International Journal of Humanities and Social Science Invention (IJHSSI) is an international journal intended for professionals and researchers in all fields of Humanities and Social Science. IJHSSI publishes research articles and reviews within the whole field Humanities and Social Science, new teaching methods, assessment, validation and the impact of new technologies and it will continue to provide information on the latest trends and developments in this ever-expanding subject. The publications of papers are selected through double peer reviewed to ensure originality, relevance, and readability. The articles published in our journal can be accessed online.
The Journal will bring together leading researchers, engineers and scientists in the domain of interest from around the world. Topics of interest for submission include, but are not limited to :
Chapter 1 of Bhagavad Geeta, entitled the Arjuna Vishada Yoga introduces the scenery & circumstances in which this great philosophical discourse took place. Arjuna, the Pandava prince, leading the Pandava forces against the Kauravas in the ensuing Mahabharata war, gets disheartened by the prospect of killing his great grandfather, uncles, brothers & other close relatives, & filled with confusion & sorrow decides to not fight the war. Sri Krishna, his close friend & charioteer, advises him & revives him back to fight this war against impropriety & unrighteousness.
International Journal of Humanities and Social Science Invention (IJHSSI) is an international journal intended for professionals and researchers in all fields of Humanities and Social Science. IJHSSI publishes research articles and reviews within the whole field Humanities and Social Science, new teaching methods, assessment, validation and the impact of new technologies and it will continue to provide information on the latest trends and developments in this ever-expanding subject. The publications of papers are selected through double peer reviewed to ensure originality, relevance, and readability. The articles published in our journal can be accessed online.
The Journal will bring together leading researchers, engineers and scientists in the domain of interest from around the world. Topics of interest for submission include, but are not limited to :
Chapter 1 of Bhagavad Geeta, entitled the Arjuna Vishada Yoga introduces the scenery & circumstances in which this great philosophical discourse took place. Arjuna, the Pandava prince, leading the Pandava forces against the Kauravas in the ensuing Mahabharata war, gets disheartened by the prospect of killing his great grandfather, uncles, brothers & other close relatives, & filled with confusion & sorrow decides to not fight the war. Sri Krishna, his close friend & charioteer, advises him & revives him back to fight this war against impropriety & unrighteousness.
Chapter 2, entitled Sankhya Yoga, is the starting point of the philosophical discourse between Sri Krishna & Arjuna. This chapter is a summarised version of all of Bhagavad Geeta as it introduces all the philosophical points which are elaborated in later chapters. It is called the Yoga of Knowledge. Sankhya yoga deals with the knowledge of the universe & its Substratum, the Atman, Brahman, or Self. The chapter initially talks about Sankhya yoga, then Karma Yoga & Bhakti yoga. It concludes with the Yoga of renunciation.
Here Mahatma Gandhi explains the contents of Chapter 3-Karma Yoga, in his incomparably simple style. He asserts that The Gita is very much concerned with practical life. He connects the Yajna with the use of Charkha for producing yarn to be spun in a handloom, & bodily labour.
joey wong on Nov 23, 2011 at 10:38 pm Reading these stories made me cry, as all of the mahasiddhas are just ordinary people with ordinary attachments and afflictions who have realized Mahamudra and enlightenment just by following their Guru’s instructions, and how near we are to achieving that, yet how far we are from it due to our own stubbornness. All of the stories have strengthened my resolve in following my Guru all the way and to not be lazy if i really wanted to extract the essence of this close to meaningless life of mine. I sincerely pray that i may have the sincerity and resolve of all of the mahasiddhas to follow my Guru all the way because i am utterly ashamed at what i lack. My eyes are welling up as i type this comment. Thank you so much Rinpoche for posting this. My fave mahasiddhas are Kalakala, Virupa, Ghantapa, Dharmapa and Tsamarepa. but really i love them all i can relate a lot to Kalakala, Dharmapa and Tsamarepa tho…. Much, much thanks to Rinpoche and his team for making this wonderful collection of stories. It’s really good to read it whenever anyone feels down..
India is a goldmine full of such personalities - the numbers does not diminish anybody's value. Together they have remided us about the timeless values inherited by India from time imemorial.
