December 22, 2013

Too Serious? Some Disappearance Day Thoughts

Grave occasions can be intimidating, especially for today's entertainment-addicted human beings. Proud of squandering our days in frivolity, whether makeshift or sophisticated, we long for convivial mirth and merriment. Oh, to be known as the life of the party . . .  

Yet, our possessing the human form of life is a grave reality—a  weightiness we should constantly address. Lord Chaitanya's process of chanting, dancing, honouring spiritual food, and hearing philosophy accomplishes the miracle of combining zestful bliss with profound soberness.

Upon the disappearance day celebration of my spiritual grandfather, His Divine Grace Srila Bhaktisiddhanta Sarasvati Thakura, I revisited the last instructions he imparted to his disciples, December 23, 1936, a week before departing this world: 

"We only cherish one desire in our hearts: to sacrifice this body, which is only a lump of matter, in the fire of the sankirtan yajna of Lord Sri Chaitanya and His associates. We do not wish to be heroes by dint of our action, bravery or religiosity. But let this be our real identity life after life: that we are specks of dust under the lotus feet of Sri Rupa. Let that mean everything to us. The Bhaktivinode current will never be stemmed. Please take up the mission of preaching the desire of Bhaktivinode with greater enthusiasm."

For me, these words have become a meditation: recognition and stature—what to speak of fame—is not where I want to go. Let me learn to aspire to be that speck of dust, under the feet of the parampara, the chain of my preceptors beginning with Lord Krishna Himself. 
Then, I recall the words of Srila Prabhupada, my eternal father,  concluding his Vyasa-puja offering to Srila Bhaktisiddhanta Sarasvati Thakur, February 1936:

"Personally I have no hope for any direct service for the coming crores of births of the sojourn of my life, but I am confident that some day or other I shall be delivered from this mire of delusion in which I am at present so deeply sunk. Therefore let me with all my earnestness pray at the lotus feet of my divine master to allow me to suffer the lot for which I am destined due to my past misdoings, but to let me have this power of recollection: that I am nothing but a tiny servant of the Almighty Absolute Godhead, realised through the unflinching mercy of my divine master. Let me therefore bow down at his lotus feet with all the humility at my command."

Heavyweight, I know. But such solemn spiritual declarations are actually the essence of bliss, because they let soar the boundless joy of real freedom and unlimited happiness. I see the light at the end of the tunnel: satisfaction at being a humble, genuine servant of Krishna's servants.

November 15, 2013

Simply Have Kirtana



My dear Sudama,

Please accept my blessings. I beg to acknowledge receipt of your letter dated October 27, 1972, and I have noted the contents carefully.

So far the Road Show and this Yoga Village are concerned, these things should be stopped. Simply perform our kirtana. If we divert our attention in this way, the whole thing will gradually deteriorate. He is going far away. All these things are nonsense inventions. Such inventing spirit will ruin our this movement. People may come to see, some will become devotees, but such devotees will not stay because they are attracted by some show and not by the real thing or spiritual life according to the standard of Lord Caitanya. Our standard is to have kirtana, start temples. What is this "Road Show'' and "Yoga Village?'' It will be another hippie edition. Gradually the Krishna Consciousness idea will evaporate: another change, another change, every day another change. Stop all this. Simply have kirtana, nothing else. Don't manufacture ideas.

November 3, 2013

Five levels of acquiring knowledge

        Lecture by H.H. Bhakti Vidya Purna Svami      


 Pratyaksa. Getting it through your own senses.

            Paroksa getting it through someone else’s senses. So we see the similarity between anna-maya as the senses and prana-maya as extended sense gratification. In other words, your senses and someone else’s senses.

            Aparoksa. What is not dealing with the senses, in other words, what is experienced. When you performing an activity there is an experience there, that experience that is aparoksa. By the proper performance of your duties that increases the aparoksa element. Doing something well then you get a good experience, doing something bad then you get a bad experience. Since people do things for the experience… The better you perform your duties the better the experience.

            That is why the Vedic culture talks so much about the proper performance of duties, because then the experience that you are looking for is the best that there is, the best that it gets. But doing it for oneself is not so important, doing it for others that is more important. That means if you are doing it for someone else then you can have a proper relationship. If you are doing it for yourself then it is not a relationship but you are using people. You don’t think I have a relationship with my pen, there technically is, but that doesn’t come to mind. But if it is a person then you think of relationship, that means that dealing with people should be different than dealing with things.

            If you deal with people like things then what is going to be the experience? You have your pen, you work with it and it goes nicely and you get a certain experience, a satisfaction, would you just want that much satisfaction in your personal dealings with other people? It’s so great whenever I am with you I feel just as if I am using my pen. It is nice to go home and be with the family it is just like when I am with my pen…

            If you have a relationship with another person and you want that relationship to work you have to be considering the other person. If you have a subject and an object then the verb connects them. The verb is applied by the subject on the object. If you are going to get a result can that application of the verb be in any way you like. Because what is if you apply the way you use the verb for a different object? Like my pen on your brother. The application of the verb must be according to the object. You are one subject but the objects you deal with is so many. So therefore how you are going to deal with your locker, and how you are going to deal with a bucket, ball, mouse there is going to be some slight difference. Though at the same time they all accommodate something. There is a communality… In other words, it is different even though there is that element of filling something. So technically the verb is the same you fill your locker with clothes, the bucket with clothes, you fill your ball with food and your mouth with food. There is some communality here but because the object is different therefore the application of that verb is different.

            That means we have to know the nature of the object to apply the activity, the verb. To do that requires what attitude: Sensitivity, submissiveness, humility, sense control and sacrifice. Sacrifice means it is for the other person’s benefit.

            If it is for my benefit then the dealing with the other party is not going to be as committed and as sensitive, humble and all these good qualities as if it is for their benefit, or for someone else’s benefit. Therefore, logically, if you want to have good relationships that must be the consideration. That means you are not focusing on your own senses, if you focus on your own senses then it is going to be pratyaksa or paroksa, or anna-maya and prana-maya. But if the duty is performed for another’s benefit or for someone else’s, for Krsna’s benefit then only can it be aparoksa.

            Only devotees can actually come to that platform of aparoksa, even impersonalists can’t obtain that platform because they are still doing it for themselves. It is only by the Vedic concept of duty that a quality-relationship is experienced, because VA means the experience of relationships. You are interacting with other people, the 4 varnas interact with each other, but to do that you have to know who you are and the rules set because they have a nature…

            Without the rules and regulations of VA how do you know how to interact? Who created humans? God. Who gave the knowledge of what is human life and what they expect how they live? God. Then could we take the Vedic literature on human nature which are called the dharma-sastras, we can them as authoritative on what is human life, need and endeavour?

            By the proper performance of duties what do you get? Good experience. You have a good experience because it is the soul’s nature to serve. We did our duty as a sacrifice to others. What happens if you want to benefit the tree but water the leaves? It doesn’t work. You have to water the root. If I perform my activities as sacrifice for others in that that is the sacrifice for Krsna, by doing that the Lord is happy and if the Lord is happy then everybody is happy.

            If you really want to be happy then you have to perform sacrifice for the Lord’s pleasure. The principle of sacrifice is important: The devotees know it is for Krsna and the devotees. The materialist just knows that I have to do that because then I get the better benefit: one I get pious activities and two the experiences of this world will be better. Therefore even the Vedic materialist is better situated as far as materialism than the modern materialist because he knows how to perform activities as a sacrifice.

            The experience we are looking for is found through the proper performance of our duties. What are religious duties: according to sastra, all our duties. When I say religious duty generally a devotee will think my sadhana and everything else is not religious duty. But as pointed out here everything has a nature. Religion is the English word for dharma. Dharma means the inherent nature of something. Therefore everything we know has an inherent nature. Dealing with the inherent nature that we are contacting that is religion, the inherent nature done according to what is appropriate.

            Therefore if you do not follow the Vedic literature what are you going to gain? Not so much. In the West they are so much talking about freedom etc. how many people are getting what they talk about? How many people have that fancy car etc. that everyone is looking for? How many have that nice relationship, a complete family and good relationships in that family? Have money, clothes, facilities, position and respect? It is not there. It can’t be. Because working for others based on their actual nature is not known. If you don’t know it how you are going to do it? The kid is not born with a book of instructions tied on his foot.

