Latest Writings (and some shares)


The Questions

Again, the moon comes up in the night

Again, the stars

They stir up in me some questions

Without letting me know

Where the answers might be

Nor is the sky helpful

Soon it will be dawn

And the most useless guy to ask

When it comes to such questions

Will be there, giving life to us

But not the kind of life we are seeking.

“Embrace yourself fully before you embrace anyone else or not.”

“How helpless we are to take care of even our loved ones when karma comes hard at them.”

“I know I know. But then I start getting doubts.”

“Woh female ka mere paas sirf email hai.”

“One of the advantages of being a theist is that one can leave the bloody work of revolutions to God, trusting he will bring them about in his own inimitable ways, and rest comfortably in one’s drawing room, reading The Motorcycle Diaries.”

“The cause of suffering is not desire but the gap, irrespective of whether the gap is real or imaginary, between expectation and reality. The funny thing is that in actual reality there are no gaps. So, the gap is always between expectation and imagined reality. Because expectation sets in ONLY when you falsely imagine a gap between that which you are or where you are and that which you want or where you want to be. All in all, it is such a ludicrous situation that I cannot fathom why creation exists at all? Just to annoy us to no end with no good purpose served thereby? And yet we suffer not just alone but along with the rest if mankind.”

“Life is the ultimate physician. It will not leave you alone until you are cured of the malady called ignorance.”

No Loneliness

I am never alone

Never ever alone

I who love words

And bask always

In their company.

“The only bitterness I have is toward myself that I made so many mistakes in life. And yet in the midst of that bitterness, there is an inner peace.”

The Poetic Soul

Yedo teliyani baadha

Yedo teerani daaham

Yedo vedinche tapana

Yedo leni santhrupti

Yedo satyam grahincalekapothunna anay avedana

Yedo prapanchani uddarinche korika

Ila vivarinchutu pothay inka ennenno cheppochu

“Our ontology is not exhausted by our biology and psychology.”–DSR

People Are Too Awake

Where’s a soporific when one needs one

Be it the company of Plato or Nisargadatta

That dullens the pain of this dreary day

Where the sun beats down mercilessly

Though the trees seem to love him

And those with solar rooftops

Me, I prefer the moon and the stars

When stern duty is not calling me

To prove myself worthy to a cause

Life seems all too superfluous

Though none with me agrees

They’re too busy living to think or feel.

The Wild Goose Chase of Self-improvement

Self-help books to motivational speakers to life coaches abound. From Dale Carnegie to Napoleon Hill to Tony Robbins to Jordan Peterson to the Stoics.

This malady afflicts even the spiritually inclined, who keep polishing the mirror of their mind so that they may better see the reflection of the Truth in it.

This, in my opinion, is a largely mistaken enterprise, and if we foolishly undertake it, that will be nothing short of a Sisyphean burden.

Why?

Because the mind or our personality is the shadow of our real original nature, and we are too busy either trying to sharpen the shadow so that we understand the contours of “ourselves” better or getting aghast every time the shadow falls on the gutter.

This world can contain only our shadow.

Nay, this whole world is our own shadow.

Forget the shadow.

Rest blissful in your own original nature, O Sat-Chit-Ananda.

“The winds of heaven mix for ever”

Whatever heavens there be or not

Methinks it for sure is here with me

As I sit idly and let the hours pass by

So that the night’s wait is not long

Should the day decide to tarry a bit

And in this idleness, I find now here

Those who wait for retirement to find.

Neither the sound of a car passing by

Nor an emotion seeking attention

Disturbs me in my idyllic idleness

Everything seems just right, in place

Cars passing by and the needy emotions.

My Silly Heart

I keep thinking

Many years down the line

When the moon is full

And the stars are shining bright

And she in her balcony

Amidst flowers in bloom

She will remember me

And for a fleeting moment

She will wonder

If she made a mistake.

“Cha, this world is full of women. God is a big teaser.”

“Sometimes I think there is something to Islam and its theory of burqas. That way, when I meet her on the road again, I will not recognize her and no old wounds will be reopened.”

“I have started to laugh now. Enlightenment is just round the corner. Summa iru is too easy, far too easy. Everytime, I venture into the territory of thoughts and feelings, her memory will come on strong and with it loads of pain, so in no time I will be convinced summa iru is so much better. Yaaaay.”

“By the time you discover love is truth and truth is love, it may be too late, dear.”

“Blame your mother. She made you addicted to love.”

Summa Iru

Do not ask why

There may be a reason

In her mind

There may be a reason

In your mind

But the world goes on

Not as per our reasons

But as per God’s will.

Besides, dear Sam,

This very looking for reasons

Is what keeps alive

Both the mind and heart

And who can be at peace

Whose mind and heart are at play.

Nevertheless

One thinks about her

And perhaps she thinks about me

Giving scope

For some more mischief in this world.

“Roxette sang ‘It must have been love’. I sing ‘It must have been desire’. The world drama gets underway due to confusion over the blurring of the two.”

Pablo Neruda, Nah I Will Not Write Any Sad Lines Anymore

Neruda, Neruda, Neruda

How you suffered, you poor thing

And wrote many a sad line

If you were alive, I would come

To sit beside you and share in your sorrow

But in the end, I would point out

Irrespective of whether you would get it or not

That if you had known love

You would have crossed the sea of sorrow

And of course you would protest, saying

It is precisely because of that

You were now suffering

Then I would gently say

Why you went in search of love

When there was no hatred in you?

“God has to run the life histories of both the murdered and the murderer down  to the minutest and last detail so that they meet at the appointed hour.”