Chapter 2, entitled Sankhya Yoga, is the starting point of the philosophical discourse between Sri Krishna & Arjuna. This chapter is a summarised version of all of Bhagavad Geeta as it introduces all the philosophical points which are elaborated in later chapters. It is called the Yoga of Knowledge. Sankhya yoga deals with the knowledge of the universe & its Substratum, the Atman, Brahman, or Self. The chapter initially talks about Sankhya yoga, then Karma Yoga & Bhakti yoga. It concludes with the Yoga of renunciation.
Here Mahatma Gandhi explains the contents of Chapter 3-Karma Yoga, in his incomparably simple style. He asserts that The Gita is very much concerned with practical life. He connects the Yajna with the use of Charkha for producing yarn to be spun in a handloom, & bodily labour.
joey wong on Nov 23, 2011 at 10:38 pm Reading these stories made me cry, as all of the mahasiddhas are just ordinary people with ordinary attachments and afflictions who have realized Mahamudra and enlightenment just by following their Guru’s instructions, and how near we are to achieving that, yet how far we are from it due to our own stubbornness. All of the stories have strengthened my resolve in following my Guru all the way and to not be lazy if i really wanted to extract the essence of this close to meaningless life of mine. I sincerely pray that i may have the sincerity and resolve of all of the mahasiddhas to follow my Guru all the way because i am utterly ashamed at what i lack. My eyes are welling up as i type this comment. Thank you so much Rinpoche for posting this. My fave mahasiddhas are Kalakala, Virupa, Ghantapa, Dharmapa and Tsamarepa. but really i love them all i can relate a lot to Kalakala, Dharmapa and Tsamarepa tho…. Much, much thanks to Rinpoche and his team for making this wonderful collection of stories. It’s really good to read it whenever anyone feels down..
India is a goldmine full of such personalities - the numbers does not diminish anybody's value. Together they have remided us about the timeless values inherited by India from time imemorial.
Swamijis words on vedanta, humanity, science and religion are still very relevant for all. His complete works are used here to explain his message in simple words
Swami #Vivekananda Bengali: , Shāmi Bibekānondo; 12 January 1863 – 4 July 1902), born #Narendranath Datta, was an Indian Hindu monk, a chief disciple of the 19th-century Indian mystic Ramakrishna. He was a key figure in the introduction of the Indian philosophies of# Vedanta and #Yoga to the Western world and is credited with raising #interfaith awareness, bringing Hinduism to the status of a major world religion during the late 19th century. He was a major force in the revival of Hinduism in India, and contributed to the concept of nationalism in colonial India. Vivekananda founded the #Ramakrishna Math and the Ramakrishna Mission. He is perhaps best known for his speech which began, "Sisters and brothers of America ...," in which he introduced Hinduism at the Parliament of the World's Religions in Chicago in 1893.
Born into an aristocratic Bengali family of Calcutta, Vivekananda was inclined towards spirituality. He was influenced by his Guru, Ramakrishna Deva, from whom he learnt that all living beings were an embodiment of the divine self; therefore, service to God could be rendered by service to mankind. After Ramakrishna's death, Vivekananda toured the Indian subcontinent extensively and acquired first-hand knowledge of the conditions prevailing in British India. He later traveled to the United States, representing India at the 1893 Parliament of the World Religions. Vivekananda conducted hundreds of public and private lectures and classes, disseminating tenets of Hindu philosophy in the United States, England and Europe. In India, Vivekananda is regarded as a patriotic saint and his birthday is celebrated there as National Youth Day.
Welcome to the Program Your Destiny course. In this course, we will be learning the technology of personal transformation, neuroassociative conditioning (NAC) as pioneered by Tony Robbins. NAC is used to deprogram negative neuroassociations that are causing approach avoidance and instead reprogram yourself with positive neuroassociations that lead to being approach automatic. In doing so, you change your destiny, moving towards unlocking the hypersocial self within, the true self free from fear and operating from a place of personal power and love.
23 reasons to Love the Bhagavad Gita & How illumined Am I
1. s p i r i t u a l i t y h e a l t h . c o m 61
and I am the sound of it heard throughout the universe.
I am the slight, delicate scent, the sweet fragrance of the
earth.
I am the brilliance in both fire and sun, and I am the light of
Divinity in all beings.
