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RASHMI's Journal


RASHMI's Journal

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6 entries this month
 

*** MISS ME BUT LET ME GO ***

10:15 Sep 26 2011
Times Read: 434


When I come to the end of the road,

And the sun has set for me,

I want no rites in a gloom filled room,

Why cry for a soul set free?



Miss me a little, but not for long,

And not with your head bowed low.

Remember the love that we once shared;

Miss me - but let me go.



For this is a journey we all must take,

And each must go alone.

It's all part of the Master's plan,

A step on the road to home.



When you are lonely and sick at heart,

Go to the friends we know.

And bury your sorrow in doing good deeds,

Miss me - but let me go.


COMMENTS

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*** The Comforting with memories ***

10:14 Sep 26 2011
Times Read: 435






Alone now and lonely with tears in my eyes,

my heart wears a big break deep down inside.

A part of me died the day you went home...

and emptiness entered where love once was shown.



I miss you so much, but after a while,

my friends tell me God will put back my smile.

So I started praying for peace to return

and for God to reveal what He'd want me to learn.



I'm learning to look back and rejoice in the thought

of our time spent together, of the love that you brought.

Of the memories sweet that we made in times past...

of your eyes lighting up when you smiled...that will last...

of the hugs and the kisses and long talks at night...

of the warm feeling I felt when things would go right.



The comforting's coming as our Lord draws near

and things once familiar make the memories dear.

When I look up to heaven and see skies of blue

I find myself talking out loud just to you.



I imagine you smiling and laughing with me

feel the touch of your hand, though I know it can't be...

loneliness is dispelled; there's a feeling of love,

and I'm sure that you sent me a kiss from above.

Peace flows in my heart, my tears have been dried,

your memory's with me...you're here by my side.

COMMENTS

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A vivid description of death as part of the cycle of life was given by Silver Birch when, one Easter-time, he drew a comparison with the seasons of the year.

10:12 Sep 26 2011
Times Read: 436


A vivid description of death as part of the cycle of life was given by Silver Birch when, one Easter-time, he drew a comparison with the seasons of the year.



"Think of the 'miracle' of the seasons," he said, "the eternal circle for ever revolving with unbroken constancy - the snows of winter, when all life sleeps; the herald of spring, when life awakens; the fullness of summer, when life is revealed in all its beauty; autumn, when the voice of nature is hushed and preparation is made for sleep ere the period of refreshment comes upon it.



"You are about to witness nature's great revelation - spring, Easter, resurrection - when the new life makes itself visible all over your world, the life that has been sleeping, the life that has retreated into the darkness of mother earth, there to find peace and quietness in the darkness. Soon you will see the rising sap, the bud, the foliage, the leaf and then the flower. The tiny aconites raise their heads and a thousand voices announce the birth of new life.



"You will be reminded of the old pagans, the 'uncivilised' savages, whose religion was founded on the rituals of nature, who saw in the seasons the divine drama, who constructed from the movements of the stars and the planets the lives of the gods, the powers that watched over them; who paid tribute to the laws which controlled their life, who recognised that the greatest season of all was spring, when birth came upon your world.



"The cycle is repeated in every human life. The pageant of nature is duplicated in every human soul. First there is the spring, with the awakening consciousness; the summer, when man's powers rise to their highest; autumn, when life begins to wane; and winter, when sleep comes to the wary, tired soul. But even after the winter of the physical life, spring comes to the spirit as it awakens in another world to continue that eternal cycle. Take from nature this message, and be assured that the laws which have never failed will continue to operate in your case and in the case of every human life."


COMMENTS

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10:10 Sep 26 2011
Times Read: 437


If anyone seems to think they will "get over" grief from losing their

child, I think they are being unrealistic. The grief will certainly change - it

gets less painful, quits occupying your mind from the time you get up

unto you fall asleep, and it can catch you by surprise with poignant,

tearful memories when you least expect it, but this is not a disease from which

we can recover. It's too bad that death and grieving have been so shoved

into the background of modern life that everyone has unrealistic

expectations about it.



Does this mean you will never be happy again? No. Does it mean you

will never laugh again? No. Does it mean you will go back to being the

person you used to be? No. Grief makes a big shift in our perspective; it

hopefully matures us and leaves us wise, more compassionate, more

loving, and makes us realize how precious time is with our loved ones. And we

slowly learn to deal with and live around that big hole left in our lives.



Being stuck in grief means when I get into prolonged depression which

I am unable to get out of. I'm talking the kind of depression where life

appears hopeless and you began to contemplate that it would be easier for you

to die rather than go on without your beloved child. Or it means a tremendous

anger which doesn't go away for a prolonged period and ends up driving others

away from you when you need them most. These kinds of things require

professional counseling. Some people think that remembering good times, happy days,

etc. is depressing when they are new in grief. Later they will find that

these memories are their treasure lode and it means that their beloved child

continues to be a part of their lives. My son no longer exists

physically. But he remains very much present in my heart, mind, and memories. I

can call him back to me any time when I bring up a memory, look at an old photo,

or find something he has written.



We have had something devastating happen to us. A part of our lives

has suddenly been amputated. We will have to live with that forever. But

it doesn't mean we go on indefinitely, years and years, living in the pain

we have during the first year. Rebuilding our lives comes about slowly.

First we awaken without our first thought being that our child is dead. We

begin to have peaceful moments in the middle of horrible pain. The pain

itself begins to lessen. One day we laugh at something funny. Establishing a

new routine of life which does not include our beloved is a slow and

sometimes difficult process, but we begin to do it.



There is no "right" or "wrong" way to grieve. I think that living in

an age where we have expectations of quick solutions means that we think grief

is something we can "deal" with and put behind us. It doesn't work that

way. Grief is a long journey, but one which gets softer with time,

fortunately. But this "time" is not measured in hours or weeks, or even a few years,

but a lifetime.



Peace, & happiness ............. rashmi


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*** ALL IS WELL ***

10:09 Sep 26 2011
Times Read: 438


"Death is nothing at all. It does not count. I have only slipped away into the next room. Nothing has happened. Everything remains exactly as it was. I am I, and you are you, and the old life that we lived so fondly together is untouched, unchanged. Whatever we were to each other, that we are still. Call me by the old familiar name. Speak of me in the easy way which you always used. Put no difference into your tone. Wear no forced air of solemnity or sorrow. Laugh as we always laughed at the little jokes that we enjoyed together. Play, smile, think of me, pray for me. Let my name be ever the household word that it always was. Let it be spoken without an effort, without the ghost of a shadow upon it. Life means all that it ever meant. It is the same as it ever was. There is absolute and unbroken continuity. What is this death but a negligible accident? Why should I be out of mind because I am out of sight? I am but waiting for you, for an interval, somewhere very near, just round the corner. All is well."


COMMENTS

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*** the real meaning of life with Upanishad's ***

09:08 Sep 26 2011
Times Read: 440








The Upanishads are also called the Vedanta. The literary meaning of Vedanta is “the end of the Vedas.” But the spiritual meaning of Vedanta is “the cream of the Vedas, the pick of the inner lore, the aim, the goal of the inner life. In the Upanishads the spiritual meanings of the Vedic texts are brought out and emphasized in their own right.



According to our Indian tradition, there were once one thousand one hundred and eighty Upanishads. Each came from one branch, shakha, of the Vedas. Out of these, two hundred Upanishads made their proper appearance, and out of these two hundred, one hundred and eight Upanishads are now traceable.



The thirteen principal Upanishads are: Isha, Katha, Kena, Prasna, Mundaka, Mandukya, Chandogya, Brhadaranyaka, Taittiriya, Aitareya, Svetasvatara, Kaivalya, and Maitri



The message of the Upanishads is the life divine, the life of transformed humanity, and the life of an illumined earth-consciousness. The Upanishads tell us that the renunciation of desire-life is the fulfilling enjoyment of world-existence. This renunciation is neither self-denial nor self-rejection. This renunciation demands the transcendence of ego to breathe in freely the life-energy of the soul and yet to live a dynamic and active life in the world where one can achieve Infinity’s Height, Eternity’s Delight, and Immortality’s Light.

The Upanishads represent the loftiest heights of ancient

Indo-Aryan thought and culture. They form the wisdom portion or

Gnana-Kanda of the Vedas, as contrasted with the Karma-Kanda or

sacrificial portion. In each of the four great Vedas--known as

Rik, Yajur, Sama and Atharva--there is a large portion which

deals predominantly with rituals and ceremonials, and which has

for its aim to show man how by the path of right action he may

prepare himself for higher attainment. Following this in each

Veda is another portion called the Upanishad, which deals wholly

with the essentials of philosophic discrimination and ultimate

spiritual vision. For this reason the Upanishads are known as the

Vedanta, that is, the end or final goal of wisdom (Veda, wisdom;

anta, end).



