“Eyes filled with love see God everywhere.”
Category: God
Beyond Words: Silence as the Highest Expression of Truth
Ramana Maharshi declared, “The only language able to express the whole truth is silence.” In Advaita Vedanta, the Self is beyond knowledge and ignorance, beyond light and darkness. Words divide, but silence holds unity. Ramana’s presence itself was a teaching—those who sat with him often felt peace beyond explanation. Silence is not absence but fullness: the stillness in which the Self shines without obstruction. To abide in this silence is to realize that truth is not something to be reached but what we already are—pure being, ever free. Explore Ramana Maharshi’s teaching that silence is the highest expression of truth in Advaita Vedanta, where words fail but being alone remains.
The Commandment
“God’s only commandment: Love.”
God and Us
“We are all the different masks that God is wearing.”
Upon Watching “Metro… In Dino”
Some people love Baba RamdevMore than they love their spouseAfter all when health goes for a tossOf what use is … More
“Everyone in this world is mad”
“My son, everyone in this world is mad. Some are mad for money, some for creature comforts, some for name … More
Compassion (Daya) vs Attachment (Maya) – Bible & Ramakrishna Paramahansa hold forth
“Anyone who loves their father or mother more than me is not worthy of me; anyone who loves their son … More
God Has a Good Sense of Humour
Here He is, almost threatening No, but not in a human way More by letting me realize Gently, gently, gently … More
Sense of Doership
“Maya is nothing but the sense of doership.”
The Vedantic Concept of Name-and-Form
Vedanta teaches that the world is nothing but name-and-form, with Consciousness as its sole reality. Just as a pot is only clay appearing in a certain form, this universe is only God appearing as countless names and forms. The sense of an individual “I” too is merely a thought-form within Consciousness. When this truth is realized, doership dissolves, sorrow ends, and one discovers that true happiness lies not outside but in the Self, which is ever free, blissful, and divine.