variations on the theme and outcomes. > > Many similar stories and slices of real life must > exist, I am sure. > > If this or similar august body does not have all the > answers what is > the next step? > > I may be jumping the gun and there might be answers > to all similar > questions! > > RR > > > > , rishi > shukla > <rishi_2000in wrote: > > > > RRji, > > The human memory, atleaast the consciously aware > > portion of the memory, is also a function of time, > it > > fades away, it is selective . To draw an analogy > with > > the computer memory, it needs upgrading, > > defragmentation and at times, formatting where all > old > > data is gone and the conscious memory is ready to > be > > filled up again with fresh human experiences. > > Maybe, that is what is all regarding rebirths, God > > takes a consciousness, a form of energy and > reformats > > it, sends it rolling down back to the world to be > > fitted in a new model, a processor, a new monitor > and > > a new life begins. > > But what about the unconscious awareness of that > same > > very memory?? > > regards > > rishi > > > > --- crystal pages <jyotish_vani wrote: > > > > > Rishi, one point if I may -- > > > Past never ceases to exist as long it is in > one's > > > memory! Human > > > beings, as opposed to other animals perhaps, > have > > > been blessed > > > (drused?) with the faculty of memory that is > acute > > > and detailed. > > > > > > Perhaps that is the key, the first step in the > > > journey of thousand > > > steps! > > > > > > RR > > > > > > > > > , rishi > > > shukla > > > <rishi_2000in@> wrote: > > > > > > > > The past has ceased to exist and only the > recorded > > > > version od the events past survives. This > past, > > > is > > > > however, not immutable and does not present > the > > > same > > > > appearance always and everywhere.. It looks > > > different > > > > at different times and places, and either an > > > increase > > > > or a decrease in our information changes the > > > picture. > > > > Our view of the relations of past events to > each > > > > other, of their relative importance, and of > their > > > > significance, changes constantly in > consequence of > > > the > > > > constant change of the fugitive present. > > > > History is what the historian sees. The same > past > > > > viewed by the same person in different periods > is > > > > different. > > > > Yet, the more things change or appear to > change, > > > they > > > > remain the same. This is the lesson of jyotish > to > > > > me.The reboots are the beginning of a > subsequent > > > cycle > > > > of time. I will hesitate to use the word ''new > '' > > > > cycle because the cycle is not really new, it > is > > > new > > > > only to us who define time in terms of past, > > > present > > > > and future. > > > > The chronological time is maybe just a > fraction of > > > > time! > > > > regards > > > > > > > > rishi > > > > > > > > --- crystal pages <jyotish_vani@> wrote: > > > > > > > > > Two cents even though unsolicitated! > > > > > > > > > > If you look at traditional literature -- it > > > would > > > > > seem that it was a > > > > > well mentored and well-proctored reality > back > > > then > > > > > with teachers and > > > > > support systems not just available but > essential > > > and > > > > > mandatory, some > > > > > would proclaim. > > > > > > > > > > We really do not have accounts of history in > > > terms > > > > > of what actually > > > > > was, few thousands of years ago, though I > have > > > the > > > > > gut feeling that > > > > > what we consider as tradition was not just > > > thousands > > > > > of years even > > > > > older than proclaimed (and debated by a few) > but > > > > > even older, almost > > > > > as if there was a gene jump at some point. > If we > > > > > knew that that > > > > > really happened,despite intermittent > seemingly > > > total > > > > > annihilations, > > > > > then the meaning of 'Shashwat' may dawn more > > > > > urgently and > > > > > significantly on our perceptions. To some > this > > > may > > > > > smack of mythology > > > > > and mythical. Let them enjoy their moment of > > > glory! > > > > > > > > > > So, history, really ancient history must be > > > > > perceived, recreated > > > > > almost based on no evidence, no documents > that > > > > > survived -- that were > === message truncated === Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 14, 2006 Report Share Posted April 14, 2006 The Vedas, which are known today, are only just one-year recitation of sage Bharadwaja. The remaining Vedas are infinite as told by Veda (Anantaa vai Vedaah). Therefore, Gita contains the essence of all the entire Vedas, which are known and unknown also. The Human incarnation is clearly mentioned in Vedas as `Vivrunute Tanoom', which means that the Lord will reveal Himself to the devotees through the human body. Again Veda says "Yat Saakshaat Aparokshaat", which means that the Lord appears before you and is not present somewhere else. The path of sacrifice of work (Karma Sanyasa) is mentioned by both Vedas (Kurvanneveha) and Gita (Kuru Karmaiva). The another part of the path, which is the sacrifice of the fruit of the work (Karmaphala Tyaga) is praised by Vedas (Thyakthena, Dhanena Tyagena) as well as by Gita (Phalam Tyaktva, Karma Phala Tyaagee). Whatever is found in Gita must exist in Vedas because Vedas are the cows and Gita is the milk milked from the cows. Knowledge is of two types. Simply hearing the greatness and qualities of the Lord belongs to the plane of mind only and this is the religious knowledge. By such knowledge, you will develop devotion to the Lord. Such knowledge is like fertilizer to grow the plant (devotion). But doubts and repulsions caused by jealousy and egoism are like insects, which attack the plant. The fertilizer cannot kill the insects. Therefore, the plant does not grow and does not become strong. When the Lord conducts tests, this plant falls on the earth by the powerful wind. If the insects are killed the plant will become a huge strong tree and will not even shake. Only pesticide can kill the insects. This pesticide is the spiritual knowledge, which alone can kill the insects. Both the fertilizer and the pesticide are chemicals. Thus, both religious and spiritual knowledge belong to Jnana Yoga only. Both should simultaneously exist as said in Gita (Bodhayantah Parasparam, Kathayantascha…). Bodha refers to spiritual knowledge and Katha refers to religious knowledge. When the qualities of Krishna were heard by Rukmini from sage Narada, she developed devotion by such religious knowledge. The good qualities and the beauty of the Lord are the religious knowledge, which attracted her. But she also heard that Krishna was a thief of butter and danced with Gopikas in Brindavanam during nights. This is the bacterial insect that attacks the devotion. Sage Narada gave her the spiritual knowledge also, which killed the insect. She came to know that Gopikas were sages, who requested the Lord for liberation from all worldly bonds like money, husband etc. By steeling the butter, their bond with money was cut. By attracting their minds through dance, their bonds with their husbands were cut. Krishna never repeated this anywhere with anybody. Since, their bonds were cut, He never returned back to Brindavanam and never repeated this with Gopikas. The Lord inside the body of Krishna is Infinite Ocean of bliss and does not require any external object for receiving happiness. Thus, the religious knowledge belongs to the external human body only and this spiritual knowledge belongs to the eternal Lord present in the body. The external human body perishes like the shirt, but internal Lord is eternal like the person who wears the shirt. Religious knowledge belong to "flesh" or the human body (Manusheem Tanum….) and the spiritual knowledge belongs to the "God" or the Lord who entered the human body (Asritam..). Unless we have the knowledge of both, the external and internal items, your devotion cannot be eternal. God or Lord is the name of the internal item. Jesus, Krishna etc., is the name of the external human body. These, external names are given only when those bodies appeared. But the name of internal item, which is God or Lord, existed even before those bodies appeared. The name, which generated along with the generation of a human body, must end when the body perishes. But the eternal name continuous forever. If this spiritual knowledge is understood, all the quarrels between all the religions will disappear. at the lotus feet of shri datta swami surya www.universal-spirituality.org "panditarjun2004" <panditarjun2004 wrote: > a person having quest for knowledge or knowing more keeps querying > till he reaches the truth and find the reality, which is loosely > called "realisation". > once a person REALISES what the truth is and what the reality is, > that person seeks no more, asks no more and wants no more, for he > realised the truth. Gita says, for a reliased person, vedas are > meaningless. It means not belittling the vedas but if a person > achieves "realisation" stauts, that person needs to know no more or > positively put the realised person knew what all is written in vedas and much more. > i positively hope that one should continue to throw more light > on "truth" and "reality" instead of injunctions on scriptures. > with best wishes > arjun Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 14, 2006 Report Share Posted April 14, 2006 [Om Namo Narayanya] Rishiji, Often the registry entries do not get wiped out or totally erased, even on defragmentation, it is all in the mother board, can you toss that out. No matter how much you try something remains, call it poorva janma vasana, lingering, eluding , coming into awareness almost there, again retreating, teasing. If you care to