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January 21, 2009

Madhava Ghosh dasa, New Vrndavan, USA : One Reason I Rarely Drink Soda


Besides being an unnecessary expense, disposal of container (which also applies to bottled water) and taking the place of other beneficial liquids like fruit juices or water, soda sucks for health reasons as well.

Source:  Still Spooked by High-Fructose Corn Syrup

By now most everyone has seen ads from the Corn Refiners Association, claiming that our fears about high-fructose corn syrup are misplaced. Since our kids will soon be loading up on Halloween treats laden with the substance, it’s a good time to consider why so many people find corn sweeteners so scary.

Just this month, researchers from Loyola University’s Stritch School of
Medicine in Chicago took a look at the link between kidney disease and
high-fructose corn syrup. Using data from nearly 9,400 adults in the
National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey from 1999 to 2004, they tracked consumption of sugary soft drinks, a major source of high-fructose corn syrup in the United States, and protein in the urine, a sensitive marker for kidney disease. They found that overall, people who drank two or more sugary sodas a day were at 40 percent higher risk for kidney damage, while the risk for women soda drinkers nearly doubled.

In June, the Journal of Hepatology suggested a link between consumption of high-fructose corn syrup in sodas and fatty liver disease.

And this summer, a small study published in The Journal of Nutrition
suggested that fructose may make people fatter by bypassing the body’s
regulation of sugars, which means it gets more quickly converted to fat than do other sugars.

Many scientists hypothesize that high-fructose corn syrup has contributed to rising obesity rates, although others say there is no solid evidence to support the theory. The corn refiners agree, dedicating a Web site to the “sweet surprise” of high-fructose corn syrup.

But we do know that foods made with high-fructose corn syrup are heavily processed and typically lack any meaningful nutritional value. And while the jury is out on the real effect high-fructose corn syrup has on obesity, we do know it’s a threat to the health of the planet.

As writer Michael Pollan told The Washington Post earlier this year,
high-fructose corn syrup “may be cheap in the supermarket, but in the environment it could not be more expensive.”

Most corn is grown as a monoculture, meaning that the land is used solely for corn, not rotated among crops. This maximizes yields, but at a price: It depletes soil nutrients, requiring more pesticides and fertilizer while weakening topsoil.

“The environmental footprint of high-fructose corn syrup is deep and wide,” writes Pollan, a prominent critic of industrial agriculture. “Look no farther than the dead zone in the Gulf [of Mexico], an area the size of New Jersey where virtually nothing will live because it has been starved of oxygen by the fertilizer runoff coming down the Mississippi from the Corn Belt. Then there is the atrazine in the water in farm country — a nasty herbicide that, at concentrations as little as 0.1 part per billion, has been shown to turn male frogs into hermaphrodites.”

Posted in Cows and Environment, Health      

by Madhava Gosh at January 21, 2009 02:39 PM

Japa Group : Japa Retreat in Alachua

Here is the amazing Japa retreat in Alachua conducted over several weeks. Badahari das, Harinama Cintamani dasi and Mahatma dasa talk indepth about the different aspects of Japa and there is also interesting comments from the audience.

by Rasa Rasika (noreply@blogger.com) at January 21, 2009 01:05 PM

Japa Group : Chanting With Your Heart

Jaya Srila Prabhupada! The Acaryas have given us different explanations of the maha-mantra. In Sri Caitanya Siksamrita Srila Bhaktivinoda Thakura recommends that we use Srila Gopal Guru Gosvami's explanations/meditations to the maha-mantra while chanting:
Hare - O Radha, please capture my inner heart and deliver me from the bondage of material life
Krsna - O Krsna, please pull my heart to you
Hare - O Radha, please steal my heart with your sweetness
Krsna - O Krsna, please purify my heart by giving me, trough Your pure devotees, knowledge how to worship You
Krsna - O Krsna, please make me steady in devotion to Your name, form, qualities, pastimes and such
Krsna - O Krsna please may I develope taste for You
Hare - O Radha, please make me qualified for serving You
Hare - O Radha, please show me how to serve You
and so on....

I have personally found this method very effective, these mediations are meant to bring a prayerful mood. If one can chant with the heart, attentiveness is automatically there. Personally I don't see a big contradiction for "Just hearing" the mantra in this method. One can just hear, but at the same time be aware of the meaning of the mantra. I found interesting this explanation to the first "Hare" - please capture my inner heart...the thing that we put our heart and feelings to chanting, in a sense real chanting just begins there. Our inner heart is always attached to something, if we dont have attachment for Sri Sri Radha-Krsna, we are attached to the ladies or men of this world, but what is a value of chanting while meditating on some mundane things?

"We may chant our rounds and progress slowly from one meditation to the next. There are no hard and fast rules as to how to use them. Perhaps we will go from one meditation to the next each time we began a round. Perhaps we alter the meditations every two or three or four rounds. As we become familiar with them, personal experience will dictate how to progress through the meditations. Remain open to the dynamics of your own practise!"
Sacinandana Swami, Nama-rahasya

Muniraja dasa

by muniraja dasa (muniraja108@gmail.com) at January 21, 2009 12:39 PM

Bhakta Eric, USA : I don’t think I’m a very good devotee

Hi folks… I wrote this little nugget a few days ago. But, as often happens, I’m now wondering if I am being too hard on devotees. Mostly, I was poking fun and giving some a good natured ribbing. But do I rib too much? I’m not at all an angry person. But, as pointed out by Ryan, I’m a cynical, skeptical and suspicious 90 year old man. That’s true in a lot of ways. I mean, I’m not actually 90 years old. I only act like it.

So I ask, am I going too far? Like I said, a lot of it is in jest. But a whole lot of it comes from my growing dislike of bullshit, personality cults and justification disguised as dovetailing.

Mostly, however, this should be taken as a bit of satire. Sort of like The Hing II: This Time It’s Personal! (except not really as likable… sort of like The Hing 2: Electric Bugaloo…. Any thoughts?

Sometimes I really question my commitment to being a good devotee. I mean, even though I’m completely convinced of Vedanta philosophy, I know that I am totally fallen and unable to truly be a real vaisnava.

First off, I don’t really like the Beatles or George Harrison. Sure, they had a few songs that I like and yeah, I respect them for being pretty amazing musicians, but I just don’t care. I just don’t think George Harrison was some great devotee - I know that pretty much disqualifies me from going back to Godhead, but I can’t even pretend to think that Dark Horse and Extra Texture were good albums.

No no no!I don’t care about aligning my chakras. I just don’t. I don’t like silent meditation or crystals. Any mention of “chi” or of “light” and “energy” makes me gag. I guess I’m not into the whole New Age thing. Actually, I think most of it is just plain silliness. I don’t care about the mind-body-spirit connection. Or collective consciousness. Or the healing power of magnets.

I have only seen a few Bollywood movies, and to be honest, they kinda sucked. I don’t really even care for the philosophically bizarre “devotional” movies that India cranked out through the 50’s and 60’s. And while I liked some aspects of the Mahabharata TV show, mostly it was weird and long-winded. And devotee-produced plays where the voices and sound effects are all pre-recorded is lame. Admit it.

I don’t have a special diet. Or a personal cook.

My head doesn’t wobble and I don’t have a fake Bengali accent, even when speaking about Krishna consciousness. I realize it makes it difficult to convey any sort of spiritual idea while talking in my normal voice, but that’s the burden I’ve been cursed to carry.

Phrases like “spaced out,” “stool room” and “fried” rarely, if ever, pass my lips. This probably means that I’m not at all situated in my spiritual life. I know that each time I say “I’m going to bed” instead of “I am going to take rest” I acquire many thousands of lifetimes on the hellish planets. I know this, and still I can’t bring myself to do like that. It must be my rascal mind. I am not “veddy much” anything, except “veddy much” going to burn in hell for a very long time. Oh, and there is no such word as “literatures.”

Cavities are AWESOME!!I don’t really care about yoga. I think it’s neat to see someone who is really good at it performing all the bendy things, but I have no desire at all to attempt it myself. I know it comes from India and that automatically qualifies it as mode of goodness/transcendental, but I just don’t like it.

I don’t even use Vicco tooth paste. Can you believe that? I just don’t think it works. I don’t wear a wool chadar when I’m cold - I have sweaters for that. I have no real desire to even visit India. It costs a lot of money and seems to be a pretty nasty, dirty place. Sort of like Detroit, but with slightly more shit on the ground.

And speaking of money, I don’t think that spending $108 to hear some guru talk is a bargain. 800 bucks to learn how to chant japa? No sorry, that’s cheating. Call me a hippie, but spiritual knowledge should be free. Again, I realize this totally blows all possibility of devotion, but what can I do?

However, I do care about the philosophy taught by Lord Krishna, Caitanya Mahaprabhu and Srila Prabhupada. I like chanting Hare Krishna, worshiping the deities and associating with the devotees, but I know it’s not enough. I know that I need to put on the All Things Must Pass album and meditate on light and love.

Empowerment seminars and hokey self help books haven’t replaced Bhagavatam classes and Prabhupada’s books. That I like traditional bhajans instead of mantra rock and crappy New Age music in the guise of sacred sound and movement (whatever that means) does indeed put my name on Yamaraja’s hit list, but I think I’ll just chant Hare Krishna instead.

by eric at January 21, 2009 12:18 PM

H.H. Mukunda Goswami : Love has to be Proved

Love has to be proved. In the fourth verse of Rupa Goswami's
Upadesamrta, he emphasizes the revelation of one's mind and the giving
of gifts and prasadam. Srila Prabhupada's translates the verse thus:
"Offering gifts in charity, accepting charitable gifts, revealing one's
mind in confidence, inquiring confidentially, accepting prasada and
offering prasada are the six symptoms of love shared by one devotee and
another."
In daily affairs, love - between family members, lover
and beloved - has to be demonstrated, activated and re-activated, on an

read more

by Mukunda Goswami at January 21, 2009 12:00 PM

Ananda Subramanian, Iowa, USA : Material disgust

For one to make true progress in Krishna Consciousness - one property is very very crucial and that is our distaste towards materialism (gross and subtle) and a materialistic way of life. To the degree we feel this distaste; to that degree we will take shelter in the Names of Krishna, His pastimes and devotees. If not, we will undoubtedly seek a material solution to our pangs.

Cultivating material distaste has been made easy in this age of Kali. All we have to do is be honest to ourselves and just open a newspaper, TV and or associate with a gross materialist. All we will encounter is stories of death, violence, sex and hypocrisy. If these qualities do not invoke distaste and misery, I am not sure what will…!!??

Below is such an instruction from Lord Krishna to Uddhava. Very nice…please read.

"Having awakened faith in the narrations of My glories, being disgusted with all material activities, knowing that all sense gratification leads to misery, but still being unable to renounce all sense enjoyment, My devotee should remain happy and worship Me with great faith and conviction. Even though he is sometimes engaged in sense enjoyment, My devotee knows that all sense gratification leads to a miserable result, and he sincerely repents such activities." (SB 11.20.27-28)

by ananda (noreply@blogger.com) at January 21, 2009 11:48 AM

Dandavats.com : May our Souls come Together to Sing and Dance

Karnamrita das: Eyes closed concentration inward, down and around the spiral staircase to the depths of my soul to find my inspiration source. It is as far as I can go through the coverings of matter, earth, water, fire, air, either-- subtle mind and intellect, then the false ego: I, me, mine.

by Administrator at January 21, 2009 11:02 AM

Dandavats.com : Ganga Sagar Mela: You didn’t want to miss it

Kumari Dasi Sherreitt: Wake up for mungal arti. Get ready. Chant rounds. Guru Puja. Bhagavatam class. Breakfast. Bhakti Sastri class. Lunch… Sometimes devotees can become tired and lazy of their weekly routine, even within the holy dham of Sri Mayapur.

by Administrator at January 21, 2009 11:01 AM

Dandavats.com : RSPCA donated cow arrives at temple

Hare KrishnaBy Bhakti - vedanta Manor

On Sunday 18th January saw the arrival of a cow-in-calf to the Temple, a gift by the RSPCA representing a symbol of reconciliation.

by Administrator at January 21, 2009 10:54 AM

Dandavats.com : Global Recession: A great time to preach!

By Sikhi Mahiti das

The world is embroiled in a recession. Banks are failing, jobs are disappearing, wealth attached to property and stocks is evaporating. The hopes of so many that rest upon saving for the future is now destroyed.

by Administrator at January 21, 2009 10:48 AM

Kirtans in Oxford, UK : Crowd goes wild in Washington, D.C.

While crowds went wild yesterday, at Barrack Obama's inauguration ceremony, people danced and chanted "Obama, Obama!"

But this post is about the previous day, when thousands gathered at the Church of the Holy City, within sight of the White House, and burst into exuberant chanting and dancing to ancient, sacred mantras:



The first "Inaugural" kirtan, Chant4change, was a huge success. Tickets were sold out days in advance, and to facilitate those who hadn't managed to get one, a live webcast was broadcast. All the most famous American kirtaniyas appeared and sang, such as Jai Uttal, Krishna das, Gaura vani, Shiva Rea, David Stringer and more.

From the very young to the quite elderly, everyone there felt it to be a tremendous occasion. Gaura vani das who conceived the idea and orchestrated the event is a young kirtaniya of extraordinary energy and dedication - he has a website here. from which you can buy his CD. I have it and it is excellent!

by Kirtaniya (noreply@blogger.com) at January 21, 2009 10:26 AM

Kirtans in Oxford, UK : Chant For Change...

This jovial cartoon was designed for Chant4Change. Chant4Change, an intrepid group of chanters in Washington DC, have organised a prestigious kirtan event for the inauguration of the new president, next week. You can read about it and even buy a tee-shirt here. If any of our readers live in Washington, there are still some tickets left. And Mr Obama, if you are reading this - why not go along too! All proceeds to charity.

I like the way the cartoon shows chanting as transcending the differences between so many designations and bringing all into a consciousness of harmony and delight. And the inference in the name chant4change that the change so many people are hoping and longing for can only come from a purified heart, free from the negative qualities of greed and selfish desires.

The inspiration for the cartoon must surely have come from the episode pictured below of the medieval saint Sri Chaitanya, chanting and dancing with wild animals in Jarakhanda forest.

by Kirtaniya (noreply@blogger.com) at January 21, 2009 10:25 AM

Manoj, Melbourne, AU : 105. New signs at the temple!


We have some new signs put up, to help those new comers from getting lost within the temple compound.

What's happening when?

How many times have we had someone come up and ask, “When will the temple open again for darshan?”. Now, they can see a nice display of all the temple services and darshan times. Also, its better placed, right next to the entrance rather than the one we had before, which was next to the deity room entrance, away from people’s immediate glance.

even with a distance calculator

even with a distance calculator

Visitors can now time their presence in the prasadam collection line, if they were to make a quick visit to the toilet. It takes about 15 seconds to get to the toilet from the temple door, somewhat the midpoint of the long line on a sunday feast day. The well known school equation states that Speed = Distance/Time, which means you would need to move at a speed of 7.12 km/hr (about 2 meters/second). This is possible. I have seen it.

Where can I buy a Krishna photo?

"Where can I buy a Krishna photo?"

2 weeks ago, I had a visitor from Canberra ask, where he can buy some original Melbourne incense sticks? I think he meant Indian ones. Anyways, I proudly pointed him to the new signboard and said, “…and there’s much more!”. Last weekend, we had someone enquire, if they can buy some tulasi seeds for their garden. This item will not be in the temple store…but there’s much, much more !!

No shoes here, please!

Oh no !!

What’s that under the “Please place your shoes on racks” sign? No surprises for guessing - Shoes ! If you were to come to the temple during an important festival day or perhaps the weekend feasts, you will need to cross over the ocean of foot wear before you can enter the temple ! And no, you can’t cover it as quickly as crossing a water collected in a calf’s footprint ! You will find them all over the path leading to the temple door. Sometime last year, I took the initiative of collecting all the shoes and placing them neatly onto the racks. It looked neat. But people just won’t take the effort to follow the above instruction. And it doesn’t look good, when a guru maharaj has to step over these shoes to enter the temple. The path to Krishna should be clear of devotee and neophyte shoes !!

Perhaps, we need a new sign that says, ”Please don’t place shoes under the - Please place your shoes on racks - sign!” 

Are we getting one too?

"Are we getting a sign too?"

Ooops. Please forward all queries to the temple president.
Thanks.

      

by 9days8nights at January 21, 2009 09:28 AM

H.H. Bhakticharu Swami : South Africa retreat lectures

Thanks to Ramvijay Prabhu we have now the unedited audio material. We are in the process of editing and converting. These are the lectures that will be posted later today.

1 Arrival day lecture
2 Day 1 – Srimad Bhagvatam class
3 Day 1 - Bhagavad Gita class
4 Day 2 – Srimad Bhagavatam class
5 Day 2 – Bhagavad Gita class
6 Day 3 – Srimad Bhagavatam class
7 Day 3 – Bhagavad Gita class
8 Day 3 – Informal Questions and Answers of Maharaja about his experiences in Krsna consciousness
9 Day 4 – Srimad Bhagavatam class
10 Day 4 – Bhagavad Gita class
11 Day 5 – Srimad Bhagavatam class
12 Day 5 – Bhagavad Gita class

We are posting the Arrival day lecture, Day 1 of Srimad Bhagavatam and Bhagavad Gita. The low quality versions will be added later today.

