Some thoughts on the spiritual life

Yesterday I hired a cleaning service to clean my room. Today I noticed something interesting: usually I don't spend time at home, but today I feel comfortable staying at home, reading books and writing. Typically, on my days off I go to the gym, to the art museum and then I practise violin haphazardly at the restaurant (no customers, I go after hours) and come home late, and just sleep. I don't do anything at home.

But today my room is clean, and I feel like staying home. I thought that, being a guy, the state of my apartment does not affect me. I'm beyond all that. I guess it does affect me in subtle ways, so I will continue to shell out money to keep my place clean, and who knows, may one day learn how to clean my own space and thereby save a dime.

Guru has an aphorism that I like: "It takes a lifetime to be truly humble." That's an interesting statement. I wonder what that means. It takes a lifetime to be truly humble. I wonder if I substituted the word "spiritual" for humble, then the meaning of this poem might become more apparent. "It takes a lifetime to be truly spiritual." If that was what Guru said, I would immediately understand and agree. I would say, why, yes, it does take a whole lifetime to absorb all the spiritual lessons we have to absorb, to fully understand why we're here, and to apply that conscious knowledge in a mature way. I know spirituality is a vast subject, and maybe I may even have to devote many lifetimes to learn the spirituality lesson.

But Guru doesn't say "spiritual". He says "humble". It takes a lifetime to be truly humble. Maybe this aphorism is in some way connected with my hiring a cleaning service. I mean, I didn't make a clean room a priority, because deep down I didn't think it was terribly important. One day I hired some people to give it a nice deep clean, and lo and behold, today I feel like staying home instead of scurrying around between spots of interest!

I like this aphorism of the Master:

"To feel oneself helpless is good.
Better to cultivate the spirit of self-surrender.
Best to be the conscious instrument of God."

(http://www.srichinmoylibrary.com/book/export/html/1286023)

Humility means evaluating your life honestly and precisely, and seeing what things you can do for yourself, and what things you may need some help with. Nobody is self-sufficient. Guru has an aphorism,

"Self-sufficient people
Are at times
Worse than street beggars."

(Sri Chinmoy, Seventy-Seven Thousand Service-Trees, Part 22, Agni Press, 2001)

And I also like this poem:

"If you take pride
In being humble,
Then you are a humility-clown."

(Sri Chinmoy, Seventy-Seven Thousand Service-Trees, Part 6, Agni Press, 1998)

Humility often requires a sense of humor!

A friend of mine told me many years ago that his Guru once told him in private conversation that "nine-tenths of spirtuality is humility."

Recently I told a friend of mine, who is not a disciple, that I have been working in spiritual businesses, Sri Chinmoy's restaurants, for twenty years. He asked me, not unkindly, what I have to show for my twenty years of work?

I told him that I've learned two things from working in spiritual businesses. The first thing is that I've learned how to work. I come from a rich family, never worked in high school or college, and so when I was about to graduate college I asked Guru whether I should go to graduate school or just work. He suggested that I not get any further degrees, but just get a job, any job with a relatively pleasant atmosphere (he did not say I needed to work in businesses associated with his philosophy). So, I've spent the past twenty years working, and I've learned slowly, painstakingly but thoroughly the ins and outs of business: customer service, professionalism, timeliness, attention to detail. These are skills I would not have learned if I had just stayed in school collecting degrees.

The second thing I've learned is how to be spiritual. By doing simple jobs in a nice atmosphere, I've had lots of time to cultivate my spiritual life. These days I spend three or four hours a day on spiritual activities, like japa, reading, prayer and spiritual singing. If I had a better-paying, but more stressful position, perhaps I would not have had much time to pray and meditate. I think I have more poise than I would have if I had not come to the spiritual life. I believe in a guiding Hand. I do know some disciples who have some real inner wealth. I know one older man who has cut vegetables for the last forty-five years, but you look at his eyes, and you see he's in communion with distant galaxies. He's in the world, but not of it. I don't want to say his name, but he's glimpsed some very profound truths, and has assimilated them. When your very presence teaches people, then you are of great service to the world. If that's not practical, what is?

I like what Guru said as part of an answer to a disciple's question:

"If you have developed an immortal consciousness, only then are you serving the Supreme all over the world."

(Sri Chinmoy, Illumination-world, Agni Press, 1977)

I've received intensive, excellent spiritual training from my twenty years in the Sri Chinmoy Centre. I'm not sure how visible that training is, or if people can immediately feel from me that I pray and meditate. But the fact is I do have a base level of cheerfulness and equanimity, and that serves me well. Sometimes I swim and lift weights at a University close to my house. The kids there learn mental knowledge, but the inner development, spiritual knowledge, they do not learn. That's a shame. I think Michael pointed out that Universities originally were founded by monks and had the function of educating people both mentally and spiritually. That does not happen these days. The kids with the best grades and test scores go to the best colleges, but they usually graduate with just mental training.

Here's a funny but poignant aphorism from "Transcendence-Perfection" that I like:

 

"The curtains of her peace-room
Are drawn.
Her life is now beyond
Peace-experience.
She now tries to be wise
By becoming a learned fool."

(Sri Chinmoy, Transcendence-Perfection, Agni Press, 1977)

(I've been enjoying Guru's University talks from the 1970's, incidentally. They are an untapped gold mine of extraordinary beauty).

Here's a final aphorism:

"Even an iota of progress
In the inner life
Is much more important
Than the so-called success-life."

(Sri Chinmoy, Seventy-Seven Thousand Service-Trees, Part 50, Agni Press, 2009)

--Mahiruha

Cross-posted from www.srichinmoycentre.org

Patanga: my spiritual name

by Patanga Cordeiro

day-5-day-1--046.jpgPatanga is a Sanskrit spiritual name. Some names are very short, while others are very long. A spiritual name is the soul´s mantra, and it can also give indications of the soul´s mission. After receiving my name, I changed all necessary papers and documents, as I really wanted to call myself only by my spiritual name. Life is too short. I was given the name with the following meaning:

Patanga – a rishi who was part-author of the Rig Veda.

(A rishi means a “divine seer”)  The conciseness of the meaning of my name is both a relief and a challenge. Few things to concentrate on, but much to discover.

 

Some of Sri Chinmoy´s remarks on spiritual names

When you repeat your own soul's name, I assure you that you will be able to bring to the fore all your divine qualities; you will be energised with your soul's divine power.

Sri Chinmoy 1

 

To get a spiritual name is really important. At that time you consciously know the meaning, the significance of your soul. If you know what your soul’s main qualities are, then only will you one day be able to bring them to the fore. If you do not know what you are trying to bring to the fore, then it is more difficult. But the moment you know what you are expected to do, what you are going to bring to the fore, then there is not only every possibility but every assurance that you will do it eventually.

Sri Chinmoy 2

Question: Could you please explain why you give your followers spiritual names?

Sri Chinmoy: Everyone has all the divine qualities, but one quality is often pre-eminent. One divine quality is usually more manifest in a certain person than the other divine qualities, and the soul has a way of manifesting the highest Truth through that particular quality. One soul will manifest through light, another through beauty, a third through power, a fourth through compassion, a fifth through peace, a sixth through joy. Each Sanskrit name I offer has a spiritual significance, and each aspirant has the capacity to realise and manifest the Highest through a particular quality which his name reveals and embodies. If the soul wants to realise and manifest the Highest on earth, then if the aspirant knows that particular quality, it becomes infinitely easier. When the disciples have spiritual names and they meditate on their names, at that time their divine qualities come to the fore most powerfully and make them feel what they are here for and why they have come into the world. That is why we give these names. 3

"Patanga" song-poems

I know of three of Sri Chinmoy´s song-poems featuring the word Patanga. As a homage to my soul and the privilege of having received a spiritual name, I sing them everyday as a mantra. Below are the exquisite translations of these songs by Sri Chinmoy himself.

The river flows toward the sea.
I know not what urges the river-heart to flow.
The sea has a magnetic pull.
As an insect offers its life to the flame,
Oh, how I wish to offer my Infinity’s life
To the all-transforming Flame-Beauty.

Nadi chale jai
Sagarer pane
Na jani kena je
Paraner tane
Patanga ase jyotir sakashe
Karite jibana dan
Temani amar kareche paran
Asimer abhijan

Sri Chinmoy

 

He who has heard the sound of Your Footsteps,
He who has seen the Smile of Your Face,
How can he remain satisfied with little things on earth,
How can he remain without loving You as his very own?
Like an insect inside a blazing fire, if my body and vital are burned to ashes,
I know yet for certain I shall have a place in the depth of Your Heart.
He who knows nothing about You can remain forgetful of You, but not I, never.
O Mother Divine, do place us, the knowers of You and those who know You not,
In Your ambrosial, Elysian Lap.

Je shunechhe taba charaner dhwani je herechhe taba hasi
Swalpe tushta kemane se rabe tomare na bhalobasi
Patanga sama anale bhasma hai jadi deha pran
Tomar sakashe labhibo janani nishchoy ami sthan
Je paini taba kona parichoy se pare rahite bhule
Chena achenare ek sathe laho janani anke tule

Sri Chinmoy

 

aps1511cm2927_baixa-1800x1200pixels300dpi.jpgPatanga as a name in Bengali and Sanskrit

(Note: By no means do I intend with this article to come to any final conclusion as to the absolute meaning of my name.  These are just some musings of a seeker to himself. I am also including some of Sri Chinmoy’s remarks on spiritual names.)

In modern Bengali, apparently Patanga is used to denote insects, mostly of the flying type, and particularly the moth, but goes as far as even a kite. In Sanskrit, it seems to be more like “bird”, or more widely, “something that flies using wings”. “Pat” would account for “wing” and “anga” for “limb”.

In this vein, I often see some events from my life and attitude related to some of Sri Chinmoy's songs, particularly the Patanga (insect) lines:

“As an insect offers its life to the flame,
Oh, how I wish to offer my Infinity’s life
To the all-transforming Flame-Beauty.”

And

“Like an insect inside a blazing fire, if my body and vital are burned to ashes,
I know yet for certain I shall have a place in the depth of Your Heart.”

I don´t know if they are just coincidences, but often I see myself in the point of sacrifice, specifically of my body and vital energy, with a goal of spiritual progress or service. Be it in ultramarathons, meditation class giving, organizing Centre matters, translating books, website contributing, etc, often I have been dragged to a point beyond and beyond exhaustion. But I never regretted the deed, action or feat itself. To me it just feels like that is what I needed to do. I do not wish to excuse myself for past mistakes based on lack of wisdom, but there is a chance these happenings have had a hint of the soul’s angelical but powerful touch behind them. Sri Ramakrishna would occasionally describe the moth’s yearning as an example of a fiery dedication to an ideal – the moth will fly towards light, even if the light is a bonfire, since in its view it is better to die on the blazing light than to live in darkness. I can only hope I will be able to develop such yearning in this lifetime or the next!

I noticed I have a tendency to bring newness and change about my environment – maybe that is the “rishi” side of the name Patanga. More than that would be hard to say.

Two short stories related to my spiritual name

I have at two stories to tell regarding two of my friends and brothers, and our spiritual names. I have written a long version of the first story that was included in a book called “First Steps on the Sunlit Path”, if I remember well. So, I’ll just keep to a very short version of both stories here.

Premananda Jan Klaile

Even before I had met him, I was reading about famous disciples of Sri Ramakrishna. For some unexplained reason, the one called Swami Premananda struck me. The name Premananda would come to me daily, even more than once. I thought that maybe Sri Chinmoy would soon give me a spiritual name. But still, no, it was not quite that which I felt.