            Aparoksa is the experience one gains. Anything you do you gain an experience, the experience can only be full because you follow the Vedic tenets. Otherwise it can’t be because you are not addressing the actual nature of something. Only when you address that and you properly interact will your actions proper and therefore will you experience be proper. Then we see according to Saunaka Rsi that the attitude is even more important than that. Therefore the sacrifice and the principle of niskama, which takes it to another level. Then more important than that is devotion, then it comes to bhakti.

            Krsna recommends bhakti and how does Krsna recommend bhakti to Arjuna? Perform your duties, by proper performance of the duty the experience will be full. In the performance of the duty what are other considerations? Perform your duty with knowledge and detachment, thinking of Krsna and for Krsna.

Q: Is knowledge that you are not the doer?

A: No, that is part of it. That is the metaphysical…the main would be just how the activity is done. Where do you get that knowledge from except from authority. Because otherwise you can only work out so much yourself. Knowledge means never to forget Krsna because all those things that catch your attention on the material platform must be connected to Krsna. So there is the activity itself that can be very absorbing but then how do you perform that activity. What is the science and art of that activity? That being done properly then you get the best result.

            If it is just coming from somebody who is only working out experience then over a long time they work out something. How many recipes that are there that come out of the European experience over the last so many years? Not a whole lot. There are some. How many kinds of preparations are there? There is quite a bit. But how much is there in the Vedic? It is so much greater. And what you can do with these things is so great also. Why? Because it is based on authority. The other one is based on experience. It is coming from the art. I apply the art, I am smart I observe it, I see pattern so I start to see the science. But now if we get the science from authority, from the scriptures, so much better, so much quicker.

            Aparoksa will be gained when we are engaged in the activity itself with the proper knowledge, that is when the greatest experience is gained. If we are worried about the result then we become either frustrated because we don’t get it, or one may be very insensitive because one will force trying to get a result from an improper action. I am trying to cut the lemon and I am using a lemon squeezer. It might not get the result we want.

            This is the platform of emotional rasa. If you don’t perform the activity then the emotional experience you want to get you won’t have. You may get some observable results but not the emotions you want. If you don’t get the emotions that you want the you will find that the whole experience wasn’t as good.

            That is why it must be according to authority: Aparoksa means it is being done according to religious principles. Even if you deal with artha and kama it is done according to religious principles. If the emotions are gained according to Vedic instructions then they are higher.

Q: Is this karma and jnana together? What gives juice?

A: …the experience that will more be the juice. Because juice is according to your definition. Some person is climbing mount everest and it is freezing out there, he is getting some juice from it. What is that juice? Experience. Someone else they have been outside, they had to get out of their car and walk to the house and it is cold and windy and snowy and when he gets inside the house where it is nice and bright and warm then he gets the juice. He goes to the refrigerator takes out a box pours a glass. In other words, it is according to your perception what it is that gives that but the point is the experience is the same. So the man sitting in front of his fire place with a nice fire on a really cold day he is getting that same satisfaction and experience as the man freezing his toes off on mount everest. So that’s the point is that that is gotten. Now the quality of that that what you have that you can work with. So if it is according to the Vedic directions it will be higher.

            If you are considering the nature of something that means that you understand the science, it will be better as if you don’t. It will be more consistent, it is something that you can recreate because you know what you are doing, otherwise it happened just by chance. Then if you have actually learned the science from the Vedas then it will be even more complete because then you understand in connection with the creation and everything about you. Then if you understand it in connection with the proper performance of duties and all that, with the right attitude that goes along with it. There is the action that gives a result and there is the attitude. If the attitude is correct then you get even a better result, naiskarmya etc. But even better than that is if it is connected to God. If it is connected to God that gives the highest.

            With this element of aparoksa you have the choice of what you want to experience. If you reject the Vedic then you have already dropped it down to the lowest of these two. Then if you are intelligent and educated in a particular area you might be observant enough to actually deal with it a little properly and get something out of it. But it won’t come to the emotional platform, you will only be able to deal with result.

            Therefore in the modern it is all about result because what do they get out of it? Friends are sitting around together. One says: I am bored let’s do something, but if they were friends why are they bored, they are friends it is a relationship, it is alive, it is dynamic. They would just be happy being with each other because they have a relationship of friendship and that friendship itself will generate rasa, but it is not. Why? Because their relationship is based on obtaining some object, let’s go to the movies, let’s go for a drive, roll some drugs… let’s do something. Therefore their experience is very meagre. But if you follow the Vedic principle then friends have so much that they can do and you actually taste that.

            This is the whole point: The senses, emotions and devotion are engaged properly, then you taste very clear rasa. The difficulty is if you are not dealing on the level of aparoksa, you are not on the emotional platform, therefore the emotional rasa will be very minimum. If you are situated in the sensual you can get that but it is very temporary. Unless it is based on dharma you will it expand, how will the artha expand the experience because the emotions are more important for your experience. 

            Aparoksa as soon as you are focusing on it it doesn’t exist. If you think about it and experience you are not experiencing the experience. You experience thinking about the experience means the present is the thinking and the experience is in the past, means it is not happening now. This is the subtle point that is made here: As soon as you think about the experience, this is nice, I don’t have it any more. But I can experience it without being absorbed in it. What are you trying to do when you focus on the experience, this is nice, you trying to enjoy the result yourself. When you are performing the duty in the proper way you are getting the experience.

            Who is the experience for? Someone else! This is the nature of rasa and the nature of the soul. The soul can’t be the enjoyer because as soon as he is the enjoyer it is in the past, it’s in ignorance. It can only be in the present, in the mode of goodness, if it is being done according to the nature with the attitude that it is for someone else’s benefit, there is sacrifice. Proper performance of one’s duties in the mood of sacrifice only then one is happy.

            The soul is not atma-rama, in the bigger picture you can say yes. Because atma-rama is the masculine position of being satisfied in oneself. Only Krsna can do that, the energy is dependent upon the energetic. It is not satisfied in itself, it can only be satisfied in its connection to the energetic. When it is properly connected to the energetic then it is satisfied. Then you can say that is atma-rama. Because then the atma is situated in its proper position, but it is in connection with the Lord and not on its own, that won’t happen.

            Because the living entity thinks they are purusa therefore they are trying to become atma-rama. But we can’t be atma-rama, we can only be atma-rama as servant of Krsna, and the soul is engaged in its proper position.

Q: Why are impersonalists called atma-rama?

A: They are trying to do it. Why is it that the big fancy executive flying around and staying in different hotels is called an enjoyer? because that is what he is trying for. Why is the business man called business man because that is what he is trying for. Or the musician because that is what they are trying for. Whether they are successful or not that is a whole other story.

Q: What is if you analyze the situation and appreciate how nice it is for them? Are we still in the present?

A: What action are you doing? You are appreciating! If you are appreciating something where does it go in sambandha, abhideya and prayojana? [Abhideya] means you are doing something. [You are appreciating prayojana?] So what is happening at the moment? Sambandha. Because as soon as it is attained it moves to sambandha. It is the experience that is important, you got the thing, but it is the experience that is important, not the thing, the thing immediately moves to sambandha.

            You want something, it is that need or feeling of want that drives you, not the thing itself. You think it is the thing, but it is the need for it. It is the need for it that is driving you not the thing itself. Because as soon as you get it you have another need. If that would have fulfilled everything and would have been the end, the goal you would be satisfied but you are not. Need and desire is driving you. It is driving you but that is not enough you have to know what you are doing, you have to have the proper knowledge and perform the activity otherwise you don’t get the result

Q: How is one’s own experience tasted by another?

A: By explaining it, that is your paroksa. You explain and they are asking questions being very interested in what you say. Somehow or another getting the point where they appreciate what it is you experienced because they find something common enough that they can actually experience themselves. If you can’t explain it and they don’t ask questions then the relationship doesn’t happen, therefore it doesn’t end up as paroksa. Because you didn’t gain something from them. It was just engaging the senses, pratyaksa,  even that you experienced that they said something but you didn’t understand what they said. Therefore there is less satisfaction, the sensual gives less than the emotional. Everyone talks about the sensual because they think that is where it is coming from, you are using the senses but to gain rasa. The sensual is the lowest, the emotional is higher and the devotional is the highest. People focus on the senses and they get it and are happy temporarily, but then with time they see they are not happy, then the focus becomes on the emotional.

            Aparoksa is experience, mano-maya. Adhoksaja is realization, vijnana-maya. You develop knowledge, skills. From that practice you will get realization. The dharma is being performed, you are engaged in the artha and kama properly, that will give moksa. But your central feature is the aparoksa. You put in on pratyaksa or paroksa then you lower your standard, then it doesn’t necessarily move forward very well.