Thanks to Ramvijay Prabhu we have now the unedited audio material. We are in the process of editing and converting. These are the lectures that will be posted later today. 1 Arrival day lecture 2 Day 1 ndash; Srimad Bhagvatam class 3 Day 1 - Bhagavad Gita class 4 Day 2 ndash; Srimad Bhagavatam class 5 Day 2 ndash; Bhagavad Gita class 6 Day 3 ndash; Srimad Bhagavatam class 7 Day 3 ndash; Bhagavad Gita class 8 Day 3 ndash; Informal Questions and Answers of Maharaja about his experiences in Krsna consciousness 9 Day 4 ndash; Srimad Bhagavatam class 10 Day 4 ndash; Bhagavad Gita class 11 Day 5 ndash; Srimad Bhagavatam class 12 Day 5 ndash; Bhagavad Gita class We are posting the Arrival day lecture, Day 1 of Srimad Bhagavatam and Bhagavad Gita. The low quality versions will be added later today.

by Vinod-bihari das at January 21, 2009 08:06 AM

Bhakta Chris, New Vrndavan, USA : Compassionate Reflections #3

Inspired by my reading of "Vaisnava Compassion" by HH Satsvarupa Maharaja

We all carry our own stone, or as the Beatles sing, "boy, you're gonna carry that weight, carry that weight a long time."

It's a heavy load of false ego, dirty addictions, life-draining habits, misconceptions, laziness, and a whole other shebang of indolence, insolence, and illusion.

We can very easily get caught up in our personal successes and failures to cleanse this dust away. Our own problems leak into our lives, into our temporary states of happiness and material well-being, and we become sullen, morose, and incapable of even a smile or a warm gesture. It's a symptom of our original malady, thinking that we are the Center Of It All, and we often mistake a temporary discomfort as the universe caving in on us.

It helps me when I am able to take a deep breath, realize the reality of my own sufferings, realize the strength provided to me by Krsna to overcome them, and above all, to realize that everyone else is also carrying this weight.

To give real compassion to others, we have to identify the crucial fact that no one is alone in the struggle against the threefold miseries of the material world, and the wisdom we gain in this struggle must be shared with each other.

In writing on tolerance in his article "Tolerance and Nonviolence", Maharaja writes:

"Tolerance towards others is only really possible when we tolerate our own suffering as a reaction to our own past misdeeds. That is, when we don't curse anyone for causing it"

He then quotes from Prabhupada's purport to SB 6.17.17)

"A devotee is naturally so humble and meek that he accepts any condition of life as a blessing from the Lord...A devotee always accepts punishment from anyone as the mercy of the Lord. If one lives in this conception of life, he sees whatever reverses occur due to his past misdeeds, and he therefore never accuses anyone."

"On the contrary, he becomes increasingly attached to the Supreme Personality of Godhead because of his being purified by his suffering. Suffering, therefore, is also a process of purification."

This is our lofty aspiration in our personal expression of our suffering state. To be grateful for our suffering!...I can barely comprehend, let alone practice it. It's essential to our devotion to properly understand our own suffering so that we can transcend it and then allow others to transcend it as well.

by Club 108 (noreply@blogger.com) at January 21, 2009 08:00 AM

ISKCON Klang, Malaysia : A Spiritual Juggernaut in Kuala Lumpur

BY UTTAMA CAITANYA DASA KUALA LUMPUR, MALAYSIA - Most of the times we don’t know what in store for us. It was virtually pouring cats and dogs from early morning of Saturday, 3rd January. The was no sign of the sun. A dreary change of weather from the previous sunny days. Is the 28th  wet affair? [...]

by jeyanthy at January 21, 2009 05:47 AM

ISKCON Klang, Malaysia : Reaching out to Single Mothers

BY UTTAMA CAITANYA DASA KLANG,  MALAYSIA - The Social and Welfare Wing of Malaysia Hindu Sangam (MHS) in collaboration with The International Society for Krishna Consciousness (ISKCON), Taman Sentosa, Klang, organised a one-day seminar for some 30-odd single mothers of the Taman Sentosa residency. This event was held at the ISKCON Taman Sentosa prayer hall at 5.00pm [...]

by jeyanthy at January 21, 2009 05:30 AM

Kurma dasa, AU : Getting Sticky Again

This coming weekend (Sat 24, Sun 25 January) marks my second coming at the Sticky Rice Cooking School in the beautiful Adelaide Hills.

My son Nitai, who fancies himself as a budding chef, is living with me at the moment. He'll enjoy his last weekend of freedom (school starts next week) as my assistant at the classes.

Nitai at home:

Saturday's class has long been filled, but there are still some vacancies in Sunday's class.

Sticky Rice Action:

This is our menu:

'Classics from the Subcontinent'

Fragrant, Tomato-laced Karnataka Hot & Sour Masoor Dal Soup (Rasam) South Indian Lemon Rice with Fresh Coconut & Cashews Grilled Homemade Panir Cheese with Cream and Spinach (Palak Panir) Crispy Battered Potato Puffs (Aloo Vadas) Fresh Mint Chutney Hot & Sweet Eggplant Pickles Mild Karnataka-style Poriyal of Cauliflower, Potato and Peas Creamy Cardamom-infused Condensed Yogurt Dessert with Pistachios and Saffron Syrup (Shrikhand)

saffron shrikand:

Here's details of how you can enrol for this exciting day of culinary education, camaraderie, feasting and fun. Please come and join me at the class!

Sticky Rice Cooking School Stirling, Adelaide Hills, South Australia Sun 25 January 2009, Cookery Workshop online bookings or call 08 8339 1314

by Kurma at January 21, 2009 04:56 AM

H.G. Sankarshan das Adhikari, USA : Wednesday 21 January 2009--Krishna Conscious Leadership for a New Enlightened World Order

================================================================== Thought for the Day--Wednesday 21 January 2009 ================================================================== Dedicated with love to you, our treasured readers, and to ISKCON Founder-Acharya: His Divine Grace A.C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada Our purpose is to help everyone awaken...

by course@ultimateselfrealization.com at January 21, 2009 03:30 AM

ISKCON Toronto, Canada : Kirtan Concert this Sunday with Gaura-Shakti

Last Sunday, we had a special presentation as a "Year in Review" of 2008. This upcoming Sunday, we have another special presentation for our community!

As a new initiative to reach out to Toronto's vast yoga community, a group of local devotees have formed a kirtan group, officially named "Gaura-Shakti".

To help introduce the power of kirtan to Toronto’s yoga scene, Gaura-Shakti will present devotional chants and sacred mantras in the form of kirtan yoga with a blend of modern and classical instruments.

The goal is to arrange performances within the large yoga community at various yoga studios in the GTA as a means to introduce and further cultivate spiritualists’ love for kirtan!

Their official debut will be for Sri Sri Radha Ksira-Chora Gopinatha, Srila Prabhupada and the assembled devotees this Sunday at the Sunday Feast! Instead of the normal lecture, a full kirtan presentation will be given. It will surely be something not to be missed!

by Keshav (noreply@blogger.com) at January 21, 2009 02:40 AM

Sita-pati dasa, AU : Space, Relationships, and Sharing Krishna Consciousness

Writing helps me to clarify and collate my thinking. In writing about the reasoning behind our decision to close the Albert St studio (not yet published) I wrote that our mission is not "to maintain a yoga studio", but rather to "help people to develop uplifting relationships".

That's a key insight.

Four Spaces where Relationships take place

Human beings need relationships in four distinct relational "spaces" in order to be psychologically balanced and healthy.

The four relational spaces are: Public, Social, Personal, and Intimate.

A strategic approach to sharing Krishna consciousness should provide opportunities for uplifting relationships in all of these spaces.

Public Space

The Public space is where you are essentially "alone in a crowd". You are surrounded by people, but there are too many for you to interact personally. You are as much spectator as participant.

Examples of the Public space would be a Sunday Feast program at a Hare Krishna temple or doing a yoga class in the Atma studio.

Social Space

The Social space is 6-15 people. It gives you an opportunity to interact with people and assess them. Essentially you are looking for persons with whom you are interested in pursuing a further relationship.

Examples of the social space would be a group of people talking at a party or sitting at the table talking over dinner at Atma after the class.

Personal Space

The Personal space is typically 3-5 people. It's a much smaller group where the conversation can turn more specific and closer to shared core values of the participants.

Examples of the Personal space would be the kitchen of a home, or a group of friends sitting down for a drink in a cafe.

Intimate Space

The Intimate space is inhabited by 2-3 people. In this space the participants are very closely bonded.

Examples of intimate space might include a heart-to-heart talk between two people, asking advice, talking confidentially or specifically. The dynamic of the interaction will change when someone else enters the space.

The Foyer, Living Room, Kitchen Analogy

In the book "Creating Community: Five Keys to Creating a Small Group Culture" Andy Stanley and Bill Willlits use the analogy of a house to describe these different spaces.

The Public space is the "foyer" or perhaps the porch of the house. If you imagine a party, people who are hanging around on the edges, sizing things up, hang outside. There they have the opportunity to spectate, without the pressure to participate.

The Living Room is the Social space, where people head once they decide that they want to get involved.

The Kitchen is the Personal space, the heart of the party, where people are more deeply engaged, and the deep and meaningful conversations happen.

The Albert St Studio and the Four Spaces

In Creating Community Stanley and Willits explain the process of deepening relationship as one of traversing these spaces, from Foyer to Living Room to Kitchen, or from Public to Social to Personal.

In the Albert St studio we have a Public space, the yoga room, we have a social space, the dining area, but we are really lacking the personal space. At our previous facilities it was literally a kitchen, a place where people could spend time with a two or three people and talk on a more personal level, while helping to cook or do dishes.

We have had an informal saying amongst the atma crew: "I came for the yoga, I came back for the food, I stayed for the company". This describes the transition from public to social to personal.

So not having a kitchen as part of our facility at the Albert St studio has constrained the fulfilment of our mission (though not thwarted it), and now I can articulate precisely how it has done so.

The Spaces and the Strategic Approach to Facilitating Uplifting Relationships

A strategic approach to sharing Krishna Consciousness, helping people to develop relationships that are uplifting and beneficial, should provide opportunities for uplifting relationships in all of these relational spaces.

To have a huge program once a week where people can be "alone in a crowd" fulfils the need of Public space, and is necessary. People need to feel that they are part of something bigger than themselves.

However, it must be accompanied by social, personal, and intimate spaces.

The seating arrangement at the Sunday Feast program in Brisbane was counter-productive to this, with guests sitting in lines. It made for easy serving out, but it failed to provide the correct setting to facilitate other spaces and other types of relationships.

Recently the serving out arrangement of the Saturday night feast at the Graceville temple has changed. With up to 300 people coming it's no longer feasible to serve out in lines. Instead guests go to a continuously serving buffet and then find somewhere to sit.

With the requirement to sit in lines no longer imposed on them people have begun to sit in circles and create social spaces. These social spaces offer the opportunity to manifest relationships in social space.

Social space and Small Groups

In "Activate: An Entirely New Approach to Small Groups Nelson Searcy and Kerrick Thomas make the argument that small groups fulfil the need for a safe social space for participants.

Relationships in a small group are not meant to be personal or intimate, they are meant to be in the social space.

Certainly we see that atma fulfils this social and psychological need of people. Where do you go if you don't drink or smoke, to hang out and meet like-minded people?

In an overall strategy small groups can fulfill the role of a social space.

In my post "Thoughts on Small Groups 1" I explained that Bhakti-vriksha (small groups) fulfill social and psychological needs of the participants. It's important to recognise this and structure things around it.

People need relationships in all four relational spaces. A small group, and the small group program, exists to provide a venue for uplifting relationships in social space. This is an important insight.

by sitapati at January 21, 2009 02:03 AM

Vrndavana Vinodini dd, Toronto, Canada : Who Do I Go To?

Whenever I'm feeling anxious, worried, or a little just "blah" I normally turn to my friends, to the internet or anything else except my beads. But lately, it's funny, but I really feel nothing else BUT my beads or the Bhagavatam can help me. Of course, talking to devotees always helps, but there's something about turning to my beads. My beads to me represent the incredible mercy of my spiritual master who has given me the holy names of Krsna. Although I still struggle to feel anything when I chant, I've stopped counting how many rounds left until I hit 16. Instead, I try to focus on praying and listening.

I had a nice realization a little while ago. My chanting is my time spent in conversation with the Lord. What do I mean by that? Well, when I actually hear the holy name of Krsna (and I actually mean HEAR), that's actually Krsna talking to me. I can just imagine what you're thinking...."She thinks Krsna is talking to her?" LOL! Let me explain. I notice that if I sincerely listen with an open heart and try not to impose my own conditions and limitations, I can feel some connection with Krsna. That's really what a conversation is when you think about it. It's not necessarily about getting answers or advice, but it's more about feeling and connecting with the other individual. Words allow us to make a connection and when emotion is injected with those words, that connection can be really be "heart-deep."

So nowadays, that connection with Krsna is the only thing that helps when I'm feeling blue. Now it could just be some incredible mercy I'm receiving here in Mayapur, but I sincerely pray that I will always feel this way. I hope I will always feel that the only way I can get rid of my anxieties, worries and doubts will be to turn to my beads which are my life-line and connection to Guru and Krsna.

by Vrndavana Vinodini dd (noreply@blogger.com) at January 21, 2009 01:21 AM

Bharatavarsa.net : Book distribution seminar: Vaikuntha restaurant and the magician

I was in a small town named Yambol, Bulgaria. I was running all day with a big bag a and big stock of books in my hands, the whole day I distributed 1 or 2 books. My mind was very disturbed because it was soo difficult. Then I had a realization: "The problem is in my consciousness."

At the end of the day I was completely exhausted, standing before a restaurant in the center of the town I prayed to Krsna to forgive me for my lack of proper consciousness and help me to be the instrument He would like me to be in this restaurant.

The bodyguards were very compassionate upon looking at my stock of books, and they purchased one." But they said, "Here, no one will take any book, they are not very philosophical."

I said, "Let's see, I will try."

On the first table an old couple took 2 Srimad Bhagavatams, the second table a group people took the whole set of all books (13)!!! Then going around in a new state of ecstacy due to the mercy of Krsna, table 3 took three books. After few minutes around 30 books were distributed. Everyone was speaking about the books with the beautiful pictures, it become a Vaikuntha restaurant !!!

I had the last 1 set of 13 books in my hands and approach one strange man who said that he is a magician, he offered me a place to sit and some herbal tea. Then he asked me to explain the books. I quickly explained every one of the books. Then he began to think a little bit and said, "These books are very dangerous and you must stop distributing them!"

I said, "I appreciate very much the tea you've given to me but I must go on with this service. Good bye." I quickly moved, remembering some verses from 16 chapter of Gita about demoniac nature.

There was one more table left but the people had no interest. Just as I was leaving the magician came up to me and asked, "Hey boy, how much do all the books cost?

I stopped and gave him the price. To my surprise he paid the price, took the books and said, "I will make a war with you guys, so I want to study the enemy."

I was very happy and said, "Good luck." And left.

This happened 15 years ago, and we never heard from him, there was no war against our movement, I think Krsna tricked him.

Surely Prabhupada books are working perfectly!!!

Krishna is amazing!!! We just have to surrender and allow him to use us as an instrument, "nimmita-matram bhava savya-sacin" (BG 11.33)

Your servant, Sthanu das

January 21, 2009 01:20 AM

Book Distribution News : Vaikuntha restaurant and the magician

I was in a small town named Yambol, Bulgaria. I was running all day with a big bag a and big stock of books in my hands, the whole day I distributed 1 or 2 books. My mind was very disturbed because it was soo difficult. Then I had a realization: "The problem is in my consciousness."

At the end of the day I was completely exhausted, standing before a restaurant in the center of the town I prayed to Krsna to forgive me for my lack of proper consciousness and help me to be the instrument He would like me to be in this restaurant.

The bodyguards were very compassionate upon looking at my stock of books, and they purchased one." But they said, "Here, no one will take any book, they are not very philosophical."

I said, "Let's see, I will try."

On the first table an old couple took 2 Srimad Bhagavatams, the second table a group people took the whole set of all books (13)!!! Then going around in a new state of ecstacy due to the mercy of Krsna, table 3 took three books. After few minutes around 30 books were distributed. Everyone was speaking about the books with the beautiful pictures, it become a Vaikuntha restaurant !!!

I had the last 1 set of 13 books in my hands and approach one strange man who said that he is a magician, he offered me a place to sit and some herbal tea. Then he asked me to explain the books. I quickly explained every one of the books. Then he began to think a little bit and said, "These books are very dangerous and you must stop distributing them!"

I said, "I appreciate very much the tea you've given to me but I must go on with this service. Good bye." I quickly moved, remembering some verses from 16 chapter of Gita about demoniac nature.

There was one more table left but the people had no interest. Just as I was leaving the magician came up to me and asked, "Hey boy, how much do all the books cost?

I stopped and gave him the price. To my surprise he paid the price, took the books and said, "I will make a war with you guys, so I want to study the enemy."

I was very happy and said, "Good luck." And left.

