12 Comments

Journeying Godward

This week we’ll move on to part 2 of our study of Easwaran’s video talk “Gandhi, Man of God”. Easwaran continues sharing writings that reveal the restless striving for growth that marked Gandhi’s inner life, and relates it to our own lives and spiritual practice. In particular, Easwaran refers to Gandhi and his own approach to making mistakes, and how to learn from them.

To watch this week’s video excerpt, we suggest you start the video where we left off last week at 8:30 and end at 17:54. We look forward to hearing from you!

12 Comments

16 Comments

Gandhi, Man of God

This month, we’re continuing our focus on meditation, with a special emphasis on effort during meditation. We’ll also enjoy inspiration and hopefulness for ourselves and others through a video study of Easwaran’s commentary on Gandhi and his spiritual teachings. This video talk is called “Gandhi, Man of God”, and is just over 30 minutes long. We’ve divided it into four sections so that we can review each part together over the next four weeks.

16 Comments

8 Comments

A Great River of Devotion

Thank you for sharing your ideas on simple ways to deepen meditation and to strengthen evenness of mind. We’re also very grateful to everyone who joined us for last week’s online workshop. It’s a great boost to our practice to strive together as a worldwide community as we put our meditation first, more of the time.

We are very interested to hear how your experiments went this past week. What did you try and did you learn something new? What impact did you notice on your meditation? Feel free to share any reflections as they always inspire us.

Please enjoy this six-minute video clip from the online workshop during which Easwaran shares stories and anecdotes about how the Lord is always closest to us in our time of need.

8 Comments

11 Comments

“How can I go deeper?”

Thanks to everyone for your inspiring contributions from last week. We appreciate hearing from you! This week, we’ve got a practical reading from Easwaran to inspire us to try one small thing to move towards a more even state of mind, and absorption in meditation.

After reading the article below, please share your reflections in the comments section. We’d love to hear from you, and by offering your ideas you’ll inspire others to do so, too! Consider some of the practical suggestions Easwaran offers, and see whether you’d like to try implementing one this week.

You might try thinking of a routine time in your day when you can make a small effort towards putting your meditation first, or strive for evenness of mind. Then, prepare yourself by thinking of a way to remind yourself about your plan and the time of day you’d like to try it. Here’s an example: “I’m going to read at least five minutes of Easwaran before bed. I’ll remind myself by putting his book on my pillow each morning.”

This month’s theme of deepening meditation will culminate with the next Returnee Online Workshop on Saturday, February 23 at 9:00–10:15 a.m. San Francisco Time. Many members of the eSatsang will be taking part, so it’s a chance for some real-time community interaction and discussion. We hope you can join us!

We’d really love to hear all of the ways everyone will be planning to put your meditation first this week. Your example will encourage others, so consider sharing as a way of putting your eSatsang friends first. Thank you!

11 Comments

8 Comments

An Infinite Force of Love

Thank you all for getting us off to a wonderful start on this month’s topic of deepening our meditation. Your insights are very helpful and motivating. Keep them coming!

We wanted to remind you about our weekly virtual meditation sessions each Saturday morning. You might consider participating as a concrete way to deepen your meditation. We invite you to join us if you can next Saturday morning at 6:30 a.m. San Francisco time. This is the same time of day that you would meditate in the morning if you were in Tomales, at the retreat house.

To inspire us, we’re sharing an article from Easwaran where he describes what we are doing during meditation and what is happening within us. After reading the article, please share your reflections in the comments section below. We’d love to hear from you, and by offering your ideas you’ll inspire others to do so, too! You might share:

  • a line or two that really stood out to you – one you’d like to remember

  • an overall message from Easwaran that resonates with you in some way

  • thoughts, feelings, or questions that come up for you as you read Easwaran’s words.

8 Comments

13 Comments

Taking Meditation Deeper

Thanks to all of you for responding so earnestly to January’s study of the latest Blue Mountain Journal, in which we discussed how we can contribute to hopefulness for ourselves and others during these trying times. It was really encouraging to hear from so many, and to share a renewed sense of inspiration with one another.

This month we’ll continue exploring a theme Christine shared in the last Blue Mountain Journal, of being “a force for peace”. Our focus will be on the many ways in which we can give our best to meditation – both during meditation, and during the rest of the day, too.

