
Projects Completed in New Raman Reti, Alachua.
Mukhya devi dasi: At long last, we have started our lighting improvement projec...
Websites from the ISKCON Universe
Projects Completed in New Raman Reti, Alachua.
Mukhya devi dasi: At long last, we have started our lighting improvement projec...
A few weeks back, while looking through some old files at the Hare Krishna temple in Brooklyn, I came upon a copy of a newsletter I had edited in 1985 while traveling with a party of pilgrims traveling throughout India. The newsletter included an article I had written, but the newsletter, and therefore the article, had long been lost. I was pleased to rediscover it.
Padayātrā Newsletter
Number 13, October 1985
Not Quite Back to Godhead
The second and third articles I wrote for the Padayātrā “On Pilgrimage” series have now appeared in Back to Godhead. I found out some weeks ago that the BTG editors chose not to print the first article, written last April. Much (or, from another viewpoint, not much) has happened since then. But if you’d still like to read the article, here it is.
On Pilgrimage
Why go?
One may go on pilgrimage out of dissatisfaction or disgust. Lord Balarāma, the celebrated divine brother of Lord Śrī Kṛṣṇa, once undertook a pilgrimage for this reason. When we find ourselves amidst falsity, hypocrisy, or injustice and feel too small and powerless to make it stop, this is one alternative: go on pilgrimage and wait for destiny to change its course.
The pilgrimage of the saint Vidura began with an insult. Vidura was brother, friend, and advisor to Dhṛtarāṣṭra, king of the Kuru dynasty. But when Vidura’s thoughtful and righteous advice cut at a nephew’s evil schemes, the nephew, the king’s pet son, bitterly insulted him and called for him to be beaten and thrown from the court. Vidura, the family’s lifelong well-wisher, pierced to the heart by his nephew’s words, simply walked out, turned his back on the palace and its politics, and set out on pilgrimage.
Years later, after fate had proven Vidura right, Vidura visited the palace again; and King Dhṛtarāṣṭra himself, this time accepting Vidura’s advice, turned pilgrim just before his death.
Death also inspired the small child who would later become the great sage Nārada. Orphaned when his mother was bitten by a snake, the child set off as a pilgrim. The teacher Śaṅkara also turned pilgrim as a child, at the age of eight.
Although one may set out on pilgrimage at any time in one’s life, the traditional Vedic culture especially advises that one take to the road after twenty-five years of marriage. Because the Vedic culture has no place for illicit sex, it encourages everyone to marry. Yet in married life illusions cover us like moss. When a man and woman “get physical,” spirit gets lost in the raptures of matter. Soon one finds oneself locked in embrace with children, in-laws, home, prestige, bills, work, taxes, responsibilities. As soul yields to the needs of the body, fresh hope turns to routine anxiety.
But the Vedic culture provides a way out, called the vānaprastha order. After twenty-five years of married life, the Vedic householder entrusts his family affairs to his grown children, leaves his entanglements behind, and sets off for a freer, happier life as a pilgrim.
India especially, the traditional home of Vedic culture, has hundreds, perhaps thousands, of holy places of pilgrimage, like Badrinath and Rishikesh in the Himalayas, Kanya Kumari on the southernmost tip of the peninsula, Dvaraka on the Arabian Sea, and Puri on the Bay of Bengal. The followers of Vedic culture take advantage of these places even today.
Taking advantage of a holy place doesn’t just mean seeing the sights or splashing into the pious waters of the Ganges. If you go just for that, the Vedic scriptures say, you’re no smarter than a cow or an ass
The real purpose of pilgrimage is self-purification. The pure mind is the mind filled with thoughts of Kṛṣṇa, the pure heart is the heart filled with love for Kṛṣṇa, and the pure life is the life fully dedicated to Kṛṣṇa’s devotional service. When we forget Kṛṣṇa, our minds fill with anxiety and mental noise, our hearts clog with falsities, and our inner life begins to grow dead. By going on pilgrimage we can pacify the mind, cleanse the heart, and revive our vitality in Kṛṣṇa consciousness.
This purification calls for more than just guided tours, holy waters, and picture postcards. A holy place becomes holy because of a holy person. Our pilgrimage becomes perfect, therefore, if we can associate with a holy person, a pure devotee of the Supreme Lord.