This happened 15 years ago, and we never heard from him, there was no war against our movement, I think Krsna tricked him.

Surely Prabhupada books are working perfectly!!!

Krishna is amazing!!! We just have to surrender and allow him to use us as an instrument, "nimmita-matram bhava savya-sacin" (BG 11.33)

Your servant, Sthanu das

January 21, 2009 01:15 AM

January 20, 2009

ISKCON Melbourne, AU : Daily Class - Chandrasekhara Prabhu

Srimad Bhagavatam 11.5.29-30 - The living entities are subordinate to Supreme Personality of Godhead

by Bhakti Sara Dasa at January 20, 2009 10:32 PM

Kirtans in Oxford, UK : Jahnavi


Jahnavi Harrison came to our Oxford Kirtan in November, with her sister Tulasi, and led us in rousing style. She's written a report of her visit to Oxford in her blog The Little Conch. You can read it here. Jahnavi has been taking part in kirtan since birth (and before!) and now, in her early twenties, has blossomed into a talented kirtaniya, in demand all over the world with her violin and singing. Most recently, she has toured in South Africa and the USA. Jahnavi's blog is worth reading for it's thoughtful posts about her life and her honest struggles for spirituality. If you're a blog reader you might like to check it out.


Rumour has it that we may have another visit from Jahnavi soon; we look forward to that...

by Kirtaniya (noreply@blogger.com) at January 20, 2009 10:12 PM

Kirtans in Oxford, UK : More Jahnavi...



Jahnavi chanting during her trip to the USA. (See previous post!)

by Kirtaniya (noreply@blogger.com) at January 20, 2009 10:08 PM

Bharatavarsa.net : Bhakti Vikasa Swami: how to undoubtedly attain Sri Krsna Caitanya

Sri Caitanya Mahaprabhu also advised Vasudeva to preach about Krsna and thus liberate living entities. As a result, Krsna would very soon accept him as His devotee. PURPORT Although Vasudeva Vipra was a leper and had suffered greatly, still, after Sri Caitanya Mahaprabhu cured him He instructed him to preach Krsna consciousness. Indeed, the only return the Lord wanted was that Vasudeva preach the instructions of Krsna and liberate all human beings. That is the process of the International Society for Krishna Consciousness. Each and every member of this Society was rescued from a very abominable condition, but now they are engaged in preaching the cult of Krsna consciousness. They are not only cured of the disease called materialism but are also living a very happy life. Everyone accepts them as great devotees of Krsna, and their qualities are manifest in their very faces. If one wants to be recognized as a devotee by Krsna, he should take to preaching work, following the advice of Sri Caitanya Mahaprabhu. Then one will undoubtedly attain the lotus feet of Sri Krsna Caitanya, Lord Krsna Himself, without delay.

>>> Ref. VedaBase => Madhya 7.148

January 20, 2009 09:11 PM

Ravindra Svarupa das, USA : “God”?


What the punctuation in the title indicates:

Quotation marks: Draping the word God in quotation marks indicates that we are first concerned with the signifier, not the signified. (Compare these two sentences: I am interested in God. I am interested in “God.”)

Question mark: The mark of interrogation backstopping “God” points us next to questions concerning the concept or idea of God. What does it mean? Aren’t there many different meanings? Isn’t the meaning often vague or ambiguous?

The mark directs us further to questions concerning the existence of God. Is there any real entity denoted by the word God? Is there any way to conclusively answer this question?

A Lesson in Vedānta

The conception of God and the conception of Absolute Truth are not on the same level. The Śrīmad Bhāgavatam hits on the target of the Absolute Truth. The conception of God indicates the controller, whereas the conception of the Absolute Truth indicates the summum bonum or the ultimate source of all energies. There is no difference of opinion about the personal feature of God as the controller because a controller cannot be impersonal. . . .  Because there are different controllers for different managerial positions, there may be many small gods . . . with various specific powers, but the Absolute Truth is one without a second. This Śrīmad Bhāgavatam designates the Absolute Truth or the summum bonum as the param satyam.

The author of Śrīmad Bhāgavatam, Śrīla Vyāsadeva, first offers his respectful obeisances unto the param satyam (Absolute Truth), and because the param satyam is the ultimate source of all energies, the param satyam is the Supreme Person. The gods or the controllers are undoubtedly persons, but the param satyam from whom the gods derive powers of control is the Supreme Person. The Sanskrit word īśvara (controller) conveys the import of God, but the Supreme Person is called the parameśvara, or the supreme īśvara. The Supreme Person, or parameśvara, is the supreme conscious personality, and because He does not derive any power from any other source, He is supremely independent.

—Śrīla Prabhupāda, Introduction to Śrīmad Bhāgavatam

Where does everything come from?
Everything comes either from something or from nothing.

When the answer is nothing, it sometimes turns out to be a very special, hyper-potent kind of nothing. Not just nothing but Nothing. In other words, a unique kind of something (after all).

When the answer is nothing, it sometimes turns out to be a special inscrutable something, beyond all possible modes of understanding or investigation. Nothing is really a “No Trespassing” sign. (Or: “You don’t belong in the physics department; you should go to the religion department.”)

When the answer is nothing, it sometimes turns out that the “everything” that (seemingly) comes from it is really nothing also. Nothing makes no things: No problem!

Vedānta settles for something. A special unique something: param satyam or brahman “the ultimate source of all energies.”janmādyasya yataḥ (Vedānta-sūtra 1.1.2)

In the Upaniṣads, this ultimate source is described as so complete or full (purṇam) that however much is taken away from it, it remains complete.

By contrast, I am not purṇa. I am a dependent, contingent being. I require regular supplies—each day so much food, water, air, light, heat, and so on. If I trace back the supply chain I will reach (according to the Vedas) the empowered universal supply agents, the devas—lords of the sun, moon, wind, rain, soil, and so on.  As they distribute, their own stores becomes depleted, and they themselves need resupply.  Following back the chain of dependence, we reach finally a singular and unique being who produces endless supplies and who never needs resupply, remaining full. This the self-sustaining sustainer of all others is the param satyam.

(Think of the param satyam as something like a hotel with infinite rooms, all occupied—purṇa, “No Vacancy.” At noon, the guest occupying Room 1 checks out. As he leaves, the bellboy blows a whistle. All the rooms’ doors open: The guest in Room 2 moves into Room 1, the guest in Room 3 moves to Room 2, and so on, ad infinitum. Thus, even though a guest checked out, the hotel remains full. It will remain full if ten, a hundred, a thousand , a million, or even an infinite number of guests check out.)

This is the “concept of the Absolute Truth,” that from which everything comes. It differs from the concept of īśvara or “god.” Īśvara means a controller. In that sense, even local controllers—the CEOs of SEPTA, PECO and Comcast, the president of the University of Pennsylvania, the mayor of Philadelphia, the governor of Pennsylvania, and so on—are all minor īśvaras, teeny gods with miniscule controlling power. And, according to the Vedas, there are superior gods who administer the universe—not petty bureaucrats but mighty cosmocrats.

Whatever we see here, in the effect, must also be there, in the ultimate cause. The param satyam has produced myriad personal controllers.  Therefore the ultimate personal controller, the parameśvara, is in the Absolute Truth itself. The Upaniṣads describe the param satyam as simultaneously personal and impersonal.

Prabhupāda coined the phrase “Supreme Personality of Godhead” to express more accurately the concept of Kṛṣṇa. The word “god” by itself is, strictly speaking, inadequate. A “god” is a being that may or may not exist. “Godhead” however, denotes the Absolute Truth, param brahman, the uncreated, self-sustaining origin of everything.  “Personality of Godhead” denotes the personal feature of the unlimited Godhead. The one Personality of Godhead exists simultaneously in many transcendent forms—Kṛṣṇa, Rāma, Nṛsimha, Nārayaṇa, Vāmaṇa and so on.

Some argue that the limitless nature of the Absoute Truth precludes personhood, since personhood or individuality entails limits and boundaries. They forget to consider that it would also be a limitation to exclude personhood. There must be somehow pesonality without limitation. For this reason, Vedic thought understands the one Personality of Godhead to be ananta rūpam, expanded in unlimited forms simultaneously.

Among all these forms, Kṛṣṇa is particularly denoted “the Supreme Personality of Godhead.”

One last consideration: Should I find myself wondering whether the Personality of Godhead exists or not, then I should understand that I do not grasp the concept of the Absoute Truth. I am thinking of Godhead as if it were simply one more contingent, dependent being: like me, or my laptop, or my city. My Dell laptop exists, but it might not; Ravīndra Svarūpa dāsa exists, but might very well not; this City of Brotherly Love exists but might not have. My current controllers—Mayor Nutter, Governor Rendell, President Obama, Lord Indra, Lord Brahmā—are all there, but might not have been. But the final controller, the Personality of Godhead, the ultimate source of all energies, exists in a different way from all these other beings. He exists so fully or truly that he has not even the possibility of not existing.

If we simply understand the concept of the Absolute Truth, we must recognize that its mode of existence—existing without even the possibility of not existing—is different from ours.

(Perhaps some readers have recognized in the last paragraphs a version of “the ontological argument for the existence of God.” This argument has generated much controversy, yet it seems to me that Prabhupāda’s distinction between the concepts of God and of the Absolute Truth clairfies the argument and helps resolve some of the controversy. When one understands the argument as dealing with the concept of Godhead or Absolute Truth, rather than the concept of God, its particular force becomes more evident, at least to me. To me, there are sound and persuasive arguments that there must be an Absoute Truth, and that the Absolute Truth must be a person. I’ve outlined them above. That the person is blue-complexioned, flute-playing, peacock-feather-wearing Kṛṣṇa—or any expansions—cannot be shown by reason and logic. Only pareśānubhava, direct perception of the Lord, will disclose these concrete particulars. On the other hand, if one studies the Supreme Personality of Godhead as encountered by Nārada, Vyāsa, Uddhava, Caitanya, and so on, one can say: “This is our idea of the supreme person. Can anyone offer a description of any greater?”)

      

by rsdasa at January 20, 2009 08:29 PM

Madhava Ghosh dasa, New Vrndavan, USA : The Guru and The Cat


” Abandon all varieties of religion and just surrender unto Me. I shall deliver you from all sinful reactions. Do not fear.”

Bg 18.66

How would religiosity be a problem? The following illustrates one possible answer.

Once upon a time in a certain village in India there lived a guru.  Every evening the guru would sit on his seat and deliver a lecture to the public. It so happened that the guru had a cat, and just at the time of giving the lecture the cat would create a big disturbance.

Being greatly annoyed by the cat, the guru decided to tie the cat to a tree before starting his lecture. So doing, the guru then delivered the lecture without disturbance. It worked so well that the guru regularly tied the cat to the tree before beginning his discourse.

After some years the guru died. His disciples carried on the guru’s program. They also continued tying the cat to the tree.  When the cat died, they bought another cat and thus the ritual of tying a cat to a tree continued generation after generation.

In the fifth generation that followed the guru, one of the renowned followers wrote an elaborate treatise on the spiritual significance of tying a cat to a tree before beginning one’s studies of the scriptures.

“For the current of our spiritual life creeds, rituals and channels that may thwart or help, according to their fixity or openness. When a symbol or spiritual idea becomes rigidly elaborate in its construction, it supplants the idea which it should support.” Rabindranath Tagore

Posted in News, Ramblings or Whatever      

by Madhava Gosh at January 20, 2009 04:19 PM

Devadeva Mirel, Alachua, USA : The Great Inaugural Bake-Off

Today is the day! The 44th  President of the United States of America will be sworn in and from this day forward, Utopia will begin!

Like most patriotic Americans not attending the festivities this weekend in DC, I spent my time home, with my family, baking. While baking in honor of the presidential inauguration may be a peculiarly American pastime, it is one that women and men, young and old, dive into with gusto every four years.


There's a certain 'O'-ness to the appearance of Harriet's that I couldn't refuse on a day like this.

Some bake cakes. Others tartlets. Cookies are always in abundance. And of course, you guessed it, in honor of Obama I baked four batches of Harriet's Thumbprint Cookies. That's one batch for each year in office!

Additionally, I made a couple of from scratch (of course!) pumpkin pies from fresh baked pumpkins. Curiously, the sticker on my pumpkins branded them Organic Valley, which I am now aware is more than just milk.



To invoke abundance and prosperity, I purposefully overfilled my pumpkin pie.

I have loved pumpkin pie since way back when Reagan was president, although I have to confess my mother never did much baking--even on election day. Really winning with the crust, white spelt--which is naturally low in gluten--scored big flaky points for this pie. Transforming the pie color from traditional pumpkin pie orange to a noticeably darker shade, sucanat added the perfect warm sweetness to my inaugural treats. Hey, I like my pies dark, like my presidents.



My second pie showed moderation, a quality left leaning Obama has been showing more and more of as the 'Big Day' arrives. Eh, I support him anyway. I baked, didn't I?

Today we will gorge ourselves on cookies and pie, ushering in the new presidency with rich buttery flavor. Here's to a sweet and prosperous four years!

by noreply@blogger.com (Devadeva Mirel) at January 20, 2009 02:16 PM

Hanuman das, Croatia : Most funny blog entry ever

This entry depicts living entity stuggling to glorify Krishna through his blog and all the obstacles Maya can put in front of you if you try.




Srimad Bhagavatam 1.8.43

TRANSLATION

O Kṛṣṇa, O friend of Arjuna, O chief amongst the descendants of Vṛṣṇi, You are the destroyer of those political parties which are disturbing elements on this earth. Your prowess never deteriorates. You are the proprietor of the transcendental abode, and You descend to relieve the distresses of the cows, the brāhmaṇas and the devotees. You possess all mystic powers, and You are the preceptor of the entire universe. You are the almighty God, and I offer You my respectful obeisances.

PURPORT

A summary of the Supreme Lord Śrī Kṛṣṇa is made herein by Śrīmatī Kuntīdevī. The almighty Lord has His eternal transcendental abode where He is engaged in keeping surabhi cows. He is served by hundreds and thousands of goddesses of fortune. He descends on the material world to reclaim His devotees and to annihilate the disturbing elements in groups of political parties and kings who are supposed to be in charge of administration work. He creates, maintains and annihilates by His unlimited energies, and still He is always full with prowess and does not deteriorate in potency. The cows, the brāhmaṇas and the devotees of the Lord are all objects of His special attention because they are very important factors for the general welfare of living beings.





Everything is temporary in material world (including Kia). And after seven years, Kia turns into dust, and after 30 years, owner of Kia also turns into dust.

by noreply@blogger.com (Hanuman das) at January 20, 2009 02:13 PM

Syamesvari dd : Migraines


I've been getting migraines since the 10th grade. Anyone who has ever had one knows that it's nothing like a regular headache - nausea, aversion to light and noise and throbbing, stabbing pain are symptoms unique to migraine headaches.

In the 11th grade I went through a whole batch of tests - MRI's, CT scans, the works. From these I realised that there were no other causes for my headaches except stress, certain foods, and temperature fluctuations.

It becomes frustrating dealing with migraines on a regular basis. You also get tired of the painkillers that knock you out and do God-knows-what to you liver and kidneys. So after high school, I spent three years studying holistic medicine, especially reflexology. Any kind of medicine that does not include needles or pills is my kinda medicine.

They don't get rid of the pain, but do help ease it for short periods of time. Migraines have played such a big part of my life that I chose it as my dissertation topic for my Anatomy and Physiology class. I thought I'd share...

Here are some natural remedies:
Aromatherapy: Peppermint, eucalyptus and lavender. (Peppermint gel works the best for me.)These can be inhaled, but are best when they're used for massage.

Reflexology: The best thing is to have regular reflexology treatments to detox and balance the body, and a qualified reflexologist will be able to tell you where there are blockages in your body and then adjust your treatments according to your ailments.
One of the great things about reflexology, or acupressure, is that you can do it yourself. Simply walking barefoot is a reflexology treatment in itself -the more varied the surfaces you walk on, the better the treatment!
For migraines and headaches specifically, the big toe (or thumb) is the area that should be treated. It represents the head and neck. So you can just massage or add pressure to these points, so that they are stimulated.

Homeopathic: Sadly, I didn't study homeopathy, but I am taking some homeopathic medication for my headaches. I really couldn't tell you what's in the stuff, but it doesn't taste bad, and it works! Good enough for me!

The most important part of migraine treatment is prevention.
  • If you know what your triggers are - the most popular being the 4 C's: caffeine, chocolate, cheese and citrus - then avoid them. Other triggers include yeast and MSG.
  • Exercise: Its probably the last thing you want to do when you're in the throes of a migraine. Some people claim that easing into some mild exercise (a walk or some stretches) helps ease the pain. Endorphins produced during activity are the body's natural painkillers. And it also goes along way toward prevention.
  • Daily doses of feverfew, a herb that is part of the daisy family, has also been found to help prevent migraines.
  • If stress is a trigger, then Biofeedback, a relaxation technique used for muscle tension can help. Yoga, or any method of de-stressing that works for you, is also good.
  • Vitamins: Riboflavin, magnesium, Q10
  • Diet: The following foods have headache fighting properties:

    - Cayenne pepper, Ginger

    - Foods rich in calcium: Spinach broccoli and kale

    - Foods high in Magnesium: Spinach, pumpkin and squash seeds, okra, whole grain cereal etc.