            That’s why in the Vedic they are talking about all this as a package. Yudhisthira talks about the performance of the religious duties. Then Saunaka doesn’t disagree but he says that there are fools who only do that, only perform their religious duties without the proper knowledge. Then he points out that the material world is not so important, therefore if you are performing your religious duties with the idea that the material world is important that is a fool. Therefore the religious duties have to be performed with the proper qualities, proper attitude and proper motives.

            In other words, your philosophical perspective and your culture must be right. Then the proper performance of duties is fruitful. Therefore you have proper duties, proper attitude and proper understanding. Krsna is saying perform your duties, that is according to sastra. With knowledge, without desire for result, that is your knowledge and proper attitude. So the activity is being done with the proper knowledge and attitude. Now the activity is complete. At the same time what is the use of that if it is not connected to bhakti. An activity is useless if it doesn’t give you the proper result, the proper result you get by the proper performance of duties. Proper performace of duties become useless if your attitude and knowledge is not right. The activity itself with all that is useless if it is not connected with Krsna. Therefore you remember Krsna. I remember Krsna I don’t do it for Him. No. I remember Krsna and do it for Him. Or I am doing it for Krsna I don’t remember Krsna so therefore it becomes mechanical. So I remember Krsna and I do it for Him. What am I offering Him? I offer to Him properly performed duties, which means they are done with the right attitude, sacrifice and knowledge, then it is complete. We are trying to learn what are our duties, what is the proper way to perform them, we are practicing them.

            Like you have a pump, you have water, you have the pump platform, then you have motion, you have knees. So then if you understand all these things properly then you can slide about 30 feet. But you also have the factor into that sliding that bumping into other people may not be according to their nature…

Q: Adhoksaja is also experience

A: You are getting experience in all of these. But the point is adhoksaja is there in everything, but it is how you gain your knowledge. Through experience, through others or directly from your senses. The sense gone into the sense objects I am getting that [knowledge], so this is going on now. But the actual experience of that. I am tasting something it is sweet. That sweet now do I consider that nice or not? That is the adhoksaja.  I am getting the experience from the other, but what is that experience that experiencing it? That is adhoksaja. The full manifestation of adhoksaja means according to the proper religious duties being performed in devotional service.

            Adhoksaja means Krsna enters into it. Krsna descends into it. Krsna descends into the proper performance of duties with knowledge. It is the knowledge of how everything is functioning, the last chapters of the Gita, that is describing adhoksaja, how Krsna enters whatever is in this creation. Seeing that along with proper performance of duties is giving you a higher.

            Aprakrta means it has nothing to do with the material energy. The first 4 you are dealing with the material energy. Are you doing it simply on the sensual platform, what you have heard from others, or the experience you get yourself from proper performance of duties, or through proper knowledge of the position of the soul, the Lord, the material energy, how those energies are functioning, what is the relationship of those.

            The one is the skill in performing the activity and the other is the actual potencies behind it that make that work. The father knows how to deal with the son, that skill according to dharma is generating your aparoksa. But knowing that it is actually from the universal form: that fatherness and sonness is there and how that is working, then they see Krsna in it, that is adhoksaja. Aprakrta means from that you think of Krsna with Nanda Baba.

Q: Adhoksaja will then be within dharma?

A: It is always based on dharma. It is your foundation, you start in dharma. From that you are going to go that direction. That is what Bhagavatam says: Don’t use dharma for artha and kama, that comes on its own. Use dharma for getting out of the material world and establishing yourself in love of Godhead. Getting out of the material world means the moksa and the way you gain that is through adhoksaja.

            Adhoksaja means where the Lord enters into the Creation. The universal form He has entered into everything. Therefore we are acquiring knowledge through understanding how Krsna has entered into the creation. If one is performing religious duties he will only come down as far as that, not to pratyaksa and paroksa. Pratyaksa and paroksa through the performance of religious duties one can then see the Lord in those elements.

            The natural position of the Lord in the universe, through the method of acquiring knowledge, is on the platform of Brahman, that is the vijnana-maya. But he will extend down to mano-maya, because there we have the performance of one’s duties according to scripture and the Lord will enter that. Below that in the artha and kama, your anna-maya and prana-maya, if those are connected to dharma then you will find Krsna in it, if not then it will be very difficult. Dharma becomes the essential feature: Through the performance of one’s duties one can gain all the other perception. That is why it is always the first thing: Perform your duties.

            Like for the brahmacari what is the first instruction he gets? Do your work. Because if you do your duties from that everything else you can gain. If you don’t do your duties then there is nothing to gain, only when something is moving you can get something from it. If there is no movement then nothing is gained.

            Aprakrta means beyond material perception, it is transcendental. This platform means that it is transcendental understanding.

            Pratyaksa – getting knowledge through one’s senses
            Paroksa – getting knowledge through others’ senses
            Aparoksa – it is experienced through the proper performance of activity
            Adhoksaja – you are seeing the Lord and understanding the Brahman element of what’s going on, these last chapters of Gita, 2nd,  3rd and 11th Canto are describing how the Lord has entered and how He is controlling it and how everything is functioning

Q: Aprakrta can be considered on the stage of prema?

A: Not necessarily, it can be even bhava because it is spiritual. The ananda-maya platform for us means our relationship with God and rasa, but it can also mean being factually situated on the Brahman platform of existence and the happiness gained from that, but that would be the lowest available happiness on ananda-maya.

            And the highest would be interacting with Krsna. So in the same way we would have to count the platform of bhava also in this aprakrta because it is transcendental, one is not conditioned and one is not on the bodily platform, one is dealing with spiritual subject matter. It is just a question of realization within that. The higher form would be prema, lower form would be bhava.

            Bhava is tatastha or junction or sandhi, it is between conditioned and prema because it has elements of both: It is connected with the transcendental you are working on the spiritual platform but it is not necessarily that one can’t fall from that platform. One is spiritually situated but one can still fall from there. Therefore it is not prema, nitya. Even if one doesn’t fall from there one wouldn’t remain there and move forward to prema. So it is an in-between position.

Q: Can adhoksaja be achieved by an intellectual effort?

A: Your jnana-yoga would be an element there but it can only be done by devotional service because the Lord enters into is.

            Technically speaking if you are not a devotee you never get off the pratyaksa and paroksa platform. Only the devotee can be situated in these other places. Because if you are not a devotee then you are motivated. If you are motivated then you can’t function purely in the proper situation of being able to perform the duty for someone else’s benefit, therefore you wouldn’t be trying to enjoy the experience. Therefore technically only the devotees can be situated on these higher platforms. The Vedic materialist has still motive, and whenever there is a motive you are conscious of what you are trying to get from it, as soon as you are conscious of that then you are not in that state.  

            The example of the state of aparoksa, gaining knowledge through aparoksa, means you can say to some degree but the quality or depth of it is like when you sleep at night, you are unaware of your sleeping but in the morning you can be questioned on how was your sleep and you could give an answer, a definitive answer. I am not sure, I was asleep, how would I know. You can say. You are engaged in the and then you think about it you can yes that was… you can understand. In other words, it is through that experience of it you can enter the experience.

Q: Adhoksaja is unmotivated…

A: Unmotivated, but still you have the element of the Brahman understanding in that, so you can’t say that it would be technically completely pure until aprakrta.

Q: But there needs to be some endeavour…

A: Of course maximum is pure so therefore you get that effect.

Q: At minimum if there is some commitment to the process…

A: Because that is what you are looking for. Like the principle of what is the difference between you have a kid born in the movement they are devotee they are doing devotional activity what is the difference between them and someone who is initiated? Technically it is the commitment. They are born in the movement therefore they are just following. The parents do it everyone else around them does it, so that is what they know. So therefore they are counted as devotees. But it is considered general devotee. Devotees are special but within the category it is common. It is not until they themselves make that commitment where they are qualified to get initiated then they are called sampradayaic. Because otherwise they may follow they may not because they consider it is theirs. Sampradayaic means now they are committed to following it. So then that goes in that category. That is considered serious. Devotional service is always special but within devotional service that which is focused, which one is committed to, then that gives the most dynamic result. So always is there that element the more one is committed the better it works.

Q: Can we classify the scientists into pratyaksa, all the materialism into paroksa…

A: No, that you can do in the 5 levels of consciousness. This is where you gain the knowledge through. Where you are situated that is your consciousness not how you are gaining the knowledge.

