| HOW TO GET VAIRAGYA 
  (Dispassion)
By 
 CONTENTS
 OM 
   B::ðg:ð r:ðg:B:y:ö kÙl:ð
  cy:Øet:B:y:ö ev:¶:ð n:àp:al:a»y:ö . m:an:ð dòny:B:y:ö b:l:ð erp:ØB:y:ö -p:ð j:ray:a B:y:m:Î ..
 S:as*:ð v:aedB:y:ö g:ØN:ð K:l:B:y:ö kay:ð kát:ant:a»y:ö .
 s:v:üö v:st:Ø B:y:aenv:t:ö B:Øev: n:àN:aö v:òragy:m:ðv:aB:y:m:Î ..
 bhoge 
  rogabhayaü kule cyutibhayaü vitte nçpàlàdbhayaü | màne dainyabhayaü bale ripubhayaü råpe jaràyà bhayam ||
 ÷àstre vàdibhayaü guõe khalabhayaü kàye kçtàntàdbhayaü |
 sarvaü vastu bhayànvitaü bhuvi nçõàü vairàgyamevàbhayam ||
 In enjoyment there is fear 
  of disease; in social position, the fear of falling off; in wealth, the fear 
  of (hostile) kings; in honour, the fear of humiliation; in power, the fear of 
  foe men; in beauty, the fear of old age; in scriptural erudition, the fear of 
  opponents; in virtue, the fear of traducers; in body, the fear of death. All 
  the things of this world pertaining to human beings are attended with fear; 
  renunciation alone stands for fearlessness.  - Vairagya 
  Sakatam of Bhartrihari.    b:ÉaedsT:av:rant:ð\:Ø
  v:òragy:ö ev:\:y:ð\v:n:Ø . y:T:òv: kakev:Åay:aö v:òragy:ö t:e¹ en:m:ül:m:Î ..
 brahmàdisthàvarànteùu 
  vairàgyaü viùayeùvanu |yathaiva kàkaviùñhàyàü vairàgyaü taddhi nirmalam ||
 Spotless freedom from desires 
  means such a dissatisfaction in respect of all objects from Brahma down to inanimate 
  things as is felt in respect of the excrement of a crow.  - Acharya 
  Sankara  
 Vairagya 
  Dindima(A Proclamation of Dispassion)
kam:H #:ðD:Á: l::ðB:Á:
  dðhð et:Åent: t:skrH . jW:an:rtn:ap:haray: t:sm:ajj:ag:t: j:ag:t: ..
 kàmaþ
  krodha÷ca lobha÷ca dehe tiùñhanti taskaraþ | j¤ànaratnàpahàràya tasmàjjàgrata jàgrata ||
 There lurk thieves in the 
  frame viz., lust, anger and greed to steal the jewel of thy wisdom. Therefore 
  awake! awake!!   j:nm: dÙHK:ö j:ra dÙHK:ö
  j:ay:a dÙHK:ö p:Øn:H . s:ös:arm:ag:rö dÙHK:ö t:sm:ajj:ag:t: j:ag:t: ..
 janma
  duþkhaü jarà duþkhaü jàyà duþkhaü punaþ |saüsàramàgaraü duþkhaü tasmàjjàgrata jàgrata ||
 Birth is full of pains 
  : old age is full of miseries: woman is again and again the source of all miseries 
  and pains. This ocean of Samsara is full of grief. Therefore wake up! wake up!! 
     m:at:a n:aest: ep:t:a n:aest:
  n:aest: b:nD:ØH s:h:ðdrH . AT:üö n:aest: g:àhö n:aest: t:sm:ajj:ag:t: j:ag:t: ..
 màtà nàsti
  pità nàsti nàsti bandhuþ sahodaraþ | arthaü nàsti gçhaü nàsti tasmàjjàgrata jàgrata ||
 You have no mother, no 
  father, no relatives, no brothers, no wealth, no house, (nothing will remain 
  for ever, nothing will follow you after death). Therefore wake up! wake up!! 
     A:S:y:a b:Dy:t:ð l::ðkñ
  km:üN:a b:hÚec:nt:y:a . A:y:ØH x:iN:ö n: j:an:aet: t:sm:ajj:ag:t: j:ag:t: ..
 à÷ayà
  badhyate loke karmaõà bahucintayà | àyuþ kùãõaü na jànàti tasmàjjàgrata jàgrata ||
 You are bound in this world 
  by desires, actions and manifold anxieties. Therefore you dont know that 
  life is slowly decaying and is wasted away. Therefore wake up! wake up!!    
 y:ad h] krn:a kran:a hò P]t:
  s:aD:Øka kam: . K:l:k k:ð rst:a edK:an:a hò P]t: s:D:Ø ka kam: ..
 yàda haqa
  karanà karànà hai phaqata sàdhukà kàma | khalaka ko rastà dikhànà hai phaqata sadhu kà kàma ||
 It is the only duty of 
  the Sadhus to remember and make others remember the Right (Absolute) 
  and it is the only duty of the Sadhus, to be the guide of the whole world.    edn: n:ikñ b:it:ð j:at:ð hò
  .  dina nãke
  bãte jàte hai |  The days are passing away 
  speedily.    s:Øem:rn: kr Â:i ram: n:am:
  t:j: ev:\:y: B::ðg: A:òr s:v:ü kam: . t:ðrð s:¤ c:l:ð n:eh Ok dam: j::ð hðt:ð hò s::ð p:at:ð hò ..
 edn: n:ikñ b:it:ð j:at:ð hò .. 1 ..
 sumirana kara
  ÷rã ràma nàma taja viùaya bhoga aura sarva kàma | tere saïga cale nahi eka dàma jo hete hai so pàte hai ||
 dina nãke bãte jàte hai || 1 ||
 Remember the (holy) Name 
  of Sri Rama, i. e., remember God. Give up all the worldly and the sexual enjoyments, 
  and all other deeds, too. Not a dama (1/20th part of an anna) will go with you. 
  Only they get (something) who give (something). The days are passing away speedily. 
     B:aI b:nD:Ø A:òr kÙXÙm:
  p:erv:ara s:b: j:it:ð j:i kñ n:t:ð hòö . eks:kñ h:ð t:Øm: kón: t:Ømhara eks:kñ b:l: hern:am: ev:s:ara ..
 edn: n:ikñ b:it:ð j:at:ð hò .. 2 ..
 bhàã bandhu
  aura kuñuma parivàrà saba jãte jã ke nate haiü | kisake ho tuma kaina tumhàrà kisake bala harinàma visàrà ||
 dina nãke bãte jàte hai || 2 ||
 Brothers, friends, relatives 
  and family membersAll these are related to you as long as you live. Otherwise 
  who is yours? (Dear Ones!) On whose strength have forgotten the 
  (holy) Name of Hari! (the Almighty)? The days are passing away speedily.    l:K: c::òras:i B:rm: kñ
  A:y:ð b:_ð B:ag: m:an:Ø\: t:n: p:at:ð . et:s: p:r B:in:aüöh kri km:aI ekr p:aCð p:Ct:at:ð hòö ..
 edn: n:ikñ b:it:ð j:at:ð hò .. 3 ..
 lakha
  cauràsã bharama ke àye ba.De bhàga mànuùa tana pàte | tisa para bhãrnàüha karã kamàã kira pàche pachatàte haiü ||
 dina nãke bãte jàte hai || 3 ||
 You have already travelled 
  over the 84 lakhs of Yonis (wombs) of the animal world. It is very fortunate 
  of you that you have got this human body. Still you have not done anything (for 
  the next birth). And therefore, you will have to repent for it. The days are 
  passing away speedily.    j::ð t:Ü l:ag:ð ev:\:y:
  ev:l:as:a m:ÜrK: kús:ð m:àty:Ø ki p:aS:a . sVy:a dðK:ð Ã:as: ki A:s:a g:y:ð kñr n:hiö A:t:ð hòö ..
 edn: n:ikñ b:it:ð j:at:ð hò .. 4 ..
 jo tå làge
  viùaya vilàsà mårakha ka.Nse mçtyu kã pà÷à | kyà dekhe ÷vàsa kã àsà gaye kera nahãü àte haiü ||
 dina nãke bãte jàte hai || 4 ||
 If you entangle yourselves 
  in worldly enjoyments after the objects, Oh foolish people! You entangle yourselves 
  in the clutches of the so-called death. And why! Are you hoping for breaths 
  (after breaths)? (Remember) what is gone is gone for ever. They, those that 
  have passed away will never return. The days are passing away speedily.  
   Once in Persia reigned 
  a king, Who upon a signet ring,
 Carved a maxim strange and wise,
 When held before his eyes,
 Gave him counsel at a glance,
 Fit for every change and chance:
 Solemn words, and these were they:
 EVEN THIS WILL PASS AWAY.
 Trains of camel through 
  the sand Brought him gems from Samarcand;
 Fleets of galleys over the seas
 Brought him pearls to rival these,
 But he counted little gain,
 Treasures of the mine or main;
 What is wealth? the king would say,
 EVEN THIS WILL PASS AWAY.
 Mid the pleasures of his 
  court At the zenith of their sport,
 When the palms of all his guests
 Burned with clapping at his jests,
 Seated midst the figs and wine,
 Said the king, Ah, friends of mine.
 Pleasure comes but not to stay,
 EVEN THIS WILL PASS AWAY.
 Woman, fairest ever seen 
  Was the bride he crowned as queen,
 Pillowed on the marriage-bed
 Whispering to his soul, he said,
 Though no monarch ever pressed
 Fairer bosom to his breast,
 Mortal flesh is only clay!
 EVEN THIS WILL PASS AWAY.
 Fighting on the furious 
  field, Once a javelin pierced his shield,
 Soldiers with a loud lament
 Bore him bleeding to his tortured side,
 Pain is hard to bear; he cried.
 But with patience, day by day,
 EVEN THIS WILL PASS AWAY.
 Towering in a public square 
  Forty cubits in this air,
 And the king disguised, unknown,
 Gazed upon his sculptured name.
 And he pondered, What is fame?
 Fame is but a slow decay!
 EVEN THIS WILL PASS AWAY.
 Struck with palsy, sore 
  and old, Waiting at the gates of gold,
 Said he with his dying breath
 Life is done, but what is Death?
 Then as answer to the king
 Fell a sunbeam on his ring;
 Showing by a heavenly ray.
 EVEN THIS WILL PASS AWAY.
 Theodore Tilton 
 Rama Rama Rama Rama Rama 
  Rama Rama Rama Rama Rama:
 Why do you search in vain
 For pleasure outside?
 Go to the fountain source
 In the subjective Atma:
 Awake, arise, stop not
 Till the goal is reached.
 (Rama Rama 
 
) 
   How long you want to remain 
  Slave of passion, tell me please?
 Try to seek peace within
 By dispassion; practice (Vairagya and Abhyasa)
 (Rama Rama 
 
) 
   Are you not really fed 
  up With illusory objects?
 Enjoy the Atmic Bliss
 By Manana, Nididhyasana,
 Reflection, meditation.
 (Rama Rama 
 
) 
   
   Sunaja Sunaja Sunaja Krishna 
  Tu Gitawala Jnana Sunaja Krishna.
 At first there is a tender 
  emotion and warm affection, Then it gross into glowing love, burning passion.
 Through Sravana and Satsang 
  comes admiration, Then attraction, attachment, supreme love.
 I want my dear beloved 
  Krishna alone; I want neither Mukti nor temporal blessings.
 The world is unreal, full 
  of miseries, God alone is real, full of Ananda.
 You are running after the 
  unreal shadow, You have forgotten the real substance.
 You came alone (weeping), 
  will go alone (weeping), no one will follow, Do Bhajan, do Kirtan, this will follow,
 Why do you fight in vain 
  with your brothers? Fight with the mind and the Indriyas. Why do you weep in vain for the death of relatives? Weep for the separation 
  of the Lord.
 The love between husband 
  and wife is selfish love, Brothers, sisters are united for selfish ends.
 Death is ever waiting to 
  devour you all, That tomorrow will never come, open your eyes now (wake up now).
 Life is short, time is 
  fleeting, (many obstacles to Japa and kirtan), Apply yourself diligently to Yogic Sadhan.
 This world is a mela for 
  two days, This life is a play for two seconds, (This body is a bubble for two seconds).
 When one is in union with 
  God, it is Samadhi, The Yogi gets infinite bliss and knowledge.
 Bhakti-Yoga is crossing 
  river by boat, Jnana-Yoga is crossing river by swimming.
 A Jnani gets knowledge 
  by self-reliance, A Bhakta gets Darshan by self-surrender.
 When there is one Vritti 
  it is Savikalpa, When there is Triputi-Laya, it is Nirvikalpa.
 When one is in fourth Bhumika, 
  it is Jivanmukti, When there is no body-consciousness, it is Videhamukti.
 When you are in a state 
  of Turiya, it is Jivanmukti, When you are in Turiyatita, it is Videhamukti.
 When there is Svarupanas, 
  it is Jivanmukti. When there is Arupanas, it is Videhamukti.
 When Jagrat appears as 
  Svapna, it is Jivanmukti, When Jagrat appears as Sushupti, it is Videhamukti.
 
 1. Remember the pains 
  of Samsara 2. Remember Death
 3. Remember the Saints
 4. Remember God
 1 and 2 will produce Vairagya. 
  3 will bring inspiration. 4 will cause attainment of God-Consciousness.  
 (Remember 
  these seven vital points)  
  Hari Om, Sensual pleasure 
    is momentary, deceptive, illusory and imaginary. A mustard of pleasure 
    is mixed with a mountain of pain. Enjoyment cannot bring 
    about satisfaction of a desire. On the contrary it makes the mind more restless 
    after enjoyment through intense craving (Trishnas and Vasanas). Sensual pleasure is 
    an enemy of Brahma-Jnana Sensual pleasure is 
    the cause for birth and death. This body is nothing 
    but a mass of flesh, bone, and all sorts of filth. Place before the mind 
    the fruits of Self-realization or life in the soul or Brahman or the Eternal, 
    such as Immortality, Eternal bliss, Supreme peace and Infinite knowledge. 
    If you remember the seven points always, the mind will be weaned from the 
    cravings for sensual pleasures. Vairagya, Viveka and Mumukshutva (dispassion, 
    discrimination from the real and the unreal, and keen longing for liberation 
    from birth and death) will dawn. You should seriously look into the defects 
    of sensual life (Dosha-Drishti) and into the unreal nature of worldly life 
    (Mithya-Drishti).  Read this once daily 
  as soon as you get up from the bed.  
 To The 
  First Edition  While it will be accepted 
  on all hands that the first and foremost requisite or qualification for an aspirant 
  treading the path of Ancient Wisdom or Yoga is Vairagya born of pure discrimination, 
  it is strange that nowadays when numberless books on Yoga, Vedanta and other 
  allied subjects are displayed at the sales window, none of these learned treatises 
  has ever thought or taken into head to supply this dire and long felt need of 
  spiritual aspirants. At such a time a book on HOW TO GET VAIRAGYA 
  by no less an eminent sage, Yogi and philosopher than His Holiness Sri Swami 
  Sivananda should be quite welcome to one and all.  True, the subject of Vairagya 
  has been dealt with in the sacred books of India by ancient sages like Vasishtha, 
  Vyasa, Yajnavalkya, Bhartrihari and others, but nowhere will the reader get 
  a clear, concise and compact knowledge of the subject, at the same time suited 
  to modern-conditions, tastes and requirements. While emphasis was laid on ruthless 
  renunciation, mental as well as, physical, by the ancients as a precondition 
  to Self-Realization, it is quite refreshing and heartening to hear from the 
  Himalayan Yogi that Vairagya is purely an internal mental state, 
  it is not a mere external show, and a man may remain in the 
  busy world amidst various luxuries, and yet he may possess perfect Vairagya, 
  while a Sadhu who lives in a cave in the far-off regions of the Himalayas may 
  be keenly attached to his Kamandalu, walking stick or piece of cloth. 
   It is earnestly hoped that 
  the object with which this publication has been undertaken will be realized 
  in the fullest measure.  THE PUBLISHERS 
  1st October, 1938.
 
 Happiness is within, 
  What is Vairagya? Miseries of mundane existence, Body, 
  Woman, World, Essence of Vairagya-Satakam 
  and Inspiring stories.  In Happiness is within, 
  I have emphasized that happiness which is the driving motive of all human endeavours 
  is not in the perishable objects of the world, but is within ones own 
  self and that even the very little momentary pleasure you get from sensual enjoyments 
  is but a reflection of the Atman Bliss only. Real and lasting happiness can 
  be had only from God, or the Atman, which shines in the chambers of your heart. 
   In the chapter entitled 
  What is Vairagya, I have pointblank stated that Vairagya does not 
  consist in running away in home, shirking the duties and responsibilities of 
  life but that it is purely an internal state and that a man while living in 
  the world amidst various luxuries may be a perfectly dispassionate soul. The 
  chapter is for the sake of convenience and ease divided into thirteen headings, 
  all useful and interesting. The need for renunciation of desire as a means to 
  liberation from bondage, varieties of Vairagya, its various stages, how to develop 
  it, the path of renunciation, what Vairagya is and what it is not- these 
  and many other allied topics have been nicely handled.  Miseries of mundane 
  existence is the inspiring title of the third chapter. It should be borne 
  in mind that ignorance is the real cause of all misery and hence it should by 
  all means be done away with and Self-Knowledge attained, if these miseries of 
  mundane life are to come to an end. One may easily renounce wife, son and property, 
  but to renounce name and fame is an extraordinary feat of the highest spirituality. 
  To attain knowledge of Self such a degree of renunciation is indispensably necessary. 
  I have condemned building of Ashrams and making disciples with a reservation 
  clause because this to me seems to be the prime cause of failure to attain the 
  goal of Yoga practice in the case of many a good aspirant nowadays.  Chapter four deals with 
  Body. Attachment to body is the cause of misery and bondage and 
  this attachment is of course due to ignorance of the Reality. When attachment 
  for ones own body comes, then desire for sensual enjoyments, lust, anger, 
  greed, worry, anxiety and innumerable other miseries also come in its train. 
  If this is cut at the root by negating the body and identifying ones self 
  with the supreme Self, then all miseries and sorrows will come to an end. Hence 
  the condemnation of attachment to the body.is purely carnal; it is not pure, 
  unselfish love. Hence condemnation of such love is justified.  World is the 
  title of the sixth chapter. Due to ignorance man believes that the world in 
  which he lives is a solid reality and that there is nothing beyond it. He therefore 
  wants to indulge in all sorts of sensual pleasures with a view to get happiness 
  from them. Had he known that the world in which he lives is unreal and that 
  there is something else which is an embodiment of Happiness, realizing which 
  one enjoys highest bliss, he would not do so. With a view to get happiness from 
  objects, he undergoes severe pain, tortures and tribulations and yet he does 
  not get the least satisfaction from them. I have tried to convince the reader 
  that this world of names and forms is unreal, transitory and fleeting, that 
  God, or the Atman alone is real and full of bliss and that he should try to 
  realize the Atman and get the happiness he wants from it.  In the next chapter entitled 
  Essence of Vairagya-Satakam I have given in a nutshell the sum and 
  substance of Bhartriharis century of verses which will be found very useful 
  to those who cannot afford to obtain each and every book pertaining to Yoga 
  or Vedanta.  In chapter eight, entitled 
  Inspiring Stories, the reader gets half a dozen thrilling and inspiring 
  stories of great saints and Yogis of ancient India, which are calculated to 
  produce deep Vairagya in him, and it is my firm belief that a book on Vairagya 
  like the present one has never been presented to the public as yet.  Prasnottari of Sri Sankaracharya 
  is appended at the end, which will be a source of strong inducement to lead 
  a life of dispassion in the world.  May the students of Yoga 
  and Vedanta in the East and West be all inspired to unstinted action by a perusal 
  of this volume is the earnest prayer of :  SWAMI SIVANANDA  15th September, 1938.  
