Tuesday, June 30, 2020

What happens when BHAKTI enters different aspects of Life?

1. When BHAKTI enters FOOD,
FOOD becomes PRASAD,
2. When BHAKTI enters HUNGER,
HUNGER becomes a FAST,
3. When BHAKTI enters WATER,
WATER becomes THEERTHAM
4. When BHAKTI enters TRAVEL,
TRAVEL becomes a PILGRIMAGE,
5. When BHAKTI enters MUSIC,
MUSIC becomes KIRTAN,
6. When BHAKTI enters a HOUSE,
HOUSE becomes a TEMPLE,
7 When BHAKTI enters ACTIONS,
ACTIONS become SERVICES,
8 . When BHAKTI enters in WORK,
WORK becomes KARMA,
9 When BHAKTI enters a MAN,
MAN becomes HUMAN..
AND
10. When BHAKTI enters a HUMAN,
HUMAN becomes DIVINE.

Thursday, July 5, 2012

First Words on Gramophone.....


Did you know this?

HMV Company had once published a pamphlet giving the history of gramophone record. Gramophone was invented by Thomas Alva Edison in the 19th century. Edison, who had invented many other gadgets like electric light and the motion picture camera, had become a legend even in his own time.

When He invented the gramophone record, which could record human voice for posterity, he wanted to record the voice of an eminent scholar on his first piece. For that he chose Prof. Max Muller of Germany, another great personality of the 19th century. He wrote to Max Muller saying, "I want to meet you and record your voice. When should I come?"

Max Muller who had great respect for Edison asked him to come on a suitable time when most of the scholars of the Europe would be gathering in England.

Accordingly, Edison took a ship and went to England. He was introduced to the audience. All cheered Edison’s presence. Later at the request of Edison, Max Muller came on the stage and spoke in front of the instrument. Then Edison went back to his laboratory and by afternoon came back with a disc. He played the gramophone disc from his instrument. The audience was thrilled to hear the voice of Max Muller from the instrument. They were glad that voices of great persons like Max Muller could be stored for the benefit of posterity.

After several rounds of applause and congratulations to Thomas Alva Edison, Max Muller came to the stage and addressed the scholars and asked them, "You heard my original voice in the morning. Then you heard the same voice coming out from this instrument in the afternoon. Did you understand what I said in the morning or what you heard this afternoon?"

The audience fell silent because they could not understand the language in which Max Muller had spoken. It was `Greek and Latin' to them as they say. But had it been Greek or Latin, they would have definitely understood because they were from various parts of Europe. It was in a language which the European scholars had never heard.

Max Muller then explained what he had spoken. He said that the language he spoke was Sanskrit and it was the first sloka of Rig Veda, which says "Agni Meele Purohitam." This was the first recorded public version on the gramophone plate.

Why did Max Muller choose this? Addressing the audience he said, "Vedas are the oldest text of the human race. And Agni Meele Purohitam is the first verse of Rig Veda. In the most primordial time, when the people did not know how even to cover their bodies and lived by hunting and housed in caves, Indians had attained high civilization and they gave the world universal philosophies in the form of the Vedas.”

Such is the illustrious legacy of our country!

When “Agni Meele Purohitam” was replayed the entire audience stood up in silence as a mark of respect for the ancient Hindu sages.

This verse means:

"Oh Agni, you who gleam in the darkness, to you we come day by day, with devotion and bearing homage.  So be of easy access to us, Agni, as a father to his son, abide with us for our well being.”

Wednesday, September 22, 2010

Allow Your Own Inner Light to Guide You

  • There comes a time when you must stand alone.
  • You must feel confident enough within yourself to follow your own dreams.
  • You must be willing to make sacrifices.
  • You must be capable of changing and rearranging your priorities so that your final goal can be achieved.
  • Sometimes, familiarity and comfort need to be challenged.
  • There are times when you must take a few extra chances and create your own realities.
  • Be strong enough to at least try to make your life better.
  • Be confident enough that you won't settle for a compromise just to get by.
  • Appreciate yourself by allowing yourself the opportunities to grow, develop, and find your true sense of purpose in this life.
  • Don't stand in someone else's shadow when it's your sunlight that should lead the way.
  • Failure is only the opportunity to begin again, this time more wisely.


