Tuesday, March 31, 2026

Barasere.

 बरस रही प्रभु की कृपा अपार

बरस रही प्रभु की कृपा अपार,

म्हारे प्रभु की बड़ी अपार कृपा बरस रही।

जी बरस रही, जी बरस रही,

प्रभु की बड़ी अपार कृपा बरस रही॥

प्रभु सबमें समभाव बिराजे,

सबका करें उद्धार।

बरस रही प्रभु की कृपा अपार॥

कान मिले सत्संग सुनन को,

आँख मिले हरि दरस करन को।

हाथ मिले सेवा करके नर,

मानव जनम सुधार॥

बरस रही प्रभु की कृपा अपार॥

जीभ मिली हरि नाम जपन को,

बुद्धि मिली है श्रवण मनन को।

श्रवण मनन नित अध्ययन करके,

हो जाओ भवपार॥

बरस रही प्रभु की कृपा अपार॥

मन मिला प्रभु ध्यान लगन को,

हृदय मिला हरि प्रेम जतन को।

तन मन धन सब अर्पण कर दो,

हो जाओ उद्धार॥

बरस रही प्रभु की कृपा अपार॥

https://youtu.be/hB3q-Shg23A?si=3aO0zJogeNJhBvSF

सीताराम सीताराम सीताराम कहिए।

जाहि विधि राखे राम ताहि विधि रहिए।।


1. मुख में हो राम नाम, राम सेवा हाथ में,

तू अकेला नहीं प्यारे, राम तेरे साथ में,

विधि का विधान जान, हानि-लाभ सहिए।।


2. किया अभिमान तो फिर मान नहीं पाएगा,

होगा वही प्यारे जो श्रीराम जी को भाएगा,

फल आशा त्याग शुभ कर्म करते रहिए।।


3. जिन्दगी की डोर सौंप हाथ दीनानाथ के,

महलों में राखे चाहे झोंपड़ी में वास दे,

धन्यवाद निर्विवाद राम राम कहिए।।


4. आशा एक राम जी से दूजी आशा छोड़ दे,

नाता एक राम जी से दूजा नाता तोड़ दे,

काम रस त्याग प्यारे राम रस गहिए।।


Sitaraam sitaraam sitaraam kahie.

Jaahi vidhi raakhe raam taahi vidhi rahie..


1. Mukh mein ho raam naam, raam sevaa haath mein,

Tu akelaa naheen pyaare, raam tere saath mein,

Vidhi kaa vidhaan jaan, haani-laabh sahie..


2. Kiyaa abhimaan to fir maan naheen paaegaa,

Hogaa vahee pyaare jo shreeraam jee ko bhaaegaa,

Fal aashaa tyaag shubh karm karate rahie..


3. Jindagee kee ḍaor saunp haath denanaath ke,

Mahalon mein raakhe chaahe jhonpadee mein vaas de,

Dhanyavaad nirvivaad raam raam kahie..


4. Aashaa ek raam jee se doojee aashaa chhod de,

Naataa ek raam jee se doojaa naataa tod de,

Kaam ras tyaag pyaare raam ras gahie..

When Seeing Is Enough: 

The Ashtavakra Truth of Effortless Renunciation

One of the most radical truths in the Ashtavakra Gita is this:

renunciation is not something you do.

It is something that happens when truth is seen.

This changes the entire spiritual journey.

Most seekers spend years fighting themselves.

They battle desires.

They suppress emotions.

They resist attachments.

They try to control every movement of the mind.

And yet, beneath all this effort, restlessness often remains.

Why?

Because forced renunciation still keeps the object alive in the mind.

What is suppressed is not transcended.

What is resisted continues to linger in subtler forms.

This is why inner conflict persists even in outward discipline.

Ashtavakra Gita points to something far more direct.

It says:

do not fight the wave — understand the ocean.

The real transformation begins not by cutting desires one by one, but by seeing the one who is entangled in them.

When awareness becomes clear, sharp, and silent, illusion reveals its own unreality.