 O Adorable Lord! Thou art 
  the subtle. Hence it is very difficult to understand and realize Thee. Thou 
  art the past, present and future. There is nothing but Thee. Thou art the Infinite 
  ocean of Grace and Mercy. Thou art known to Thy devotee alone. Thou art without 
  attributes and without forms and yet Thou possess attributes and forms. It is 
  very difficult to comprehend Thy glory and greatness. Thou art my father, mother, 
  Guru and sole refuge. Salutations unto Thee! Protect me. Guide me. Lift me up 
  from this terrible round of births and deaths.  O Lord! Thou art the indweller 
  of all Thou art the soul in all! Thou art the womb of all! Thou art the protector 
  of all: Thou art the bestower of fruits of Karma to all: Thou art all; Thou 
  dwellest in all; Thou art the source of all; Thou art the giver of Moksha to 
  all. Prostrations unto Thee!  O Lord! If Thou art the 
  sun, then I am the ray; if Thou art the ocean, I am the wave: if Thou art the 
  Himalayas, I am the tree; if Thou art the Ganga, I am the drop; if Thou art 
  the garden, I am the flower; if Thou art the electric light, I am the bulb; 
  If Thou art the landscape, I am the grass. By loving Thee, I have become Immortal. 
  The noose of Yama is cut asunder. Salutations unto Thee!  O Self-effulgent Lord! 
  Thou art the Supporter, the Saviour, the Creator, the Inner Ruler, the Governor, 
  the Master, the Protector and the Deliverer. Thou art the Dispeller of the darkness 
  of ignorance. Thou art the Remover of the miseries and sufferings of Thy devotees. 
  Thou art the Destrayor of the three kinds of sufferings (Tapas) or fevers of 
  human beings. O Venerable Lord! Salutations unto Thee! In Thee I take refuge. 
  Give me purity and devotion. Let my wandering, mischievous mind always rest 
  in Thy blessed Lotus feet.  O Sovereign Lord of all 
  creations! I do not want any wealth, or Moksha or power or dominion. But I do 
  want that sufferings and troubles of all beings should come to an end for ever. 
  Thou art ocean of mercy. Thou art omnipotent. Thou can do this.    
 OM 
   In Memory 
  of  Lord 
  Buddha, Raja Bhartrihari and Raja Gopichand,  who were 
  embodiments of Vairagya,  who renounced 
  their kingdom,  throne 
  and their all for the  attainment 
  of the Infinite  or 
   the final 
  beatitude of life  or Kaivalya, 
   the Supreme 
  Abode of Immortality  and 
   Eternal 
  Bliss  OM 
   
 ! 
 Happiness 
  Is Within Man wants happiness. He 
  shuns pain. He moves heaven and earth to get the happiness he wants from sensual 
  objects and, lo, gets himself entangled in the inextricable meshes of Maya. 
  Poor man! He does not know that these objects are perishable and evanescent, 
  finite and conditioned in time, space and causation. And what is more, he fails 
  to get the desired happiness from them.  This world is imperfect 
  (Apurna) and there is uncertainty of life. A barrister-at-law talks at 
  the telephone, ascends the staircase to take his meals and, alas, while ascending 
  he dies on the staircase. Such instances are not uncommon to you all.  There is not an iota of 
  happiness in objects, because they are insentient (Jada). Even the sensual 
  pleasure is a reflection of Atmic Bliss only. Just as a dog that sucks a dry 
  bone in the street imagines foolishly that blood is oozing out of the dry bone, 
  whereas blood is really oozing from its own palate, so also worldly-minded people 
  foolishly imagine that the happiness they enjoy in everyday life comes from 
  objects only.  You can find eternal, infinite, 
  supreme peace and bliss only in your Atma which shines in all its splendour 
  and glory in the chambers of your heart. It is an embodiment of Bliss (Ananda 
  Swarupa).  There is mental uneasiness, 
  dissatisfaction, discontentment and restlessness even in multimillionaires and 
  kings. Some kind of sorrow, misery or pain is invariably present even when they 
  are in the height of enjoyment of worldly pleasures. Show me a man who is perfectly 
  happy? When the marriage of his second son is being celebrated, the remembrance 
  of the death of his first son who passed away only sometime ago torments his 
  mind.  Mind is so constituted 
  that the rhythm of pleasure and pain is kept up like the rhythm of systole and 
  diastole of the heart. You entertain the fear that the happiness will pass away 
  soon, when you are in happy surroundings. This adds pain, when you are in the 
  enjoyment of sensual pleasures. Even if you remove the pain by some means or 
  other, it again manifests in some form or other such as loss of property, disease, 
  death, hostility and disappointment.  There is no hope of immortality 
  by means of riches. Such indeed is the emphatic and irrefutable declaration 
  of the Upanishads. "Na karmana na prajayana dhanena tyagenaike amritatvamanasuh. 
  Neither by rituals, nor by progeny, nor by riches but by renunciation alone 
  one can attain immortality."  Mere giving up of objects 
  will not constitute real renunciation. Dear friends, remember this point well. 
  True Tyaga or renunciation consists in renouncing egoism, "I-ness," 
  "mine-ness," selfishness, desires and cravings of all sorts.  For all beings a human 
  birth is verily difficult to attain, more so with a male body. It is said that 
  there are three things which are rare indeed and are due to the grace of God 
  viz., a human birth, the longing for liberation and the protecting care 
  of a perfected sage. The man who having by some virtuous actions done in previous 
  births obtained a human birth with a male body and a good intellect to boot 
  is foolish enough not to exert for Self-Realization verily commits suicide, 
  for he kills himself by clinging to things unreal.  You will now ask me the 
  pertinent question : "Why should I realize the Atman?" I say because 
  Self-Realization gives you freedom from the Samsaric wheel of births and deaths 
  with its concomitant evils. Hear the emphatic declaration of the Upanishads: 
  "This Atman (Self) which is free from sin, undecaying, undying, free from 
  sorrow, hunger and thirst, with true desires and true resolves-that is what 
  is to be sought after, and which one must wish to understand; one who has sought 
  after his Self and understand It, obtains all worlds and all desires." 
  (Chhandogya Upanishad).  Hear again the forcible 
  utterances of the same Chhandogya Upanishad: "Yo vai Bhuma tat 
  sukham na alpe sukham asti, bhumaiva sukham bhuma tveva vijijnasitavyah. 
  The infinite (the Great) is bliss. There is no bliss in what is small (finite). 
  The Infinite alone is Bliss. But one should wish to understand the Infinite." 
   Every man in this world 
  is restless, discontented and dissatisfied. He feels that he is in want of something, 
  the nature of which he does not really understand. He seeks, in the accomplishment 
  of ambitious projects, the rest and peace that he feels he is in need of. But 
  he finds to his great sorrow and disappointment that worldly greatness when 
  secured is a delusion and a snare. He does not find any happiness in it. He 
  gets coveted degrees, diplomas, titles, honours, power, position, name and fame; 
  he marries; he begets beautiful babies; in short, he gets all that he supposes 
  would give him happiness. But yet he finds no real rest and peace.  Pious men, saints, sages, 
  Acharyas and prophets are never tired of saying that this restlessness of every 
  man, this state of discontentment, dissatisfaction and uncomfortableness of 
  being ill at ease with himself and his environments is solely due to the loss 
  of the companionship of the partner of his soul, who is ever eternally shining 
  in the chambers of your heart, who is ready to embrace you with outstretched 
  hands, if you really care to see Him and if you are really spiritually thirsty 
  and hungry.  One anna of pleasure is 
  mixed with fifteen annas of pain. Pleasure that is mixed with pain, fear and 
  worry is no pleasure at all. If you carefully begin to analyze this one anna 
  of pleasure also, it will dwindle into an airy nothing. You will find that it 
  is a mere play of the mind. O man! Wake up. Open your eyes. Develop Viveka. 
  You cannot get the real happiness from finite objects.  Nitya, Nirupadhika, 
  Niratisaya Ananda (eternal, infinite Bliss) that is independent of objects 
  can be had only in the Immortal Spirit or Atma or Soul or Brahman, the Indweller 
  of your heart. Therefore shun all external things ruthlessly and run to the 
  Feet of the Lord. Develop Vairagya. Vairagya is the rock-bottom foundation for 
  the spiritual path.  Why do men run after the 
  sensual pleasures? What is their concept of happiness? Do Samskaras force them 
  to repeat the same sensual acts again and again? Is man a mere creature of environment 
  or circumstance? Can he not obliterate his Samskaras by effective and suitable 
  means?  On account of ignorance 
  man runs hither and thither to seek happiness in objects. A little ginger bread 
  and some sweetmeats, a son and a young wife, some position and power and a little 
  money in the bank to boot will fill his heart with joy and calm down his nerves. 
  That is all he wants. Bliss of Atma, supersensuous Ananda and Peace, spiritual 
  ecstasy and knowledge are unknown to him. He does not want them. Nay, he dislikes 
  them. He hates people who talk about higher and sublime things. Believe me, 
  man can obliterate his Samskaras by Purushartha or right exertion. 
  He is not a creature of environment or circumstance. He is the master 
  of his destiny.  Amidst the din and boisterous 
  bustle of worldly activities, there do come moments of tranquillity and peace, 
  when the mind for the time being, however short it may be, soars above the filthy 
  worldly things and reflects on the higher problems of life viz., the 
  why and wherefore of life and the riddle of the universe. Man begins to enquire: 
  "Who am I?" The sincere enquirer becomes serious and gets absorbed 
  in his reflections. He begins to search and understand the Truth. Discrimination 
  dawns on him. He seeks Vairagya, concentration, meditation, and purification 
  of the body and mind and eventually attains the highest Knowledge of Self. But 
  the man whose mind is saturated with worldly Vasanas and materialistic 
  poison is quite heedless and is irresistibly carried away by the two currents 
  of Raga and Dwesha and tossed about helplessly hither and thither 
  in the tumultous Samsaric stream of worldly concerns.  Ah! How uncertain is sensual 
  life in this world! If you constantly think of the transitory nature of sensual 
  pleasure and its concomitant evils viz., miseries, worries, troubles, tribulations, 
  anxieties and premature death, then you will slowly develop Vairagya. The Vairagya 
  that comes momentarily is due to the loss of either wife, relation, friend, 
  son or property; this will not help you much in the spiritual path. What is 
  really wanted is Vairagya born of discrimination or Viveka.  In the presence of sensual 
  pleasure, spiritual bliss cannot exist, just as darkness cannot exist in the 
  presence of light. Therefore show extreme contempt for worldly objects. Destroy 
  all desires. Turn the mind away from the sensual objects. You will develop Vairagya. 
   You yourself have made 
  your life complex and intricate. You have entangled yourself in this quagmire 
  of Samsara. You have multiplied your wants and desires. Everyday you are forging 
  an additional link to the chain of bondage. Simplicity has vanished. Luxurious 
  habits and ways of living are embraced. No wonder there is unemployment everywhere. 
  People are dying of starvation. There is depression in trade. There is unrest 
  everywhere. There is wholesale devastation by earthquake. Divorce courts are 
  also multiplying. One nation is afraid of another nation. One nation suspects 
  that other nations are preparing for a big war. Life has thus become a matter 
  of uncertainty. It has become a mass of confusion, chaos and bewilderment. It 
  has become stormy and boisterous. It is full of under-currents, cross-currents, 
  subterranean currents and mixed currents. Is there no way of escape from these 
  troubles and difficulties? There is only one way. Lead a life of dispassion, 
  self-control, purity, selfless service, cosmic love. Develop the habit of taking 
  the right point of view, right thinking, right feeling, right acting, with right 
  mental attitude or Bhav. Practice devotion and meditation.  O Mohan! You have no real 
  sustained Vairagya. Your present mental state is due to pecuniary embarrassments. 
  This will not help you in the spiritual path. The mind will be waiting to get 
  back the object renounced, when it gets the first opportunity. No doubt you 
  are a man of spiritual Samskaras. But your Vairagya must be of that type that 
  is born of pure Viveka, (Nityanitya-vastu-Viveka), discrimination between 
  the real and the unreal. This is a rare commodity, a rare virtue, though many 
  people feign to be in possession of the same.  Thousands of young graduates 
  and young doctors come to me with earthen pots in their hands and attired in 
  orange coloured robes in quest of caves in Uttarakasi and Gangottri for deep 
  meditation and practice of Pranayama. And some young research students in science 
  and some Rajkumars go to the Punjab and Kashmir in silk suits with stiff collars 
  and ties in search of girls for marriage. Is there pleasure or pain in this 
  world? If there is pleasure, why do young educated men retire into forests? 
  If there is pain, why do young men run after wealth, women and position? Mysterious 
  is Maya! Mysterious is Moha!  Try to understand the riddle 
  of life and the riddle of the universe. Acquire Viveka. Take recourse to Satsang. 
  Enquire into the nature of the Atman. Study the Yoga-Vasishtha and the 
  Upanishads. Then you will have a comprehensive understanding of the innumerable 
  problems of life. There is not an iota of happiness in this world. Seek the 
  happiness within.  Is not a kingdom valuable 
  to be owned? Is not a summer palace in Kashmir or a pleasant garden with sweet-smelling 
  flowers of various colours nice to live in? Is not the company of young Mabaranis 
  with tender waists and lotus-like eyes dear as life itself, very pleasing? Yet 
  wise, dispassionate men like Bhartrihari, Buddha, Gopichand and others retired 
  into forests kicking all these things as worthless as straw, to realize the 
  Self which alone can confer infinite Bliss, Immortality, and eternal Peace. 
   The spirit comes and goes. 
  Therefore you will have to be careful always in nourishing and protecting your 
  spiritual Samskaras with burning Vairagya, intense and constant Sadhana and 
  burning longing for liberation (Mumukshutva). You will have to increase 
  your good Samskaras. You will have to develop them. You will have to multiply 
  them.  Vairagya is purely an internal 
  mental state. A man may remain in the busy world amidst various luxuries, women 
  and wealth, and yet he may possess perfect Vairagya, while a Sadhu who lives 
  in a cave in the far off regions of the Himalayas may be greatly attached to 
  his Kamandalu, walking stick or piece of cloth.  
 What Is 
  Vairagya? An Internal 
  Mental State Raja Janaka, though he 
  ruled a kingdom, was a perfectly dispassionate man. So was Raja Bhagiratha, 
  too. Queen Chudala possessed perfect Vairagya, though she ruled a dominion, 
  while her saintly husband, Raja Sikhidhvaja, who retired into the forest to 
  practice penance and Yoga, was intensely attached to his body and Kamandalu 
  (waterpot).  You cannot form a correct 
  opinion of any Sadhu or Sannyasin or even householder as to his mental state 
  of Vairagya or mental condition by just having a casual talk with him for a 
  few hours or staying with him for a few days. You will have to live with him 
  for a very long time to study his internal mental state.  Generally most people commit 
  serious blunders in these matters. They are deluded by mere external appearances. 
  They mistake a physically nude Sadhu for a great Mahatma in the beginning. Later 
  on they feel obliged to change their impression after closer contact. Physical 
  nudity alone will not constitute real Vairagya. The mind of the physically nude 
  Sadhu may be full of fantastic desires, cravings and appetites. Who knows! What 
  is wanted, therefore, is mental nudity, i. e., complete eradication of 
  Vasanas, egoism, etc. Do not be deceived by external appearances. Beware! 
  Beware!! Beware!!! Defects 
  of Sensual Pleasures If you do not possess Viveka, 
  if you do not try your extreme level best for the attainment of salvation, if 
  you spend your whole life-time in eating, drinking, sleeping, marrying and propagating 
  race, you are no better than a horizontal being. You will have to sit at the 
  feet of these animals and learn several lessons from them. Even animals possess 
  self-restraint to an astonishing degree. O man, where has your self-restraint 
  gone  Sensual enjoyment is attended 
  with various defects. It is attended with various sorts of sins, pains, weaknesses, 
  attachments, slave-mentality, weak will, severe exertion and struggle, bad habits, 
  cravings, aggravation of desires and mental restlessness. Therefore shun all 
  sorts of sensual enjoyments and rest in peace.  The Narayana Upanishad 
  says: "In the beginning these two roads were laid-the road, through Karma 
  and Sannyasa. The latter consists of the renunciation of the threefold desire 
  (son, wealth, and fame). Of these the road through Sannyasa is preferable." 
  The Taittiriya Upanishad also says: "Renunciation (Tyaga) certainly 
  is to be preferred."  Mere outward giving up 
  of thing is nothing. It is not real renunciation. Real Tyaga or Sannyasa is 
  absolute renunciation of all Vasanas and destruction of the heart knot 
  (ignorance), the Chit-jada-Granthi.  The Glory 
  of Vairagya What should be renounced 
  is that Bhedabuddhi which says: "I am superior to that man. I have 
  done that. I have done this. I am the body" and the Kartritwa abhimana 
  which thinks: "I am the doer." There is no use of renouncing your 
  home, wife and children, if you cannot renounce these also.  He cannot be truly regarded 
  as having renounced the world altogether who has merely withdrawn himself from 
  worldly possessions. But he, who living in actual contact with the world, finds 
  out its faults (Doshas), who is free from every passion and whose soul 
  depends on nothing, may well be said to have truly renounced the world. Read 
  the story of Raja Sikhidhvaja in the Yoga-Vasishtha. You will clearly 
  understand this point.  Renounce this world. Renounce 
  the desire for Moksha. Renounce renunciation itself. Then you will become 
  That. You will become itself.  Dear brother! If you have 
  no real sustained Vairagya, you will find no improvement or progress in spirituality. 
  Vows, austerities, energy and meditation will leak out like water from a cracked 
  pot. Be careful.  There is verily no sword 
  more powerful than Vairagya to cut off all sorts of attachment to this world. 
  Hold this sword in your hand and march along in the spiritual path. You will 
  safely reach the goal.  The shadow of clouds, the 
  friendship with a fool, the beauty of youth, wealth, all these last only for 
  a very short time. They are impermanent. Shun them all ruthlessly.  Only a thirsty man drinks 
  water. Only a hungry man eats food. Even so, a man who is spiritually hungry 
  and thirsty will only drink the Nectar of Immortality.  The life of Vemanna is 
  worthy to be read. He was a Jnani of Andhra Desa. He was leading a voluptuous 
  life, most abominable indeed. The moment Vairagya dawned in him, he became an 
  entirely different man. He made no Sadhana as he was a Yoga Bhrashta , 
  or one who had fallen from Yogic practices in his previous birth, and became 
  a Jnani . He was, and is very much revered by devotees.  This search after God and 
  God-Realization is a question of supply and demand. If you really want God, 
  if there is a real demand from your heart for God, then the supply would come. 
   He is really a Sannyasin 
  who is free from passion, egoism and who possesses Sattvic qualities.  Atma-Vichara (enquiry into 
  the nature of the Atman, or Self) and Yogic practices done without intense Vairagya 
  becomes fruitless.  To get Vairagya one should 
  seriously ponder over the various entanglements and bondage of married life. 
   If you get Vairagya, rest 
  assured that is a sign of purification of mind (Chitta-Suddhi).  The things that used to 
  afford you delight before give you displeasure now. That is a sign of Vairagya. 
   Vairagya that comes momentarily 
  after such accidents as the loss of some dearly loved relative or wealth is 
  known as Karana Vairagya. It will not help you much in your spiritual advancement. 
  The mind will be simply waiting for an opportunity to catch hold of the sensual 
  objects, when an opportunity arises.  Therefore, Vairagya born 
  of discrimination or Viveka is the premonitory symptom of spiritual development. 
  That will help the aspirant. That will give him a good spiritual uplift.  Varieties 
  of Vairagya Vairagya is of two kinds 
  viz., Karanavairagya (on account of some miseries) and Viveka-purvaka-Vairagya 
  (on account of discrimination between the real and the unreal).  The mind of a man who has 
  got the former type of Vairagya is simply waiting for a chance to get back the 
  things that have been given up or lost. As soon as the first opportunity occurs, 
  the man gets a downfall and goes back to his former state. Vishaya (sensual 
  object) does havoc in him with a vengeance and redoubled force from reaction. 