peer into the layers, it is there. But unfortunate it is difficult to decode it.The pity is we are very much in the present, longing for the past and worrying about the future. Regards nalini [Om Namah Shivaya Namah mallikarjunaya} , rishi shukla <rishi_2000in wrote: > > RRji, > The human memory, atleaast the consciously aware > portion of the memory, is also a function of time, it > fades away, it is selective . To draw an analogy with > the computer memory, it needs upgrading, > defragmentation and at times, formatting where all old > data is gone and the conscious memory is ready to be > filled up again with fresh human experiences. > Maybe, that is what is all regarding rebirths, God > takes a consciousness, a form of energy and reformats > it, sends it rolling down back to the world to be > fitted in a new model, a processor, a new monitor and > a new life begins. > But what about the unconscious awareness of that same > very memory?? > regards > rishi > > --- crystal pages <jyotish_vani wrote: > > > Rishi, one point if I may -- > > Past never ceases to exist as long it is in one's > > memory! Human > > beings, as opposed to other animals perhaps, have > > been blessed > > (drused?) with the faculty of memory that is acute > > and detailed. > > > > Perhaps that is the key, the first step in the > > journey of thousand > > steps! > > > > RR > > > > > > , rishi > > shukla > > <rishi_2000in@> wrote: > > > > > > The past has ceased to exist and only the recorded > > > version od the events past survives. This past, > > is > > > however, not immutable and does not present the > > same > > > appearance always and everywhere.. It looks > > different > > > at different times and places, and either an > > increase > > > or a decrease in our information changes the > > picture. > > > Our view of the relations of past events to each > > > other, of their relative importance, and of their > > > significance, changes constantly in consequence of > > the > > > constant change of the fugitive present. > > > History is what the historian sees. The same past > > > viewed by the same person in different periods is > > > different. > > > Yet, the more things change or appear to change, > > they > > > remain the same. This is the lesson of jyotish to > > > me.The reboots are the beginning of a subsequent > > cycle > > > of time. I will hesitate to use the word ''new '' > > > cycle because the cycle is not really new, it is > > new > > > only to us who define time in terms of past, > > present > > > and future. > > > The chronological time is maybe just a fraction of > > > time! > > > regards > > > > > > rishi > > > > > > --- crystal pages <jyotish_vani@> wrote: > > > > > > > Two cents even though unsolicitated! > > > > > > > > If you look at traditional literature -- it > > would > > > > seem that it was a > > > > well mentored and well-proctored reality back > > then > > > > with teachers and > > > > support systems not just available but essential > > and > > > > mandatory, some > > > > would proclaim. > > > > > > > > We really do not have accounts of history in > > terms > > > > of what actually > > > > was, few thousands of years ago, though I have > > the > > > > gut feeling that > > > > what we consider as tradition was not just > > thousands > > > > of years even > > > > older than proclaimed (and debated by a few) but > > > > even older, almost > > > > as if there was a gene jump at some point. If we > > > > knew that that > > > > really happened,despite intermittent seemingly > > total > > > > annihilations, > > > > then the meaning of 'Shashwat' may dawn more > > > > urgently and > > > > significantly on our perceptions. To some this > > may > > > > smack of mythology > > > > and mythical. Let them enjoy their moment of > > glory! > > > > > > > > So, history, really ancient history must be > > > > perceived, recreated > > > > almost based on no evidence, no documents that > > > > survived -- that were > > > > not meant to survive perhaps, because the > > UNIVERSE, > > > > the Shashwat > > > > Universe seems to believe in reboots! Minor > > reboots > > > > include natural > > > > calamities, the latest examples being the > > Tsunamis > > > > but the real and > > > > scary *atlantis* of modern times being NEW > > ORLEANS. > > > > One of the > > > > biggest annihilative challenges thrown in the > > face > > > > of humanity in > > > > recent times. Total wipeout! Will it emerge? > > Will > > > > Atlantis reemerge? > > > > For those who may know, Mardi gras is a big > > > > tradition of New Orleans > > > > and Texas took upon it this year while New > > Orleans > > > > recuperates > > > > slowly -- just so that the tradition does not > > die. I > > > > translate that > > > > to say: So that human spirit as we know it does > > not > > > > die. And really, > > > > that is what tradition is about, dear friends. > > Not > > > > crumbling books, > > > > or buildings that are falling to pieces and > > rituals > > > > too in some > > > > settings, but the HUMAN SPIRIT! Bravo New > > > > Orleanians! Through your > > > > misery and personal losses you have demonstrated > > to > > > > us the power of > > > > human spirit and that the ATLANTIS EXPERIENCE > > was > > > > not a myth. > > > > > > > > Atlanteans had much psychic powers and pyramids, > > > > some say. We as a > > > > world community have lost Atlantis but this > > world > > > > has perhaps > > > > retained everything that was magnificient and > > great > > > > and covetable and > > > > worthy of retention. True it looks a bit like a > > war > > > > zone, like a > > > > disaster zone but it is all there. All that was > > > > worthy of living on, > > > > though some details may have gone missing. > > Jyotish > > > > aussi! > > > > > > > > The current reality is, like it or not -- > > coffee/tea > > > > arriving or not > > > > in bed -- not structured and mentors and > > teachers > > > > though galore and > > > > arriving in baker's dozen (13 to a dozen for > > anyone > > > > not familiar with > > > > that idiom) are suspect, for the most part. This > > is > > > > not my judgment > > > > but just ask around privately. Lot of people shy > > > > away from stating > > > > things like that publicly. Those that do and > > > > question get beaten up! > > > > > > > > Even history and historical myths and glib, > > > > undocumented, > > > > unsubstantiated claims and pronouncements about > > > > history must be > > > > questioned and challenged. A few individuals a > > few > > > > years were > > > > seriously questioning about the aryan-dravidian > > > > 'history' that most > > > > of us were taught and take for granted, taught > > by > > > > europeans who had > > > > the "point of power" in terms of how history was > > > > written and > > > > propagated in the last few hundred years (at > > least > > > > in India) and even > > > > how MAPS were made worldwide and regions > > depicted > > > > MISPROPORTIONATELY > > > > (the different projections, for instance, > > mercator > > > > and so on). > > > > > > > > I am not a scholar in these matters but know > > enough > > > === message truncated === > > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 14, 2006 Report Share Posted April 14, 2006 Dear Sir, A good plausible explanation that every thing in this world is relative as time moves as swiftly as horses.where as something sthira(boon?) can only retain energy.The energy is part of world /universe and acts from behind as a moving spirit to activate one and all.There being no chance to seek boon(to find sthira) the best way is to drift to spirtual bent and indluge in reformation of oneself.I think all of us are unanimous and universal in admitting that spirtual progress alone can make or break energy and is the only positive application that helps human beings.This is where our vivekata granted by the Almighty can come to our rescue. To intiate this kind of thought why not we as people looking indirectly into the nature of human charts counsel through the planets reading and impress that any other pursuit is difficult to be retained and the world giving no time to plan to retain suggest for spirtual progress. Instead, the bonds that is getting related to one another in search of fulfilment of desires have no permanancy.A time is there in every one's life(however short or long) to end this drama and leave to unknown destinations.This is where a wake up call through jyotish can be endorsed.The search what humans can attain through their efforts and can not attain for which the worries get compounded and makes life miserable in a candid way has to be indicated.This effort helps not only conserving energy but allows to apply for spirtual purpose. The enlightenment one possibly gets through spirtual progress has no hinderances and all endeavours result in highest satisfaction.There is contentment and fulfilment one can find in life.The only bond that is saswat is to relate oneself to the supernatural that creates energy and change the status from sthira to chara.Any thing other than this can be termed as maya.To understand what is maya is certainly a long traverse of life and reformations. with regards krishnan rishi shukla <rishi_2000in wrote: Krishnanji, In this rapidly moving world...the veda says... "kaalo ashwato bahati"...time moves as swiftly as a horse; isnot it a boon to find something not chara or ubhaya...something which is sthira. Something which even in the flow of time retains its energy. Yet, if it is too sthira then the world , passes it by, that is why everything becomes relative. The grahas act in relation to each other. The most saatvik of grahas at its deepest exaltation becomes powerless if it is not supported by other grahas. regards rishi --- vattem krishnan <bursar_99 wrote: > Dear Friends, > All 12 signs(making 360 deg) have been broadly > divided > into:Chara(1,4,7&10)sthira(2,4,5&11)ubhaya(3,6,9&12) > This age old classificationwhether hold good in > today is a point jyotishis through their present > experiences has to be analysed. > The modern man thinks of the by relating to > present times.No doubt he is more dual than the > other two categories. > Past definetely is past and is frozen.certainly > immutable.Future ceratinly is only dualism,a secular > feeling in rehan and sahan. > No body likes to sthira as categorised but would > like to be chara or ubhaya.I think even astrologers > too without any reference to their identity should > not also be fixed and advocate only mutable..that > way we are emphasising need to changes.we need to > link to future make duality as the main > platform.temples therefore signify God.But God's do > not signify temples.Today houses are becoming more > as temples with emphasis and stress on religious out > look.I find more and more and more adopting to > e-poojas and e-bhajans.where God's are believed to > have been located and reverred have become places to > mop up un accounted money. > spitual progress today is dual in nature and is > trisanku. > Define the past is half hearted exercise and > defining present is more comforts and future? > jyotish is not an easy science to promise except > advocate karma siddhanta.Past for ever remained as > past from the point of view present hardships being > experienced in different ways.To list these > hardships is to heckle at our selves as we are > neither in the present nor in the past > krishnan > crystal pages <jyotish_vani wrote: > Rishi, one point if I may -- > Past never ceases to exist as long it is in one's > memory! Human > beings, as opposed to other animals perhaps, have > been blessed > (drused?) with the faculty of memory that is acute > and detailed. > > Perhaps that is the key, the first step in the > journey of thousand > steps! > > RR > > > , rishi > shukla > <rishi_2000in wrote: > > > > The past has ceased to exist and only the recorded > > version od the events past survives. This past, > is > > however, not immutable and does not present the > same > > appearance always and everywhere.. It looks > different > > at different times and places, and either an > increase > > or a decrease in our information changes the > picture. > > Our view of the relations of past events to each > > other, of their relative importance, and of their > > significance, changes constantly in consequence of > the > > constant change of the fugitive present. > > History is what the historian sees. The same past > > viewed by the same person in different periods is > > different. > > Yet, the more things change or appear to change, > they > > remain the same. This is the lesson of jyotish to > > me.The reboots are the beginning of a subsequent > cycle > > of time. I will hesitate to use the word ''new '' > > cycle because the cycle is not really new, it is > new > > only to us who define time in terms of past, > present > > and future. > > The chronological time is maybe just a fraction of > > time! > > regards > > > > rishi > > > > --- crystal pages <jyotish_vani wrote: > > > > > Two cents even though unsolicitated! > > > > > > If you look at traditional literature -- it > would > > > seem that it was a > > > well mentored and well-proctored reality back > then > > > with teachers and > > > support systems not just available but essential > and > > > mandatory, some > > > would proclaim. > > > > > > We really do not have accounts of history in > terms > > > of what actually > > > was, few thousands of years ago, though I have > the > > > gut feeling that > > > what we consider as tradition was not just > thousands > > > of years even > > > older than proclaimed (and debated by a few) but > > > even older, almost > > > as if there was a gene jump at some point. If we > > > knew that that > > > really happened,despite intermittent seemingly > total > > > annihilations, > > > then the meaning of 'Shashwat' may dawn more > > > urgently and > > > significantly on our perceptions. To some this > may > > > smack of mythology > > > and mythical. Let them enjoy their moment of > glory! > > > > > > So, history, really ancient history must be > > > perceived, recreated > > > almost based on no evidence, no documents that > > > survived -- that were > > > not meant to survive perhaps, because the > UNIVERSE, > > > the Shashwat > > > Universe seems to believe in reboots! Minor > reboots > > > include natural > > > calamities, the latest examples being the > Tsunamis > > > but the real and > > > scary *atlantis* of modern times being NEW > ORLEANS. > > > One of the > > > biggest annihilative challenges thrown in the > face > > > of humanity in > > > recent times. Total wipeout! Will it emerge? > Will > > > Atlantis reemerge? > > > For those who may know, Mardi gras is a big > > > tradition of New Orleans > > > and Texas took upon it this year while New > Orleans > > > recuperates > > > slowly -- just so that the tradition does not > die. I > > > translate that > > > to say: So that human spirit as we know it does > not > > > die. And really, > > > that is what tradition is about, dear friends. > Not > > > crumbling books, > > > or buildings that are falling to pieces and > rituals > > > too in some > > > settings, but the HUMAN SPIRIT! Bravo New > > > Orleanians! Through your > > > misery and personal losses you have demonstrated > to > > > us the power of > > > human spirit and that the ATLANTIS EXPERIENCE > was > > > not a myth. > > > > > > Atlanteans had much psychic powers and pyramids, > > > some say. We as a > > > world community have lost Atlantis but this > world > > > has perhaps > > > retained everything that was magnificient and > great > > > and covetable and > > > worthy of retention. True it looks a bit like a > war > > > zone, like a > > > disaster zone but it is all there. All that was > > > worthy of living on, > > > though some details may have gone missing. > Jyotish > > > aussi! > > > > > > The current reality is, like it or not -- > coffee/tea > > > arriving or not > > > in bed -- not structured and mentors and > teachers > === message truncated === SURRENDER JOYFULLY TO THE WILL OF THE ULTIMATE DIVINITY AND RELISH THE TASTE OF ABSOLUTE BLISS. Vedic astrology Astrology chart Astrology software Visit your group "" on the web. Talk is cheap. Use Messenger to make PC-to-Phone calls. Great rates starting at 1¢/min. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 14, 2006 Report Share Posted April 14, 2006 Quite right, Naliniji,some echoes continue,decoding is not always possible and maybe not desirable at times. There could be some astrological signatures somewhere, I think, RRji can decipher it to some extent. regards rishi , "auromirra19" <nalini2818 wrote: > > [Om Namo Narayanya] > Rishiji, > Often the registry entries do not get wiped out or totally erased, > even on defragmentation, it is all in the mother board, can you toss > that out. No matter how much you try something remains, call it > poorva janma vasana, lingering, eluding , coming into awareness > almost there, again retreating, teasing. If you care to peer into > the layers, it is there. But unfortunate it is difficult to decode > it.The pity is we are very much in the present, longing for the past > and worrying about the future. > Regards > nalini > [Om Namah Shivaya Namah mallikarjunaya} > , rishi shukla > <rishi_2000in@> wrote: > > > > RRji, > > The human memory, atleaast the consciously aware > > portion of the memory, is also a function of time, it > > fades away, it is selective . To draw an analogy with > > the computer memory, it needs upgrading, > > defragmentation and at times, formatting where all old > > data is gone and the conscious memory is ready to be > > filled up again with fresh human experiences. > > Maybe, that is what is all regarding rebirths, God > > takes a consciousness, a form of energy and reformats > > it, sends it rolling down back to the world to be > > fitted in a new model, a processor, a new monitor and > > a new life begins. > > But what about the unconscious awareness of that same > > very memory?? > > regards > > rishi > > > > --- crystal pages <jyotish_vani@> wrote: > > > > > Rishi, one point if I may -- > > > Past never ceases to exist as long it is in one's > > > memory! Human > > > beings, as opposed to other animals perhaps, have > > > been blessed > > > (drused?) with the faculty of memory that is acute > > > and detailed. > > > > > > Perhaps that is the key, the first step in the > > > journey of thousand > > > steps! > > > > > > RR > > > > > > > > > , rishi > > > shukla > > > <rishi_2000in@> wrote: > > > > > > > > The past has ceased to exist and only the recorded > > > > version od the events past survives. This past, > > > is > > > > however, not immutable and does not present the > > > same > > > > appearance always and everywhere.. It looks > > > different > > > > at different times and places, and either an > > > increase > > > > or a decrease in our information changes the > > > picture. > > > > Our view of the relations of past events to each > > > > other, of their relative importance, and of their > > > > significance, changes constantly in consequence of > > > the > > > > constant change of the fugitive present. > > > > History is what the historian sees. The same past > > > > viewed by the same person in different periods is > > > > different. > > > > Yet, the more things change or appear to change, > > > they > > > > remain the same. This is the lesson of jyotish to > > > > me.The reboots are the beginning of a subsequent > > > cycle > > > > of time. I will hesitate to use the word ''new '' > > > > cycle because the cycle is not really new, it is > > > new > > > > only to us who define time in terms of past, > > > present > > > > and future. > > > > The chronological time is maybe just a fraction of > > > > time! > > > > regards > > > > > > > > rishi > > > > > > > > --- crystal pages <jyotish_vani@> wrote: > > > > > > > > > Two cents even though unsolicitated! > > > > > > > > > > If you look at traditional literature -- it > > > would > > > > > seem that it was a > > > > > well mentored and well-proctored reality back > > > then > > > > > with teachers and > > > > > support systems not just available but essential > > > and > > > > > mandatory, some > > > > > would proclaim. > > > > > > > > > > We really do not have accounts of history in > > > terms > > > > > of what actually > > > > > was, few thousands of years ago, though I have > > > the > > > > > gut feeling that > > > > > what we consider as tradition was not just > > > thousands > > > > > of years even > > > > > older than proclaimed (and debated by a few) but > > > > > even older, almost > > > > > as if there was a gene jump at some point. If we > > > > > knew that that > > > > > really happened,despite intermittent seemingly > > > total > > > > > annihilations, > > > > > then the meaning of 'Shashwat' may dawn more > > > > > urgently and > > > > > significantly on our perceptions. To some this > > > may > > > > > smack of mythology > > > > > and mythical. Let them enjoy their moment of > > > glory! > > > > > > > > > > So, history, really ancient history must be > > > > > perceived, recreated > > > > > almost based on no evidence, no documents that > > > > > survived -- that were > > > > > not meant to survive perhaps, because the > > > UNIVERSE, > > > > > the Shashwat > > > > > Universe seems to believe in reboots! Minor > > > reboots > > > > > include natural > > > > > calamities, the latest examples being the > > > Tsunamis > > > > > but the real and > > > > > scary *atlantis* of modern times being NEW > > > ORLEANS. > > > > > One of the > > > > > biggest annihilative challenges thrown in the > > > face > > > > > of humanity in > > > > > recent times. Total wipeout! Will it emerge? > > > Will > > > > > Atlantis reemerge? > > > > > For those who may know, Mardi gras is a big > > > > > tradition of New Orleans > > > > > and Texas took upon it this year while New > > > Orleans > > > > > recuperates > > > > > slowly -- just so that the tradition does not > > > die. I > > > > > translate that > > > > > to say: So that human spirit as we know it does > > > not > > > > > die. And really, > > > > > that is what tradition is about, dear friends. > > > Not > > > > > crumbling books, > > > > > or buildings that are falling to pieces and > > > rituals > > > > > too in some > > > > > settings, but the HUMAN SPIRIT! Bravo New > > > > > Orleanians! Through your > > > > > misery and personal losses you have demonstrated > > > to > > > > > us the power of > > > > > human spirit and that the ATLANTIS EXPERIENCE > > > was > > > > > not a myth. > > > > > > > > > > Atlanteans had much psychic powers and pyramids, > > > > > some say. We as a > > > > > world community have lost Atlantis but this > > > world > > > > > has perhaps > > > > > retained everything that was magnificient and > > > great > > > > > and covetable and > > > > > worthy of retention. True it looks a bit like a > > > war > > > > > zone, like a > > > > > disaster zone but it is all there. All that was > > > > > worthy of living on, > > > > > though some details may have gone missing. > > > Jyotish > > > > > aussi! > > > > > > > > > > The current reality is, like it or not -- > > > coffee/tea > > > > > arriving or not > > > > > in bed -- not structured and mentors and > > > teachers > > > > > though galore and > > > > > arriving in baker's dozen (13 to a dozen for > > > anyone > > > > > not familiar with > > > > > that idiom) are suspect, for the most part. This > > > is > > > > > not my judgment > > > > > but just ask around privately. Lot of people shy > > > > > away from stating > > > > > things like that publicly. Those that do and > > > > > question get beaten up! > > > > > > > > > > Even history and historical myths and glib, > > > > > undocumented, > > > > > unsubstantiated claims and pronouncements about > > > > > history must be > > > > > questioned and challenged. A few individuals a > > > few > > > > > years were > > > > > seriously questioning about the aryan-dravidian > > > > > 'history' that most > > > > > of us were taught and take for granted, taught > > > by > > > > > europeans who had > > > > > the "point of power" in terms of how history was > > > > > written and > > > > > propagated in the last few hundred years (at > > > least > > > > > in India) and even > > > > > how MAPS were made worldwide and regions > > > depicted > > > > > MISPROPORTIONATELY > > > > > (the different projections, for instance, > > > mercator > > > > > and so on). > > > > > > > > > > I am not a scholar in these matters but know > > > enough > > > > > === message truncated === > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 14, 2006 Report Share Posted April 14, 2006 Nalini ji, Unknowingly we are dual in character and approaches.This is what in one of my mail I opined. The mother board at the back end is ever vigilant to register all sundries.The problem remains with decoding.what we really intend to decode and what we could decode happen beyond our control.That particular state a semiconscious state(sushma avastha) has a very limited processor speed.so you witness your psychic internet hang over.No wonder that"The pity is we are very much in the present, longing for the past and worrying about the future." Astrological signatures concerning these issues need to be explored from the lagna itself.Moon though vascilates takes us back in to lingering past,the lagna very strong element pulls you back with the help of all other planets aiding lagna to live in the present. concern about future and the apprehension there on arise as a result of knowing/finding our own inabilities and feeling that there is no one to aid us to assure us green pastures for future. This concern without the help of super natural is always ambiguous. krishnan rishi_2000in <rishi_2000in wrote: Quite right, Naliniji,some echoes continue,decoding is not always possible and maybe not desirable at times. There could be some astrological signatures somewhere, I think, RRji can decipher it to some extent. regards rishi , "auromirra19" <nalini2818 wrote: > > [Om Namo Narayanya] > Rishiji, > Often the registry entries do not get wiped out or totally erased, > even on defragmentation, it is all in the mother board, can you toss > that out. No matter how much you try something remains, call it > poorva janma vasana, lingering, eluding , coming into awareness > almost there, again retreating, teasing. If you care to peer into > the layers, it is there. But unfortunate it is difficult to decode > it.The pity is we are very much in the present, longing for the past > and worrying about the future. > Regards > nalini > [Om Namah Shivaya Namah mallikarjunaya} > , rishi shukla > <rishi_2000in@> wrote: > > > > RRji, > > The human memory, atleaast the consciously aware > > portion of the memory, is also a function of time, it > > fades away, it is selective . To draw an analogy with > > the computer memory, it needs upgrading, > > defragmentation and at times, formatting where all old > > data is gone and the conscious memory is ready to be > > filled up again with fresh human experiences. > > Maybe, that is what is all regarding rebirths, God > > takes a consciousness, a form of energy and reformats > > it, sends it rolling down back to the world to be > > fitted in a new model, a processor, a new monitor and > > a new life begins. > > But what about the unconscious awareness of that same > > very memory?? > > regards > > rishi > > > > --- crystal pages <jyotish_vani@> wrote: > > > > > Rishi, one point if I may -- > > > Past never ceases to exist as long it is in one's > > > memory! Human > > > beings, as opposed to other animals perhaps, have > > > been blessed > > > (drused?) with the faculty of memory that is acute > > > and detailed. > > > > > > Perhaps that is the key, the first step in the > > > journey of thousand > > > steps! > > > > > > RR > > > > > > > > > , rishi > > > shukla > > > <rishi_2000in@> wrote: > > > > > > > > The past has ceased to exist and only the recorded > > > > version od the events past survives. This past, > > > is > > > > however, not immutable and does not present the > > > same > > > > appearance always and everywhere.. It looks > > > different > > > > at different times and places, and either an > > > increase > > > > or a decrease in our information changes the > > > picture. > > > > Our view of the relations of past events to each > > > > other, of their relative importance, and of their > > > > significance, changes constantly in consequence of > > > the > > > > constant change of the fugitive present. > > > > History is what the historian sees. The same past > > > > viewed by the same person in different periods is > > > > different. > > > > Yet, the more things change or appear to change, > > > they > > > > remain the same. This is the lesson of jyotish to > > > > me.The reboots are the beginning of a subsequent > > > cycle > > > > of time. I will hesitate to use the word ''new '' > > > > cycle because the cycle is not really new, it is > > > new > > > > only to us who define time in terms of past, > > > present > > > > and future. > > > > The chronological time is maybe just a fraction of > > > > time! > > > > regards > > > > > > > > rishi > > > > > > > > --- crystal pages <jyotish_vani@> wrote: > > > > > > > > > Two cents even though unsolicitated! > > > > > > > > > > If you look at traditional literature -- it > > > would > > > > > seem that it was a > > > > > well mentored and well-proctored reality