            Like a devotee can gain knowledge through pratyaksa, he can see it. In fact, when you are able to see sabda as pratyaksa then you actually have understood. In other words, you hear that the material world is a place of suffering, and when you can actually observe that and understand the connection that means that it has become practical for you. So this is just how knowledge is gained, and naturally there is also some connection but generally through the levels of consciousness this is where you situate people.

            Saktas and scientists they are on anna-maya because they are dealing with the senses and the knowledge acquired with that.

            The ism’ists, they will be in 2 categories: ganapatyas or sauryas. They are either in life in general or specific categories of life they are worried about

            Then after that, what’s that. This is pancapasana. Then where you are worshiping maha-narayana, worshipping Krsna in the mode of goodness, they are not worshipping transcendental Visnu, your proper performance of duties etc.

            Then Siva, is the impersonal platform of trying to understand the soul and liberate yourself from material existence.

            So within dharma, artha, kama and moksa these five kinds of mentalities are followed by the materialists. Either in a proper way according to the Vedic definition or if not, they have just the mentality and so they follow it in some modern way. It is just a matter of what knowledge they know, if they know the Vedic knowledge…

            There is still purusa-bhava in liberation because you identify with that this is me and I am that. There is still I am the controller and then therefore I am situated in Brahman and therefore I am the enjoyer of brahmananda.

            The purusa-bhava is always there, it is a matter of detachment in the performance of your duties. The purusa-bhava only really goes with devotional service. What can be observed in general is the principle of not being attached to the results. The impersonalist is attached to the result of getting to the Brahman for himself but in all other material activities we call society, friendship, love etc. but there he would be detached from. It is relative when you say.  

            Like you have a variety of black and try to find out what is more and less black… Within materialists, or dharma, artha, kama ,moksa those who are situated in liberation are considered very elevated and not material, beyond this world etc. because your comparison is material existence. Therefore the sinful person is considered the lowest, the pious is considered better and the transcendentalists is considered better than that. But looking at it from the devotional platform they are all bogus, because only the devotee is proper. But taking it from how to get out of the world then the transcendentalist is on something that the karmi doesn’t have. At the same time the transcendentalist doesn’t act, so how will he get his result? Whereas the karmi does, therefore the combination of karma and jnana that gives you buddhi-yoga.

            That’s why these different things describe the parameter by which you make your decision. Like for unscrewing the screw you have wood and kitchen knife, or knife and screw driver with not exactly the same size, or not so well-fitting screw-driver and the appropriate screw driver. You can create right and wrong, how do you make that standard? You have to have a parameter. These Vedic ways of thinking create a parameter of how to think and judge something. Otherwise how do judge and how do you know?

            The person has a little bit of nice quality and therefore you forget everything or he has so much good quality but there is something not right so therefore you don’t see the good quality. So how do you…? People make their decision of right and wrong they are always constantly establishing these parameters, and because it is not based on sastra it is inconsistent. When it is based on sastra because all the different sastras, bodies of knowledge can act together therefore there is consistency. Because it will all be based on the same principles. If you want to be sane then you follow a lifestyle that is consistent, if you want to be insane then you follow one that is not. The Vedic is superior because it gives you a more consistent perspective on how you can make a judgement on what to do and not to do or what’s right and wrong.

Q: Relationship of sabda, anumana and pratyaksa to 5 levels of consciousness?

A: Sabda is coming from authority that is coming from aprakrta. Aparoksa is your anumana and pratyaksa is pratyaksa. You could take it like that otherwise you could take it depending upon where you are getting. If your knowledge is coming from authority but that authority is not getting it from authority but getting it from their senses then it is paroksa. Like in the modern academy they get their knowledge from other academics and they get it from their senses. Therefore their knowledge is pratyaksa and them teaching them to someone else that is paroksa. Therefore they never get out of that realm because it came from their senses.


October 30, 2013

Йога и духовно здраве

                                  от Махендра дас


Днес много хора смятат, че йога е практика за поддържане на физическото здраве. Обикновено асоциираме думата ‘йога’ се с картини на усмихнати, добре изглеждащи мъже или жени, застанали в известна асана или седнали да медитират в поза лотос. Интуитивно си казваме, че целта на тези занимания трябва да е свързана със здравето, намаляването на стреса и т.н. Рядко обаче, от популярното представяне на йога можем да разберем какъв е по-дълбокия смисъл и философия, стоящи зад привидно ‘земния’ характер на тези упражнения.

      Можем да разбираме йога като едно обобщаващо понятие за традиция, включваща много течения, практики и концепции имащи една цел – мокша, или освобождение от кръговрата на материалното съществуване. Това се постига чрез свързването (йога) на индивидуалното съзнание (атма) и свръх-съзнанието (парам атма). Всички други резултати от практиката на йога, като здраве и спокойствие, са ‘вторични продукти’, които разбира се, имат своето важно място в постепенния напредък към духовно усъвършенстване. Затова Патанджали, основателят на класическата йога, поставя физическите упражнения в началото на своята ‘осморна’ (ащанга) система. Но за да има устойчив напредък и траен резултат от практиката, човек трябва изцяло да приеме принципите на системата.

      Първите два принципа са така наречените ‘морални правила’ – яма и нияма. Те са изключително важни, защото изграждат основата за постигането на крайния резултат. Без тях, практиката на упражнения ще има само повърхностен ефект върху най-грубата част от нашето същество. Иначе казано, може да се излекуваме от някоя болест на тялото и да се чувстваме много добре физически, но ако не работим паралелно върху духовното си здраве, няма как да навлезем в дълбините на йога, какво да говорим за постигането на крайната й цел. Именно поради това, яма и нияма са основополагащи, независимо от конкретната форма на йога практиката.

      Яма са ‘правилата-забрани’, или въздържането от: 1/ насилие, 2/ лъжа, 3/ кражба, 4/ полов живот и 5/ трупане на притежания. В зависимост от положението си, йога адептът трябва да се опитва да прилага тези принципи доколкото може. За аскетът, отрекъл се от обществото, е задължително да следва правилата сто процента.  Смисълът е, че колкото повече се въвличаме в гореизброените занимания, толкова повече се отдалечаваме от целта на йога. Съвременното общество, в което изобилстват насилието, измамите, разврата и алчността, не ни предлага много благоприятна среда за задълбочено практикуване на йога. Не случайно ведическите текстове описват днешната епоха на Кали като най-трудното време за живот във всяко отношение и особено за духовна практика. 

      Нияма са ‘позитивните’ правила или качествата, които трябва да култивираме: 1/ чистота, 2/ удовлетворение, 3/ непривързаност, 4/ изучаване на свещените текстове, 5/ отдаване на Ишвара (Бог). Чистотата е свързана както с поддържане на тялото хигиенично и здраво, така и с пречистване на съзнанието. Според Аюрведа, коренът на повечето болести е ама – токсини, натрупани в резултат на неправилно хранене и начин на живот. Класическите йога трактати ни съветват да имаме балансирана диета и режим и да правим асани и пранаяма (физически и дихателни упражнения) за да поддържаме тялото си в добра форма. Освен физическата ама има и токсини на съзнанието (мала). Традиционно се изброяват няколко основни ‘замърсявания’ на душата – похот, гняв, алчност, гордост, завист и заблуда. Поддържането на духовно здраве се свежда до ‘изчистване’ или минимизиране на тези негативни състояния, които са сериозна пречка за духовното усъвършенстване.

      Патанджали сравнява тези препятствия (антарая) със скали лежащи по пътя на йога. Той изброява също проблеми като болести, летаргия, съмнения, нетърпение, примирение, разсейване, невежество породено от арогантност, липса на инициатива и на самоувереност. Те се проявяват в симптоми като негативно настроение, депресия и физически страдания. За да преодолее тези препятствия йога адептът трябва да се въоръжи с много търпение и решителност, а също и със знание за методите, с които тези проблеми могат да се разрешат. Йога сутрите ни учат да се придържаме към наставленията на нашия учител, да следваме практиката редовно и философски да размишляваме върху нашето истинско ‘Аз’ – като същност различна от грубата и фина материални обвивки. Но най-важния метод за отстраняване на препятствията, според Патанджали, е ишвара-пранидхана – отдаването на Бог.  