Reinterpreting the Vedic Ashvamedha (horse sacrifice)

The Brihadaranyaka Upanishad begins (1.1.1) by reinterpreting the Vedic Ashvamedha (horse sacrifice) not as a physical ritual, but as a meditation where the cosmos itself is viewed as a sacrificial horse. It symbolizes the identification of the individual with the universal, using the horse’s body to represent time, space, and the elements.

Symbolism of the Sacrificial Horse (1.1.1):

•  Head: The Dawn

•  Eye: The Sun

•  Vital Force: The Air

•  Mouth: Fire (Vaisvanara)

•  Body/Time: The Year

•  Back/Belly: Heaven and Sky

•  Hoof/Footing: Earth

•  Veins/Bones/Flesh: Rivers/Stars/Clouds

Key Philosophical Aspects:

•  Meditation over Ritual: The Upanishad converts a physical act into a meditation, aiming to transform every object into the Universal Subject.

•  The Cause of Duality: The horse sacrifice represents the desire for material prosperity, which arises from the ignorance of our non-dual nature with Brahman.

•  Creation as Desire: The text explains that in the beginning, there was only “Death” or “Hunger” (a creative desire), which manifested as the universe.

•  Identity with the Divine: The one who understands this symbolic sacrifice (as in 1.2.7) conquers further death, meaning they realize their true identity with the absolute, and death cannot overcome them.

The text implies that the material world and its rituals (the sacrifice) are transient. The true goal is to understand that the sacrificer, the sacrifice, and the deity are ultimately one (the Absolute).

On Friendship by Francis Bacon

“A principal fruit of friendship is the ease and discharge of the fullness and swellings of the heart, which passions of all kinds do cause and induce. We know diseases of stoppings and suffocations are the most dangerous in the body, and it is not much otherwise in the mind: you may take sarza to open the liver, steel to open the spleen, flowers of sulphur for the lungs, castoreum for the brain; but no receipt openeth the heart but a true friend, to whom you may impart griefs, joys, fears, hopes, suspicions, counsels, and whatsoever lieth upon the heart to oppress it, in a kind of civil shrift or confession.”

Full essay here:

https://www.ourcivilisation.com/smartboard/shop/baconf/friends.htm

“In the wickedness of another might lie a lot of good for us, though our puny brains cannot understand that often.”

“A friend puts us to sleep. The enemy awakens us.”

“A Ramana Maharshi does not need a Nisargadatta Maharaj as a friend. But you and I, we need each other for many things in life.”

Shunyam, Shunyam, Sarvam Shunyam

This void at the core

That infects all existence

Including mine

Which mocks all

Who think deep enough

And feel long enough

Cannot be filled

And so, we are screwed

If the void is real.

“If I could, I would. Both personally and otherwise. But I just do not know how.”

“Stop reading. Silence is speaking.”

“The word is meant for the ear. But somehow my heart keeps eavesdropping.”

The Merry-Go-Round

An ache

The never goes away

In all our lives

I wonder how they smile

Despite this

I wonder how they cry

Despite this

This merry-go-round

Who gets on, who gets off

Unconcerned

Is the merry-go-round.

Revisiting the Past

These words

That promise much

Much understanding

Both for me and her

She who read my letter

Many decades back

And thought she understood me

Little did she understand

I did not understand myself.

“Silence also seems to be of different kinds.”

“I find it strange when people say God resides in our hearts because space itself resides in God.”

“That which moves the rivers and earth, moves me also.”

The Sad Part about Marriage as a Legal Institution

That marriage exists as a legal institution is a sad commentary on human nature.

Look at it this way.

If there is love, where is the need for legal guarantees.

Now, I know some will think I am being naive because practically speaking, even if love does not change, the needs may change and people cannot live together any longer. Again, no problem, part on good terms.

Now, in both the above scenarios, the property or financial or livelihood issues can and will be taken care of easily enough because both parties are decent.

The problem comes I think when people fall out of love and it leads to acrimony.

But, even in such a case, it will be far easier to separate than if the couple were legally wedded because then it will lead to a long and messy divorce if it is not mutual.

But, what about property, or financial or livelihood issues in this scenario if the couple are not legally wedded.

I do not think just for that thing one should erect a legal institution called marriage and complicate matters for everyone concerned because one can find a creative solution to these issues.

Plus, think of the vast burden that would be reduced for those less well-to-do parents who incur huge debt to perform the wedding ceremony.

Can love ever be legalized?

“Funnily, people are more bothered about whether someone is walking-the-talk rather than about what the talk is. If you understand the full implications of what I am saying here, you would have understood a lot.”

“We should learn to look at all people as different kinds of trees, without superimposing on them some ‘I’ or personality, or a so-called ‘ghost in the machine’ as Gilbert Ryle would characterize it. Then we can see the thoughts, feelings, words, actions as the different fruits on the people-trees, exposed to and responding to the changing weather patterns. After we all are part of nature, sprung from the earth and into which we will dissolve.”

“Psychiatrists are unaware that Advaita is the correct antipsychotic.”

“My mind wants to cease existing. My heart wants to experience the rainbows.”

“Stop and smell the roses”

“Stop and smell the roses” is an idiom advising to slow down, relax, and appreciate life’s beauty, rather than rushing through it. It emphasizes mindfulness, gratitude, and finding joy in small, daily moments instead of solely chasing goals or worrying about work.

Meaning and Key Takeaways:

•  Slow Down: It is a gentle reminder to take a break from a frantic, busy schedule.

•  Appreciate the Moment: It encourages being present and noticing the pleasant things around you.

•  Enjoy the Process: It serves as a reminder to find happiness during the journey, not just at the destination.

•  Self-Care: The phrase suggests that resting and recharging prevents burnout.