  But the other man who has given up objects on account of deep enquiry and Viveka, 
  on account of the illusory nature of objects, will have spiritual advancement. 
  He will not have any downfall.  "Drishta-anursravika 
  vishaya-vitrishnasya vasikarasamjna vairagyam-That particular state of mind 
  which manifests itself in one who does not hanker after objects seen or heard 
  and in which one is conscious of having controlled or mastered those objects 
  is non-attachment." (Patanjali's Yoga-Sutras: 1-15)  It is only when the mind 
  is absolutely free from attachment of all sorts that true knowledge begins to 
  dawn and Samadhi supervenes. Secret powers, attainment of heaven, states of 
  Videha and Prakritilaya, etc., are all temptations. One should be perfectly 
  free from all sorts of temptations. Samadhi comes by itself when the Yogic student 
  is fully established in perfect Vairagya. Para-Vairagya is the means to Asampra-jnata 
  Samadhi.  Stages 
  in Vairagya There are four stages in 
  Vairagya:  (1) Yatamana:- This 
  is an attempt not to allow the mind to run into sensual grooves;  (2) Vyatireka :-In 
  this stage some objects are attracting you and you are endeavouring to cut off 
  the attachment and attraction. Slowly Vairagya develops for these objects also. 
  Then the Vairagya matures. When some objects tempt and delude you, you should 
  ruthlessly avoid them. You will have to develop Vairagya for these tempting 
  objects and it must also mature. In this stage you are conscious of your degree 
  of Vairagya towards different objects;  (3) Ekendriya:-The 
  senses stand still and subdued, but the mind has either Raga or Dvesha 
  for objects. Mind is, in other words, the only sense that functions 
  independently;  (4) Vasirara :-In 
  this highest stage of Vairagya, the objects no longer tempt you. They cause 
  no attraction. The senses are perfectly quiet. The mind also is free from likes 
  and dislikes (Raga and Dvesha). Then you get supremacy 
  or independence. Now you are conscious of your supremacy. Without Vairagya no 
  spiritual progress is possible.  Vairagya is of three kinds 
  viz., dull (Manda), intense (Tivra) and 
  very intense (Tivratara). Dull Vairagya cannot help you 
  much in the attainment of your goal.  Vairagya is the opposite 
  of Raga, or desire. It is dispassion or non-attachment. It is indifference to 
  sensual objects herein and hereafter. Vairagya thins out the fatty sensual mind. 
  It turns the mind inward (Antarmukh Vritti). This is the most 
  important qualification for an aspirant. It is the one and the only means to 
  enter into Nirvikalpa Samadhi.  Vairagya that is born of 
  discrimination is lasting and steady. If you seriously think of the various 
  kinds of pain in this Samsara such as birth, death, worries, depression, suffering, 
  disease, loss, hostility, disappointment, fear, etc., if you understand intelligently 
  the defects of sensual life (Dosha Drishti), and the transitory 
  and perishable nature of all objects of the world, Vairagya will immediately 
  dawn.  How to 
  Develop Vairagya Study of Vairagya-Satakam 
  of Bhartrihari, and the company of dispassionate Sadhus and Sannyasins will 
  also help one in developing Vairagya. The temporary Vairagya which one gets 
  when he is attending the funeral of a dead person and the Vairagya which a pregnant 
  lady in pangs gets cannot help one to attain spiritual exaltation. The mind 
  will pounce upon the objects when it gets opportunities.  Aspirants generally complain 
  to me "Swamiji Maharaj, we are meditating for the last 12 years. But we 
  do not know the reason why we have not made any substantial spiritual progress." 
  This is due to lack of intense Vairagya only. The mind will be ever thinking 
  of objects even during meditation. Intense Vairagya only can help the aspirant 
  in attaining Self-Realization.  "Tarparampurushakyateh 
  gunavaitrisnyam: Para-Vairagya or supreme non-attachment is that state wherein 
  even the attachment to the qualities (Sattva, Rajas and Tamas) drops, owing 
  to the knowledge of the Purusha." (Patanjali's Yoga Sutras 
  : 1-16).  The Vairagya described 
  earlier is Apara-Vairagya (lower one). Now comes supreme Vairagya. In the former 
  state, there is preponderance or Sattva. Sattva is mixed with Rajas and Tamas. 
  The Yogi gets Siddhis and becomes a Videha or Prakritilaya. But 
  the Yogi with Para-Vairagya rejects the Siddhis also and gets Sakshatkara, or 
  Darsan, of the Purusha.  In ordinary Vairagya there 
  is a trace of Vasanas and desires. But in Para-Vairagya all Vasanas, Samskaras 
  and desires are fried in toto. In Para-Vairagya there will be no desire at all. 
  Perfect desirelessness is Para-Vairagya. In the Bhagavad Gita you will find: 
  "Objects fall away from the abstinent man, leaving the longing behind. 
  But his longing also ceases, who sees the Supreme." (11-59).  Note how Vairagya arises 
  in the mind. The transitory, evanescent and perishable nature of all things 
  creates a sort of disgust in all minds and in proportion to the depth and subtlety 
  of nature, this reaction from the world works more or less powerfully in the 
  mind of every individual. An irresistible feeling arises in our mind viz., that 
  the finite can never satisfy the Infinite within us, that the changing and perishable 
  cannot satisfy the change-less and deathless nature that is ours.  When you are not impressed 
  with rich living, rich style of living cannot attract you. When you are impressed 
  with the idea that meat and wine are not at all pleasurable, meat and wine cannot 
  tempt you. When you are impressed that a woman is nothing but a leather-bag 
  of pus, blood, urine, bones and flesh, woman cannot tempt you. In that case, 
  if you fail to get meat or wine or woman, or to have a rich living, you will 
  not be agonized at all in your mind.  Why are you attracted towards 
  a young, beautiful lady? Have you ever seriously thought over this life-and-death 
  problem? The answer is: because owing to your ignorance you vainly think you 
  will get pleasure from her. If you have Vairagya and Viveka, it will at once 
  tell you that you will get immense pain from her rather than pleasure. Then 
  your mind will recede or withdraw from the object, viz., woman.  It is only when the mind, 
  being divested of all its desires is indifferent to pleasure and pain and is 
  not attracted by any object that it will be rendered pure, free from the grip 
  of the great delusion like a bird freed from the cage and roaming about freely 
  in the Akasa.  As soon as Vairagya arises 
  in the mind, it opens the gate of Divine Wisdom. No true and lasting satisfaction 
  comes from the enjoyment of worldly pleasures. Yet, people rush headlong towards 
  objects, even when they know full well that the objects they are trying to seize 
  are unreal and that the world in which they live is fraught with miseries of 
  all sorts. This is Maya. When the mind rests in Atma then the only Nitya-Tripti, 
  or eternal satisfaction comes. Because the Atman is Paripurna (All-Full). 
  All desires are gratified by realization of Atma or Self.  Sometimes the mind gets 
  disgusted with one kind of Sadhana. It wants some other kind of Sadhana. It 
  rebels against monotony. The aspirant should know how to coax the mind on such 
  occasions and to extract work from it by a little relaxation of mind. The cessation 
  of Sadhana is a grave blunder. Spiritual practices should never be given up 
  under any circumstances. Evil thoughts will be waiting to enter the gates of 
  the mental factory. If the student of Yoga stops his Sadhana, his mind will 
  become the devil's workshop. Do not expect anything. Be sincere and regular 
  in your daily meditation, routine and Tapas. Do not deviate from the path you 
  have chosen. The fruit will come by itself. Your efforts will be surely crowned 
  with roaring success. It takes a long time to purify the mind and get one-pointedness. 
  Be cool and patient my child.  Cut the 
  Knot of Attachment Attachment is the first 
  child of Maya. The whole Lila of the Lord is being kept up by the force of attachment 
  only. A sober man just tastes a small peg of Champagne, when he is caught up 
  in an evil company and becomes ultimately an inveterate drunkard through attachment 
  to spirit. A teetotaler just takes a whiff of Gold-Flake Cigarette and becomes 
  in due time a terrible smoker through attachment. There is in the mind a gummy 
  substance which is like a mixture of castor-oil, glue, gum-arabic, mucilage 
  of tragacanth, gluten paste, honey, glycerin, jack-fruit's juice and all other 
  pasty substances of this world. The mind is glued, as it were, to the objects 
  of the world with this mixture. Therefore attachment is very strong.  Therefore O man, never 
  say "My body, my son, my wife, my house, my property, my garden, etc." 
  Attachment is the root cause of the innumerable miseries and troubles of this 
  world. Discipline your mind little by little. The old evil habits will creep 
  in. Destroy them to the very root. Lead a life of perfect non-attachment. This 
  is the master key to open the realms of Brahmic Bliss.  But work incessantly without 
  attachment, without any identification. Then alone you can feel that you are 
  a different being. Karma Yoga elevates a man to sublime, magnanimous heights, 
  when done in the right spirit, with the right mental attitude or Bhav. One should 
  patiently work. That is all. No meditation or Samadhi is ever possible without 
  a preliminary training in Nishkamya Karma-Yoga. To work without attachment is 
  doubtless a difficult task. It is an uphill work. But it becomes a very easy 
  job and pleasant too to a man of patience and determination. You will have to 
  do it at any cost, if you want final beatitude and immortality. Everyone of 
  you will have to do it, though not now, at least after taking five hundred births. 
  There is no other alternative but to do so. But the question is: Why not now? 
  Why not in this very birth itself? Why not cut short the cycle of births and 
  deaths and enjoy the Bliss of the Self right now, this very second? Therein 
  lies real wisdom.  Work cannot bring misery, 
  but it is attachment and identification with work that brings in all sorts of 
  unhappiness and bondage. Understand the secret of work, the technique of Karma 
  Yoga and attain God-Consciousness. This Jnanagni or fire of wisdom will 
  consume all fruits of actions in toto.  Nivritti-Marga, 
  or the Path of renunciation Have a strong determination 
  and a strong will. Never think of returning home after taking up to the Nivritti-Marga. 
  Look before you leap. Have courage, fixity of mind and a definite purpose in 
  life. Be not wavering. Are you ready to give up all possessions, including body 
  and life? Then alone come to me. Then alone take to Nivritti-Marga and embrace 
  Sannyasa. Think twice before you come to definite conclusions. This is not a 
  rosy path as you may imagine. It is full of thorns. It is beset with countless 
  difficulties and hardships. Be humble, patient and persevering. Never care for 
  Siddhis or quick awakening of the Kundalini. I shall serve you. I shall help 
  you. I shall take care of you. Be not troubled. Be not anxious. I am your servant 
  always. Be noble-minded. Mere emotional bubbling will not help you much. Some 
  young men have returned to their homes. Difficulties are many in this path. 
  But it can make you a King of kings, an Emperor of emperors.  Those who want to take 
  to seclusion and Nivritti-Marga should observe Mouna, non-mixing and disciplining 
  the Indriyas, mind and body while living in the world. They should train themselves 
  to a laborious hard life, coarse food, sleeping on the ground or a hard mattress 
  without pillows, walking barefooted without umbrellas. Then alone they can bear 
  the rigorous austerities of an ascetic's life. They should give up timidity 
  and shyness in getting alms.  Aspirants who take to the 
  Nivritti-Marga generally become lazy after some time, as they do not know how 
  to utilize their mental energy, as they do not keep any daily routine, as they 
  do not follow the instructions of their masters. They get Vairagya in the beginning, 
  but they have no experience in the spiritual line. They do not make any progress 
  in the end. Intense and constant meditation is necessary for entering into Samadhi. 
   Have you fully determined 
  with an iron will to stick to this line at any cost? Are you really prepared 
  to sacrifice this body and life in the cause of Truth? Have you understood the 
  glory of Sannyasa and the importance of seclusion? If your daughter, brother, 
  mother or son comes here and weeps, have you got the requisite strength to resist 
  Moha? After coming here can you cut off all sorts of connections with your relatives? 
  Can you stop all correspondences? Do not hide anything. Be absolutely candid. 
  Be frank and guileless. Speak to me the truth now. Open out your heart to me. 
   Sleepless vigilance is 
  necessary, if you wish to have rapid spiritual advancement. Never rest content 
  with a little achievement or success in the path a little serenity of mind, 
  a little one-pointedness of mind, some visions of angles, or Siddhis, a little 
  faculty of thought-reading, etc. There are still higher summits to ascend, higher 
  regions to climb up.  The attraction for objects 
  and ties of various sorts make a man bound to this world. Renunciation of all 
  attractions and breaking up of all ties constitute real renunciation. That Sannyasin 
  or Yogi who is free from attraction and ties enjoys infinite bliss and supreme 
  joy and peace. Fluctuation and imagination are the two seeds of the mind. Fluctuation 
  is the fuel. Imagination is the fire. The unceasing fire of imagination is kept 
  up by the fuel of fluctuation. If the fuel of fluctuation is with drawn, the 
  fire of imagination gets extinguished by itself. The mind becomes tranquil. 
  It is withdrawn into its source, the Atma.  You came alone. You came 
  naked. You came weeping. You will go alone. You go naked. You will go weeping. 
  Wily then are you proud of your titles, false wealth and false knowledge? Become 
  humble and meek. You will conquer the whole world through humility. Become pure 
  in thought, word and deed. This is the secret of spiritual life. The Upanishads 
  and the Gita harp again and again upon this one note.  To a passionate man there 
  is much pleasure in this world. He runs after money and women. His mind is intoxicated, 
  perverted and clouded. Poor man, he does not know what he is really doing. But 
  to a Yogi or a man of discrimination this world is a ball of fire. It is a huge 
  furnace in which all beings are roasted. The three kinds of heat viz., Adhyatmika 
  (internal), Adhidaivika (heavenly) and Adhibhautika 
  (external) are burning him.  Friend! Is there any limit 
  to the number of fathers and mothers and wives you had in the crores and crores 
  of previous incarnations? Yet this clinging and false relationship have not 
  gone. Discrimination has not dawned.  Are you not ashamed to 
  repeat the same old process of eating, drinking and sleeping day in and day 
  out? You are proud of your titles and knowledge. Have you improved your life 
  even a bit? What have you learnt from the recent Bihar and Quetta earthquakes? 
  Are you attempting to reach that imperishable seat, wherein all desires and 
  Trishnas are completely eradicated? Are you endeavouring, in however small a 
  measure it may be, to attain the highest goal of life, Atmic realization, which 
  gives immortality, bliss and peace? You are not crawling now. You have learnt 
  to stand up and walk. You can think, reason out, judge, infer and ratiocinate. 
  Will you not utilize this precious life and all your various faculties in meditation 
  and Self Realization? Can you give me a definite word of promise to the effect? 
  Speak to me the truth now. Climb up the ladder of Yoga. Drink the Nectar of 
  Immortality.  Vairagya born of Viveka 
  is enduring and everlasting. It will not fail the aspirant at any time unlike 
  the Vairagya that comes temporarily to a lady who gives birth to a child or 
  to a man attending a funeral in the crematorium. The view that everything in 
  the world is unreal causes Vairagya or indifference to the enjoyments of this 
  world and the other heaven worlds also. One has to come down to this Mrityu-loka 
  from heaven when the fruits of good works are exhausted.  The same five kinds of 
  enjoyment of sensual pleasures prevail in the heaven worlds also. But they are 
  more intense and subtle. This cannot give real and lasting happiness to a Viveki. 
  He shuns all enjoyments of the heaven world also. He kicks them mercilessly. 
  He is keenly aware of the pleasures of the three worlds and is convinced that 
  they are only a mere drop in the ocean of Brahmic bliss.  Remember 
  the sayings of the Gita Meditation on the following 
  Slokas of the Bhagavad-Gita will induce true Vairagya: "The delights that 
  are contact-born are, verily, wombs of pain, for they have a beginning and an 
  ending, O Kaunteya, not in them would rejoice the wise." ( Ch. V-22 
  ). "Indifference to the objects of the senses, and also absence 
  of egoism, insight into the pain and evil of birth and death, old age and sickness." 
  ( Ch. XIII-8 ). "That which from the union of the senses 
  with their objects is at first as nectar, but in the end is like venom." 
  ( Ch. XVIII-38 ). "Having obtained this transient, joyless 
  world, worship Me."  What Vairagya 
  is not Vairagya does not mean 
  abandoning social duties and responsibilities of life. It does not mean detachment 
  from the world. It does not mean a life in the solitary caves of the Himalayas 
  or in the crematorium. It does not mean living on Nim-leaves, cow's urine and 
  dung. It does not mean wearing of matted-hair and a Kamandal made of fence-gourd 
  or coconut shell in the band. It does not mean shaving of head and throwing 
  of clothes.  What Vairagya 
  is Vairagya is mental detachment 
  from all connections with the world. That is all. A man may live in the world 
  and discharge all the duties of his order and stage of life with perfect detachment. 
  He may be a householder. What if? He may live with family and children. But 
  at the same time he may have perfect mental detachment. He can do his spiritual 
  Sadhana. That man who has perfect mental detachment while remaining in the world 
  is a hero indeed. He is much better than a Sadhu living in the Himalayan caves 
  because the former has to face the innumerable temptations of life every moment. 
   Wherever a man may go, 
  he carries with him his fickle, restless mind, his Vasanas and Samskaras. Even 
  if he lives in solitude, still he is the same worldly man, if he is engaged 
  in building castles in the air, and thinking of the objects of the world. In 
  such case even the cave becomes a big city to him. If the mind remains quiet, 
  if it is free from attachments, one can be a perfect Vairagi even while 
  living in a mansion in the busiest part of a city like Calcutta or Bombay. Such 
  a mansion will be converted in a dense jungle by him.  A dispassionate man has 
  a different mind altogether. He has a different experience altogether. He is 
  a past master in the art or science of separating himself from the impermanent, 
  perishable objects of the world. He has absolutely no attraction for them. He 
  constantly dwells on the Eternal or the Absolute. He identifies himself every 
  moment of his life with the witnessing consciousness that is present in pleasure 
  and in pain, in joy and in sorrow, in censure and in praise, in honour and in 
  dishonour, in all states of life. He stands adamantine as a peak amid a turbulent 
  storm, as a spectator of this wonderful world show. He is not a bit affected 
  by these pleasant and painful experiences. He learns several valuable lessons 
  from them. He has, in other words, no attraction for pleasant objects and repulsion 
  for painful ones. Nor is he afraid of pain. He knows quite well that pain helps 
  a lot in his spiritual progress and evolution, in his long journey towards the 
  Goal. He stands convinced that pain is the best teacher in the world.  Let me sound a note of 
  warning here. Dear aspirants! Vairagya also may come and go, if you are careless 
  and mix promiscuously with all sorts of worldly-minded people. You should develop 
  Vairagya, therefore, to a maximum degree. The mind will be waiting for golden 
  opportunities to get back the things once renounced. Whenever and wherever the 
  mind hisses or raises its hood (for the mind is verily like a serpent), you 
  should take refuge in Viveka and in the imperishable fortress of wise, dispassionate 
  Mahatmas. There are different degrees in Vairagya. Supreme dispassion comes 
  when one gets himself established in Brahman. Now the Vairagya becomes perfectly 
  habitual.  A man can develop inner 
  mental detachment from pleasure and pain while living in the world. He should 
  see that he is not carried away by the pleasant experiences of the world. He 
  should not cling to them. He should simply remain as a silent spectator. If 
  he thus practices for some years, every experience will be a positive step in 
  his ascent in spiritual ladder. Eventually he will be crowned with sanguine 
  success. He will then have an unruffled mind. He will have a poised mind also. 
  A dispassionate man is the happiest and the richest man in all the three worlds. 
  He is also the most powerful man. How can Maya tempt him now?  Best Training 
  School Doctors have a wide field 
  for developing Vairagya. Everyday they come across patients with incurable disease. 
  Everyday they see dead bodies in the mortuary. Thus they have innumerable chances 
  of seeing Maya in all her naked state. They can be convinced beyond 
  a ray of doubt of the impermanence of life here in this world of man.  The superintendent of jail 
  and all the officers there also have wonderful chances of developing Vairagya, 
  if they are lovers of Truth and Emancipation. The sight of hanging a condemned 
  prisoner will open their eyes.  Hey Saumya! Your mental 
  state is laudable indeed. The life of a Sannyasin is the best kind of life in 
  the world. A true Sannyasin is the monarch of the three worlds. Even an aspirant 
  is an emperor of the whole world. Lord Krishna also says : "Only wishing 
  to know Yoga, even the seeker after Yoga goes beyond the Brahmin world." 
   I am extremely glad to 
  note that you have got exceptionally good spiritual Samskara which want to burst 
  out in this birth. They need protection and tender nurturing for your further 
  growth and evolution. Do not be carried away by the temptations of the world. 
  Be careful. Be wise. The beginner in the spiritual path should not remain in 
  the company of worldly-minded people. He should resort to Satsang. The company 
  of worldly-minded people is a deadly poison. You will not become a prey to lust 
  if you shun their company. Remain in seclusion under the direct guidance of 
  a Guru who is fully established in Brahman till you get perfect Vairagya and 
  till you are established in the path of Sannyasa.  A Note 
  of Warning Many aspirants come to 
  me with great Vairagya and enthusiasm in the beginning. But they do not keep 
  up the same spirit for a long time or till the end of their Sadhana. When they 
  begin to encounter some difficulties, they retrace their steps. It is indeed 
  a great pity. Look before you leap. Have a firm determination. Stick to the 
  path of Sannyasa till you reach the goal and realize the fruits of Sadhana. 
   If you lack any of these 
  qualifications, wait for three more years. Do spiritual Sadhana, Asanas, Pranayama, 
  concentration and meditation at home. Plunge deep into silent meditation. Plunge 
  your-self in selfless service also. This is very necessary for purification 
  of mind. Keep up your Brahmacharya. Destroy all evil habits, if you have any 
  of these, such as smoking, tea, coffee, etc. Develop all virtuous qualities. 
  Mark the change in your mental attitude. Then come to me. Come here and be prepared 
  to lead a hard, active life.  Some aspirants come in 
  a hurry. Due to lack of Vairagya they go back. This is not good. Hence the warning. 
   Many aspirants want to 
  do some nice work such as writing, collection of flowers for Puja, arranging 
  books in the library, some kind of supervision and management. They dislike 
  works such as drawing of water, cleansing utensils, washing clothes of sick 
  persons, sweeping, nursing, cooking, cleansing bedpans, etc. They consider these 
  works as menial. They have not understood the real spirit of Nishkamya Karma 
  Yoga. They are yet Babus.  Dear Prabhu! There is a 
  dull spiritual awakening in you and a dull type of Vairagya. You will have to 
  develop both. Dull Vairagya are mere bubbling, emotions will not help you much 
  to stick to the path of renunciation. For some time leave the house and remain 
  in a secluded place for a week or two. Enquire. Cogitate. Investigate. Do self-analysis 
  and find out if you have any Moha, attachment to your family members. Find out 
  if your mind runs after sensual pleasures. Be sure whether you will be able 
  to leave the sensual objects, relatives and all sorts of comforts and conveniences. 
  If you can completely disconnect yourself from the world, then alone come to 
  me. I will make you a yogi of Yogis in a very short time. There are many who 
  have advanced in the spiritual path considerably in course of one or two years. 
  You can also do that. Implicit obedience and faithful carrying out of instructions 
  of the spiritual preceptor to the very letter is what is expected of you; that 
  is the secret of success in the spiritual path.  
 Miseries 
  Of Mundane Existence Ignorance 
  is the Cause of Misery You are but repeating the 
  same action of yesterday yielding but momentary pleasure and enjoyed things 
  do recur again. Things seen yesterday are again present today. Ornaments worn 
  with exultation yesterday are, again, donned by you. And yet, even intelligent 
  persons do not get disgusted with them and are not ashamed of enjoying them 
  again and again.  Like ignorant children 
  that do taste again and again sweetmeats which impart sweetness for the time 
  being, you are also afflicted, ignorant of the true path. Days, nights, weeks, 
  fortnights, months, years and Yugas do cycle again and again, and nothing new 
  crops up. Wealth which only makes a host of thoughts whirl in the brain will 
  not confer Bliss on you. This wealth which the mind so much covets and which 
  is so very ephemeral in its nature is utterly worthless like a flower-bud in 
  a creeper growing in a well encircled by a serpent. Nobody 
  Comes and Goes The Prana! Life which is 
  like a drop of rain water dripping from the end of a leaf turned overhead flits 
  out of the body at unseasonable times. This life is ephemeral like the autumnal 
  clouds or a gheeless lamp or ocean waves. Life and death are but two acts in 
  the drama. Really nobody comes and goes.  The lives of those who 
  have freed themselves from rebirth are the noblest. There is nothing so baneful 
  as the life which is perishable in its nature and fleeting in the bestowal of 
  pleasure.  Fire of 
  Desires The fire of desires has 
  scalded you quite. In the present state even a full bath in a pool of ambrosia 
  will not cool you down. It is these ever-waxing desires that bring on pains 
  of rebirths, the heaviest and the most excruciating of all pains. This body 
  which is composed of muscles, intestines, urine and fecal matter and is subject 
  to various changes, being at one time fat and at another time lean, shines in 
  this mundane existence simply to undergo pains. What beauty is then to be enjoyed 
  in this body which is composed of flesh, bone and blood, which has the tendency 
  to rot, which is of the same nature in the rich and in the poor, and which is 
  subject to growth and decay?  Three Fevers 
  There are scorpion stings 
  on one side. Serpents are on the other side. Flies, fleas, bugs, mosquitoes, 
  thorns and other insects trouble you from one corner. The sun scorches you in 
  summer. Cold stings you in winter. Influenza, plague, fashionable appendicitis, 
  pyorrhea, smallpox are all ready to devour you. Then there are the three fevers, 
  Adhyatmika, Adhidaivika and Adhibhautika. Fear, delusion, grief, sorrow 
  and misery kill you every moment.  Desire, anger, hatred, 
  jealousy, worry, anxieties and cares torment you every second. Deaths of persons 
  whom you loved so dearly give you severe shocks. Yet you will never renounce 
  the momentary pleasures of the senses of this unreal mundane existence. Such 
  is the depth of sensual enjoyments. You will speak through egoism, "O, 
  I am a powerful man. I am very intelligent. I can do any thing. There is no 
  God." You will twist your glued moustache and when the scorpion stings 
  you sharp, you will cry out bitterly: "O Narayana, Narayana, Narayana, 
  help me. Relieve me of this horrible pain."  If the hair becomes gray, 
  you invent various dyes to blacken it. You invent monkey gland grafting for 
  rejuvenation. If the teeth are fallen, you put on a new artificial dental set. 
  You will never leave the "will-to-live and enjoy." Miserable wreck 
  that you are! Hopeless specimen!  Think deeply. Cogitate. 
  Reflect. Have constant Satsang. Do selfless service of country and humanity. 
  Develop the four means of salvation. Study the Bhagavad Gita, Yoga-Vasishtha 
  and Viveka-Chudamani of Sri Sankara. Clear your doubts by approaching learned 
  Sannyasins. Have recourse to Sravana, Manana and Nididhyasana. 
  Remove the veil of ignorance and rest in your own Svarupa-the Satchitananda 
  state. "Atma va are drasktavyah srotavyo, mantavyo, nididhyasitavyah-The 
  Self must be seen, heard, thought upon and deeply pondered." (Brihadaranyaka 
  Upanishad: IV.5).  Shun honour, respect, degrees, 
  name, fame, power, position and titles. They are absolutely worthless. They 
  will not give you eternal satisfaction. They will only intensify your vanity. 
  They are all intoxicants of the mind. They will bring misery and mental disturbance. 
  That is the reason why Raja Bhartrihari, Raja Gopichand and Lord Buddha deserted 
  their kingdoms, riches, honour, etc. They treated them as trifles.  Uncertainty 
  of Life Only your actions, good 
  and bad, will follow you after death. And God will judge you according to your 
  deeds.  The attraction for external 
  objects ceases, but there yet remains the internal craving or sense-hankering 
  or thirsting which is called Trishna. That is why the Gita says: "The objects 
  of sense, but not the relish for them, turn away from an abstemious dweller 
  in the body, and even the relish turns away from him after the Supreme is seen." 
   Friend! Is there any limit 
  to the number of fathers, mothers, wives, sons, daughters, uncles and aunts 
  you had in the countless incarnations in the past? And yet the clinging and 
  false relationship has not gone. Discrimination has not dawned. What a great 
  pity it is!  Are you not ashamed to 
  repeat the same acts of eating, drinking and sleeping day by day? You are proud 
  of your titles and honours. Have you improved your life even a bit? What lessons 
  have you learnt from the recent Bihar and Quetta earthquakes? Are you attempting 
  to reach the Imperishable Seat wherein all desires and Trishnas will be utterly 
  annihilated? Are you endeavouring to attain the highest end of life, Divine 
  realization which confers immortality, bliss and peace?  In the recent Bihar earthquake 
  (this was written years ago, when the earthquake took place there) a rich banker 
  had to beg for nine rupees just to protect himself and his family from death 
  by starvation. A Pundit earned slowly twenty-five thousand rupees by selling 
  his books. But he had to spend that money in a short time in the treatment of 
  his chronic chest complaint. He tried all sorts of medicines, but all in vain. 
  He had to leave the house to lead a life of a hermit.  Life is quite uncertain 
  here. Diseases of various sorts attack the body. Yet man clings blindly to this 
  ephemeral life! He forgets the truth. O man, seek everlasting peace and bliss 
  in the Atma or Soul within you by purifying your mind and practicing intense 
  meditation. This is the right royal road to extricate yourself from the pains 
  of Samsara. Be quick in taking to spiritual practices. Hairs are becoming gray. 
  Teeth are failing. Indriyas are getting cold. Practice meditation and Japa while 
  you are young. You can do nothing in old age, when you retire from service. 
   It is extremely difficult 
  to have a pure and calm mind. But you must have such a mind, if you want to 
  have progress in meditation and Yoga.  Lord Buddha had Viveka 
  from his very boyhood. He was one who had been profoundly impressed from 
  his early youth by the transient and impermanent nature of all conditions of 
  worldly existence and by the sufferings and wretchedness in which he saw all 
  beings immersed. Will you not become another Lord Buddha?  You have spent eight hours 
  in sleep, and the rest of the day in idle gossiping, telling lies, deceiving 
  others, in selfish activities, in amassing wealth. How can you expect spiritual 
  good, how can you expect immortality and peace, if you do not spend even half 
  an hour in the service of the Lord, in singing His Names and in divine contemplation? 
   On the 
  Whole, Life is Sorrow Lord Buddha says: "On 
  the whole, life is sorrow." You will find an echo of this statement in 
  Patanjali's Yoga Sutras "Sarvam duhkham vivekinah-All indeed, is 
  pain to a person of discrimination." This is not the philosophy of the 
  pessimists. This is wonderful optimism, as it induces deep Vairagya, weans the 
  mind from sensual pleasures and directs it towards God, the Atman, to realize 
  eternal and infinite Bliss.  "Mamsa-lubdho yatha 
  matsyo lohasamkum na pasyati, Sukha-lubdhastatha debi yama-bandham na pasyati." 
   Just as a fish in its desire 
  to eat flesh does not see the hook that lies beneath, so also man in his passionate 
  desire to get sensual pleasure does not see the noose of death.  How to 
  Eradicate Sense-hankering Trishna means an 
  intense craving or sense-hankering. Through constant repetition of enjoyment 
  of an object, the longing for the object becomes very keen and acute. This is 
  Trishna.  It is all easy to become 
  a big research scholar in the Oxford or Cambridge University and to get an M.A., 
  Ph.D., degree. But it is extremely difficult to eradicate these Trishnas. 
  That is the reason why Sri Vasishtha says to Sri Rama : "You can even 
  uproot the Himalayas. You can even drink the waters of the whole ocean. You 
  can even swallow balls of fire. But it is difficult to destroy the Trishnas. 
  Cravings cause incessant trouble in many different ways. These cravings are 
  the seeds of this Samsara" (Yoga-Vasishtha).  A worldly man is always 
  drowned in sorrow. He is ever struggling to get something, some money, some 
  power, some position and so on. He is always anxious as to whether or not he 
  would get it. Even when he is in actual possession of the things he so passionately 
  longed for, he is very anxious lest he should lose it. There is pain in earning 
  money. There is more pain in taking care of it. There is still more pain if 
  the money gets decreased. And when it is lost, just imagine for a moment the 
  magnitude of the climax and the intensity of pain it gives a man! Therefore 
  renounce money and rest in peace in the blissful Self.  In the presence of light, 
  you cannot have darkness. In the presence of sensual pleasures, Atmic Bliss 
  cannot exist. Worldlings want both sensual pleasures and Atma Ananda in 
  one and the same cup and one and the same time. This is an absolute impossibility. 
  They do not want to renounce sensual pleasures. They do not want to develop 
  real Vairagya in their hearts of hearts. They simply talk a lot.  Though a man knows he might 
  die at any moment, still he thinks he would live for ever. To get oneself entangled 
  in the meshes of Maya till death is simply foolish. He who is attached to wife, 
  wealth and children will not derive even an iota of benefit in the spiritual 
  path.  A bachelor who is full 
  of passion from head to foot imagines that he is miserable because he has no 
  wife! A householder who is tired and exhausted of worldly life thinks wife and 
  children are a mighty hindrance in his spiritual march.  Desire 
  for Name and Fame One can renounce wife, 
  son, property and all else, but it is very difficult and rare to renounce name 
  and fame. Pratishta is established name and fame. This is a great obstacle in 
  God-Realization. This brings downfall in the end. This does not allow the aspirant 
  to march forward in the spiritual path. He becomes a slave of respect and honour. 
  As soon as he gets some purity and ethical progress, ignorant people rock to 
  him and begin to pay homage and salutation. He gets puffed up with pride.  He thinks he is a great 
  Mahatma. He becomes eventually a slave of his admirers. He cannot notice his 
  slow downfall. The moment he mixes up freely with householders. He loses what 
  little he had gained during the eight or ten years of his intense Sadhana. He 
  cannot influence the public now. His admirers also leave him because they do 
  not find any real solace or spiritual influence in his company.  People imagine that the 
  Mahatma has got Siddhis and that they can get children through his grace, plenty 
  of wealth and Himalayan herbs for the rooting out of diseases and the building 
  up of radiant and healthy bodies. They always approach a Sadhu with some selfish, 
  ulterior motive or other. The aspirant through bad association loses his Vairagya 
  and Viveka. Attachment and desire crop up in his mind. Therefore you should 
  hide yourself always. Nobody should know what sort of Sadhana you are doing. 
  You should never attempt to exhibit your psychic powers of Siddhis. You should 
  be very humble. You should pass for quite an ordinary man. You should not accept 
  rich presents from householders. You will be affected by the bad thoughts of 
  those who offer presents. You should never think that you are superior to this 
  man or that man. You should not treat others with contempt. You should always 
  treat others with great respect and profound consideration. Then only respect 
  will come by itself. You should treat respect, honour, name and fame as dung 
  and poison and wear disrespect and dishonour as gold necklace. Then only you 
  will reach the goal in safety.  Why this 
  Trouble Building of Ashrams and 
  making disciples bring about the downfall of aspirants. Then, are all stumbling 
  blocks in the path of God-Realization. The aspirant becomes another sort of 
  householder. He develops institutional egoism. He gets attached to his Ashram 
  and disciples. He has now the same cares, worries and anxieties for running 
  the Ashram and the monthly magazine and feeding his disciples. He develops slave-mentality. 
  Thoughts of Ashram revolve in his mind, when he is in a dying condition.  Some Ashrams are nicely 
  managed by the spiritual heads of the respective institutions while they are 
  alive. When they pass away, the disciples who are petty-minded fight amongst 
  themselves in open courts. You can see so many cases going on. The Ashram becomes 
  a fighting centre. Ashram owners have to flatter the donors and appeal for funds 
  very often. How can thought of God remain in his mind, when one has his mind 
  fixed on accumulation of wealth and development of his Ashram? Those who have 
  started Ashrams already may now say: "We are doing good to the people in 
  various ways. We are having religious classes daily. We feed poor people. We 
  are training religious students."  It is quite true that an 
  Ashram run by a selfless dynamic Yogi or a realized soul or a Jivanmukta 
  is a dynamic centre of spirituality. It is spiritual uplift of so many thousands 
  of people. Such centres are needed in all parts of the world. Such Ashrams can 
  do immense spiritual good to the country. But such ideal Ashrams with ideal 
  spiritual heads to run them are very, very rare nowadays. Money is collected 
  in a variety of ways. Some portion is spent for useful purposes. The rest goes 
  to the comforts and conveniences of the founders of the Ashram and their beloved 
  disciples.  The founders of the Ashram 
  in course of time become unconsciously slave of worship and Puja. Maya works 
  in a variety of ways. They are quite eager that people should drink their Charanamrita. 
  How can a man who has the Bhav that he should be worshipped as an 
  Avatara serve the public? Workers are petty-minded. They fight amongst themselves 
  even for trifling things and disturb the peaceful atmosphere of the Ashram. 
  Where then is peace in the Ashram? How can outsiders who visit the Ashram to 
  get Santi, enjoy Santi there?  The founders of the Ashram 
  should live on daily Bhiksha from outside. They should lead an ideal life of 
  absolute self-sacrifice, a life of ideal simplicity like the late Baba Kalikambliwala 
  of Rishikesh, who carried water-pot on his head for the Ashram and himself lived 
  on Bhiksha from outside. Such people alone can do real good to the people. Founders 
  of Ashrams should never appeal for funds. It brings great discredit to the order 
  of Sannyasa itself. It is another way of respectable begging. The habit of begging 
  destroys the subtle, sensitive nature of the intellect and those who appeal 
  for funds frequently do not know what they are doing.  It is very difficult to 
  get good workers for the Ashram. Then why do you bother about building Ashrams 
  when you have neither money nor workers nor dynamic spiritual force? Keep quiet. 
  Do meditation and evolve yourself quietly. Mind your own business. Reform yourself 
  first. How can you help others when you are yourself groping in darkness, when 
  you are yourself blind? How can a blind man lead a blind man? Both will fall 
  into a deep abyss and break their legs.  Generally an aspirant is 
  very enthusiastic about his Sadhana in the beginning. He is full of zeal. He 
  takes a great deal of interest. He expects to get some good results soon. When 
  he does not get these results within the expected time be gets discouraged. 
  He loses his interest and slackens his efforts. He gives up his Sadhana entirely. 
  He loses faith in the efficacy of Sadhana itself.  Worry and 
  Anxiety Man always thirsts for 
  possession of objects, wife and cattle. This surely makes him selfish. Selfishness 
  causes attachment. Wherever there is attachment, there are "Ahamta" 
  and "Mamata." The whole misery starts here. The whole Maya 
  Chakra begins to revolve from now. Man becomes a slave now. Strong 
  iron chains are fastened to his hands, legs and knees. He is entangled like 
  the spider or the silk-worm. This is his own self-created web for his own destruction. 
   Sit for a moment alone 
  in a quiet room. Enquire. Cogitate. Investigate. Happiness is a mental state. 
  It does not depend upon money or possessions. You actually see very rich people 
  are very miserable, while a poor clerk is very happy, and a Sadhu with a loin-cloth 
  only dancing in divine ecstasy.  Enjoyment cannot bring 
  satisfaction of desire. On the contrary, it aggravates and intensifies desires 
  and makes the mind more restless through sense hankering or Trishna just 
  as the pouring of ghee or oil aggravates fire. The fewer the wants, the greater 
  the happiness. Milk gives pleasure to some and pain to some others. The fourth 
  cup of milk brings retching or nausea. It does not give pleasure during fever. 
  Therefore pleasure is not in the objects but it is in the imagination or inclination 
  of the mind.  Mango is not sweet but 
  the imagination is sweet. Woman is not beautiful but the imagination is beautiful. 
