Monday, November 5, 2007

Conversation with the Masters: OSHO - Why do you contradict yourself?



Osho, I know that you love contradictions. A lot of it I can accept now as two sides of one coin. But today after lecture some questions still arose. On the one side you say the good and the bad are two sides of the same coin and both have to be and the one can't be without the other. On the other side you want to create a better world with your sannyasins. On the one side you tell us not to think in terms of the future. On the other side you are talking about the coming third world war. On the one side you tell us not to wish anything. On the other side it seems you want to avoid the third world war. On the one side you say things are okay as they are, there is no goal, nothing to achieve, to change. On the other side: what are you doing here? What are we doing here? I can feel there is an answer, but I can't point it out. Can you?


Osho:


It is not that I love contradictions: life is contradictory. Existence itself is possible only through contradictions. It is the mind that has been trained in Aristotelian logic that becomes disturbed because of contradictions. The Aristotelian logic gives you a linear mind, a one-dimensional mind. It says: A can only be A and can never be B, and B can only be B and can never be A, and for two thousand years our minds have been conditioned by this logic.


This logic never had any sway over the mystics, and now even scientists are escaping from the Aristotelian prison. If you want to be true to life you cannot be a follower of Aristotle; to be true to life you will have to say things as they are. If you want to be true to Aristotle then you will have to repress a few things of life, deny, at least avoid, not look at them, choose only what fits with your logic.


The whole world has existed up to now according to one-dimensional logic -- and existence is multi-dimensional, it is rooted in contradictions. In fact, to call it a contradiction is again to use a word from Aristotle.


The mystics use the word "paradox," not "contradiction." In the very word "contradiction" there is condemnation: something is wrong, something has to be put right. But a paradox is a totally different phenomenon: nothing has to be put right. A paradox is a mystery, elusive, inexplicable.


Existence is a mystery. Mathematics is incapable of understanding it; mind is utterly impotent in understanding it, because mind knows only one way. The Aristotelian way is the mind's way. And anybody who knows life knows that Aristotle has been a calamity, the greatest that has ever existed in the world. And he is the father of modern philosophy, the father of modern science! But there are revolts against him. Mystics have always been revolting, now physicists are revolting.


According to Aristotle there is no mystery: everything is explainable in logical terms -- that is his fundamental tenet. And my fundamental tenet is: nothing is explainable in terms of logic. If you try to explain life in terms of logic you destroy life.


It is as if to explain the beauty of a rose you take the rose to the chemist to dissect it, to analyze it, and to find out where the beauty is. The chemist is capable of analyzing the rose, but he will find only chemicals, not beauty. Beauty will evaporate. Beauty was in the paradox of the rose. It should not be according to logic -- hence logic is very blind.


Your problem, Suresh, is that you suffer from Aristotelitis. It is one of the most deep-rooted diseases.


You say: I know that you love contradictions.


It is not so that I love contradictions. What can I do? Contradictions are there! If I have to be true to the totality of existence I have to love them, otherwise something will have to be denied. And the moment you deny something you miss something immensely valuable, and the denial will never allow you to know the whole. And only the whole is true; the parts are only parts. They have some meaning only in the context of the whole; in themselves they are meaningless.


That's why science has created great meaninglessness in the world. It was bound to happen; it is a by-product of scientific methodology. Science tries to explain everything cleanly, with no vagueness; it wants to reduce everything to clear-cut categories. And it has succeeded, but in its success man and his spirit has failed.


The success of science is rooted in Aristotle, but man's failure -- the failure of his joy, the failure of his love, the failure of his capacity to sing, dance and celebrate -- is also rooted in Aristotle. But there are clear-cut signs of revolt, particularly within these last thirty, forty years -- many great scientists have revolted against Aristotle. The first one to revolt was Albert Einstein.