Origins:

While the exact origin is unclear, the phrase is often associated with professional golfer Walter Hagen (who encouraged golfers to “stop and smell the roses” between shots) and was famously featured in the 1974 song “Stop and Smell the Roses  ” by Mac Davis.

How to Practice It:

•  Be Mindful: Focus your attention on your immediate surroundings.

•  Practice Gratitude: Count your blessings every day.

•  Reduce Stress: Actively avoid letting work-related worries dominate your life.

The Malaise

There’s a malaise deep down

In all our minds and hearts

That neither knowledge can cleanse

Nor can our all too human love

Yet we keep searching for those two

This tussle between the outer and inner

Will be our undoing one day

And when we collapse in despair

Where neither our karma can kill us

Nor our knowledge and love save us

We might at last learn to laugh heartily

Seeing how comic the condition is

Of all us humans on this earth

And at long last might start to think

We can last the night even now

Because our laughter might allow us

To bear whatever pains be our lot

Till the light might dawn at dawn.

“There is nothing wrong with you. That is what is wrong with you.”

“Svadharma, too, is ultimately Svadrama, in that it is playing out the role of a dream character who is part of this cosmic drama — and as a poet said, ‘Theirs not to reason why / Theirs but to do and die’.”

The Disconnect Between Me and the World

The world is interested in the economy, society, politics, history, religion, and sports.

I am interested in political philosophy, psychology, philosophy, poetry, literature, arts, and spirituality.

Hence the disconnect.

Hearing a Different Drummer

“If a man does not keep pace with his companions, perhaps it is because he hears a different drummer. Let him step to the music which he hears, however measured or far away.”

This famous quote by Henry David Thoreau (from his 1854 book Walden) encourages individual nonconformity, self-reliance, and following one’s own path rather than societal expectations.

Key Aspects of Thoreau’s “Different Drummer” Philosophy:

•  Individualism & Nonconformity: The quote advocates for being true to oneself and ignoring peer pressure or conventional standards.

• Context in Walden: It is found in the “Conclusion” chapter of Walden, where Thoreau explains his decision to leave the woods and encourages others to pursue their own unique, unconventional lives.

•  Self-Reliance: It emphasizes listening to one’s internal convictions (“the music which he hears”) over the opinions of others.

•  Interpretation: The “different drummer” is interpreted as an inner voice, passion, or calling that differs from the mainstream “beat” of society.

The phrase is widely used today to encourage being unique, original, and independent.

“Be materialistic if you want to be, but be so in a light, cool, bindaas, zany, nonchalant, innocent, devil-may-care attitude sense, but not in a heavy, in-your-face, flaunty, gawdy, flashy, show-offish, status-seeking, richer-than-thou way.”

“Forget Buddha. Tell me what is your suffering?”

The Five Senses

Every eye judges me

Well, not every eye.

Every ear misunderstands me

Well, not every ear.

Every tongue defames me

Well, not every tongue.

Every nose smells me out

Well, not every nose.

Every hand avoids the touch

Well, not every hand.

Pablo Neruda, Today I Indeed Will Write Even Sadder Lines Than You

You knew what you wanted

And it was her, whoever she was;

I, too, have wanted many a she

Whether each of those she’s

Wanted me or not, and at the end

After having forsaken love for truth

I find I have neither truth nor love

What I have are just these

These words, these lines

In which again people see in them

Not truth or love but merely mistakes.

“Very few get me. Most get to me.”

“I wonder how many are lucky to find what they look for. I wonder how many are lucky to not find what they look for.”

“What would the great DiMaggio do?”

In Hemingway’s The Old Man and the Sea, Santiago asks “what would the great DiMaggio do?” to find the strength to endure immense physical pain and isolation, using the baseball legend as a model of resilience. DiMaggio represents playing through injury—specifically bone spurs—symbolizing fighting through suffering to achieve excellence and survival.

What “The Great DiMaggio” Symbolizes to Santiago:

• Perseverance Over Pain: Santiago’s hands are cut and cramped, yet he tells himself, “I would like to take the great DiMaggio fishing… They say his father was a fisherman. Maybe he was as poor as we are and would understand”.

• Mental Toughness: Even when facing impossible odds (sharks eating his catch), Santiago draws inspiration from DiMaggio’s “painful condition” (bone spurs) yet still playing, reminding himself to remain a “champion” in his own field of fishing.

• Excellence and Duty: For Santiago, DiMaggio is a, “model of strength and commitment,” a hero who does his job with excellence regardless of circumstances.

In summary, DiMaggio represents the unwavering commitment to duty and the endurance of pain, prompting Santiago to say, “I think the great DiMaggio would be proud of me today”.

“Johns Hopkins, a businessman in Baltimore, funded the JH School of Medicine for those weak in body and the JH University for those strong in mind, as he himself put it. But, for me the least preferred spot on earth is a hospital, be it as a patient or as a doctor, and the most preferred spot is a university, be it as a student or as a professor.”

“The differences between castes, such as they may be, are not so much due to differences in ability as much as due to differences in what they love.”

“A poet’s job is not to tell the truth but to make you fall in love with the truth.”

from Robert Frost’s poem “Two Tramps in Mud Time” (https://allpoetry.com/Two-Tramps-In-Mud-Time)

The last stanza reads:

But yield who will to their separation,

My object in living is to unite

My avocation and my vocation

As my two eyes make one in sight.

Only where love and need are one,

And the work is play for mortal stakes,

Is the deed ever really done

For Heaven and the future’s sakes.

Key Aspects of the Quote:

Meaning: Frost argues against separating love (avocation) from necessity (vocation/work).

Philosophy: He believes true fulfillment comes only when passion and work are united.