One way that Easwaran often suggested going deeper in meditation was to refresh or memorize a new passage. Because “we become what we meditate on”, we wanted to remind you of the many passages in God Makes the Rivers to Flow and available for free on the BMCM website. We invite you to read each passage simply for the sense of peace and inspiration they impart. Do you already use one during meditation? If so, which one, and do you notice its impact on you? Are you moved to memorize a new one in order to refresh your meditation repertoire? Please share your thoughts in the comments below.

13 Comments

9 Comments

The Power of Nonviolence

We began the month with the question: How can we contribute to a sense of hopefulness in ourselves and others? We hope that our in-depth study of the articles from the Special Issue of the Blue Mountain Journal has given you a well of pure waters to draw on when you feel oppressed by difficulty.

Is there one thing you will be taking away from this month of reflection and practice? Do you have something new you can take away from this exploration?

We will close this study with a final article by Easwaran. We ask you to take this opportunity to contribute to Easwaran’s message of hope together as a satsang. In the comments below, we’d love if you’d share a line or two that really stood out for you, or a practical step you’d like to emphasize for yourself and others.

9 Comments

9 Comments

You Are a Force for Peace

Thank you again for your insightful comments about Easwaran’s message for hope in difficult times. This week, Easwaran imparts a precious insight into how we can transform our suffering for the good of all through our meditation practice. He guides us as we ponder our central question this month: How can we contribute to a sense of hopefulness in ourselves and others?

Let’s absorb Easwaran’s message of hope together by sharing in the comment section below:

  • Type a line or two that really stood out for you.

  • Share an overall message from Easwaran that resonates with you in some way.

  • Write any thoughts or questions that come up for you as you read Easwaran’s words.

We’d love to hear your thoughts on this timely conversation. Your contributions are very encouraging!

This message from Easwaran can be found on page 3 in the Special Issue Blue Mountain Journal, Winter 2018.

9 Comments

13 Comments

The Mantram: A Light in the Darkness

gabriel-jimenez-156526-unsplash.jpg

Thank you for your inspiring reflections and for highlighting the messages of hope in Easwaran’s article. We’re continuing our conversation as a community on the question: How can we contribute to a sense of hopefulness for ourselves and others? This week we’re diving into Part 2 of Easwaran’s “The Candle of the Lord”.

After reviewing the article, please share your reflections in the comments section below. We’d love to hear about your experience of Easwaran’s message of hope. Please feel free to type a line or two that really stood out to you, or write any thoughts or questions that arose. Again, your contributions inspire all of us and we appreciate reading them!

Also, in the spirit of the Mantram Relay for Peace on New Year’s Day, we’d like to suggest a practical exercise for this week. Try giving extra effort to applying the mantram to negative thoughts or feelings that may come up for you. You might consider catching the negativity before it arrives, by making some extra time to repeat the mantram, or giving extra effort to noticing new mantram moments throughout your day. You might look at this as another pathway into understanding how you can contribute to a sense of hopefulness in yourself and others.

B0033f22t.jpg

It can be helpful to give some thought to what you would like to try in advance, as you’ll be more likely to remember to do it! Below are a few practical suggestions. Feel free to choose or modify one from the list below, or make up your own!

  • Keep a mantram journal or series of pages in your journal titled “You Are a Force for Peace” and write some mantrams there every day.

  • Repeat the mantram every time you brush your teeth.

  • Repeat the mantram during exercise, or for a specific time during your regular exercise.

  • Repeat the mantram when you find yourself reacting negatively to a news article or a TV story.

  • Repeat the mantram before going online.

  • Identify a situation or word that usually triggers you into a string of negative thoughts. Plan ahead and resolve to use the mantram in these instances.

We’d love to hear how this exercise goes for you. When and how were you able to apply the mantram? What impact did this have on negative thoughts or feelings?

This is Part 2 of the article “The Candle of the Lord” by Easwaran from the Special Issue Blue Mountain Journal, Winter 2018.

Light in the Darkness

“For thou wilt light my candle,” says a Psalm of David: “The Lord, my God, will enlighten my darkness.” To anyone in whom this candle is lit, spiritual leadership comes — entirely through the grace of God. In the Bhagavad Gita, the Lord promises that he will rescue the world whenever righteousness declines and violence threatens to overpower us. Traditionally this is understood as divine incarnation. But it applies equally to the miracle of transformation, when some personal crisis turns an apparently ordinary person like Mohandas Gandhi or Francis Bernadone into a beacon figure who lights a path back from the brink of self-destruction.