Aristotle is very absolutistic: A is absolutely A and never B, man is absolutely man and never a woman. He believes in the absolutes, and Einstein brought the idea of relativity. He said absolutes don't exist; there are only relative things. A man is relatively more a man than a woman and a woman is relatively more a woman than a man, but the question is not one of absolute distinction -- they overlap. And you may be a man in the morning and you may not be a man by the evening; you may be a woman in the evening and you may not be a woman by the morning. You are not one-sided, you have many sides.


Have you not seen a woman in anger? Then she is more masculine than any male. And have you not seen a man when he is in love? -- his tenderness, his feminineness. He is more feminine than any woman can ever be. When a woman is in anger, enraged, her whole denied part starts functioning, and the denied part is very vital and alive because it has never been used.


I have heard a future story:


A man went into a hospital to purchase a brain; because his own was not functioning well he wanted to replace it. The surgeon took him around; there were many brains available. He showed him the brain of a scientist, the price only a hundred rupees; the brain of a great, famous, well-known mathematician, and the price only two hundred rupees; and the brain of a great general, and the price only three hundred rupees -- so on and so forth. And then he came to the brain of a great political leader, and the price- was ten thousand rupees!


The customer was a little puzzled. He said, "What do you mean? Do you mean that the politician has a greater brain than a great, Nobel prize-winning scientist?"


The surgeon said, "Please don't misunderstand us. It is not that the politician has a greater brain than the scientist or the general or the mathematician or the poet, but this is a brain which has never been used. It is brand new, hence the price!"


Whatsoever is not used and denied in you remains very vital. Hence a woman enraged is far more dangerous than a man; and if you have been in relationship with a woman you know it perfectly well -- she can drive you crazy! because that is the denied part, the unused part. When it is used it has vitality, newness. And when a man is tender, loving, he is more tender and loving than a woman. He can be more womanly because that is his denied part.


Carl Gustav Jung accepted that man is bi-sexual: no man is simply man and no woman is simply woman. Man has a woman part, a very intrinsic part, and woman has a man inside her, very intrinsic. Now this is a totally different world: old categories lose meaning, old absolutes disappear.


And then came the theory of uncertainty -- because up to now science was aware only of the superficial world of matter. It has not penetrated into the mysteries of matter as mystics have done in the inner world; they have penetrated into the mysteries of consciousness. And when they penetrated the mysteries of consciousness they became aware that it is not Aristotelian at all. Sometimes A is A and sometimes A is B; and not only that -- that sometimes A is B -- there are times when A is both A and not A simultaneously.


Mahavira said that; his philosophy is known as saptabhangi -- sevenfold. He must have appeared a very strange man. You asked one question and he would always answer your one question with seven answers, because his philosophy was sevenfold. He said, "I have come to see the seven aspects of the inner world." You asked him, "Does God exist?" and he would say, "First: perhaps he exists. Second: perhaps he does not. Third: perhaps he exists and yet does not exist. And fourth: perhaps he neither exists nor does not exist." And so on and so forth. He would give you seven answers. You would leave him more confused than you had come. That's why he could not influence many people. His religion remained one of the smallest although it had the potential of becoming one of the greatest religions of the world.


But now the days of Mahavira are coming: Albert Einstein has made the way for it. As the physicist entered deeper into the mysteries of matter he was very much puzzled -- Aristotle works no more, helps no more. On the contrary, if you remain hung up with Aristotle you have to deny a few things which you cannot deny -- they are there!


For example: matter does not exist at the deepest level of matter; matter is only apparent, it is maya. Shankara said it thousands of years ago: it is illusion. By "illusion" he does not mean that it does not exist; by "illusion" he simply means it appears to exist -- something else exists. Don't be deceived by the appearance. And the scientist found himself entering more into the world of Shankara than into the world of Aristotle. Matter disappears, there is only energy -- energy moving so fast that you cannot see its movement and it gives you the idea of solid matter.


Nothing is solid, everything is liquid. And when there is nothing solid, what meaning can the word "liquid" have? Then a new problem arises: if there is nothing solid, what do you mean by "liquid?" Liquidity had meaning only in reference to solidity; the moment solidity disappears, liquidity disappears...and you are dumb, in awe.