back > > > then > > > > > with teachers and > > > > > support systems not just available but essential > > > and > > > > > mandatory, some > > > > > would proclaim. > > > > > > > > > > We really do not have accounts of history in > > > terms > > > > > of what actually > > > > > was, few thousands of years ago, though I have > > > the > > > > > gut feeling that > > > > > what we consider as tradition was not just > > > thousands > > > > > of years even > > > > > older than proclaimed (and debated by a few) but > > > > > even older, almost > > > > > as if there was a gene jump at some point. If we > > > > > knew that that > > > > > really happened,despite intermittent seemingly > > > total > > > > > annihilations, > > > > > then the meaning of 'Shashwat' may dawn more > > > > > urgently and > > > > > significantly on our perceptions. To some this > > > may > > > > > smack of mythology > > > > > and mythical. Let them enjoy their moment of > > > glory! > > > > > > > > > > So, history, really ancient history must be > > > > > perceived, recreated > > > > > almost based on no evidence, no documents that > > > > > survived -- that were > > > > > not meant to survive perhaps, because the > > > UNIVERSE, > > > > > the Shashwat > > > > > Universe seems to believe in reboots! Minor > > > reboots > > > > > include natural > > > > > calamities, the latest examples being the > > > Tsunamis > > > > > but the real and > > > > > scary *atlantis* of modern times being NEW > > > ORLEANS. > > > > > One of the > > > > > biggest annihilative challenges thrown in the > > > face > > > > > of humanity in > > > > > recent times. Total wipeout! Will it emerge? > > > Will > > > > > Atlantis reemerge? > > > > > For those who may know, Mardi gras is a big > > > > > tradition of New Orleans > > > > > and Texas took upon it this year while New > > > Orleans > > > > > recuperates > > > > > slowly -- just so that the tradition does not > > > die. I > > > > > translate that > > > > > to say: So that human spirit as we know it does > > > not > > > > > die. And really, > > > > > that is what tradition is about, dear friends. > > > Not > > > > > crumbling books, > > > > > or buildings that are falling to pieces and > > > rituals > > > > > too in some > > > > > settings, but the HUMAN SPIRIT! Bravo New > > > > > Orleanians! Through your > > > > > misery and personal losses you have demonstrated > > > to > > > > > us the power of > > > > > human spirit and that the ATLANTIS EXPERIENCE > > > was > > > > > not a myth. > > > > > > > > > > Atlanteans had much psychic powers and pyramids, > > > > > some say. We as a > > > > > world community have lost Atlantis but this > > > world > > > > > has perhaps > > > > > retained everything that was magnificient and > > > great > > > > > and covetable and > > > > > worthy of retention. True it looks a bit like a > > > war > > > > > zone, like a > > > > > disaster zone but it is all there. All that was > > > > > worthy of living on, > > > > > though some details may have gone missing. > > > Jyotish > > > > > aussi! > > > > > > > > > > The current reality is, like it or not -- > > > coffee/tea > > > > > arriving or not > > > > > in bed -- not structured and mentors and > > > teachers > > > > > though galore and > > > > > arriving in baker's dozen (13 to a dozen for > > > anyone > > > > > not familiar with > > > > > that idiom) are suspect, for the most part. This > > > is > > > > > not my judgment > > > > > but just ask around privately. Lot of people shy > > > > > away from stating > > > > > things like that publicly. Those that do and > > > > > question get beaten up! > > > > > > > > > > Even history and historical myths and glib, > > > > > undocumented, > > > > > unsubstantiated claims and pronouncements about > > > > > history must be > > > > > questioned and challenged. A few individuals a > > > few > > > > > years were > > > > > seriously questioning about the aryan-dravidian > > > > > 'history' that most > > > > > of us were taught and take for granted, taught > > > by > > > > > europeans who had > > > > > the "point of power" in terms of how history was > > > > > written and > > > > > propagated in the last few hundred years (at > > > least > > > > > in India) and even > > > > > how MAPS were made worldwide and regions > > > depicted > > > > > MISPROPORTIONATELY > > > > > (the different projections, for instance, > > > mercator > > > > > and so on). > > > > > > > > > > I am not a scholar in these matters but know > > > enough > > > > > === message truncated === > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > SURRENDER JOYFULLY TO THE WILL OF THE ULTIMATE DIVINITY AND RELISH THE TASTE OF ABSOLUTE BLISS. Visit your group "" on the web. Love cheap thrills? Enjoy PC-to-Phone calls to 30+ countries for just 2¢/min with Messenger with Voice. 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Guest guest Posted April 14, 2006 Report Share Posted April 14, 2006 dear rishi ji as you observed rightly, the saga of visiting and revisiting is never ending till the person is realised. once the person is realised, he needs no more, knows no more, wants no more and experience the eternal bliss. however, the maya is like this. even the gods keep taking various forms and shapes to see and enjoy the maya. the sages too visit various kingdoms to test the kings and either give blessings or curses. people attributing "go hatya" to sage gautam or king of devatas indra having sage gautam's wife ahalya in the disguise of sage gautam are few examples of how sages and devatas too fall in the maya. kings in medieval times also used to collect first hand intelligence by roaming on the streets in disguise. king bhartruhari shows what the material wealth or kingdom gets in his various subhashitam. one shall keep trying the path of seeking and knowing the reality and truth till realisation. with best wishes arjun , rishi shukla <rishi_2000in wrote: > > Well said, Arjunji, one seeks the reality and for this > one queries and stumbles on the path of life learning > a bit here and a bit there. > The point is, however, that what is the 'realisation'? > Realisation, even if handed to us on a platter, we are > often unable to realise that this is the realisation! > For afterall,we are ordinary persons and keep seeking > that elusive truth. > Our rich heritage in terms of philosphical thought and > religious values is there to guide us. As you have > said, it consists of symbolic sets of thoughts. The > question, for me, is how do I interpret this symbolic > story. I can, either, take it on its face value or I > can analyse it in terms of my own interactions or > experiences. > Each individual is at a given stage of life > experiences and therefore, uniquely different. Blessed > are those on the bhakti path for they immerse > themselves in a given thought and cross this hourney > of life.An ordinary bhakta may be more realised than > the more well known seers. Who knows..the quest > therefore continues as life goes on. > regards > rishi > > --- panditarjun2004 <panditarjun2004 wrote: > > > dear friends > > > > relating to all the messages on this thread, i share > > some thoughts > > mentioned in another group below: > > > > light is knowledge and darkness is ignorance. > > knowledge as per > > lexicon means "to know". in our vedic concept, > > knowledge means to > > seek and know the truth and reality. knowing truth > > ultimately make > > you realised when you come to know what is reality. > > > > when you got by rote what is written in your school > > books that rama > > killed ten headed ravana, chandra married twenty > > seven stars and all > > mythical stories, why even mythical stories even > > medieval stories of > > kings, dynasties, wars etc, you just cram what was > > written, at the > > best refer the oldest book written on that subject > > (only to check > > what you read already has any reference or basis and > > no way it is > > knowing the truth) and write the same and lo, you > > pass the exam and > > you are given a certificate of excellence in that > > subject. did you > > verify whether they are true or not, logically > > questioned whether > > they are comprehensible at all in the first place. > > no because you > > are interested only in passing the exam and get a > > certificate. this > > is what all humans do till they are realised. > > > > a person having quest for knowledge or knowing more > > keeps querying > > till he reaches the truth and find the reality, > > which is loosely > > called "realisation". > > > > once a person REALISES what the truth is and what > > the reality is, > > that person seeks no more, asks no more and wants no > > more, for he > > realised the truth. Gita says, for a reliased > > person, vedas are > > meaningless. It means not belittling the vedas but > > if a person > > achieves "realisation" stauts, that person needs to > > know no more or > > positively put the realised person knew what all is > > written in vedas > > and much more. > > > > i positively hope that one should continue to throw > > more light > > on "truth" and "reality" instead of injunctions on > > scriptures. > > > > however, when we deal with unrealised people, > > craving more material > > needs and wanting us to do or advise something as to > > how to get > > these material goodies more, we advise this or that > > remedy. this > > reminds me of an unrealised person getting the > > darshan of the god > > and when asked to seek a boon, he asks that whatever > > he touches > > shall become gold. lo, he touches his wife and > > children they become > > gold. he touches food and it becomes gold. then he > > realises the > > realiity and become a realised person. the logic > > behind god > > granting whatever the sadhaka asks is simple. you > > get what you want > > till you are realised. you