The Lord himself is the most holy person, and equally holy are the devotees who give themselves fully to the service of the Lord. A place originally becomes holy, therefore, by the presence of the Lord and the Lord’s devotees.
Unfortunately, holy places tend to clutter with unholy people. We live in a world of cheaters and cheated, and a holy place makes a good marketplace for deceit. For example, some low-class women in India think they’ll win pious merit if a sannyāsī, a celibate monk, blesses then with a child. So they go to a holy place to seduce a sannyāsī. To complete the picture, some equally low-class men go to holy places, pose as sannyāsīs, and wait for the pleasures of being seduced. For those who prefer their seduction less literal, holy places have no shortage of svāmīs, ṛṣis, yogīs, avatāras, bābājīs, mystics, and saints ready to prostitute the Vedic teachings.
Pure devotees of the Lord therefore travel to holy places to reclaim them as places of Vedic knowledge and reinfuse them with spiritual life. A pure devotee always keeps the Lord within his heart and serves the Lord with unalloyed devotion. So he makes every place holy wherever he goes.
Nearly five hundred years ago, Śrī Caitanya Mahāprabhu therefore traveled to holy places throughout India as a pilgrim. Lord Caitanya was Kṛṣṇa Himself, descended in the role of a devotee to taste love for Kṛṣṇa and distribute that love freely as the essence of all Vedic teachings, the essence of life itself. He did this through saṅkīrtana, the ecstatic congregational chanting of Lord Kṛṣṇa’s holy names.
There is no difference between Lord Kṛṣṇa’s holy names and Lord Kṛṣṇa himself. While chanting Kṛṣṇa’s name, one comes in touch with Kṛṣṇa in person. So wherever Lord Caitanya went He spread the chanting of Kṛṣṇa’s names, especially as found in the mahā-mantra: Hare Kṛṣṇa, Hare Kṛṣṇa, Kṛṣṇa Kṛṣṇa, Hare Hare / Hare Rāma, Hare Rāma, Rāma Rāma, Hare Hare. This chanting of Lord Kṛṣṇa’s holy name is the most sublime benediction in all Vedic literature, and it was Lord Caitanya’s purpose to spread this chanting not only in holy places but to every town and village of the world.
Lord Caitanya inundated India with a wave of love for Kṛṣṇa. And by Lord Caitanya’s desire, in 1965 this wave overflowed from India to the world when His Divine Grace A. C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupāda began the international Hare Kṛṣṇa movement.
Now, to celebrate the five-hundredth anniversary of Lord Caitanya’s appearance, devotees Śrīla Prabhupāda inspired with Lord Caitanya’s teachings have joined together from around the world to travel in India on pilgrimage.
Their pilgrimage is a padayātrā, a journey by foot. Their route takes them to the same places Lord Caitanya visited nearly five hundred years ago. It covers six thousand kilometres and will take eighteen months to complete.
The padayātrā forms a joyful procession, with 150 people, five bullocks, a camel, and a decorated elephant. The bullocks pull an open trailer with sculptured dancing forms of Lord Caitanya and His eternal companion Lord Nityānanda, and seated at Their feet the form of Their emissary par excellence, His Divine Grace A. C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupāda.
As the pilgrims pass along the road, they follow in Lord Caitanya’s footsteps, not only by visiting the same places He did but by chanting the mahā-mantra: Hare Kṛṣṇa, Hare Kṛṣṇa, Kṛṣṇa Kṛṣṇa, Hare Hare / Hare Rāma, Hare Rāma, Rāma Rāma, Hare Hare. And every evening, whether in a big city or small village, they stop and hold a festival. They chant and dance and pass out prasādam, food blessed by Lord Caitanya. They hold discourses and distribute books about Lord Caitanya’s philosophy. And they show films that share with people the worldwide Hare Kṛṣṇa movement.
The padayātrā, in its course, will pass through 120 cities and 2300 villages and towns. It will reach its final destination—Śrīdhām Māyāpur, West Bengal, Lord Caitanya’s birthplace—by 26 March, the anniversary of His birth. There the pilgrims will join literally hundred and thousands of Lord Caitanya’s devotees who will gather to celebrate Lord Śrī Caitanya Mahāprabhu, the incarnation of Kṛṣṇa who taught love of Kṛṣṇa to the world.
I have decided to go on piligrimage with Lord Caitanya’s padayātrā.