In Indian mythology, this recurring saga is dramatized vividly. When the suffering of the world becomes unbearable, it is said, Mother Earth herself goes to the Lord and throws herself at his feet in an appeal for help. The Lord responds by coming to life in a human being whose consciousness is ready for service as an instrument of peace.

In my interpretation, the Lord’s promise to come to our rescue can be understood in a third way too. Little people like you and me may not be a Gandhi, a Saint Francis, or a Saint Teresa, but if we do everything we can to still our mind and subdue our self-will, the Lord can light the lamp of wisdom within so that we, too, can contribute a little light instead of adding to the darkness of our times.

Prayer from the Depths

In any human being, a profound personal crisis can open a channel into the depths of the unconscious.

I would hazard the guess that this is what happens in cases of serious addiction, when life becomes so unbearable that an ordinary man or woman suddenly finds the strength to reverse the deep-seated self-destructive habits of a lifetime.

We see the same miraculous transformation on a grander scale in the lives of many great saints. In spiritual terms, this is the Lord within responding to a wholehearted appeal from the very depths of the heart.

Spiritual psychology would explain the myth of the Lord coming to the rescue of Mother Earth in a very similar way. When the world is sick to the heart with violence, that revulsion opens a channel deep into the collective unconscious, the race-old consciousness of our common humanity. Little people all over begin to find the will to make deep changes in their lives to fulfill that longing for peace. Then, when a beacon figure comes to show a way out — Jesus or the Buddha, Moses or Muhammad, Gandhi or Saint Francis — the ground is ready. Our hearts are open for them to teach.

The prayer of Mother Earth in this myth is the collective cry of countless ordinary people like you and me around the world. Prayer from the heart really means prayer from the depths of the unconscious — not oral prayer, but prayer without words. When prayer arises from the depths of the unconscious like this, tremendous forces — life forces that operate beneath our fragmented, superficial, egocentric awareness — are touched and moved and brought into action. These eternal laws, which are as operative as the law of gravity, open their doors to those who have no personal irons in the fire, who do not seek any profit or prestige but depend entirely upon the Lord.

Faith Burns Brightly

Gandhi tells us from his own bitterly-tested personal experience that there is no prayer from the heart that will not be answered. But the Lord will answer it, he says, not on our terms — that is the heartbreak — but on his. We cannot see more than a small corner of the vast stage of the human drama, on which consequences already set in motion have to be played out. But always, at the eleventh hour, rescue comes.

“My faith is brightest,” Gandhi says, “in the midst of impenetrable darkness.” I can assure you that Gandhi knew intimately what it was like to stand in darkness and alone. This is how faith is tested. When everything looks dark, when there is no silver lining on the horizon and the earth is pitch black from pole to pole, faith will burn brightly. That is the kind of faith that Gandhi had, that my grandmother had. With that kind of faith, prayer of the heart can bring into operation those eternal laws which ensure that good prevails and evil disappears.

May the Lord of Love grant us all that faith which can never be put out by any storm that blows.

13 Comments

15 Comments

Lighting the Candle of Hope

We’re thrilled to devote January to a study of the special issue of the Blue Mountain Journal, with a focus on applying the mantram to prayers for peace. This Journal arrived at the close of 2018 as a response to many friends asking the BMCM for guidance during these difficult times. In this Journal, we find practical spiritual guidance from Eknath Easwaran and Christine Easwaran, who offer us inspiration, encouragement, and hope.

Two decades ago, Easwaran told us, “People look around with fear and suspicion in their hearts, and they see a world to be afraid of, a world of danger. I see a world of choices, a world of hope.” A big question we’d like to discuss this month is: How can we contribute to a sense of hopefulness during these trying times for ourselves and others?

Our goal is to brainstorm this question as a community, and to encourage each other to keep focusing our minds the long list of reasons Easwaran gives us for being hopeful, even in the hardest of times. This week we’ll begin to try and answer this question by sharing our thoughts on Easwaran’s message for hope in the article shared on the eSatsang site.

15 Comments

6 Comments

A New Year’s Message from Easwaran

Join us for the mantram relay on January 1! Help our world-wide BMCM community collectively to keep the mantram going for all 24 hours of January 1, 2019, and start the new year off with a positive force to deepen our practice and spread peace to the world.

