Showing posts with label swami adiswarananda. Show all posts
Showing posts with label swami adiswarananda. Show all posts

Saturday, 25 May 2019

Meditation and Its Practices: A Definitive Guide to Techniques and Traditions of Meditation in Yoga and Vedanta by Swami Adiswarananda





PART THREE



In the state of meditation, one becomes videha, or detached from body-consciousness.  It is the only direct way to separate the soul from the bondages of body and mind.  






Direct realization is like seeing a country with our own eyes, rather than hearing about it from others or reading about it in books or newspapers. 



Ordinarily we perceive everything through the prism of our mind with its built-in predispositions.



The way to attain direct realization is the repeated practice of meditation.  Practice is required to convert intellectual conviction into spiritual realization.



Spiritual illumination has its manifestation on the mental level in the form of poise, peace, naturalness, serenity, stability of emotions, conservation of energy, and a capacity to bear the frustrations of life.



A degree of emotional maturity is necessary so that we can develop an adequate reserve of mental energy for use in finding creative solutions to the problems of life.



Many people think that meditation is a process of passive reflection or just letting things happen, but actually it a conscious process of guiding the mind by oneself. In meditation, it is the alertness of the mind that matters most, not the length of time devoted.



A mantra is a specific combination of letters or words which has hidden within it a mysterious power to bring about certain results on being used in a particular manner.




The sun, the visible luminary in the sky, is the representation of the Supreme Godhead. 




The Yoga system is based upon the idea that the inner Self, which is Pure Consciousness, remains covered by successive layers of ignorance consisting of attachments and aversions. 




Mind and matter, according to Yoga, are not two separate entities.




Our body is nothing but solidified mind.



Spiritual advancement is to be determined not by what the seeker feels occasionally and temporarily, but by what he is, naturally and spontaneously.

Monday, 15 April 2019

Meditation and Its Practices: A Definitive Guide to Techniques and Traditions of Meditation in Yoga and Vedanta by Swami Adiswarananda





PART TWO 

Each individual is like a leaf on a tree.  Leaves come and go, but the tree continues to exist.  This Absolute Reality is our true identity.



The only way to overcome the maladies of life is to establish contact with the Ultimate Reality, and the only way to make contact with It is through meditation. Meditation leads to direct perception of the Ultimate.



Meditation is a mental process by which the meditator becomes one with the object of meditation.  Concentration (Sanskrit dharana) is the preliminary stage of this process; when concentration becomes effortless and continuous, it takes the form of meditation (dhyana), in which the mind flows continuously toward its object.  The culmination of meditation is total absorption (samadhi) in the object of meditation.



Meditation is a technique for gaining mastery over the mind.  Mind controlled is our best friend; uncontrolled, it is our worst enemy.



The harvest of egotistic living is fatigue and failure, anxiety and frustration. 



Life is action, participation, interaction, and communication.



When the mental focus is not conscious and deliberate, it is considered a lower type of concentration…. Such subconscious, lower concentration dissipates psychic energy to a great extent.



Worry, anxiety, and mental restlessness deplete psychic energy.  Further, subconscious concentration on diverse subjects creates scattered channels of energy that are not regular and straight.  Such haphazard concentration creates endless whirlpools in the mind and body.  Meditation restores this energy balance.



Ritualistic worship and prayer merge in the Gayatri, which is the highest and most concentrated prayer of the Vedas.  The Gayatri then becomes further concentrated into the sacred word Om, from which all words emanate; and finally, Om merges in the profound silence of Samadhi.  Meditation is thus the culmination of all worship, the state before the final revelation.



There are three components of every form of worship: the object of worship, the act of worship, and the worshipper. 



It is not that the seeker attains the state of meditation, but rather the opposite: he or she is taken over by it.

Saturday, 10 March 2018

Meditation and Its Practices by Swami Adiswarananda







All quotes from Swami's book




Illumination remains hidden in the mantra, just as the oak tree remains hidden in the acorn.