Weeks later I met him for the first time in New York. Soon Guru gave him the spiritual name Premananda. Talk about oneness! When we walk together, often people ask if we are twin brothers. Only please notice that he is a blonde, fair skinned Finnish person, while I am a dark-haired, tanned-skin Brazilian!

Ushika Muckenhumer

I met Ushika in my first 10-day race. We naturally became friends. With him being very, very experienced in such races, I often went to him for advice regarding injuries that would come up during the race. But even in such a tough race, while running together for some reason we would often laugh to the point were running became impossible, and we would walk like drunkards, legs crossing in front of each other (myself particularly). I asked the meaning of his spiritual name, and he said it is, if I remember correctly, “A hermit from the Rig-Veda”. Remember that Patanga is “a rishi who was part-author of the Rig Veda”! So our souls are in the same business, I might try and say. It is interesting also that the 10-day race was one of the key experiences of my life. I also made many other important friendships there.

I think I might someday come back to this page to write more about Patanga, as I discover more about my name and its meaning!

Cross-posted from www.srichinmoycentre.org

Sri Chinmoy TV

Radio Sri Chinmoy

Spirituality means speed

patanga-cycling-santostriathlon.jpg

Spirituality means speed: speed in the inner world, speed in the outer world. In the inner world, speed is founded mostly upon aspiration. In the outer world, speed is founded mostly upon inspiration.

Sri Chinmoy 1

 
It is rather interesting how I got to write this page. I had been thinking about how to increase my own speed in the spiritual life. This article accounts for a small experience I had. What happened is that recently I have been doing too much technical work, on a computer screen, and I felt it was affecting me, making me feel tired and useless. So I felt the need to sharpen or 'speed up' my consciousness (or natural awareness).
 
But why is speed necessary? Can we not go at a slow, steady pace? Slow and steady wins the race, as the saying goes, reminding us of the famous story about the race between a turtle and a hare. But I think the answer to my own question is more like riding a bicycle – the faster you go:
 
  • the more balance you have;
  • the easier it becomes to surmont occasional obstacles such as hills;
  • the more difficult it is for outer interferences to stop you
  • the more you discover capacity in yourself and
  • the more joy you get from your speed! :D
 
We know that vehicles can easily skip over small holes on the road if they go fast enough – so all the same we might be above the daily pits and falls of life if we can get to this turning point of speed.
 
1978-sri-chinmoy-cyclea.jpg
 

I bicycle with my heavenly friend: speed!
Earthly cries before me die,
Heavenly smiles within me fly.
Supreme God-Joy our only need.

Sri Chinmoy 2
 
But how can I increase my own speed? I think for different people at different times, there will be different manners to achieve more speed. For me, it usually means focusing more on the inner aspects meditation, music, devotional practices – with the outer aspects following naturally afterwards, like a wave and its tow.  Also it happens sometimes that, when the outer aspect is doing well, it becomes easier for the inner dimension to grow. Like, when I do some voluntary work or write about my experiences, I usually feel quite good inwardly, inspired and aware. So that is how I got into writing this small article not just for you, but also for me. 
 
Even though I am extremely far from the great spiritual figure Swami Vivekananda’s 'speed' or awareness, I would like to quote him in the vein of this page’s theme:
 
“Our duty is to encourage every one in his struggle to live up to his own highest idea, and strive at the same time to make the ideal as near as possible to the Truth.” 
 