The post On pilgrimage, 1985: The lost article appeared first on Jayadvaita Swami.
Please, take a look at the first 5 meter base relief panel that will decorate one of the 4 corner walls of the temple room.
This is a wall of ventilation channel, that provides air circulation and conducts the drainage system of the temple and various types of communication lines. Two base relief panels will show the pastimes of Sri Krishna, and another two will show the lilas of Sri Caitanya Mahaprabhu.
Visit us at: www.tovp.org
Follow us at: www.facebook.com/tovp.mayapur
Watch us at: www.youtube.com/user/tovpinfo
Phone App at: http://tovp.org/news/announcements/new-tovp-phone-app-goes-live/
Mailing List at: https://goo.gl/forms/ojJ2WcUUuqWh8bXt1
RSS News Feed at: https://tovp.org/rss2/
Buy from us at: https://tovp.org/tovp-gift-store/
Support us at: www.tovp.org/donate/seva-opportunities
The post Wall Relief Panels appeared first on Temple of the Vedic Planetarium.
A beautiful photoreportage about Sri Hampi Dhama Yatra ~ Kishkinda Ksetra.
Hampi is a village in northern Karnataka state, and is identified with the historical Kishkinda, the Vanara (monkey) kingdom mentioned in the Ramayana. At Hampi there are many important sites related to Ramayana, namely Shabari’s cave and sacred Pampa Sarovar, where Shabari, a great devotee of Lord Ramacandra lived; Anjaneya Hill which is the Birthplace of Hanuman Ji; Yantrodharak Anjaneya Temple where Hanuman first saw Lord Rama and His brother Laxmana; Rsyamuka hill were Sugriva took shelter and lived for several years when banished by his elder brother Vali from his kingdom Kishkhinda; Maalyavant Raghunatha Swamy Temple where Lord Rama and Laxmana stayed for 4 months during the rainy season after Sugriva had been coronated on the throne; Kodanda Rama Temple where Sugriva was crowned as the King of Kishkhinda; Sugriva’s cave where Sugriva hid the jewels of mother Sita while she was been taken away by Ravana, and other places. Lord Caitanya Mahaprabhu visited Hampi during His South India tour as mentioned in Sri Caitanya Caritamrta Madhya-lila 9.316. Lord Nityananda also visited here during His travels.
2019 International Vaisnavi Retreat – VIHE (Album with photos)
This year’s International Vaisnavi Retreat, held between Mar 28 and April 2, was wonderful. Over 110 vaishnavis attended this extraordinary sadhvi sanga in the land of Vrindavana, under the shelter of Govardhana.
Please, take a look at the first 5 meter base relief panel that will decorate one of the 4 corner walls of the temple room.
This is a wall of ventilation channel, that provides air circulation and conducts the drainage system of the temple and various types of communication lines. Two base relief panels will show the pastimes of Sri Krishna, and another two will show the lilas of Sri Caitanya Mahaprabhu.
Visit us at: www.tovp.org
Follow us at: www.facebook.com/tovp.mayapur
Watch us at: www.youtube.com/user/tovpinfo
Phone App at: http://tovp.org/news/announcements/new-tovp-phone-app-goes-live/
Mailing List at: https://goo.gl/forms/ojJ2WcUUuqWh8bXt1
RSS News Feed at: https://tovp.org/rss2/
Buy from us at: https://tovp.org/tovp-gift-store/
Support us at: www.tovp.org/donate/seva-opportunities
The post Wall Relief Panels appeared first on Temple of the Vedic Planetarium.
The TOVP will be filled with many beautiful, hand-crafted murtis of important devas made by local artisans. These will add to the astounding nature of the temple itself and also enhance the richness of the culture it represents.
Pictured is a colorful murti of Goddess Lakshmi. This sculpture, along with many other demigods in poses of worship of the Supreme Lord, will decorate the Nrsimha wing hall on the first floor. They are made of high quality fiberglass and will be intricately and stunningly painted.
Visit us at: www.tovp.org
Follow us at: www.facebook.com/tovp.mayapur
Watch us at: www.youtube.com/user/tovpinfo
Phone App at: http://tovp.org/news/announcements/new-tovp-phone-app-goes-live/
Mailing List at: https://goo.gl/forms/ojJ2WcUUuqWh8bXt1
RSS News Feed at: https://tovp.org/rss2/
Buy from us at: https://tovp.org/tovp-gift-store/
Support us at: www.tovp.org/donate/seva-opportunities
The post Temple Murtis Report appeared first on Temple of the Vedic Planetarium.
