A record number of 10 people came to Vedicsoc this week. One guest from last week who was quite skeptical (or so I thought) surprised me by bringing two of her friends along.
However, kundalini-chakra yoga certainly is not everyone??(TM)s cup of tea. Too weird.
I introduced people to the chanting of the pancha-tattva mantra. I was again surprised by how easily everyone picked it up. I practically couldn't get them to stop! The subsequent chanting of the Maha-Mantra was equally powerful.
I picked the first text in Bhagavad-Gita Chapter 13: Nature, the enjoyer and consciousness for the discussion. However, I was really busy and so no time to actually prepare anything. I stumbled a bit trying to explain the difference between the body (field) and consciousness (knower of the field), reading bits of the purport out loud as I went along, but overall didn't think I made much sense. Then, somehow or other, I got into talking about satisfying the senses and desires and so on.
I found that when I suggested that all material pleasure is limited by time people immediately reacted: "oh, you're against enjoyment! No, no, there must be a balance (i.e. all material), live in the real world, we want to enjoy nice thing. Don't take away my enjoyment!"
I had to emphasis the same point three times throughout the session: Krishna consciousness is about spiritual pleasure! This kind of pleasure makes material pleasure pale in comparison. Why drive in an old beaten-up Fiat, if you have a Mercedes in the garage (excluding fuel mileage considerations, of course)? Matter is temporary, spirit is eternal. Why go for the temporary, if there is something so much better to be had?
That seems to be a deep routed fear that many people have regarding any spiritual progress. Will it take away my sense gratification?
Question for the experts (please comment): how to convince people that we are all spirit. Lots of people, of course, accept the new-age notion that we are both matter and consciousness. That is, all is one: body, mind, spirit. How can they understand that matter is not part of their eternal identify?
In the end, I was surprised once again: two guests said they would definitely start chanting one round a day. One guest even bought a hardcover Bhagavad-Gita to take back with him to his home country (Turkey).