  An ugly woman appears very beautiful to her husband because his imagination 
  is beautiful. There is a grain of pleasure in objects, but the pain that mixed 
  with it is of the size of a mountain.  Sensual pleasure is tantalizing. 
  There is enchantment so long as man does not possess the objects. He exerts 
  hard. His mind is filled with anxieties. He is under despondency because he 
  doubts if he would get the desired object. The moment he is in possession of 
  the object, the charm vanishes. He finds that he is in entanglement. The bachelor 
  thinks of his marriage day and night. He thinks he is in imprisonment after 
  the marriage is over. He is not able to satisfy the extravagant wants of his 
  wife. He wants to run away from the house to forests. The rich but the childless 
  man thinks he will be more happy by getting a son: he worries himself day and 
  night to get a son, goes on pilgrimage to Ramashvaram and Kasi and performs 
  various religious ceremonies.  But when he gets a child, 
  he feels miserable. The child suffers from epileptic fits and his money is given 
  away to doctors. Even then there is no cure. This is Mayaic jugglery. 
  The whole world is fraught with temptation.  When you cannot get the 
  objects, you feel miserable. The man who is addicted to taking tea, who is in 
  the habit of taking fruits and milk after meals, feels very miserable when he 
  cannot get tea or fruits and milk in a certain place. He scolds his wife and 
  servants without rhyme or reason out of sheer irritability. When the wife dies, 
  the husband is drowned in sorrow, not because of the loss of his loving partner 
  in life, but because he cannot get sexual pleasure now. The cause of pain is 
  pleasure. The cause of death is love for sensual life. Give up all sensual pleasures, 
  if you do not want pain. Give up sensual life, if you do not want death.  To wear spectacles at the 
  age of ten, to wear ring-watch, to buy a car by borrowing money, to wear fashionable 
  dinner-uniform and Ellwood hat, health boots, to have a French crop or bobbed 
  hair, to smoke Three-Castles cigarettes or Navy-cut or Manila cigars, to constrict 
  the neck with stiff collars, to walk along the beach with their wives in clasped 
  hands, to have newspaper in their pocket, to have a trimmed or Kaiser-moustache 
  at the middle of the upper lip, to take meat and drink brandy, to play bridge, 
  to gamble, to dance in ball-rooms, to borrow money to go to talkies and, in 
  short, to lead a life of dissipation-this is modern civilisation! Fashion and 
  style have made you a beggar of beggars!  Raga and 
  Dvesha The two currents of the 
  mind viz., Raga and Dvesha (attraction and repulsion) really constitute world 
  or Samsara. The mind gets intensely attached to pleasant objects through attraction 
  because it derives pleasure. Wherever there is sensation of pleasure, the mind 
  gets glued, as it were, to the object that gives pleasure. This is what is called 
  attachment. This only brings bondage and pain. When either object is withdrawn 
  or perishes, the mind gets unspeakable pain. Attraction is the root cause of 
  human sufferings. The mind runs from those objects which give pain. Hatred arises 
  in the mind. For instance, nobody likes a cobra, a tiger or even a scorpion. 
  Attraction and pleasure, repulsion and pain coexist. A worldly man is a slave 
  of these two mighty and devastating currents. He is tossed about hither and 
  thither like a piece of straw. He smiles when he gets pleasures, he weeps when 
  he gets pain. He clings to pleasant objects, he runs away from objects that 
  cause pain.  The desire for sensual 
  enjoyment is deep rooted or ingrained in the minds of all. The Rajasic mind 
  is so framed that it cannot remain even for a single moment without thoughts 
  of enjoyment of some kind or another. People invent various sorts of subtle 
  enjoyments. Modern science has made marvellous contribution towards bringing 
  forth refined ways of enjoyment. Modern civilisation is only another name for 
  sensual enjoyment. Hotels, cinemas, aeroplanes, radios intensify sensual enjoyments. 
  Man invents new dishes, new syrups, new drinks, to satisfy his palate. Fashion 
  in dress is making vast strides year by year. So is the case with hair-dressing. 
  Even the man treading the path of Truth wishes to find out lasting and intense 
  sensual enjoyment by means of his Yogic practices. He wants to move about in 
  celestial cars. He wants to taste the nectar of immortality underneath the Kalpa-Vriksha 
  side by side with Indra and other Gods. He wants to hear celestial nymphs and 
  Gandharvas singing and dancing. These are all subtle temptations. The 
  sincere aspirant will resolutely turn his back to all these sorts of refined, 
  subtle, intense enjoyment herein and hereafter. He will treat them all 
  as vomited matter, as offal or as the urine of a donkey or as poison. 
   This world is full of difficulties 
  and troubles. No one save a Yogi or a Bhakta or a Jnani is free from these worldly 
  miseries and anxieties. Go wherever you like. It is all the same.  Kamala and Krishna had 
  no children. They were building castles in the air one night, when they were 
  sleeping on a raised bedstead. Kamala asked Krishna : "How will you manage 
  for the sleeping place of our son, if I get a child?" Krishna replied: 
  "I will make room in this very wooden cot itself." So saying he moved 
  some inches away from his wife. She again asked: "What will you do, if 
  I beget a second son?" Krishna answered: "I will again make room in 
  this very cot itself." So saying he actually moved a few inches further 
  to the edge of the cot. Kamala again asked: "My dear husband, what will 
  you do if I beget a third son?" The husband said : "I will give him 
  room in this very cot." While moving to the extreme end of cot, he tumbled 
  down and fractured his left leg. Krishna's neighbour came and asked him : "What 
  is the matter with your legs?" Krishna said: "I broke my leg on account 
  of my false sons." Such is the case with the people of the world also. 
  They suffer on account of Mithya Abhimana (false egoism) and Mithya 
  Sambandha (false relationship).  
 Body Woman is the source of 
  constant vexation and greatest bondage. The figure or form of woman is nothing 
  but a network of bones coated with fat and flesh. This observation also applies 
  to man.  Woman is the source of 
  all misery. She is an embodiment of passion. She sucks your vitality. You do 
  many vicious actions just to please her. You have to reap the fruits of these 
  actions and suffer. What happiness is there to be derived from the string-tossed 
  puppets of female bodies? Where is the beauty in a female? Do Vichara and analyze. 
  Will any Viveki think of this illusory figure? The beauty you see in the form 
  of a woman is the emanation from the Atman within. Look at the condition of 
  the eyes, face and body of a woman after an attack of seven days' illness! Where 
  has the beauty gone? Look at the wrinkled face of an old woman? Analyze the 
  parts of a woman, realize their illusory nature and abandon these totally. If 
  you begin to analyze this body into flesh, blood, bone, sweat, etc., 
  the attraction towards woman will perish in a short time. Love and attachment 
  to a woman destroy Buddhi, Mukti and virtuous deeds and cause contraction of 
  heart.  If lust for woman which 
  is the source of all enjoyments ceases, then all worldly bondage which has its 
  root or substratum in the mind will automatically cease. Even the most virulent 
  poison is no poison at all when compared to sensual objects. The former defiles 
  one body only whereas the latter adulterates many bodies in successive births. 
   This body is certainly 
  not meant for the satisfaction of petty ends. It is for rigorous penance here 
  and infinite happiness hereafter. It is an instrument for achieving the goal 
  of human life i. e., the attainment of Brahma Jnana. It serves the purpose of 
  a boat to cross this ocean of Samsara to the other side.  This body is the source 
  of infinite miseries. It is full of impurities. It brings disrespect, censure, 
  pain, etc. It passes away without a moment's notice. It is subject to disease, 
  decay and old age. Therefore think of Atma which is eternal, pure and all-pervading. 
   The physical body appears 
  only in the present. A thing that has neither past nor future must be considered 
  as non-existent in the present also. If you think over this matter more deeply 
  with Suddha-Buddhi, you will find Atyanta-abhav (complete nonexistence) of the 
  world.  This body which is full 
  of impurities, urine, fecal matter, pus, etc., is perishable. It is like froth 
  or bubble or mirage. It is despised by your enemies. It remains like a useless 
  log of wood on the ground when the Prana departs from the body. It is 
  the cause of the pain and suffering. It is your real enemy. You should treat 
  this body with extreme contempt as dung. Why should you cling to it (Abhinivesa) 
  and worship it with scents, powders, and flowers? Do not be foolish and 
  silly in adorning it with fine silks and ornaments. It is dire Ajnana only. 
   Nothing on this earth belongs 
  to me. This body even is not mine. This is true wisdom. "He is my son. 
  She is my daughter. She is my wife. That bungalow is mine. I am rich. I am a 
  kshatriya. I am a' Brahmin. I am lean. I am fat." This is foolishness of 
  a superior order. This physical body is the rightful property of fishes, jackals 
  and vultures. How can you call this as yours?  Application of soap to 
  the body, oil to the hair, powder to the face, looking into the mirror thousand 
  and one times a day, wearing rings on the fingers, these and many as these will 
  intensify your attachment to the body. Therefore give up all these things ruthlessly. 
   A big boil is washed with 
  lotion. Then boric ointment is applied. Then bandage is put on. Even so this 
  nasty body is a very big boil. It is washed daily. Food is thrust into it. This 
  is the ointment. Cloth is worn. This is the bandage. Sadhus treat this body 
  as a very big boil or wound with an oozing discharge. But the body is worshipped 
  by worldly-minded persons on account of delusion and infatuation.  Wearing cloth is not for 
  enhancing the beauty of the body. This body is a dirty leather-bag filled with 
  various sorts of impurities. Cloth is meant to cover up this impure body. Wear 
  simple clothing. Have sublime thinking. Virtuous life in God or Atman can give 
  you real beauty.  The "beauty" 
  of this body is only superficial (apata-ramaniya). The beauty 
  of the skin is also superficial. You can have undecaying, infinite beauty in 
  God alone.  O man! Are you not ashamed 
  to call this filthy body as "I" and to say "this is mine," 
  "'he is my son," when everything is perishable? Even jackals, vultures 
  and fishes say : "These bodies of human beings are ours." This world 
  or Samsara is Asara or Virasa (essenceless). Give up identification with 
  this feeble, perishable and impure body of five elements whereof the bones are 
  the pillars, which is strung by the nerves, coated over with flesh and blood, 
  covered up by the skin, is of bad odour, full of urine and feces, is ever haunted 
  by dotage and miseries and is the seat of all ills. This identification with 
  the body is the seat of Raurava hell. What is the difference between the worms 
  and men that rejoice in this ill-smelling body?  Maya, the great 
  juggler, prepares a skeleton, covers it with flesh, and hides the various impurities 
  with a shining skin. O deluded man! How long are you going to call this body 
  as yours? How long are you going to cling to this perishable body? Give up this 
  identification with the body and identify yourself with your real nature the 
  Satchitananda Swaroop.  When this body is free 
  from disease and decrepitude, when old age is still far off, when the powers 
  of the senses are not affected and life is not decaying, the man of discrimination 
  should exert for God-Realization? It is useless to dig a well when the house 
  is on fire.  
 Woman Marriage is a curse and 
  a life-long imprisonment. It is the greatest bondage. A bachelor, who is full 
  of passion, imagines that he is miserable because he has no wife. The bachelor 
  who was once free is now tied to the yoke of family and his hands and feet are 
  chained. This is the experience of all married people. They weep after marriage. 
  More beggars are brought forth into this world through lust. He who has understood 
  the magnitude of human sufferings will not dare to bring forth a child.  Woman (wherever woman is 
  represented from the view-point of man, with a view to induce Vairagya in him, 
  the reader will do well to remember that a similar representation of man from 
  the view-point of woman is implied therein) is the source of constant vexation 
  and sorrow and is the greatest bondage. One cannot sacrifice a noble and sublime 
  ideal, Self-Realization, for the sake of pleasing a bewitching woman.  Wife is only a luxury. 
  It is not an absolute necessity. Every householder weeps after marriage. He 
  says : "My son is ailing from typhoid. My second daughter is to be married. 
  I have debts to clear. My wife is worrying me to purchase for her a gold necklace. 
  My eldest son-in-law died recently." Indeed such miseries are not uncommon 
  to all.  Wife is a sharp knife to 
  cut the life of the husband, and vice versa. Anasuya and Savitri are 
  very, very rare. If the gold necklace and Benares silk saries are not supplied, 
  at the proper time, the wife frowns at the husband. The husband cannot get his 
  food at the proper time. The wife lies down in the bed under pretext of acute 
  abdominal colic. You can see for yourself this pitious spectacle in your own 
  house or in the house of your friend and in daily experience. Indeed I need 
  not tell you much. Therefore be wedded to Santi and have Vairagya, the worthy 
  son and Viveka the magnanimous daughter. Eat the delicious fruit of Atma Jnana 
  which can make you immortal.  When your wife is young 
  and beautiful, you admire her curly hair, rosy cheeks, fine nose, shining skin 
  and silvery teeth. When she loses her beauty on account of some chronic incurable 
  malady, you have no attraction for her. You marry a second wife. Had you loved 
  your first wife with Atma Bhav, had you a comprehensive understanding that the 
  Self in you and in your wife is the same, your love for her would have been 
  pure, unselfish, lasting, undecaying and unchanging. Just as you love old sugar 
  candy or old rice the more, so also you would love your wife more and more, 
  even when she becomes old, as you have Atma-Bhav through Jnana. Jnana will only 
  intensify Prem and make it lasting.  He who is attached to his 
  wife, children and wealth., will not derive even an iota of benefit in the spiritual 
  path. By indiscriminate clinging to wife, children, house, wealth and objects, 
  you have forgotten your essential divine nature. Even the old needles without 
  eyes will not follow you, when you die. Only your actions, good and bad, will 
  follow you. And God will judge you according to your motives and deeds.  A passionate bachelor is 
  ever thinking "When can I live with my young wife?" A dispassionate 
  householder in whom Viveka has dawned is ever thinking: "When can I disentangle 
  myself from the clutches of my wife and retire into the forests for contemplation 
  on Atma?" The mind alone is the cause of bondage and freedom. Kill this 
  mind and rest in the Atman.  You have become the sporting 
  lap-dog of the caprice of woman. You have become a slave of countless desires, 
  emotions and passions. When are you going to rise up from this miserable state? 
  In the Yoga Vasishtha you will find: "Those persons, in spite of the knowledge 
  of the non-existence of happiness both in the past and the present in the baneful 
  objects of the world, do yet entangle themselves in them with their thoughts 
  clinging to them, deserve the appellation of an ass, if not a worse one." 
   Human love is all hollow. 
  It is mere animal attraction. It is passion only. It is carnal love. It is selfish 
  love. It is ever-changing. It is all hypocrisy and sheer show. The wife does 
  not care for her husband, if he happens to be on the roll of- unemployment. 
  The husband dislikes his wife, when she loses her beauty on account of some 
  chronic disease. Dear man, you can find real, lasting love in God and God alone. 
  His Love knows no change.  Remembrance or image of 
  a woman disturbs the mind. Lust is very powerful. It carries a flowery bow equipped 
  with five soft arrows, viz., mohana, stambhana, unmadana, soshana and 
  tapana(fascination, stupefaction, maddening, emaciation and inflaming). 
  Viveka, Vichara, devotion and contemplation will eradicate this dire malady. 
  If lust is conquered, anger, greed, etc., which are all auxiliary weapons, will 
  become ineffective. Love's principal weapon is woman. If this is destroyed, 
  its followers or retinue can be quite easily conquered. If the commander is 
  killed, then it becomes easy to conquer the soldiers. Conquer passion first. 
  It will then be easy to subdue anger, who is only one of his followers.  When a tiger has once tasted 
  human blood, it always runs after human beings. It becomes a man-eater. Even 
  so, when the mind has once tasted the sexual pleasure, it always runs after 
  that pleasure. It is through constant Vichara and Brahma-Bhavana that the mind 
  has to be weaned out from lustful thoughts and tendencies. Make the mind understand 
  by repeated auto-suggestions and hammering that sexual pleasure is false, worthless, 
  illusory and full of pains. Place before the mind the advantages of a life in 
  the Atman-bliss, power, and knowledge. Make it understand fully that the exalted, 
  eternal life is in the immortal Atma, not certainly in sensual pleasures. When 
  it hears constantly these suggestions, it will slowly leave off its old habits. 
   In the Bhagavad Gita you 
  will find "Humility, unpretentiousness, harmlessness, forgiveness, rectitude, 
  service of the teacher, purity, steadfastness, self-control, dispassion 
  towards the objects of the senses, and also absence of egoism, insight into 
  the pain and evil of birth, death, old age and sickness, unattachment, absence 
  of self-identification with son, wife, or home, and constant balance of mind 
  in wished-for and unwished-for events, unflinching devotion to Me by Yoga, without 
  other objects, resort to sequestered places, absence of enjoyment in the company 
  of men, constancy in the wisdom of the Self, understanding of the object of 
  essential wisdom; that is declared to be the Wisdom; all against it is ignorance 
  (Ch. XIII-8-12).  "Demoniacal men know 
  neither right energy, nor right abstinence; nor purity, nor even propriety, 
  nor truth is in them." "The whole universe is without truth, without 
  basis," they say, "without a God; brought about by mutual union, and 
  caused by lust and nothing else." Holding this view these ruined selves 
  of small understanding, of fierce deeds, come forth as enemies for the destruction 
  of the world surrendering themselves to insatiable desires, possessed with vanity, 
  conceit and arrogance, holding evil ideas through delusion, they engage in action 
  with impure resolves. Giving themselves over to unmeasured thought whose end 
  is death, regarding the gratification of desires as the highest, feeling sure 
  that this is all, held in bondage by a hundred ties of expectation, given over 
  to lust and anger, they strive to obtain by unlawful means hoards of wealth 
  for sensual enjoyments"(Ch. XVI-7-12).  In the Vishnupurana, it 
  is said: "If the deluded fool loves the body, a mere collection of flesh, 
  blood, pus, feces, urine, muscles, fat and bones, he will verily love hell itself! 
  To him who is not disgusted with the nasty smell from his own body, what other 
  argument need be adduced for detachment?"  Sage Vasishtha says to 
  Sri Rama "What is there of an auspicious nature in the cage like automation 
  of a woman-a veritable doll of flesh, joined with knots made of muscles and 
  bones? Scrutinize her eyes closely and see, after an analysis, if there is, 
  after all, anything charmingly beautiful about the membraneous sheaths muscles, 
  blood and tears composing them. Why, then, are you enamoured of them in vain? 
  Her breast, whereon the movements, hither and thither, of the pearl necklace, 
  are comparable, in point of elegance, to the swift waters of the Ganga rolling 
  down the summits of mount Meru, the self-same breast, of a damsel is, however, 
  voraciously devoured, when occasion arises, by dogs, on the cremation ground 
  situated in some out-of-the-way spots, even like a small ball of rice. Wearing 
  the soot-like locks of hair and therefore best left untouched, though attractive 
  to the eye, women, who are the veriest flame of the fire of sin, consume men 
  like so much straw. It is women who, though appearing all juicy and green, are 
  verily devoid of grace and who, by their attractive looks, allure men to their 
  destruction and feed the fires of hell raging on a far off region. They are 
  verily traps laid by the bird catcher Cupid, to catch his bevy of birds, viz., 
  unsophisticated men. Woman is the treacherous bait, attached to the line of 
  impure latent desires, to catch men, who are, so to say, so many fish in the 
  pond of birth and death, wallowing in the mire of the mind. Enough with woman-the 
  treasure chest, wherein the serene gems of the deadliest sins are kept and the 
  endless chain of torturing misery. Made up of flesh here, blood there and bones 
  in a third place, this female form, O Brahman! After all disintegrates in a 
  few days. He feels the desire for intercourse, who has a woman about him. Where 
  is the scope for such enjoyment to the womanless? Abandon her and you abandon 
  the whole world; by abandoning the whole world, you find Supreme Bliss." 