This week as we head to the start of the #Giving TOVP 10 Day Worldwide Matching Fundraiser from May 7th (Akshaya Tritiya) until May 17th (Nrsimha Caturdasi), His Holiness B.B. Govinda Maharaja speaks about the importance of the TOVP and participating in this 10 day window of opportunity to make a donation to the project.
The #Giving TOVP 10 Day Worldwide Matching Fundraiser will be an incredible, never before done online event to raise funds, large or small, from every devotee, whether they have already given to the TOVP or not. Ambarisa prabhu will match all donations up to $125,000, thus doubling the income to the TOVP during this fundraising event to help complete the TOVP by 2022.
For more information, go to the TOVP #Giving TOVP Fundraiser page. You can also become a TOVP Ambassador by downloading the flyer from the website page and posting it on the internet, emailing it to your devotee friends and relatives, and posting at your local temple. We want the participation of every ISKCON devotee and congregation member worldwide.
MISSION 22 MARATHON KI JAYA! THINK 22 -> TOVP NOW!
Visit us at: www.tovp.org
Follow us at: www.facebook.com/tovp.mayapur
Watch us at: www.youtube.com/user/tovpinfo
Phone App at: http://tovp.org/news/announcements/new-tovp-phone-app-goes-live/
Mailing List at: https://goo.gl/forms/ojJ2WcUUuqWh8bXt1
RSS News Feed at: https://tovp.org/rss2/
Buy from us at: https://tovp.org/tovp-gift-store/
Support us at: www.tovp.org/donate/seva-opportunities
The post His Holiness Gopal Krishna Maharaja Speaks About the #Giving TOVP Worldwide Matching Fundraiser appeared first on Temple of the Vedic Planetarium.
Please, take a look at the first 5 meter base relief panel that will decorate one of the 4 corner walls of the temple room.
This is a wall of ventilation channel, that provides air circulation and conducts the drainage system of the temple and various types of communication lines. Two base relief panels will show the pastimes of Sri Krishna, and another two will show the lilas of Sri Caitanya Mahaprabhu.
Visit us at: www.tovp.org
Follow us at: www.facebook.com/tovp.mayapur
Watch us at: www.youtube.com/user/tovpinfo
Phone App at: http://tovp.org/news/announcements/new-tovp-phone-app-goes-live/
Mailing List at: https://goo.gl/forms/ojJ2WcUUuqWh8bXt1
RSS News Feed at: https://tovp.org/rss2/
Buy from us at: https://tovp.org/tovp-gift-store/
Support us at: www.tovp.org/donate/seva-opportunities
The post Wall Relief Panels appeared first on Temple of the Vedic Planetarium.
Book Distribution week ending April 7, 2019 (Album of photos)
Mohanasini Devi Dasi: Super sweet people I met this weekend! I a...
Daily readings of Srila Prabhupada’s Books.
Bhagavat Ashraya Das: Congratulations on this significant milestone. As Maharaja says, he has dedicated himself to this project every day for the rest of his life. Let us all pray that there are many, many, many more days, weeks, months and years to the rest of this life.
Harinaam Monday - ISKCON Chowpatty (4 min. video)
Srila Prabhupada: Pure devotees chant the Hare Krishna mantra, and simply by...
Giriraj Swami read and spoke from Bhagavad-gita 3.10.
“After reading and examining and discussing, the conclusion is that we should engage in sankirtan yajna. That will enable us to live happily in this life and to go back home back to Godhead at the end of this life. We should all chant as much as possible — Hare Krishna Hare Krishna Krishna Krishna Hare Hare, Hare Rama Hare Rama Rama Rama Hare Hare. Srila Prabhupada Said that anyone can chant. Even a child can take part. Even a dog can take part.”
Sunday Feast Talk (Right click to download)
Jagannath Rath Yatra 2019, Kurukshetra (Album of photos)
Srila Prabhupada: When there is large-scale congregational chanting o...
West Sydney Temple Project.
Ramai Swami: I attended another fundraising dinner for the new temple project in Vineyard, West Sy...