Context: The poem contrasts the speaker’s pleasurable, yet necessary, labor of splitting wood with the serious, paid labor needed by the tramps, ultimately aiming to align his love for the task with the necessity of doing it.

The phrase emphasizes holistic living—combining what you love with what you must do.

The Prologue to Bertrand Russell’s Autobiography

What I Have Lived For

Three passions, simple but overwhelmingly strong, have governed my life: the longing for love, the search for knowledge, and unbearable pity for the suffering of mankind. These passions, like great winds, have blown me hither and thither, in a wayward course, over a great ocean of anguish, reaching to the very verge of despair.

I have sought love, first, because it brings ecstasy – ecstasy so great that I would often have sacrificed all the rest of life for a few hours of this joy. I have sought it, next, because it relieves loneliness–that terrible loneliness in which one shivering consciousness looks over the rim of the world into the cold unfathomable lifeless abyss. I have sought it finally, because in the union of love I have seen, in a mystic miniature, the prefiguring vision of the heaven that saints and poets have imagined. This is what I sought, and though it might seem too good for human life, this is what–at last–I have found.

With equal passion I have sought knowledge. I have wished to understand the hearts of men. I have wished to know why the stars shine. And I have tried to apprehend the Pythagorean power by which number holds sway above the flux. A little of this, but not much, I have achieved.

Love and knowledge, so far as they were possible, led upward toward the heavens. But always pity brought me back to earth. Echoes of cries of pain reverberate in my heart. Children in famine, victims tortured by oppressors, helpless old people a burden to their sons, and the whole world of loneliness, poverty, and pain make a mockery of what human life should be. I long to alleviate this evil, but I cannot, and I too suffer.

This has been my life. I have found it worth living, and would gladly live it again if the chance were offered me.

Hopkins’ most famous dropout

Gertrude Stein’s brief tenure as a student at the Johns Hopkins School of Medicine is often treated as mere literary trivia, but her four years in Baltimore helped set the stage for an unconventional, extraordinary life.

https://hub.jhu.edu/magazine/2026/spring/gertrude-stein-at-jhu/

Pablo Neruda, I, Too, Write the Saddest Lines Tonight, But…

Yes, Neruda,

I, too, am writing them now

You pined for your love

Without taking a name

Well, all that is fine and good

But you never wrote

In that poem of yours

What love was

Is it merely pining

Like you would have us conclude

And if pining were it

Isn’t everyone pining

For someone or something

In what way your pining was different

That you needed to write about it?

Aren’t you also fooling us

In some way

That such pining has some merit.

Did you spend your life pining away

I hope not.

But tonight I write

About a different kind of pining

One where one’s pining

Is not one’s own pining

But one’s pining

About the pining of others.

The difficulty is not that it is difficult. The difficulty is that we are interested in things other than what he is talking about in the book or at least not sufficiently interested in those matters because our focus is on ourselves as body-mind and consequentially on this world with which we need to interact to serve the purposes of our body-mind…and by that I do not mean only our base or gross desires but also this “thirst” to gain more and more knowledge of this world, be it through natural sciences but also about our own selves in the form of our feelings, emotions, the societies we have built, the “history” that we think we have been through, the future that seems to lie ahead of us, etc., because we are psychophysical organisms or we think we are that, but as Ramana Maharshi pointed out, “Knowledge of duality is ignorance” because duality is unreal and so knowledge of unreality can only be ignorance…understanding this we should live our lives as best as we can doing our svadharma because there is a gap been intellectual understanding and the realization, and it is in that gap our lives will have to be led in such a manner that the gap closes or more correctly we will realize one day that the gap also was merely an imaginary gap…

No Jana, No Dukhi

Which ganja-smoking bloke in which Himalayan cave came up with this prayer or moral ideal (if you ask me, it is nonsense) of “Sarve jana sukhino bhavantu” I do not know, but I do know that he must have been a ganja smoker.

I mean under which possible metaphysical, religious, philosophical. political, social, psychological Weltanschauung can such a state of affairs be brought or has it ever been brought about or has anyone ever put forward a theory or model that can bring it about?

So, as long as jana exist, there will be both sukhis and dukhis, if only sometimes for the simple reason that I will be become a dukhi if I see someone else more sukhi than me.

The only way there will be no dukhi is if there are no jana.

And, if you think about it, strangely enough, spirituality is taking you to that space where you become sukhi by realizing there is no sarve jana but ONLY YOU.

“The source of suffering is NOT what is MISSING from your life, including enlightenment, but what you DO NOT WANT to be MISSING from your life, including enlightenment. Understanding this IS enlightenment.”

“Gender discrimination, caste discrimination, class discrimination, racial discrimination, and ideological discrimination, etc., are all symptoms of one and only one disease.”

“Narayana Murthy thinks he is wise because he has learned the art of ignoring his subconscious mind, which is why he said that thing about the 72 hours. Now, when Sudha Murty got to know that Murthy is going around claiming he is wise, she suppressed her smirk and putting her tongue in her cheek, she wrote for Times of India a column titled, “Yes, he is wise”. This episode is very instructive for us lesser mortals on many things…from the intelligence level of the bourgeois capitalists and their wives, the dynamics of marriage in India, the status of women in Indian society, the standards of journalism in India, the level of public discourse in India, how impotent Arnab Goswami is in certain matters, the awful stupidity that the Infosys employees had to put up with over the years, etc. — too many to enumerate, but I think you get the picture. Nevertheless, as a true desh bhakt I cannot but point out gleefully that Narayana Murthy is now retired, and I do not think Sudha Murty can do much damage as the Chairman of Infosys Foundation. Jai Hind.”