On this final post for 2018, we’d like to invite you to reflect on the past year of your practice of the eight-point program. What was something you learned that had an impact on your practice, or that contributed to a success you had? Also, feel free to share any words about your gratitude for your eSatsang friends!

If you are relatively new to the eSatsang, or joined in the last several months, we’d love for you to take this opportunity to introduce yourself. You could tell us how you found out about passage meditation, and about a recent success or challenge you’ve experienced.

Have you decided to set a positive intention for 2019? If so, share it with others below to help solidify it.

6 Comments

5 Comments

Slowing Down our Thoughts

We are eager to hear about how your experiment is going in slowing down and becoming more aware of conditioned behavior. Were you able to recall it at the time you wanted to? Was there a change in the situation, or interaction? If you haven’t yet chosen an experiment, it’s not too late! Remember to keep it small. Click here to read all about it. We’d love to hear your reflections or observations.

To inspire us to continue deepening our appreciation of Slowing Down, we’re offering a short clip (three minutes) from Easwaran called “Slowing Down Our Thoughts.” Let’s try watching him with as much One-Pointed Attention as possible. Please feel free to share your reflections on Easwaran’s tips.

5 Comments

4 Comments

Tools for Reengineering our Time and Attention

In a year when many friends have been asking the BMCM for guidance, the BMCM is sharing Easwaran’s message of hope through this special edition of the Blue Mountain Journal. You’ll find inspiration and practical advice in two articles from Easwaran, two short pieces that Christine Easwaran wrote after 9/11, and a new, previously unpublished passage for meditation.

Here on the eSatsang, we will be studying articles in this journal together throughout January 2019. We’re sharing today however, so that you could have this resource at hand right away.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~

When we’re more slowed down and one-pointed during the day, we’re more likely to be aware of our conditioned habits. This awareness provides us with opportunities to begin reversing or reengineering our conditioned patterns. We invite you to try a tiny experiment this month. Please make it very small! Ideally, it will fit into something you are already doing.

Please let us know what experiment you’d like to try and if you have ideas of other small ways we can give the gifts of time and attention throughout our days and busy lives!

To inspire us for the week ahead, enjoy this reading below by Easwaran from the book Passage Meditation.

4 Comments

9 Comments

Give the Gifts of Time and Attention

This month, we’ll focus on giving the gifts of time and attention through the subtle points of Slowing Down and One-Pointed Attention. Slowing Down dovetails nicely into our spiritual reading topic from last month, because part of slowing down is prioritizing how we spend our time effectively.

As this holiday period begins around the world, we consider gifts to our families, friends, co-workers, and acquaintances. This month, we’ll also consider the generosity that comes from the gift of our time and attention. It’s a gift we can give every day, in any season. During the month, we’ll sharpen our focus on how we can give gifts of time and attention more of the time.

Is there something you have done in your life to help you slow down effectively? How has that helped you and those around you? We’d love to hear your strategies and tips!

9 Comments

4 Comments

A Spiritual Literature Treasure Hunt

tom-hermans-264015-unsplash.jpg

We’ve come to the end of our month dedicated to the pursuit of reading more spiritual literature from the scriptures and mystics. Thank you all for joining us in our experiments and for sharing your inspiring successes and challenges.

Chapter Eight in Passage Meditation, entitled “Spiritual Reading,” is an important chapter. Easwaran emphasizes the significance of each of the eight points in our spiritual practice. In Chapter Eight, Easwaran has ten full pages of recommended spiritual writings, which come from a wide array of traditions we can draw inspiration from. Of course you can also simply focus on reading Easwaran’s own books, which draw on all the great spiritual traditions of the world.

If you have a copy of Passage Meditation (any edition), try referring to Easwaran’s list of recommended spiritual titles in Chapter Eight. Do you see one of your favorites? Is there a title you hadn’t noticed before? Is there one that surprisingly appeals to you? Does this generous list inspire you to dig into one of these gems that Easwaran is encouraging us to read? Or would you like to tackle one of Easwaran’s own books that you have not yet read?

We realize that not everyone has a copy of Passage Meditation. For this reason, we’re asking those who do to help us create a collective list of titles and authors that inspire you so that we can share them with our eSatsang community (including Easwaran’s books!). You might consider this as a way of putting others first!