ENTHUSIASM POINTS TO GROWTH OF JALGAON WALKS
April 9, 2019
By Caitanya Jivan dasa, President ISKCON Jalgaon
Jenni Adopts A Cow (3 min. video)
Cow protection often appeals to people who ordinarily would not become interested in Krsna Consciousness. Due to their attraction to the cow, they learn about the philosophy behind cow protection, Krishna Consciousness.
This is the story of a surprise wedding gift to a cow lover. Jenni’s parents wanted to give her a surprise wedding gift of a cow adoption. They took her on a mystery road trip and she did not know where she was going or for what purpose. Watch the video to find out what happened.
Sri Lakshmiji manifests in the TOVP! (Album of photos)
Sadbhuja Das: Here is the murti of the Goddess Lakshmi. This sculpture,...
To make everyone understand that He was accepting the sinful actions of Jagai and Madhai, Lord Caitanya’s body became blackish in complexion. The Lord inquired, “Why do you all look at Me in this manner? How do I look?” Advaita Acarya replied, “You look like Lord Krishna.” Lord Caitanya began to laugh at Advaita Acarya’s words and all the Vaisnavas became ecstatic and expressed their joy with jubilant sounds. Lord Caitanya then said, “Begin kirtana, and this black shroud of sin will lift from My body and enter the bodies of those who criticize the devotees of the Lord.” Continue reading "Beware of the Mad Elephant
→ Dandavats"
This year's parade was special because the show got enlivened with 40 decorative cars and boasted of participants from 37 cross-cultural communities. ISKCON community in Surabaya was also given invitation and as soon as the opportunity arrived, the devotees arranged for the Lord Jagannath's chariot festival. Devotees enjoyed spiritual bliss on pulling Lord Jagannath's chariot and the people of Surabaya in turn received the inconceivable merciful blessings of Lord Jagannath. Here is a short report. Continue reading "Jagannatha Ratha Yatra at Surabaya Vaganza
→ Dandavats"
Giriraj Swami read and spoke from Bhagavad-gita 3.10.
“The Lord created this material world to enable the conditioned souls to learn how to perform yajñas (sacri?ces) for the satisfaction of Visnu, so that while in the material world they can live very comfortably without anxiety, and after ?nishing the present material body they can enter into the kingdom of God. That is the whole program for the conditioned soul. By performance of yajña, the conditioned souls gradually become Krsna conscious and become godly in all respects. In the Age of Kali, the sankirtana-yajña (the chanting of the names of God) is recommended by the Vedic scriptures, and this transcendental system was introduced by Lord Caitanya for the deliverance of all men in this age. Sankirtana-yajña and Krsna consciousness go well together. Bg 3.10 purport
Darshan Room Discussion (Right-click to download)
I attended another fund raising dinner for the new temple project in Vineyard, West Sydney. The ground breaking ceremony was held the week before on the new land and although I was unable to attend, the devotees reported that it was a wonderful occasion.
The management team announced that the goal was to have the first stage constructed by Janmastami 2021 and everyone applauded. The evening went well with kirtan, speeches, drama performance by the children and prasadam at the end.
New building for the Iskcon School in Houston, Texas (Album of photos)
Goswami Academy: We are super excited to share that we ...
A Revolutionary Spirit.
Kadamba Kanana Swam: In the introduction to the Srimad Bhagavatam, Śrīla Prabhupāda quotes a very famous verse (SB 1.5.11). This is the verse that speaks about a revolution, so that attracts me because I like the revolutionary spirit, the spirit of making changes, something dynamic. Prabhupada is pointing out it is the discussion of Krsna that would bring about the change.