“Fathers are our enemies. Based on their vast experience of married life, they never have a heartfelt conversation with us about what a lot of trouble a woman is, and we end up committing the same mistake they did.”

“You are mistaken. Women do not use reason. They will either cry or slap you.”

Questions to Ask Yourself to Know if You Have Nailed the Concept of Non-doership

1. Am i spontaneous in my reactions?

2. Have I stopped overthinking?

3. Do I worry less than usual?

4. Do i feel less anxious?

5. Am i less afraid?

6. I feel less fearful of the future?

7. I regret the past less?

8. I smile more often?

9. I love others more these days?

10. Others irritate me less?

11. I live these days by the philosophy of Carpe Diem (Seize the Day)?

12. I am happier these days?

If your answers are no to any one of the above such questions, then, dear non-doer who is thinking you are the doer, you have some more work to do.

But then if you ask me if I am not the doer then why are you asking me to do anything, then I will have to say that it will cost you a lot if I have to teach you that—maybe you will need to forgo your vacations for next 5 years to afford my fees.

“The noise is the loudest when she is silent.”

Urgently Hiring: Translator Needed — from English to Silence

The ideal candidate has a master’s degree in Silence — PhD is desirable but not a requirement.

He/she will have a youthful of experience, though we strongly discourage women from applying since our past experience tells us that they find the job too demanding.

Hours of work: The noisy part of the day.

Husbands are strongly encouraged to apply since they know the art of listening better than most.

Salary Expectation: Send us a selfie rather than a voice note.

Location: The World.

Hiring Company: Maya, a conglomerate of all the companies.

Apply @ shunya@anthashunya.om

“Definition of God: That supreme power which can convert in a jiffy emptiness into pain.”

“Does anyone have God’s email ID? I want to write him an email with subject ‘Are you mad?'”

“Definition of a Woman: The magical alchemical potion that converts mard into dard.”

“Emotions are perhaps the counterpart in the heart of the thoughts in the mind, both of which are responses to the desires that our being harbours beneath the mind and heart.”

Seize the day | Zindagi Na Milegi Dobara

“Seize the day my friend” is an iconic dialogue from the 2011 film Zindagi Na Milegi Dobara, delivered by Laila (Katrina Kaif) to Arjun (Hrithik Roshan). The scene highlights the importance of living in the present, enjoying life’s small joys, and not waiting for the future to live, encapsulated by Laila’s line: “Pehle is din ko puri tarah jiyo, phir 40 ke bare me sochna”.

Key Context & Related Lines:

The Context: Laila tells this to Arjun when he says he will retire after 40, questioning him on how he knows he will even live that long.

Related Dialogue: “Insaan ko dibbe mein sirf tab hona chahiye jab woh mar chuka ho” (A person should remain in a box only once he is dead).

Significance: The phrase summarizes the film’s theme (YOLO – You Only Live Once), prompting a shift from work-centric stress to experiencing life.

This philosophy, heavily influenced by Laila’s character, encourages Arjun to overcome his fear of missing out on money and instead focus on finding happiness in the moment.

The Four Yogas

As Sankaracharya pointed out, action is NOT opposed to ignorance, only “knowledge” counters ignorance.

And, the problem is ONLY ignorance, ignorance that you are the bound entity called body-mind.

Hence, any amount of karma will not bestow moksha.

So, the only yoga that works ultimately is Jnana Yoga — sravana-manana-nididhyasana.

Rest of the yogas – karma, bhakti and meditation – are merely preparatory or purify and concentrate the mind so that one can then understand Jnana Yoga more easily.

So, how can one tell if other yogas still need to be practiced? They may be needed ONLY if you find that you are not getting “intellectually” what Jnana Yoga is trying to teach.

Nevertheless, one could still deploy all the yogas in one’s daily life.

But, paradoxically, only one who knows Jnana Yoga correctly can practice the other yogas better.

For instance, what is karma yoga ultimately? As Ramana Maharshi pointed out, “kartrutva-bhava rahita karma is karma yoga”, that is, action done without the sense of doership is karma yoga. But only through Jnana Yoga you come to know you are not the doer.

When it comes to Bhakti Yoga, unless you know what is God, you will fall in love with the wrong bloke, and only Jnana Yoga teaches you what exactly God is — see the two verse I will share below from Upadesa Saram of Ramana Maharshi.

And, unless one has understood from Jnana Yoga that there is no distance between you and the Truth (Tat Tvam Asi), then you will be “trying” to (at least subconsciously) some place or state called moksha, and that sets up a restlessness to get there and that disturbs the peace and stillness in meditation because any “desire” be it even “desire” for moksha generates thoughts…remember the chain — ignorance—desires–thoughts—speech and other bodily actions…

from Upadesa Saram

Verse 5

Ether, fire, air, water, earth,

Sun, moon and living beings

Worship of these,

Regarded all as forms of His,

Is perfect worship of the Lord.

Verse 8

Than contemplation with Duality,

the “He is me” (Non-dual) type

of contemplation without Duality,

is considered by Sruti to be more purifying or holy.

Verse 5 and 8, which are part of Bhakti Yoga section In Upadesa Saram, can be done only if one understands why what they are saying is true, and only Jnana Yoga lets you know why they are true.

“Although I am not caught in the rat race, I seem to be caught in some other race, though I know not what race.”

“The ego stays alive as long as you do not fall in love either with a woman or with the idea of liberation or with both.”

Purushulandu punya purushulu veraya ani Vemana rasaadu.

But, I feel he missed a trick by not adding another line to his uppu kappurambu poem:

Kaani, purushulandu ye purushulu veru kaadayya

Maybe he understood that truth, though I cannot be sure, but somehow, he failed to point that out.