To conclude, we’re pleased to share a short video of Easwaran reading directly from Gandhi’s writings regarding the value of his own spiritual reading from the Bhagavad Gita. Happy reading!

PS - We promised to share our Spiritual Reading experiments poll results with you from last week. Thanks to each of you who participated. Your results are below - well done team!

From 28 respondents.

From 28 respondents.

From 17 respondents.

From 17 respondents.

4 Comments

3 Comments

Becoming a Little More Real

Thank you for all of your responses and encouraging experiments! It’s great to hear about all of the effort we’re collectively putting in to deepen our practice of the eight-point program.

We’d love to hear more about how your experiment with incorporating Spiritual Reading is going. What successes and/or challenges have you encountered? How has the strategy to help you remember the experiment been working?

Finally, for inspiration from Easwaran, please enjoy this five-minute video that was shown in the November 10 Online Workshop. What are your thoughts on Easwaran’s comments? Did something resonate with you? We’d love to hear what stood out to you from the video.

3 Comments

5 Comments

Easwaran Lives in His Eight-Point Program

In last weekend’s Online Workshop, we thought about a routine time in our daily lives during which we could experiment with Spiritual Reading. We also thought about a way to remember our chosen time during the day, so that we set ourselves up for success over the next couple of months! We’d love to hear from you about what you are trying out this month. Please feel free to share any part of your experiment – the part of your week or day you’ll explore your reading opportunities, or ways in which you’ll help yourself remember to incorporate spiritual reading.

Even if you didn’t have a chance to join the Online Workshop, please feel free to consider trying a simple exercise to emphasize your use of Spiritual Reading this month.

This is an excerpt from the Blue Mountain Journal, Spring/Summer 2016 by Easwaran:

5 Comments

3 Comments

An Opportunity for Transcendent Companionship

We welcome you to join us today for our Online Workshop and explore Spiritual Reading in the company of other passage meditators. We’d love to share this live satsang with you, today on November 10 at 9:00 a.m. San Francisco time. It’s not too late to register for the event, and you can pay on the sliding scale from $0–25. (The standard fee is $10.)

In the reading below, Easwaran describes our need for “transcendent companionship.” He describes the richness we can find in reading the mystics and meditating on their words in order to bring their presence into daily life through the eight points.

If you’re unable to attend the Online Workshop live, don’t worry – register below and we’ll send you the recording in a few days.

3 Comments

4 Comments

Go Directly to the Sources of Radiance

This month, we’re taking a deeper look at one of the eight points that we touch upon lightly during retreats and satsangs: Spiritual Reading.

During the online workshop we’ll be studying an excerpt from the Blue Mountain Journal, Spring/Summer 2016, focusing on Easwaran’s teachings on Spiritual Reading. Here on the eSatsang, we’ll have the opportunity to study/discuss the excerpt featured in the online workshop in more depth, and to develop our understanding of the eighth point through reviewing additional readings throughout the month.

In the reading below, Easwaran reminds us that the purpose of spiritual reading is to inspire our daily spiritual practice.

Please share any reflections you have on the reading below. We are always eager to hear from you!

To get us started on this topic, we have a reading study below! This reading will also prepare us for next week’s optional live real-time satsang opportunity during our Online Workshop.

4 Comments

5 Comments

Celebrate and Share Inspiration!

Thank you all for your engagement during this rich period of reflection. As we enter the final week of October, we encourage you to choose one or more of the suggestions below.

  1. Watch the Easwaran video below that will also be played in Shanti, the meditation hall at Ramagiri Ashram, on October 27. Try to watch with as much concentration as possible, and find Easwaran’s personal message for you.

  2. Reflect on this theme, the process of your study, your experiment, or on joining together in spirit with the worldwide community. How has it helped you? What did you discover?

  3. Share with others how you participated in Easwaran's Life Celebration – we’d love to hear from you! Tell us what you did, what your experience was like, and share a photo. It could be of yourself or your group, a page of mantrams you wrote, or your meditation spot where you meditated. Please share your photos in the Facebook Group!

  4. Create worldwide satsang by reading comments, replying, and adding your own.

  5. Reflect on how you could integrate something you learned or experienced into your practice next month. Feel free to share on the Event or in the BMCM Living & Learning Group in future weeks as you work on your practice.

Please continue sharing your wonderful comments and reflections with us as they show us how much we have in common wherever we are! It’s always fantastic hearing from you.

5 Comments