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Bhakti Yoga-Devotional Service to the Supreme Lord Sri Krishna

Bhakti Yoga-Devotional Service to the Supreme Lord Sri Krishna
Gopis performing Devotional Service to the Lordships Sri Sri Radha Krishna

Pictures of the week!

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Am I this car?

1who's driving mercedes car thinks he's that car&sees d rickshaw
driver as rickshaw.Actually both r human beings but this man in nice
car identifies himself with this car.Likewise v have white/black
bodies&v identify ourself with this body.But v r spirit souls&only our
consciousness is spread over d body.

--
Yours
Dinesh
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The Plague

Filed under: Reader  Article's source: http://www.16rounds.com/
brain-exam-flickr
The very word plague brings dread. We recall medieval images of the Black Death, scourging fourteenth-century Asia and Europe. We envision rampant rats and dying children.
Late in 1994, as plague broke out in the Indian state of Gujarat, people fled in the hundreds of thousands. Neighboring countries sealed their borders. Airlines cancelled flights. Even doctors grabbed their stethoscopes and scrambled for their lives.
Now, of course, life is back to normal. The outbreak had been quelled. We're no longer in the fourteenth century; the plague bacillus yields to tetracycline.
Yet all of us find ourselves still encircled by death. Rats!
It may be today from plague or tomorrow from cancer, old age, a car crash, an armed burglar. All we're doing is putting death off—we think.
Everyone has an appointed time to live, say the Vedic sages, and an appointed time to die. When your time comes you go, plague or no plague, medicine or none. And so it sometimes happens that a hopeless case survives and a man the doctors tell us ought to live drops dead.
Anyway, while life is still in us, what are we living for? If we don't know and don't ask, what's the use of our life?
Matter will be finished—all of it. Every material body is destined to be a corpse, every universe a cinder. The more we embrace matter and try to hold onto it, the more we suffer, and the more we lose. Material enjoyment is an oxymoron. Security is humbug.
This is the plague of the material world. For one who is born, says the Bhagavad-gita, death is certain. And after one dies one is sure to be born again. Tetracycline isn't a cure for the cycle of birth and death.
The severest plague, worldwide in its extent, is that of spiritual ignorance. It is this plague that has driven us into the materialism, and that keeps us there suffering. It is this plague that fools us into making our problems still worse. And this plague of ignorance can be cured only by spiritual knowledge.

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Compassion?

 
 

Sent to you by dinesh via Google Reader:

 
 

via KKS Blog by noreply@blogger.com (aatish) on 12/5/10

Transcribed by Bhakta Frederick
(Kadamba Kanana Swami, October 2010, Melbourne)


What is compassion? How can one be compassionate? Is it a sentiment? Hm?
Compassion only really begins if we appreciate that we have something better. If we have something better then we can be compassionate. Otherwise you can go out on book distribution and you can see all your old friends sitting on a terrace somewhere, like drinking outside in the sun, and you can feel compassion for who? Yourself! You have to stand out there with those books in the street, and everyone else is having a good time. Yeah, That's how it is!.
But if we are convinced that we have something better, then we can develop compassion for others...


Then we can experience real compassion.
The more we are relishing Krishna consciousness, the more compassionate we can be; the more we can preach very easily - because we are relishing!
We are relishing our Krishna consciousness; it's so wonderful!
"Please, take some mercy!"
"No no, I don't want to.."
"That's okay!"
Nobody wants it, but they take anyway. Right?
"Take!"

Somehow or other, just give it to them. Right?
When we are full of relishing this Krishna consciousness, then naturally we will want to give it to everyone and then naturally people start appreciating also.
"They have something nice."
It's like,I bought a yellow jacket and someone said:
"Why do you have a yellow jacket?"
I said, "Because it reminds me of the sun, Some bright, positive effulgence in a world where everyone dresses in black and darkness. Krishna is like the sun."
He brings light in the darkness of this world. That is a fact. That is Krishna consciousness! It brings light in the darkness of this world. Krishna surya-sama maya haya andhakara.
Maya is just bringing us so much darkness in all directions:. suffering, burdens, difficulties, stress, anxiety, - Krishna consciousness is just lightening it all up! So if we get absorbed here in the temple -herewhere we are free to worship Krishna, and if we drink it, then compassion will follow.

Transcribed by Bhakta Frederick
(Kadamba Kanana Swami, October 2010, Melbourne)

 
 

Things you can do from here:

 
 

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Distributing Books in the Hospital

 
 

Sent to you by dinesh via Google Reader:

 
 

via KKS Blog by noreply@blogger.com (aatish) on 12/5/10

One thing the devotees did in the Netherlands - I was new, brand new and they took me to these hospitals, in the visiting hour. There were two devotees and we would just boldly walk in with a box of books and then one would stand on a chair and would give a whole speech about the greatness of the work we were doing and helping so many people in the world and for that we were distributing these wonderful books here today and everyone was getting a promotion copy! Yes everone, and in the visiting hours in a ward there can be a hundred people - right? So everyone -a book, then we would ask for a donation and then we would look at somebody who gave a big one and we would go:
"There, take it," hold up the money and say "This gentleman gave--!"
Then everyone else started to give more money also, it was really good - A lot of books and a lot of Laksmi!

It was great -- until the moment that the nurse would walk in and with an icy voice say:
"What is going on here!?"
and then we would have to bluff our way out:
"Um, well.. We're doing the charity action!"
"Charity action? What's that?"
"No, haven't you read the letter!?"
"Letter..? Letter?"
"Yeah! You haven't read? -Yes, yes.."
"No, no"
"It's there, yes! Go check it out!"
So we send her away, and then try to escape!
If we manage to escape, then we would go one floor down and do the same thing again! I almost became a patient in the hospital, just from high blood pressure, anxiety and heart trouble!
But, somehow or other, these kind of activities save us. They save us from the material energy. They save us from the modes of material nature.
I was in total anxiety in that hospital, to tell you the truth, death scared of that icy voice of the nurse that could come any moment, and the police that would follow, and so on..
Still, looking at it now in hindsight, I must say it was very good!
It saved us from the three modes of material nature.
It saved me from dwelling on sense gratification.
It saved me from the iron grip of lust, which is otherwise so difficult to overcome.

In this way, by developing this mood of "let's give this mercy to others" we can become very strong.

Transcribed by Bhakta Frederick
(Kadamba Kanana Swami, October 2010, Melbourne)

 
 

Things you can do from here:

 
 

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