Thereby I feel he did a great disservice because now Brahmins are going around deluded, thinking memu Dalitula nunchi veraya.

“That there are no words to name somethings is perhaps a good thing.”

Life Is a Meaningless Farce???

“I had a day to go and I went with it. There was no plan. There was an outline, one which I could follow, floating, gently. There was no goal, no prey to be caught. I was not a circling raptor, a vulture, a shark, a big cat poised to spring. I was not on my guard. This was something else. I was on a journey. On my way home, I thought. I was traveling on an open ticket, with no itinerary. I journeyed through the minutiae of the streets in a universe replete with minor incidents, a host of objects and occurrences and sensations all crowded together in my memory.”

Gosh, to hit upon that! I just couldn’t believe how much these passages expressed this way of living that had something to do with experiencing time — this term “being present” — but it took no effort. How amazing it was! It was a beautiful way to live in the world. And I knew it would go away, too. I have to try to remember it. I have to try to live this way. The degree of freshness to the world around me and the amazement and the beauty of it was something I got to be in!

Read full interview with Bob Odenkirk here:

A friend shared:

“The world will trouble you so long as any part of you belongs to the world.

It is only if you belong entirely to the DIVINE that you can become free”

Sri Aurobindo 🪷

I replied:

So, how do you plan to “belong entirely to the DIVINE”?

Now, I am not asking that in any skeptical way.

My opinion is that to “belong entirely to the DIVINE” one has to  basically be silent.

I am not sure how being “silent” can be pulled off by people who are still working.

At the same time, I am not sure how even people like me who work only 1 hr/day can also pull off being silent.

I think one has to really be wanting liberation desperately that one will go after it almost single-mindedly — I will give a few quotes of Nisargadatta below, which sort of speak to this, but before that let me share my own insights into this.

I basically realized that it is not that difficult to keep just the body alive. And, what is this world and all its feverish activity but the various ways to keep the mind and heart not only alive but also somehow happy and joyous. So, I sort of said at one point, “Just keep the body alive, and forget the mind and heart.” In my case, where I am hardly working and even that work, I do from home, and I am single and I almost never visit anyone nor anyone visits me that much, I perhaps could somehow pull it off. But, here, too, a person like J. Krishnamurti will create some doubt in your mind because he keeps saying, “to be is to be related”, and moreover Nididhyasana is best done in the midst of all the relationships in this world and while “living” in the world.

But I find myself somehow pulled into online interactions, though these days since I have deleted almost all my social media accounts, only WhatsApp keeps me engaged, and the occasional phone call.

So, it is a bit unclear how to spend one’s day. Hence, I have decided that perhaps Maharshi’s advice to spend 1-2 hrs a day in meditation and spend the rest of the day anyway might be the middle path I am looking for because in that case, I can follow my svadharma, though not in the field work involving livelihood but other “work” whereby I pursue literature, arts and philosophy, which not only satisfy my svadharma of the intellectual life but also would contribute directly or indirectly to purifying the obstacles (which you, too, are somehow focused on with you turn to Abhidharma), and in the process somewhere down the road maybe a more radical inward turn could take place.

Maybe we can also use the advice given by WB Yeats in his poem “Down By the Salley Gardens”, though that advice was given in the context of romantic love between two humans, but I do not see why the same advice cannot be followed when it comes to the relation between our individual soul and the divine because love, even of the romantic kind is to “belong entirely to one’s beloved”, and all that Aurobindo seems to be saying is let your beloved be the DIVINE, so love has to be there but in what proportion one loves the various objects one’s love could vary.

She bid me take love easy,

   as the leaves grow on the tree;

She bid me take life easy,

   as the grass grows on the weirs;

from I Am That: Dialogues of Sri Nisargadatta Maharaj

Once you have seen that you are dreaming, you shall wake up. But you do not see, because you want the dream to continue. A day will come when you will long for the ending of the dream, with all your heart and mind, and be willing to pay any price; the price will be dispassion and detachment, the loss of interest in the dream itself.

The desire to find the self will be surely fulfilled, provided you want nothing else. But you must be honest with yourself and really want nothing else. If in the meantime you want many other things and are engaged in their pursuit, your main purpose may be delayed until you grow wiser and cease being torn between contradictory urges. Go within, without swerving, without ever looking outward.

Try to be, only to be. The all-important word is ‘try’. Allot enough time daily for sitting quietly and trying, just trying, to go beyond the personality, with its addictions and obsessions. Don’t ask how, it cannot be explained. You just keep on trying until you succeed. If you persevere, there can be no failure. What matters supremely is sincerity, earnestness; you must really have had surfeit of being the person you are, now see the urgent need of being free of this unnecessary self-identification with a bundle of memories and habits. This steady resistance against the unnecessary is the secret of success.

“When love comes calling, be prepared to lose everything. Because to hold on to love, you have to let go of your hold on everything else.”

“I have been kicked around since I was born by words.”

“Love is a pleasure that conceals the pain.”

“Love’s only task is to make you aware how far you are from it.”

“Something strange is going on in this world of love. Our parents loved us. Our siblings loved us. Our teachers loved us. Our friends loved us. Our colleagues loved us. Sometimes the boss loved us. Sometimes the wife loved us. Our children loved us. Even the janitor loved us. At the end of it all, we are still searching. Wanting perfect love? But, did the others, the parents, the siblings, the teachers, the friends, the colleagues, the boss, the wife, the children, the janitor get that perfect love from us? Are we here on earth only to leave one other forever dissatisfied?’-

What’s This Reaching Out?

What’s this reaching out

That is happening all the time

In all climes, reaching out for what

To possess a smile, to set free a pain

To win the Nobel or become Noble

To bring about World Peace

To dress the neighbour’s wound

Most often we do not know

What wounds a neighbour has.

