HG Krishna Kirtan Dasa CCM 20.120 – 05.07.2015
HG Krishna Kirtan Dasa CCM 20.120 – 05.07.2015
HG Nityananda Prabhu / SB 10.85.22-23
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HH Bhakti Tirtha Swami homage @ The Darshan Room
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Tuesday, June 23rd, 2015
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St. John's, Newfoundland
By the Lake! By the Temple!
The previous night's successful event at Memorial U. was such that you wonder if anything gets better than this.
The agreement for the morning was a walk around Quidi Vidi Lake and so some of the listeners of last night came, like troopers, to join in that event. Even a rep from "The Telegram" newspaper showed up to take photos of some of us doing the most simple thing - walking.
What great views...and then my favourite...the cove at Quidi Vidi Village itself with the picturesque charm of an old fishing enclave. It was something to melt your heart.
Weather was "the pitts" as they say, rainy, cold. It's hard to tell its summer. Again, the warm hearts of the Newfoundlanders make up for the elemental conditions.
There was a fine follow-up by attendees at the Hindu Temple. As we pulled in that evening for what I thought might be a weak turn-out, I became pleasantly surprised to see a good many vehicles in the parking lot. Once inside, I was happy to see a circle of sitting people already in the thrust of kirtan.
Once settling down I opened up by speaking about what someone might call the universal truths. Listed as "divine" attributes in chapter 16 of the Gita, I relayed the twenty six qualities mentioned. They go as follows: Fearlessness, purification of being, cultivation of knowledge, generosity, self-controlled, sacrificial, Vedic study, austerity, simplicity, non-violence, truthfulness, free from anger, renounced, tranquility, aversion to fault-finding, compassion for all, free from greed, gentleness, modesty, determination, vigour, forgiveness, fortitude, cleanliness, freedom from envy, and not expecting honour.
Explanations were well received. What I have to say about the rest of the program is, "Wow, how they danced, how they chanted!!!"
May the Source be with you!
4 km
Japa Tips 4 – Helpful Stuff
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The main thing is to want to chant Hare Krishna. Doing the chanting is extremely easy, it’s just words, anyone can say them or think of them. Wanting to chant is the trick, its the hard part. So to work on my japa I try to work on increasing my desire to chant. Here are a few helpful ways I have sometimes been able to do that.
This is the Real Stuff, the Pure Stuff
We get told all the time that this or that or the other thing is “pure devotional service,” but the raw, bare truth is that none of that stuff is. Sorry. Everything we do, we do because we like it to, or because we have to do it. Everything we do gives us some sort of material benefit or prevents us from suffering some material ill. Chanting Hare Krishna (especially nāma-japa – which is generally done when we are all alone, with no one watching, and without arts or decoration) gets us nothing; no one will become our fan or our follower, no one will give us any position or reward from it – because no one even knows what we are doing – the entire thing is a private, internal affair. You can chant for material things, but that’s a whole different thing – it’s not our interest. We are trying for attentive and devotional chanting. Such chanting will not pay our bills or find us a job or make us sexy and suave.
Chanting is just you and Krishna’s name, and no one else even really cares.
That’s why its the real thing. It’s the real “pure devotional service” – an expression of affection for Krishna that has no ulterior motive and brings no extrinsic reward: anyābhilāṣitā-śunyaṁ jñāna-karmādy-anāvṛtam anukūlyeṇa-kṛṣṇānu-śīlanaṁ.
When the shaved heads, long braids, tilok and indian cloth is set aside; when the “prabhu” “mahārāja” “gurudeva” and “śrī śrī” is dropped and forgotten; when the good-citizen or bad-citizen badges fall off; when whatever you do in the temple or outside the temple is over and done… this is what it all boils down to, this is the bottom line. The amount of interest we have in our private cultivation of nāma-mantra is the only thing that really matters – for its the only true measure to answer the question, “how much advancement have I made?”
When I started to realize this, I became a little depressed, actually, especially at first – but I also automatically started paying a lot more attention to unpretentious nāma-japa.