  *  
 * Lust is a potent 
  force, very difficult to get rid of. Hence I have to place such a mental picture 
  before the minds of the vast majority of persons. Really, women should be adored, 
  as Mother-Shakti. She is the creatress, generatrix and nourisher of the universe. 
  She must be revered. In India, religion is being preserved and maintained only 
  through the devotional element of women. Devotion is a fundamental characteristic 
  of Hindu ladies. Hate lust, but not women.  "Yatra naryastu 
  pujvante ramante tatra devatah, Yatraitastu ne puiyante sarvastraphalah kriyah." 
   "Where women 
  are honoured, there the gods are pleased; but where they are not honoured, no 
  sacred rite is fruitful" (Manusmiriti)  
 World This is a strange world 
  indeed. This is a very big museum or a wonderful show. The flowers and the Himalayan 
  landscape, the Niagara waterfalls and the blue seas, the sky and the Taj Mahal 
  are all very beautiful and charming. But the earthquakes, Volcanic eruptions, 
  lightnings, cyclones and epidemics of influenza and plague are frightfully awful 
  and threatening.  A beautiful wife is very 
  charming. She is very sweet, when she is young, when she smiles, when she puts 
  on beautiful dress, when she sings and plays on the piano or violin, when she 
  dances in the ballroom. But she is horrible to look at when she loses her temper, 
  when she quarrels with her husband for not getting silk saries and gold necklace, 
  when she is suffering from acute abdominal colic or some such disease and when 
  she becomes old.  The spring is very lovely. 
  The trees arc adorned with flowers and fruits. The cool gentle breeze is really 
  exhilarating but the summer is scorching. The winter is bitingly cold.  Man laughs when he gets 
  a son, when he gets married, when he gets some sudden fortune or increase in 
  salary, but he weeps when his wife dies, when he loses his money, when he is 
  thrown out of employment, or when he suffers from some acute disease.  Now, tell me, friend! what 
  do you really find in this illusory world-happiness or pain, joy or sorrow? 
  Have you now understood the illusory nature of Mayaic creation? This world is 
  a mere appearance. Mind and the senses are deceiving you every moment. You have 
  mistaken pain for pleasure. There is not even an iota of happiness in this sense 
  universe. Abandon these selfish struggles and schemes for amassing wealth. March 
  directly to that wire-puller who is moving these toys of fleshy human bodies, 
  who is keeping up this big show, who is behind this show. In Him only you will 
  find lasting happiness and perennial joy. Merge in Him by practicing daily meditation 
  and Japa.  This world is as unreal 
  as the shadow, bubble or froth. Why then do you run after the toys of name and 
  fame?  How uncertain is sensual 
  life in this world! How transitory and fleeting is sensual pleasure! Mark how 
  many thousands of people were carried away in the recent Bihar and Quetta earthquakes! 
  (refers to incidents occurred long ago before this book was written) How many 
  big palatial mansions were destroyed! This is Adhidaivika Tapa. Yet people 
  want to build bungalows in Simla and Mussoorie and attain immortality there! 
  How foolish these people are! Poor self-deluded souls! Pitiable is their lot! 
  They are earth-worms only as they revel in filth. I pray for them. May God bestow 
  on them Viveka, Vairagya and Bhakti!  Go wherever you may, to 
  Gulmarg or Pahalgaon in Kashmir, to Darjeeling or Simla, to Vienna or Alps. 
  It is all the same.  You will not find any real 
  rest. The charming scenery may soothe the retina for a second. Raga, Dvesha, 
  jealousy, passion and greed are everywhere. You will find the same earth, the 
  same sky, the same air, and the same water. And you carry with you the same 
  mind. Imagination and change of places have deceived not a few. O man! 
  Be contented. Live where you may. But discipline the mind and the senses. Meditate 
  on the inner Self (Antar-Atma) ceaselessly. Here you will find the everlasting 
  peace. Mind will stop deceiving you now.  To me the whole world appears 
  as a ball of fire. To me the whole world appears as a huge furnace wherein all 
  living creatures are being roasted.  Will your son or daughter 
  or friend or relative help you, when you are about to die? Have you got one 
  sincere, unselfish friend in all this world? All are selfish. There is no pure 
  love. But that Lord, your real Friend of friends, Father of fathers, who dwells 
  in your heart, will never forsake you, though you may forget Him. Adore Him 
  in silence, that God of gods, that Divinity of divinities, Highest of the highest. 
  May He bless you with His Love, Wisdom, Power and peace.  As everything is unreal 
  in this world, treat love and respect as poison. Be indifferent. Be reserved 
  and reticent. Give up mixing with others. Live alone and enjoy the Atmic Bliss 
  in your heart. You don't want any company, when you can live in the Soul.  You must show extreme contempt 
  towards worldly objects. Treat all earthly possessions and sensuous enjoyments 
  as dung, poison, dust, and straw. Turn the mind away from them. Then only you 
  will get Jnana.  Give up clinging to this 
  illusory life. Be fearless. Take refuge in Vairagya. All fears will melt away. 
  Cling to the Feet of the Lord. Cling to the indivisible, unseen, unknown, unknowable 
  Atman or Brahman of the Upanishads.  By indiscriminate clinging 
  to wife, children, house, wealth, and objects, you have forgotten all about 
  your essential divine nature. You have become an atheist. Wife, children and 
  money have become your gods, whereas in reality they are your enemies.  If you develop keen Vairagya, 
  if you subdue your senses, and shun all enjoyments and pleasures of this worthless 
  world, mixed as they are with pain, sin, fear, craving, miseries, disease, old 
  age and death then nothing can really tempt you in this world. You will become 
  proof against all temptations. You will have eternal peace, and infinite joy. 
  You will have no attraction for women and other worldly objects. Lust cannot 
  possess you then.  If you really want God 
  and God alone, kick this world mercilessly. Enough, enough of your tea and coffee, 
  enough of soda and lemonade, enough of father, mother, son, daughter, brother, 
  sister and relations. You have had countless fathers and mothers, wives and 
  children in the past. You came alone. You will go alone. None will follow you 
  save your own actions. Realize God. All miseries will come to an end.  He who indiscriminately 
  clings to wife, son and daughter and the objects of the world has no other alternative 
  but to forget all about his divine nature.  The company of worldly-minded 
  people is as dangerous, if not more, as the company of a woman to an aspirant. 
   Worldly men think they 
  are quite happy because they get a few ginger biscuits, some money and a woman. 
  O, if they would just taste the nectar of immortality, what should be the intensity 
  of happiness they should feel!  Dear friend! The past now 
  appears to you as a dream. Then why do you not believe that the present also 
  will appear as a dream in the near future?  All worldly pleasures appear 
  as nectar in the beginning, but become virulent poison in the end. This world 
  is a Mela (a congregational performance as a diversion or sport) for two days, 
  and this body is a mere appearance for two seconds. Even if you become the sole 
  monarch of the whole world, you can hardly be in the enjoyment of real Bliss 
  and Peace.  Life of man on earth is 
  nothing but a life of temptations and tribulations. Those who have real and 
  intense Vairagya and strong Viveka can hardly be tempted by worldly objects, 
  by Mara and Satan.  Being much hemmed in on 
  all sides and whirling in, different conditions in this ever fluctuating world, 
  you are ever whirling with delusion and afflicted with pains like dusts of sand 
  floating on a large stone. Now, reflecting upon Time which is eternal in its 
  true nature, you cannot but term as a moment the 100 years of your life. While 
  so, how is that you estimate your life so greatly and fall into all sorts of 
  despondencies through the insatiable desires? Who is there so debased in life 
  as you who are spoiled through the gross-mind? Fie on-your uneven life, which 
  cannot be considered as of any moment.  Comparing this life to 
  the countless universes, you cannot but consider it as an atom. It is really 
  surprising that you should rate high this universe full of pains.  Even the greatest of persons 
  will in course of time become the lowest of the low. All enjoyments, great men, 
  and their kindred have appeared in former times. Where then is the certitude 
  of existence of all objects now? The innumerable earths with their countless 
  rulers and wealth have all perished like fine sands; the Devalokas (celestial 
  realms) with their Indras and wealth have all disappeared: no 
  limit can be imposed upon the number of universes, Brahmas and Jivas 
  that have come and gone. Where then are all the objects that have vanished 
  out of sight? Where then is the permanency of earthly life? It is only by bestowing 
  your desires on the illusion of the long dream of bodily delusion in the sable 
  night of the unreal Maya that you have debased yourself to this ignorant state. 
   Enough, enough with all 
  the deaths you had in previous times. Not one beneficent object exists on this 
  earth either in the beginning, middle or end. Are not all created objects coated 
  over with the varnish of destruction? You enact in your daily life with your 
  body dire sinful acts, painful deeds and illimitable vices.  In youth you are enveloped 
  in ignorance, in adult age you are entangled in the meshes of women; in old 
  age you groan under the burden of Samsara and debility. You eventually 
  die. Being thus always occupied, when will you find time to devote yourself 
  to the commission of virtuous deeds? How came this Maya to play and dance 
  in this world? This ghost of your mind dances in the theatre of this universe 
  to the music of the organs. If in the opening and closing of the eyelids many 
  Brahmas are created and destroyed, what are you, a puny self, before them?  You cannot please the world, 
  your wife and children. Remember the story of the old man, his son and the donkey. 
  In the Sastras it is said "The pure man is looked upon as a devil, 
  the clever man as presumptuous, the man of forbearance as weak, the strong man 
  as cruel, the absent-minded man as a thief, and the handsome man as lewd. Who 
  can then please the world? There is no means within knowledge wherewith one 
  can satisfy all people. One's own good should, by all possible means, be looked 
  to. What can the myriad-tongued world do?"  The Blessed Lord says : 
  "He, O Pandava, who hates not radiance, nor outgoing energy, nor even delusion, 
  when present; nor longs after them, absent; he, who, seated as a neutral, is 
  unshaken by the properties; who, saying: 'The properties revolve,' stands apart 
  immovable, balanced in pleasure and pain: self-reliant; to whom a lump of earth, 
  a rock and gold are alike; the same to loved and unloved; the same in censure 
  and in praise the same in honour and in ignominy; the same to friend and foe, 
  abandoning all undertakings, he is said to have crossed over the properties. 
  And he who serves Me exclusively by the Yoga of Devotion, he, crossing beyond 
  the properties, is fit to become the Eternal" (Gita : Ch. XIV-22-26). 
   To attain to this exalted 
  state of spirituality, you should, in the first instance, fully realize the 
  glory of life in the Spirit, or the Soul. Then only you will have the requisite 
  strength to kick and spurn this world mercilessly and take to a life of meditation 
  on the Atman and the path of renunciation. Constant remembrance, and meditation 
  on the following verses of the Bhagavad-Gita will help you not a little in the 
  attainment of your goal.  "He, whose self is 
  unattached to external contacts, and finds joy in the Self, having the self 
  harmonised with the Eternal by Yoga, enjoys happiness exempt from decay." 
  (Ch. V-21)  "That in which he 
  finds the supreme delight which the Reason can grasp beyond the senses, wherein 
  established, he moves not from the Reality; which, having obtained, he thinks 
  there is no greater gain beyond it; wherein established, he is not shaken even 
  by heavy sorrow." (Ch. VI-21, 22).  "The Yogi who thus, 
  ever harmonizing the self, has put away sin, he easily enjoys the infinite bliss 
  of contact with the Eternal." (Ch. VI-28).  "I shall declare that 
  which ought to be known, that which being known immortality is enjoyed; the 
  beginningless supreme Eternal, is called neither being nor non-being." 
  (Ch. VIII-12)  "When the dweller 
  in the body has crossed over these three qualities, whence all bodies have been 
  produced, liberated from birth, death, old age and sorrow, he drinks the nectar 
  of immortality." (Ch. XIV-20).  Dear friends! Do not relax 
  your efforts. Keep the Divine Flame burning steadily. You are nearing the goal 
  now. Thy Light has come. There is Brahmic aura in your face. You have crossed 
  many peaks and insurmountable summits in the spiritual path by dint of untiring 
  and patient Sadhana. It is highly creditable indeed. You have indeed made remarkable 
  progress. I am highly pleased with you, O Yogindra! But you will have still 
  to ascend one more peak and go through one more narrow pass. This demands still 
  more patient efforts and strength. You will have to melt your Sattwic egoism 
  also. The Brahmakara-Vritti also should die. Then alone you will attain the 
  Bhuma, the highest goal of life. You can do this. I am quite confident.  
 Essence 
  Of Vairagya-Satakam The Vairagya-Satakam, or 
  the Hundred Verses on Renunciation, of Bhartrihari (for particulars about Bhartrihari's 
  life see Chapter 8), are generally grouped into ten divisions, viz., condemnation 
  of desire, futile attempts to abandon sense-objects, condemnation of poverty 
  of a supplicant attitude, delineation of the evanescence of enjoyments, description 
  of the working of Time, comparison of a king to an ascetic, control of mind 
  by stimulating wisdom in it, discrimination of the immutable reality from the 
  mutable, worship of Lord Siva and the ways of a Self-realized ascetic.  Even though you may roam 
  about heaven and earth with a view to obtain riches at the sacrifice of dignity 
  of birth, rank in life and self-respect, your efforts will not be attended with 
  success; and even if perchance you do succeed, your desires will never be satiated. 
  O ignoble man! What horrible sins and crimes have you not committed just to 
  fill the cavity of your stomach and cover this body with a piece of cloth?  Hope is a flowing river. 
  Desires are its water. Longings are its waves. Attachments for objects are the 
  animals of prey living therein. One cannot cross this river because of the countless 
  whirlpools of ignorance in the waters and the precipitous nature of the river 
  banks. Only Yogis of pure mind can cross this river and enjoy the highest Bliss. 
   When you know fully well 
  that all objects of enjoyments in this world are perishable and would leave 
  you some day, why should you not voluntarily renounce them right now and enjoy 
  eternal Bliss?  There is no miracle more 
  wonderful to accomplish than that of a man of discrimination arising from knowledge 
  of Brahman to wholly discard the wealth which has been giving him enjoyment! 
   The lives of ascetics living 
  in mountain caves and meditating upon the Supreme Light are indeed blessed, 
  not of those who live in mansions and indulge in sensual pleasures and vain 
  imagination. The lives of ascetics living on alms, sleeping on the bare ground, 
  self-reliant, and having but a worn-out blanket made up of a hundred patches 
  is indeed the most exalted and blessed, not of those eating rich dishes, sleeping 
  on royal beds and wearing excellent costly attire.  While the insects jump 
  into the blazing fire and the fish sizes the bait attached to the hook through 
  sheer ignorance, man who is supposed to have discrimination, and a knowledge 
  of right and wrong does not abandon sensual pleasures that are attended with 
  various defects! How inscrutable is the power of delusion!  Ignorant are those that 
  think that possessing tall buildings, learned sons, tons of gold, a young beautiful 
  lady as wife, and vigorous health constitute real blessedness, for they are 
  deluded to run into the prison house of worldliness, whereas the truly blessed 
  are those that renounce the world with all its joys and pleasures on account 
  of its transitoriness.  Is it that those Himalayan 
  valleys and the celestial Ganga banks are all engulfed in ruin that shameless 
  men hanker after wealth, women and wine? Ts it that roots and herbs are no more 
  available in those mountain-caves or that fruit-bearing trees are all destroyed 
  that these men always want to revel in filth of worldliness?  Arise, O ignorant man, 
  come with me. Let us go to solitary caves where even the name of that ignoble 
  rich man is not heard. Let us live on roots and herbs and forest fruits; drink 
  the cool, refreshing water of the holy Ganga and lie on soft beds of tender 
  twigs and creepers. Let us repose on stone-beds in mountain-caves, meditate 
  deeply day and night upon the All-merciful Siva, and lead a contented and peaceful 
  life. Let us be happy, let the greedy and the avaricious be miserable. Even 
  if gold equal to the Maha-Meru in weight were conferred upon me, I will 
  not accept it.  Worldly life is always 
  attended with fear, whereas renunciation alone makes man absolutely fearless. 
   Birth is eaten by death, 
  blooming youth by old age, contentment by greed, happiness of self-control by 
  the dangerous wiles of young women, virtues by jealous men, kings by the wicked 
  ministers and power itself by transitoriness. Tell me what on earth is not eaten 
  away by something else?  Health of men is subjected 
  to various physical and mental ailments, wealth to peril of robbers, and whatever 
  is born is carried away by death again and again. Enjoyments are fleeting, life 
  is short and youthful happiness too little to quench one's thirst. Oh, this 
  world is unreal. God alone is real. Renounce desires for worldly enjoyments 
  and attain knowledge of the Self.  How dare you say there 
  is happiness in this world, when you have come forth from within an impure womb, 
  when in youth you are polluted by sensual pleasures and mental distraction, 
  and in old age you become the laughing stock of lustful women?  How wonderful that man 
  goes on doing sinful and vicious acts as usual regardless of everything when 
  he knows that old age is waiting like a vulture to devour him, when diseases 
  afflict his body and mind in various ways, and when days are wasted in useless 
  pursuits!  O little man of little 
  faith! Believe me, this world with all its enjoyments and sensual pleasures, 
  is evanescent and fleeting. Why do you vainly search for happiness in 
  these worldly objects and break your legs? If you really want happiness, do 
  as I tell you. Concentrate. Meditate. Realize. Then you will enjoy the highest 
  happiness.  Where are those lovely 
  cities, powerful kings, their feudatory kings or vassals, their cabinet of shrewd 
  ministers, those beautiful women with moon-like faces, those princes and lords 
  of illimitable wealth and fame, those ministrels and their songs of praise and 
  flattery that once flourished?  How strange again that 
  man wants to enjoy the same pleasures of the senses, eat the same delicious 
  foods, drink the same wine, enjoy the same women, pass the same day and night 
  again, and that disgust for these have not yet arisen!  The span of man's life 
  is very short-only a hundred years. Half of it is spent in sleep, and out of 
  the rest, half is passed away in childhood and old age. Then there are periods 
  of illnesses, bereavements and troubles, and serving others. What happiness 
  can there be for a man in this world?  Who is great-a king or 
  an ascetic? If you are a king of wealth and lands, I too am the king of the 
  highest wisdom. If you are a king of great repute, my reputation resounds in 
  all the four quarters of the globe and is envied greatly by all learned men. 
  If you are cold and indifferent towards me, I too am perfectly indifferent towards 
  you and your riches. If you exercise your kingly powers over riches I do the 
  same over words. If you are a great warrior in the battlefield, I have the skill 
  and the faculty to humble down the proudest of disputants.  O king, if you are rich 
  in royal garment, I am perfectly contented with the bark of trees. He is verily 
  poor whose desires are boundless, while he is truly rich who is contented with 
  his lot.  O let us eat begged food, 
  let the sky be our clothing, let the earth be our bed. We have absolutely nothing 
  to do with the riches.  What a great fool you are 
  to set thyself to winning good graces, so difficult to secure? O mind, wander 
  not hither and thither. Rest in peace. Let things happen, if happen they must. 
  Brood not over the past, nor plan about your future.  O mind, be calm and never 
  desire for sensual enjoyments. Expel delusion and cultivate devotion unto Lord 
  Siva, the Lord of lords, the God of gods, the Yogi of Yogis. Choose to live 
  on the banks of the Ganga, the celestial river.  O mind, never again think 
  of the frail Goddess of Fortune. Plunge thyself into deep and profound meditation 
  on the Atma.  When there is devotion 
  to Lord Siva, and fear of birth and death, when there is not the least attachment 
  for family and excitement for sexual passions, when there is the solitude of 
  the forests where the air breathed by worldly men does not exist, what better 
  life is to be wished for?  Meditate on the supreme, 
  infinite, ageless, effulgent Brahman, bereft of all imperfections and attain 
  supreme Knowledge and Bliss.  When this body is free 
  from disease and old age, when the senses are yet unaffected and life is still 
  young, wise people should leave no stone unturned for the sake of their own 
  supreme good, for it is of little avail to dig a well when the house is already 
  on fire.  In our quest through the 
  nook and corner of the three worlds ever since the beginning of creation, none 
  has come within sight or hearing of a means to control the elephant of his mind, 
  when maddened by the mysterious, deep-rooted infatuation for the female elephant 
  of sense-object.  Sitting in the meditative 
  posture at nights, when all sounds are stilled into silence, somewhere on the 
  banks of the Ganga, and fearful of the horrible miseries of birth and death, 
  crying aloud, "Siva, Siva, Siva" when shall we attain to that ecstatic 
  state which is characterized by copious tears of joy :  If there is a loin-cloth 
  worn out and shredded a hundred times, if one is free from all disquieting thoughts, 
  if there is food, obtained from begging, and sleep on the cremation ground or 
  in the forest, if one is at perfect liberty to wander about alone without any 
  let or hindrance, and if one is steadfast in the festive joy of Yoga, what then 
  is worth the rulership of the three worlds?  