Then attachment does not need to be severed.

It simply loses its hold.

A child clings tightly to a toy, believing it to be everything. But once the child matures and sees a larger world, the grip loosens naturally. No one needs to pry the toy away.

So too with desire.

The sage does not become free because he forced himself into austerity.

He becomes free because he has seen clearly what is real and what is passing.

This is the sacred difference between discipline and understanding.

Discipline has its place. It can steady the mind. It can prepare the field.

But understanding alone uproots bondage.

One struggles with shadows.

The other turns on the light.

The moment the rope is seen as rope, the snake vanishes on its own.

The problem was never the world, the desire, or the attachment.

The problem was misperception.

Once seen, the false loses energy.

That is why the highest wisdom traditions do not glorify suppression. They glorify clear seeing.

Look deeply.

Do not force yourself into renunciation.

Do not escape life in the name of spirituality.

Do not make war against the mind.

Instead, observe.

See every desire arise.

See every fear seek continuity.

See every attachment demand permanence from what is impermanent.

Just see.

In that seeing, something miraculous happens.

What is unnecessary begins to fall away by itself.

Not through violence.

Not through guilt.

Not through control.

But through truth.

And what remains is not emptiness, but natural freedom.

That is the effortless renunciation of Ashtavakra: not abandoning life, but awakening from illusion.

A rare companion line from the Ashtavakra Gita that fits this perfectly:

“The wise one knows nothing is to be accepted or rejected.”

Rare Ashtavakra Verses on Effortless Renunciation

1) What is there to renounce?

न ते सङ्गोऽस्ति केनापि किं शुद्धस्त्यक्तुमिच्छसि ।

सङ्घातविलयं कुर्वन्नेवमेव लयं व्रज ॥

This is the most radical opening. Ashtavakra asks: if your true nature was never bound, what exactly are you trying to renounce?

The Self is already untouched. What falls away is not reality, but false identification.

2) Nothing to reject, nothing to accept

“Nothing to reject, nothing to accept.”

This perfectly expresses your insight. The restless mind is always choosing—this should stay, that should go.

But the sage rests in clear awareness where both grasping and rejection dissolve naturally.

3) Desire itself is bondage

“The essential nature of bondage is nothing other than desire.”

The problem is not the object but the inner clinging.

The moment desire is seen in full light, without feeding it or fighting it, its spell weakens.

4) See desire, see samsara

“Wherever a desire occurs, see samsara in it.”

This is not condemnation of desire, but diagnosis through awareness.

Ashtavakra is asking us to look so deeply that the whole machinery of becoming is exposed.

5) Doing and not-doing are both ignorance

“Doing and not-doing both arise from ignorance.”

What a liberating verse. Even forced renunciation can become another ego movement.

“I am renouncing” is still a subtle doership.

True freedom dawns when the doer itself is seen through.

6) Effort is for the distracted mind

“Effort is required to concentrate a distracted mind… knowing this, I remain here.”

Practice has value, but only as preparation.

The final step is not more effort, but abidance in what is already aware.

7) Peace through seeing

“Realising that suffering arises from nothing other than thinking, dropping all desires one is happy and at peace everywhere.”

Suffering is sustained not by life itself, but by the mind’s interpretations, projections, and resistance.

When this is seen, unnecessary struggle leaves on its own.

Do not force renunciation.

See clearly, and what is false will not survive your seeing.

That is the living flame of Ashtavakra Gita.

United dignity.

 https://www.facebook.com/share/v/14cVH8uD7my/

Charlie Chaplin, Vasudhaiva Kutumbakam, and the Dream of a United World

There are moments in history when a voice rises beyond the noise of its own time and begins to speak for all ages. One such immortal moment is the final speech of Charlie Chaplin in The Great Dictator.

What appears at first as a cinematic monologue soon reveals itself as something far greater—a cry from the human soul for unity, liberty, compassion, and the dignity of all mankind.