would remain at the > > receiving end till > > you are realised. once you are realised, you are > > not dependant on > > any one or any thing and are only in the giving end. > > > > sarvam paravasam dukham, sarvam atma vasam sukham > > e tad vidyaat samasena lakshanam sukha dukhayo. > > > > this is how sukham and dukham are defined. > > > > may jupiter's light shine on all. > > with best wishes > > arjun > > , vattem > > krishnan > > <bursar_99@> wrote: > > > > > > Dear Friends, > > > Seeking spirtuality by moving with mobiles,in > > limousine cars and > > dwelling house where seasons have no meaning for a > > modernite. > > > This recalls me to recollect Rajaneesh acclaimed > > osho > > philosophy.people may agree that this philosophy has > > meaning and > > convictions brought out by seers by making several > > sacrifices.we all > > know in those old and golden(?)people have limited > > avocations > > compared to the modernite who needs robbot > > controlled places.Throgh > > click of mouse we wish to link to the past and yet > > explore value > > scinces which were more theoritical in orientation > > and less > > acceptance statistically.Probably East known for > > their orientation > > to explore nature through observations and offering > > complex formulas > > through vedic mathematics have partially succeeded > > in enticing even > > the modern man to slip into past histories and > > attempt in his own > > way to find meaning in these days of changed > > habitats. > > > what really striked the ambition of modern man > > and race through > > mechanical life is memorise past histories and find > > values of those > > theories.There are less number populations who were > > not attached > > God's feeling and have reverence to vedic > > preachings.is it that even > > today the age old convictions have significance and > > difficult to > > negate them.is it that modern man finds more > > botherations in > > electronic controlled atmosphere.Difficult however > > to find a logical > > solutions.The only plausible answer is however a > > modern man finds > > his tagged to his past actions and acclaim good or > > bad experiences > > as prarabdha and willing to proceed and make > > strides. > > > we may disagree to live in through the past > > teachings however > > nascent they are,prepare ourselves to take a leaf > > out of them. > > > Today various chapters of geeta are not > > difficult to understand > > as the availabilty of these preaching has become > > extensive through > > the advent of electronic media.what matters however > > has to bother > > atleast some of us is self orientation in choosing > > what is ideal for > > him only and ignore all other aspect of social > > animal. > > > here i may take initiative and quote an > > incident. > > > I met prof D.P.Tripathi a sanskrit scholar > > involved in teaching > > and counselling through jyotish has to face a more > > or less a > > modernite.when i understand modernite let me also > > clarify that he is > > one who can not forsake comforts and yet offering > > from a distance > > his obeissence to idols consecrated in > > temples.Intends to be be > > identified through arya samaj(may not worship > > different forms of > > Gods and idols) and seeks way to come out of the > > mess in which he > > was inolved either through his family or through his > > > > profession.Denies for elaboarate poojas and sanskars > > as he belongs > > to different convictions and wants pariharas to come > > out of the rut. > > > My friend though he does not belong to the > > generation of > > siddhantis(capable of interrpreting classicals and > > advise) yet > > advocates pariharas to overcome bad situations. > > > Accordingly he fixed days to perform shanti > > poojas and men to > > recite mantras suitably for the modernite.My friend > > more concerned > > with brevity and feeling that any money spent on > > these pariharas is > > to be limited actual cost of materials but not > > willing to offer any > > gurudaksina for the priests willing to toil and > > perform > > remedies.This divergence is ambiguous as he believes > > that the bad > > > === message truncated === > > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 14, 2006 Report Share Posted April 14, 2006 Dear Rishi and Nalini, I think that the computer analogy is wonderful. I recall a posting on compuserve which touched on something similar. I will look for it and if I find it will share with both of you. As far as decoding and deciphering -- would love to, one of these days, godwilling :-) RR , "rishi_2000in" <rishi_2000in wrote: > > > Quite right, Naliniji,some echoes continue,decoding is not always > possible and maybe not desirable at times. > There could be some astrological signatures somewhere, I think, RRji > can decipher it to some extent. > regards > rishi > > , "auromirra19" > <nalini2818@> wrote: > > > > [Om Namo Narayanya] > > Rishiji, > > Often the registry entries do not get wiped out or totally erased, > > even on defragmentation, it is all in the mother board, can you > toss > > that out. No matter how much you try something remains, call it > > poorva janma vasana, lingering, eluding , coming into awareness > > almost there, again retreating, teasing. If you care to peer into > > the layers, it is there. But unfortunate it is difficult to decode > > it.The pity is we are very much in the present, longing for the > past > > and worrying about the future. > > Regards > > nalini > > [Om Namah Shivaya Namah mallikarjunaya} > > , rishi shukla > > <rishi_2000in@> wrote: > > > > > > RRji, > > > The human memory, atleaast the consciously aware > > > portion of the memory, is also a function of time, it > > > fades away, it is selective . To draw an analogy with > > > the computer memory, it needs upgrading, > > > defragmentation and at times, formatting where all old > > > data is gone and the conscious memory is ready to be > > > filled up again with fresh human experiences. > > > Maybe, that is what is all regarding rebirths, God > > > takes a consciousness, a form of energy and reformats > > > it, sends it rolling down back to the world to be > > > fitted in a new model, a processor, a new monitor and > > > a new life begins. > > > But what about the unconscious awareness of that same > > > very memory?? > > > regards > > > rishi > > > > > > --- crystal pages <jyotish_vani@> wrote: > > > > > > > Rishi, one point if I may -- > > > > Past never ceases to exist as long it is in one's > > > > memory! Human > > > > beings, as opposed to other animals perhaps, have > > > > been blessed > > > > (drused?) with the faculty of memory that is acute > > > > and detailed. > > > > > > > > Perhaps that is the key, the first step in the > > > > journey of thousand > > > > steps! > > > > > > > > RR > > > > > > > > > > > > , rishi > > > > shukla > > > > <rishi_2000in@> wrote: > > > > > > > > > > The past has ceased to exist and only the recorded > > > > > version od the events past survives. This past, > > > > is > > > > > however, not immutable and does not present the > > > > same > > > > > appearance always and everywhere.. It looks > > > > different > > > > > at different times and places, and either an > > > > increase > > > > > or a decrease in our information changes the > > > > picture. > > > > > Our view of the relations of past events to each > > > > > other, of their relative importance, and of their > > > > > significance, changes constantly in consequence of > > > > the > > > > > constant change of the fugitive present. > > > > > History is what the historian sees. The same past > > > > > viewed by the same person in different periods is > > > > > different. > > > > > Yet, the more things change or appear to change, > > > > they > > > > > remain the same. This is the lesson of jyotish to > > > > > me.The reboots are the beginning of a subsequent > > > > cycle > > > > > of time. I will hesitate to use the word ''new '' > > > > > cycle because the cycle is not really new, it is > > > > new > > > > > only to us who define time in terms of past, > > > > present > > > > > and future. > > > > > The chronological time is maybe just a fraction of > > > > > time! > > > > > regards > > > > > > > > > > rishi > > > > > > > > > > --- crystal pages <jyotish_vani@> wrote: > > > > > > > > > > > Two cents even though unsolicitated! > > > > > > > > > > > > If you look at traditional literature -- it > > > > would > > > > > > seem that it was a > > > > > > well mentored and well-proctored reality back > > > > then > > > > > > with teachers and > > > > > > support systems not just available but essential > > > > and > > > > > > mandatory, some > > > > > > would proclaim. > > > > > > > > > > > > We really do not have accounts of history in > > > > terms > > > > > > of what actually > > > > > > was, few thousands of years ago, though I have > > > > the > > > > > > gut feeling that > > > > > > what we consider as tradition was not just > > > > thousands > > > > > > of years even > > > > > > older than proclaimed (and debated by a few) but > > > > > > even older, almost > > > > > > as if there was a gene jump at some point. If we > > > > > > knew that that > > > > > > really happened,despite intermittent seemingly > > > > total > > > > > > annihilations, > > > > > > then the meaning of 'Shashwat' may dawn more > > > > > > urgently and > > > > > > significantly on our perceptions. To some this > > > > may > > > > > > smack of mythology > > > > > > and mythical. Let them enjoy their moment of > > > > glory! > > > > > > > > > > > > So, history, really ancient history must be > > > > > > perceived, recreated > > > > > > almost based on no evidence, no documents that > > > > > > survived -- that were > > > > > > not meant to survive perhaps, because the > > > > UNIVERSE, > > > > > > the Shashwat > > > > > > Universe