    That's all I can think of right now. And if all else fails, you can do what the Ancient Egyptians did!
P.S. I came across the painting at the top of this post when I googled migraines. Hoping to find something more medical looking, I came across this painting, and was struck by how eloquently it captured the essence of having a migraine. Which is why I used it. What I didn't know was that it was actually painted by a devotee, Jayadeva das. Thank you for allowing me to use it, prabu!

by Syamesvari (noreply@blogger.com) at January 20, 2009 01:16 PM

Syamesvari dd : I miss...

In -20 degree conditions, surrounded by snow and ice, I miss being engulfed by the 30 degree humidity.

I miss hearing people say 'beach' and mean the ocean, not a body of calm, fresh water, with no waves, crabs or rock pools.

I miss the sun!

I miss walking on sea sand, so hot it curls your toes.

After wearing snow boots for the past 2 and a half months, I miss wearing my flip-flops.

I miss the awesome stream of association that is constantly flowing through Durban - Indradyumna Swami, BB Govinda Swami, Kadamba Kanana Swami, Lokanath Swami, Partha Sarathi das Goswami, Kavicandra Swami, Devamrita Swami, Bhakti Caru Swami...the list goes on.

I miss the amazing festivals, oceans of sweetness, that deepened my Krsna consciousness and urged me on to become a better devotee.

I miss my Gurudeva.

And most of all, I miss Their beautiful smiling faces...


*Sigh* Oh to be under the African sun again, at the lotus feet of Sri Sri Radha Radhanath.

Distance and separation have a funny way of making you more absorbed in and attached to that which you are away from.

I'm looking forward to the next time I get to have Their darshan - when next I do see Them, I plan on savoring every single precious moment.

by Syamesvari (noreply@blogger.com) at January 20, 2009 01:05 PM

Manoj, Melbourne, AU : 104. A sudden bolt connection


I was reading some archived news, when I came across this blog maintained by a leading Australian journalist, Andrew Bolt. For my reader’s outside of Australia, here is a description of him from his blog - Andrew Bolt started his column in 1998, after working as a foreign correspondent. He also writes for Brisbane’s Sunday Mail, and is a regular commentator on Channel 9’s Today show, ABC TV’s Insiders, Channel 10’s Nine AM, Melbourne’s 3AW, Adelaide’s ABC, Perth’s 6PR and Brisbane’s 4BC. Andrew’s book ‘Still Not Sorry’ was released last year.

Anyways, as I was reading a few articles, this particular article and 2 comments took my interest. Thought, I would share it with you…

————————————————————————-
Saturday, September 22, 2007 at 08:07am 
http://blogs.news.com.au/heraldsun/andrewbolt/
HERALD SUN

The most interesting people read this blog. MareeS, for example, has a family that is remarkable for being so exotically diverse… and numerous:

Andrew, further information about my siblings…
brother 1 is a military commander
brother 2 is a physicist
I’m a writer
Here goes the next…
sister next is a university lecturer
sister next is a radiologist
sister next is a neonatal nursing unit chief
sister next is an environmental scientist
brother next is a hare krishna
brother next is a master seaman (who crewed that boat to Nome)
brother next is a carpenter
sister next is a schoolteacher

Can any reader match it?

COMMENTS

I also don’t have the family numbers to match Maree’s impressive list (The Hare Krishna jumped out at me! Not often you see that!)
Danielle of Vic (Reply)
Sat 22 Sep 07 (11:31am)

The hare krishna in the family is a former smackhead with five kids who lives off your and my taxes. He’s the only failure in our line-up, but he cooks a great veggie curry, composes good music and we love him and his kids despite some bad times with him in the past.
mareeS (Reply)
Sat 22 Sep 07 (12:10pm)
————————————————————————-
:)

      

by 9days8nights at January 20, 2009 12:42 PM

Japa Group : Japa Room Anniversary

Hare Krsna everyone. Today is a very special day for all of us, because we celebrate the 1yr Anniversary of the Japa Room. I have been participating for about 10 months and I have a lot to share with you about my own realisations with the Holy names and how important serious chanters association have helped me.
I usually join both sessions, and for me sometimes they are very late at night and very early in the next day, but I never miss them because they are valuable to my spiritual advancement, to my chanting and also to be aware of what I need to change.
I can't say I am applying all I have heard in the sessions but I am aware of what I need to improve and when I fall into the old habits again, I remind myself of what I am doing wrong and try to correct it. I think that the Lord speaks through many ways with us and today I was reading a book for my job and suddenly I read a sentence: "If one knows how to train their own minds, this person will be the most talented and succesful in life."
Wow, it reminded me of what I have heard in the Japa Room for all this time, we need to keep the mind engaged in the sound vibration of the mantra and then we will be able to have the mind controlled. Then we will be succesful and all our problems will be solved. This weekend in the Japa Room, a devotee said that our mind is just like a child that needs to be trained and once you train you will get the results.
The most amazing thing during all this time I have taken association in the Japa Room is how I saw other devotees making advancement, I met nice devotees, got new friends and also learned a lot searching about japa and how to chant nicely.
I got a taste for chanting....in the past chanting this was much harder and also it's good being with serious chanters. I really have a lot to learn but for sure all I have got until now is helping me to have a strong faith in the Holy Names because I felt all the purifying effects through this year of association.
I wish all of you can share your realisations with us, it will be very pleasing to hear from you and make sure how good association is important to our spiritual life.
Thanks for being with us all this time and for sharing. Hope we all have a nice week of nice chanting.

Hare Krsna.

your servant,

Aruna dd

by Aruna (noreply@blogger.com) at January 20, 2009 12:32 PM

H.H. Mukunda Goswami : Know Three Things, Know Everything

Srila Prabhupada: "Our only request is that every one of you, you try
to understand God, love Him and be happy. The final conclusion in the
Bhagavad-gita is that if you want to be peaceful, if you want the peace
of your mind, you should understand three things. That three things are
that to understand that God is the supreme enjoyer. This is one. He is the proprietor of everything, and He is friend of everyone.
If you learn these three things only, very scientifically, that God is

read more

by Mukunda Goswami at January 20, 2009 12:00 PM

Ananda Subramanian, Iowa, USA : Forgiveness - unto others!

When Dhruva Maharaja was humilatedby his step mother,his real mother told him,Maamangalam taata pareshu Amamsthaah - Do not think inauspiciousness for others.

Similarly,after the destruction of Ravana, Hanumantha approaching Sita asks her,'oh mother! Shall I destroy all these raksashis who troubled you.'

In reply Mother Sita Says,Oh Hanuman! Na Kashchinaparaadyate' - who does not commit mistakes?'

We are ever ready to forgive ourselves but never others.Why Can't we learn to forgive others?

Hare Krishna

by ananda (noreply@blogger.com) at January 20, 2009 08:47 AM

David Haslam, UK : leaving ISKCON??

Well it must be true I’ve had several initiated devotees say the some thing it’s time I left ISKCON and may be get initiated by someone like Narayana Maharaja after all there is less hindrances and regulations they will meet you at the stage you are at. HUM! Is this an advisory? Another statement that surprises me [...]

by WordPress at January 20, 2009 08:29 AM

Krishna Ksetra Das : OCHS Newsletter, Winter 2009: Hindu Studies in China

From the latest Oxford Centre for Hindu Studies newletter, Winter 2009 (http://www.ochs.org.uk)

Hindu studies in China

The Department of Cultural and Religious Studies (CRS), at The Chinese University of Hong Kong (CUHK), - the oldest department of religious studies in the Chinese speaking world - has raised funding for a professorship in Indian Religions and Culture. This post was held by OCHS Fellow, Dr Kenneth Valpey in its inaugural year.

Students taking Dr Valpey's courses were from different academic and cultural backgrounds (from Hong Kong, Mainland China, and overseas). In addition to formal teaching, Dr. Valpey also organised several film appreciation meetings for students and staff to introduce the Hindu traditions in an enjoyable way.

by kkd-editor at January 20, 2009 07:29 AM

Kurma dasa, AU : Bride of Chakki

Chucky:

N from Brisbane asks:

"How to make rice chakki? It looks like 'Jalebi'."

Kurma answers:

"I have no idea. Any expert Indian housewives out there that can shed some light?"

by Kurma at January 20, 2009 06:08 AM

Gouranga TV : Govindam darsan, Mayapur

darsan aroti in ISKCON Mayapur temple - Govinda…

by uploader at January 20, 2009 06:00 AM

H.G. Sankarshan das Adhikari, USA : Tuesday 20 January 2009--Ride the Waves to Krishnaloka

In this world everyone is looking for the sweetest pleasure that they can find. But no matter how hard they look they never find complete total satisfaction. Therefore we recommend that everyone throughout the entire world should try diving into the sweet ocean of Hare Krishna kirtan because there is truly nothing more sweet and enlivening than this....

by course@ultimateselfrealization.com at January 20, 2009 03:30 AM

ISKCON Toronto, Canada : 2008: A Year in Review at ISKCON Toronto

This past Sunday, we showcased a presentation, "2008 - A Year in Review at ISKCON Toronto". We have placed this presentation on YouTube

The video contains touching footage and images of the early days of the Hare Krishna movement.

The message is that the Hare Krishna movement has been around, in the west, for over 40 years and while it seems that so much has changed, we're still doing a lot of the same wonderful things.

We hope you enjoy the presentation!

-- PART ONE --


-- PART TWO --


-- PART THREE --

by Keshav (noreply@blogger.com) at January 20, 2009 12:55 AM

January 19, 2009

Radha Priya dd, Austin, TX, USA : The Year of the Ox….

Somehow I accidently deleted this post, so I’m reposting this lovely essay written by Mother Hare Krishna dasi for BTG back in 1997: 1997—The Year of the Ox By Hare Krsna dasi (Back to Godhead 1997) According to the East Asian calendar, 1997 is the Year of the Ox. And as one devotee has put it, [...]

by radhapriya at January 19, 2009 11:35 PM

Maddy Jean-claude Durr, New Govardhana, AU : Back in Peat's Pit (day 2)

Tuesday, 30th Dec, 2008. Gaura awoke me from my deep slumber. The room invaders seemed to have retreated. I slowly readied myself for another day in the battlefield of Maya. Before I showered Sri P prompted me. “Can you shave me Maddy?” he asked. I thought he was joking but was shocked out of my mind that he was serious. He wanted me to buzz him, which was a little less scary than razor shaving (I suppose). Most people think “Gurukuli” and think, shaving, mrdanga, bhajans, kaupins…but I was a Westy Kuli. I grew up in the lush family supported life with ample food and cooshy bedding. I was shaved by teacher or parent. I had never buzzed anyone or anything (“anything” is for the record). I started off making sure to make a nice clean patch around his sika. My biggest paranoia is people cutting my sika. As far as I have been told, this is a handy handle that Krsna can pull us out of the ocean of material suffering. I have had personal experience testing this thing out. When I was 3 or 4 I disappeared into a murky lake at New Gokul. We were having a little swimming excursion or something and I just vanished in the deep end or something. People were searching and fearing the worst. Eventually one mataji reached her hand in and felt something strange. All of a sudden I was pulled out by my sika and my life was saved. I was good at near death experiences at the ages of 3 and 4. Eventually Sri P had realised I had no idea of how to shave anyone and some how I had failed to learn the simplistic science in the 5 minutes that had passed. At this point the Shaving King emerged (Gaura) and saved us all from nescience. I quickly learned my lack of technique and Sri P was spiky like an echidna (Aussie porky pine). After this Gaura sent me on a mafia money collection. I went to the treasury in search of one prabhu. I entered, found my prabhu, 4 rasagulas and the shiftiest eyed brahmacari I had ever set my regular non-shifty eyes on! I made the transaction and found no false reason to postpone my leaving. My Maha thief brain had kicked in though. This was the Maha thief’s dream job. I had to steal a container of 4 rasagulas off a shelf in plain sight of 2 people! Fortunately I had a pre planned diversion. Besides the door of the treasury was the door of the kitchen. Besides the door of the kitchen was the Maha Plate. It was well scavenged from earlier but the sweet rice/kiar was wrongfully neglected. I scooped it into a cup and decided to enjoy it in the treasury. Suspicious eyes were on me. “What are you doing?” one asked. “Oh nothing” I said. “Just enjoying your association prabhus.” I downed the contents of my cup as slowly as I could. Their gaze was strong and penetrating but they made no connection with the milk sweets. My mere persona was making them suspicious. Eventually one prabhu went back to his emails. The shifty eyes were ever shifty though. I downed the last portion of my cup and held it high above my head. Most people would just be satisfied with a cup of sweet rice but not me, if it was not stolen it was not enough! Finally in my last ounce of Maha enjoyment the shifty eyes shifter away. I skilfully turned to exit, gliding my chadha over the shelf and picked up the maha on the way. When I was a metre out of the room I ran like road runner out of the temple to safety. Gaura rolled up with a van of matajis. I went to his door. We both had a look of business. “How many milk sweets do you want?” I asked. I had planned to give them away, seeing as I had just had a cup of sweet rice and it was more enjoyable sharing stolen milk sweets than anything else. “How much ice cream do you want?” he replied. We banished the girls and sat in the front seats. I dished out half my stash and he dished out half his stash. Nothing like burnt milk sweets and chocolate ice cream in the morning. After some instigating we were soon off. I assembled my familiar troop and hit the road, trailing behind Gaura in the van. I nearly lost the van and our way to Peat’s Ridge, only catching up at the accusations of “dodgy” driving. My main experience of driving was country roads and highway speeding so I was a little insulted by the mistrust of the troop but totally understood it otherwise. They had, after all, only been driving with me in the city so had all rights to build an opinion of me. Everyone exited the car and rushed to the site. Tribi volunteered to help me with books but I was too long for his patience as I organised the mess of the previous day. I only had to carry two boxes of books and so I decided to do it all in one trip. The boxes were in such a way that they were very long and open at the top. I could only hold them a certain way and had to use a couple fingers to support each. This developed into an arm seizing, muscle tearing, painful carry of the books. It was totally worth all the unknowing permanent ligament damage I had done for a stress free day on the books. Jambavati Mataji/Jambas had already set up the table also. It was bliss and nectar from now on. I scoped out the crowd from the book table. I met a man with so many malas. I complimented them. He had tulsi and Rudra Malas and whatever else he could find. He seemed to be attracted to our tent but was not totally comfortable in his pursuit. His appearance was almost as impressive as the hat of dreadlocks a man had from the Jamaican tent next door. I spaced out for a little and then gazed up as some people approached the table. First person I saw was Shyama Makunda, Gurukuli friend from New Govardhana who had moved to New Gokul (normally people move from N Gokul to N Govardhana). He was quickly followed by his wife, Nandini, and the little crew of Sati and Sita. It was such a great chance to meet up again. I failed to make it their way when I popped through New Gokul and was regretting it. Now they rocked up to the cruisiest festival of our tour and I was on book table. An empty book table becomes a very good base for general catch up sessions and pajalpa sessions. Sati entertained herself by constantly finding Indradyumna Swami and seeking his divine association while the rest of us caught up. Sita was treating me like a stranger till the re warm up period seized up. I rushed off for play make up. Behind the tent was large field between us and the Dub Shack (Jamaican tent). This was back of house, or more so where we mucked around out of sight of public. I found myself challenging Gaura to a kung fu ninja show down utilizing this ample battle ground. Me and Gaura were throwing around a few warm up moves. A bicycle flying kick here, a crane pose there and a bit of Brazilian dance moves. Domo caught glimpse of the action and the theme changed. Domo removed his shoe and held it high like a knight’s sword and charged into battle. It was obvious at this point that it was two on one and my fight or flee instincts manifested. I selected…FLEE!! After an epic chase scene it came down to battling on the ground. I parried strike after strike (Domo trying to make me honour his Maha shoe with my mouth) and we all calmed down a little. The Peat’s Ridge insanity was starting to manifest… We did our performance in a laxed mood. We seemed to be more interested in trying to make each other laugh than give our best in the performance. I was caught out by Balesvari when she stuck her tongue out when her face was hidden and mine was not. It was a scene where we were all frozen, I was in centre stage and I doubt anyone missed the little bursting smirk on my face. I think in the end I chose to get Bali back through her husband, making a face at him but it was not the same. After play Chandra was finally threatening to get me back for slapping him so hard in our scene. I was eager to receive the loving exchange. It is all the more fun in violent plays if, in a sporting mood, your opponent gives you a little something back. Our make up removers had been replaced with wet tissues. After the play I was using them to fake a crying act to whomever would become audience to it. Eventually I had little Sati concerned, “why are you crying Maddy?” she was asking so innocently. By some strange turn of events this had me chasing her as if I was a monster and cornering her and some other child in a tent and terrorising them from the outside. I am an eternal kid. I was back on the book table. A lady bought a CD and a Gita. This was a normally cool combination at our other shows but was a rare thing to see at Peat’s Ridge. I was happy to see her walk away with the two main souvenirs of our show. After this purchase I met Hamish. Hamish was a cool young guy. He said he was reading the Gita and “digging” what he was reading. I asked him where he purchased it. He informed me he received it from our Mona vale show in Sydney. I was so happy to hear this. I had nothing more in the book world to recommend him until he was well and done in his Gita pursuits so I offered instead my email. He was very happy to exchange and even commented that he read in the Gita that you should inquire from someone who has knowledge on the subject. This was worth the whole festival for me. At one point a guy named Scotty came to the table. He was very much interested in who Krsna was. His first question was what the maha mantra meant. I explained it to him and he was quite satisfied. He then glimpsed a bit at Krsna book and Gita. I started some talking with him. He had grown up in a Christian school and felt a bit…well Bible bashed is the term given. He was force fed a bit of information he was not totally confident with and not left with a fully satisfying answer of who God was as a person. In the end he chose to take my email so he could talk to me about it further. I thought he was such a cool guy and pretty sharp and it was worth a book for me if he got back to me. In moments like this I realised most religion and spiritual pursuit, even the more authentic, really lack the personal feature, something that I all my life took totally for granted. People only knew of God as a title or a position and nothing else about him. It was a sad prospect and I felt glad to be of assistance to an genuine seekers. After this nectar dosage it was back on stage for a second Gita show. It was in and out and just felt like clock work. After I found myself in the changing tent with a few of the boys. Sadhu Sastra popped in for some business. Chandra was on some side track thought and was attacking Sadhu with Kung Fu moves. Sadhu acted oblivious, kept talking with whomever he was talking and then plummeted Chandra across the tent. He came flying in my direction and found himself finally resting on a pile of things. Everyone, including Chandra, was laughing their head off. He was a little shocked but otherwise ok to continue on his Chandra adventures. Back stage I found Shyam and Nandini saying their farewells to Maharaja. Shyam was expressing his interest in helping out in the Polish tour and their girls were also taking advantage of the saintly association. I got some good pics of the girls getting in there and hanging out with the maharaja and the who family seemed very pleased with their little trip to the strange little valley show. This was the top of Grehasta, kids being trained up so well that they were seeking the association of pure devotees. I was happy to see my little family in such a good light and it was a good surprise to lift up the day. We finished off again with the reggae concert. I decided to love the book table from afar and the whole crew got in there to create the right atmosphere (actually put people on the dance floor). It was good to let loose for a bit and dance like a loon. I combined dancing and searching for my shoes to fill up the remainder of the night. The show was over, it was the quiet time. Although this quiet time allowed people to open up and voice themselves. I was back at the table. A mildly (excessively) drunk man came to the table. “Have you got anything about astral travelling?” he started. I began to warn him of the dangers of this mystical exercise and instructed him about subtle things. He was to drunk to be interested in purchasing anything besides alcohol but it was good ground to spin some interesting philosophy. After my astral travelling friend travelled his way off, Mala Man came in. He was one of the only outsiders who took full advantage of our VOP concert and now he was loosened up for some philosophical discourse (he was also mildly drunk so I think that loosened him up a bit also). It was tough. I spent time with him. He was such a nice man and he was really crying out inside. He had been following so many different impersonal and voidist philosophies that he had sort of lost track of where the path was leading. I didn’t want to stop talking to him, I didn’t want to loose him. Eventually Domo pointed out I had a car of extremely tired people to return home and to talk some other time. I was caught in the moment. I held out as long as I could. In Gita Prabhupada explains violence in connection with ahimsa (non violence). A devotee does not cause violence if he can help it. Violence is not always physical, it can be mental and spiritual. He comments that causing confusion is a sense of violence. I felt deep pain for the violence that has been caused to this man of many malas. He had such a bright attitude but he was so confused and it looked like it was frustrating him. It was sad to say goodbye because there is always the chance that I may never get the chance again to interact with such persons. I prayed hard for this man’s resolution and tried to detach myself. Its times like this you want to use the danda on the mayavadis. They had done such harm to this man’s chances. We rolled out of the valley and I still had the whole thing on my mind. It was shook off by more prevalent events. Some car behind me was flashing their lights. I couldn’t make out why. Eventually the colours blue and red were flashed. I was being tailed by the police and they wanted me to pull over. I did and they were yelling from their car and on their sound system. I couldn’t make out what they were saying but everyone was getting restless. Eventually I realised they wanted me to keep driving till I found a more appropriate spot. I picked a nice little slot off the road and I had my first highway interview. They were randomly stopping people for breath tests. I counted to ten for them. I handed my licence and I knew that was the downfall. The Police were on their “Christmas Marathon”. In Sydney temple that means going around to people with a bucket and asking for money. In the government world that means going around flashing lights at people and handing out maximum fines. I was given a big wappa for the simple lack of displaying provisional licence plates, a slack law in Australia. Technically I could have payed the same money the fine was worth to update my licence to full and not have this apply. This to me was just silly money hording. I otherwise was positive and polite to our blue friends because I was representing Srila Prabhupada and Vaisnavas alike. I got home. Me and Gaura were fizzling off our energy from the festival. I was curled up inside from talking to Mala Man. Gaura was just a little too affected by his awake drink he used to prevent sleeping at the wheel and slaying a large number of matajis, an expert kirtana leader and a pure hearted Swami. We talked about preaching and it was total nectar and then did some serious snooze factor. Tomorrow was our last day of Peat’s Ridge.

by Maddy Jean-claude Durr at January 19, 2009 11:25 PM

Devadeva Mirel, Alachua, USA : All You Can Eat

What is it with Hare Krishnas and all you can eat meals? They seem to go hand in hand. Saturday night, after working up an appetite eating fresh picked citrus, we headed over to Krishna House for the $8 a plate sit down all you can eat dinner extravaganza.

The meal was plentiful, with preps too abundant to count. I am happy our friends Naveena-Shyam and Krishna-priya clued us in to this excuse to get out of the house. Really, I'm always enthusiastic to eat someone else's cooking. And our kids, who dined for $4 a plate, were grinning ear to ear. They like the restaurant experience.


Out in the parking lot we passed by the Krishna Lunch van, which--as you can read on the side there--has been serving out karma free meals since 1971. That's like, a pretty long time. Way to go!




We were arrived about 15 minutes before they opened for dinner. Thankfully they let us warm up inside as we waited for the men to get back from a quick jaunt to the bike shop.


Feeding time!



Here's a shot of some of the happy diners.  My daughter and the woman are now best friends. I think they made plans to meet up there next Saturday night.

by noreply@blogger.com (Devadeva Mirel) at January 19, 2009 10:53 PM

Jahnavi, UK : Monday Morning Blues?


This morning on the Tube to my work placement, I was eyedropping (you eavesdrop with your ears, and eyedrop with your eyes - let’s get in dictionaries by 2010 - yes we can!) on the magazine of the girl next to me. The article was decorated with pink swirls and a beautiful stylised sunrise, and a sentence from the article had been enlarged near the top: ‘You have to have faith that if you put enough energy into the getting the life that you want, everything will turn out alright.’ I didn’t read the rest of the article. The print was too small, and I suspected if I moved any closer, the next unexpected jolt would find my face firmly planted in her lap. It got me thinking though. The author seemed to be promoting radical optimism as the answer to life’s problems.

It’s not the first time I’ve heard it - from the fairly popular new-age film ‘The Secret’ to countless self help ‘gurus’, there are countless people preaching positive thinking as a the ultimate path to success. Perhaps in times such as these, with the world’s economic situation getting ever more grim and political trouble ever rumbling in the distance, it’s tempting to think that a sunny outlook holds the key to happiness. Of course I’m not denying that there’s truth in it, but I do wonder how helpful this kind of optimism is in the long run.

Being brought up with the teachings of bhakti yoga, I’ve learned that ultimately everything in the world will eventually disappoint, unless it is centred around Krishna. Hearing this, people often cry pessimism, but I don’t think it is. Seeing the world for what it is - warts and all, is realism. Anticipating difficulty; assuming that life entails struggle; understanding the futility of the search for material happiness - all of these things empower us and help to bring us to a state of equilibrium. It’s this state that is favoured by those seeking lasting happiness, for only when we can keep our heads clear above the choppy waves of life, can we see the horizon.

Perhaps if the 25% of the London workforce that called in sick today knew this, they might not have felt so down upon waking to the grey skies and rain. Maybe that’s too much to ask. The English weather can probably get to anyone in time. I wonder what people will feel tomorrow, as Obama formally begins his presidency? I suspect that for every cheering supporter, there is a pessimist who feels that America can never hope to improve, whatever the presidential promises. I think it’s best to be realistic. It’s a wonderful thing that America is getting a new president, and I’m sure the whole world will feel the effects. But regardless of how many times he calls for change, some things never will. As taught in the Bhagavad Gita, this world is a place of suffering - our position here is as fish out of water, and the discomfort we feel will continue to rise until we return to the place we belong - with Krishna.

Perhaps the easiest way to invoke Krishna’s presence into our lives is to chant his names. Tonight at the Church of the Holy City in Washington DC, my friends from As Kindred Spirits, along with other well known kirtaniyas, are holding a kirtan festival to bring auspiciousness to the inauguration tomorrow. All the tickets are sold out, but you can still watch ‘Chant for Change’ in a live webcast tonight.

Chant loud enough for everyone to hear, dance until your feet hurt and come closer to a happiness that transcends all else.  Happy Monday.

      

by jahnavi at January 19, 2009 10:21 PM

ISKCON Melbourne, AU : FOLK News Feb-May 2009 on site

The temple's Folk News magazine (Feb-May 09) was recently mailed out to recipients.

1.jpg In FOLK News you will find advance notice of festival programs, background stories to those festivals and Le Carnaval Spirituel, news from the farm, and more.

Your feedback and original contributions are always welcome.

If on site access proves useful to you, I can begin publishing the PDF of the next issue in colour.

Should you be unable to read the PDF file, you can download a free Acrobat reader here.

by Rasanandini at January 19, 2009 10:18 PM

Kurma dasa, AU : Jammin'

Strawberries are prolific in Sydney at present. Since my store of Sabjimata's plentiful pots of pectin-laced peccadillos is long exhausted, I'll make some of my own.

Here's the way I do it. Dead simple.

jam 1: Slice the berries

jam 2: Splash of water + lemon juice & cook with lid till soft

jam 3: Raw sugar is added

jam 4: Cook over full heat

jam 5: Remove when 'just right'

jam6: Ready for cooling and storage

by Kurma at January 19, 2009 09:32 PM

Vrndavana Vinodini dd, Toronto, Canada : Appreciation and Gratitude

This past week I have had the opportunity to learn so much in the way of gratitude and appreciation. I haven't been posting and writing a lot because we just finished our module on dress making. For those who know me well, things that require a lot of patience just really aren't up my alley! But despite that, for some reason I ended up deciding to make a simple but complicated pattern for my outfit for Gauranga. It took a lot of embroidery work. Why did I choose that? I really don't know. On one hand I don't like to shy away from a challenge but on the other I knew that it would really test my determination. I am happy to say that I was able to complete it and in the process learned a little more patience! :D

But that being said, all of us had a lot of help from the wonderful devotees who make Radha Madhava's outfits here in Sridham Mayapur. For example, I had finished all the embroidery late on Sunday evening and I was taking it over to the sewers so that could stitch it up with velcro. You know the first thing they did? Two boys took a look at it and saw that I had not had a chance to put some sequins on the cadar and immediately started to work on it. In a matter of 15 minutes they were finished and I was just in awe. These devotees didn't have to do anything. They were under no obligation to help us since there was nothing in it for them, but just out of the kindness of their hearts they wanted to help us. And it wasn't just for me. For every single devotee who went to get help stitching up their outfits, they would help out in any way possible that they could.

It makes me realize how easy it is to actually help other people. It doesn't take a lot of wealth, knowledge or power. All it takes is an open heart. The sad thing is that, I can see for myself, I'm so busy trying to get others to help me that I never try to help anyone else. As HH Candramauli Swami was saying yesterday, "Whatever we give out, we attract." So if we willingly and lovingly give ourselves to others, just imagine how Krsna will reciprocate!

I had another instance of feeling completely overwhelmed with gratitude today. I was reading an offering a friend had written for Srila Prabhupada where the devotee was praying to Srila Prabhupada to help them find their spiritual master. It made me recall that not even four years ago I was in the same position and I got to experience something HH Sacinandana Swami once said to me, "Auspiciousness is all around you, all you need to do is look for it." I was actually able to feel the auspiciousness. How can someone like me deserve to have a spiritual master who is so loving, magnanimous and so compassionate when I am the complete opposite of that! That is mercy. I was also in so much appreciation for this friend to actually pray to Srila Prabhupada with such a wonderful request.

So I leave you with these wonderful words...."Auspiciousness is all around you, all you have to do is look for it."

Ananta koti vaisnava vrnda ki JAI!

by Vrndavana Vinodini dd (noreply@blogger.com) at January 19, 2009 09:31 PM

Ekendra dasa, AU : Kamoda-raga by Narahari Dasa

I was reading Indradyumna Swami's latest diary and came across this beautiful song that I just had to blog about. This is perfect for any harinama enthusiasts:

Kamoda-raga by Narahari Dasa
(Translated by Kusakrata Dasa)

aju gora nagara kirtane sajiya calaye priya parikara sane

“Surrounded by His dear devotees, Lord Gaura performs sankirtana in the city.”

angera su-besa bhala sobhe nace nana bhangite bhubana-mana mohe

“His well-dressed form is glorious. Dancing in many graceful ways, He charms the hearts of everyone in the world.”

prema barisaye anibara bahaye ananda nadi nadiya majhara

“He continuously showers the bliss of ecstatic spiritual love. He makes a river of spiritual bliss flow in Nadiya.”

deba-gana misa-i manuse braise kusuma kata manera harise

“The demigods stay amongst the human beings. Their hearts are joyful. How many monsoons of flowers do they shower?”

nagariya loka saba dhaya manera manase goracandra guna gaya

“The people run to greet Him. With all their hearts they sing Lord Gaura’s glories.”

mudhegana suni simha-nada ha-iya birasa mana ganaye pramada

“Some bewildered people, their hearts withered by fear, think the tumultuous kirtan is a host of lions roaring.”

lakhe lakhe dipa jwale bhala upama ki abani gagana kare alo

“Millions and millions of glistening lamps shine. With what shall I compare the light that fills the ground and sky?”

narahari kahite ki jane matila jagata ke-u dhairaja na mane

“What shall Narahari say? He does not know. The whole world has become wild with bliss. No one is peaceful at heart.”

by Ekendra Dasa at January 19, 2009 09:24 PM

Bharatavarsa.net : Bhakti Vikasa Swami: Krsna's apparent disappearance and a magician's trick

Srila Visvanatha Cakravarti Thakura tells the following story of a certain magician who exhibits the trick of dying:

"In front of a great king, a magician approaches a stack of valuable garments, jewels, coins and so forth, all placed there by the king. Taking a jeweled necklace, the magician tells the king, 'Now I am taking this necklace, and you can't have it,' and he makes the necklace disappear. 'Now I'm taking this gold coin, and you can't have it,' he says, and makes the gold coin disappear. Next, challenging the king in the same way, the magician makes seven thousand horses disappear. Then the magician creates the illusion that the king's children, grandchildren, brothers and other family members have attacked each other and that nearly all are dead from the violent quarrel. The king hears the magician speaking and at the same time observes these things taking place before him as he sits in the great assembly hall.

"Then the magician says, 'O King, I no longer wish to live. Just as I have studied magic, so also, by the mercy of the lotus feet of my guru, I have learned the mystic meditation of yoga. One is supposed to give up one's body while meditating in a holy place, and since you have performed so many pious activities, you are a holy place yourself. Therefore I shall now give up my body.'

"Thus speaking, the magician sits down in the proper yoga posture, fixes himself in pranayama, pratyahara, dharana, dhyana and samadhi and becomes silent. A moment later, a fire generated from his trance blazes forth out of his body and burns it to ashes. Then all the wives of the magician, distraught with lamentation, enter into that fire.

"Three or four days later, after the magician has returned to his own province, he sends one of his daughters to the king. The daughter tells him, 'O King, I have just come to your palace, bringing along with me, invisibly, all your sons, grandsons and brothers in good health-along with all the jewels and other items given by you. Please, therefore, give me whatever you consider fitting remuneration for the wisdom of the magic that has been exhibited before you.' In this way, even by ordinary magic one can simulate birth and death."

It is not difficult to understand, therefore, that the Supreme Personality of Godhead, although transcendental to the laws of nature, exhibits His illusory potency so that ordinary fools will think the Lord has left His body like a human being. Actually, Lord Krsna returned to His abode in His own eternal body, as confirmed throughout the Vedic literature.

>From SB 11.31.12 ppt.

January 19, 2009 09:11 PM

Gauranga Kishore das,USA : Sacred Journey's Gaura Purnima Festival

My friend Nitai is organizing what look like an awesome Gaura Purnima Festival at New Vrindavan with H.H. Indradyumna Swami and wanted me to pass along the information.


Sacred Journeys
Seminars by HH Indradyumna Swami and HH Varsana Swami
March 6-8, 2009

Visiting holy places is a cherished principle on the path of devotion. Devotees of the Lord regularly visit such auspicious locations as Vrindavan, Mayapur, and Jagannath Puri, where the Lord and His associates have appeared.