 
Cross-posted from www.srichinmoycentre.org

The Fourth of July

Fourth of July "America's Independence Day Is God the dreaming Child's Very special Rainbow-Birthday-Smile." Sri Chinmoy, Gratitude-Flower-Hearts, Agni Press, 1993 http://www.srichinmoylibrary.com/gratitude-flower-hearts/3-july-1988 I was inspired to compile a small list of inspirational material regarding the celebration of today's July 4th. I feel that America's independence is relevant and precious to the whole world. I am from Brazil. When the time came for our country’s independence, we were inspired by the courage of the Americans during their fight for independence. Also, our constitution and other declarations for the establishment of a new country were based on the US Declaration of Independence, the First Constitution etc. Likewise it was for many, many countries liberated in the Americas and elsewhere. Here below are a few selections where Sri Chinmoy speaks, in addition to the outer meanings, also on the (hidden), inner meanings on America’s independence, and on America as a new nation. My favorite, available as audiobook and paperback "America the Beautiful" http://www.amazon.com/America-Beautiful-Sri-Chinmoy/dp/0982428464 Sri Chinmoy's play "The Sacred Fire" http://www.srichinmoylibrary.com/sacred-fire Bicentennial Flames at the United Nations book http://www.srichinmoylibrary.com/bicentennial-flames-at-the-un Sri Chinmoy sings "America the Beautiful" http://www.radiosrichinmoy.org/6804/peace-divinitys-dream-on-earth/ (look for track 38) "America" songs and poems http://www.srichinmoysongs.com/song/list/?qs=america (the ones with a blue "s" have the sheet music in them)
Cross-posted from www.srichinmoycentre.org

Spiritual moments with my grandmother

vo2.jpg

Today I am trying to relate some of my (spiritual) experiences with my grandmother. I´ll start by briefly talking about her early life, and quickly move to the spiritual moments which I was told or have witnessed.

Early life in a nutshell

Her name was Edenir Prochnow. She grew up in a farm and, by the age of 14, she wanted to marry my grandfather. His family told her that he was not a reliable person, but she was set, so they married and had 3 daughters. Sometime later he became alcoholic, left home and years later died in a far away city. My own mother was the eldest, around eighteen at the time. My grandmother brought up all three daughters by herself, with heaps of tough experiences for her and her daughters.

Grandma was always very religious in a human sense. She went to Christian church very regularly and gave the tithe her whole life. She used to read the Bible at night and then pray for her family’s welfare. However, more tangible spiritual inclinations per se were not vividly present during her whole life. She told me she had a very ordinary life, and her wishes were mostly eating some kinds of food and, when an opportunity arose, taking her four grandchildren (including me) to eat somewhere or get some gifts.

 

~75 years old: Rebirth

I was then  19 years old, and grandma was about 75. I had just become a disciple of Sri Chinmoy, which for me meant a rebirth. I could more clearly perceive what I wanted for my life, that I wanted to go beyond the ordinary day to day business and experiences, find more concrete fulfilment, feel devoted from within, break from my self-created prison-cell of futility and endless void, etc.

Grandma then got a serious case of diverticulitis, intestinal inflammation, and would have to be operated. She was not supposed to eat many kinds of things she used to love (she once said that she was a glutton her whole life), under risk of death. But even then she consciously risked her life by eating strictly forbidden items a few times.

However, something happened in the days after the operation. She felt that it was a miracle to be alive. That she had “been granted life by the Lord”. That she was not the same anymore.

Her behavior and general presence of mind changed drastically. She was no longer interested in food as before, not so much worried about the various family issues, etc. She was retired already, so she started to spend the whole morning following the TV-aired Christian programmes on the various religious channels. She would start at around 6 am and go on to the next, and the next, and the next, maybe until 9 am. Her usual phrases became things like “If it is the Lord´s Will” and so on. From a worried kind of mindset, she turned into a joyful person, childlike and spontaneous, and her smile became clearly very beautiful in a matter of a days.

So even though she had attended church her whole life, only now she felt like a real spiritual person, a real devotee of the Christ.  As the Christ said, “born again, but not from the womb”.

Time together

One interesting fact is that she changed a few months after I too had changed. We found that some of our interests became very similar. I would go on a Sunday afternoon to her house to read from the Bible with her. Sometimes she would make selections during the week to read for me. She would be visibly moved by the things we read, and when I left her house, I remember clearly feeling that my faith in my spiritual Master Sri Chinmoy had increased, just by spending time in spiritual activities with my grandmother. I can still remember leaving her house on my bicycle, overwhelmed with spiritual fervor.