The name Upanishad has been variously interpreted. Many claim

that it is a compound Sanskrit word Upa-ni-shad, signifying

"sitting at the feet or in the presence of a teacher"; while

according to other authorities it means "to shatter" or "to

destroy" the fetters of ignorance. Whatever may have been the

technical reason for selecting this name, it was chosen

undoubtedly to give a picture of aspiring seekers "approaching"

some wise Seer in the seclusion of an Himalayan forest, in order

to learn of him the profoundest truths regarding the cosmic

universe and God. Because these teachings were usually given in

the stillness of some distant retreat, where the noises of the

world could not disturb the tranquillity of the contemplative

life, they are known also as Aranyakas, Forest Books. Another

reason for this name may be found in the fact that they were

intended especially for the Vanaprasthas (those who, having

fulfilled all their duties in the world, had retired to the

forest to devote themselves to spiritual study).



The form which the teaching naturally assumed was that of

dialogue, a form later adopted by Plato and other Greek

philosophers. As nothing was written and all instruction was

transmitted orally, the Upanishads are called Srutis, "what is

heard." The term was also used in the sense of revealed, the

Upanishads being regarded as direct revelations of God; while the

Smritis, minor Scriptures "recorded through memory," were

traditional works of purely human origin. It is a significant

fact that nowhere in the Upanishads is mention made of any author

or recorder.



No date for the origin of the Upanishads can be fixed, because

the written text does not limit their antiquity. The word Sruti

makes that clear to us. The teaching probably existed ages before

it was set down in any written form. The text itself bears

evidence of this, because not infrequently in a dialogue between

teacher and disciple the teacher quotes from earlier Scriptures

now unknown to us. As Professor Max Mller states in his lectures

on the Vedanta Philosophy: "One feels certain that behind all

these lightning-flashes of religious and philosophic thought

there is a distant past, a dark background of which we shall

never know the beginning." Some scholars place the Vedic period

as far back as 4000 or 5000 B.C.; others from 2000 to 1400 B.C.

But even the most conservative admit that it antedates, by

several centuries at least, the Buddhistic period which begins in

the sixth century B.C.



The value of the Upanishads, however, does not rest upon their

antiquity, but upon the vital message they contain for all times

and all peoples. There is nothing peculiarly racial or local in

them. The ennobling lessons of these Scriptures are as practical

for the modern world as they were for the Indo-Aryans of the

earliest Vedic age. Their teachings are summed up in two

Maha-Vakyam or "great sayings":--Tat twam asi (That thou art) and

Aham Brahmasmi (I am Brahman). This oneness of Soul and God lies

at the very root of all Vedic thought, and it is this dominant

ideal of the unity of all life and the oneness of Truth which

makes the study of the Upanishads especially beneficial at the

present moment.



One of the most eminent of European Orientalists writes: "If we

fix our attention upon it (this fundamental dogma of the Vedanta

system) in its philosophical simplicity as the identity of God

and the Soul, the Brahman and the Atman, it will be found to

possess a significance reaching far beyond the Upanishads, their

time and country; nay, we claim for it an inestimable value for

the whole race of mankind. .



Whatever new and unwonted paths the philosophy of the future may

strike out, this principle will remain permanently unshaken and

from it no deviation can possibly take place. If ever a general

solution is reached of the great riddle . . . the key can only be

found where alone the secret of nature lies open to us from

within, that is to say, in our innermost self. It was here that

for the first time the original thinkers of the Upanishads, to

their immortal honor, found it...."



The first introduction of the Upanishads to the Western world was

through a translation into Persian made in the seventeenth

century. More than a century later the distinguished French

scholar, Anquetil Duperron, brought a copy of the manuscript from

Persia to France and translated it into French and Latin.