Този принцип произлиза от ведическото разбиране, че сред безбройните вечни живи същества (нитяс) или индивидуални съзнания (четанас) има едно, което е най-висше – Ишвара, което значи ‘Върховно същество’. Понеже ние сме малки и ограничени, а Ишвара – всемогъщ, то ако се обърнем към него за помощ и се отдадем, проблемите по пътя ни ще станат незначителни. Метода на връзка с Върховния чрез преданост (бхакти йога) е много ефективен. Не случайно Шри Кришна нееднократно подчертава в Бхагавад-гита, че това е най-възвишения йога път и начин за постигане на себепознание (БГ 6.47, 18.55).

В йога сутрите се описва по какъв начин може да се обърнем към Ишвара, който е личност и може да отвърне на молбата ни. Директния метод за свързване е повтарянето на мантри като ОМ. Медитацията чрез повтаряне на ОМ или пранава (най-висше просветление) е позната като джапа. Без мантра, медитацията няма духовен ефект. Джапа, правена с дух на преданост, премахва препядствията по пътя на йога, поддържа духа ни здрав и съзнанието ни чисто. По този начин всичките ни дейности се посвещават (пранидхана) на удовлетворението на Бог (Ишвара) и така напредъка в йога става много бърз и лесен. Великият йога учител Кришнамачаря, наричан често ‘бащата на съвременната йога’, е твърдял, че ишвара-пранидхана е най-важния, ако не и единствен метод, достъпен за нас в тази епоха на Кали.

Важно е да знаем обаче, че за да има истински резултат от повтарянето на ведическите мантри като ОМ и гаятри, те трябва да бъдат получени от учител свързан с автентична ученическа последователност. А за да бъде посветен в този процес, човек трябва да притежава специални качества – себеконтрол и стриктно спазване на гореизборените принципи на чистота и въздържание. И макар повтарянето на ведическите мантри без тази квалификация да не грешно, според писанията то ще е нишпхала (безплодно). Но ако следването на правилата е трудно за съвременния човек поради огромните препятствия, как може да разчитаме на помощта на мантрите, ако тяхната сила се проявява само за посветените?


За разлика от ведическите мантри, панчаратрика мантрите са достъпни за всички – дори хората без посвещение. От тях най-важни са нама мантрите или имената на Ишвара. ОМ обозначава безличностния аспект на Бог, а нама мантрите като Рама, се отнасят до безбройните му форми и качества на личност. Измежду многото нама мантри, една е изтъкната в Кали-сантарана Упанишад като най-доброто средсто за духовно просветление в епохата на Кали – затова е наречена маха (велика) мантра: Харе Кришна Харе Кришна / Кришна Кришна Харе Харе / Харе Рама Харе Рама / Рама Рама Харе Харе. Шри Чайтаня, основоположника на масовото бхакти движение, казва че за потварянето на маха-мантрата не се изисква специална квалификация, нито пък има строги правила. Тази мантра носи най-голямото благо (шрея) и блаженство (ананда) за всички живи същества. Затова тя е най-достъпния и лесен начин за постигане на духовно здраве по пътя на йога.

June 3, 2013

Without Faith You Are Finished



Srila Prabhupada:

So the modern psychologists, they have divided the function of the mind: thinking, feeling, willing, and then other subdivisions. That is known as the science of psychology. But intelligence... Above mind there is intelligence. I don't think in the modern science there is any analytical study of the intelligence function. But in the Vedic literature there is analysis of the intelligence. They are described here: samsaya, doubtfulness.

In the Bhagavad-gita there is a statement: "Those who are doubtful about the existence of God," vinasyati, "they are finished." Their progress is finished. That niscayatma, that is very good, to believe, to have faith, niscaya, by full assertion. Just like Krsna said, sarva-dharman parityajya mam ekam saranam vraja [Bg. 18.66]. So if by your intelligence you become doubtful, "Whether Krsna is able to give me protection?" then you are finished. Samsayatma vinasyati. But if you have faith in Krsna's words, niscaya, "When Krsna says that if I surrender unto Him, He will give me protection, there is no doubt about it," that is called faith. Niscayatmika. Vyavasayatmika buddhih. Buddhi, intelligence, that is very good.

Avyavasayinam, those who have no faith, doubtful, they have got different branches of activities. But one who has got faith, niscayatmika, "Yes, here Krsna says that He will give me protection. Let me surrender," then his life becomes successful. This is beginning of successful life. Adau sraddha, this araddha, or this niscayatmika buddhi, or vyavasayatmika buddhi, is the beginning of spiritual life. If one has no faith in the words of the authorities, then he has no hope.


May 20, 2013

Protest against the modern civilization




Srila Prabhupada: So this instruction of Risabhadeva is very, very important. Try to understand. Our this Krsna consciousness movement is a protest to the modern way of civilization. The leaders of the modern society, they want that people should be engaged in working like dogs and hogs and asses. They should not understand what is the value of life, what is the object of life. Let them always remain intoxicated, and sense gratification, and produce more product for sense enjoyment. This is modern civilization. All these factories... I understand that in this country the farmers are taxed so heavily that they are forced to work in the factory. This is a policy of the government leaders to engage people. If anyone wants to live peacefully, save time for developing Krsna consciousness, then the leaders of the society or the government will not allow him to do so. This is the position.

So you are all fortunate, or you are so kind that you have joined this movement despite all these obstacles in this country. Not in this, all over the world. So don't be disappointed. Go on preaching this philosophy of Krsna consciousness. There are many innocent people; they do not know what to do. There are four... For a preacher, there must be vigilance. A preacher will see four things: God, a devotee of God, innocent person, and envious, jealous persons. So a preacher should deal with these four items differently. So far God is concerned, we shall try to increase our love for God. This is one business. How? That is the arcanä-vidhi, to always be cautious, to offer foodstuff, early to rise, offer maìgala-aratrika, keep the temple very cleansed, yourself also. Without being cleansed, without being brahmana... We should always remember. When you come to the temple, don't think that "Here is a picture of Sri Caitanya Mahaprabhu or Radha-Krsna." They are not picture. You should know that personally they are present. You'll realize the personal presence by the quality of your devotional service. If your devotional service quality is not first class, then it will take time to realize that here is personally Krsna or Sri Caitanya Mahaprabhu or the acaryas are present here. It is a question of realization. The more you strictly follow the regulative principles, chant sixteen rounds regularly, the more you'll realize.

Because God, Krsna, is omnipotent. He can accept your service. He can bless you even from the picture. That is God's potency.  (Lecture on Bhagavatam, Stockholm, September 8, 1973)

May 13, 2013

The essence of varnasrama


Interview of His Holiness Bhakti Vidya Purna Swami

Conducted by Çréman Bhagiratha Dasa                                                                    

Bhagiratha Dasa: What are the pillars of a varnasrama society?

Bhakti Vidya Purna Swami: The essence is that varnasrama is a science of relationship. Our philosophy is explained in terms of sambandha, abhideya, and prayojana. Sambandha simply means “relationship.” We have relationships. A relationship is operated according to the desired prayojana (goal). The same relationship could be operated differently in view of a different result. Therefore, the nature of the activity depends on the nature of the desired result. This is how we operate relationships. You may have a relationship with God, but your goal may be some material benefit. In that case, your abhideya (process) would be praying to God for material prosperity. But if in the same relationship with God you seek prema, the abhideya would be bhakti.

What is the constitutional position of a living entity? What is his position in the material world? What are the natural relationships between various living entities? What is the position of God? What is the relationship between God and the living entities? The answers to these questions form the basis of Vedic society. That is varnasrama.

So we are dealing with dharma, the varnasrama-dharma. Dharma means “religion” or “inherent nature that does not change.” We cannot change the inherent nature of anything—no matter how hard we try—because all those attributes are set by God. Therefore the logical option is always to understand that nature and act accordingly—if we want things to work out nicely for us. Varnasrama gives us in details the positions of all individuals in society, their relations with each other, and their consequent duties. Varnasrama explains the position of the brahmana and the ksatrya, what they do, what they need, and how they relate. The relationship between the ksatrya and the vaisya is of a different nature. Similarly, a ksatrya-sudra or a vaisya-sudra relation has its unique nature. Each of them has its own position and relationships. Varnasrama is neither a managerial system, nor an economic system. It includes management, economics, sense gratification, and liberation, but its main purpose is to develop one’s relationship with God. Varnasrama extends far beyond economic development. That is why it is also called sanatana-dharma (eternal religion).

Let us look at varnasrama and the marital institution. In the spiritual realm, do they have husbands and wives? Is Mother Yasoda a devotee, or somebody’s wife?
Bhagiratha Dasa: She is both a devotee and the wife of Nanda Maharaja.