Mystical Vrindavan - Prahlada Kunda (Album of photos)
Indradyumna Swami: Yesterday we traveled through the countryside of Vrindavan on dusty roads to the village of Phalain, where we took darshan of Prahlada-kunda. Prahlada-kunda is said to be the home of the great devotee Prahlada Maharaja and the place where the Holika-dahan festival - a precursor to the famous festival of throwing of colors - is celebrated. Every year, during the full moon night in the month of Phalguna, the Vrajavasis celebrate the death of Hiranyakasipu’s evil sister, Holika at Prahlada- kunda. When Hiranyaksipu was unsuccessful in trying to kill his son Prahalda Maharaja, he approached Lord Siva and asked for the ultimate weapon of destruction: the fire that Siva employs to destroy the cosmic manifestation. With that benediction Hiranyakasipu built a huge funeral pyre and put his sister Holika on top of it, with Prahlad in her lap to make sure he didn’t escape. Holika had a benediction from Lord Brahma that she could never be burned by fire. When Hiranyakasipu lit the fire it burned for a long time. But in the end, Prahlada was seen blissfully chanting the holy names and Holika was burned to ashes. The acaryas say that her offense to a pure devotee, Prahlad Maharaja, nullified the benediction of Brahma. The Vrajavasis, honoring the sraddha, or deep faith of Prahlada Maharaja, burn an effigy of Holika each year to celebrate the pastime. Prahlada Maharaja lives eternally on Lord Nrsimhadeva’s Vaikuntha planet, but Krsna remembered Prahlada every year when He was present in Vrindavan by celebrating His devotee’s strong faith in divine protection at the festival at Prahlada-kunda.
Rishabh Verma: This Rama Navami, devotees must remind themselves of the promise of the Lord and with faith in his nature and words, demonstrate the principle of fearlessness in their lives by wholeheartedly engaging in devotional service. By demonstrating this principle in their lives, devotees will be able to glorify the Lord and also grant this gift of fearlessness to others who still live in a fearful state of material existence.
(Kadamba Kanana Swami, 14 March 2019, Durban, South Africa, Lotus Park Nama Hatta)
In the introduction to the Srimad Bhagavatam, Śrīla Prabhupāda quotes a very famous verse (SB 1.5.11):
tad-vāg-visargo janatāgha-viplavo
yasmin prati-ślokam abaddhavaty api
nāmāny anantasya yaśo ‘ńkitāni yat
śṛṇvanti gāyanti gṛṇanti sādhavaḥ
This is the verse that speaks about viplavo, a revolution, so that attracts me because I like the revolutionary spirit, the spirit of making changes, something dynamic. Prabhupada is pointing out it is the discussion of Krsna that would bring about the change.
It means wherever there are devotees who are chanting the names of God, that can bring about a revolution in a misdirected and misguided civilization. Where slokas of Krsna will be discussed, that is where there will be a change. And such verses are heard and sung by men who are thoroughly honest, even if imperfectly composed.
Some devotees have identified this verse as a verse which predicts Srila Prabhupada’s mission because it says that through Srimad Bhagavatam in particular the world will change. And Prabhupada brought the Bhagavatam to the western world, not the Gita. The trunks that he brought with him on the Jaladuta contained sets of Bhagavatams. He sold 1 set to the captain of the Jaladuta, and of course, later he sold other sets.
He was going to give a lecture in Pennsylvania when a man came and sat next to him and they had a discussion. It was a nice conversation and when it was time for Prabhupada to speak, he asked the man to look after his box of books. After the lecture Prabhupada asked him to open the box and hold the books up. Prabhupada explained what those books were, and then said that anyone who wanted books could go to the man and give him the money.
Prabhupada just engaged him, and in this, he put the Bhagavatam into practice by engaging someone in devotional service. It was not just a dry lecture but a real lecture. Before this person knew it he was engaged in devotional service. That was Prabhupada’s tendency – to somehow or the other engage everyone in devotional service.
The article " A Revolutionary Spirit " was published on KKSBlog.
Harinam Sankirtan in Bali, Indonesia (Album of photos)
Srila Prabhupada: The name Krishna and the Personality of Godhead Krish...
Bhaktivedanta Manor: Letting the cows out!
Our herd spent the winter months in the shelter of the barns, but the warmer weather means that it’s time to let them out.
Please join us on Sunday 21st April to watch the cows stretch their legs and feel the green grass beneath their hooves as they joyfully run onto the fields! This will be a fun occasion for all of the family
[Bhagavatam class at Hawaii, USA]
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[Talk at San Jose, USA]
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The post “Do demons exist?” and lessons from Kabandha – Ramayana wisdom appeared first on The Spiritual Scientist.
[Sunday feast class at ISKCON, Sydney, Australia]
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The post Thinking about thinking – how our thoughts can harm us or help us appeared first on The Spiritual Scientist.
[Bhagavatam class on 1.11.21 at ISKCON, Sydney, Australia]
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The post How to become more personal in our dealings appeared first on The Spiritual Scientist.