Publishing only the Latin text. Despite the distortions which

must have resulted from transmission through two alien languages,

the light of the thought still shone with such brightness that it

drew from Schopenhauer the fervent words: "How entirely does the

Oupnekhat (Upanishad) breathe throughout the holy spirit of the

Vedas! How is every one, who by a diligent study of its Persian

Latin has become familiar with that incomparable book, stirred by

that spirit to the very depth of his Soul! From every sentence

deep, original and sublime thoughts arise, and the whole is

pervaded by a high and holy and earnest spirit." Again he says:

"The access to (the Vedas) by means of the Upanishads is in my

eyes the greatest privilege which this still young century (1818)

may claim before all previous centuries." This testimony is borne

out by the thoughtful American scholar, Thoreau, who writes:

"What extracts from the Vedas I have read fall on me like the

light of a higher and purer luminary which describes a loftier

course through a purer stratum free from particulars, simple,

universal."



The first English translation was made by a learned Hindu, Raja

Ram Mohun Roy (1775-1833). Since that time there have been

various European translations--French, German, Italian and

English. But a mere translation, however accurate and

sympathetic, is not sufficient to make the Upanishads accessible

to the Occidental mind. Professor Max Mller after a lifetime of

arduous labor in this field frankly confesses: "Modern words are

round, ancient words are square, and we may as well hope to solve

the quadrature of the circle, as to express adequately the

ancient thought of the Vedas in modern English."



Without a commentary it is practically impossible to understand

either the spirit or the meaning of the Upanishads. They were

never designed as popular Scriptures. They grew up essentially as

text books of God-knowledge and Self-knowledge, and like all text

books they need interpretation. Being transmitted orally from

teacher to disciple, the style was necessarily extremely

condensed and in the form of aphorisms. The language also was

often metaphorical and obscure. Yet if one has the perseverance

to penetrate beneath these mere surface difficulties, one is

repaid a hundredfold; for these ancient Sacred Books contain the

most precious gems of spiritual thought.



Every Upanishad begins with a Peace Chant (Shanti-patha) to

create the proper atmosphere of purity and serenity. To study

about God the whole nature must be prepared, so unitedly and with

loving hearts teacher and disciples prayed to the Supreme Being

for His grace and protection. It is not possible to comprehend

the subtle problems of life unless the thought is tranquil and

the energy concentrated. Until our mind is withdrawn from the

varied distractions and agitations of worldly affairs, we cannot

enter into the spirit of higher religious study. No study is of

avail so long as our inner being is not attuned. We must hold a

peaceful attitude towards all living things; and if it is

lacking, we must strive fervently to cultivate it through

suggestion by chanting or repeating some holy text. The same

lesson is taught by Jesus the Christ when He says: "If thou bring

thy gift to the altar and there rememberest that thy brother hath

aught against thee; leave there thy gift before the altar and go

thy way; first be reconciled to thy brother, and then come and

offer thy gift."



Bearing this lofty ideal of peace in our minds, let us try to

make our hearts free from prejudice, doubt and intolerance, so

that from these sacred writings we may draw in abundance

inspiration, love and wisdom.



Isa Upnishada :-This Upanishad desires its title from the opening words

Isa-vasya, "God-covered." The use of Isa (Lord)--a more personal

name of the Supreme Being than Brahman, Atman or Self, the names

usually found in the Upanishads--constitutes one of its

peculiarities. It forms the closing chapter of the Yajur-Veda,

known as Shukla (White).



Oneness of the Soul and God, and the value of both faith and

works as means of ultimate attainment are the leading themes of

this Upanishad. The general teaching of the Upanishads is that

works alone, even the highest, can bring only temporary happiness

and must inevitably bind a man unless through them he gains

knowledge of his real Self. To help him acquire this knowledge

is the aim of this and all Upanishads.



PEACE CHANTS :_OM! That (the Invisible-Absolute) is whole; whole is this (the

visible phenomenal); from the Invisible Whole comes forth the

visible whole. Though the visible whole has come out from that

Invisible Whole, yet the Whole remains unaltered.



OM! PEACE! PEACE! PEACE!



The indefinite term "That" is used in the Upanishads to designate the

Invisible-Absolute, because no word or name can fully define It. A finite

object, like a table or a tree, can be defined; but God, who is infinite and

unbounded, cannot be expressed by finite language. Therefore the Rishis or Divine Seers, desirous not to limit the Unlimited, chose the indefinite term "That" to designate the Absolute.



In the light of true wisdom the phenomenal and the Absolute are inseparable.

All existence is in the Absolute; and whatever exists, must exist in It; hence all manifestation is merely a modification of the One Supreme Whole, and neither increases nor diminishes It. The Whole therefore remains unaltered.