- Unknown Author

Limitation of Science

“Science does not know how we learn and remember, nor how we think and communicate, nor how the brain stores information, nor what the relationship between language and thought is. Science does not know how living cells interact with nonliving matter. It does not know what the origin of the universe is, nor how old the universe is, not what the ultimate fate of the universe will be."

[Charles M. Vest, professor, president of MIT, in the International Herald Tribune, January 16, 1996, p.8] 

Yaksha Prashna

Following are the famous intricate questions (called Yaksha Prashna) that were asked by the Lord of Death, Yama to Yudhisthir or Dharmaraja or Dharma, the eldest of the Pandavas of the Indian epic Mahabharata, and the famous wisdom-filled answers given by him:


1) Yama:     What is heavier than earth, higher than heavens, faster than the wind and more numerous than straws?
Dharma: One's mother is heavier than the earth; one's father is higher than the mountains. The mind is faster wind and our worries are more numerous than straws. 
2) Yama:     Who is the friend of a traveler? Who is the friend of one who is ill and one who is dying?
Dharma: The friend of a traveler is his companion. The physician is the friend of one who is sick and a dying man's friend is charity. 
3) Yama:     What is that which, when renounced, makes one lovable? What is that which is renounced makes happy and wealthy?
Dharma: Pride, if renounced makes one lovable; by renouncing desire one becomes wealthy; and to renounce avarice is to obtain happiness.
4) Yama:     What enemy is invincible? What constitutes an incurable disease? What sort of man is noble and what sort is ignoble?
Dharma: Anger is the invincible enemy. Covetousness constitutes a disease that is incurable. He is  noble who desires the well-being of all creatures, and he is ignoble who is without mercy. 
5) Yama:     Who is truly happy? What is the greatest wonder? 
Dharma: He who has no debts is truly happy. Day after day countless people die. Yet the living wish to live forever. O Lord, what can be  greater wonder?
(Source: Chapter 24  of Complete Mahabharatha collection of Amar Chithra Katha)

The Faith

            By the power of faith every enduring work is accomplished. Faith in the Supreme; faith in the over-ruling Law; faith in your work, and in your power to accomplish that work, - here is the rock upon which you must build if you would achieve, if you would stand and not fail.
To follow, under all circumstances, the highest promptings within you; to be always true to the divine self; to rely upon the inward Light, the inward Voice, and to pursue your purpose with a fearless and restful heart, believing that the future will yield unto you the need of every thought and effort; knowing that the laws of the universe can never fail, and that your own will come back to you with mathematical exactitude, this is faith and the living of faith. By the power of such a faith the dark waters of uncertainty are divided, every mountain of difficulty crumbles away, and the believing soul passes on unharmed.

                         – From "Poverty to Power" by James Allen

The Secret of Success

          Mere wishing brings nothing but disappointment; it is living that tells. The foolish wish and grumble; the wise work and wait.

            Your success, your failure, your influence, your whole life you carry about with you, for your dominant trends of thought are the determining factors in your destiny. Send forth loving, stainless, and happy thoughts, and blessings will fall into your hands, and your table will be spread with the cloth of peace. Send forth hateful, impure, and unhappy thoughts, and curses will rain down upon you, and fear and unrest will wait upon your pillow. You are the unconditional maker of your fate, be that fate what it may. Every moment you are sending forth from you the influences which will make or mar your life. Let your heart grow large and loving and unselfish, and great and lasting will be your influence and success, even though you make little money. Confine it within the narrow limits of self-interest, and even though you become a millionaire your influence and success, at the final reckoning will be found to be utterly insignificant.
                              – From Poverty to Power by James Allen