Chaplin does not merely speak against tyranny. He speaks against the invisible walls that humanity keeps building—walls of fear, race, nation, greed, and hatred.

His dream is simple and eternal:

a world where no border is stronger than brotherhood.

In spirit, this is nothing but the ancient Bharatiya ideal:

वसुधैव कुटुम्बकम्

Vasudhaiva Kutumbakam

The whole world is one family.

This luminous truth from the Maha Upanishad teaches that the wise do not divide the world into “mine” and “others.” Such division belongs to the narrow mind. The expansive heart sees all beings as connected.

Chaplin’s words echo this same expansive vision.

When he says humanity should rise above national barriers, he is not denying culture, identity, or heritage. Rather, he is reminding us that identity must never become hostility.

A nation can have borders.

A heart should not.

This is where his message becomes deeply spiritual.

Sanatana Dharma has long taught that the same divine consciousness dwells in all:

ईश्वरः सर्वभूतानां हृद्देशेऽर्जुन तिष्ठति

The Divine dwells in the heart of all beings.

— Bhagavad Gita

If the same divine spark lives in every being, then hatred of another is ignorance of one’s own deeper self.

Chaplin sensed that modern civilization was becoming too mechanical, too fast, too driven by greed. His warning remains urgent even today. Technology without compassion, progress without wisdom, and power without conscience only widen human separation.

The united world he dreamt of is not political alone.

It is inner civilization.

A world becomes united when:

minds are free from prejudice

speech is free from cruelty

nations cooperate without arrogance

religions inspire love, not division

humanity remembers its common destiny

In this sense, Chaplin’s speech becomes almost like a modern prayer: not for conquest, but for consciousness.

The sages of India saw the same truth ages ago: the divisions we cling to are temporary, but the essence within us is eternal.

The future of the world may not depend merely on stronger economies or larger armies, but on whether human beings can truly rediscover this ancient truth:

we were never separate to begin with.

A united world is not created first on maps.

It is created first in the mind, then in the heart, and finally in the way we treat one another.

Perhaps that is why Chaplin’s voice still moves us. It is the timeless voice of humanity remembering itself.


Monday, March 30, 2026

Chair for presence. An honour.

 Baba Harbhajan Singh: The Soldier Who Never Left His post.

There are some stories that history records, and there are some stories that the mountains themselves seem to remember.

The story of Baba Harbhajan Singh belongs to that sacred second kind.

In the icy silence of Nathu La Pass in Sikkim, where the winds carry whispers across snow-clad ridges, soldiers still speak of a young jawan whose duty did not end with death. Sepoy Harbhajan Singh of the 23 Punjab Regiment lost his life in 1968 while escorting a mule column through the dangerous Himalayan terrain near the border. 

He was only twentyr-two.

Yet, what followed transformed a martyr into a living legend.

The Dream That Became a Shrine

A few days after he went missing, one of his fellow soldiers is said to have seen him in a dream.

Harbhajan Singh reportedly told his comrade where his body would be found and expressed a wish that a shrine be built in his memory.

The search party followed the dream’s indication, and his mortal remains were recovered from the mountain stream. From that day onward, the soldiers stationed there began to feel that their brother-in-arms had not really gone anywhere. 

Soon a small memorial arose in those mist-covered heights.

That memorial became Baba Mandir.

A Soldier Still on Duty

What makes this story so moving is not merely the miracle-like legend, but the love and faith of the soldiers who keep it alive.

Even today, his room is maintained with:

a neatly made bed

polished boots

a pressed uniform

water kept ready

daily offerings and prayers

Many posted there believe Baba warns them in dreams of storms, avalanches, or enemy movement. In that brutal terrain, where every step is uncertain, such faith becomes a form of courage. 

This is why he is lovingly remembered as the Hero of Nathula.

Why This Story Touches the Heart

This is more than a ghost story.

It is a story of seva beyond the body.

Harbhajan Singh’s legend reminds us that true duty becomes larger than life itself. When a soul is completely surrendered to service, even death cannot silence its presence.