Bhakti Vidya Purna Swami: Okay. She has a husband, so they have a marital relationship there in the spiritual world. That relationship is reflected here in the material world. The rules originate there and are based on their spiritual behavior. Did Nanda Maharaja and Mother Yasoda have a child?

Bhagiratha Dasa: Yes.

Bhakti Vidya Purna Swami: Do they eat? Do they sleep? Do they have a house? Do they cook, wash their clothes, or make ornaments? Yes. The difference is that there they do it for Krishna, while here we do it selfishly. That is the varnasrama system. Varnasrama is not an economic system, solely explaining how to make money and put things together. That is what a vaisya would conclude. Therefore in our society, up until now varnasrama is not manifesting because we do not really understand it; without the basic understanding, any effort to put it together will fail. We miss the point because we only consider varnasrama as a system of economics, not as a religion, not as something eternal. It does not matter whether we live in a modern society or not—varnasrama works. We cannot accept the imposition of mundane adjustments upon eternal religion.

Manu-samhita describes what is modern. Millions of years ago, Manu gave the definition of modern: “that which is not Vedic.” Modern people are very proud and consider themselves special, but they are actually old dogs and hogs. They also follow some knowledge, i.e., Vedic knowledge. There is no knowledge without its connection to the Vedas. Modern man searches and simply finds out things that already exist. Benjamin Franklin discovered electricity—which was already there—and Newton figured out gravity, which we see everywhere. This means that they have simply uncovered, unknowingly, a drop of Vedic knowledge pertaining to those phenomena, which are just manifestations of the material world. You cannot avoid that there is only Vedic knowledge—despite the pride and arrogance of the modern people, who feel that they are so unique, special, and somehow aloof from God. Anything not firmly connected to the Vedas is temporary; that is called modern. Therefore, that body of knowledge which is not cohesively connected to the Vedas is called modern. Philosophically, modern simply means temporary. Anything temporary has no substance, it does not last. Therefore, what modern means to people is always mutating; the fashion changes with time. “I am modern” today has to be different than what it was six months ago. “My language is different than six months before. I do not use these old, archaic English terms anymore; I use upbeat modern terms now.” After a few years, those too are rotten and something fresh is used. That is modern.
                                                                                                                                                                        If you understand your relationship with God, things work; if you do not, you will never understand varnasrama. Ultimately there is only one relationship: the one with Krishna, nothing else. Because we chose to ignore the varnasrama system and created these artificial rules and regulations for society, we have forgotten the path of reestablishing our relationship with Krishna. The intelligent follows the path directly, and the less intelligent should at least respect and follow the scriptures piously. God and his laws are all there is. Krishna says, “I am the taste of water”; anything that happens, anything special, is Him. Materialistic people want to go to the heavenly planets by performing yajna; but in truth, all that they desire is in fact Krishna. The road they take is Krishna, and so is their destination—everything is Krishna—but they cannot see this underlying truth. Therefore they are in illusion.

So the essence of varnasrama is to understand relationships. A human being can have four different occupations—brahmana, ksatrya, vaisya, sudra—and four different social positions: brahmacari, grihasta, varnasrama, and sannyasa. Each one has a specific definition, a nature that makes it what it is. Varnasrama is the science for understanding those positions and their interrelations. To understand varnasrama, first of all we have to understand who we are. If we do not, we cannot understand the identity of someone else. If you cannot see yourself, you cannot see what is outside. In varnasrama, if you can understand who you are, you can come to understand everyone else and organize society. But if you are unsure of your own identity, you will be unable to function in relationships or to organize society.

The main duty of a brahmana is in relation to knowledge, to study scriptures and teach; that of a ksatrya is protection; that of a vaisya is economic development, to generate wealth and give charity; and that of a sudra is service, to happily assist the other three classes without any bad feelings. This is what we want.

Then we have the asramas. The brahmacari gets trained how to function in life. Without the brahmacari training, one cannot be a grihasta, varnasrama, or sannyasi. If one is a sudra, that is all right because he will follow what the brahmanas, ksatryas, or vaisyas do. But without training, you cannot be a grihasta per se; you have to learn from somebody. If you find some nice grihastas, properly trained and successful, and ask them, you will find out that they absorbed that culture from their parents or someone else. This is a science. For a brahmacari, the essential is that he is a menial servant meant to study. He is humble, respectful, clean, and strictly celibate; he is studying and gaining knowledge. Without those qualities you cannot be a grihasta. Srila Prabhupada explains that a first-class brahmacari makes a first-class grihasta. So it follows that a second-class brahmacari makes a second-class grihasta, and that third-class gives you third-class. Only a first-class brahmacari can make a first-class grihasta.

There is no exception to this rule, because we are dealing with science. This is neither a matter of opinion nor a matter of preference. Suppose you have a car—what are you going to do with it? You are going to drive around. But if you decide to use it to make mango juice … You could to some extent. You would have to stick the mangos into the fan or under the wheels. But this is neither what the car is for nor the best way to make juice. You have to understand and follow principles. What does God say? What is God’s opinion? His opinion is the one that matters. In the Bhagavad-gita Krishna says, “Some say this and some say that, but My opinion is this.” You have to follow Krishna. This is varnasrama, this is dharma. You cannot change it. Sugar is sweet and you have no say in the matter. You could use it as a paper weight or whatever—you could do that—but sugar is sweet; that is what makes it sugar. This is the definition of dharma.

The grihasta is going to practice what he learned as a brahmacari. His inspiration will be detachment. A brahmacari learns to submissively follow the orders of the guru. He develops humility, tolerance, respect for others, and he is active, doing service, always absorbed in activities. If the grihasta does exactly the same thing it will work. Therefore if he is not a good brahmacari he will not make a good grihasta. Women will not live with men who are impatient, intolerant, disrespectful, or lazy. They will not live with them—guaranteed.

The grihasta has to understand who God is, and the wife follows the husband. That is an important point. But we have to understand the term follow as something dynamic. Following implies that one person is following another person who is actively going somewhere. Although a man may demand that his wife follow him, it only makes sense if he is going somewhere. If he is not going anywhere, what is the meaning of that injunction? That is why most marriages fail—because the man is ignorant of the nature of relationship. He just likes to think that he is the boss. But he does not understand that he is being the boss like a woman, not like a man. The main problem in society is that most grihasta men act like women. Therefore, because the man acts like a woman, she has to act like a man. One of the main reasons for “women’s liberation” is men behaving like women. The male and female couple is dynamic in a balanced relationship. If you have full male, you will have full female; if you have partial male, you will have partial female. For sure, the missing male part has to be filled by the female, and vice versa. If the man is forty percent female, then the woman will have to be forty percent male.

For instance, if your perspective is seeing the sannyasi order only in terms of being in charge, you will never establish varnasrama in millions of millions of years. God does not work like this. God is male. He is the only male. How does God deal with His devotees? “As you surrender to Me, I reciprocate.” What does it mean? He deals with His devotees as they want to be dealt with. This is male—not ordering whatever one wants with the expectation that it should be done without any consideration. Mother Yasoda wants to feed Krishna now—what is Krishna doing? He is sitting down and eating. According to the modern hard-line male definition, that would be improper. That is because those hardcore males are all women. I will not go into much detail, but I can prove philosophically and psychologically that they are all women. Real men are very gentle, sensitive, and accommodative. All these so-called tough guys are women; they just happen to be of male gender. Women cannot get along with them because of this: two women vying for control cannot get along.

The real brahmacaris are those who do not need women, not those who do not like women. Some loathe women because “they do this, they do that, and they are nasty, materialistic, and self-absorbed” or whatever other reason there could be. If a man dislikes women, he cannot be brahmacari. The real brahmacari is the one who does not need women. Whether women are around or not does not bother him at all. A true brahmacari can serve prasada to women and not be disturbed; for him it does not matter whether woman or man—he is just serving prasada to devotees. The brahmacari who does not serve women because of aversion is the guy who is going to get married very soon. Talking big and saying “Women are trash” will not make you a brahmacari. When womanizers talk of women with other men, they talk about women just like that, as if women are garbage. Same with the top hardcore brahmacaris. Where are they now? Most of them are married or getting married.