The Ignorance

Sometimes I wonder

If I have in me

That which love wants.

And I also wonder

If love has

That which I want.

“What gives philosophers sleepless nights is emotion because try as they might they just cannot account for it in their neat overarching theories.”

“When it comes to us humans, probably there is something like optimal distance even in love, but when it comes to God, one has to go all the way, otherwise one can never reach him.”

“When you can love the girl in mini-skirt who has a cute smile but do not exclude the guy in the unemployment line from the ambit of your love, then consider that you are beginning to understand life.”

“Every generation talks of love in its own way, writes songs in its own way, makes movies in its own way, writes novels in its own way, writes poetry in its own way, creates art and music in its own way, and yet every generation keeps missing the mark by and large. O, the pity of it, it makes me cry.”

Being Gen Z

My Brahmin friend

Yes, I gotta mention his caste

Since Gen Z, too,

Has not forgotten caste,

Thinks I am not as cool as Gen Z

I know he has read history

He has read DD Kosambi

And keeps mentioning

Some Brahmin king Pushyamitra

I am surprised then

He has not heard of Romeo and Juliet

O lover of Che Guevara

And to an extent Marx

Know that love is as old as the hills

Nay older than the hills

If some Greek philosopher

Is to be believed, who said

Eros and Eris are the two forces

That give rise to this world

So, don’t give me this Gen Z bullshit.

“Keeping Quiet”

Now, people will start wondering why is the guy who is saying “Just keep quiet” is not keeping quiet.

Without confusing all you people by saying things like, “It depends on what you mean by ‘quiet'”, let me put things more simply.

You cannot get to quietude by “trying” to be quiet, because that very attempt and trying is the unquietude.

Instead, just keep saying, writing and doing things that will allow you to get to quietude.

Because after all, one will soon get tired of shouting and fall silent.

Maybe that is why the Bhagavad Gita says, “Action is better than inaction.”

So, keep shouting instead of keeping quiet when the urge to shout is there inside.

“The world is the fashion parade of Brahman.”

Quote of the day by Christina Rossetti:

 ‘Can anything be sadder than work left unfinished? Yes, work never begun’ ;

lessons on productivity from British poet –

 The Economic Times https://share.google/sTSRqKdlMyTJnJh2C

Why Should We Imagine Sisyphus Happy?

Explaining Camus’ Famous Quote | TheCollector

https://share.google/ZcxfGM9HXVIqDjvpt

From The Ballad of East and West by Rudyard Kipling — https://www.kiplingsociety.co.uk/poem/poems_eastwest.htm

Oh, East is East, and West is West, and never the twain shall meet,

Till Earth and Sky stand presently at God’s great Judgment Seat;

But there is neither East nor West, Border, nor Breed, nor Birth,

When two strong men stand face to face, though they come from the ends of the earth!

Kipling’s justly famous ‘Ballad of East and West’, in which an English officer and an Afghan horse-thief Kamal discover friendship by respecting one another’s courage and chivalry. The ballad tells how, when Kamal the border thief steals a prize bay mare, the Colonel’s son (not named) follows them into enemy territory.

When his own horse collapses from exhaustion the Colonel’s son, having lost a pistol to Kamal and being threatened with the prospect of making a meal for the jackals and crows, ‘lightly’ responds by promising vengeance:

…Do good to bird and beast’

But count who come for the broken meats before thou makest a feast’ .

His jesting defiance wins the tribute: ‘May I eat dirt if thou hast hurt of me in deed or breath’ from Kamal, and the Colonel’s son responds in kind:

Take up the mare and keep her – by God she has carried a man.

Kamal instead gives back the mare with the ‘lifter’s dower’ of his own jewelled accoutrements, and when the Colonel’s son in return offers him the gift of his remaining pistol Kamal, not to be outdone in generosity, whistles up his ’only son’ to be the companion and fellow-soldier of the Englishman. The two young men return to ‘Fort Bukloh’ and: ‘the boy who last night was ‘a Border-thief’ is now ‘a man of the Guides.’

One Way of Looking at Some Things

“To love truth and see the truth in love — these are the only two worthwhile goals in life.”

“Love is in the air but the problem is we have stopped breathing.”

“No two pairs of eyes can see the same world.”

“All worlds are relative to the one who sees.”

“To know and yet not know is the anguish.”

“The very need for love is the lie, and yet we cannot seem to go beyond the need for love.”

“God keeps appearing in our life as the sunrise, the smile, the love, and sometimes as the sunset, the smirk, the separation, and we keep thinking they are just sunrises, smiles, loves, sunsets, smirks, and separations.”

“Sometimes he who knows too much, understands very little.”

“Knowledge keeps adding to the doubt.”

“All fear prevents the flowering.”

“Everybody fears everyone in this world. Hence so many contracts, including the wedding vows.”

“When love itself needs to be reaffirmed from time to time, what fulfillment can we expect in this world.”

“Aristotle said ‘Man is a social animal’. But as long as we remain a social animal, the animal in us also will live on.”

“He who is afraid of hatred cannot understand what love is.”

The Dream Analogy and Castes

Remember the dream analogy.

The waking world is also a dream.

The dream characters of Brahmins and Reddys are NOT real…they are just dream characters.

Only the dreamer is real.

And the dreamer can dream up even 10 castes, why only 4 castes.

“Is one ever NOT in love? Only the object(s) of one’s love keeps changing. Find out what you love truly and deeply.”