Only energy is, and the ways of energy are very paradoxical, very mystic. One particle of energy jumps from its place to another place; it is continuously lumping. It is taking quantum leaps. The term "quantum leap" comes from quanta. "Quanta" means the ultimate particle of energy, and "quantum leap" means a very different leap from what you understand by the word "leap."


When the ultimate particle of energy jumps from place A to B the phenomenon is very mysterious: it simply disappears from A and appears at B and you cannot find it anywhere in between. You come from your place to me; you will be found in between. How can you just jump from your place to my place? Even if you jump, you will have to pass through. Even if you take the fastest plane, still you will be in between. But the ultimate particle of matter simply disappears from one place and appears at another place and you cannot find it in between at all. Now what to make out of it? It should not be so, but it is so.


First scientists figured, "We must be missing it -- maybe we don't have sophisticated enough instruments. How can it be?" The old Aristotle was haunting them: "It must be somewhere in between." But now we have more sophisticated instruments -- it simply disappears. It becomes unmanifest in one place and becomes manifest again in another place. What happens in between nothing can be known about, because it becomes unmanifest; it simply disappears from existence. It moves into a totally different dimension which is not known at all and may never be known at all, because it is the unknowable.


And it was thought always, according to Aristotle and Euclid, that a point can never be a line. It was found by the physicists that the point can be both together: it can be a particle and a wave, it can be a point and a line. Euclidean geometry used to say -- you must have read it at school -- that two parallel lines never meet. Now there is something like non-Euclidean geometry which says they meet. What to make out of it? Euclidean geometry says you can draw a straight line: a straight line is the shortest distance between two points -- a well-known definition, every schoolboy knows about it. But non-Euclidean geometry has come with great force and is changing the whole course of scientific thinking.


Non-Euclidean geometry says you cannot draw a straight line at all; it is impossible to draw a straight line. Why? -- because you are sitting on an earth which is round. So whatsoever you draw, it appears straight because you don't know that you are sitting on a round globe. Go on drawing the line, go on drawing the line, and soon you will see that it becomes a circle, because it will cover the whole earth. And a straight line cannot be a part of a circle, obviously; if it is a part of a circle it is not straight. No straight line can create a circle, but every straight line that you know, if drawn to its ultimate, will become part of a circle. Then it is an are, not a straight line.


And the whole universe is circular. The whole universe, all the movement, is circular; everything is a circle. Straight lines are not possible; they are imaginary lines.


Mystics have always talked in paradoxes; now physicists are talking in paradoxes. And the reason is the same: mystics entered reality through their being and came across the mystery; physicists are coming across the same reality from another door -- the outward door.


I am not in love with contradictions -- they can't be helped. Existence is a paradox.

Wednesday, October 17, 2007

Lord Dakshinamurthi

On the Mount Kailas, with Devi by His side, Lord Siva was sitting in a hall beautifully decorated by precious stones. At that time, Devi worshipped the Lord and requested Him to alter the name of Dakshayani given to her before for being the daughter of Daksha. This Daksha was killed by Lord Siva for his disrespect and arrogance. On hearing this request, Lord Siva ordained that Devi should be born as the daughter of Parvata Raja who was doing rigorous Tapas for getting a child. He also told Parvati that He would come over to her and marry her. Thus ordained, Parvati was born as the child of Parvata Raja, and since her fifth year, began to do rigorous Tapas for being the bride of Lord Siva.

During the absence of Devi, when Lord Siva was alone, the sons of Brahma—who are sages Sanaka, Sanandana, Sanatana and Sanatkumara—came to have Darshan of Lord Siva and prostrated before Him. They entreated the Lord to teach them the way to remove Avidya and attain Salvation. They expressed that in spite of the vast study of scriptures, they had no internal peace, and they were in need of learning the inner secrets by knowing which they could attain Salvation. Lord Siva, hearing this appeal made by the sages, assumed the form of Dakshinamurti, and remaining as the Guru Supreme, began to teach them the inner secrets by keeping Mauna and showing the Chinmudra by His Hand. The sages began to meditate on the lines shown by the Lord and attained the state of inexpressible and illimitable joy.