Discourses describing the significance and pastimes of the holy sites, visiting ancient temples, worshiping the Deities of the Lord, and congregational chanting are the heart and soul of their
sacred journeys.

Join His Holiness Indradyumna Swami, His Holiness Varsana Swami and hundreds of sincere devotees
as they take you on a narrative journey to the great spiritual regions of India to search out the most rare and valuable treasure: Pure love of God.

Seminars and Prasadam

$108 by March 1st
$151 after March 1st
Proceeds Benefit Viva Kultura Foundation

Lodging Special Price
Full Weekend Adult - $25
Kids under 12 - $10
Under 5 - Free

Must Reserve by March 1st

For registration, lodging or volunteering
Contact: sacredjourney108@gmail.com
www.newvrindaban.com

by Gauranga Kishore Das (noreply@blogger.com) at January 19, 2009 07:59 PM

H.H. Mahavishnu Swami : A very interesting conversation


ganga*An Atheist Professor of Philosophy was speaking to his Class on the Problem
Science has **
with** **GOD**,** **THE ALMIGHTY**.  He asked one of his New Christian
Students to stand and . . .** **
** **
Professor :**  ** **You are a Christian, aren’t you, son ?** **
Student    :**  ** **Yes, sir.** **
Professor :**   ** **So, you Believe in** **GOD ?** **
Student    :**  ** **Absolutely, sir.** **
Professor :**   ** **Is** **GOD Good ?** **
Student    :**   ** **Sure.** **
Professor :**   ** **Is** **GOD ALL - POWERFUL ?** **
Student    :**   ** **Yes.** **
Professor :**   ** **My Brother died of Cancer even though he Prayed to ** *
*GOD to Heal him.
                  Most of us would attempt to help others who are ill.
                  But** **GOD didn’t. How is this** **GOD good then? Hmm?**
*

*(Student was silent )** *

*Professor :**  ** **You can’t answer, can you ?  Let’s start again, Young
Fella.
                Is** **GOD Good?** **
Student    :**  ** **Yes.** **
Professor :** ** **Is Satan good ?** **
Student    :**  ** **No.*

***Professor :**  ** **Where does Satan come from ?** **
Student    :**  ** **From . . .** **GOD . . .** **
Professor :**  ** **That’s right.  Tell me son, is there evil in this World?
** **
Student    :**  ** **Yes.** ** **Evil is everywhere, isn’t it ? And** **GOD*
* did make everything. Correct?** **
Student    :**  ** **Yes.** **
Professor :**  ** **So who created evil ?** *

*(Student did not answer)** *

*Professor :**  ** **Is there Sickness? Immorality? Hatred? Ugliness?
                 All these terrible things exist in the World, don’t they?**
**
Student    :** ** **Yes, sir.** **
Professor :**  ** **So, who Created them ?** *

*(Student ha**d** **no answer)** *

*Professor :** ** **Science says you have 5 Senses you use to Identify and
Observe the World around you.
                Tell me, son . . . Have you ever Seen** **GOD** **
Student    :** ** **No, sir.** **
Professor   :** ** **Tell us if you have ever Heard your** **GOD**?** **
Student    :** ** **No , sir.** **
Professor :**  ** **Have you ever Felt your** **GOD**, Tasted your**
**GOD**,
Smelt your** **GOD**?** **
             Have you ever had any Sensory Perception of** **GOD** for that
matter?** **
Student    :**   No, sir. I’m afraid I haven’t.** **
Professor :**  ** **Yet you still Believe in** **HIM**?** **
Student    :** ** **Yes.** **
Professor :**  ** **According to Empirical, Testable, Demonstrable Protocol,

                Science says your** **GOD** **doesn’t exist.  What do you
say to that, son?** **
Student    :** ** **Nothing.  I only have my** **Faith**.** **
Professor :** ** **Yes**,** Faith**.  And that is the Problem Science has.**
*

*Student    :**  ** **Professor, is there such a thing as Heat?** **
Professor :**  ** **Yes.** **
Student    :**  ** **And is there such a thing as Cold?** **
Professor :**  ** **Yes.** **
Student   :**  ** **No, sir. There isn’t.** *

*(The Lecture Theatre became very quiet with this turn of events )** *

*Student    :**  ** **Sir, you can have Lots of Heat, even More Heat,
Superheat, Mega Heat, White Heat,
                 a Little Heat or No Heat.
                 But we don’t have anything called Cold.
                 We can hit 458 Degrees below Zero which is No Heat, but we
can’t go any further after that.
                 There is no such thing as Cold.                   Cold is
only a Word we use to describe the Absence of Heat.
                 We cannot Measure Cold.
                 Heat is Energy.
                 Cold is Not the Opposite of Heat, sir, just the Absence of
it.** *

*(There was Pin-Drop Silence in the Lecture Theatre )** *

*Student    :** ** **What about Darkness, Professor? Is there such a thing
as Darkness?** **
Professor :** ** **Yes. What is Night if there isn’t Darkness?** **
Student    :** ** **You’re wrong again, sir.** **
             ** **  Darkness is the Absence of Something** **
                ** **You can have Low Light,   Normal Light, Bright Light,
Flashing Light . . .** **
              ** **  But if you have No Light constantly, you have nothing
and its called Darkness, isn’t it?** **
                ** **In reality, Darkness isn’t.** **
              ** **  If it is, you would be able to make Darkness Darker,
wouldn’t you?** **
Professor :**  ** **So what is the point you are making, Young Man ?** **
Student   :**  ** **Sir, my point is your Philosophical Premise is flawed.**
**
Professor :**  ** **Flawed ? Can you explain how?** **
Student    :**  ** **Sir, you are working on the Premise of Duality.** **
              ** **  You argue there is Life and then there is Death, a Good
** **GOD** and a Bad** **GOD**.** **
              ** **  You are viewing the Concept of** **GOD** as something
finite, something we can measure.** **
                ** **Sir, Science can’t even explain a Thought.
              ** **      It uses Electricity and Magnetism, but has never
seen, much less fully understood either one.** *

*                  ** **To view Death as the Opposite of Life is to be
ignorant of the fact that
                 Death cannot exist as a Substantive Thing. **  **
                 Death is Not the Opposite of Life: just the Absence of it.
                 Now tell me, Profssor, do you teach your Students that they
evolved from a Monkey?** **
Professor :**  ** **If you are referring to the Natural Evolutionary
Process, yes, of course, I do.** **
Student    :**  ** **Have you ever observed Evolution with your own eyes,
sir?** *

*(The Professor shook his head with a Smile, beginning to realize where the
Argument was going )** *

*Student    :**  ** **Since no one has ever observed the Process of
Evolution at work and
                 Cannot even prove that this Process is an On-Going
Endeavor,
                 Are you not teaching your Opinion, sir?
                 Are you not a Scientist but a Preacher?** *

*(The Class was in Uproar )** *

*Student    :** ** **Is there anyone in the Class who has ever seen the
Professor’s Brain?** *

*(The Class broke out into Laughter )** *

*Student    :** ** **Is there anyone here who has ever heard the Professor’s
Brain, Felt it, touched or Smelt it? . . .** **
                No one appears to have done so. **  **
                So, according to the Established Rules of Empirical, Stable,
Demonstrable Protocol,
               Science says that You have No Brain, sir.
                With all due respect, sir, how do we then Trust your
Lectures, sir?** *

*(The Room was Silent. The Professor stared at the Student, his face
unfathomable)** *

*Professor :**  ** **I guess you’ll have to take them on** **Faith**, son.**
*

***Student    :** ** **That is it sir . . .  Exactly !** **
                The Link between Man &** **GOD** is** **FAITH**.
                That is all that Keeps Things Alive and Moving.** *

*  *

*That student was Albert Einstein**.** **

      

by mahavishnuswami at January 19, 2009 04:59 PM

ISKCON Toronto, Canada : Sunday Feast Recordings - Jan 18th, 2009

Today's Sunday Feast recording can be viewed by clicking the image below. As a reminder, the recordings from our weekly live web broadcasts are stored on our new ISKCON Toronto Video Archive Blog.



by Keshav (noreply@blogger.com) at January 19, 2009 03:34 PM

Dandavats.com : Down in the Pits

By Indradyumna Swami

Our festival programs continued in the Sydney area with great success. I had come with twenty-eight devotees from various countries, and many of them were staying in rooms at the Sydney temple. Devotees from other parts of Australia were also staying there for the Christmas Marathon.

by Administrator at January 19, 2009 02:46 PM

Kripamoya dasa, UK : Lost English Vegetables


I mentioned to someone younger than me the other day that I grew up eating Swedes and he looked perplexed. “As in Swedish people?” he asked. “No, the vegetable,” I replied. He’d never heard of it. “Like a Turnip?” I ventured, sure that one of our nation’s staple foods would be familiar to him. “Nope. What’s a turnip?”

“Well, what about Kale,” I tried, “You must have heard of that vegetable?” No luck there either. I was beginning to sound my age, speaking about the post-war diet in rural Cornwall. Suddenly aware that I might just as well have been talking about threepenny bits and ten-bob notes I threw in a “Bet you’ve never heard of Mangolds either?” Now he was really confused.

I am not from another country, I am from Cornwall. And when you live in a place you eat what the soil produces. But maybe England was another country before the infestation of supermarkets put paid to local vegetable growers. And maybe Cornwall, situated at the end of a long southernmost finger of England jutting into the Atlantic, got international and frozen foods last of all.

So by the time I joined a Krishna commune there were foods I was accustomed to eating - which many others had never eaten - and foods I had never even seen, what to speak of tasted.

I had never had spinach, for instance. It was the stuff of Popeye cartoons and had almost legendary qualities of being able to make you big and strong, and fight like a he-man, but I’d never had it. And I had never even seen olives, avocados, or mangoes. I was 25 years old before I even heard the word ‘pizza.’

But I never felt I was deprived because of these dietary mysteries. I am over six feet tall so the Turnips and Swedes and Kale must have done me good. I can’t remember the last time I ate a turnip now, but if the recession really bites us all hard in 2009 - as we’re being told - we might see much more of them.

Here, for my dear readers, is a selection of those ‘lost’ English vegetables:

Swedes

…and Turnips. OK, so they don’t look much different to Swedes, but they taste different. One is cream inside the other golden. I forget which..

And Kale. All the above were regularly fed to the local cows, which might have been why they were in plentiful supply.

      

by deshika at January 19, 2009 01:49 PM

New Vrndavan, USA : Sacred Journeys: Gaura Purnima at New Vrindaban

Spend this Gaura Purnima absorbed in the pastimes of Sri Caitanya Mahaprabhu!

Sacred Journeys
Seminars by HH Indradyumna Swami and HH Varsana Swami
March 6-8, 2009

Visiting holy places is a cherished principle on the path of devotion. Devotees of the Lord regularly visit such auspicious locations as Vrindavan, Mayapur, and Jagannath Puri, where the Lord and His associates have appeared.

Discourses describing the significance and pastimes of the holy sites, visiting ancient temples, worshiping the Deities of the Lord, and congregational chanting are the heart and soul of their sacred journeys.

Join His Holiness Indradyumna Swami, His Holiness Varsana Swami and hundreds of sincere devotees as they take you on a narrative journey to the great spiritual regions of India to search out the most rare and valuable treasure: Pure love of God.

Seminars and Prasadam
$108 by March 1st
$151 after March 1st
Proceeds Benefit Viva Kultura Foundation

Lodging Special Price
Full Weekend Adult - $25
Kids under 12 - $10
Under 5 - Free

Must Reserve by March 1st

For registration, lodging or volunteering
Contact: sacredjourney108@gmail.com
www.newvrindaban.com

by bc at January 19, 2009 12:00 PM

H.H. Mukunda Goswami : Krishna and the Soul

Krishna and the soul are 'invisible' to our materialistic eyes. Srila Prabhupada has called the soul and God (jiva and iswavar)
"correlative" terms. In London on 29August 1975 he said, "Atheist means
one who does not believe in the soul and God. These are correlative
terms. If you understand what is soul, then you can understand what is
God."

by Mukunda Goswami at January 19, 2009 12:00 PM

Japa Group : Kapila's Letter

For the KuliMela in Radhadesh, I hosted a Japa Workshop. I received amazing feedback, and I felt inspired to hear this all from gurukulis, who have a hard time especially with japa. My good friend Kapila, though, e-mailed me the following letter some time later, and I found it beautiful... and essential to understanding that japa is, well, the holy name, and the holy name is pure.

Dear Bhakti, 

I have a serious bone of contention about only one thing from what I heard of your inspirational japa retreat.  The term Bad Japa.  It's impossible, absurd, and horrific to say... there is no such thing as bad japa.  There is only JAPA and EXCELLENT JAPA... no BAD JAPA.
 
Better to simply chant
Better still to chant even one mantra purely than 100 without attention
Better still to chant constantly....
 
But there is no BAD in that.  Once we have bad, we have judgement, once we have judgement we have police who will say to people "that's bad japa, don't bother" or self judgement..."no point unless it's pure". 
Water can flow down a mountain and scatter in all directions and evaporate from dillution, but over time, it will form a channel.  Japa is certainly like that.  Better to have japa than nothing.  My god, this movement is all about sharing the holy name, and how it cannot be poluted and how it purifies, how can we reverse that even subtly.  And I know the direct intention is not to reverse it, but in proposing and promoting the concept that any chanting of the holy name can be BAD is doing a huge horrible injury to all. 
Certainly it's better to dig a channel, and to build it one step at a time so the water flows nicely, and stays strong against the sun, and has focus... but all water is good... how we capture that water can be better... only... but never bad :)
 
with love...
 
Kap

by Bhakti lata (noreply@blogger.com) at January 19, 2009 11:52 AM

Devadeva Mirel, Alachua, USA : Fresh Fruit: Kanapaha Botanical Gardens

Saturday we went to Kanapaha Botanical Gardens in Gainesville with the kids and some friends. My husband had been before but it was my first time there. Admittedly, the coldest week of the year is not the optimal time to visit a garden.  But we made it work.

Lots of herbs to smell, vines to swing on and oranges to pick! These mandarin oranges (below) were super sweet and, picked straight from the tree, ultra-tasty. Unfortunately, the lower limbs were picked over. Fortunately, our friends are very tall.






by noreply@blogger.com (Devadeva Mirel) at January 19, 2009 11:41 AM

Jaya Kesava Das, USA : Bringing It Home

A few days ago a friend who follows my blog and whose adventurous love for the great outdoors wrote ma a nice note about goings on in his life. He mentioned that he enjoys reading my blog but get little knowledge about my actual life from them. So after careful consideration I decided to write today on why I chose a monastic life. Of course there are many paths and individuals following those paths, but for this blog I'll stick to the Krishna Consciousness Movement and my, as well as some others' involvement in it.
The hope of a parent is to see that their child is educated, and happy in life, and some, if they could, would try as hard as possible to shield their children's innocence form time. My innocence was broken at an early age, 6 years old, as Politicians in my country staged coups and imposed curfews on the citizens during their fight to the top of the mountain and occupy some post. Again, on my eleventh birthday, the civil war that lasted for more than 10 years in Liberia began. I quickly put away my toys and became mother's helper, making sure everything went smoothly in running our household, now also joined by other family and friends whose areas had been severely affected by war. As time went by I was practically and adult before 15 and my dreams of becoming a Franciscan monk was fading away as the mode of life, keeping your head above water, crept in. Then something else threatened- recruitment of child soldiers, which urged my Father to bring me to the US to live with him.
My father had a zillion plans for my life and worked hard to give me a comfortable means for studying and then realizing his dreams for me. But mother had taught me to make decisions I will live with for the rest of my life and blame no one later for "making me" live a life I didn't want to. In America thanks to the Media, the lives of everyone was an already opened book or a book waiting to be opened by some luck of the draw act- win the lottery and you're on TV; Save a dog from drowning, blow up buildings, molest someone- anyone could be famous in an instant. I also watched my dad struggle daily as he drove from New Jersey to New York to work and then on the weekends spend most of his time on the sofa in front of Headline News pouring in with more and more negative things happening in the world. From my own experience, children are impressionable and so I began to really question the dream my dad had for me vs the monastic life I wanted to lead since I was 5. What kind of culture was this where people worked so hard 11 and a half months out of the year for two weeks of vacation where they spend their hard earnings on Jack Daneils, Jim Beam, Johnny Walker, Jose Quervo and a T-shirt that says they did?
In Africa I lived in a community with Jews, Hindus, Christians, and Muslims shared everything. Once I asked my mom why we had so many mixed bowls and plates and she mentioned that if I wanted a complete set of china, I had to go and retrieve them from the neighbors. But I also couldn't take their bowls and plates back empty. Here, I saw a deep resentment of individuals based on externals- religion, skin color, this, that, etc.
So when I came across Four Krishna monks and two nuns on a busy day in Seattle, I had to dig deeper. I visited them almost daily for three weeks straight trying to understand why 25 people lived so happily sharing rooms in a house meant for maybe 6 people. Why were they so peaceful? Why was I not satisfied although I was earning and living as I desired- or more as I had fallen into the pattern of living. Talking with some of them was even more incredible! These were young men and women from well-to-do families who just didn't find satisfaction in their daily life course and so dared to do the extraordinary. Of course their families freaked out beyond reason; got cut out of wills, others "deprogrammed" back into the "normalcy" of society, and others who had everything, like on monk who lived with his mother in Beverly Hills in a mansion, just decided to move into such a situation.
So why did i do it? For me, sharing things with people was natural in my upbringing, I shared a bedroom with bunk beds occupied by my brothers and the best part, the music, was something I did everyday with my Mother and Step-Father. When my mom would come home after work, in the evenings she would sit on the porch with my Step father and sing songs they learned from their parents, for Church, or from growing up amongst friends. So when the monastery came alive at 4:30 am with Songs of the Spiritual Master, I was more than happy to Join in. Also the topic of God was not doctrine but very practical- we have a relationship with God, Krsna as he's called in Vedic thought, and to show our love for him, we did something for him. Just as I saw my mom cooking and sharing with the Neighbors, or many guests coming over on the weekends to spend the day in our yard on the beach, or other personal dealings, Service to God then means that He is a person and doing things in the association of devotees shows love for Him. We, in the monastery also came from various religious or nonreligious backgrounds. We developed great friendships with each other based on service to a common goal, we protected each other and cultivated each other. This was nothing like I had seen as a result of the Civil wars or my introduction to America. More interestingly, people in the war were before very close friends, and due to intoxication of power, were now hunting each other down.
Come see a world that's filled with pain
broken homes and scavenges
where hatred and strife
seems not to cease
where children laugh and play
as kids together
then grow as men and fight
to kill their pals.
Where friends betray each other and then sing "Soul rest in Peace" -
I had to change my world, even if it meant sleeping in a sleeping bag next to five or five hundred people with that same goal. I prefer living simply with a small bowl of Good healthy food, than a fridge supply of junk, filling the empty gap of satisfaction in the body with food prepared by a machine or someone who takes the place of the machine, does his job, care nothing about you, but cares about his paycheck at the close of the week. When mother made food, it was infused with her conscious love for her children and this same, or even better conscious was in the minds of the cooks in the monastery. No pay, just love for those you live with and a desire to see them satisfied eating food offered in Love to Krsna.
In this realm I live in now, no one who deeply understands this Krishna Conscious philosophy lives to exploit anyone else. We're learning daily that Love means self sacrifice, and knowledge of the Supreme Person is very vast. Not limited to cast or creed. When a person lives without fear- without feeling threatened by the next person, then human life becomes a grand vehicle to drive us to our ultimate goal- to build a world where God is real and we are real and our relationship between God, man, and nature is harmonious :)
Good Morning. Hare Krishna.