In our spiritual traditions too, we often say that great souls never truly leave the spaces they have sanctified with sacrifice.

The Himalayas seem to hold his vow: “I will keep watch.”

And perhaps that is why every traveler who visits the shrine feels something rare—

not fear,

not mystery alone,

but deep reassurance.

As if sacrifice itself has become compassion.

Baba Harbhajan Singh’s story gently teaches us:

When duty is pure, it becomes prayer.

When sacrifice is total, memory becomes presence.

A soldier’s body may fall, but his sankalpa lives on.

That is why this story feels so heart-warming.

It tells us that love for one’s people, one’s land, and one’s duty can become so intense that even the mountains refuse to let it fade.

The Empty Chair at the Border

Perhaps the most heart-stirring part of Baba Harbhajan Singh’s legend is this:

During India–China border meetings near Nathu La, it is said that an empty chair is kept in his honour.

Imagine the depth of that moment.

Across a tense frontier where every movement is watched, where words are weighed with caution, and where nations stand alert, there remains one silent seat for a soldier whose earthly journey ended decades ago.

That chair speaks without words.

It tells the world that duty can become so pure that even borders bow before it.

What makes this even more moving is the belief that even the Chinese soldiers came to respect the legend of the jawan who still guards the mountains. In that sense, Baba Harbhajan Singh ceased to belong only to one regiment or one side of the border.

He became a guardian spirit of the Himalayas.

The empty chair is not merely ritual.

It is a symbol:

of respect beyond conflict

of honour beyond nationality

of memory stronger than time

of a vow that still echoes in the snow

Some soldiers do not retire.

They become part of the land they swore to protect.

And so, in the frozen heights of Nathula, amid silence, snow, and watchful peaks, one presence is still felt.

A soldier. A sentinel. A vow. A legend.

Baba Harbhajan Singh still keeps his post.

Jai Hind.

Jai Hind.

Jai Hind.

Sunday, March 29, 2026

Space geometry.

 


Imagine tracking the Sun at the exact same time every day for a full year.Instead of forming a straight line, its position slowly shifts creating a graceful figure-8 pattern in the sky.This fascinating phenomenon is called the analemma.

The reason behind this shape lies in two key factors: Earth’s tilt (about 23.5°) and its slightly elliptical orbit around the Sun. Because of these, the Sun appears a little higher or lower, and slightly ahead or behind, depending on the time of year.

The top loop of the figure-8 is usually smaller, while the bottom loop is larger.This asymmetry happens because Earth moves faster in its orbit when it’s closer to the Sun and slower when it’s farther away.

Analemmas aren’t just limited to Earth. Every planet with a tilted axis and an elliptical orbit can produce its own unique version some look stretched, tilted, or even teardrop-shaped instead of a perfect “8”.

This pattern is also closely connected to the concept of solar time vs clock time. The difference between them known as the equation of time is what causes the Sun to appear slightly off from where we expect it to be at the same clock time each day.

It’s a beautiful reminder that even something as routine as the Sun’s daily journey hides a complex and elegant cosmic rhythm.


Family of girls.

The Quiet Strength of Families with Daughters

There is a certain softness, a certain awareness, that quietly blossoms in a home where daughters grow. It is not loud, not proclaimed—but it is deeply felt.

A family with daughters does not merely understand womanhood—it lives it.

Every stage of life unfolds before their eyes: the innocence of a young girl, the awakening of self-awareness, the silent negotiations with society, the strength wrapped in gentleness, the courage hidden behind everyday smiles. These are not distant observations; they are intimate realities woven into daily life.

And in many ways, our ancient wisdom has always hinted at this sacred presence.

“यत्र नार्यस्तु पूज्यन्ते रमन्ते तत्र देवताः”

Yatra nāryastu pūjyante ramante tatra devatāḥ

— Where women are revered, there the divine rejoices.

(From the Manusmriti)

Such homes begin to see what often goes unnoticed.