Thus Lord Siva came to be known as Dakshinamurti.

Handling relationship problems – Sri Sri Ravishankar

What really disturbs interpersonal relationships? The relationship gets disturbed when disagreement begins.

Just look at yourself. Have you always agreed with yourself? You had some idea yesterday; today you may have a different idea. Five years back you had other ideas that do not necessarily agree with the ideas that you have today. So, when you have disagreements with yourself, why should it not happen with someone else?

The "someone" you have a disagreement with is just a photocopy of your old or new self. So you need to take a look at your own thought and emotional patterns. There is a rhythm in them. And there is a rhythm in consciousness. We need to find a harmony between all these rhythms within us. That's what is called spirituality.

Spirituality is not just fantasizing; it's observing your own existence. Have we thoroughly known our body? You can know someone else's body but have you experienced your own body? Experiencing your own body, your breath, your mind, your emotions, and the source of your life is meditation. Meditation is experiencing the life force and being conscious of it. And it is done effortlessly.

For maintaining interpersonal relationships, you have to first have a relationship with yourself. Your relationship with yourself is called integrity. If you have no relationship with yourself, that's called lack of integrity. Being informal keeps your interpersonal relationships strong, for it give space for mistakes to happen. You cannot expect perfection in any relationship or situation.

Life is very complex. There is no set formula. When you think that you are very honest, that your are righteous, you become a little stiff inside without even knowing it. You point your finger toward others and become intolerant. When you recognize that there are flaws in you, you are tehn able to accommodate the flaws in other persons.

Meditation is the only way you can transcend the negative thoughts, and then positive thoughts will come on their own. Stress and tension cause negativity. Suppose you don't sleep for two days, then small things can start to irritate you. But if you have rested well, the situation will be different.

Some people always blame themselves for something that goes wrong in a close acquaintance. Leave this "always" – "I always want to be happy." Take life as it comes. Sometimes you are upset or angry; it is OK to be upset or angry. Life does not stop for anything; it moves. Just move with the flow.

Friday, August 17, 2007

Memo from God!