by Jaya Kesava Das (jayakesavapda@hotmail.com) at January 19, 2009 10:42 AM

Subuddhi Krishna dasa, Chicago, USA : Pearls of Wisdom - 107


One who follows the principles and instructions enjoined by the great sages of the past can utilize these instructions for practical purposes. Such a person can very easily enjoy life and pleasures.

A foolish person who manufactures his own ways and means through mental speculation and does not recognize the authority of the sages who lay down unimpeachable directions is simply unsuccessful again and again in his attempts.


Srimad Bhagavatam - Canto 4 Chapter 18 Verses 4 & 5

by Subuddhi Krishna das, Chicago (noreply@blogger.com) at January 19, 2009 09:42 AM

Ananda Subramanian, Iowa, USA : Theory of Generalization

The danger of scientific modeling is the theory of generalization. Through inductive reasoning, we induce a theory based on sample data hoping the sample represents the entire population. That’s right hope - there is no accurate fool proof way to measure the representative-ness of a sample to the whole population. I am of the opinion that no two people are alike…having said that how can a representative sample actually represent a true population. This major assumption in science today limits science. Still, however, scientists make grave generalities attempting to solve population wide issues.

Based on these generalizations, we assume a tested pill is suitable to almost everyone, we assume that all objects obey laws of physics (hence arose quantum physics), we assume that children from broken homes most likely will drop out, we assume that stimulus package will boost the failing economy etc etc. Our assumptions in many instances have gone wrong and have caused fatal results albeit in unique cases nevertheless fatal. In other words, when we assume the sample represents the population we are missing out on the details that make up the variety in the population and just deal with certain key generic variables that can be measured (practically!). This assumption can sometimes prove costly and ineffective. Hence when the scientists are satisfied about a medicine being approved, all they care about is, it should test positive in 95 or 99 out of 100 patients…now imagine if the same drug is administered to 100s of 100s of people. Then there will be more than 100 people whose body will not accept the drug due to unique conditions and may cause severe repercussions. This illusory ubiquitous-ness can be attributed to the generalization of a sample and the downplaying of the limitations. From the scientist’s perspective, they can care less about the freaks of nature. It is a statistic, an anomaly in the curve chart; it is not a human who’s dying!!

Why then science is dubbed as the panacea of all problems and the abode of rational thinkers in spite of their limitations? In my opinion, science has become its own mundane religion with blind irrational followers occupying different priestly orders. In this religion – their false ego is God! Indeed, knowledge is power, they think they have the knowledge and the power…this is the biggest illusion of all!

Hare Krishna

by ananda (noreply@blogger.com) at January 19, 2009 09:26 AM

Dandavats.com : NASN December 2008 - North American Sankirtan Newsletter

By Mayapur Sasi dasa

For the pleasure of Srila Prabhupada this file contains the following North American results for the month of December: North American Totals, Monthly Temples, Monthly Weekend Warriors etc., Monthly Top 100 Individuals, Monthly Top 5, Cumulative Countries, Cumulative Temples, Cumulative Top 100 Individuals, Cumulative Top 5

by Administrator at January 19, 2009 09:21 AM

David Haslam, UK : attachment to a car?

Over the past few weeks my car has been undergoing some repairs following a small crash during this time the insurance company gave me a hire car, a like for like equivalent so they said so I was somewhat amused and perplexed when a Ford focus turned up (I can not see how this is [...]

by WordPress at January 19, 2009 08:28 AM

Devadeva Mirel, Alachua, USA : Sabjimata: The Next Generation


Many people have children to carry on their legacy. I just wanted someone cute to kiss and cuddle. But lucky, lucky me--I get the best of both worlds.

When we lived in Pennsylvania my little girlie would often say that when she grows up, she wanted to be a jam maker. Now, she has refined her occupational aspirations. According to her, when she is all big and grown, she "wants to be Sabjimata." 

I have a successor.

She is an avid fan of prasadam, always wanting the biggest piece or the biggest spoonful of everything being served. At lunch today she got all giddy, licking her lips and skipping around from item to item. A little potato and broccoli, slide the soup bowl over, take some rice, more soup, a few forkfuls of paneer, more soup (I had to fill her bowl three times) and then some fistfuls of salad. My girlie is a pleasure to cook for; she is interested and excited about vegetarian spiritual cuisine.

When she goes over her friend Kamala's house, she spends hours at the play stove making sabji and birthday cake tea and jam and chapatis for everyone to eat. And at home she gets all my old spoons and utensils for her own kitchen, located in her bedroom. Grandma even bought her her own stoneware tea set and a bunch of plastic dinner plates from the dollar store. Unlike toy plates, these are full sized and can accommodate the large feasts Madhumati cooks on a regular basis.

Tonite, when she fell asleep with a kid-sized oven mitt in one hand and an old silicone spatula in the other, I just couldn't help but think how much I love her. A few hours later, I just couldn't help and take a picture of my sleeping cooker. The stuff was no longer in her arms, but close enough.

Feel free to comment about how cute she is. We're not shy around here  ;)

by noreply@blogger.com (Devadeva Mirel) at January 19, 2009 04:14 AM

H.G. Sankarshan das Adhikari, USA : Monday 19 January 2009--Beware of Cheating Gurus

================================================================== Thought for they Day--Monday 19 January 2009 ================================================================== Dedicated with love to you, our treasured readers, and to ISKCON Founder-Acharya: His Divine Grace A.C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada Our purpose is to help everyone awaken...

by course@ultimateselfrealization.com at January 19, 2009 03:30 AM

Ahaituki Bhakti dd, USA : “This is such nice things.”


“At least whoever buys, he will look over. If you have to sell books, do it by hook or by crook. The real preaching is selling books.” Letter to Bali-mardana, 30 Sep 1972

“So I want that you all my students shall very vigorously try for this book distribution. Do not hesitate to use your American and European brains to increase, that is Krishna’s special gift to you, now use it. Any activity which will please Krishna should be accepted favorably, this is our guiding principle.” Letter to Kirtiraja, Nov 1971

“Every word is for the good of the human society. Every word, each and every word. Therefore we stress so much in the book distribution. Somehow or other, if the book goes in one hand, he will be benefited. At least he will see, “Oh, they have taken so much price. Let me see what is there.” If he reads one sloka, his life will be successful. If one sloka, one word. This is such nice things.” SB 1.16.8 — LA, January 5, 1974

ct84-0821

“So, you just do your service,” he continued. “That is all that is necessary. This is what love means. To do service.” Blissful Airport Lila; Love is Service, by Srutakirti Prabhu

      

by Ahaituki Bhakti at January 19, 2009 02:23 AM

Bharatavarsa.net : Book distribution seminar: The compassion of the sankirtan devotees

Dear Devotees,

Please accept my humble obeisances. All glories to Srila Prabhupada.

On Dec. 26 I met a nice Indian gentleman at our San Fransosco Harinama. He said that he was a devotee of Krishna his whole life and now he was facing some hard times. He had lost his job and had no where to sleep. He said that he was losing his faith.

We were standing at the book table when he asked, "What can you tell me? I don't know what to do." He asked if he could stay at our Temple, but I explained that it is very small and there may not be any room. I really did not know what to do, but somehow I could not let him leave without some words of encouragement. I gave him 2 small books, an ISO and a Civilization & Transendence, and I told him that if you have Krishna then you have everything. I could tell that he had a renewed sense of hope when he took the books. I gave him my personal phone number and told him that if you get into trouble please call me and I will come and get you and bring you to my apartment. A few days later he called and said he was staying at a friends house for a few days. He told me that he had graduated with a Hotel and Restaurant Managament degree from India and was desperate to send money back to his family.

I sent an email to my friend Michelle who is the owner of an award winning restaurant here in the city. Now he has a job interview on Monday. I could tell by the tone of his voice that his faith in God is renewed by his experience with the devotees. We really made a difference in his life. He was so happy to see the devotees on Harinama.

Every time we go on book distribution, we eradicate ignorance and bring auspiciousness to everyone we connect with.

My whole life all i wanted to do is help people. This Sankirtan movement is the best way to really help....in fact it is the only way to help people. As Vaisesika Prabhu has said," Let's leave everyone with a good impression. Everyone we meet should feel that they have met a spiritual person." Let us not be afraid to go the extra distance to make our preaching more personal. Sometimes just giving someone your phone number can really encourage them to get reconnected to Krsna Consciousness. We should approach everyone with an open heart, ready to do what is necessary to help. Those who are receptive will appreciate your effort.

Everyone is looking for Krishna everywhere.

All Glories to the Sankirtan Devotees!!! Your servant, Bhakta Jorge (Text PAMHO:16744223) --------------------------------------

------- End of Forwarded Message ------

January 19, 2009 01:20 AM

Book Distribution News : The compassion of the sankirtan devotees

Dear Devotees,

Please accept my humble obeisances. All glories to Srila Prabhupada.

On Dec. 26 I met a nice Indian gentleman at our San Fransosco Harinama. He said that he was a devotee of Krishna his whole life and now he was facing some hard times. He had lost his job and had no where to sleep. He said that he was losing his faith.

We were standing at the book table when he asked, "What can you tell me? I don't know what to do." He asked if he could stay at our Temple, but I explained that it is very small and there may not be any room. I really did not know what to do, but somehow I could not let him leave without some words of encouragement. I gave him 2 small books, an ISO and a Civilization & Transendence, and I told him that if you have Krishna then you have everything. I could tell that he had a renewed sense of hope when he took the books. I gave him my personal phone number and told him that if you get into trouble please call me and I will come and get you and bring you to my apartment. A few days later he called and said he was staying at a friends house for a few days. He told me that he had graduated with a Hotel and Restaurant Managament degree from India and was desperate to send money back to his family.

I sent an email to my friend Michelle who is the owner of an award winning restaurant here in the city. Now he has a job interview on Monday. I could tell by the tone of his voice that his faith in God is renewed by his experience with the devotees. We really made a difference in his life. He was so happy to see the devotees on Harinama.

Every time we go on book distribution, we eradicate ignorance and bring auspiciousness to everyone we connect with.

My whole life all i wanted to do is help people. This Sankirtan movement is the best way to really help....in fact it is the only way to help people. As Vaisesika Prabhu has said," Let's leave everyone with a good impression. Everyone we meet should feel that they have met a spiritual person." Let us not be afraid to go the extra distance to make our preaching more personal. Sometimes just giving someone your phone number can really encourage them to get reconnected to Krsna Consciousness. We should approach everyone with an open heart, ready to do what is necessary to help. Those who are receptive will appreciate your effort.

Everyone is looking for Krishna everywhere.

All Glories to the Sankirtan Devotees!!! Your servant, Bhakta Jorge (Text PAMHO:16744223) --------------------------------------

------- End of Forwarded Message ------

January 19, 2009 01:15 AM

January 18, 2009

Bharatavarsa.net : Bhakti Vikasa Swami: from a recent letter from me

Many devotees, having despaired of getting fair, generous, and consistent treatment in ISKCON, and of its affairs being conducted in an intelligent manner corresponding to the society's stated goals, have turned their backs on it. I am not one of them. Although I do not foresee a paradigm shift soon, I maintain the faith that ISKCON is overseen by higher powers and that it is the duty of its members, especially its leaders, to continue existing and serving as best we can within the society and to pray for the change of outlook that must take place if again ISKCON is to get on track and be intensely focused on fulfilling Srila Prabhupada's desires. Also, despite ISKCON's warts, I do not see that there is a better alternative.

January 18, 2009 09:11 PM

Devadeva Mirel, Alachua, USA : My Husband, My Hero

My oven door makes me sad. Repeatedly milk has boiled over from my stove top and made its way down into the oven door vents, streaking the inside of the oven door glass panels in a very unsightly way. I couldn't figure out a way to get in there and clean up the mess without spending money on a service call.

And then it hit me: I should google it. Figuring out how to phrase my search was a little tricky but I hit pay dirt the second time searching. On a message board I learned that by removing the lower drawer of the range one could get up between the glass with a windex soaked cloth on a stick and clean up the mess.

Thankfully, my husband was up for the task. This morning he got to work rigging two paint stirrers together so he would have enough reach.



I didn't take a before shot since I really just want to forget about the horrors of the streaked oven glass. But look! here is my husband modeling his paraphernalia in front of the just cleaned oven window. Nice.

Inspired by his dutiful kitchen service, I wanted to reciprocate with a very dairy lunch. Not for the vegan hearted.



This curds and whey soup is very simple to prepare and good for your tummy. An homage to M. Kaulini, our dear friend who is terribly ill right now, she used to make this soup frequently during her 30 + years cooking at Gita Nagari Farm.

To make, simply boil a half gallon of milk, add a curdling agent such as lemon juice or citric acid and stir until the milk curds and whey separate. Add some chopped vegetables, salt, pepper, hing and dried herbs, boil and you have this mild yet flavorful soup.




Basmati rice, broccoli and potato sabji, salad and paneer steaks tempted my husband to go for seconds but he resisted, opting to save room for dinner.

by noreply@blogger.com (Devadeva Mirel) at January 18, 2009 06:03 PM

Madhava Ghosh dasa, New Vrndavan, USA : Planes and Presidents: Omens?


9-11

Bush took office and soon after came 9/11 with the iconic photos of a plane crashing into the Twin Towers in New York City.  He is now considered one of the worst presidents ever (even though he is just a front man and scapegoat for Dick Cheney,  whatever).

Now we have a new set of photos that may become the icons of the Obama presidency.  He takes office at a time when the economy seems to have lost both  engines and  society is headed for a crash.  Can Obama pull off the same miracle that Sully the pilot pulled off with this plane crash in New York?  A landing that is being lauded as the Miracle on the Hudson?

We will see.

passengers-stand-on-the-w-001

Posted in News, Ramblings or Whatever      

by Madhava Gosh at January 18, 2009 04:20 PM

Madhava Ghosh dasa, New Vrndavan, USA : “Our Valley” by Philip Levine


We don’t see the ocean, not ever, but in July and August
when the worst heat seems to rise from the hard clay
of this valley, you could be walking through a fig orchard
when suddenly the wind cools and for a moment
you get a whiff of salt, and in that moment you can almost
believe something is waiting beyond the Pacheco Pass,
something massive, irrational, and so powerful even
the mountains that rise east of here have no word for it.

You probably think I’m nuts saying the mountains
have no word for ocean, but if you live here
you begin to believe they know everything.
They maintain that huge silence we think of as divine,
a silence that grows in autumn when snow falls
slowly between the pines and the wind dies
to less than a whisper and you can barely catch
your breath because you’re thrilled and terrified.

You have to remember this isn’t your land.
It belongs to no one, like the sea you once lived beside
and thought was yours. Remember the small boats
that bobbed out as the waves rode in, and the men
who carved a living from it only to find themselves
carved down to nothing. Now you say this is home,
so go ahead, worship the mountains as they dissolve in dust,
wait on the wind, catch a scent of salt, call it our life.