All this, whatsoever exists in the universe, should be covered by

the Lord. Having renounced (the unreal), enjoy (the Real). Do

not covet the wealth of any man.



We cover all things with the Lord by perceiving the Divine Presence

everywhere. When the consciousness is firmly fixed in God, the conception of diversity naturally drops away; because the One Cosmic Existence shines through all things. As we gain the light of wisdom, we cease to cling to the unrealities of this world and we find all our joy in the realm of Reality.





The word "enjoy" is also interpreted by the great commentator Sankaracharya as "protect," because knowledge of our true Self is the greatest protector and sustainer. If we do not have this knowledge, we cannot be happy; because nothing on this external plane of phenomena is permanent or dependable. He who is rich in the knowledge of the Self does not covet external power or possession.

If one should desire to live in this world a hundred years, one

should live performing Karma (righteous deeds). Thus thou mayest

live; there is no other way. By doing this, Karma (the fruits of

thy actions) will not defile thee.





If a man still clings to long life and earthly possessions, and

is therefore unable to follow the path of Self-knowledge

(Gnana-Nishta) as prescribed in the first Mantram (text), then he

may follow the path of right action (Karma-Nishta). Karma here

means actions performed without selfish motive, for the sake of

the Lord alone. When a man performs actions clinging blindly to

his lower desires, then his actions bind him to the plane of

ignorance or the plane of birth and death; but when the same

actions are performed with surrender to God, they purify and

liberate him.



After leaving their bodies, they who have killed the Self go to the worlds of the Asuras, covered with blinding ignorance.







The idea of rising to bright regions as a reward for well-doers, and of falling into realms of darkness as a punishment for evil-doers is common to all great religions. But Vedanta claims that this condition of heaven and hell is only temporary; because our actions, being finite, can produce only a finite result.







What does it mean "to kill the Self?" How can the immortal Soul ever be destroyed? It cannot be destroyed, it can only be obscured. Those who hold themselves under the sway of ignorance, who serve the flesh and neglect the Atman or the real Self, are not able to perceive the effulgent and indestructible nature of their Soul; hence they fall into the realm where the Soul light does not shine. Here the Upanishad shows that the only hell is absence of knowledge. As long as man is overpowered by the darkness of ignorance, he is the slave of Nature and must accept whatever comes as the fruit of his thoughts and deeds. When he strays into the path of unreality, the Sages declare that he destroys himself; because he who clings to the perishable body and regards it as his true Self must experience death many times.



That One, though motionless, is swifter than the mind. The

senses can never overtake It, for It ever goes before. Though

immovable, It travels faster than those who run. By It the

all-pervading air sustains all living beings.



This verse explains the character of the Atman or Self. A finite

object can be taken from one place and put in another, but it can

only occupy one space at a time. The Atman, however, is present

everywhere; hence, though one may run with the greatest swiftness

to overtake It, already It is there before him.



Even the all-pervading air must be supported by this Self, since

It is infinite; and as nothing can live without breathing air,

all living things must draw their life from the Cosmic Self.



It moves and It moves not.

It is far and also It is near.

It is within and also It is without all this.



It is near to those who have the power to understand It, for It dwells in the heart of every one; but It seems far to those whose mind is covered by the clouds of sensuality and self-delusion. It is within, because It is the innermost Soul of all creatures; and It is without as the essence of the whole external universe, infilling it like the all-pervading ether.



He who sees all beings in the Self

and the Self in all beings,

he never turns away from It (the Self).

He who perceives all beings as the Self'

for him how can there be delusion or grief,

when he sees this oneness (everywhere) ?



He who perceives the Self everywhere never shrinks from anything, because through his higher consciousness he feels united with all life. When a man sees God in all beings and all beings in God, and also God dwelling in his own Soul, how can he hate any living thing? Grief and delusion rest upon a belief in diversity, which leads to competition and all forms of selfishness. With the realization of oneness, the sense of diversity vanishes and the cause of

misery is removed.



He (the Self) is all-encircling,

resplendent, bodiless, spotless, without sinews, pure,

untouched by sin, all-seeing, all-knowing,

transcendent, self-existent;

He has disposed all things duly for eternal years.



This text defines the real nature of the Self. When our mind is cleansed fromthe dross of matter, then alone can we behold the vast, radiant, subtle,ever-pure and spotless Self, the true basis of our existence.