It happened, too, that in family gatherings like Christmas day, both me and her were not inclined to spend a long time on the dinner table, speaking of day to day subjects with everyone else. We would go to some other room to enjoy spiritual conversation. My mother was actively against spiritual talks, and would occasionally refer to us as “those two.”

 

One such experience

One of the most beautiful experiences that I remember I would like to write here. Grandma had a fairly small retirement pension, around 400 USD per month. Still, she never, ever, had skipped on giving the tithe to her church.

Because of a lifespan of health problems and experiences, she had to take quite a few remedies everyday, maybe some eight. And some of them were absolutely important, the kind that spending a day or two without them might force her to go to the hospital.

On a certain month, she figured she would not be able to buy her medicines and give the tithe at the same time. She did not tell this to anybody, but started praying to the Lord, and said, “You know why I cannot give Your tithe this month. During my whole life I have given it unfailingly, but this month I cannot buy the medicines I require to stay alive and give Your tithe at the same time. I hope You will understand why I won´t give this month.”

So she went to the church with the remainder of her money, with the intention of on the way back home buying her medicine.

But after the worship was over, she felt something unusual about not giving the tithe. She thought, “How silly! It is the Lord that keeps me alive, and not the medicine from the drug store. We are all living by His Grace. I only have to listen to Him and give Him my all and surrender, and He will provide me with His Plan.” She offered her tithe, putting it in the tithe box, and she was absolutely full of joy and fervour. She went back to her seat to pray and assimilate the experience. After a while, the church was becoming empty, and she thought, “Oh, now I don´t even have money to go back home.” She just stayed there, praying with gratitude.

Then, a young couple came to her, a couple whom she used to help and even provided for the husband to get a job years before. They asked, “Grandmother, do you need a ride home? We have a car today.” She humbly said, “Yes, I could use a ride.” She was already rejoicing with the feeling that the Lord knows everything and is really in charge of everything.

Once more, on the way home, the couple pulled the car into the parking lot of a drug store. They had to buy something to take home, so they also asked grandma if she needed anything from there. She told in minimal words that she needed such and such important medicine, but she had no money. They were happy to buy her everything she needed, and in good measure. She went home and cried the whole day, rejoicing to have witnessed the strength of her faith and surrender, as well as how really the Divine is in charge of everything that we look on.  I cannot help but cry as I recollect this experience related to me.

She told me it a few days later. I was also very short on money, but I was given the privilege of giving her enough to attend to church for that month.

 

Grandma and Guru

As her faith in the Christ increased and found new depths, this only seemed to increase her faith and comprehension of other Masters. One incident I call tell.

Once, my mother secretly asked grandma to tell me to stop meditating, singing, traveling, etc, because “it was a bad thing, etc.” Grandma became really serious with my mother and told her, in an authoritative tone, “I do not know what he does (what meditation is), nor what kind of place he is attending (the Sri Chinmoy Centre). But one thing I do know. When I talk to him, when I look at his face and at his life, I can see that the Lord is guiding his steps. I can clearly see and feel that he is doing things according to the Will of the Lord, and that is infinitely more justification than anybody could require for anything. So you had better let him be, for you know nothing of what goes on the inside of a spiritual person.” She stepped and went away. Days later we met and she told me the story with such happiness.

Also, she became interested in Sri Chinmoy, who he was and what he taught. (Here is a picture of her watching pictures and listening to stories from my visit to Sri Chinmoy in New York.) She found many remarkable similarities in Sri Chinmoy’s teachings and that of the Christ, as well as some earlier books of the Bible. I remember she enjoyed reading some of Sri Chinmoy’s writings.

 

Gratitude

As a final note, I can only thank Guru, thank God and thank my grandmother for these experiences. There are many more, but I cannot recollect them at this time, and grandma passed away years ago. Now, really, only God knows. :D

Cross-posted from www.srichinmoycentre.org