Posted in Poetry      

by Madhava Gosh at January 18, 2009 02:37 PM

H.H. Mukunda Goswami : Work Now, Samadhi Later

Srila Prabhupada is reputed to have said "Work now, samadhi later."
Although this phrase is not to be found within the Bhaktivedanta
Database, the idea is that devotional service is to be part of our
lives and that we are to be ghostianandies, not bhajananandies.
Some may argue that Rupa and Sanatana Goswami were bhajananandies,
living in caves, beneath sacred trees, near holy lakes and rivers, at
hallowed shrines, aloof from the general public. But what was their
purpose? "Lokanam hita-karinau tri-bhuvane," It was to

read more

by Mukunda Goswami at January 18, 2009 12:00 PM

Bhakta Eric, USA : Bhagavad-gita: a contradictory verse? (9.29)

gitasEach week I select a verse from the Bhagavad-gita and compare/contrast four different translations. These translators all subscribe to the Gaudia-Vaisnava philosophy. This examination isn’t to prove one more superior to another, but to highlight the similarities and learn from the differences in ideologies.

The four Gitas are:
-Bhagavad-gita: As It Is by Srila Prabhupada (1972 edition)
-Bhagavad-gita: It’s Feeling and Philosophy by Tripurari Swami
-Srimad Bhagavad-gita by Narayana Maharaja
-Bhagavad-gita: The Beloved Lord’s Secret Love Song by Garuda dasa (Graham Schweig)

Though I’m hardly qualified to do so, I dissect each translation, sometimes interjecting my own unsolicited commentary. More on this can be found here.

This week’s verse comes from Chapter 9: Raja-Guhya-yoga, also called The Yoga of Hidden Treasure and the King of Secrets. This chapter deals with the most important knowledge.

The Bhagavad-gita is a conversation between Krishna (God) and Arjuna (His devotee). Arjuna is asking questions and Krishna in answering them. Arjuna’s last question was at the beginning of Chapter 8. Since then, Krishna has covered a lot of topics, from the importance of our last thought to explaining the entire material existence. He’s on a roll.

He just finished up teaching Arjuna the proper ways to worship Him. After He speaks this verse, He continues explaining worship and its rewards. This verse gives a small glimpse into God’s nature and position.


samo’ham sarva-bhutesu
na me dvesyo’sti na priyah
ye bhajanti tu mam bhaktya
mayi te tesu capy aham




I envy no one, nor am I partial to anyone. I am equal to all. But whoever renders service unto Me in devotion is a friend, is in Me, and I am also a friend to him.
-Srila Prabhupada

I am impartial to all beings. I hate no one and I favor no one. However, those who worship me with devotion are in me, and I am also in them.
-Tripurari Swami

I am equal to all living beings and am neither inimical nor partial to anyone. But as those who serve Me with bhakti are attached to Me, so too am I bound by affection for them.
-Narayana Maharaja

I am the same
    towards all beings;
    no one is either hated
    or dearly loved by me.
Yet those who,
    with an offering of love,
    offer their love to me -
    they are in me
    and I am also in them.
-Garuda dasa (Graham M. Schweig)

Translating from the Sanskrit is no easy task. Each of our esteemed authors must make tough decisions about where to place which phrases. Garuda dasa chooses to follow the Sanskrit poetical flow as closely as possible. Tripurari Swami seems to keep it as simple as he can, adding no extra content to the verses. Srila Prabhupada and Narayana Maharaja both take liberties not only in placement of phrases, but in the addition of ideas to explain the verse.

equalThe first line, samo’ham sarva-bhutesu is similarly translated by all four: “I am equal to all.” Srila Prabhupada choses to translate the second line before the first line, but his verses often have to be taken as a whole.

Tripurari Swami translates samah as “impartial” rather than “equal.” Srila Prabhupada and Narayana Maharaja are, of course, not indicating that Krishna is equal to us, that we are the same, that we are God. The meaning is that Krishna is impartial. Garuda dasa (whose edition provides no word-for-word analysis of the original Sanskrit) seems to have translated it as “the same towards.”

Srila Prabhupada placed the second line before the first. In his edition, Krishna explains that He envies no one and that He is not partial to anyone. He then states that He is equal to all. Prabhupada actually translates samah as “equally disposed” in his word-for-word.

Tripurari Swami translates na me dvesyo ’sti na priyaha, the second line, as “I hate no one and I favor no one.” “Hate” has been translated from dvesyah. Narayana Maharaja also translates it as “hated,” though chooses the word “inimical” in his verse. Garuda dasa also uses “hated.”

While Srila Prabhupada glosses dvesyah as “hateful,” he choses to verse it as “envy.” This is interesting that he is equating envy with hate. We usually think of envy as a strong form of coveting or even obsessive admiration. But true envy cannot exist without hatred (and often that is also hatred of oneself).

Three of our translators chose the word “dear” from priyah. In their verses, they used “partial” or in Tripurari Swami’s case, “favor.” However, Garuda dasa oddly chose “dearly loved.” His exact line is: “no one is either hated or dearly loved by me.” This seems a bit extreme. True, when something is dear to you, it is loved by you. So it’s not that his translation is incorrect. But saying that God does not love anyone seems a bit misleading.

That is, however, the nature of this verse. It is contradictory. In the first two lines, Krishna is telling us that He is impartial, that He favors nobody over another. But that all changes in the second part of the verse.

Krishna throws a monkey wrench...With the tiny Sanskrit word tu, Krishna throws a monkey wrench into the whole thing. Tu means “but” or “yet.” So even though all of this may be true, that Krishna is impartial and doesn’t favor one person over another… tu. There is an exception. Who is this exception?

Ye bhajanti tu mam bhaktya - However, those who worship Me with devotion….

Devotees of God are the exception.

As Narayana Maharaja and Tripurari Swami translate bhajanti as the more traditional “worship,”
Srila Prabhupada translates bhajanti as “render transcendental service.” All Gaudia-Vaisnavas agree that service to God is worship, but Srila Prabhupada often drove this point home. Here is another such example. Instead of simply translating bhajanti as worship, he translates it as “devotional service.”

I usually enjoy Garuda dasa’s translation. Sometimes it may be quite different from (though never at odds with) the other translations. He truly captures the poetry contained in the Bhagavad-gita. Oddly, In this case I guess I just don’t get it. “Yet those who, with an offering of love, offer their love to me…” The purpose in his translation was to follow the Sanskrit as closely as possible. He nearly always takes it line-by-line, and though he may sometimes choose words that seem strange, he rarely, if ever, departs from the flow of the original poetry like he does here.

Maybe it’s a typo. His typical four lines are now an inexplicable five with two of the lines repeating the same idea. “With an offering of love, offer their love to me” just doesn’t make any sense. Maybe he was trying to decide between the two lines and accidentally left them both in. Though sloppy, that would at least explain it. “Yet those who offer their love to me…” makes sense, even if it has no mention of worship or devotional service. I’m honestly baffled by this one.

Moving on, mayi te tesu capy aham is a very sweet line. I find Srila Prabhupada’s to be the sweetest here: “… is a friend, is in Me, and I am also a friend to him.” Narayana Maharaja puts it similarly, “… are attached to Me, so too am I bound by affection for them.” In the original Sanskrit there is no mention of attachment or friendship. It is simply, as Tripuari Swami and Garuda dasa both put it, “… are in me, and I am also in them.”

Srila PrabhupadaThough there is no specific mention in the verse of such a reciprocal relationship, a devotee understands that “I am in them and they are in Me” is very reciprocal.

We, as Gaudia-Vaisnavas, believe in a personalist philosophy. God isn’t just all around us or somewhere off in heaven. We believe that He is a person and that we have a relationship with Him (and He with us). This verse confirms that if we love God, He reciprocates. While He is fully impartial to everyone, He favors those that favor Him. Isn’t this natural?

Srila Prabhupada concludes his purport by saying, “Devotional service of the Lord is not an activity of this material world; it is part of the spiritual world where eternity, bliss and knowledge predominate.”

All three of the purports to this verse (Garuda dasa’s translation contains only the verses - without commentary) are very worth reading. Any honest student of the Bhagavad-gita would be greatly benefited by obtaining and studying at least these three books.

by eric at January 18, 2009 11:15 AM

Krishna Consciousness & Ecological Awareness : Tree Huggers


180px-chipkoThe forests of India are a critical resource for the subsistence of rural peoples throughout the country, but especially in hill and mountain areas, both because of their direct provision of food, fuel and fodder and because of their role in stabilising soil and water resources. As these forests have been increasingly felled for commerce and industry, Indian villagers have sought to protect their livelihoods through the Gandhian method of satyagraha non-violent resistence. In the 1970s and 1980s this resistance to the destruction of forests spread throughout India and became organised and known as the Chipko Movement.

The first Chipko action took place spontaneously in April 1973 and over the next five years spread to many districts of the Himalaya in Uttar Pradesh. The name of the movement comes from a word meaning ‘embrace’: the villagers hug the trees, saving them by interposing their bodies between them and the contractors’ axes. The Chipko protests in Uttar Pradesh achieved a major victory in 1980 with a 15-year ban on green felling in the Himalayan forests of that state by order of India’s then Prime Minister, Indira Gandhi. Since then the movement has spread to Himachal Pradesh in the North, Kamataka in the South, Rajasthan in the West, Bihar in the East and to the Vindhyas in Central India. In addition to the 15-year ban in Uttar Pradesh, the movement has stopped clear felling in the Western Ghats and the Vindhyas and generated pressure for a natural resource policy which is more sensitive to people’s needs and ecological requirements.

The Chipko Movement is the result of hundreds of decentralised and locally autonomous initiatives. Its leaders and activists are primarily village women, acting to save their means of subsistence and their communities. Men are involved too, however, and some of these have given wider leadership to the movement. Prominent Chipko figures include: Sunderlal Bahuguna, a Gandhian activist and philosopher, whose appeal to Mrs. Gandhi results in the green-felling ban and whose 5,000 kilometre trans-Himalaya footmarch in 1981-83 was crucial in spreading the Chipko message. Bahuguna coined the Chipko slogan: ‘ecology is permanent economy’.

Chandi Prasad Bhatt, one of the earliest Chipko activists, who fostered locally-based industries based on the conservation and sustainable use of forest wealth for local benefit.

Dhoom Singh Negi, who, with Bachni Devi and many village women, first saved trees by hugging them in the ‘Chipko embrace’. They coined the slogan: ‘What do the forests bear? soil, water and pure air’.

Ghanasyam Raturi, the Chipko poet, whose songs echo throughout the Himalaya of Uttar Pradesh.

Indu Tikekar, a doctor of philosophy, whose spiritual discourses throughout India on the ancient Sanskrit scriptures and on comparative religion have stressed the unity and oneness of life and put the Chipko Movement in this context.

A feature published by the United Nations Environment Programme reported the Chipko Movement thus: ‘In effect the Chipko people are working a socio-economic revolution by winning control of their forest resources from the hands of a distant bureaucracy which is concerned with selling the forest for making urban-oriented products.’

“The solution of present-day problems lie in the re-establishment of a harmonious relationship between man and nature. To keep this relationship permanent we will have to digest the definition of real development: development is synonymous with culture. When we sublimate nature in a way that we achieve peace, happiness, prosperity and, ultimately, fulfilment along with satisfying our basic needs, we march towards culture.” Sunderlal Bahuguna

      

by environmentkrishna at January 18, 2009 10:08 AM

ISKCON News.com : Spiritonomics: ISKCON & The Financial Crisis

By Madhava Smullen on 18 Jan 2009

Call it what you want – economic crunch, financial meltdown, apocalypse now – the world in general, and the USA in particular, is not exactly rolling in wealth.

The recession began, according to the National Bureau of Economic research, in December 2007. By 2008, the prices of commodities such as oil and food had gotten so high that they were causing genuine economic damage – oil prices peaked at $147 a barrel in July, and a gallon of gas cost over $4 across most of the USA.


by Ekendra Dasa at January 18, 2009 09:24 AM

ISKCON News.com : Radha Govinda Maharaja Recovering from Brain Hemmorage

By ISKCON News Weekly Staff on 18 Jan 2009

In remarkable semblance to Jayapataka Swami's recent health crisis, ISKCON guru Radha Govinda Maharaja is currently recovering from a brain hemorrhage in a New Delhi hospital.

While traveling by train on January 8 from Vrindavana to Ludhiana, Punjab, where he was scheduled to give a talk, Maharaja stopped off at the town of Jalandhar to visit the local ISKCON temple.


by Ekendra Dasa at January 18, 2009 09:18 AM

ISKCON News.com : Sri Sri Radha-Parisishvara to Move to New Home

By Rita Gupta on 18 Jan 2009

Within the next few months, ISKCON will move to its new temple in Sarcelles, a multi-ethnic and multi-religious suburb on the northern outskirts of Paris and near the famous Charles de Gaulle International airport. For the first time in over twenty years, ISKCON will own temple property in the Paris area. The presiding Deities, Sri Sri Radha Parisishvara, were installed in 1973 by the Founder-Acarya of ISKCON, His Divine Grace A.C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada.


by Ekendra Dasa at January 18, 2009 08:41 AM

ISKCON News.com : ISKCON Cow Protection Director Suffers Heart Attack

By ISKCON News Weekly Staff on 18 Jan 2009

Balabhadra Dasa, co-managing director of ISCOWP (International Society for Cow Protection) along with his wife Chayadevi, is currently in a stable condition at home after suffering an unexpected heart-attack.


by Ekendra Dasa at January 18, 2009 08:19 AM

ISKCON News.com : ISKCON Guru's Birthday Celebrated at Udupi

By ISKCON News Weekly Staff on 18 Jan 2009

As they do every year, over eight hundred disciples and congregational devotees celebrated the fifty-second Vyasa-puja, or birthday, of ISKCON guru Bhakti Vikas Swami this January 3rd. But hospitality from a different branch of Vaishnavaism added a twist. This year's event was hosted by the Madhva Sampradaya and held in Udupi, the south Indian town where Madhvacharya "one of the greatest Vaishnava teachers of all time" lived eight hundred years ago.


by Ekendra Dasa at January 18, 2009 08:05 AM

ISKCON News.com : Padyatra India 1984


Mukunda Goswami introduces Padyatra India. This is a video made in the very beginning of the Padayatra festival in 1984. This is when Pradayatra was just in India. It was planned to trace the footsteps of Lord Caitanya who also travelled all over India from village to village by foot. It started in Dwarka down to South India then up to Sridhama Mayapur in 1986 to coincide with the appearance day celebrations of Lord Caityanya Mahaprabhu and the culmination of all the festivities for the celebration of the Srila Prabhuapda Centennial.


If the selection above is hosted by YouTube then after the video plays there will be several links presented to other videos. ISKCON News Weekly has no control over the selections presented and is not responsible for their contents.

by Ekendra Dasa at January 18, 2009 07:52 AM

Dandavats.com : Mayapur Worldwide - New Website Launch

By Bhaktin Sue

ISKCON Mayapur is launching its brand new exciting project “Mayapur Worldwide”, a project that at one point none of us could ever have imagined how it was going to emerge or whether it was ever going to happen at all but it has and we hope that you will be as exited by it as we are.

by Administrator at January 18, 2009 07:52 AM

ISKCON News.com : Oven-roasted Stir-fry

By on 18 Jan 2009

Cauliflower, after a quick drizzling with olive oil and a spritz of sea salt, roasts really well in the oven, and combines beautifully with cashews, snow peas, fresh coriander and sour cream. It is, in fact, one of the most popular vegetable dishes at my cookery classes. And, for some reason, it is very popular with ladies.

This is a simple but tasty entree. If you double the quantities, and add a rice dish plus a salad or soup, you have a substantial meal. Serves 4.

by Ekendra Dasa at January 18, 2009 07:30 AM

ISKCON News.com : Radhanatha Swami Kirtana



If the selection above is hosted by YouTube then after the video plays there will be several links presented to other videos. ISKCON News Weekly has no control over the selections presented and is not responsible for their contents.

by Ekendra Dasa at January 18, 2009 07:27 AM

ISKCON News.com : Hare Krishna and Rastafarian



If the selection above is hosted by YouTube then after the video plays there will be several links presented to other videos. ISKCON News Weekly has no control over the selections presented and is not responsible for their contents.

by Ekendra Dasa at January 18, 2009 07:12 AM

ISKCON News.com : Man Refuses to Drive 'No God' Bus

BBC News on 16 Jan 2009

A Christian bus driver has refused to drive a bus with an atheist slogan proclaiming "There's probably no God".

Ron Heather, from Southampton, Hampshire, responded with "shock" and "horror" at the message and walked out of his shift on Saturday in protest.


by Ekendra Dasa at January 18, 2009 07:06 AM

ISKCON News.com : Law Firm Challenges Atheist Lawsuit Over Obama Oath

The Becket Fund on 30 Dec 2008

Michael Newdow, the atheist attorney best known for trying to remove the words "under God" from the Pledge of Allegiance, announced he is filing a lawsuit in the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia, to forbid references to God during the presidential inauguration ceremony for Barack Obama, January 20.


by Ekendra Dasa at January 18, 2009 06:58 AM