seems to believe in reboots! Minor > > > > reboots > > > > > > include natural > > > > > > calamities, the latest examples being the > > > > Tsunamis > > > > > > but the real and > > > > > > scary *atlantis* of modern times being NEW > > > > ORLEANS. > > > > > > One of the > > > > > > biggest annihilative challenges thrown in the > > > > face > > > > > > of humanity in > > > > > > recent times. Total wipeout! Will it emerge? > > > > Will > > > > > > Atlantis reemerge? > > > > > > For those who may know, Mardi gras is a big > > > > > > tradition of New Orleans > > > > > > and Texas took upon it this year while New > > > > Orleans > > > > > > recuperates > > > > > > slowly -- just so that the tradition does not > > > > die. I > > > > > > translate that > > > > > > to say: So that human spirit as we know it does > > > > not > > > > > > die. And really, > > > > > > that is what tradition is about, dear friends. > > > > Not > > > > > > crumbling books, > > > > > > or buildings that are falling to pieces and > > > > rituals > > > > > > too in some > > > > > > settings, but the HUMAN SPIRIT! Bravo New > > > > > > Orleanians! Through your > > > > > > misery and personal losses you have demonstrated > > > > to > > > > > > us the power of > > > > > > human spirit and that the ATLANTIS EXPERIENCE > > > > was > > > > > > not a myth. > > > > > > > > > > > > Atlanteans had much psychic powers and pyramids, > > > > > > some say. We as a > > > > > > world community have lost Atlantis but this > > > > world > > > > > > has perhaps > > > > > > retained everything that was magnificient and > > > > great > > > > > > and covetable and > > > > > > worthy of retention. True it looks a bit like a > > > > war > > > > > > zone, like a > > > > > > disaster zone but it is all there. All that was > > > > > > worthy of living on, > > > > > > though some details may have gone missing. > > > > Jyotish > > > > > > aussi! > > > > > > > > > > > > The current reality is, like it or not -- > > > > coffee/tea > > > > > > arriving or not > > > > > > in bed -- not structured and mentors and > > > > teachers > > > > > > though galore and > > > > > > arriving in baker's dozen (13 to a dozen for > > > > anyone > > > > > > not familiar with > > > > > > that idiom) are suspect, for the most part. This > > > > is > > > > > > not my judgment > > > > > > but just ask around privately. Lot of people shy > > > > > > away from stating > > > > > > things like that publicly. Those that do and > > > > > > question get beaten up! > > > > > > > > > > > > Even history and historical myths and glib, > > > > > > undocumented, > > > > > > unsubstantiated claims and pronouncements about > > > > > > history must be > > > > > > questioned and challenged. A few individuals a > > > > few > > > > > > years were > > > > > > seriously questioning about the aryan-dravidian > > > > > > 'history' that most > > > > > > of us were taught and take for granted, taught > > > > by > > > > > > europeans who had > > > > > > the "point of power" in terms of how history was > > > > > > written and > > > > > > propagated in the last few hundred years (at > > > > least > > > > > > in India) and even > > > > > > how MAPS were made worldwide and regions > > > > depicted > > > > > > MISPROPORTIONATELY > > > > > > (the different projections, for instance, > > > > mercator > > > > > > and so on). > > > > > > > > > > > > I am not a scholar in these matters but know > > > > enough > > > > > > > === message truncated === > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 14, 2006 Report Share Posted April 14, 2006 why you want to enjoy the bliss continuously without doing anything? Why you want bliss freely? What is that you will do in return to make the lord happy. This leads to idle nature. Swami Vivekananda is a great saint. He identified the Satguru (Lord in human form i.e., Paramahamsa)and realised & pleased the Lord. After realisation, He did not sit idle and enjoyed the bliss. He participated in the divine knowledge propagation at the order of His Satguru. He worked for 17-18 hours/day. The very nature of Lord Datta is to donate. Lord is in bliss means, the true devotees who approached Him will be in bliss by attracting their sins on Himself.But He gives bliss to those devotees, who reached that state where they participate in His mission without expecting anything in return but not to all.It is a sacrifice in both the directions. Lord enjoys the devotion (practical sacrifice of devotee)and devotee enjoys the bliss given by Lord. Otherwise theoretical worships give theoretical results. at the lotus feet of shri datta swami surya www.universal-spirituality.org "panditarjun2004" <panditarjun2004 wrote: > > dear rishi ji > > as you observed rightly, the saga of visiting and revisiting is > never ending till the person is realised. once the person is > realised, he needs no more, knows no more, wants no more and > experience the eternal bliss. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 14, 2006 Report Share Posted April 14, 2006 Dear Sir, The lord has only one expectation from all of us.Act according to dharma,carry dharma with you and let dharma be your judge.Almighty is always in a state of bliss and expects every one to experience bliss.so the cursor is there prompting actions.Almighty knows what is expected out of us.we need to do only that to seek bliss and get bliss krishnan surya <dattapr2000 wrote: why you want to enjoy the bliss continuously without doing anything? Why you want bliss freely? What is that you will do in return to make the lord happy. This leads to idle nature. Swami Vivekananda is a great saint. He identified the Satguru (Lord in human form i.e., Paramahamsa)and realised & pleased the Lord. After realisation, He did not sit idle and enjoyed the bliss. He participated in the divine knowledge propagation at the order of His Satguru. He worked for 17-18 hours/day. The very nature of Lord Datta is to donate. Lord is in bliss means, the true devotees who approached Him will be in bliss by attracting their sins on Himself.But He gives bliss to those devotees, who reached that state where they participate in His mission without expecting anything in return but not to all.It is a sacrifice in both the directions. Lord enjoys the devotion (practical sacrifice of devotee)and devotee enjoys the bliss given by Lord. Otherwise theoretical worships give theoretical results. at the lotus feet of shri datta swami surya www.universal-spirituality.org "panditarjun2004" <panditarjun2004 wrote: > > dear rishi ji > > as you observed rightly, the saga of visiting and revisiting is > never ending till the person is realised. once the person is > realised, he needs no more, knows no more, wants no more and > experience the eternal bliss. SURRENDER JOYFULLY TO THE WILL OF THE ULTIMATE DIVINITY AND RELISH THE TASTE OF ABSOLUTE BLISS. Vedic astrology Astrology chart Astrology software Visit your group "" on the web. New Messenger with Voice. Call regular phones from your PC and save big. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 14, 2006 Report Share Posted April 14, 2006 Bliss must come without a price/cost or it would not be bliss! It would be called payment! Work need not be a *chore* always or for all. Work can be blissful too! Been there done that! As I am sure all can relate to, I am sure on this august forum!! RR , "surya" <dattapr2000 wrote: > > why you want to enjoy the bliss continuously without doing anything? > Why you want bliss freely? What is that you will do in return to make > the lord happy. This leads to idle nature. Swami Vivekananda is a > great saint. He identified the Satguru (Lord in human form i.e., > Paramahamsa)and realised & pleased the Lord. After realisation, He did > not sit idle and enjoyed the bliss. > > He participated in the divine knowledge propagation at the order of > His Satguru. He worked for 17-18 hours/day. The very nature of Lord > Datta is to donate. Lord is in bliss means, the true devotees who > approached Him will be in bliss by attracting their sins on > Himself.But He gives bliss to those devotees, who reached that state > where they participate in His mission without expecting anything in > return but not to all.It is a sacrifice in both the directions. Lord > enjoys the devotion (practical sacrifice of devotee)and devotee enjoys > the bliss given by Lord. Otherwise theoretical worships give > theoretical results. > > at the lotus feet of shri datta swami > surya > www.universal-spirituality.org > > "panditarjun2004" <panditarjun2004@> wrote: > > > > dear rishi ji > > > > as you observed rightly, the saga of visiting and revisiting is > > never ending till the person is realised. once the person is > > realised, he needs no more, knows no more, wants no more and > > experience the eternal bliss. > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 14, 2006 Report Share Posted April 14, 2006 1) Pravrutti (path of justice): In this people desire the welfare of their body and family. They love their bodies and their families only. Their real love is not on the God but only on their body and family. When that welfare is disturbed and when it is not possible to rectify it by worldly means, then only they look at God. When you get fever and it is not subsided by the medicines you used, then you are approaching a doctor. Thus God is only an instrument to achieve the welfare of their body and family. They pretend real love on God, which is not real. When you go to the doctor you respect him too much. That respect is not real. That respect is only apparent and the aim of that respect is only that he will cure carefully your disease. These people do not bother about tomorrow. They don't bother about the hell after death and about the next birth. Their aim is only the temporary happiness confined to this birth only. They worship God for this purpose, which is not true love at all. God also acts accordingly. He postpones all your bad results to the next births like pro-notes with increased interest. He brings the good results from future births with reduced values like the pre-matured deposits. The Lord will not save these people in the hell. They will go to the heaven and when the results of their good deeds are finished, they are thrown back to the earth. In the future births, which are full of difficulties only, these people weep scolding the Lord. But the Lord keeps silent, because He acted according to their prayers only in the previous birth. In this field one can worship the Lord with single face, who is Vishnu, the embodiment of Sattvam quality. With this quality God will help you when you worship. But this quality always requires justice and logic. Therefore, within the rules of the cycle of justice God helps you. He will never harm you for your worship. In this field God in human form is not necessary. God will protect the justice by His power. In this field the aim of the people is not God. Their aim is only protection of justice and their families. Lord Krishna did not fight directly in the war because in this field His power is sufficient to protect the justice. Arjuna was charged with His power and Arjuna fought with the enemies. In this field the devotees can worship formless God or statues and can get apparent and temporary protection in this world. 