Effective immediately, please be aware that there are changes that you need to make in your life. These changes need to be completed, in order that I may fulfill my promises to you, to grant you peace, joy and happiness in this life. I apologize for any inconvenience, but after all that I am doing, this seems very little to ask of you. I know, I already gave you the 10 Commandments. Keep them, but follow these guidelines also:
  1. QUIT WORRYING!
    Life has dealt you a blow and all you do is sit and worry. Have you forgotten that I am here to take all of your burdens and carry them for you? Or do you just enjoy fretting over every little thing that comes your way?
  2. PUT IT ON THE LIST!
    Something needs done or taken care of. Put it on the list. No, not YOUR list. Put it on MY to-do-list. Let me be the one to take care of the problem.I can’t help you until you turn it over to me. And, although my to-do-list is long, I am after all, God! I can take care of anything you put into my hands. In fact, if the truth were ever really known, I take care of a lot of things for you that you never realize.
  3. TRUST ME!
    Once you’ve given your burdens to me, quit trying to take them back. Trust in me! Have the faith that I will take care of all of your needs, your problems and your trials. Problems with the kids? Put them on my list. Problems with finances? Put it on my list. Problems with your emotional roller coaster? For your sake, put it on my list. I want to help you. All you have to do is ask.
  4. LEAVE IT ALONE!
    Don’t wake up one morning and say, “Well, I’m feeling much stronger now, I think I can handle it from here.” Why do you think you are feeling stronger now? It’s simple. You gave me your burdens and I’m taking care of them. I also renew your strength and cover you in my peace. Don’t you know that if I give you these problems back, you will be right back where you started? Leave them to me and forget about them. Just let me do my job.
  5. TALK TO ME!
    I want you to forget a lot of things. Forget what was making you crazy. Forget the worry and the fretting because you know I’m in control. But there’s one thing I pray you never forget. Please don’t forget to talk to me—OFTEN! I love you. I want to hear your voice. I want you to include me in on the things going on in your life. I want to hear you talk about your friends and family. Prayer is simply you having a conversation with me. I want to be your dearest friend.
  6. HAVE FAITH!
    I see a lot of things from up here that you can’t see from where you are. Have faith in me that I know what I’m doing. Trust me, you wouldn’t want the view from my eyes. I will continue to care for you, watch over you, and meet your needs. You only have to trust me. Although I have a much bigger task than you, it seems as if you have so much trouble just doing your simple part. How hard can trust be?
  7. SHARE!
    You were taught to share when you were only two years old. When did you forget? That rule still applies. Share with those who are less fortunate than you. Share your joy with those who need encouragement. Share your laughter with those who haven’t heard any in such a long time. Share your tears with those who have forgotten how to cry. Share your faith with those who have none.
  8. BE PATIENT!
    I managed to fix it, so in just one lifetime you could have so many diverse experiences! You grow from a child to an adult, have children, change jobs many times, learn many trades, travel to so many places, meet thousands of people and experience so much. How can you be so impatient then, when it takes me a little longer than you expect to handle something on my to-do-list? Trust in my timing, for my timing is perfect. Just because I created the entire universe in only six days, everyone thinks I should always rush, rush, rush!
  9. BE KIND!
    Be kind to others, for I love them just as much as I love you. They may not dress like you, or talk like you, or live the same way you do, but I still love you all. Please try to get along, for my sake. I created each of you different in some way. It would be boring if you were all identical. Please know I love each of your differences.
  10. LOVE YOURSELF
    As much as I love you, how can you not love yourself? You were created by me for one reason
    only—to be loved, and to love in return! I am a God of Love. Love me! Love your neighbors! But also, love yourself! It makes my heart ache when I see you so angry with yourself when things go wrong. You are very precious to me. Don’t ever forget that! With all my heart, I love you!

    Original Source : www.bethesda-mission.org/nl-oct-05.pdf

Wednesday, August 8, 2007

GURU MANTRA

The gurumantras always took me close to him, without even knowing the meaning of those Sanskrit words. After understanding the meaning of those pearls, it was a different experience. What is the master? He is much beyond the levels of our intellect and minds… go through this. I am just a student of Sanskrit. If you find any mistake in these interpretations, please correct me, post it in the forum…

“gurur brahmA gurur vishNu gurur dEvO mahEshvaraha
gururEva parabrahmA tasmai srI guravE namaha ”

The most powerful verses in the life of a disciple! Guru is the trinity, brahmA-vishNu-mahEshwara. Guru is the supreme soul too, the parabrahmA. Salutations to that supreme master! These are the words that we use to offer gratitude to the master.

“nityam shuddham nirAkAram nirAbhAsam niranjanam
nityabodham chidAnandam gurum brahma namAmyaham ”

I bow down to the guru, my master, who is none other than the Brahman; who is eternal, pure and formless; who is self-effulgent; who is taintless, ever awake, intelligent and blissful; salutations to thee.

“dhyAnamUlam gurur mUrtihi
pUjAmUlam gurOrpadam
mantramUlam gurOrvAkyam
moksha mUlam gurukrupa ”

The root of ‘dhyanam’ or meditation is the master’s form. The root of worship is the lotus feet of the master. The root of mantra is guru’s words. No other mantra is needed, other than the words of guru. And the ultimate blessing is guru’s grace. The root of liberation, moksha is guru’s grace.
“akhandamandalAkAram vyAptam yEna charAcharam
tatpadam darshitam yEna tasmai srI guravE namaha ”

The Guru is unbounded like the canopy of the sky. He permeates all the movable and immovable entities in this universe. Everything dwells within guru. He is omnipresent in everything in this universe. My Salutations to that master who showed me my abode, my home; I bow down to him.