“In the depths, and at the very foundations, of every body of knowledge, every romantic love, every one-night stand, every relationship, every extra-marital affair, every mode of thinking, every emotion, every sadness, every failure, every success, every joy, every betrayal, every criticism, every praise, every blame, every shame, every envy, every guilt, every remorse, every destruction, every hate, every deceit, every judgement, every forgiving, every kindness, every sympathy, every empathy, every compassion, every doubt, Truth and Love await to receive you with open arms.”

Apollonian and Dionysian Dichotomoy

Apollonian and Dionysian are philosophical concepts from Friedrich Nietzsche’s The Birth of Tragedy (1872) representing the duality between order/reason (Apollo) and chaos/emotion (Dionysus). Apollonian represents structure, logic, and individualism, while Dionysian represents ecstasy, intoxication, and unity. Nietzsche argued that great art arises from the synthesis of these opposing forces.

Key Aspects of the Apollonian and Dionysian Dichotomy:

Apollonian (Order and Form): Associated with Apollo, the god of light, music, and reason. It embodies principles of moderation, clarity, beauty, and individuality. It relates to structured arts like sculpture and epic poetry, creating a “beautiful illusion” that makes existence bearable.

Dionysian (Chaos and Unity): Associated with Dionysus, the god of wine, ritual, and madness. It embodies irrationality, intense emotion, unbridled passion, and the dissolution of the individual into a collective, chaotic whole. It relates to art forms like music, which break down individual barriers.

Nietzsche’s Perspective: Nietzsche believed Greek culture reached its peak by balancing these two forces, notably in Athenian tragedy, which combined structured dialogue (Apollonian) with musical chorus (Dionysian). He argued that a, overemphasis on the Apollonian (rationality) since Socrates led to the decline of art and cultural vitality, calling for a return to a healthy tension between the two.

Application: These terms are used to analyze art, psychology, and personality, describing a person’s tendency toward control (Apollonian) or passion and spontaneity (Dionysian).

“No Brahmin could have taught the Bhagavad Gita.”

Why

Because the Brahmin (and by this I do not mean merely Brahmin by birth but in the sense in which Krishna himself describes in Gita that one’s caste is determined by one’s guna and karma, and not by birth, which point even Buddhism talks about in a  whole chapter in Dhammapada as to who is a Brahmana) is one characterized by Sattva Guna, which in turn is characterized by Happiness and knowledge.

The field of karma and action is the domain of Rajas.

Hence, the Brahmin will struggle to understand the metaphysics of action, which only a Kshatriya like Krishna could fathom. The Brahmin, with his knowledge, might be able to invent better bows and arrows, and the art of archery, etc. The Brahmin might even be able to say why Kurukshetra is necessary, etc., given his political understanding. But he will be struggling to connect action and duty and karma drama happening in the physical world to the metaphysical world of soul and moksha.

That is why Vedas make a sharp  distinction between action (Karma Kanda of yajnas, sacrifices, etc.) and knowledge (Jnana Kanda of Upanishads), the two clear demarcations in Vedas, the so-called apara vidya and para vidya, which has led to the Varnashrama Dharma.

Krishna comes and blurs the distinction between apara vidya and para vidya, saying that both can take you to moksha.

Karma Yoga road also takes you to the same destination as the road of Jnana Yoga, is what Krishna pointed out.

The Brahmin is dwelling in the world of knowledge and wisdom, and the kshatriya like Krishna is dwelling in the thick of action or you could say applied knowledge. So, only Krishna is in the best position to understand the mysteries of action and karma.

In the modern world, these Brahmins would be people like professors, researchers, consultants, etc.

“It is not the path that is important but the traveller. Because every path takes you to the truth, but the traveller may like to take rest, or fear the hardships on the path, or want to switch paths, etc.”

“Ultimately, our love for others helps us much more than it helps others.”

“Marx says it’s the bourgeois. Maharshi says it’s you.”

The Secret Few Know

You can try

But you ain’t gonna succeed

Better give up

Why, you ask

Surely, you can fail

Only when you try to succeed.

“Only when you are at ease to be sitting with even  a murderer and allowing him to tell his side of the story can you be said to be enlightened to a large extent.”

“Among all the castes it is the Brahmin who is the coward. Why? He lives in constant fear that even the shadow of the Dalit will eclipse the light of knowledge in his being.”

“Always assign at least a tiny corner to doubt in the impressive edifice of your knowledge and wisdom.”

“Hell is your underemployed and unmarried friend with access to WhatsApp.”

“Ghar waapsi karna chahta hoon. Lekin kitna bi sonchoo ya dhoondoon pata hi nahi lag raa ghar ka pataa.”

“Gandhi is supposed to have said, ‘My life is my message.’ I, not being so profound, can only say, ‘My life is my joke’.”

“One kind of bad karma, there are many kinds mind you, is when people start laughing more at you than at your jokes.”

“It is so sad that till now I have recognized instantly every friend I have met no matter how long it was since we last met.”

“In friendship there is a giving without any expectation and a receiving without any obligation.”

‘Sometimes freedom throws itself around your arms as unrequited love.’

‘She was wearing the rose in her hair, and I was brushing off the snow from my jacket.’

“The longing for the home is the cause for all the strife in this world. To feel at home anywhere and everywhere is freedom.”

“When you set aside the mind and heart, you reach that state of aloneness that is also oneness in which there can be no loneliness.”

“This is the mistake we keep making that we seek the truth with our mind and love with our heart, without realizing that only when we set aside the mind and heart will we find the truth and love that we seek.”

Sambhavami Yuge Yuge: Thoughts While Reading Some Diaries

Sometimes a boy from Argentina

Is the antidote

If you ask “For what?”

Then you are part of the problem.

“Every day the sun arrives and with it some smiles, and those make us dance and dance till our feet ache.”

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