This is the Only Thing
Look around the world carefully, always. It is all the same pattern just repeating in very, very slightly different ways over and over and over and over again, millions and billions and trillions of different times. Everything that exists, ev-ery-thing, is only a combination of śakti and śaktimān – prakṛti and puruṣa. There is only one pattern: puruṣa seeking the pleasures in its prakṛti. Repeat that pattern an infinite number of times with infinite microscopic variances in the exact flavor of pleasure the puruṣa seeks from the exact instance of prakṛti – and you have the created the entire universe.
This realization has helped me be less distracted by all the dazzling, infinite patterns that line the shelves, flash on smart phones, notify my newsfeeds, flicker on the big and small screens, shake their tail feathers on the sidewalks, and flexing their neck muscles in their wolf-packs. It has helped me to realize, “Wow, I’ve already been everywhere, been everyone, done everything – probably literally over the course of infinite lives, but also ideally because everything is just a minutely different version of the same story. So I guess there’s nothing out there that’s really important for me.”
The original pattern, and patterns built directly off it, are the best. The rest are reflections – exports, “made in China.” The original pattern – śakti and śaktimān enjoying their inherent pleasures – is encapsulated in the words “Hare Krishna” and “Hare Rāma” making itself freely available to unfold in my consciousness and grant me the direct experience of the adi-rāsa, the original flavor, the original pattern of life. Whatever interests me out there is best discovered in here.
One Liners
“I waste my time everyday, dallying with illusions. But now, for at least just a few minutes, let me do something real and significant.”
I might not be able to make my whole like spiritual and pure, but let me at least have a little bit of time in the day that is purely spiritual – the time for nāma-japa.
I came to realize that trying to make my life “24 hours Krishna consciousness” was just my attempt to be impressive. Better to have even 5 minutes of real Krishna consciousness (focused purely on Krishna’s name with no extrinsic motives) than to have 24 hours of strutting about demonstrating how to be Krishna conscious (even writing this article is so impure, but hopefully it will help many people chant and therefore inadvertainly make Rādhā and Krishna pleased with me.)
“Shrink the universe.”
This means reducing everything to its original form, which is only in the mantra. It also means becoming like a kid playing with toys, unable to hear his mother standing right in front of him. His universe has shrunk to exactly the size of his toys, and thus his concentration is so strong it is very difficult to break. Shrink the universe to the mantra and chant it.
“Nothing truly exists except this.”
Only consciousness exists, everything else exists as a byproduct, within consciousness. The “original pattern” (śakti-śaktimān) is consciousness as an experienced object and consciousness as an experiencing subject – in which the object provides bliss to the subject. The external world is an substandard object precisely because it is “external” – extrinsic to the essence of who and what I am. The real object is in the nāma-mantra and I need to discover it.
“I offer you myself.”
I am consciousness. Consciousness is awareness. Awareness is attention. I am my attention. I will pay attention to Krishna. By doing this I literally “offer myself” to Krishna.He enjoys existence, and I offer myself as a platform of consciousness upon which (within which) he can expand his existence, and thus expand his enjoyment. Thus, literally, I am his strī.
“Withdraw. Withdraw within.”
Sometimes, pulling my attention from everything else and investing it in chanting has a visual and tactile experience to it. Its something like a trees roots (if the tree were made of vapor) withdrawing from the holes they have deeply sunk themselves into, down so many lanes, in so many homes, across so much space and time. Withdrawing like vapor inhaled and compacted within. Envisioning this scene often helps inspire the actual task it represents.
“This is the root upon which the tree can stand.”
This one helps me when I have significant material worries on my mind. I don’t want to chant for the purpose of fixing my material problems, but the truth is that the material problems will be resolved easily, or else will not be damaging in their effect, when the name is chanted purely. So I remind myself that Krishna is the root which sustains all existence, and if I connect more directly and willingly with that root, my need to fend for myself will dissolve.
I may add to these in the comments. If you like this, you may want to subscribe to the comments so you get a notice when something is added. In the comments you are also welcome to share similar tips, or to ask for clarification about what I’ve shared here.
– Vraja Kishor dās
Tagged: Chanting, Hare Krishna, Japa, Mantra Meditation, Meditation, nama-japa

Monday, June 22nd, 2015
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St. John's, Newfoundland
Questions
"Excuse me, but did you see a monk down the trail?" The middle-aged robust- looking man stopped
cycling and adjusted his helmet while readying himself for the answer to my question. "Well, what does he look like?" he first asked.
"Like me, but younger," as I explained who Brihat was and who was to meet me on this trail lined with trees on both sides.
"What kind of monk? Hindu?"
"Well your close," said I. "A Hare Krishna monk!"
"Nope! I haven't," he said. I was relieved to know that even though his accent was strong, I just didn't hear an "eh" at the end of any of what he had to say. Indeed, I was enlightened on this very day, that Newfoundlanders do not say "eh" like most rural Canadians when finishing a statement. They may say "bai" when referring to brother. The women may say "darlin'" or "love" to address, and that's all kind of nice.
Anyway I made friends with the guy and Brhat, who had driven ahead with the deal to meet me on the path finally did show in his robe attire. We were meant to dash off then to Jan's place to prepare a
meal. Brhat's kichari, a traditional Indian dish, was a killer, so was Jan's apple crisp sweetened with
coconut sugar. Jan's partner, Leo, a high court Judge, broke from golf for the meal and company. Other locals came to the lunch table for food and good questions lodged towards Brihat and I.
Questions did not finish for the day. For a second round, eighty people showed up at Memorial
University , at a lecture hall with queries about pilgrim travels and Vedic philosophy.
Questions are a big part of my life. I use them. I answer them.
May the Source be with you!
8 km
Alive In The Holy Names
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From Bhajan Kutir #87
by Satsvarupa dasa Goswami
Personal responsibility
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Sometimes people say, “Yes, I will be a devotee when Krsna makes me a devotee. I am just surrendered.” This philosophy is dismissing the personal responsibility that we have of making choices. We are making choices. At the right time, the choice comes to us then we have to make it. “Shall I do it? Shall I be a devotee or shall I not be a devotee?”
That is your choice and your responsibility. If you say, “No!” Then you also have to face the consequences, and you are responsible for that.
Sunday Feast – 11:00am to 2:00pm – July 12th,2015– Speaker His Grace Acharya Thakur Das
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His Grace Acharya Thakur Das is a disciple of His Holiness Gopal Krishna Goswami Maharaj. He has been serving Iskcon Brampton in various capacities.


11.00- 11.15 Tulsi Puja
11:30 –11:55 Aarti & Kirtan
11.55 - 12.00 Sri Nrsingadeva Prayers
12.00 – 1:00 Vedic discourse
1:00 – 1:30 Closing Kirtan
1.30 _ 2.00 Sanctified Free Vegetarian Feast

Fasting.....................on Sat July 11th,2015
Breakfast.................on Sun July 12th,2015 b/w 5.47am-10.51am
Every fortnight, we observe Ekadasi, a day of prayer and meditation. On this day we fast (or simplify our meals and abstain from grains and beans), and spend extra time reading the scriptures and chanting the auspicious Hare Krishna mantra.

Sat(July 11 2015) at Carabram from 1pm-10pm
South Fletcher's Sportsplex
500 Ray Lawson Blvd.
Brampton, ON(Arena 3)
Our congregation performs book distribution of vedic literature on weekends, special occasions and during festivals by going out on streets, door to door and at different public places.If you are interested to buy the books,sponsor those to be distributed by our Sankirtan team or want to join the Book distribution Team,for details please contact Rasa Raj Prabhu 647.887.5736

The past four decades have witnessed the Festival of India blossom into one of Toronto’s most dazzling, head-turning summer events. This year again be sure to come visit the 43rd Annual Festival of India (also known as Ratha-Yatra) on July 18th and 19th for an unforgettable experience.
The event will begin with a euphoric parade down world-famous Yonge Street (beginning at Bloor and continuing south to Queens Quay). The celebrations then will shift to Centre Island for two days of festivities expected to draw close to 40,000 people.
The festival is open to the public and free for everyone.
*ATTENTION* ISKCON Brampton will move to Centre Island on account of Festival of India(Toronto) on July 19th 2015.We'll see you there!!
ON GOING EVERY SUNDAY

To register,contact us
Email:sundayschool108@gmail.
Call:647.893.9363
The Sunday School provides fun filled strategies through the medium of music, drama, debates, quizzes and games that present Vedic Culture to children. However the syllabus is also designed to simultaneously teach them to always remember Krishna and never forget Him.
The Sunday School follows the curriculum provided by the Bhaktivedanta College of Education and Culture (BCEC).

Our boutique is stocked with an excellent range of products, perfect for gifts or as souvenirs of your visit. It offers textiles, jewellery, incense, devotional articles, musical instruments, books, and CDs inspired by Indian culture.We're open on all Sundays and celebrations marked in our annual calendar.
Hare Rama Hare Rama Rama Rama Hare Hare
Chant and Be happy
Hare Krishna! Time Magazine – The Answers Issue: A Closer…
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Hare Krishna! Time Magazine – The Answers Issue: A Closer Look
The Answers Issue might make you feel guilty if you drive over 13,400 miles a year (the average), since it claims that car emission is the biggest factor to our individual carbon footprints. Eating meat comes in second. Something to consider for those who want to make an impact on their carbon footprint but can’t bring themselves to give up driving. Other lessor categories are our use of air conditioning, air travel and beer drinking, etc. The interesting thing is that the mag is silent on the carbon footprint of our purchases of goods from overseas, since we can hardly buy anything that’s’ manufactured in America anymore.
Read the entire article here: http://www.dandavats.com/?p=18377
Time Magazine – The Answers Issue: A Closer Look
→ NY Times & Bhagavad Gita Sanga/ Sankirtana Das
Hare Krishna! Don’t Worry, Be Happy – The secret to true…
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Hare Krishna! Don’t Worry, Be Happy – The secret to true happiness and well-being
Devamrita Swami: “Anyway, money can’t buy everything,” members of all social tiers often quip. Daily life, however, regularly belies this old mantra. Happiness and even love often seem to have a price tag, or at least a significant financial correlation. Whatever our level of income and indulgence, we all long for true happiness and genuine well-being, however defined. Shouldn’t personal contentment become enshrined as a basic human right, for all people, everywhere? Then again, what about the special persons—the ones who, with wings of selfless magnanimity, soar beyond all social pigeonholes? Compassionate, empathetic, and noble, they radiate human sunshine, in any kind of weather.
Read the entire article here: http://www.dandavats.com/?p=18374
Gita Contest Winner Donates Cash Prize to Educate Needy
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The Art of Kirtan and The Human Story Behind Madhava
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6 Herbs for Anxiety and Stress Relief
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Raincoats and umbrellas but the “show goes on!”…
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Raincoats and umbrellas but the “show goes on!” (Album with 49 photos)
Indradyumna Swami: One hundred kilometers from our festival in Pobierowo a storm had torn roofs off of houses, knocked down trees and utility poles and left a trail of destruction. Somewhat weakened by the time it reached us, it nevertheless caused serious problems. Two of our tents were severally damaged by wind and a deluge of water made walking difficult, if not impossible, in many areas of our festival site. Despite it all we persevered and went on with our event. And to our utter amazement hundreds of people came, fully equipped with raincoats and umbrellas. Most stayed the entire show, sometimes taking shelter in our tents, where they continued watching the show as it poured rain. All proof of Srila Prabhupada’s statement that Krsna is, “all attractive.”
See them here: https://goo.gl/m4zx9
7 Air Purifying Plants To Remove Harmful Indoor Toxins
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Hare Krishna! Religion And Religions
With all the exotic…
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Hare Krishna! Religion And Religions
With all the exotic trappings of ‘a traditional Hindu ritual structure’ thus in place, ISKCON appears to many to be heavily freighted with culturally conditioned forms and hence to exemplify sectarianism with a vengeance. It stands in contrast to advaita vedanta, that earlier Indian export, whose philosophical abstractions and non-devotional orientation make it appear universal, nonsectarian, and free from adventitious cultural and historical accretions. Yet even after Prabhupada had everything in place, the Western youth who joined ISKCON never thought of themselves as ‘converting’ to something called ‘Hinduism’ or as participating in ‘a traditional Hindu ritual structure’.
Read the entire article here: http://www.dandavats.com/?p=18370
A Day at the Polish Festival of India Tour
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Kirtan in Ireland (12 min video)
Praghosa Das of ISKCON and…
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Kirtan in Ireland (12 min video)
Praghosa Das of ISKCON and Govinda’s (Dublin) leads a kirtan chant session at a gathering in County Westmeath, Ireland. Jayananda Davis is the brilliant and enlivening mridanga drum player.
Watch it here: https://goo.gl/KnxfEG
Bhaktivedanta Players 30th Anniversary (1985- 2015)
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Amazing Gita Nagari farm (Album with photos)
See them here:…
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Narada’s Previous Life Demonstrates His Dependence on Krishna
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(this blog is recorded on the full page: quick time player needed)
[Originally published on July 24th, 2012](The final installment of the 3 part series.) One of my favorite accounts in Shrimad Bhagavatam is Narada’s sharing of his previous life with Vyasadeva in the first Canto. This volume was all of the SB that was published when I became a devotee, and I have read it more than any other passage. Still, even with whole 12 Cantos of SB in print, I still find this story very inspiring. I like biographies anyway, and “coming to Krishna” stories are especially interesting and relevant to sadhakas (practicing devotees of Krishna). Although Narada is an eternally perfected devotee, he still has this aspect of his life as a way to teach us about the essential importance of Vaishnava blessings and association to jump start our spiritual lives. Narada embarks on the pilgrim’s journey to attain spiritual perfection, and he seems like one of us as he faces a personal tragedy which catapults him toward Krishna. We read how he depended on Krishna in all circumstances and was not independent in his endeavor to successfully meditate, but had to abide by Krishna’s timing for perfection.
The Universality and the Variety of Suffering
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Superconsciousness – The Voice Within Sixth Sense or Gut Instinct?
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So often in routine life we experience phenomena unexplainable by the current western paradigm. Out-of-body or near death experiences, children who can remember past lives leave mainstream scientists baffled. What then to speak of understanding superconsciousness, a phenomenon we all experience throughout our lives.
BHAKTI – The transforming engine
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From Chandramukha Swami
When BHAKTI enters FOOD
FOOD becomes PRASAD,
When BHAKTI enters HUNGER,
HUNGER becomes a FAST,
When BHAKTI enters WATER,
WATER becomes CHARANAMRIT,
When BHAKTI enters TRAVEL,
TRAVEL becomes a PILGRIMAGE,
When BHAKTI enters MUSIC,
MUSIC becomes KIRTAN,
When BHAKTI enters a HOUSE,
HOUSE becomes a TEMPLE,
When BHAKTI enters ACTIONS,
ACTIONS become SERVICES,
When BHAKTI enters in KARMA,
KARMA becomes AKARMA,
AND
When BHAKTI enters a MAN,
MAN becomes HUMAN.
Hare Krishna! Where Is Godhead? Is It Possible To See Him?
Srila…
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Hare Krishna! Where Is Godhead? Is It Possible To See Him?
Srila Prabhupada: In the Secretariat Buildings in New Delhi there is an inscription on the stone that Liberty does not descend upon a people but it has to earned before it can be enjoyed. Actually this is the fact and we have seen it that much sacrifice had to be rendered by the people of India before they could gain Swaraj. But in the matter of Godhead some irresponsible people ask, “Can you show me.” “Have you seen God?” These are some of the questions put forward by some irresponsible men who want to have everything very cheap. If for attaining a temporary false sense of liberty in this material world so much labour and sacrifice have to be requisitioned is it possible to see Godhead — The Absolute Truth so cheaply? To see God means complete liberty from all conditions. But is Godhead an attending orderly so that He may be present at my command?
Read the entire article here: http://www.dandavats.com/?p=18367
ISKCON Devotees Attend Rome Environmental Convergence.
Young…
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ISKCON Devotees Attend Rome Environmental Convergence.
Young religious environmental leaders from around the world, including four ISKCON devotees, attended an environmental “convergence” and march in Rome at the end of June.
The march culminated in St. Peter’s Square in front of the Vatican, where the Pope’s encyclical is traditionally broadcast from to over 1 billion Catholics across the globe.
“It almost looked like St. Peter’s Square had turned green,” says participant Gopal-Lila Das, who is the Director of the Oxford Centre for Hindu Studies’ Bhumi Project. “It was a really beautiful sight.”
Read the entire article here: http://goo.gl/s5cWs5
Daily Darshan – July 10th, 2015
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The post Daily Darshan – July 10th, 2015 appeared first on Mayapur.com.
HH Radhanath Swami Singing in Sadhu Sanga Retreat 2015 on Day 2 HD Video
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HH Radhanath Swami Singing in Sadhu Sanga Retreat 2015 on Day 2 HD Video
Hare Krishna! The History of the Balaram Mridangas
Some time in…
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Hare Krishna! The History of the Balaram Mridangas
Some time in 1972-73 Srila Prabhupada saw that the East Indians were not carrying on the tradition of making the original mridangas and kartals. The younger generation who would normally take over the arts from their fathers were becoming more and more interested in going to school and going to the cities. They were thinking that working with leather making the drums and such was a lower class of activity. So Srila Prabhupada sent out a letter to all the GBCs indicating that some men should be sent to India to learn these arts. At that time I was in the temple of Jagadisha who was Srila Prabhupada’s Minister of education and a GBC member.
Read the entire article here: http://www.dandavats.com/?p=18364
The Lighthouse
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HG Mother Sucarya / Bg 10.18-27
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HG Mathuranatha Prabhu / SB 10.85.21
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Interpreting the Guru
→ The Enquirer
“Krishna dictates everything the guru says.
Everything guru says is therefore perfect,
we should not interpret it.”
Friends, the idea that it’s possible to not interpret the guru is a myth.
Subjectivity means seeing something from your own point of view (“interpreting it” according to your own viewpoint). The idea that it’s possible to remain a conscious individual yet avoid subjectivity is a myth.
To be a conscious individual means to be aware of things from a distinct perspective. I look out my window at the street and see it from one angle. My neighbor sees the same street from a different angle. The same principle operates on emotional and intellectual levels as well. We see and understand everything from our own unique physical, emotional, and intellectual perspective – that is what makes us a distinct, individual being.
The only way to get rid of subjectivity is to have no unique physical, emotional or intellectual perspective, which is impossible if one wants to remain a distinct, individual being. Consciousness can be free of subjectivity only if its individuality is completely neutralized and reduced to latency in the homogeneous non-dual brahmajyoti.
If that sounds attractive, go for it – but the Gauḍīya school of Vedānta would not likely wind up being the best fit for you.
So, how do we understand Guru?
It’s impossible to lose our subjective perspective, but we can try to get our perspective to be compatible with his or her perspective. How? By learning what he learned, by feeling what she felt, by experiencing what he experienced, and by being aware of the surroundings and contexts that he was aware of.
The majority of ISKCON members (and probably many other guru-centric groups, too) are indoctrinated to have a phobia of something called “mental speculation.” The majority of them understand this phrase to mean that its wrong to use your own mind and intellect to understand things. (God, the ’70s were weird. No wonder my mother warned me not to join a cult.)
Friends, the idea that its possible to understand anything at all without using your mind and intellect is a ridiculous myth. We have no choice but to use our minds and intelligence, for these are the tools consciousness uses to listen to words and understand things. We cannot understand anything without using our mind/intellect. The goal is not to stop using it, but to make it compatible with the guru’s. How? By learning what he learned, by feeling what she felt, by experiencing what he experienced, and by being aware of the surroundings and contexts that he was aware of.
“I just read guru’s books
and listen to his lectures
and accept whatever he says.”
Unless the people who say this are as enlightened as their guru, the real truth is that they are just lazy – content to allow their maligned mind and intellect make whatever (non)sense the automatically make out of the guru’s words. Yes, they are “just accepting,” but just accepting what? They are accepting whatever their own natural subjective perspective can grasp, without questioning it or reforming it from ignorance. Then they exalt their maligned subjective interpretation as if it were synonymous with the guru’s absolute truth – thereby making a godawful mess of the guru’s effort to distribute divine realization. We who have come after them are expected to be thankful for the tangled maze they have left us, forcing us to sort through the myriad subjective baggage they have piled around gurudeva in our hopeful but longshot attempt to come truly close to the real heart and mind of Śrī Guru.
If you are hearing from guru like that, if you are reading guru’s books like that, the truth is that all you are hearing and reading is your own mind’s version of the guru’s words, you are only learning your own perspective on a new subject.
How should you hear guru? By learning what he learned, by feeling what she felt, by experiencing what he experienced, and by being aware of the surroundings and contexts that he was aware of.
Learn what he learned by studying whatever has been left behind by the teachers who taught him. Are you “jumping over” your guru if you do this? There is a world of difference between “jumping over the guru” and researching the previous gurus for the sake of better understanding your own! Govinda das stepped over Mahāprabhu… to serve him.
Feel and experience what she felt and experienced by practicing the sādhana that she gave to help you do exactly that! And, learn about her life and try to trace the same steps she walked and see the same things she saw, at least in your head. “Walk a mile in her moccasins.”
Be aware of his surroundings and contexts by immersing yourself in the culture he was immersed in – which includes his era, his upbringing, his education, his nationality and ethnicity.
In closing: Guru teaches what he received from his gurus, who are distributing what Vyāsa, Brahmā and Viṣṇu revealed in śāstra. So we have three principles: (1) the śāstra, (2) the ācāryas (“sādhus”) who teach it, and (3) the specific ācārya/sādhu who teaches it to us – our guru. All three are required! We need the guru to understand the ācāryas and śāstra, and we equally need the ācāryas and śāstra to really understand the guru.
If you want to take one of these three without the other two, I think you won’t really comprehend the true teachings of any of them.
If you want to go for it anyway, go for it. But please leave me alone about it; stop trying to make me one of you, and for God’s sake at least please stop claiming that you are the only one who is “humble” and “faithful to guru”!
– Vraja Kishor dās
Tagged: A. C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada, Guru, interpretation, mental speculation, subjectivity

Empowering our nature
→ KKSBlog
(Kadamba Kanana Swami, 26 April 2015, Radhadesh, Belgium, Vyasa Puja Morning Lecture, Caitanya Caritamrta Madhya Lila 24.124)
The reason why I brought this little bit of astrology into the lecture, is to point out that we have our nature. I will give an example of Krsna Ksetra Maharaj. I like to call him, “His Relaxedness.” Happy relaxedness! I have never seen Maharaj uptight in all these years. I am the opposite – I get uptight about things, all the time. Like these vyasa-pujas, they make me uptight. There are so many people and I have relationships with everybody and they are all here and they all want to talk to me. But how I am going to talk to all of them!? It is impossible. The only way I can talk to all of you, is through the microphone right now. That is about it, and here and there catch some of you but not all of you, because it is impossible. But I find that Krsna Ksetra Maharaj knows how to deal with everything in a relaxed way. I am learning from Maharaj, this art of becoming relaxed in Krsna’s service.
So our natures are different but still each of these natures has to be adjusted for the sake of Krsna. I realized, through many life experiences, that natures have their good sides and bad sides in devotional service, and that we have to use our natures to the advantage of Krsna. When you have a fiery nature, sometimes you have to just cool it. When you have a very cool nature, sometimes you need to get a bit hot for Krsna.
So we have to make adjustments for Krsna – whatever it is and whatever it takes. We have to have that willingness to be shaped – like chapati dough – into whichever forms are required. Just like a joker in the card game who can adjust to whatever card he is placed next to; he immediately takes on the qualities of the card he is next to. So we have to be like that for Krsna’s service. We have to be ready to change and to rise to the occasion, which means to do anything and everything that is required.
In the material world, you can say that you are not trained for that type of engagement but in Krsna consciousness that does not work because there is always that, “You just surrender, prabhu!” mantra. (laughter)
They ask you, “Can you cook?”
You reply, “Well, no. Not really…”
“Oh, that is easy. Just put some water on the stove, some rice and this and that…“
Half an hour later, there is kitchari and one week later you are in charge of the kitchen! All in the name that Krsna will empower us. But it is true that Krsna will empower us and it is true that we depend on Krsna’s empowerment. Without the empowerment of Krsna, there is nothing we can do. Even with all the talents in the world – even if you can sing like a gandarva, not every morning you will wake up with the golden voice!
Krsna says, paurusham nrishu (Bhagavad-gita 7.8) – I am the ability in man. Everything is simply a gift from Krsna. Therefore, we are using our gifts and where we are not so gifted, we just try to do the best we can, in the hope that Krsna will help us. Therefore, Srila Prabhupada was saying that the word impossible exists only in the fool’s dictionary. By that, he was referring to the principle of empowerment and it is important that we contemplate this principle of empowerment.
Therefore, our limitations do not apply. Otherwise we start to thing logically, “I know myself. I am not a kid. I have been around. I am not new, you know. I know what I can do; I know what I cannot do. I know how I can stretch myself, but really certain things I know I just cannot do.“ Not necessarily! When the Krsna factor is there, then we can surprise ourselves. “I did not know I can do it!’ With Krsna’s help anything can be done.
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culture of vilification
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We live in a culture of cynicism, fault finding and intense doubt. How can anyone be happy in this negative culture? A bad person or criminal is never given a chance to repent and change due to media character assassination (vilification). Whatever happened to cast the sin and not the sinner! Therefore we have to be careful to not fall into the trap of finding fault with these people. Rather we should pray to Krishna (or at least stay neutral). My basic point is we should let the experts deal with misdemeanor or bad behavior and not allow such negative stories hamper our consciousness.
Hare Krishna
Hare Krishna! 13th Annual Lord Jagannatha’s Ratha Yatra At…
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Hare Krishna! 13th Annual Lord Jagannatha’s Ratha Yatra At Rijeka, Croatia, Europe
The 13th annual Ratha Yatra Festival in Rijeka, Croatia was held on Saturday, 6th June, 2015. The procession started at 5pm from Jelacic Square then proceeded through Korzo street to Jadranski Trg and back to Korzo. A stage program was held from 7pm to 9pm. Special guests for the festival were His Holiness Candramauli Swami, HH Smita Krsna Swami, HG Vaiyasaki Dasa Prabhu and HG Rohini-Suta Prabhu. HH Krsna Ksetra Swami was expected to arrive with the Slovenian devotees. Prasadam distribution was held at 7.30 pm near the parking precinct of the Chariot. This was the largest public ISKCON or Hare Krishna festival in Croatia and the main street in Rijeka, Korzo was filled with cheerful devotees of Lord Jagannatha, Baladeva and Subhadra Devi.
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Yamuna about George Harrison.
“He was a genuine, likeable…
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Yamuna about George Harrison.
“He was a genuine, likeable person and, in spite of his fame, a gentleman and a terrific record producer.”
Yamuna: One day George Harrison called Shyamasundara and asked us to come to the Abbey Road Studios to record. He was there recording “Here Comes the Sun” and had slotted in some time to record the mahamantra as a single. In his role as record producer, George was soft-spoken, but no-nonsense.
As an expert musician, he knew how to get the best from us, tapping into each of our strengths and making them better. He knew where to place us to take the best advantage of what he saw we had. He was a genuine, likeable person and, in spite of his fame, a gentleman and a terrific record producer. This manifested in many ways, particularly with how he worked with our group of nonprofessional musicians.
“On the day of the recording, about a dozen devotees, including some newly-recruited Britishers, assembled at the recording studios on Abbey Road. When the first group of devotees arrived in George’s Mercedes, a crowd of teenagers began singing Hare Krishna to the tune popularized by the rock musical Hair. While Yamuna applied Vaishnava tilak to the foreheads of the recording technicians, Malati unpacked picnic baskets of prasadam, and some of the other devotees put up pictures of Krishna and lit incense. The studio was duly Krishnized.
With Paul McCartney and his wife, Linda, operating the control console, the recording session began. Everyone worked quickly, making Side One of the 45 rpm record in about an hour. George played organ and Mukunda played mridanga. Yamuna sang the lead with Shyamasundara backing her, and the other voices blended in a chorus. And to make it come out exactly right, everyone concentrated on Prabhupada and prayed for spiritual strength.”
-Srila Prabhupada Lilamrta
Yamuna Devi: A Life of Unalloyed Devotion: Part 1: Preparing an Offering of Love. Unalloyed Inc. Kindle Edition.