They notice the small hesitations.

They sense the unspoken fears.

They celebrate the quiet victories.

They understand the weight of expectations that daughters carry so gracefully.

This lived experience creates a natural sensitivity—a kind of inner refinement. Respect for women is no longer an idea taught from outside; it becomes an instinct that rises from within.

In our tradition, the feminine is not secondary—it is supreme.

“या देवी सर्वभूतेषु शक्तिरूपेण संस्थिता”

Yā Devī Sarva Bhūteṣu Shakti Rūpeṇa Saṁsthitā

— The Divine Mother who resides in all beings as power.

(From the Devi Mahatmyam)

A daughter, then, is not merely a member of the family—she is a living expression of that Shakti.

In these homes, conversations slowly change.

Priorities gently shift.

Perspectives broaden.

A father becomes more mindful, not out of obligation, but out of love.

A mother often rediscovers her own strength reflected in her daughter.

The entire household becomes more aware—more compassionate, more attentive.

It is this closeness to the lived reality of a girl that often makes such families contribute to the upliftment of women in a deeply intuitive way. Their actions are not always grand or visible, but they are sincere, grounded, and transformative.

Our scriptures echo this reverence again and again:

“न स्त्री स्वातन्त्र्यमर्हति” — often quoted, yet deeply misunderstood,

is balanced by lived tradition where women were seers, philosophers, and teachers.

Think of Gargi Vachaknavi, who stood in the court of King Janaka and questioned sages.

Think of Maitreyi, who sought immortality through knowledge, not wealth.

They were not exceptions—they were reminders of what a society becomes when it truly recognizes the feminine.

This is not to say that other families do not contribute. They certainly do—and with equal sincerity. But there is a difference between knowing and experiencing. When something is experienced within one’s own home, it leaves a deeper imprint on the heart.

And yet, the essence of this reflection is not comparison—it is awakening.

For the true upliftment of women will come when every home embraces this truth:

“स्त्रीणां देवत्वमस्ति” — There is divinity in womanhood.

When respect is not dependent on circumstance, but becomes a natural way of being.

A daughter, in her quiet presence, often becomes the bridge between philosophy and practice—between what we believe and how we live.

Perhaps that is why such homes carry a quiet grace.

Not because they are different—

but because they have been given the blessing to experience Shakti closely, and in that experience, to grow.

Dont,s

What We Must Never Carry Within

There are burdens heavier than mountains, yet invisible to the world.

They are not placed upon us by fate—but gathered, slowly, silently, by our own mind.

To walk the path of clarity, devotion, and inner strength, one must learn not only what to hold—but more importantly, what to drop.

The Inner Weights to Renounce

Resentment

A burning coal held within. It does not wound the other—it scorches the one who carries it.

Release it, not for them, but for your own stillness.

Unending Guilt

Mistakes are teachers, not lifelong prisons.

If guilt does not lead to transformation, it becomes self-inflicted suffering.

Fear of Opinion

The world speaks in many voices, often contradicting itself.

If you listen to all, you will hear nothing of your own truth.

Comparison

A subtle thief of joy.

Each life is a sacred script written differently—comparison is ignorance of this divine uniqueness.

Unresolved Anger

Like poison stored in a golden vessel.

It neither purifies nor protects—it only waits.

Regret

The past is a closed door.

Knocking on it repeatedly will not open it—only exhaust you.

Expectation

Expectation binds happiness to outcomes.

When outcomes shift—as they always do—peace collapses.

Ego

The quiet architect of separation.

“I” and “mine” build walls where none truly exist.

Harsh Inner Voice

No enemy outside is as constant as the voice within.

When that voice is unkind, even success feels empty.

The Need to Control

Life is vast, flowing, and intelligent.

To try to control everything is to resist the very current that carries you.

What the Wise Teach

The eternal wisdom of the Bhagavad Gita gently guides us toward inner light—not by accumulation, but by release.

