freedom – Global Gita https://globalgita.org Global Bhagavada Gita Convention Tue, 25 Jan 2022 04:44:35 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=5.5.13 https://globalgita.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/09/6-1-150x150.png freedom – Global Gita https://globalgita.org 32 32 Global Bhagavad Gita Convention 2022 https://globalgita.org/event/global-bhagavad-gita-convention-2022/ Sat, 19 Feb 2022 18:30:00 +0000 https://2022.globalgita.org/?post_type=tribe_events&p=5200 Global Bhagavad Gita Convention - 2022, on February 19th, 20th, and 21st.

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Center for Inner Resources Development – North America (CIRD-NA), a non-profit global knowledge institution, is pleased to announce the fourth Global Bhagavad Gita Convention (GBGC) on February 19, 20, and 21, 2022.

The Convention is organized under the inspiration and guidance of Swami Bhoomananda Tirtha, a renowned Spiritual Master from India, founder of Narayanashrama Tapovanam and Center for Inner Resources Development. Previous conventions were held in Irvine, California, Fairfax, Virginia, and San Jose, California. The conventions have evoked great interest and inspiration in the attendees. This year’s convention will be a virtual event which will allow people across the globe to attend and benefit from the amazing series of discourses that are being organized.

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State of Supreme Freedom- Yoga https://globalgita.org/state-of-supreme-freedom-yoga/ Fri, 07 Jan 2022 14:55:53 +0000 https://2022.globalgita.org/?p=4221 Yoga is the stable and un-flickering nature of our very intelligence. It is when our inner personality is so unshakable that it will not be dislodged by any kind of input from the world. We must evolve from our limited, constricted “well-dimensional” mind, to that of a “sea-dimensional” mind. Every situation has a fulfilling role, and must be faced with neither fear nor reluctance. 

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In this illuminating segment, Poojya Swami Bhoomananda Tirthaji discusses the pinnacle of yoga. We speak of samatva (equanimity). But what does this samatva translate to in our daily life? 

The answer comes in 3 shlokas that Swamiji discusses with great depth and clarity.

The first is verse 2.52:

यदा ते मोहकलिलं बुद्धिर्व्यतितरिष्यति
तदा गन्तासि निर्वेदं श्रोतव्यस्य श्रुतस्य ५२

yadā te moha-kalilaṁ buddhir-vyatitariṣyati
tadā gantāsi nirvedaṁ śrotavyasya śrutasya ca

“When your intelligence has passed out of the quagmire of delusion, you shall become indifferent to all that has been heard and all that is to be heard.”

In this verse Swamiji emphasizes the term moha-kalilam (quagmire of delusion). When Arjuna asked Krishna to station his chariot in front of the Kaurava’s army, seeing his beloved kith and kin he became overpowered by kārpaṇya (narrow-mindedness). This was Arjuna’s quagmire of delusion. Wrong thinking gives rise to this quagmire – the slush that yields beneath your feet – making it almost impossible to take the next step. Yoga enables us to transcend this quagmire of delusion. 

With yoga we develop an enlightened indifference to whatever has been heard, and remains to be heard. The poise and stability of the intelligence, coupled with the supremely peaceful state of mind, makes us completely unaffected by whatever has been read, and no longer curious to know anything further. 

The next part of the transformation is described in verse 2.53:

श्रुतिविप्रतिपन्ना ते यदा स्थास्यति निश्चला
समाधावचला बुद्धिस्तदा योगमवाप्स्यसि ५३

śruti-vipratipannā te yadā sthāsyati niścalā
samādhāvacalā buddhis-tadā yogam-avāpsyasi

“When the intelligence, which is now vacillating between the conflicting notions of the scriptures, remains firm and unshakable, that state is called Yoga” 

Swamiji emphatically declares that yoga is not Self-realization or Self-seatedness. Yoga is the stable and un-flickering nature of our very intelligence. It is when our inner personality is so unshakable that it will not be dislodged by any kind of input from the world.

Even if we meditate and get absorbed for 1000 days, Swamiji says, when we take up the interactions we still feel dislodged. That dislodgement will not be there when we have the surety, stability, poise, composure and inner fullness that yoga brings. 

But is that all? Swamiji says NO! What is more, is described in verse 2.70:

आपूर्यमाणमचलप्रतिष्ठं
समुद्रमापः प्रविशन्ति यद्वत्
तद्वत्कामा यं प्रविशन्ति सर्वे
शान्तिमाप्‍नोति कामकामी ७०

āpūryamāṇam acala-pratiṣṭhaṁ samudram-āpaḥ praviśanti yadvat
tadvat kāmā yaṁ praviśanti sarve sa śāntim-āpnoti na kāma-kāmī

 

“A person who is not disturbed by the incessant flow of desired experiences – that enter like rivers into the ocean, which is ever being filled but is always still – can alone attain peace, and not the man who strives to satisfy his desires.”

Who is the man who will attain perennial contentment, placidity and quietitude? Just as the sea receives the waters of multiple rivers without its own salinity being altered, the wise man interacts with the world, allowing the inflow of all inputs, remaining completely unaffected. 

We must evolve from our limited, constricted “well-dimensional” mind, to that of a “sea-dimensional” mind, exhorts Swamiji. Every situation has a fulfilling role, and must be faced with neither fear nor reluctance. 

Rivers are nothing but the vapours from the sea that rise up, get condensed and return to the sea. In the same manner, it is our own mind’s projections that come back in the form of impacts. 

Swamiji’s “very special discovery” is that the mind finds it difficult to bear its own products, which are nothing but the mind itself! How foolishly we carry on through life never realizing this fundamental truth! 

The manifold responses of the mind are nothing but the same mind, therefore no reaction or assimilation is required. The man who knows this attains peacefulness, not he who goes on hankering after desires.