They enter into blind darkness

who worship Avidya (ignorance and delusion);

they fall, as it were, into greater darkness who

worship Vidya (knowledge).



By Vidya one end is attained;

by Avidya, another.

Thus we have heard from the wise men

who taught this.

He who knows at the same time both Vidya and Avidya,

crosses over death by Avidya

and attains immortality through Vidya.



Those who follow or "worship" the path of selfishness and pleasure (Avidya), without knowing anything higher, necessarily fall into darkness; but those who worship or cherish Vidya (knowledge) for mere intellectual pride and satisfaction, fall into greater darkness, because the opportunity which they misuse is greater.



In the subsequent verses Vidya and Avidya are used in something the same sense as "faith" and "works" in the Christian Bible; neither alone can lead to the ultimate goal, but when taken together they carry one to the Highest. Work done with unselfish motive purifies the mind and enables man to perceive his undying nature. From this he gains inevitably a knowledge of God, because the Soul and God are one and inseparable; and when he knows himself to be one with the Supreme and Indestructible Whole, he realizes his immortality.



They fall into blind darkness who worship the Unmanifested

and they fall into greater darkness who worship the manifested.

By the worship of the Unmanifested one end is attained;

by the worship of the manifested, another.

Thus we have heard from the

wise men who taught us this.

He who knows at the same time both the Unmanifested

(the cause of manifestation)

and the destructible or manifested,

he crosses over death through knowledge of the destructible

and attains immortality through knowledge of the First Cause (Unmanifested).



This particular Upanishad deals chiefly with the Invisible Cause and the visible manifestation, and the whole trend of its teaching is to show that they are one and the same, one being the outcome of the other hence no perfect knowledge is possible without simultaneous comprehension of both. The wise men declare that he who worships in a one-sided way, whether the visible or the invisible, does not reach the highest goal. Only he who has a co-ordinated understanding of both the visible and the invisible, of matter and spirit, of activity and that which is behind activity, conquers Nature and thus overcomes death. By work, by making the mind steady and by following the

prescribed rules given in the Scriptures, a man gains wisdom. By the light of that wisdom he is able to perceive the Invisible Cause in all visible forms. Therefore the wise man sees Him in every manifested form. They who have a true conception of God are never separated from Him. They exist in Him and He in them.





The face of Truth is hidden by a golden disk.

O Pushan (Effulgent Being)!

Uncover (Thy face) that I, the worshipper of

Truth, may behold Thee.

O Pushan! O Sun,

sole traveller of the heavens,

controller of all, son of Prajapati,

withdraw Thy rays and gather up Thy burning effulgence.

Now through Thy Grace I behold Thy blessed

and glorious form.

The Purusha (Effulgent Being)

who dwells within Thee,

I am He.



Here the sun, who is the giver of all light, is used as the symbol of the

Infinite, giver of all wisdom. The seeker after Truth prays to the Effulgent One to control His dazzling rays, that his eyes, no longer blinded by them, may behold the Truth. Having perceived It, he proclaims: "Now I see that that Effulgent Being and I are one and the same, and my delusion is destroyed." By the light of Truth he is able to discriminate between the real and the unreal, and the knowledge thus gained convinces him that he is one with the Supreme; that there is no difference between himself and the Supreme Truth; or as

Christ said, "I and my Father are one."



May my life-breath go to the all-pervading and immortal Prana,

and let this body be burned to ashes.

Om! O mind, remember thy deeds!

O mind, remember, remember thy deeds!

Remember!



Seek not fleeting results as the reward of thy actions, O mind! Strive only for the Imperishable. This Mantram or text is often chanted at the hour of death to remind one of the perishable nature of the body and the eternal nature of the Soul. When the clear vision of the distinction between the mortal body and the immortal Soul dawns in the heart, then all craving for physical pleasure or material possession drops away; and one can say, let the body be burned to ashes that the Soul may attain its freedom; for death is nothing more than the casting-off of a worn-out garment.





O Agni (Bright Being)!

Lead us to blessedness by the good path.

O Lord! Thou knowest all our deeds,

remove all evil and delusion from us.

To Thee we offer our prostrations and supplications

again and again.



the one who reads and realizes the meanings of the life through the Upanishad's , will attain the ture meaning of living the life along with the new bounds of spiritual life with complete happiness.









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