The point is that the new grihasta, now being inspired by the wife, has to become humble and tolerant to make the grihasta life work. The women will demand that. Any successful grihasta man knows this fact. Anyone who denies this point does not know what he is talking about. I can boldly say that. Why? Because while the men may think that they are doing fine, I ask their wives and find out the real story. A grihasta performs his duty in the association of a woman to further his progress in Krishna consciousness. In other words, the naistiki-brahmacari, who heard and practiced the knowledge in the way of sädhana and menial service, sees no need for family life and remains brahmacari. The upakurvaëa-brahmacari has understood the same knowledge but not realized it yet. The naistiki, who has strong realizations, remains a brahmacari. Those who did not realize move on to grihasta life, and by interacting with the family in a progressive way remove the need for it—just like we use a thorn to remove another thorn. That is the function of the grihasta-asrama.

A varnasrama, who has dealt with the senses, now restrains from engaging them in various aspects of sense gratification and strives to engage them fully in the Lord’s service. Lord Krishna says in the Bhagavad-gita that some engage the senses in the fire of sense objects; that is grihasta. The varnasrama reverses the process. He is to deal with the senses to control them. He creates a severe, harsh situation, where he becomes indifferent—because sannyasa means indifference. He may be in the renounced situation, but his mentality is indifference. The grihasta has to eat nice food; the brahmacari eats what is given. The grihasta makes arrangements to eat nice food, while the varnasrama makes arrangement not to eat nice food. The sannyasi could not care less whether it is nice or not—if it is nice, Krishna has given, and if it is not nice, it does not matter. That is varnasrama in a nutshell—how each one of them relates to each other. The twelfth chapter of the Manu-samhita explains it.

Now, some may think that of the last five chapters in the Seventh Canto, in the instructions of Närada to Yudhiñöhira, only the first two (“The Perfect Society: Four Social Classes” and “The Perfect Society: Four Spiritual Classes) explain varnasrama, and that basically the last three of them (“The Behavior of a Perfect Person,” “Ideal Family Life,” and “Instructions for Civilized Human Beings”) discuss only pure spiritual life and the paramahamsa, not varnasrama. That is a mistake. The whole idea of varnasrama is to reach the state of paramahamsa. Unless you know what a paramahamsa is, how will you get there? To reach the destination, you must know what the goal is: prayojana.

The devotees are unable to apply varnasrama because they cannot regulate the senses. In other words, with varnasrama, if you endeavor to make money you have to proceed in a way that will assist your God consciousness. When dealing with the senses, the problem is not sense engagement per se; it is that the senses are not engaged in the Lord’s service. A general misconception causes the devotees to avoid dealing with their senses out of fear of maya. The problem is that they do not engage them in the Lord’s service either. This dry renunciation creates a void, and socially we get huge problems. To solve their issues, the devotees turn their attention to karmé self-help books, seminars, and that kind of stuff, because they do not follow in depth their own philosophy and culture, because “It is maya to engage the senses.”

Srimad Bhagavatam has a lot of instructing stories for us in this regard. Would you say that most of the stories found in its pages are about grihastas, or celibates? Are Dhruva Maharaja, Prahlada Maharaja, Kasyapa Muni, Kardama Muni, Devahuti, and all the kings of the Tenth Canto celibate? No, they are grihastas. But they do talk philosophy. Would you say that Srimad Bhagavatam is a pure philosophical work that has no relevance to the culture of Krishna consciousness? No. But this is how most devotees look at it. You find two conversations where the same husband talks to two wives—Kasyapa is talking to Diti, then to Aditi. Basically, both of them are making demands that are unreasonable, improper, and unimportant. How does Kasyapa deal with them? You can read and understand the tone of voice and words he uses. That is the example of how a man should deal with his wife—not just by saying “That is nonsense” or “You do not know what you are talking about.”

Men generally deal with women improperly. The soul wants to be God so much; he must be the controller and enjoyer. Anything that does not make him a controller is not appreciated. Therefore if the man is sensitive and submissive to the needs of his family, it is taken as a sign of weakness. Even a so-called top grihasta would rebuke this idea. They all are like women! Real men are sensitive, gentle, and sense-controlled. But nowadays men cannot be gentle and sense-controlled, because they are untrained; so consequently they will be nasty and rough. Because that is what happens to women when they are told to be austere—they become nasty. If you put men in an austere environment, their mind and intelligence becomes submissive. So the brahmacari is placed in an austere environment, becomes submissive, and renders service to the guru. That is the way. That is masculine. Unless you are a brahmacari, you cannot really be a good grihasta. Of course, you could learn to be by training, but the point is that we do not have training.

Now, how does a brahmacari respect his own nature while dealing with the grihastas, as varnasramas, sannyasis, brahmanas, ksatryas, vaisyas, and sudras intermingle with each other? See, in varnasrama you should maintain your nature, and for that you have to be aware of your nature in the first place.

Bhagiratha Dasa: How do we recognize varnas in Kali-yuga? It seems very hard to sort them out.

Bhakti Vidya Purna Swami: It is very easy. But in the Age of Kali, because of false ego, no one will accept. Varnasrama sees the spectrum of human society. Some excel in economics, some in administration, some in knowledge. You start with the sudra as the common platform. Among those, the dvijas, the natural leaders of the common people, will stand out. Not that we start from the top downward, with the brahmana, and everybody else is sub-standard. No, it is the other way around. Everyone is human, but among humans we must find leadership and leaders in knowledge, administration, and wealth. Without those, nothing will work. If you do not know where to go, you will not get anywhere. Without administration or protection, a brahmana cannot study and a vaisya cannot prosper. If there is no economic development, nothing moves and the wheels stop. Varnasrama only appears to be different in the modern day.

How do we recognize varnas? Well, how do you maintain yourself? The first option is through education, by cultivating and disseminating knowledge. The second is by protecting your community and providing facilities for them to perform their respective religious duties. The third is by generating wealth, either through farming, dairy, business, or banking. If you are not under any of these three options, then you are a sudra. If you work for somebody or have a salary, you are a sudra. It is very simple. The same goes for the asramas. If you are unmarried and not planning to get married soon and live under the direction of the temple commander, what are you called?
Bhagiratha Dasa: Brahmacari.
Bhakti Vidya Purna Swami: If you have a wife or you want to get married, what are you called? A grihasta, is it not? Then, if you were married, gave it all up, are now retired and dedicate yourself full-time in service to progress in Krishna consciousness, what are you? A varnasrama. Then, if you dedicate yourself on a full-time basis but are not dependent like a brahmacari, what is your position? Sannyasi. If asrama is so simple, why then is varëa so difficult? It is simple, but no one wants think about it, because no one wants to be a sudra. That is the whole point. It is so easy, but there is a mental block. That is the problem in Kali-yuga. We are neither capable of understanding our identity, nor our relationships, nor our duty toward anyone else. That is the first mistake.
If you observe society now, you see educators, doctors, lawyers; you find administrators and politicians; you find businessmen and farmers; and everybody else works for those other three. So is not varnasrama already going on? That is the second difficulty in establishing varnasrama—we think that varnasrama is not going on because of Kali-yuga. This is not a scientific view. To make a parallel: let us say that a great cook is preparing a meal and that a layman also cooks something. Are you going to tell me that this changes the process of cooking, in itself, or that the universal principles of cooking are not at work? You have a pot, you put it on the stove, you turn it on, you put something in the pot, you heat it up, and it becomes soft for eating. Is there any difference in the principles used by the expert and by the other cook? No. The chef just understands the principles better, applies them more scientifically, and therefore his preparation comes out nice.
So varnasrama and its principles are in effect right now in the whole world, in every aspect of life. Even if you take a tribe—there is a king, there are warriors, and there is everybody else who assists. You have persons who go out and make things happen; they are your vaisyas. Are there no husbands and wives nowadays? Are there no males and females, no parents and children? Not only that—is the influence of Kali so extensive that in Kali-yuga water is not wet and fire not hot, that the sun does not rise in the east and set in the west anymore, that the wind does not blow and the rain does not fall, that people do not need to sleep, to breathe, to eat, and to go to the toilet, that they do not like sex as they used to, that children are not born from the wombs of women, that nothing works like that anymore?
What has changed? If in Kali-yuga varnasrama will not work, tell me what has changed? People are not following the Vedas, that’s all. But that does not mean that the nature of the living entity has changed. There are dogs in the Indian villages, in the Indian cities, and in New York. Is there any real difference between them? So the dogs, the birds, the water, the wind, and everything else are the same. Only human beings refuse to acknowledge their role—that is their change! The basic perversion is that women have become men and men have become women. But their natures are still underlying, and if you revert to operating it correctly, it will work. That is the beauty of it.
Varnasrama works despite the modern idea that it does not. It still goes on. We still need money, administration, and protection. The qualified brahmana, ksatrya, and vaisya know what is going on. They clearly see the reasons how to organize varnasrama. The businessman knows; he gets capital and makes money. A leader knows that you still have to organize people and give protection. Someone who reads books and studies acquires knowledge and teaches. What has changed? Nothing! The science still remains, and if you follow it, it still works today. It is nice to see all these examples that are handed down by the traditional system. That is science, and it works.
Varnasrama is not external. We wear dhoti and chadar. Why? Because it is Indian? No, because it is what Krishna wants us to wear. What is the underlying principle? It is gentle and cultured. Therefore, even if you have to wear non-devotional clothes you wear something that is cultured, and you still follow varnasrama. You will not wear stretch-jeans or a funky t-shirt. You dress appropriately, according to the situation. That is the rule of varnasrama: according to your age, your position, your relationship, and your situation, you dress appropriately. You do not dress outside of those parameters. That is varnasrama. So can we say that it does not apply now? A man going to the office wears a suit. Does he wear that suit at home? This is all varnasrama. But people do not know what varnasrama means anymore; therefore they cannot identify it.
Often someone who has suffered many divorces, because he was ignorant of the basic principles of family life, will conclude that marriage no longer works. The truth is that the majority of couples simply do not know what to do. We see others making it through due to some remnants of family traditions; for them, marriage still works. A loser will label tradition as obsolete, while others still apply it with success.