I am the subtle spirit in spiritual practices that gives them their
existence — for example, the love in the devotee, the auster-
ity in the ascetic, the sweet sense of charity in the giver.
It continues for several more chapters, but by this time we had
fallen from head to toe in love with this wondrous text. We
were beginning to understand why this half-inch-thick master-
piece poem about life, death, love, and duty is often called
India’s greatest gift to humanity.
23
Reasons to
Love
the BHAGAVAD
GITA
What’s behind my 25-year love affair with
what is often called India’s greatest gift to humanity?
Story by Jack Hawley
Art by Kim Waters Murray
Twenty-five years ago, in the summer heat of India’s Deccan
plateau, my wife and I stopped at a guesthouse. Thirsting for
something to read, I skimmed a dog-eared Bhagavad Gita,
coming to rest on chapter seven. Krishna, the Divinity figure,
is describing the very nature of God. Enthralled, I began read-
ing aloud to my wife, explaining that this is God talking:
I am Pure Consciousness, the underlying essence of all elements
and beings.
I am the innate nature of everything.
In pure water I am the sweet taste.
In the sun and moon I am the radiance.
In the very center of human beings I live as virility and courage.
IamthesacredwordOm,whichisanappellationoftheDivine,
2. S p i r i t u a l i t y & H e a l t h S e p t / O c t 2 0 0 6
6 2
8,000 years ago
people embarked on a startlingly
different approach
to learning, turning inward.
I love the Gita’s basic goodness, and how it
pushes me beyond merely trying to be a good person
toward becoming my own Divinity within. And I love
that it provides me with page after page of the means
to call forth that extreme goodness in me. And I love
how it continually reminds me to do that.
I love the ultra-honesty in it about reli-
gion and the notions of heaven and hell,
death and life. I love how the Gita lives in
the open spaces beyond religious dogma,
and yet has a reverence for the scriptural
teachings of all faiths.
The origins of the Gita go back as many as 8,000 years, when
the people who were building sophisticated cultures here in
the river valleys embarked on a startlingly different approach
to learning. As they tried to comprehend their world — which
was no doubt as vexing to them as our world is to us — they
discovered important new ways of understanding. Instead of
looking outward for their answers, a small number of these
earliest scientists turned inward.
Thus, humanity began, those eons ago, to methodically ex-
plore consciousness. The methods they developed were not for
merely coping with a harsh world but for living at a rare level
of consciousness that includes almost uninterrupted happiness.
Birthed back then were the principles of atma (a version of
“soul”), reincarnation, dharma, karma, meditation, and serenity.
These are the ideas that parented Hinduism, Buddhism, Jainism,
Taoism, and influenced most other enlightenment systems.
The Bhagavad Gita (the “Song Celestial”) is the most com-
plete spiritual text from those times. The Gita — buried in the
center of a six-inch-thick epic masterpiece poem, the Maha-
bharata (“Great Country”), about the heights and depths of
the human soul — gives us a continuous, unbroken sight line
back into the minds and hearts of men and women living in
those primeval times. It provides perhaps the most complete
explanation of the earliest spiritual formulations of humanity,
and it lives on today as a still-fresh centerpiece text guiding the
daily lives of hundreds of millions of human souls.
Now, in my small room a generation later, having researched
and written four books about the Gita, I wonder how best to
express the real meaning of this great work. The only true way
to let people in on the essence of the Gita’s spiritual gifts is to not
try to analyze or further codify it; talking about the epic does
not convey its epic deepness. Instead, the ancient sages within
me whisper the answer: “Share your love.”
TheBhagavadGitabeginswithanimpendingwar.Grief-strickenat
theprospectofbattlingarmiesofteachers,relatives,andfriends,
thewarriorArjunarefusestofight.TheGodVishnu(page64),incar-
natedasthecharioteerKrishna(page63),tellsArjunahemustfulfill
hisdestinyasawarrior(right):thesoulisindestructibleandArjuna
mustfightwithoutattachmentoraversiontoanoutcome.