 Inspiring 
  Stories Story of 
  a Prince Once a young prince saw 
  a beautiful princess on the banks of a river, when he was on a hunting excursion. 
  The princess had a philosophical bent of mind. She had mastered several Vedantic 
  books. She was practicing deep meditation on the Atman. The prince approached 
  and wanted her to marry him. She flatly refused. The prince again and again 
  entreated her in various ways. She finally told him: "Please come and see 
  me in my residence after ten days. I shall marry you." The prince also 
  was a student of Vedanta but he had no real sustained Vairagya. He spent 
  sleepless nights and on the morning of the tenth day eagerly proceeded to the 
  palace of the princess.  The young princess had 
  already devised a means to escape from the clutches of marriage. She took a 
  drastic purgative of crouton oil continually for ten days and collected all 
  the motions in ten separate enamel commodes and arranged them all nicely with 
  numbers I to X in a big room covering all the commodes with beautiful silk clothes. 
  She now looked all skin and bones. Her eyes were sunken and she lay down on 
  her bed.  The prince came to meet 
  her with great joy. The maid-servant conducted him to the room, where the princess 
  lay. He could not recognize her. He asked the maid-servant : "Where is 
  the young, beautiful lady? She is not the lady whom I met the other day!" 
  To which the princess replied: "O dear prince, I am the very same lady. 
  I have carefully stored up my beauty in the yonder room. Kindly go with me and 
  see the accumulated beauty there. Come along with me now. I shall show it to 
  you." So saying she took the prince to the room, removed the silk piece 
  and asked the prince to look at her beauty: She added "This is the beauty 
  of my skin and flesh. "The prince was simply stunned. He did not speak 
  a word to the lady. He prostrated himself at her feet and took her as his mother. 
  He threw off his princely robes and retired into the forests. Now his heart 
  was filled with intense Vairagya. He sought the protection of a sage, got instructions 
  from him, practiced rigorous meditation and attained Knowledge of Self.  Story of 
  Yogi Vemanna Vemanna was born in the 
  year 1820, in a small village, in the district of Godavari (Andhradesa). He 
  had a brother by name Ramanna. His parents died, when he was quite a young boy. 
  He was born in a rich family. He was a Reddy by caste.  Vemanna was sent to a primary 
  school. He was not able to prosecute his studies. He fell into evil company 
  and became a rowdy boy. But he was very handsome and active. Ramanna and his 
  wife Jagadishvari liked Vemanna very much. At the age of fifteen, Vemanna became 
  debaucherous. He spent much money for the sake of women. Yet his brother and 
  sister-in-law liked him very much.  Ramanna and his wife wanted 
  to correct the ways of Vemanna. They stopped giving him any money. So Vemanna 
  stole at night the ornaments of his sister-in-law and gave them to a prostitute. 
  When his sister-in-law came to know of the loss of jewels, she asked Vemanna: 
  "Where are my jewels?" Vemanna replied: "As you did not give 
  me money, I took them and gave away to my beloved." She did not speak a 
  word. She did not even inform her husband of the loss of jewels. She liked Vemanna 
  very much. She locked up all her ornaments in the safe.  The prostitute urged Vemanna 
  to bring some more money or ornaments. So again at the dead of night Vemanna 
  woke up from his bed and tried to remove some of the ornaments from the neck 
  of his sister-in-law. She was wearing only the sacred ornament that was tied 
  round her neck at the time of her marriage. Vemanna wanted to remove at least 
  this ornament. When be was attempting to remove it, she woke up and caught hold 
  of his hand and asked him why he came to her bedroom at mid-night. He replied 
  in a daring manner: "my beloved asked me to bring some ornaments: I came 
  here to take them." She asked Vemanna to get out of the room at once. Then 
  he cried and fell at her feet. Jagadishvari prayed to God to give Vemanna good 
  Buddhi (intellect) and make him a pure, virtuous soul. Then he promised 
  to obey her words. Vemanna fully assured her to do so.  Jagadishvari said : "Vemanna, 
  ask the girl to stand naked in front of you. Let her back be turned towards 
  you. Then ask her to bend down and take the jewels from your hands by passing 
  her hands through her thighs." Vemanna promised to do so and took the ornaments 
  to the prostitute's house.  He asked her to do in the 
  manner his sister-in-law had instructed. While she was bending down, he saw 
  very clearly her private parts. At once Vairagya dawned in his mind. He retraced 
  his steps to his house with the ornaments in his hands and related to his sister-in-law 
  all that had happened. He said: "My dear sister-in-law, thank you so much 
  for all your kind acts. I am a changed man now. There is no real happiness in 
  this world. It is all jugglery of Maya. I am going now in quest of real 
  happiness." He left the house at once and went to a Kali temple near his 
  village and sat near the image of Kali.  Now it so happened that 
  for some years a man named Abhiramayya was praying to Kali for Her Darshan. 
  One day she appeared in his dream and said: "Come tomorrow at midnight. 
  I will give you Darshan." But the unfortunate devotee could not come the 
  next day. When Kali came, Vemanna was there. She asked Vemanna to ask a boon 
  of her. Vemanna said : "O Mother! Give me Brahma-Jnana." Mother Kali 
  then initiated him into the mysteries of Jnana. From that day onwards, Vemanna 
  became a virtuous man with great devotion, Yogic powers and Jnana.  In the course of his wanderings, 
  Vemanna went to Cuddappah. He lived in a forest near Cuddappah. He planted various 
  fruit bearing trees, melons, cucumbers, etc. The cucumbers were all filled with 
  gold. Vemanna built a golden temple in Sri-Sailam with this gold. Even today 
  this golden temple of Sri-Sailam contains the famous Jyotirlinga of 
  Mallikarjuna. It is a famous place of pilgrimage. One day some thieves came 
  to rob the cucumbers containing gold. They all became senseless due to the Yogic 
  powers of Vemanna.  Once, Vemanna entered the 
  cottage of a poor Brahmin at mid-night and was sleeping on his bed. He answered 
  the calls of nature on the bed itself. That portion of the bed that was soiled 
  by the excreta became transmuted into gold.  Vemanna cast off his physical 
  sheath in 1865. He wrote several books in Telugu on Yoga, chief among them being 
  Vemanna-Tattva-Jnanam and Vemanna-Jivamritam.  Story of 
  a Servant Narendra Singh Bahadur, 
  the Raja of Indrapur, had a servant named Hira Singh. Hira Singh resolved to 
  break open the treasury of the Raja and steal away the ornaments and gold. Accordingly 
  one day at the dead of night, he entered the bed-room of Narendra Singh on his 
  way to the treasury, when he overheard a conversation between the Raja Sahib 
  and the Rani. Lalitakumari, the Rani, asked the king: "When are you going 
  to get our daughter Suratkumari married? She is quite a grown-up girl now. We 
  cannot postpone the marriage any longer." The king replied : "I am 
  trying my level best during the last two years, but I am not able to get a suitable 
  match." The Rani would not accept such an answer, but again and again pressed 
  the Raja to yield to her wish. At last the Raja said : "Lalita, I shall 
  offer Surat in marriage to the first Yogi I would come across in the neighbouring 
  forest along with half of my estate tomorrow morning."  Hira Singh who was all 
  the while keenly over-hearing this conversation thought within himself: "Why 
  this hazardous attempt then? If I am caught, I will be severely punished. Let 
  me go to the forest and sit like a Yogi. I will get the girl and half the estate 
  also quite easily." Immediately he dressed himself as a Yogi, repaired 
  to the forest and sat in Samadhi on Padmasana with closed eyes. He did not shake 
  the body even a bit. The Raja went to the forest the next morning and at last 
  came to the place where this Yogi was sitting. He waited for a long time. The 
  Yogi did not open his eyes. He gave one the impression that he was immersed 
  in Samadhi. After full one hour he opened his eyes. The Raja fell prostrate 
  at his feet and sincerely begged him to visit palace. The Yogi finally condescended 
  to do so.  The Raja took the Yogi 
  to the Durbar hall, seated him on the gaddi, and washed his feet. The 
  Raja was fanning him. Then the Raja with folded hands addressed the Yogi thus 
  : "O mighty Yogi blessed Soul, we have a beautiful girl. Kindly accept 
  her in marriage together with half of my estate." Now real discrimination 
  dawned upon the Yogi. Hira Singh who was wearing the false garb of a saint began 
  to think very seriously and feelingly : "I am now honoured by this Raja 
  and Rani simply because I am wearing the garb of a Yogi. If I were a Yogi and 
  saint with divine virtues and God-Consciousness, how much more should I be held 
  in esteem and honour by not merely this one petty chief but by countless kings, 
  emperors and queens, and how many such princesses and kingdoms should I acquire?" 
  At once he left the gaddi and the palace with a changed heart. God's 
  grace descended upon him now. His heart was burning with intense Vairagya born 
  of discrimination. Tears of joy flooded his eyes. Hair on the body stood on 
  ends. No sensual object of the world could tempt him now. He went back to the 
  dense forests with a heart filled with righteous disgust for the world, did 
  intense and constant meditation and attained Self-Realization.  Story of 
  Lord Buddha Some 2500 years ago there 
  lived in North India a Raja named Suddhodhana. He had a son named Gautama, a 
  fine and handsome youth. At the age of sixteen he was married to a beautiful 
  wife named Yasodhara and had a little son named Rahula. He lived in fine palace 
  enjoying all the splendours and pleasures befitting a royal prince.  Beyond the bare fact that 
  from the age of sixteen right up to the age of twenty-nine he lived the life 
  of a householder nothing can be said about the early life of Gautama, who was 
  destined in course of time to shine forth as a brilliant pole-star in the spiritual 
  firmament of the world.  Prince Gautama, also called 
  Siddhartha, had always been a wise and thoughtful lad. Gentle in his speech, 
  kind hearted, and full of mercy to all living beings, when one fine morning 
  he accompanied his royal father for a ride on horse-back, he felt quite pleased 
  and happy. But the next moment he saw a plough man beating a poor bullock that 
  had a sore on its back till it dropped down with intense pain and agony. As 
  he rode along a little further he saw a dove being eaten away by a hungry hawk. 
  Then he saw another dove eating some flies. Gautama went back home full of sorrow. 
   After a few days Gautama 
  had a dream. He saw an old feeble man unable to walk and hardly able to stand 
  and groaning under the burden of old age. And a voice addressed Gautama: "Thou 
  wilt also get old and feeble like this old man, O Gautama!"  He then saw a man suffering 
  from some dire malady and crying aloud unable to bear the torturing pain. And 
  the voice said to Gautama: "Thou wilt also get ill and full of pain like 
  this, O Gautama." Then he saw another man lying dead on the ground. And 
  the voice again said to Gautama : "You must also die one day, O Gautama." 
   Supreme Vairagya dawned 
  upon Gautama now. He fully realized the utter transitoriness of life and leaving 
  his home, wife and child and all the pleasures and joys of life, he retired 
  into the forest and became an ascetic. For full seven years he lived in the 
  woods trying to find out some means to put an end to pain, sin and sorrow in 
  the world, to seek something higher and nobler than the things of the sense 
  conditioned in time.  Thus we learn that Siddhartha's 
  reason for renunciation was his profound conviction that all worldly pleasures 
  and happiness were fleeting, and his intense longing to attain to peace and 
  calm which nothing could shake or end. Of course he sought this first for himself 
  only, but afterwards he thought that what had given him peace and calm would 
  be equally beneficial to others as well.  One night as he sat meditating 
  under a Bodhi Tree (the Tree of Buddhahood), Truth dawned upon him. He realized 
  that man's life is full of pain, that desire is the cause of pain that pain 
  can be ended by putting an end to all desires, and that desire can be ended 
  by right thought, word and deed. From this memorable day onwards, he came to 
  be known as Buddha or the "Enlightened."  Buddha was one of the noblest 
  and kindest men who ever lived. His religion is called Buddhism. He taught the 
  world to be good and kind to all beings including animals and crawling creatures 
  and that it was a sin to hurt anyone. He had a large following. Even today Buddhism 
  is considered to be a great religion by all right-thinking men.  Story of 
  Raja Bhartrihari Once when Raja Bhartrihari 
  was on his throne, a great Tapasvin or Rishi came to his court. Bhartrihari 
  at once got up from his seat, and prostrating himself before the Tapasvin began 
  to serve him in various ways. The sage being extremely pleased with the Raja's 
  demeanour, gave him a fruit that could bestow upon the eater immortality and 
  peace.  Now Raja Bhartrihari had 
  a very beautiful queen of whom he was very enamoured and whom he very dearly 
  loved. He thought that the only person who deserved this fruit was his young 
  queen and none else, and so he took this God-sent gift to her and offered her 
  the same. This young queen, though for all practical purposes the beloved of 
  the Raja, had a paramour in the person of the charioteer who used to take her 
  for drives now and then. She therefore took this fruit to him and gave him the 
  same. Again this charioteer had a prostitute whom also he loved, and, accordingly, 
  he gave the fruit to her.  Now, this prostitute thought 
  that the only person who best deserved this fruit was Raja Bhartrihari himself, 
  and so she took this fruit in her hands went to the Raja's palace and offered 
  it to him. Raja Bhartrihari was simply mystified. He was unable to solve the 
  problem as to how it could be possible for this prostitute to get the fruit 
  that was the rightful possession of his queen.  After deep thought and 
  great deliberation, he was able to solve the problem by himself. Just before 
  this incident, Bhartrihari's brother who came to know of the queen's love for 
  the king's charioteer had told Bhartrihari that the queen was an unchaste lady 
  and that it was a great shame on the fair name of the royal family to keep a 
  woman as queen in the palace when she secretly loved the king's charioteer. 
  But the young queen rose equal to the occasion and brought forth evidences to 
  disprove the validity of the charge against her and was able to prevail upon 
  the king to exile his brother from the kingdom. After due investigation into 
  the whole matter, with all the dexterity that he could command, Bhartrihari 
  came to the conclusion that, after all, the charge brought against his queen 
  by his brother was true and that he had been fooled by a woman to take the extreme 
  step of exiling his own brother who loved him so dearly and who held as high 
  the fair name of the royal family by zealously guarding it from insinuation 
  and blot.  True Vairagya immediately 
  dawned upon the king. He now thought that there was none in the world who was 
  really dear to another, no, not even one's own wife or brother or friend. He 
  became convinced that in fact these are one's real enemies. He felt extreme 
  disgust for the world and its pleasures and at once left his kingdom, wife and 
  children and retired into the forests to lead a life of a Sannyasin. He did 
  profound meditation for many years and finally attained knowledge of Self. He 
  wrote a book generally known as 'Bhartrihari's Vairagya Satakam, or the Hundred 
  Verses of Renunciation' a perusal of which will produce immediate disgust for 
  things mundane and induce one to renounce everything and lead the life of a 
  recluse.  Story of 
  Yayati There once was a sagely 
  king named Yayati, who lived for 1,000 years, enjoying all the pleasures a king 
  of his position could command. When old age attacked him, and he had still great 
  desire to enjoy all royal pleasures for some more years, he asked his sons one 
  by one to take upon himself this old age and give him his youth in return, assuring 
  him that after another 1,000 years he would return the youth and take back his 
  decrepitude. Not one of them was willing to accept the offer except his youngest 
  son named, Puru.  Puru said with all humility 
  that he was quite willing to do as his father wished him and accordingly gave 
  his youth to his father and got in return old age and its consequent weakness. 
  Yayati, being exceedingly delighted with his new youth, began again to indulge 
  in sensual pleasures. He enjoyed himself to the full extent of his desires and 
  to the full limit of his powers and as much as he desired without violating 
  the precepts of religion. He was very happy, but only one thought troubled him 
  and that was the thought that the one thousand years would soon come to an end. 
   When the fixed time came 
  to an end, he came to his son Puru and addressed him thus: "O son, I have 
  enjoyed with your youth to the full extent of my desires and to the full limit 
  of my powers and all according to their seasons. But desires never die. They 
  are never satiated by indulgence. By indulgence they flame up like the sacrificial 
  fire with ghee poured into it. If one becomes the sole lord of all the earth 
  with its paddy, oats, gems, beasts and women, still it will not be considered 
  by him enough. Therefore, the thirst for enjoyment should be abandoned. The 
  thirst for enjoyments which is difficult to cast off by the wicked, which does 
  not fail even with failing life, is truly a fatal disease in man. To get rid 
  of this thirst is real happiness. My mind was attached to the pleasures of life 
  for full one thousand years. My thirst for them, however, without being 
  abated, is daily being increased. Therefore, I shall get rid of it.  I shall fix my mind on 
  Brahma, and becoming peaceful and having no attachment, I shall pass the rest 
  of my days in the forest with the innocent deers." So saying he installed 
  Puru on the throne after giving him back his youth and retired into the forest 
  to lead the life of an ascetic.  Story of 
  Hemachuda There was a king named 
  Muktachuda in olden times. He ruled the kingdom of Dasarna. He had two sons, 
  Hemachuda and Manichuda. They both were very beutiful, and virtuous. They had 
  good behaviour and conduct. They were also very proficient in all arts. They 
  both went to the mountain Sahya with attendants and weapons for hunting. They 
  shot many tigers and wild animals. All of a sudden there was a terrible sand-storm. 
  Immense darkness prevailed. One could not see the other person.  Hemachuda, anyhow, managed 
  to reach the hermitage of a sage which was full of fruit trees. He saw 
  in the ashram a handsome maiden. He was quite astonished to see a fearless girl 
  in that solitary forest. He asked the maiden "Who are you? Who is your 
  father? Why are you alone here? How did you develop this courage?" She 
  replied politely, "Welcome, O Prince. Take your seat. Take a little rest. 
  You seem to be much tired. Kindly take these fruits, and nuts. I shall relate 
  my story." The I Prince ate those fruits and nuts and rested for a while. 
   The girl then began "O 
  Prince, hearken to my story with rapt attention. I am the God-child of sage 
  Vyaghrapada who is adored by all, whom has conquered the world by his severe 
  austerities, and who has attained liberation. My name is Hemalekha. Vidyutprabha, 
  a celestial nymph of matchless beauty and indescribable splendour one day came 
  to the river Vena for bathing. Sushena, king of the Vengas, also came there. 
  Sushena was captivated by the enchanting beauty of Vidyutprabha. The celestial 
  nymph was also infatuated by the handsome figure of the king. Sushena pleaded 
  his love towards Vidyutprabha. She responded. The king spent some time with 
  her. Afterwards he returned to his capital.  Vidyutprabha soon brought 
  forth a child. She left the child there as she was afraid of her husband, and 
  went to her place. I was that child. Vyaghrapada went to the river for his daily 
  ablutions. He saw me and took pity on me. He brought me up like a mother. I 
  regard him as my father. I serve him with reverence. Through his grace I have 
  become fearless here. My father will return presently. Please wait a little. 
  Pay your respects to him and obtain his blessings." The intelligent girl 
  understood the heart of the Prince and said : "O Prince, do not get disheartened. 