A varnasrama society can exist only if there is education. You have to train people in varnasrama. Varnasrama means to act as human beings; you do not train them as animals. Education basically comprises three stages: sravana, manana, and nididhyasana.

Sravana means to hear—you hear about the nature of God, the individual soul, and the material energy, as well as their interrelations. That is knowledge. Manana means to contemplate what was heard and put it to practice. It is not confined to thinking, but is combined with practice. Not to combine knowledge and application is a very grave and common mistake. And nididhyasana means realization. By practicing with knowledge one gains realization.

From that, we can understand that a true leader wants people to proceed with knowledge. He knows that this way the results will be greater and long lasting. People who are not real leaders are afraid that they will lose control, or their position, if people are educated. They think that the less others know, the easier it is to control them. But a real leader appreciates other people’s qualities and encourages them to do things with knowledge.

So you want to know what the obstacles are in our society. Well, consider the following: We know the wife is supposed to follow what the husband says, but she is a human being and will ask why—“human” means to inquire. So if the husband does not explain, or the parents do not explain, or the temple president never explains, and so forth, then it is not a human society. If an authority does not like the devotees to study and ask questions or ask the reason behind an instruction, then he is not acting as a human being. This is why varnasrama education does not manifest in our society. ISKCON is a society meant for human beings, but many of our leaders are happier with a bunch of sheep, because people who think are problems for bureaucrats.

Bureaucrats are not leaders; they are sudras. Sudra does not imply a guy with a big fat belly just good enough to do physical work. The brahmanas have their sudras. Even today, when you have a school are there not people who maintain the building, go around, and drive buses? In the modern context, we can say that they are sudras working for the brahmanas. Same goes for the hospital: doctor is a brahminical profession, so the nurses, the anesthetists, secretaries, cleaners, etc., are all sudras.

The ksatryas, the government, have their sudras. You have administrators, generals, ministers, and then the people who assist them. The foot soldiers, the policemen, the workers making the roads, and the secretaries sitting behind desks pushing papers are all sudras of ksatryas. That is why bureaucrats are sudras; they are maintained by the administration they serve. They do not generate money or power. If you are maintained by someone else you are a sudra. Bäs! Does it make sense?

If you go into a big shop in India, how many vaisyas are sitting in the shop? There is only one guy, at the cash counter, chewing pan and wearing a t-shirt. He is the vaisya, and everybody else, showing you the items and all, are sudras. Being a salesman does not make you a businessman.

In this regard, Srila Prabhupada told a story to elucidate who is a vaisya. There is a particular group of vaisyas named suvarëa-mallika, who come from a village just outside Kolkata. At that time there was a man who was the prominent businessman from this mallika community. One day a young man came from the village to Kolkata to meet him. Being confident in his qualification and family reputation he asked, “I have a good business plan, and I come from the same community as yours. Please lend me some money for investment. I will surely return your money later, with interest.” The big businessman looked at the younger mallika straight in the eyes and challenged, “So you are a vaisya, huh?” The young man proudly said yes. “Okay,” the mallika said, “then come with me and I will show you your capital investment.” He got out of his chair and went over to the window. He pointed to a garbage bin on the street, where a dead rat was lying. At that time Kolkata was experiencing plague, and the government was giving two rupees per rat. That was a lot of money in those days. Prabhupäda said that one paisa would get you more vegetables then a man could carry—let alone two rupees. So the mallika said, “If you are a vaisya, go down, pick up that rat, get your two rupees, and start your business.” The young mallika did just that, and consequently became a very rich man in later years. That is a vaisya, not the guy who has been selling hats for the last twenty years. That is a salesman. A real vaisya will not be selling hats for so long. He gets hats, starts selling them, gets more hats—but at some point he grows and starts hiring sudras. That is a vaisya. Varnasrama is very straightforward, but because of his impersonal nature, modern man cannot appreciate relationships and their science. He simply looks at it from the angle of “I am the controller.” 

Let us look at the mother-and-child relationship. According to the modern viewpoint the mother is the absolute controller of the child. She is senior, she has knowledge, and what she says goes! Every law in the land will uphold that. Any adult will support it. Whatever she wants to do with the kid—how she wants to dress or feed him, what school he will attend—is absolutely, one hundred percent, in her hands. Dictatorial. Put like that, it sounds like the child is in a terrible position. But if a woman coldly acts just like that with her child, is she representing motherhood, the feminine manifestation of the parental position? How should mature women deal with their kids even though they have full control? Even though, in tattva, the mother is in control, in rasa, in the relationship, who is actually in charge, the kid or the mother? Will the mother feed the child whenever she wants, or when the child wants to eat? When the child is crying, the mother responds. When the child is tired, the mother makes some arrangement. When he is hungry or wants to go to the toilet, she attends to his need. So who is actually in charge here?

Bhagiratha Dasa: In this case, the child is in charge.

Bhakti Vidya Purna Swami: Yes, the child. That is varnasrama. But most devotees look at it the other way around. That is why they cannot establish the culture. That is why, in the sphere of interpersonal dealings, those devotees have no life—because they cannot accept the submission and sacrifices required in relationships. Good relations are based on trust, and in Kali-yuga nobody will trust anybody.

Can we say that at any point the mother lose her identity, or feeling of control, because she is one hundred percent for the child? And the more she is around the child, and the less she takes time for herself, do we not call her a better mother? Which woman would we consider the best mother—the dedicated one or the self-indulgent? The mother who is selfless is the best, anyone would agree. Now, does she lose her control or identity when she serves the kid? No. So why would a man lose his identity as a man if he does everything to meet the needs of the wife and children? This is the exact problem in our society. Most devotees—Western and even Indian—have no clear idea of who they are in regard to social dealings. They do not know what a male is, they do not know what a female is, and they do not know what parenting is.

“In case of any disagreement, the wife has to follow the husband”; “The wife has to be submissive”; “The wife has to serve the husband”—are there any more cliches? “The wife follows the husband and he is in control.” “The wife serves submissively and he is enjoying.” “Control” and “enjoy”—what is that? That is the false ego, the false identity that one is God. How can we accept ahaìkära as the working principle behind family life? Until we get rid of this so-called masculine nature we cannot establish true society, because around ninety percent of our society are grihastas.

Women are willing to be submissive and follow. Every movie, novel, or story depicts a man who is a man, who is going somewhere—powerful, accomplished, and gentle with ladies. Can you show me one woman who will resist, who will not be submissive to such a man, the noble knight on a white horse? If the man has no clue of who he is, how is the woman supposed to follow? So this is what the whole problem boils down to. If the man is trying to become a man, everything works. Then how do you train men to be men? You require teachers to train them, a gurukula. That means we need brahmanas. The soul is feminine by constitution; therefore one needs a lot of training to take the male position.

So brahmanas will train men to be real men. Out of those, some will be ksatryas and will reestablish social order, some will be vaisyas and will create prosperity. Everyone else is basically sudra. So all you have to do is create a class of qualified brahmanas who understand varnasrama and its application. Brahmanas comprehend the nature of man and woman, as well as the ideal platform for their interactions. If you do that, you will have varnasrama. That is the end of the discussion; it is that straightforward. But to do that is a lot of work. That is why education is so essential.