3. s p i r i t u a l i t y h e a l t h . c o m 63
I love how the Gita is so clear about how we must live with the conse-
quences of our actions, but with no hint of punishment. I love how it
neither excuses nor overlooks our dark side — and yet doesn’t dwell there,
highlighting instead the bright side of humanity. Indeed, Sanskrit, the
precise spiritual language of the Gita, has no word for damnation.
I love the Gita’s absolute in-
sistence on truth, and how
adamant it is that we follow
our own basic nature and live
a dharmic life — which is to
consciously live by our own in-
ner truth, a whole life of doing
the right thing. I love how it
doesn’t compromise an iota on
this, and won’t take any excuses
where truth is concerned.
I just love the happiness in the Gita, and thor-
oughly appreciate its careful explanation of how
to attain real happiness. I appreciate also that it lays
out what happiness is not, and is so clear about the
obstacles in the way of lasting happiness.
I love my own inner peacefulness whenever I enter the Gita’s teachings.
I love how my anger has pretty much been eliminated, and how worldly
agitations are largely things of the past for me.
I love the Gita’s teachings on acceptance — not mere
compliance, but acceptance as a state of mind and
way of being — a receptiveness so elevated that one’s
life forever soars when touched by the magic of it.
This acceptance is the most shining facet of love, so
all-embracing it’s the very essence of spiritual sur-
render. When my wife suffered a stroke in India,
we were both imbued with such a strong mood of
acceptance that we are convinced that being in this
mental zone is what pulled her through. (That full
story is retold in The Bhagavad Gita: AWalkthrough
forWesterners [New World Library, 2001].)
I love the fact that the utter
truths of the Gita have been test-
ed and purified down through
so many centuries. It makes me
feel humbled and gladdened that
these hoary ideas, stemming from
perhaps one of the oldest records
of humanity (the Vedas), precede
all other teachings known in
the world today; that they have
passed the severe tests of count-
less centuries.
I love that the Gita’s truths, though
stated in different ways at different
times by different peoples of the
world, have been known to humanity
for millennia — and that all higher
religions and philosophical systems
are in nearly complete agreement
with these basic truths.
I love the absolute love in the Gita, and the
utter adoration that saturates its pages. I
love its straightforward emphasis on expe-
riencing devotion to a loving God.
I love its definition of sin — not evil
acts, but actions that make us veer from
the spiritual path, away from our own
Divine nature.
I love not only its straightforward
elucidation of what God really is,
but also what I really am. Some-
thing shivers deep inside because
these two descriptions sound so
much alike.
I also love that it so carefully
explains just what heaven
and hell are, and what they
are not. And I love that the
Gita reminds me that I can
create heaven here on earth,
if I want.
I love that it teaches us to return love for hate.
I love its insistence that we love everyone. No exceptions allowed!
4. S p i r i t u a l i t y & H e a l t h S e p t / O c t 2 0 0 6
6 4
Jack Hawley, Ph.D., lives, studies, and lectures half of each year in an
ashram in rural southern India, where the values of the Gita are very
much alive. When not in India, he brings these ancient yet current ideas
to leaders and organizations in the West. His books include the classic
Bhagavad Gita: a Walkthrough for Westerners; Reawakening the Spirit in
Work: the Power of Dharmic Management; Roadmaps to Self-Realization;
and Essential Wisdom of the Bhagavad Gita. His website is GitaWalk-
through.com; email is jackhawley@yahoo.com.
Kim Waters Murray is co-author and illustrator of Illuminations from
the Bhagavad Gita and The Butter Thief (from Mandala Publishing,
mandala.org).
I love the Gita’s emphasis on application,
its insistence that we put its teachings into
practice in our daily lives. “Theory and
make-believe have no place in true spiritu-
ality,” says the Gita.
I love the Gita because it explains the significance of the mystical declaration
“Om-Tat-Sat.” Pronounced “Om-tut-sut,” this ancient phrase is said to echo back to
the very beginning of time when Divinity first projected itself as sound. Each word rep-
resents Supreme Consciousness, the Source from which everything else comes. Uttered
by knowledgeable people whenever they perform spiritual activities, Om-Tat-Sat lends
a blessed and sacred tone to their actions, serving as a reminder that the act about to be
done is noble and conducive to self-realization. Invoking this declaration, the sages tell
us, purifies one’s own acts and reforms the world as well.