  You can gratify your wish. My father will grant your wish."  Immediately the sage Vyaghrapada 
  entered with flowers for worship. The Prince got up and prostrated himself before 
  the sage. The sage understood that the Prince was in love with the girl. He 
  gave Hemalekha in marriage to the Prince. The Prince returned with her to his 
  city. His father was very much delighted. He celebrated their marriage with 
  pomp and splendour.  The Prince loved Hemalekha 
  immensely. He was very much attached to her. But he noticed that she was rather 
  indifferent to sensual pleasures. He asked her one day "O dear Hemalekha: 
  What is the matter with you? I am very much attached to you. Why do you not 
  reciprocate my love? Nothing seems to have any effect on you. You are dispassionate. 
  How can I enjoy when you have such an attitude of mind? You always sit with 
  closed eyes like a statue. You do not laugh, play and joke with me. Kindly speak 
  out your heart. Be frank."  Hemalekha replied respectfully: 
  "O Prince; Hear me. What is love? What is dislike? As this is not clear 
  to my mind, I am always reflecting over it. I have come to no definite conclusion. 
  Please enlighten me on this point. I entreat you."  Hemachuda replied with 
  a smile "it is true that women possess an innocent mind. Even animals understand 
  what is like and dislike. We see that they like pleasing things and dislike 
  unpleasant objects. Beauty gives us pleasure; ugliness gives us pain. Why do 
  you waste your time daily on this?"  Hemalekha replied : "It 
  is true that women have no independent power of thinking. So is it not your 
  duty to clear my doubts? If you throw light, I will leave off thinking and be 
  attached to you always. O Prince, you said that like and dislike or love and 
  hatred arise out of objects which give us pleasure and pain. But the same object 
  gives us pleasure and pain on account of time, circumstances and environments. 
  What is your decision then? Kindly give me your definite answer. Fire is very 
  pleasant in winter but in summer it is very terrible. You cannot go near the 
  fire. The same fire gives pleasure in cold countries and pain in hot countries. 
  The quantity of fire gives us different results. Similar is the case with wealth, 
  wife, son, mother-country and so on. These induce positive sufferings and misery. 
  Why is it that your father Muktachuda, despite his possession of immense wealth, 
  sons and wife, is always sorrowful? Others are very happy even without these. 
  Worldly happiness is mixed with misery, pain, fear and anxiety. So it cannot 
  be called happiness at all. Misery is personal and impersonal or internal and 
  external. The external one is caused by the impact of the elements on the body. 
  The internal one is born out of desire. It has connection with the mind. Of 
  these, the internal one is more formidable. It is the seed or cause for all 
  sufferings. The whole world is drowned in such internal misery. The tree called 
  misery has desire as the strong and never-failing seed. Even Indra and other 
  gods are impelled by this desire. They carry out its instructions day and night. 
  If there is no desire, you cannot experience any pleasure. Such mixture of happiness 
  and misery is enjoyed even by the insects, worms, dogs. Do you think that man's 
  happiness is greater than this? The happiness of the insects is superior to 
  that of man. Because desire is not mixed in their pleasures; it is unalloyed. 
  Whereas in man a little pleasure is found in the midst of thousands of ungratified 
  desires. This cannot be called happiness. Man feels happy by embracing his wife, 
  but by pressing her limbs too much she feels uneasy. After sporting they are 
  exhausted. What happiness have you in these sensual perishable objects. Kindly 
  explain. O Prince! This sort of happiness is enjoyed even by dogs, donkeys and 
  pigs. But if you say that you are happy by looking at my physical beauty, this 
  happiness is imaginary and illusory like the embracing of a lady in dream." 
   A certain beautiful Prince 
  had a very handsome wife. He was very much attached to her. She on the contrary 
  was in love with the Prince's servant. She was cheating the Prince by foul means. 
  The servant would give some intoxicating drugs in the wine to the Prince. Then 
  he would send an ugly servant-maid to the Prince. He himself would sport with 
  the Prince's wife. The Prince under intoxication was thinking 'I am very fortunate. 
  I have got the most beautiful lady in the world.' Many days passed thus. One 
  day the servant forgot to mix the narcotic in the wine. The Prince also did 
  not drink much that day. He joined the ugly woman when he fell victim to passion. 
  He now found out that she was the servant-maid. He asked her where his dear 
  wife was?  She kept silent at first. 
  Then Prince drew the sword and threatened to kill her if she did not reveal 
  the whole truth. She told him everything and showed the place where his beautiful 
  wife was with the servant. The Prince said "What a fool am I? I have degraded 
  myself by drinking. Whoever places too much love on woman, becomes despicable. 
  Just as a bird is not fixed to any one tree, so also woman is not fixed to one 
  man. She has a fickle, unsteady mind. I have become a beast. I have lost my 
  power of discrimination. I regarded my wife more valuable than my very life 
  itself. A man who is attached to a woman and who yields to a woman is a veritable 
  donkey indeed. Woman's beauty is evanescent like the autumnal sky. I did not 
  know woman's nature till now. She goes to the dirty servant and she has left 
  me who am ever attached to her, and who is faithful to her. She pretended to 
  show love to me like a dramatic actress. I am cheated. The servant is ugly in 
  all his limbs. What beauty does she find in him? The Prince became disgusted 
  with everything. He left the kingdom and went to a forest."  Hemalekha continued: "Therefore 
  O Prince: beauty is a mental creation only. Beauty is mind born. Beauty is the 
  result of mental conception. Just as you behold beauty in me, others find even 
  better charm in an ugly woman. On seeing a woman her reflection is formed in 
  the mirror of his mind if a man thinks of this beauty constantly, desire is 
  stimulated in that part of the body which is subject to impulse. That man in 
  whom the desire is thus stimulated enjoys sensual pleasure, whereas he whose 
  desire is not stimulated does not care to see even the most handsome girl. The 
  cause for this is the constant meditation on beauty or woman. Children and ascetics 
  do not meditate or think this. Therefore they do not have any desire for sensuous 
  pleasures. Those who find pleasure in the company of a particular woman create 
  in their minds beauty according to their ideas, whether the woman is ugly or 
  most beautiful. They project their ideas of beauty in the woman. If you ask 
  how beauty is found in an ugly woman and how there can be joy without beauty 
  I can only say that passionate man in his infatuation is blind. Cupid is painted 
  blind. The passionate man finds the beauty of Rambha in the ugliest woman. 
  There can be no beauty without desire. If beauty be natural like sourness, sweetness, 
  bitterness in substances, then why is it not found in children and small babies? 
  Therefore beauty is created by the mind only."  "People think beautiful 
  this physical body which is composed of flesh; filled with blood, built of nerves, 
  covered with skin, a cage of bones, over-grown with hair, full of bile, phlegm, 
  a box of excreta and urine, created out of blood and semen, born through the 
  urinary passage! How can those persons, who find pleasure in this, be superior 
  to worms born in filth? O Prince, you find my physical body to be handsome. 
  Just analyze this body part by part and think over each part. Think over every 
  part of sweet and delicious things. All things we eat are changed into abdominal 
  dirt. When such is the case what is lovable and delighting?"  Hemachuda heard the nectar-like 
  instructions of Hemalekha with great attention and interest. He developed strong 
  Vairagya and Viveka, meditated on the all pure, iimmortal Atman and became liberated. 
  Manichuda also learnt the truth from his brother; Muktachuda from his son and 
  his wife from her daughter-in-law. The ministers and citizens of that town became 
  wise. Even birds were uttering words of wisdom in that town. Sages Vamadeva 
  and others noticed that all in that town, including animals and birds were learned 
  and wise, and called the city as Vidyanagara, or the town of Wisdom.  
 Appendix 
  PRASNOTTARI 
  of Sri Sankaracharya Q. 1. Who is really enslaved? 
  A. One who is attached to the objects of the senses.
 Q. 2. What is freedom (or 
  liberation)? A. Non-attachment to worldly objects.
 Q. 3. What is the most 
  horrible hell? A. Your own body.
 Q. 4. What is the path 
  to heaven? A. The total annihilation of all desires.
 Q. 5. What is the gate 
  to hell? A. Woman.
 Q. 6. What leads to heaven? 
  A. Non-violence or harmlessness to all creatures.
 Q.7. Who are the enemies? 
  A. Our own Indriyas. They are our friends when subjugated.
 Q. 8. Who is really poor? 
  A. One who has many desires.
 Q. 9. Who is rich? A. He who has full contentment.
 Q. 10. What is nectar? 
  A. Delightful desirelessness.
 Q. 11. What is the real 
  betters? A. Egoistic sense of "mineness" and "thineness."
 Q. 12. What is that which 
  intoxicates as if it were wine? A. A woman.
 Q. 13. Who is the most 
  blind? A. One actuated by lust.
 Q. 14. What is the deadliest 
  of all poisons? A. All sensual enjoyments.
 Q. 15. Who is miserable 
  for ever? A. He who is attached to worldly enjoyments.
 Q.16. What is beyond the 
  reach of everybody's knowledge? A. A woman's heart and her doings.
 Q. 17. Who is a beast? 
  A. One without knowledge.
 Q. 18. Whose company should 
  we shun off? A. The company of the fools, the mean minded, the wicked and the sinful.
 Q. 19. What is at the root 
  of degradation? A. Begging.
 Q. 20. What is at the root 
  of becoming great? A. Never to beg.
 Q. 21. Who is really born? 
  A. He who has no birth again.
 Q. 22. Who is really dead? 
  A. One who is not to die again.
 Q. 23. Who is the greatest 
  of all enemies? A. Kama (desire), anger, untruth, greed and craving.
 Q. 24. Who is not gratified 
  by (all) objects of (enjoyment)? A. Desire (lust).
 Q. 25. What is at the root 
  of all miseries? A. The sense of "mineness" or I-ness."
 Q. 26. Who are the real 
  dacoits? A. Evil desires.
 Q. 27. Who is the beast 
  of all beasts? A. One who does not fulfil his duties and has no knowledge of the Self.
 Q. 28. What is fleeting 
  like-lightning? A. Wealth, youth and life.
 Q. 29. What should be constantly 
  thought of? A. The illusory nature of the universe and the existence of Brahman.
 Q. 30. What is real action? 
  A. That which is pleasing to Lord Krishna.
 
 Lord Buddha's 
  Advice Lord Buddha describes the 
  amount of suffering which men endure. "The transmigration (Samsara) of 
  beings, O mendicants", he says "has its beginning in eternity. The 
  opening cannot be found from which, having come forth, being led astray through 
  ignorance, bound by the thirst for existence, stray and wander. What do ye think, 
  O mendicants, which of the two is more, the water which is in the tour great 
  oceans, or the tears which have poured from you and have been shed for you, 
  while ye wandered and went astray in this long transmigration, and sorrowed 
  and wept, because that which ye hated was your portion, and that which ye loved 
  was not your portion? A mother's death, a father's death, a brother's death, 
  a sister's death, a son's death, a daughter's ass death, the loss of relations, 
  the loss of property, all this ye have experienced through long ages. And while 
  ye experienced this through long ages, more tears have poured from you and have 
  been shed from you, while ye strayed and wandered on this long pilgrimage, and 
  sorrowed and wept because that which ye hated was your portion and that which 
  ye loved was not your portion, than all the water which is in the Four Great 
  Oceans".  "A wise man should 
  avoid unchastity as if it were a burning pit of live coals; one who is not able 
  to live in a state of celibacy, should not commit adultery".  "Never associate with 
  loved or with unloved objects;  Not to see the loved and 
  to see the unloved is pain.  Therefore hold nothing 
  dear, for the loss of the loved is evil;  No bonds have they to whom 
  nothing is loved or unloved.  From what is loved is born 
  grief, from the loved is born fear;  To the man freed from loving 
  anything there is no grief, much less fear.  From affection is born 
  grief, from affection is born fear;  To the man freed from affection 
  there is no grief, much less fear.  From pleasure is born grief, 
  from pleasure is born fear;  To the man freed from pleasure 
  there is no grief, much less fear."  From desire is born grief, 
  from desire is born fear;  To the man freed from desire 
  there is no grief, much less fear.  "What laughter, what 
  joy is there, since there is always the burning?  Enveloped in darkness, 
  seek ye not a lamp?  Behold the varicoloured 
  figure, the accumulated mass of wounds.  Afflicted full of wishes, 
  to which there is no firmness, no stability.  This form (body) is decrepit, 
  a nest of diseases, decaying:  The putrid body is breaking 
  up, for life ends in death.  These grayish bones, which 
  are cast away gourds in autumn,-  Having seen them, what 
  pleasure remains?  The preoccupied man while 
  in the act of gathering flowers,  Does death seize and carry 
  off, as a great flood the sleeping village.  The preoccupied man while 
  in the act of gathering flowers,  Does the God of Death get 
  into his power, when unstated with lusts".  - Dhammapada 
   
 Selections 
  From Viveka-Chudamani of Sri Sankaracharya 1. The man who having with 
  difficulties acquired a human births with a male body and knowledge of the scriptures 
  through delusion does not exert for liberation commits suicide, for he destroys 
  himself by clinging to unreal objects.  2. What greater fool is 
  there than the man who having obtained a rare human birth and a male body too, 
  neglects to attain the goal of his life?  3. Vairagya is the desire 
  to abandon all the transitory enjoyments from the physical body up to Brahma, 
  the creator, having already known their defects and shortcomings from observation, 
  hearing, etc.  4. Those fools who are 
  tied to these sense objects by the thick cord of attachment, so very difficult 
  to be broken are forcibly carried along by the messenger, their own Karma, to 
  heaven, earth and hell.  5. The deer, elephant, 
  moth, fish and black bee-these five meet with their death, being bound to one 
  or other of the five senses, viz., sound, etc., through attachment. What then 
  of man who is bound by all the senses jointly.  6. In point of virulence 
  sense-objects are more fatal than the poison of cobra even. Poison kills one 
  who drinks it, but sensuous objects can kill one who even looks at them through 
  the eye's.  7. He who is free from 
  the terrible bondage of the hankering of the sense objects so very difficult 
  to get rid of is alone fit for liberation; none else even though he is well 
  versed in the six systems of philosophy.  8. Those seekers after 
  liberation who are endowed with only an apparent dispassion (Vairagya) and are 
  endeavouring to cross the ocean of Samsara or conditioned existence are seized 
  by the stark of hankering; being caught by the neck and forcibly dragged into 
  the middle and drowned.  9. He who has slain the 
  stark of desire with the sword of supreme or mature dispassion, crosses the 
  ocean of Samsara without obstacles.  10. Know that death rapidly 
  overtakes that stupid man who treads along the dreadful path of sensual pleasure; 
  but whoever treads the right path under the instruction of a Guru who looks 
  after his spiritual welfare, also his own reasoning attains his end-know this 
  to be true.  11. If thou hast really 
  an yearning for liberation, abandon sense-objects from a good distance as if 
  they were poison and always develop carefully the nectar-like virtues of contentment, 
  compassion, forgiveness, sincerity, tranquillity and self-control.  12. Whoever passionately 
  attends to the feeding of his own body which is an object for jackals, fishes 
  and vultures, to enjoy, and ignores what should always be attempted viz., liberation 
  from the bondage of ignorance without beginning commits suicide thereby.  13. Whoever tries to realize 
  the Self by nourishing his body is like one who crosses a river by catching 
  hold of a crocodile, thinking it to be a log of wood.  14. For one desirous of 
  liberation the infatuation over things like the body is dire death. He who is 
  free from such infatuation is alone fit for liberation.  15. Conquer the infatuation 
  over the objects like the body, wife, children, and so on. Having conquered 
  it the sages attain that supreme state of Vishnu.  16. This gross body is 
  to be condemned for it is made up of skin, flesh, blood, arteries, veins, fat, 
  marrow and bones and is filled with filth.  17. The physical body has 
  got various restrictions regarding caste and order of life. It is subject to 
  various diseases. It is worshipped and honoured sometimes. It is censured and 
  insulted at other times.  
 The Mysterious 
  Palace of Brahman The mason builds a house 
  out of stones, small bricks, lime and cement. He keeps big pieces of stones 
  in the construction of the main walls and puts small bricks and pebbles to fill 
  up the crevices in the wall, plasters the wall with lime and eventually puts 
  a layer of cement. He polishes the wall with finishing touches and gives a colouring 
  in the end to attract the eyes. Even so, the Divine Architect, God, has constructed 
  this human body with the help of Prakriti. The bones represent the big stones; 
  the muscles represent the pebbles; the fat the bricks; dermis or white skin 
  the lime; the skin or epidermis the cement; the pigment of the skin the colouring 
  matter. Look at the marvellous skill of the Divine Engineer, Engineer of all 
  engineers. The muscles are fixed to the bones by means of tendons. The joints 
  are kept intact by ligaments. Deposition of fat gives good shape to the limbs, 
  trunk and abdomen and gives beauty. The pigment in the skin attracts the eyes 
  of the out lookers and people are deluded by false beauty of the perishable 
  body. They cling to this body and through this clinging they are caught up in 
  the round of births and deaths.  The body is a mysterious 
  moving palace. His Divine Majesty Brahman dwells here. Brahman is the Immortal 
  soul or Atma. Buddhi or intellect is His Prime Minister. Mind is the commander. 
  The ten Indriyas are the soldiers or servants. The eyes are the marvellous windows 
  of the palace. Mouth is the way out. Eyes and ears are the way in. The Devatas 
  who preside over the Indriyas, eyes ears, nose, etc., are the gatekeepers.  The nerves are the wires. 
  Brain is the receivers It receives all messages. It contains a wonderful switch-board 
  also. Prana is the electricity. The bones are the mountains. The veins are the 
  rivers. The bladder is the ocean. The bowels and urethra are the sewers. The 
  heart is the water-works. The arteries are the pipes. The astral heart is the 
  garden of Vrindavan, Susbuma is the Kunjgalli of Vrindavan. Jiva is sweet Radha 
  who wants to unite with Lord Krishna, or Brahman, through Yoga Samadhi. Sahasrara, 
  or the crown of the head, is thplace where Radha and Krishna, the individual 
  soul and Brahman, unite. The different Chakras are the resting places with Kadamba 
  tree.  The body is made up of 
  five elements. Bone is nothing but earth or clay. Blood or flesh is nothing 
  but water. The shining in the skin and the eyes is nothing but fire. The Prana 
  that moves in the nostrils and lungs is nothing but air. This air rests on ether. 
  Ether is the support for all the other four elements. Air, fire, water and earth 
  have emanated from ether. When the body is buried, the bones become one with 
  the earth. They go back to their source. Through the practice of Laya-Chintan 
  if you reduce the earth into water, water into fire, fire into air, and air 
  into ether, the body does not really exist. It dwindles into airy nothing. Through 
  jugglery of Maya you perceive this body. In reality the imperishable soul which 
  is the support for this body and mind really exists.  The body is inert and insentient. 
  It remains as a log of wood as soon as the Prana leaves the body. It appears 
  to be sentient through contact with Prana, mind and reflected intelligence, 
  just as a ball of iron appears to be a ball of fire through contact with fire. 
  The reflected intelligence, or Chaitanya, galvanizes the inert intellect 
  first, as it is very subtle, and as the intellect is in close contact with it, 
  and through intellect this inert body also is galvanized. So the body moves, 
  feels and does various sorts of actions. After all, mortal flesh is clay, bone 
  is only a modification of earth. O Man: Do not cling to this body of flesh and 
  network of bones. Give up infatuation for this body. Destroy ignorance. Realize 
  the Immortal Self and be free.  The Lord is hiding himself 
  in the inner chambers of this mysterious palace. He is playing the game of 'hide 
  and seek' with you. Find Him out. Search Him out. Search Him in the chambers 
  of your heart by withdrawing the mind and the Indriyas from the external objects 
  and practicing concentration and meditation.   
 
A DIVINE LIFE SOCIETY PUBLICATIONThird Edition: 1983 (5,000 Copies)
 World Wide Web (WWW) Edition : 1998
 WWW site: http://www.SivanandaDlshq.org/  This WWW reprint is for free distribution © The Divine Life Trust Society    Published ByTHE DIVINE LIFE SOCIETY
 P.O. Shivanandanagar249 192
 Distt. Tehri-Garhwal, Uttar Pradesh,
 Himalayas, India.
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