“gurur brahmA gurur vishnu gurur dEvo mahEshvaraha
gururEva parabrahmA tasmai srI guravE namaha ”

Guru is the creator, brahmA; guru is the preserver, vishNu; guru is the destroyer (of ignorance), shivA; guru is the supreme soul too, the paramAtmA, the brahman. In the glory of brahmA, vishNu, shiva and the paramAtma, it is only the guru. Salutations to that supreme master; I bow down to him.Guru is the personalized transcendental form of the paramAtma. ParamAtma is ‘sachidAnand’ (sat-chit-anand); and guru is ‘sachidAnandasvarUpam’, the form of brahman. Blessed are those who get this guru, the divine in the human body.

“ajnAnathimirAndhasya jnAnAnjana SalAkayA
chakshurunmIlitam yEna tasmai srI guravE namahA ”

My eyes were covered with the darkness of ignorance. My master opened my eyes by applying the collyrium of knowledge. Salutations to that supreme master; I bow down to him.‘thimiram’ is a disease that affects the eye, that takes away the eye-sight and ‘anjanam’ is a traditional collyruim, eye wash used to prevent ‘thimiram’. Guru is that divinity that cures the blindness of ignorance, and guides to the light of knowledge.Everyday morning the sun comes to open our eyes, but once in lifetimes a guru comes to open our inner eyes, and he carries us through lifetimes thereafter.

“sthAvaram jangamam vyAptam yatkinchit sacharAcharam
tatpadam darshitam yEna tasmai srI guravE namaha ”

I bow down to my master, who showed me the one to be known, the divine, who is permeating everything; movable, immovable, sentient, insentient, conscious, unconscious; Salutations to that supreme master.The divine, the paramAtma, pervades the entire universe. But many among us seldom understand this. It is the satguru, who helps us to realize this ultimate truth. He is the window to the divine.

“chinmayam vyApi yatsarvam trailokyam sacharAcharam
tatpadam darshitam yEna tasmai srI guravE namaha ”

I salute my master, who showed me through his teachings, the one to be known; the divine; the one inside whom all the three worlds dwell, including the sentient and insentient.The divine is the awareness. And it is the master who is making us aware of the divine. What else can we do other than paying obeisance to that master?

“sarvaSrutiSirOratnavirAjitapadAmbujaha
vEdAntAbujasUryO yah tasmai srI guravE namaha ”

I bow down to my master, who is the sun to the lotus of vEdAnta and whose lotus feets are radiant with the jewel of all Srutis; Salutations to that master.When it sees the sun, the lotus blossoms. Knowledge is like that lotus. When it feels the presence of the master, the sadguru, it starts blossoming in every disciple around him. His lotus feet are adorned by all the ‘srutis ‘, the Upanishads. All the Upanishads are at his lotus feet. Even the dust from his lotus feet can change the life of the disciple. Even those dust contains the knowledge of the truth.

“chaitanyah SaSvatah SantO vyOmAtItO niranjanah
bindunAdakalAtItah tasmai srI guravE namaha ”

The Guru is who is pure awareness; who is changeless and beyond time; who is peace, beyond space; who is untouched, pure and free from likes and dislikes; who is beyond the manifest and unmanifest; salutations to that guru; I bow down to him.
The master is free from everything. Nothing touches him; he is niranjan. Nobody can influence him. Nobody is special to him. He loves everybody with the same intimacy and intensity.He is beyond the manifest and unmanifest; beyond bindu, nAda and kala. (bindu, nAda and kaLA are the subtle aspects of the mystic syllable of sanAtana dharma, ‘aum’)

“jnAnaSaktisamArooDHah taTHvamAlAvibhUshitah
bhuktimuktipradAta cha tasmai srI guravE namaha ”

The master who is rooted in the knowledge, that is power; who is adorned with the garland of ‘tatva’, the truth; who bestows the joy of liberation to the seeker; salutations to that supreme master; I bow down to him.The satguru is powerful, for he is the embodiment of the true knowledge. Only he can liberate one from the clutches of mAya.