I love the Gita for its
depth, breadth, and
mostly its height. I
love it for its honesty
and humanness, for its
gentleness and its loving
devotion. I love how it
makes room for every-
body. I love how it tells
it all so straight.
I love the emphasis in the Gita on going
beyond — beyond all our worldly levels
of understanding, beyond everything we
see or feel in the world. I love that it pulls
us higher and higher to our most lofty
nature — and then even beyond that, as
I mentioned, to the Divinity within us.
I love how it shows me again and again
that I am all the power and glory of the
universe, and so is everyone.
I love how the Gita looks death (and life)
squarely in the eye, and gives not only
straightforward methods for conquering our
fears of death, but for triumphing over death
itself! (The secret: move beyond the painful
cycle of birth and death altogether.)
I love that the Gita explains
with precision how the world re-
ally works and how my life really
works — and how I can live a tru-
ly happy life and even die happy.
I love the Gita’s far-out, far-reaching audaciousness
— insisting, in the face of today’s universal convictions
to the contrary, that human suffering can be overcome.
(It’s a matter of moving beyond mere happiness.)
I love that the Divin-
ity described in the
Gita is loving, gentle,
and nonpunitive.
5. s p i r i t u a l i t y h e a l t h . c o m 65
Self-Inquiry — Self-Assessment
ConsiderthelistofIlluminedOnequalitiestobebothalife
goal list and life assignment checklist.Take it seriously but
not grimly. As you read each item:
• Put a 1–9 self-rating (see sample scale below) next to
each of the 24 items based on the extent you practice
that in your life at this time.
• Mark * * by any “impossibles” (qualities that, to you,
now seem unattainable).
• Date this sheet and revisit it later to check your prog-
ress. (You will be pleasantly surprised.)
“The truly enlightened human, the ‘Illumined One,’
can be identified by certain qualities. He or she . . .
______ abandons all selfish desires, cravings, and tor
ments of the heart
______ is satisfied with theTrue SelfWithin (Atma)
______ wants nothing outside of theTrue Self
______ knows that real bliss is found only within
______ is unperturbed by sorrow and adversity
______ does not thirst for pleasures
______ is free of the three traits that most tarnish the
mind:
______ a) greed
______ b) fear
______ c) anger
______ is detached from worldly objects of desire
______ neither rejoices nor gets depressed when faced
with good or bad fortune
______ is poised in wisdom above worldly turmoil
______ deftly withdraws the senses from attractions of
the world (just as the turtle pulls in its limbs to
protect itself)
______ keepsthemindeverintentonachievingthegoal
of life, which is union with Divinity
______ gets in the habit of substituting divine thoughts
for bad thoughts and sense attractions
______ stays free of either attachment or aversion to
sense attractions
______ is tranquil of heart
______ is absorbed in the peace and wisdom of theTrue
SelfWithin (Atma)
______ knows that serenity is the point where all
sorrow ends!
______ uses the mind’s powers to restrain the senses
and steady the mind
______ is totally still, never disturbed, despite the con-
stant flow of desires and attachments
______ is free of ego (the sense of‘I’and‘mine’)
______ lives life devoid of cravings; forgets desire.
Onceyouachievethisfixed,stillstate,youwillneverfall
back into delusion, and will eventually achieve the goal of
life, which is to merge into Me, Divinity.”
In response to a question at the end of chapter two, the
BhagavadGitagivesalistingofthequalitiesoftheenlight-
ened human being (referred to as an“Illumined One”) and
never veers from these through its remaining 16 chapters.
I take that list a step further, making it into the modern
self-inquiryinstrument.Thiscanregisterasatest.Butwhen
peopletakeabreathanddiveintotheteachings,theyfind
themselves comfortably participating in spiritual growth.
That’s when I sigh, because for many people this is the
breathless opening of a profound shift in consciousness
— and consciousness is everything! When we change
our consciousness we change our world, and when we
change our world we change the world. It’s that simple,
and that profound.
Proceed unhurriedly with high receptivity. Notice your
awareness shift as you proceed. Do not seek to learn the
material, but to become it — to actually be the conscious-
ness that permeates these teachings.
how illumined am i?
A spiritual progress instrument drawn from the Bhagavad Gita
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
never seldom sometimes frequently always