2) Nivrutti (path of liberation): In this field people want God only. Their aim is the permanent association with the God and not the temporary results in this world. They never care for the worldly justice. They don't care for their body or family bonds. Their concentration is always on God. Here the justice is also crossed. Prahlada did not care for his father's death. God came directly and fought with the enemy in his case. Gopikas left every body and every thing for the sake of Lord Krishna. He liberated them in this world itself. God in human form was required by Gopikas and not by Arjuna. Gopikas wanted to see, touch, talk and live with the God. The Lord came in the human form as Krishna for the sake of Gopikas only. Arjuna wanted only the power of God to protect justice by getting back the kingdom. Therefore, Arjuna worshipped statues like Siva Lingam and energetic body like Siva. Lord Krishna was an instrument for Arjuna in achieving his kingdom. The aim of Arjuna was kingdom and not Krishna. But in the case of Gopikas the aim was Krishna and not anything else or anybody else. They crossed even the traditional justice and ran to Brindavanam to dance with Krishna. They were unable to live for even one minute without Krishna. In this field of Nivrutti the Lord comes down in human form and donates Himself to the devotees. Such human form is called as Datta. In this field the Lord has all the three aspects of Brahma, Vishnu and Rudra. He shows Sattvam of Vishnu, Rajas of Brahma and Tamas of Rudra. In this field He gives troubles when you worship Him. Troubling a devotee unnecessarily is Rajas and Tamas. In this field only the real love on God is proved. When God troubles you after your worship and if you are unable to leave Him still then that is real love. Thus single face Datta (Vishnu) is for Pravrutti and three-faced Datta is for Nivrutti. God acts according to the field you choose. In Nivrutti only He protects you from hell and takes you to His eternal abode. In this field only He attracts the evil effects of His real devotees and undergoes sufferings to save His devotees. Here the attitude of God is not logic and justice but only pure love. But real devotees oppose this. Therefore, He undergoes the bad results without their knowledge. The God circulates the information regarding Pravrutti and Nivrutti to everybody so that nobody can blame Him later on for their ignorance. Except the motto of information He is not having an intention to attract the people into Nivrutti. He is not benefited in any way by doing so. All the benefit is only for the devotee. The person following the Pravrutti always scolds the Nivrutti. The reason is that he is unable to catch God directly in Nivrutti and therefore, discourages that field with jealousy. When he is unable to succeed in that field he does not want anybody to succeed in that field. He wants to close that field and wants that his field only to remain. Such psychological jealousy is not good because God will punish him. Even though he is incapable he should appreciate others and in such case God will help him to come to Nivrutti. In nutshell God helps in Pravrutti with sympathy only and such help is only in the apparent and temporary rearrangement of your good and bad results. In Nivrutti the fruit is permanent and real and God really loves the devotees. If you are unable to follow Nivrutti, please be in Pravrutti at least and never become an atheist. You try constantly to follow the Nivrutti. You might have not reached the goal, but you have left your station. Only a person who is always limited to Pravrutti should worry. The attitude towards Pravrutti or Nivrutti comes from the accumulated Sadhana done in several previous births. Such a person turns spontaneously towards Nivrutti and the association of Satguru is only accidental. In the pearl shell one raindrop fallen becomes the pearl. Even if 100 drops fall on mud pond, all the drops become mud water only. Therefore, the deservingness of the devotee due to previous Sadhana is the most important factor and not the close or long association with Satguru. One may sit on the seashore for several hours but he has only a small tumbler in his hand. He can take only a tumbler of water even after sitting for several hours on the seashore. A fellow may come with a pot but he takes a full pot of water in 5 minutes. The Satguru rains His divine knowledge on all the people impartially so that He should not be blamed later on. The knowledge is essential like the rain, but more essential is the deservingness of the devotee that developed based on his sincere spiritual efforts for the past several births continuously (Purva Janma Samskara). at the lotus feet of shri datta swami surya www.universal-spirituality.org vattem krishnan <bursar_99 wrote: > The lord has only one expectation from all of us.Act according to dharma,carry dharma with you and let dharma be your judge.Almighty is always in a state of bliss and expects every one to experience bliss.so the cursor is there prompting actions.Almighty knows what is expected out of us.we need to do only that to seek bliss and get bliss > krishnan Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 14, 2006 Report Share Posted April 14, 2006 If anything is given freely, it will not have any value. But once its value or worth is realised after putting enough effort then only we will enjoy the bliss and do not misutilise it also. We will give Rs 100/- note to a child, when he realises the worth of hundred rupees. Otherwise he will mis-utilise it and may get destroyed also. If bliss is free, the whole creation would have been in bliss, which means sinners also will be in bliss. The fruit of sin is sufferance which only brings realisation. Instead of that if you give him bliss he will continue to do sins for which others will suffer.it means others bliss will get disturbed. Nothing is free. If lord gives bliss freely, people treat Him as fool. But He is wiser than the wisest. at the lotus feet of shri datta swami surya www.universal-spirituality.org "crystal pages" <jyotish_vani wrote: > > Bliss must come without a price/cost or it would not be bliss! > It would be called payment! > Work need not be a *chore* always or for all. > Work can be blissful too! > Been there done that! > As I am sure all can relate to, I am sure on this august forum!! > > RR Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 14, 2006 Report Share Posted April 14, 2006 sir, how come we term some as sinner.Are they the people find no descrmination between good and bad.sometimes the perspectve of good also changes.At that time why do we forget sinner?There is no hardline drawn between them.may be due to maya that makes us blind folded to overlook issues,can't we exercise caution and ward of sins not to become a sinner krishnan surya <dattapr2000 wrote: If anything is given freely, it will not have any value. But once its value or worth is realised after putting enough effort then only we will enjoy the bliss and do not misutilise it also. We will give Rs 100/- note to a child, when he realises the worth of hundred rupees. Otherwise he will mis-utilise it and may get destroyed also. If bliss is free, the whole creation would have been in bliss, which means sinners also will be in bliss. The fruit of sin is sufferance which only brings realisation. Instead of that if you give him bliss he will continue to do sins for which others will suffer.it means others bliss will get disturbed. Nothing is free. If lord gives bliss freely, people treat Him as fool. But He is wiser than the wisest. at the lotus feet of shri datta swami surya www.universal-spirituality.org "crystal pages" <jyotish_vani wrote: > > Bliss must come without a price/cost or it would not be bliss! > It would be called payment! > Work need not be a *chore* always or for all. > Work can be blissful too! > Been there done that! > As I am sure all can relate to, I am sure on this august forum!! > > RR SURRENDER JOYFULLY TO THE WILL OF THE ULTIMATE DIVINITY AND RELISH THE TASTE OF ABSOLUTE BLISS. Vedic astrology Astrology chart Astrology software Visit your group "" on the web. Messenger with Voice. Make PC-to-Phone Calls to the US (and 30+ countries) for 2¢/min or less. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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