“anEkajanmasamprApta karmabandha vidAhinE
atmajnAnapradAnEna tasmai srI guravE namaha ”

I bow down to the lotus feet of my master who bestows the ultimate self-knowledge and burns up the bondages of the accumulated actions through lifetimes.Through innumerable births we carry forward a lot of accumulated karma. And through out the life we will be under the bondages of these karmas; sanchita karma. These bondages are referred as karma-bandha. Only the satguru can burn these bondages. With one look, one touch, one smile, one word, one blessing, in a fraction of a second he takes everything away; sets his disciple free; without expecting anything in return. Only he is unconditional here.

“SoshaNam bhavasindhoScha jnApanm sArasampadah
gurOh pAdodakam samyak tasmai srI guravE namaha ”

I bow down to the satguru whose grace completely dries up the ocean of the samsAra (relative existence – transmigration) and makes one realize the supreme wealth.The satguru is rooted in the knowledge and vision of the srutis, the Upanishads. The flow of wisdom from those roots dries up totally the ocean of transmigration and reveals the essence of all wealth. The ultimate wealth is liberation, freedom of want. Guru takes his disciple to that ultimate wealth.

“na gurOradhikam tatvam na gurOradhikam tapaha
tatvajnAnAt param nAsti tasmai srI guravE namaha ”

Guru is the truth. Guru is the highest purifying austerity. There is nothing superior to that truth. There is nothing superior to that guru. There is no other superior purifying austerity than the guru. There is no other superior knowledge than guru. Oh my master, I bow down to thy lotus feet!

“mannAtah srIjagannAthah madguruh srIjagadguruhu
madAtma sarva bhUtAtmA tasmai srI guravE namaha

My lord is the Lord of this universe. My master is the master of this universe. He is present in me, and all beings; my self is he himself; he is the self of this universe; my master is within me; salutations to that master; I bow down to him.The ultimate truth! You and me are the same! But I never knew that my master! every being in this universe contains him, and he contains everything. He is the ocean, and all beings here are drops of water. All drops are part of the ocean; even if the drops are separated, they show the same properties of the ocean. One day they have to merge in the ocean itself.

“gururAdiranAdishcha guruh paramadaivatam
gurOh parataram nAsti tasmai srI guravE namaha ”

The universe begins in the guru; yet he doesn’t have any beginning; there is no end for him too. He is the beginning and beginning-less! He himself is the highest deity; there is none higher than him. And none is superior to him too. Prostrations to that supreme master; I bow down to him.Why we need another ‘god’ when we have a guru? Why we need to bang the head here and there when he is carrying us every moment? He is everywhere, within us, outside us. Just we need to know this truth; just we need to have this conviction.

“brahmAnandam paramasukhadam kEvalam jnAnamUrthim
dvandvAtitam gaganasadrusham tatvamasyAdilakshyam
Ekam nityam vimalamachalam sarvadhIsAkshIbhUtam
bhAvAtItam trigunarahitam sadgurum tam namAmi "

My sadguru, my master is the embodiment of the bliss, the bliss of the paramAtma, the brahman. He is the giver of the supreme happiness, the beatitude. He is the personification of the highest knowledge. He is beyond the duality, the pairs of the opposites. He is untouched by evil. He is like the sky, untouched, vast and endless. He is only one, the permanent, the eternal, the pure, the immovable, the witness of everything, ‘sarvasAkshi’, He is beyond all the ‘gunas’; beyond thoughts; beyond attributes. Oh my master, I bow down to thee. Please accept my obeisance.

“tvamEva mAtA cha pitA tvamEva
tvamEva bandhuScha sakhA tvamEva
tvamEva vidyA draviNam tvamEva
tvamEva saRvam mama dEvadEvA

O’ my master, the god of all the gods, you are only my mother, father, kin, friend, knowledge and wealth. You are everything to me. I am yours.