This is why Swamiji calls the Bhagavad Gita an “interactional gospel”. It takes us to the point of no longer being deluded by whatever is known or to be known, with a clear mind and doubt-free intelligence, stable and poised in the world with its myriad of inputs.

The conclusion of Sri Krishna’s proposition comes in verse 2:72 

एषा ब्राह्मी स्थितिःपार्थ नैनां प्राप्य विमुह्यति
स्थित्वास्यामन्तकालेऽपि ब्रह्मनिर्वाणमृच्छति ७२

eṣā brāhmī sthitiḥ pārtha naināṁ prāpya vimuhyati
sthitvāsyām anta-kāle’pi brahma-nirvāṇam ṛcchati

“That is the supreme spiritual state, attaining which a man is no longer deluded. If one is thus stabilized even at the hour of death, he attains supreme freedom.”  

And this is the finale – progressing from the meditative, absorptional state of ātma-stithi, to the interactional, permanently fulfilling brāhmī sthiti, after attaining which there is nothing more to be attained. 

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How to Remain Anchored in the Soul https://globalgita.org/how-to-remain-anchored-in-the-soul/ Sun, 02 Jan 2022 17:00:07 +0000 https://2022.globalgita.org/?p=4090 We often say we are able to understand this teaching, but not able to retain it. The ability to retain and hold on to it is known as dhrti, as Swami Nirviseshananda Tirtha beautifully explains in this practical and pertinent segment.

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We often say we are able to understand this teaching, but not able to retain it. The ability to retain and hold on to it is known as dhrti, as Swami Nirviseshananda Tirtha beautifully explains in this practical and pertinent segment.

Dhrti, just like everything else in this objective world, is subject to the three gunas – the three modes of nature – sattva, rajas and tamas.

Sattvika dhrti is what anchors one to yoga buddhi. Yoga buddhi is when the Soul dimension is projected in the intelligence, bringing forth qualities such as unaffectedness, impersonality and universality. 

Rajasika dhrti activates us with bhoga buddhi (the tendency towards enjoyment, working egoistically). Finally tamasika dhriti immerses one in moha (delusion, wrong understanding).

To put it simply, says Swamiji, yoga, bhoga and moha, represent sattvaguna, rajoguna and tamoguna respectively. All three are generally present in all of us. 

As seekers on this path, our focus must be on cultivating more and more sattvika dhrti. As Krishna says in verse 33 of the 18th chapter;

धृत्या यया धारयते मन:प्राणेन्द्रियक्रिया: |
योगेनाव्यभिचारिण्या धृति: सा पार्थ सात्त्विकी || 33|| 

dhṛtyā yayā dhārayate manaḥ-prāṇendriya-kriyāḥ
yogenāvyabhicāriṇyā dhṛtiḥ sā pārtha sāttvikī

“With that dhrti, the mind, vital energies and sense organs all hold on to yoga in a non-desultory manner. Such a dhrti (which arises from the sattvika buddhi) is known as sattvika dhrti.”

Avyabhicari (non-desultory) is an important word for us to understand. Swamiji explains that vyabhicari means desultory, inconsistent. It is when we flit from one state to the other (for example from yoga to bhoga and back). Sattvika dhrti provides the one-pointed dedication and persistence of the buddhi to follow yoga and hold on to the Truth.

When the buddhi helps us differentiate between bondage and liberation, it is the drhti that allows us to follow it.  It enables us to use our viveka (discrimination) effectively so that it will be naturally followed by the right measure of vairagya (dispassion). This is how vairagya automatically follows viveka.

An interesting fact Swamiji pointed out is that physical features can reveal very deep-seated traits such as stealth. While facial expressions are flexible and respond accordingly to emotions, structural features such as formation of toes and other gross features of the body indicate a far deeper impact of traits and tendencies. Such traits are so deeply engrained that they are extremely difficult to rectify, often resulting in the person having no choice but to simply accept that this is how they are.

A crucial point for us to remember is that while the buddhi can become enlightened with the help of the Self-realized Teacher, dhrti will only come from our own sadhana. It is not enough to have sharp intelligence. We must make the effort to do the sadhana and cultivate sattvika dhrti. In Bhagavad Gita, Sri Krishna gives a two-pronged approach of abhyasa (practice) and vairagya. The most powerful abhyasa is vichara (introspection). 

Swamiji explains in a purely rational and scientific manner that abhyasa provides the centripetal force that anchors us within. Vairagya reduces the centrifugal force created by the outside pull of the objective world, which takes us away from the center.

Therefore, Swamiji concludes, we must generate more of the centripetal force through abhyasa, and diminish the centrifugal force through vairagya. Ultimately this is the only way to develop dhrti, and remain anchored in our real identity, the Soul.

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Global Bhagavad Gita Convention 2020 https://globalgita.org/event/global-bhagavad-gita-convention-2020/ Sat, 10 Oct 2020 18:30:00 +0000 http://wordpress.templaza.net/wp-maniva/meetup/?post_type=tribe_events&p=1802 Global Bhagavad Gita Convention - 2020, on October 10th, 11th and 12th.

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Center for Inner Resources Development – North America (CIRD-NA), a non-profit global knowledge institution, is pleased to announce the fourth Global Bhagavad Gita Convention (GBGC) on October 10, 11, and 12, 2020.

The Convention is organized under the inspiration and guidance of Swami Bhoomananda Tirtha, a renowned Spiritual Master from India, founder of Narayanashrama Tapovanam and Center for Inner Resources Development. Previous conventions were held in Irvine, California, Fairfax, Virginia, and San Jose, California. The conventions have evoked great interest and inspiration in the attendees. This year’s convention will be a virtual event which will allow people across the globe to attend and benefit from the amazing series of discourses that are being organized.

Agenda


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