Is There A Need Of Change? (By Nisargadatta Maharaj)

Friday, 20 July 2012

Where is the need of changing anything?

The mind is changing anyhow all the time. Look at your mind dispassionately; this is enough to calm it. When it is quiet, you can go beyond it. Do not keep it busy all the time. Stop it – and just be.
If you give it rest, it will settle down and recover its purity and strength. Constant thinking makes it decay.

If my true being is always with me, how is it that I am ignorant of it?
Because it is very subtle and your mind is gross, full of gross thoughts and feelings.

Calm and clarify your mind and you will know yourself as you are.

Do I need the mind to know myself?
You are beyond the mind, but you know with your mind. It is obvious that the extent, depth and character of knowledge depend on what instrument you use.

Improve your instrument and your knowledge will improve.

To know perfectly I need a perfect mind.
A quiet mind is all you need. All else will happen rightly, once your mind is quiet. As the sun on rising makes the world active, so does self-awareness affect changes in the mind.

In the light of calm and steady self-awareness inner energies wake up and work miracles without any effort on your part.

You mean to say that the greatest work is done by not working?
Exactly. Do understand that you are destined for enlightenment. Co-operate with your destiny, don't go against it, don't thwart it. Allow it to fulfil itself.

All you have to do is to give attention to the obstacles created by the foolish mind.

(By Nisargadatta Maharaj from 'I Am That' – 1973)
 

Or this there indeed a need to change things?
Tell us, ultrafeel.tv wants to hear from you. Namaste!

Treetrunk and wall (by h.r.fox @ ultrafeel.tv)
   

Nisargadatta MaharajSri Nisargadatta Maharaj (April 17, 1897 – September 8, 1981)

Named Maruti Shivrampant Kambliwas at birth, Nisargadatta was a spiritual teacher who followed school of non-duality or advaita vedanta. Maharaj was famous and admired for his direct and informal teachings to people of various backgrounds. His most famous book is the spiritual classic "I Am That".

Nisargadatta claims that our true nature is perpetually free peaceful awareness. Awareness is the source of, but different from, the personal, individual consciousness, which is related to the body. The mind and memory are responsible for association with a particular body; awareness exists prior to both mind and memory. It is only the idea that we are the body that keeps us from living what he calls our "original essence", the True Self.

Nisargadata Maharaj describes this essence as pure, free, and unaffected by anything that occurs. He likens it to a silent witness that watches through the body's senses, yet is not moved, either to happiness or sadness, based on what it sees.

5 thoughts on “Is There A Need Of Change? (By Nisargadatta Maharaj)

Leave a Reply to admin Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *