Acupuncture (part 4)
→ Home

I went to see Dr. Philip Weeks two days ago. It just so happened that I had an appointment just after that stressful presentation of mine. And yes, the stress certainly damaged my digestion.

Philip started off by burning Chinese herbs on various acupuncture points on my body. He would light the herb-powder, let it smoke and burn until it became uncomfortably hot on my skin, then quickly lifted it off. Burning the herbs apparently re-kindles the digestive fire in the body.

He also did some normal acupuncture on me. He stuck on needle in my forehead (third eye chakra) to release the stress I??(TM)ve been subjected to. He also did the usual points around my lower legs. Some points on my chest were troublesome. I??(TM)ve lots so much weight that there wasn??(TM)t enough muscle for the needle to trigger the chi flow. The needle were just (slightly) painful, without the strange tingling feeling of a successful acupuncture point.

Still, Phil was satisfied with the overall effect of the treatment. I feel a bit better today ??" I think. But then I do always feel a lot better straight after acupuncture treatment, but it wears off after a week. Ideally, I??(TM)d have acupuncture every week until my body gets the point and starts behaving the way it should. But alas, we don??(TM)t live in an ideal world.

Philip said that acupuncture is very good at inducing healing when you know exactly what the problem is. His Vega testing machine is very good at diagnosing illnesses, toxins and poisons. He can then use acupuncture to fix the problem, if the patient??(TM)s body does not respond to more high-tech homeopathy-type treatment. On top of that come various herbal tinctures that Phil mixes and prescribes.

I??(TM)m now taking a whole slew of herbs to try and get this broken down body machine working again:

Oregano complex kills yeast in my gut. That fungus better watch out! It also produces a strange oregano smell/burp about an hour after taking it.

Digestive enzymes are very powerful. They cause the food I eat to be digested earlier in the colon, thereby hopefully reducing the colonic irritation and increasing the amount of nutrients I absorb. They should allow me to gain some much needed weight. Something is certainly happening. I feel quite tired (more than usual) after eating and kind-of weird. I had a stomach ache last night. We??(TM)ll see how this develops.

Probiotics replenish the good bacteria in my digestive system.

Clay and slippery elm powered lines my colon wall, reducing irritation and allowing it to heal. It also stop diarrhea by expanding and almost crystallizing in contact with water. The clay-mesh slows the digestive process and forms clumps with any liquid.

Chickpea protein powder is a good source of protein (which my body desperately needs to build itself back up) that is not dairy related (since dairy products are difficult for my body to absorb in its current state).

Finally, detox tea, as the name implies, reduces toxins in my body. Always good.

Slaughtered by logicians
→ Home

I gave a lunchtime presentation yesterday. It was the same event that my colleague got hammered at last week. Only this time practically the entire research group attended: about 35 people.

My presentation was about the potential future direction of my research. I had planned to talk about how I could incremental classify otherwise unmanageably large ontologies. However, I was barely past the first powerpoint slide when one professor started pointing out flaws in the formal language, logic and approach I was suggesting. I attempting to carry on, but as I went on, the audience of experts (Manchester is the world leader in automated reasoning/classification) pointed out more and more flaws and areas I had not yet though through sufficiently.

Very soon it didn??(TM)t matter what I said. No one was listening anymore. I had some genuinely good ideas, but by they were buried under the initial barrage.

I was surprised at the bloodlust with which I was set upon. My (wrong) assumption was that I could present my idea to a friendly group of fellow researchers to get useful feedback and advice. Instead, every tiny inconstancy and imprecise use of terminology was berated.

Advice from my supervisor (he couldn??(TM)t make it to my talk because he was out of the country at the time, but got emails expressing concerned from practically every researcher who was there): ??oeYou??(TM)re too far along in your career to get away with presenting half-baked ideas (though he said it was very good when I rehearsed the presentation with him the week before). Some of these people are so certain that they are right that they are very difficult to convince otherwise, even when they're wrong, which actually happens quite often??. I have to be super-rock-solid in knowing my stuff. Even with these so-called ??oefriends??.

My supervisor was supportive and impressed that I was not completely emotionally shattered by the experience. Note: I was certainly shattered, but chanting the Hare Krishna mantra the next morning drew all the emotion out of me and fixed my consciousness. My body is another (ongoing) story: more on that tomorrow.

I still think that my idea for incremental classification would work, but now it is probably best done in a different way by someone other than me. Also, now everyone in the department thinks I??(TM)m an idiot and don??(TM)t know what I??(TM)m talking about (and lots of people feel really sorry for me for being ripped apart so severely). So, I??(TM)m going to change the direction of my research away from the hard-core description logic to a more practical/maintenance focus.

Someone today asked me if the experience has put me off. It certainly has put me off logic. If becoming a logician turns people into a blood thirsty vampires, that??(TM)s not a career path of choice for me. I also prefer doing things which are of practically use. Formal logic can get rather theoretical.

So, in the end: my armour is cracked, my body is wounded, but I??(TM)m still alive. Time to regroup and fight a new battle on another day.

Slaughtered by logicians
→ Home

I gave a lunchtime presentation yesterday. It was the same event that my colleague got hammered at last week. Only this time practically the entire research group attended: about 35 people.

My presentation was about the potential future direction of my research. I had planned to talk about how I could incremental classify otherwise unmanageably large ontologies. However, I was barely past the first powerpoint slide when one professor started pointing out flaws in the formal language, logic and approach I was suggesting. I attempting to carry on, but as I went on, the audience of experts (Manchester is the world leader in automated reasoning/classification) pointed out more and more flaws and areas I had not yet though through sufficiently.

Very soon it didn??(TM)t matter what I said. No one was listening anymore. I had some genuinely good ideas, but by they were buried under the initial barrage.

I was surprised at the bloodlust with which I was set upon. My (wrong) assumption was that I could present my idea to a friendly group of fellow researchers to get useful feedback and advice. Instead, every tiny inconstancy and imprecise use of terminology was berated.

Advice from my supervisor (he couldn??(TM)t make it to my talk because he was out of the country at the time, but got emails expressing concerned from practically every researcher who was there): ??oeYou??(TM)re too far along in your career to get away with presenting half-baked ideas (though he said it was very good when I rehearsed the presentation with him the week before). Some of these people are so certain that they are right that they are very difficult to convince otherwise, even when they're wrong, which actually happens quite often??. I have to be super-rock-solid in knowing my stuff. Even with these so-called ??oefriends??.

My supervisor was supportive and impressed that I was not completely emotionally shattered by the experience. Note: I was certainly shattered, but chanting the Hare Krishna mantra the next morning drew all the emotion out of me and fixed my consciousness. My body is another (ongoing) story: more on that tomorrow.

I still think that my idea for incremental classification would work, but now it is probably best done in a different way by someone other than me. Also, now everyone in the department thinks I??(TM)m an idiot and don??(TM)t know what I??(TM)m talking about (and lots of people feel really sorry for me for being ripped apart so severely). So, I??(TM)m going to change the direction of my research away from the hard-core description logic to a more practical/maintenance focus.

Someone today asked me if the experience has put me off. It certainly has put me off logic. If becoming a logician turns people into a blood thirsty vampires, that??(TM)s not a career path of choice for me. I also prefer doing things which are of practically use. Formal logic can get rather theoretical.

So, in the end: my armour is cracked, my body is wounded, but I??(TM)m still alive. Time to regroup and fight a new battle on another day.

Devamrita Swami: Pariksit questions the rasa-lila
→ Home

download
Place: Heidelberg Temple, Germany
Time: 41 min.

Summary:
Emperor Pariksit asks Sukadeva Goswami: Why is the maintainer of moral principles breaking these very principles by dancing with other people??(TM)s wives in the middle of the night?

The answer is that spiritually super-powerful people (like Siva and Vishnu) transgress ordinary piety and impiety. Krishna is in everyone: everything and everyone belongs to him. He does not accumulate karma. Everything he does increases the pleasure of his devotees.

Questions:

  • The four Kumaras refused to get married, so Brahma created other children to increase the population of the Universe. All these people were pure devotees. So therefore, is family life spiritual?
  • Please say some more about how we need to be ready to hear about the rasa-lila and can??(TM)t just jump straight to it.
  • Please say some more about the position of the gopis??(TM) husbands.

Devamrita Swami: Pariksit questions the rasa-lila
→ Home

download
Place: Heidelberg Temple, Germany
Time: 41 min.

Summary:
Emperor Pariksit asks Sukadeva Goswami: Why is the maintainer of moral principles breaking these very principles by dancing with other people??(TM)s wives in the middle of the night?

The answer is that spiritually super-powerful people (like Siva and Vishnu) transgress ordinary piety and impiety. Krishna is in everyone: everything and everyone belongs to him. He does not accumulate karma. Everything he does increases the pleasure of his devotees.

Questions:

  • The four Kumaras refused to get married, so Brahma created other children to increase the population of the Universe. All these people were pure devotees. So therefore, is family life spiritual?
  • Please say some more about how we need to be ready to hear about the rasa-lila and can??(TM)t just jump straight to it.
  • Please say some more about the position of the gopis??(TM) husbands.

Vedicsoc: session #6
→ Home

Not much to report on for Vedicsoc today. None of the new people from last week came. However, three of the regulars attended. Slow-deep stretch yoga was so relaxing that it put two of the attendees to sleep. Oh well. I repeated the discussion from last week, since this was an (almost) entirely new audience.

Vedicsoc: session #6
→ Home

Not much to report on for Vedicsoc today. None of the new people from last week came. However, three of the regulars attended. Slow-deep stretch yoga was so relaxing that it put two of the attendees to sleep. Oh well. I repeated the discussion from last week, since this was an (almost) entirely new audience.

Devamrita Swami: Levels of understanding of God
→ Home

download
Place: Heidelberg Temple, Germany
Time: 76 min.

Summary:
There is a huge gap between belief in God and understanding Krishna. Any civilized human being can believe in God. So what? Understanding Krishna however gives freedom from repeated birth, doing the same few basic activities over and over again and eventual death. Many people however want God to stay out of our affairs. Krishna hides himself from such people.

Devamrita Swami gives the example of his father??(TM)s desire to enjoy the satisfaction of seeing his children happy at Christmas. Some slight selfishness is always there in us, but Krishna acts without motives. He acts simply to please his devotees.

While Krishna gets no reactions for His actions, we most certainly do. Devamrita Swami??(TM)s father, after returning from a world-trip, told his fianc?©e: ??oeI??(TM)ve seen that there are other ways of relating to God than through Jesus?? and received a heavy reaction. If we act according to Krishna??(TM)s direction we??(TM)ll be free from reactions, but as long as we have material motives then there will be reactions.

Questions:

  • Is it part of Krishna consciousness to become free from karma?
  • Doesn??(TM)t Krishna have some desire for us to become Krishna conscious and he therefore isn??(TM)t desireless?
  • Do we relate with Krishna, or does he relate with us?
  • New devotees might be serving Krishna for his own benefit. Will selfless service automatically develop?
  • Is it similar with serving the devotees? Will the heart gradually soften simply by mechanical service?

Devamrita Swami: Levels of understanding of God
→ Home

download
Place: Heidelberg Temple, Germany
Time: 76 min.

Summary:
There is a huge gap between belief in God and understanding Krishna. Any civilized human being can believe in God. So what? Understanding Krishna however gives freedom from repeated birth, doing the same few basic activities over and over again and eventual death. Many people however want God to stay out of our affairs. Krishna hides himself from such people.

Devamrita Swami gives the example of his father??(TM)s desire to enjoy the satisfaction of seeing his children happy at Christmas. Some slight selfishness is always there in us, but Krishna acts without motives. He acts simply to please his devotees.

While Krishna gets no reactions for His actions, we most certainly do. Devamrita Swami??(TM)s father, after returning from a world-trip, told his fianc?©e: ??oeI??(TM)ve seen that there are other ways of relating to God than through Jesus?? and received a heavy reaction. If we act according to Krishna??(TM)s direction we??(TM)ll be free from reactions, but as long as we have material motives then there will be reactions.

Questions:

  • Is it part of Krishna consciousness to become free from karma?
  • Doesn??(TM)t Krishna have some desire for us to become Krishna conscious and he therefore isn??(TM)t desireless?
  • Do we relate with Krishna, or does he relate with us?
  • New devotees might be serving Krishna for his own benefit. Will selfless service automatically develop?
  • Is it similar with serving the devotees? Will the heart gradually soften simply by mechanical service?

Germany tour #2 acknowledgements
→ Home

20|1Over the following weeks I'll be posting lectures of my spiritual master, Devamrita Swami, recorded during his recent tour of Germany (be sure to subscribe by pressing the green button). Thanks to Guruvani for expertly recording these. I sadly could not join my guru on the tour due to poor health.

These pictures are of Guruvani's and Bhumna Krishna's visit to my parent's house in Germany shortly before jetting off to a far away country.

Germany tour #2 acknowledgements
→ Home

20|1Over the following weeks I'll be posting lectures of my spiritual master, Devamrita Swami, recorded during his recent tour of Germany (be sure to subscribe by pressing the green button). Thanks to Guruvani for expertly recording these. I sadly could not join my guru on the tour due to poor health.

These pictures are of Guruvani's and Bhumna Krishna's visit to my parent's house in Germany shortly before jetting off to a far away country.

New features on deltaflow
→ Home

There are a couple of new features on my blog that I though I??(TM)d tell you about. Have you notice the colorful buttons under the ??oemeta?? heading on the right side of the page? Here??(TM)s what they do:

Do you want to be automatically kept up to date with the latest interesting sounds from the spiritual world? Well, today is your lucky day. Just click the green button.

You can automatically subscribe to my MP3 Podcasts using Apple??(TM)s iTunes application by pressing the green ??oeSubscribe?? button. By doing this your computer??(TM)s iTunes media player software (and iPod, if you have one) will automatically download the latest talks and lecture I publish. I??(TM)ll be releasing a bunch of new MP3s very soon, so keep your ears primed.

Using iTunes is easier, if you know what you??(TM)re doing you can use any RSS Podcast aggregator (like iPodder) to subscribe. ??oeRSS Podcast?? button allows you to get the standard Really Simple Syndication (RSS) news/mp3 feed from my website.

Finally, the ??oeBF Mapstats?? button allows you to see many people from around the world who visit this website. Click on and see the physical location of the last five people who visited in a Google Map. Neat stuff (it??(TM)s a service offered by a website called BlogFlux, hence the BF title).

New features on deltaflow
→ Home

There are a couple of new features on my blog that I though I??(TM)d tell you about. Have you notice the colorful buttons under the ??oemeta?? heading on the right side of the page? Here??(TM)s what they do:

Do you want to be automatically kept up to date with the latest interesting sounds from the spiritual world? Well, today is your lucky day. Just click the green button.

You can automatically subscribe to my MP3 Podcasts using Apple??(TM)s iTunes application by pressing the green ??oeSubscribe?? button. By doing this your computer??(TM)s iTunes media player software (and iPod, if you have one) will automatically download the latest talks and lecture I publish. I??(TM)ll be releasing a bunch of new MP3s very soon, so keep your ears primed.

Using iTunes is easier, if you know what you??(TM)re doing you can use any RSS Podcast aggregator (like iPodder) to subscribe. ??oeRSS Podcast?? button allows you to get the standard Really Simple Syndication (RSS) news/mp3 feed from my website.

Finally, the ??oeBF Mapstats?? button allows you to see many people from around the world who visit this website. Click on and see the physical location of the last five people who visited in a Google Map. Neat stuff (it??(TM)s a service offered by a website called BlogFlux, hence the BF title).

Re-install, re-start, re-fresh
→ Home

I reinstalled Windows XP on my computer over the weekend. My lowly Dell Inspiron 4150 laptop was showing its age. The operating system was clogged up lots and lots of old applications and orphaned data. It was time for a spring clean.

I deleted everything (after doing a backup) and started from scratch. It took three days to install all the many, many programs, utilities and applications I use. I must have downloaded gigabytes of updates and software. Windows itself is the worst culprit. The amount of patches and updates Microsoft has released in 3 years is mind-boggling.

As Gopala-Guru has remarked recently: something as complex as Windows needs constant tweaking and fixing by highly intelligent software engineers. Something even more complex, like the human body, supposedly came about completely by chance and involved no intelligent design whatsoever. Uh-hu ??¦

Yes, sometimes it is necessary to tear down the decrepit, old, moldy, rotten and highly unstable foundations and start over. A fresh new beginning to break free from past paradigms can work wonders. Free from debt and in a new attractive, city-center location ...

It certainly worked well for my computer. It runs so much faster now. Almost like new. The austerity of the re-install will help me get a few more months of life out of this machine.

Re-install, re-start, re-fresh
→ Home

I reinstalled Windows XP on my computer over the weekend. My lowly Dell Inspiron 4150 laptop was showing its age. The operating system was clogged up lots and lots of old applications and orphaned data. It was time for a spring clean.

I deleted everything (after doing a backup) and started from scratch. It took three days to install all the many, many programs, utilities and applications I use. I must have downloaded gigabytes of updates and software. Windows itself is the worst culprit. The amount of patches and updates Microsoft has released in 3 years is mind-boggling.

As Gopala-Guru has remarked recently: something as complex as Windows needs constant tweaking and fixing by highly intelligent software engineers. Something even more complex, like the human body, supposedly came about completely by chance and involved no intelligent design whatsoever. Uh-hu ??¦

Yes, sometimes it is necessary to tear down the decrepit, old, moldy, rotten and highly unstable foundations and start over. A fresh new beginning to break free from past paradigms can work wonders. Free from debt and in a new attractive, city-center location ...

It certainly worked well for my computer. It runs so much faster now. Almost like new. The austerity of the re-install will help me get a few more months of life out of this machine.

On confidence
→ Home

One of my colleagues gave a internal departmental presentation of some of his research results a few days ago. Apart from the usual mix of students and professors, one American research, who happened to be visiting our University at the time, also attended.

My colleague was ripped to shreds. Everyone asked him very difficult question. They did not properly understand the research and asked very challenging question based on their false conceptions. He, in turn, did not realize what they had misunderstood and ended up unable to give clear answers to the questions.

What struck me was that this American research was so (over) confident. He would make bold statements and people believed and agreed with him, simply because he seemed so confident in his presentation.

He would say things like: "I don't think those results are true!" and everyone would nod their head in agreement. I happened to know that the results in question were indeed true, but this didn't seem to matter. His confidence was too powerful.

This kind of confidence seems very prominent in the USA. Americans??(TM) idea of the ideal personality is the domineering, over-confident superstar (jerk). This is part of the reason why I??(TM)m not too keen on living and working in the United States. My personality is better suited for a more mellow country (*cough* ... New Zealand ... *cough*).

On the topic of confidence: Srila Prabhupada had great power to convince others by virtue of his firm faith. I remember listening to one conversation between him and disciple.

The disciple said: "Prabhupada, the scientists say there are 2 million different species of life"
Prabhupada??(TM)s reply: "2 million? No, 8,400,000!"

That settled the matter. He sounded so certain of this fact that no one could argue.

On confidence
→ Home

One of my colleagues gave a internal departmental presentation of some of his research results a few days ago. Apart from the usual mix of students and professors, one American research, who happened to be visiting our University at the time, also attended.

My colleague was ripped to shreds. Everyone asked him very difficult question. They did not properly understand the research and asked very challenging question based on their false conceptions. He, in turn, did not realize what they had misunderstood and ended up unable to give clear answers to the questions.

What struck me was that this American research was so (over) confident. He would make bold statements and people believed and agreed with him, simply because he seemed so confident in his presentation.

He would say things like: "I don't think those results are true!" and everyone would nod their head in agreement. I happened to know that the results in question were indeed true, but this didn't seem to matter. His confidence was too powerful.

This kind of confidence seems very prominent in the USA. Americans??(TM) idea of the ideal personality is the domineering, over-confident superstar (jerk). This is part of the reason why I??(TM)m not too keen on living and working in the United States. My personality is better suited for a more mellow country (*cough* ... New Zealand ... *cough*).

On the topic of confidence: Srila Prabhupada had great power to convince others by virtue of his firm faith. I remember listening to one conversation between him and disciple.

The disciple said: "Prabhupada, the scientists say there are 2 million different species of life"
Prabhupada??(TM)s reply: "2 million? No, 8,400,000!"

That settled the matter. He sounded so certain of this fact that no one could argue.

Practitioners of Krishna consciousness (Vedicsoc: session #5)
→ Home

21|1Here the promised set of pictures from Vedicsoc session #5. All 18 of these people have practiced Krishna consciousness to some extent, or are indeed very distinguished Vaisnavas. I narrated the stories of when, where and how these people came upon Krishna consciousness and where they ended up because of it.

Apologies to anyone how embarrassed by my using them as an example. Just keep in mind that it was for a greater good.

You can view the gallery here.

In case you are wonder who some of these people are. Here a run-down of names (left to right):

  1. Lord Brahma
  2. Dhruva Maharaja
  3. Steve Jobs
  4. Bhaktisiddhanta Saraswati Thakura
  5. Bhakta Tirtha Swami
  6. Ambarish Das / Alfred Ford
  7. Elias and Mangala Vaisnava Das
  8. George Harrison
  9. Krishna
  10. Narada Muni and Vyasadeva
  11. Devamrita Swami
  12. Sukanti Radha Devi Dasi
  13. Bhakta Hitesh
  14. Hriman Krishna Das
  15. Carana Renu Devi Dasi and Mukunda Das
  16. Atmananda Das
  17. Vrinda Devi Dasi
  18. A.C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada

Practitioners of Krishna consciousness (Vedicsoc: session #5)
→ Home

21|1Here the promised set of pictures from Vedicsoc session #5. All 18 of these people have practiced Krishna consciousness to some extent, or are indeed very distinguished Vaisnavas. I narrated the stories of when, where and how these people came upon Krishna consciousness and where they ended up because of it.

Apologies to anyone how embarrassed by my using them as an example. Just keep in mind that it was for a greater good.

You can view the gallery here.

In case you are wonder who some of these people are. Here a run-down of names (left to right):

  1. Lord Brahma
  2. Dhruva Maharaja
  3. Steve Jobs
  4. Bhaktisiddhanta Saraswati Thakura
  5. Bhakta Tirtha Swami
  6. Ambarish Das / Alfred Ford
  7. Elias and Mangala Vaisnava Das
  8. George Harrison
  9. Krishna
  10. Narada Muni and Vyasadeva
  11. Devamrita Swami
  12. Sukanti Radha Devi Dasi
  13. Bhakta Hitesh
  14. Hriman Krishna Das
  15. Carana Renu Devi Dasi and Mukunda Das
  16. Atmananda Das
  17. Vrinda Devi Dasi
  18. A.C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada

Vedicsoc: session #5
→ Home

7 guests came to the Vedicsoc session yesterday. I was surprised: very few of the regulars came, but 5 new people replaced them.

All the newcomers found flyers and were attracted by those. Better late than never, I suppose. It certainly shows the value of not requiring a subscription. So many clubs want people to pay an up-front fee to join. This might make them money, but it certainly does not encourage membership. No one wants to commit to anything these days.

People said they liked the kundalini-yoga I taught, but they didn??(TM)t seem too enthusiastic about it. I have to admit, it was kind of weird. Strange breathing, chakra energy manipulation, it??(TM)s not for everybody. It is also incredibly difficult to teach. I had to constantly refer back to my notes. Who can remember all those crazy asanas, breath rhythms and transition?

I??(TM)ve found there to be two kinds of students. One group want to get fit and therefore prefer fast paced, give it all you got, passionate power yoga. Others aren??(TM)t fit and don??(TM)t want to be because it??(TM)s too much work. They prefer mellow, relaxing, de-stressing, slow-deep stretch yoga. I try to give them both.

The discussion was about past and present practitioner of Krishna consciousness. I printed out pictures of 18 people that have practiced Krishna consciousness to some degree. I then let the students choose which persons??(TM) stories they wanted to hear. My aim was to alleviate some the fears and doubts people might have about KC. Hearing real human success stories makes it so much easier to see oneself also practicing this ancient and mysterious science of self-realization.

(I'll post the pictures I used tomorrow.)

Summary: the samosas I made were very well received. Two girls bought beads and wanted to start chanting. Two more didn??(TM)t have any money on them, but were eager to purchase their set of beads next week. All guests said they would definitely return next week. We shall see.

Vedicsoc: session #5
→ Home

7 guests came to the Vedicsoc session yesterday. I was surprised: very few of the regulars came, but 5 new people replaced them.

All the newcomers found flyers and were attracted by those. Better late than never, I suppose. It certainly shows the value of not requiring a subscription. So many clubs want people to pay an up-front fee to join. This might make them money, but it certainly does not encourage membership. No one wants to commit to anything these days.

People said they liked the kundalini-yoga I taught, but they didn??(TM)t seem too enthusiastic about it. I have to admit, it was kind of weird. Strange breathing, chakra energy manipulation, it??(TM)s not for everybody. It is also incredibly difficult to teach. I had to constantly refer back to my notes. Who can remember all those crazy asanas, breath rhythms and transition?

I??(TM)ve found there to be two kinds of students. One group want to get fit and therefore prefer fast paced, give it all you got, passionate power yoga. Others aren??(TM)t fit and don??(TM)t want to be because it??(TM)s too much work. They prefer mellow, relaxing, de-stressing, slow-deep stretch yoga. I try to give them both.

The discussion was about past and present practitioner of Krishna consciousness. I printed out pictures of 18 people that have practiced Krishna consciousness to some degree. I then let the students choose which persons??(TM) stories they wanted to hear. My aim was to alleviate some the fears and doubts people might have about KC. Hearing real human success stories makes it so much easier to see oneself also practicing this ancient and mysterious science of self-realization.

(I'll post the pictures I used tomorrow.)

Summary: the samosas I made were very well received. Two girls bought beads and wanted to start chanting. Two more didn??(TM)t have any money on them, but were eager to purchase their set of beads next week. All guests said they would definitely return next week. We shall see.

Vedicsoc: session #4
→ Home

4 people turned up for the Vedicsoc session yesterday. I did a basic power yoga class. Someone commented how it was amazing and almost mystical the way the yoga generated so much heat in his body. That reminded me of Hiranyakashipu's yoga austerity and his ability to thereby increase the heat of the entire Universe.

Most of the people who came were into speculating, giving their own thoughts and ideas. I asked them how they might verify their speculations. This they could not do.

The Vedic literature gives authorized spiritual knowledge that is back up by countless sages and the Supreme Personality of Godhead himself (and even he quotes other authorities in the course of the text). I explained the deep intricacies of karma and why bad things happen to good people.

One Indian guest had loads and loads of questions. An insatiable appetite for knowledge, but, at the same time, vague Hindu conceptions of pseudo-mayavadi philosophy. He'll only be able to understand the Bhagavad-Gita if he purifies himself by the regular chanting of the Hare Krishna maha-mantra. We shall see.

Devotees are so very, very rare in this material world (BG 7.3).

One fellow PhD-student friend of mine came along to the session. She wanted to see what it was all about and experience the yoga (as well as see why I have a stack of Bhagavad-Gitas in my office). She was a pious Muslim and didn't feel comfortable chanting the maha-mantra, so it didn't press her on that. However, she was happy to chant "om namo bhagavata vasudevaya" and liked it very much. Islam, when practiced property, is a very powerful process. I was impressed by her chastity and purity.

Vedicsoc: session #4
→ Home

4 people turned up for the Vedicsoc session yesterday. I did a basic power yoga class. Someone commented how it was amazing and almost mystical the way the yoga generated so much heat in his body. That reminded me of Hiranyakashipu's yoga austerity and his ability to thereby increase the heat of the entire Universe.

Most of the people who came were into speculating, giving their own thoughts and ideas. I asked them how they might verify their speculations. This they could not do.

The Vedic literature gives authorized spiritual knowledge that is back up by countless sages and the Supreme Personality of Godhead himself (and even he quotes other authorities in the course of the text). I explained the deep intricacies of karma and why bad things happen to good people.

One Indian guest had loads and loads of questions. An insatiable appetite for knowledge, but, at the same time, vague Hindu conceptions of pseudo-mayavadi philosophy. He'll only be able to understand the Bhagavad-Gita if he purifies himself by the regular chanting of the Hare Krishna maha-mantra. We shall see.

Devotees are so very, very rare in this material world (BG 7.3).

One fellow PhD-student friend of mine came along to the session. She wanted to see what it was all about and experience the yoga (as well as see why I have a stack of Bhagavad-Gitas in my office). She was a pious Muslim and didn't feel comfortable chanting the maha-mantra, so it didn't press her on that. However, she was happy to chant "om namo bhagavata vasudevaya" and liked it very much. Islam, when practiced property, is a very powerful process. I was impressed by her chastity and purity.

A day in my life
→ Home

Due to popular request, here is a record of a day in my life. This is what I did on Tuesday 1/11/2005:

5:30 alarm clock rings
5:45 get up, shave, shower, ayurvedic oil self-massage
6:10 hot drink (to flush out toxins built up during the night)
6:15 start chanting
7:35 finish chanting @ 16 rounds of the Maha Mantra
7:35 physical (yoga) exercise
7:45 cook breakfast and lunch (kept warm in thermos flask)
8:25 sing Damodarastaka prayers
8:30 have breakfast
8:45 pack gear for Vedicsoc meeting
8:50 vacuum my flat
9:00 talk to my parents on the phone/skype (advise my mother to get a Sony Ericsson W800i (K750i) phone/camera/mp3-player)
9:30 walk into University
9:50 check email at my office in University
10:00 attend meeting with visiting research from Harvard Uni.
12:00 have lunch with fellow researchers
12:45 check email
13:00 start writing a chapter of a new research paper
15:00 do experiment measuring the speed of my segmentation algorithm
16:00 go shopping for some fruit & veg
16:20 eat some fruit
16:30 do a bit more writing
17:00 walk to Vedicsoc meeting room
17:15 arrive and chat with the five guest
17:20 start teaching slow-deep stretch yoga (peace on earth set)
18:10 start discussion reincarnation and the nature of Krishna
19:15 serve prasadam (Chinese almond cookies ??" very popular with attendees)
19:30 clean-up room
19:40 talk with Ben about some philosophical issues
20:10 walk back to flat
20:30 fix and eat some light prasadam
20:50 read Caitanya Caritamrita
21:20 take rest/sleep

A day in my life
→ Home

Due to popular request, here is a record of a day in my life. This is what I did on Tuesday 1/11/2005:

5:30 alarm clock rings
5:45 get up, shave, shower, ayurvedic oil self-massage
6:10 hot drink (to flush out toxins built up during the night)
6:15 start chanting
7:35 finish chanting @ 16 rounds of the Maha Mantra
7:35 physical (yoga) exercise
7:45 cook breakfast and lunch (kept warm in thermos flask)
8:25 sing Damodarastaka prayers
8:30 have breakfast
8:45 pack gear for Vedicsoc meeting
8:50 vacuum my flat
9:00 talk to my parents on the phone/skype (advise my mother to get a Sony Ericsson W800i (K750i) phone/camera/mp3-player)
9:30 walk into University
9:50 check email at my office in University
10:00 attend meeting with visiting research from Harvard Uni.
12:00 have lunch with fellow researchers
12:45 check email
13:00 start writing a chapter of a new research paper
15:00 do experiment measuring the speed of my segmentation algorithm
16:00 go shopping for some fruit & veg
16:20 eat some fruit
16:30 do a bit more writing
17:00 walk to Vedicsoc meeting room
17:15 arrive and chat with the five guest
17:20 start teaching slow-deep stretch yoga (peace on earth set)
18:10 start discussion reincarnation and the nature of Krishna
19:15 serve prasadam (Chinese almond cookies ??" very popular with attendees)
19:30 clean-up room
19:40 talk with Ben about some philosophical issues
20:10 walk back to flat
20:30 fix and eat some light prasadam
20:50 read Caitanya Caritamrita
21:20 take rest/sleep

Mac mini + OS X review
→ Home

I got my parents a new Mac mini computer (cost: US$500). I was using it when I visited them last week. Here are my impressions / review:

Shortcomings:

  • No preview of image files in the Finder. Windows can easily do this. What was Apple thinking?
  • Inconsistent Home/End key effects. End usually goes to the end of the document (expect in Word or some other Windows centric text editors).
  • I have to relearn to use the Windows/Cloverleaf/Apple key. Nearly all keyboard shortcuts use it. Of course, I can remap the key to CTRL and all is well.
  • Safari is a decent enough web-browser, but it crashes too much. Firefox rulez!
  • When the Dock crashes, spin-locks, or hangs the Apple equivalent of Ctrl-Alt-Del, which is Command-Alt-ESC, cannot be used to Force Quit and restart it. It is a special hidden process. I have to start the Activity Monitor to restart the Dock. However, when Dock crashes it is impossible to start the Activity Monitor (because I have to use the Dock to start the application). Bad design!
  • The 1.42 Ghz G4 processor is seriously underpowered. Compared with a modern Pentium-M based notebook this machine is a real dog, especially when I??(TM)m heavily multi-tasking. No wonder Apple is switching to Intel processors.
  • The dual-core P-M (code name Yonah) processor (due to come out in early 2006) will hopefully fix all this.

The good:

  • Expos?© is great. Instead of Alt-Tab I found myself flicking to a screen corner and clicking on a preview-window. It is a much more sure way of switching between applications. No more guess work when I switch applications.
  • The Dock: It may be inconsistent and bastardized to do too many different things, but, somehow or other, it just works. It does what it should and does so very well. I like it.
  • Setup via System Preferences is very nice, understandable and clean. Much better than the Windows control panel and much, much, much (!) better than the various home-grown Linux config tools.
  • Application installation and uninstallation is (mostly) very intuitive. Just drag and drop.
  • Software update is quick and painless. Unlike Windows-Update, it doesn??(TM)t bewilder you with too many unnecessary options.
  • Core applications are small, light and start quickly. No overblown monsters like Microsoft Outlook.
  • The H.264 video codec is amazing. Downloaded HD-video content looks terrific. However, decoding the video bring the processor to its knees. Major meltdown (cooling fan kick-in).
  • Security is really good. One can clearly see that Apple have thought about protecting users from viruses and spyware without insulting our intelligence, or hurting ease of use.
  • Blend transitions are used everywhere. No harsh flicker. The whole interface looks very elegant and refined. Animations are smooth, fast and useful.
  • The maximize button is smart. It makes a window use only as much screen space as it needs. This makes using widescreen displays useful. Applications can be placed side-by-side with a minimum of effort.
  • Bluetooth support is excellent. Plug and play. Bluetooth on Windows is a nightmare. I??(TM)ve never gotten any Bluetooth gear to work with a Windows-box.
  • Scroll-wheel focus actually works. Windows don??(TM)t suddenly loose focus for no reason. However, web-browser windows do frequently and annoyingly steal the focus. Just like in Windows.
  • The Mac mini computer itself is tiny and beautiful. 30 times smaller than the old tower case it replaced. Faster too.

Mac mini + OS X review
→ Home

I got my parents a new Mac mini computer (cost: US$500). I was using it when I visited them last week. Here are my impressions / review:

Shortcomings:

  • No preview of image files in the Finder. Windows can easily do this. What was Apple thinking?
  • Inconsistent Home/End key effects. End usually goes to the end of the document (expect in Word or some other Windows centric text editors).
  • I have to relearn to use the Windows/Cloverleaf/Apple key. Nearly all keyboard shortcuts use it. Of course, I can remap the key to CTRL and all is well.
  • Safari is a decent enough web-browser, but it crashes too much. Firefox rulez!
  • When the Dock crashes, spin-locks, or hangs the Apple equivalent of Ctrl-Alt-Del, which is Command-Alt-ESC, cannot be used to Force Quit and restart it. It is a special hidden process. I have to start the Activity Monitor to restart the Dock. However, when Dock crashes it is impossible to start the Activity Monitor (because I have to use the Dock to start the application). Bad design!
  • The 1.42 Ghz G4 processor is seriously underpowered. Compared with a modern Pentium-M based notebook this machine is a real dog, especially when I??(TM)m heavily multi-tasking. No wonder Apple is switching to Intel processors.
  • The dual-core P-M (code name Yonah) processor (due to come out in early 2006) will hopefully fix all this.

The good:

  • Expos?© is great. Instead of Alt-Tab I found myself flicking to a screen corner and clicking on a preview-window. It is a much more sure way of switching between applications. No more guess work when I switch applications.
  • The Dock: It may be inconsistent and bastardized to do too many different things, but, somehow or other, it just works. It does what it should and does so very well. I like it.
  • Setup via System Preferences is very nice, understandable and clean. Much better than the Windows control panel and much, much, much (!) better than the various home-grown Linux config tools.
  • Application installation and uninstallation is (mostly) very intuitive. Just drag and drop.
  • Software update is quick and painless. Unlike Windows-Update, it doesn??(TM)t bewilder you with too many unnecessary options.
  • Core applications are small, light and start quickly. No overblown monsters like Microsoft Outlook.
  • The H.264 video codec is amazing. Downloaded HD-video content looks terrific. However, decoding the video bring the processor to its knees. Major meltdown (cooling fan kick-in).
  • Security is really good. One can clearly see that Apple have thought about protecting users from viruses and spyware without insulting our intelligence, or hurting ease of use.
  • Blend transitions are used everywhere. No harsh flicker. The whole interface looks very elegant and refined. Animations are smooth, fast and useful.
  • The maximize button is smart. It makes a window use only as much screen space as it needs. This makes using widescreen displays useful. Applications can be placed side-by-side with a minimum of effort.
  • Bluetooth support is excellent. Plug and play. Bluetooth on Windows is a nightmare. I??(TM)ve never gotten any Bluetooth gear to work with a Windows-box.
  • Scroll-wheel focus actually works. Windows don??(TM)t suddenly loose focus for no reason. However, web-browser windows do frequently and annoyingly steal the focus. Just like in Windows.
  • The Mac mini computer itself is tiny and beautiful. 30 times smaller than the old tower case it replaced. Faster too.

Body feeling better
→ Home

I'm feeling a lot better today. My body seems to have healed itself. It seems that last week's breakdown was simply a (severe) temporary reaction to the hardship of international travel. The sickness disappeared as quickly as it came. I'm pretty much back to normal (minus a few kg).

My spiritual master told me I should be grateful. It could be a lot worse. He, for example, was sick for 25 years.

Body feeling better
→ Home

I'm feeling a lot better today. My body seems to have healed itself. It seems that last week's breakdown was simply a (severe) temporary reaction to the hardship of international travel. The sickness disappeared as quickly as it came. I'm pretty much back to normal (minus a few kg).

My spiritual master told me I should be grateful. It could be a lot worse. He, for example, was sick for 25 years.

God & Science: Exact Science in the Srimad-Bhagavatam
→ Home

(chapter summary from God and Science by Richard L. Thompson)

The basic unit of measurement in the Vedic literature is the yojana. Thompson has calculated a yojana to be 8.59 miles long. One yojana is 32,000 hastas. One hasta is 432 millimeters (the number 432 should be familiar to anyone well read in the Vedic literature).

One might ask why there such a correspondence between the Vedic and Western distance measurement units? It surely is not simply coincidence?

The answer is that both a latitude based, that is, they are based on the size of Earth. The Greek astronomer Eratosthenes was (supposedly) the first person to calculate the size of earth. He used a well (in Syene) with the sun directly overhead as a reference point, measured the length of a shadow from a post some distance away (in Alexandria) and used the angled derived to estimate the size of the Earth.

There is evidence that the ancient Egyptians knew of latitude and longitude long before Eratosthenes. Similarly, Vedic civilization seems to also have had exact knowledge of the size and shape of the Earth.

The circumference of the Earth as the poles is very close to 108 x ten-billion hastas (108 is another number which should be familiar to students of the Vedic literature).

Interestingly, the distance from the Earth to the Sun (using figures from modern astronomy) equals 10821.6 thousands yojanas. Again, a figure surprisingly close to 108. Further suggesting a connection between the map of the Earth and map of the solar system.

The Vedic civilization that the Bhagavatam describes is both mysterious and amazing. It had incredibly advanced scientific knowledge and it's traces can be found on nearly every continent of the world. Thompson urges us to be on the lookout for more evidence that may shed light on this hidden chapter of human history.

(Thus ends the book: God & Science by Richard L. Thompson. I have left out much of the detail, many of the examples and analogies and all the mathematical proofs in my short summaries. Please buy the book and support Thompson's efforts if you are at all interested in learning more.)

God & Science: Exact Science in the Srimad-Bhagavatam
→ Home

(chapter summary from God and Science by Richard L. Thompson)

The basic unit of measurement in the Vedic literature is the yojana. Thompson has calculated a yojana to be 8.59 miles long. One yojana is 32,000 hastas. One hasta is 432 millimeters (the number 432 should be familiar to anyone well read in the Vedic literature).

One might ask why there such a correspondence between the Vedic and Western distance measurement units? It surely is not simply coincidence?

The answer is that both a latitude based, that is, they are based on the size of Earth. The Greek astronomer Eratosthenes was (supposedly) the first person to calculate the size of earth. He used a well (in Syene) with the sun directly overhead as a reference point, measured the length of a shadow from a post some distance away (in Alexandria) and used the angled derived to estimate the size of the Earth.

There is evidence that the ancient Egyptians knew of latitude and longitude long before Eratosthenes. Similarly, Vedic civilization seems to also have had exact knowledge of the size and shape of the Earth.

The circumference of the Earth as the poles is very close to 108 x ten-billion hastas (108 is another number which should be familiar to students of the Vedic literature).

Interestingly, the distance from the Earth to the Sun (using figures from modern astronomy) equals 10821.6 thousands yojanas. Again, a figure surprisingly close to 108. Further suggesting a connection between the map of the Earth and map of the solar system.

The Vedic civilization that the Bhagavatam describes is both mysterious and amazing. It had incredibly advanced scientific knowledge and it's traces can be found on nearly every continent of the world. Thompson urges us to be on the lookout for more evidence that may shed light on this hidden chapter of human history.

(Thus ends the book: God & Science by Richard L. Thompson. I have left out much of the detail, many of the examples and analogies and all the mathematical proofs in my short summaries. Please buy the book and support Thompson's efforts if you are at all interested in learning more.)

Body malfunctioning (update)
→ Home

My body is still not working right, but now slightly better. Some new advice just in from Dr. Philip on how to heal the ulcer(s):

  • Drastically increased dosage of Probiotics
  • Drastically increased dosage of Bentonite Clay and Slippery Elm powder
  • As much Aloe Vera juice as I can drink
  • No food

Body malfunctioning (update)
→ Home

My body is still not working right, but now slightly better. Some new advice just in from Dr. Philip on how to heal the ulcer(s):

  • Drastically increased dosage of Probiotics
  • Drastically increased dosage of Bentonite Clay and Slippery Elm powder
  • As much Aloe Vera juice as I can drink
  • No food

Two weeks on: body malfunctioning
→ Home

It has been two weeks since my trip to Canada for the K-CAP conference. Traveling to the out-of-the-way town of Banff took a total of 22 hours of continuous travel each way. The ordeal of traveling for such a length of time twice within one week certainly took its tole on my body. I'm feeling the damage now.

I've found that one faces three reactions for neglecting the body. One the next day, the next two weeks afterwards and another as a reduction in one's overall life-span. While I haven't yet experienced the last one (or I can't remember those many past lives where I have experienced it), the first two certainly hold true.

Now, two weeks after my return from Banff, my digestion system has gone on strike. "I will digest food no more!", it says. "Too much unhealthy (wheat and dairy) food, too much flying in toxic airplanes, too many long nights without adequate rest".

For the last week I've been having intense stomach pains exactly an hour after attempting to eat any type of food. The undigested food passes straight through me.

I know what this is, of course. It's not like it hasn't happened before. A newly formed ulcer is sabotaging my colon. Ulcerative colitis in all its glory. The result: I've lost what little weight I had (now weight 57 kg), sleep for 12 hours a day, have no energy and am really irritable when I am awake.

Solution?

I'm (again) taking a colon cleansing juice-mix that Dr. Philip Weeks recommends:

  • juice of 3 apples
  • juice of 3 carrots
  • 1/4 of a lemon
  • thumbnail size chunk of fresh ginger
  • 4 tablespoons of olive oil
  • 4 cloves of garlic

I hate this juice and certainly don't recommend it for anyone. The garlic especially wreaks havoc on my consciousness. It has great healing properties, but has equally great disturbing effects on any kind of meditation practice. I can't concentrate on anything.

Anyway, lets hope my body starts working again soon. It's really annoying when this happens. I'll have to start all-over, slowly building the body back up. If nothing else, it is a good lesson for what the time of death is like.

Two weeks on: body malfunctioning
→ Home

It has been two weeks since my trip to Canada for the K-CAP conference. Traveling to the out-of-the-way town of Banff took a total of 22 hours of continuous travel each way. The ordeal of traveling for such a length of time twice within one week certainly took its tole on my body. I'm feeling the damage now.

I've found that one faces three reactions for neglecting the body. One the next day, the next two weeks afterwards and another as a reduction in one's overall life-span. While I haven't yet experienced the last one (or I can't remember those many past lives where I have experienced it), the first two certainly hold true.

Now, two weeks after my return from Banff, my digestion system has gone on strike. "I will digest food no more!", it says. "Too much unhealthy (wheat and dairy) food, too much flying in toxic airplanes, too many long nights without adequate rest".

For the last week I've been having intense stomach pains exactly an hour after attempting to eat any type of food. The undigested food passes straight through me.

I know what this is, of course. It's not like it hasn't happened before. A newly formed ulcer is sabotaging my colon. Ulcerative colitis in all its glory. The result: I've lost what little weight I had (now weight 57 kg), sleep for 12 hours a day, have no energy and am really irritable when I am awake.

Solution?

I'm (again) taking a colon cleansing juice-mix that Dr. Philip Weeks recommends:

  • juice of 3 apples
  • juice of 3 carrots
  • 1/4 of a lemon
  • thumbnail size chunk of fresh ginger
  • 4 tablespoons of olive oil
  • 4 cloves of garlic

I hate this juice and certainly don't recommend it for anyone. The garlic especially wreaks havoc on my consciousness. It has great healing properties, but has equally great disturbing effects on any kind of meditation practice. I can't concentrate on anything.

Anyway, lets hope my body starts working again soon. It's really annoying when this happens. I'll have to start all-over, slowly building the body back up. If nothing else, it is a good lesson for what the time of death is like.

God & Science: the Universe of the Vedas
→ Home

(chapter summary from God and Science by Richard L. Thompson)

The Srimad-Bhagavatam describes the Bhu-mandala, the Universe. At first glance these descriptions are inconsistent and constantly contract one another. However, when viewed with the correct understanding, it all makes sense.

Bhu-mandala simultaneously describes four things:

  • a topographical map of south-central Asia
  • a polar-projection map of the Earth
  • a map of the solar system
  • a map of the celestial heavens of the demigods

Bhu-mandala can be seen as a topographical maps of south-central Asia. The various peaks of the Himalayan mountains are accurately depicted on the North/top of the map.

The Bhagavatam certainly doesn't have the primitive idea that the Earth flat. There are plenty of indirect references to a globe-shaped Earth. Bhu-mandala, understood as a map of the Earth, is an astrological map. Lines on the map show the exact orbital paths of various stars and planets from the Earth's perspective.

Bhu-mandala can also be taken as a map of the solar system up to Saturn. The orbits of the planets in the solar system lie on a nearly flat plane, so the flatness of the map does not cause any trouble here. Furthermore, the distances given in the Bhagavatam closely match the recent astronomical measurements.

Finally, Bhu-mandala, viewed as a map of the paradisiacal lands of the demigods, explains the extremely large distances which are sometimes quoted in the text. For example: India is described to be 72,000 miles across (3 times the circumference of the Earth). This is no mistake, after all demigods like Lord Siva are said to be nearly the size of Europe.

The various maps are overlaid because they are interconnected. Mystic yogis could use the various points of interconnection as "short-cuts" through space in order to very quickly transport themselves between Earth, the celestial realms and other planets.

God & Science: the Universe of the Vedas
→ Home

(chapter summary from God and Science by Richard L. Thompson)

The Srimad-Bhagavatam describes the Bhu-mandala, the Universe. At first glance these descriptions are inconsistent and constantly contract one another. However, when viewed with the correct understanding, it all makes sense.

Bhu-mandala simultaneously describes four things:

  • a topographical map of south-central Asia
  • a polar-projection map of the Earth
  • a map of the solar system
  • a map of the celestial heavens of the demigods

Bhu-mandala can be seen as a topographical maps of south-central Asia. The various peaks of the Himalayan mountains are accurately depicted on the North/top of the map.

The Bhagavatam certainly doesn't have the primitive idea that the Earth flat. There are plenty of indirect references to a globe-shaped Earth. Bhu-mandala, understood as a map of the Earth, is an astrological map. Lines on the map show the exact orbital paths of various stars and planets from the Earth's perspective.

Bhu-mandala can also be taken as a map of the solar system up to Saturn. The orbits of the planets in the solar system lie on a nearly flat plane, so the flatness of the map does not cause any trouble here. Furthermore, the distances given in the Bhagavatam closely match the recent astronomical measurements.

Finally, Bhu-mandala, viewed as a map of the paradisiacal lands of the demigods, explains the extremely large distances which are sometimes quoted in the text. For example: India is described to be 72,000 miles across (3 times the circumference of the Earth). This is no mistake, after all demigods like Lord Siva are said to be nearly the size of Europe.

The various maps are overlaid because they are interconnected. Mystic yogis could use the various points of interconnection as "short-cuts" through space in order to very quickly transport themselves between Earth, the celestial realms and other planets.

God & Science: Cross-cultural traces of Vedic Civilization
→ Home

(chapter summary from God and Science by Richard L. Thompson)

The Greek author Aratos wrote tales of progressively more degraded ages. In the final bronze age "they tasted the meat of cows, the first who did it". Protecting cows is a prominent theme in the Vedic literature, but not so common in Europe. It is therefore surprising to find a classical author highlighting these principles. Unless, of course, he got the idea from the Vedic culture. The Vedic literature also describes cycles of ages called yugas: Satya, Treta, Dvapara and Kali. Each with progressively shorter human life-spans (100000, 10000, 1000 and 100 years respectively).

The Sioux Native American Indians say they were visited by a celestial woman who gave them their religion. She was said to have talked about four ages and a sacred buffalo that loses one leg during each age. In the present age the buffalo has only one leg. This story will sound familiar to anyone who has read the Srimad-Bhagavatam's story of Maharaja Pariksit and the bull of Dharma.

The Bible describes only a very short time-span of human history. Still, it is interesting that the people in the early Biblical stories lived for around 1000 years, as we might expect for people living in Dvapara-yuga:

  • Adam: 930 years
  • Seth: 912 years
  • Enos: 905 years
  • Noah: 950 years
  • Jared: 962 years
  • Kenan: 910 years

After the great flood life spans gradually decreased to the around 100 years we have today.

  • Shem: 600 years
  • Salah: 438 years
  • Abraham: 175 years
  • Issac: 180 years
  • Jacob: 147 years
  • Moses: 120 years

The flood is generally believed to have taken place sometime in the second or third millennium B.C. Similarly, the date given in the Vedic literature for the beginning of Kali-yuga is February 18th, 3102 B.C.

Norse mythology is also surprisingly similar to the Vedic world-view. The Norse Ragnarok, for example, tells of the destruction of the Earth. Its timeline fits in well with the Vedic period of 1000-yuga cycles, called a day of Brahma, after which the most of the Universe is destroyed.