1. Freedom from Attachment, Fear, and Anger

वीतरागभयक्रोधा मन्मया मामुपाश्रिताः ।

बहवो ज्ञानतपसा पूता मद्भावमागताः ॥ (4.10)

“Freed from attachment, fear, and anger, absorbed in Me, many have become purified and attained the highest state.”

Here, the Lord does not ask us to gather more—but to drop what clouds the Self.

2. Letting Go of the Fruits

कर्मण्येवाधिकारस्ते मा फलेषु कदाचन ।

मा कर्मफलहेतुर्भूर्मा ते सङ्गोऽस्त्वकर्मणि ॥ (2.47)

“You have a right to action alone, never to its fruits. Let not the fruits be your motive, nor let your attachment be to inaction.”

Expectation dissolves when action becomes offering.

3. The Gateway to Inner Peace

प्रजहाति यदा कामान्सर्वान्पार्थ मनोगतान् ।

आत्मन्येवात्मना तुष्टः स्थितप्रज्ञस्तदोच्यते ॥ (2.55)

“When one abandons all desires arising in the mind and finds contentment in the Self alone, that one is said to be steady in wisdom.”

Contentment is not gained—it is uncovered.

4. The Three Gates to Ruin

त्रिविधं नरकस्येदं द्वारं नाशनमात्मनः ।

कामः क्रोधस्तथा लोभस्तस्मादेतत्त्रयं त्यजेत् ॥ (16.21)

“Desire, anger, and greed—these are the three gates leading to destruction. Therefore, one should abandon them.”

What we carry within shapes our destiny more than what we face outside.

Life does not become lighter by changing the world—it becomes lighter when we stop carrying what is not ours to carry.

Drop resentment, and compassion enters.

Drop fear, and courage arises.

Drop ego, and love flows naturally.

In truth, the soul is never burdened.

It is the mind that gathers weight.

And when the unnecessary is set down,

what remains is simple, luminous, and free.

108 Reflections: What Not to Carry Within

Do not carry what burns you from within.

Resentment is a silent fire—extinguish it early.

Let go, not because they deserve it—but because you deserve peace.

Guilt is useful only when it transforms you.

Beyond learning, guilt becomes bondage.

Do not rehearse your past mistakes endlessly.

The past is a teacher, not a residence.

Drop regret—carry wisdom instead.

Comparison is a thief dressed as a guide.

Your path is not meant to resemble another’s.

Do not measure your life with borrowed scales.

Fear of opinion weakens inner clarity.

The world’s voice is loud, but often confused.

Anchor yourself in truth, not approval.

Anger unresolved becomes a quiet poison.

Express, understand, release.

Carrying anger is carrying unrest.

Expectations bind joy to conditions.

Joy that depends will eventually break.

Act sincerely—release the outcome.

The ego builds walls where none exist.

“I” and “mine” are heavy words.

Lightness begins where ego loosens.

Do not carry the need to be right always.

Peace is often found in letting go of being right.

The harshest voice is often within.

Speak to yourself with quiet kindness.

What you repeat within shapes your world.

Control is an illusion we cling to.

Life flows better when not resisted.

Do what you can—release what you cannot.

Carry effort, not anxiety.

Anxiety is imagination misused.

Trust dissolves unnecessary fear.

Do not carry every thought seriously.

Not all thoughts deserve belief.

Watch the mind—do not become it.

Let thoughts pass like clouds.

Silence is not empty—it is full.

In silence, burdens fall away.

Do not carry bitterness—it stains perception.

Forgiveness is inner cleansing.

You free yourself when you forgive.

Holding on is heavier than letting go.

Drop the need to revisit wounds.

Healing happens when revisiting stops.

Do not carry imagined fears.

Most fears never come to pass.

The mind exaggerates; awareness corrects.

Stay rooted in the present moment.

The present is lighter than the past and future.

Do not carry unnecessary explanations.

Not everyone needs to understand you.

Clarity within matters more than clarity outside.

Do not carry perfection as a burden.

Growth is more sacred than perfection.

Mistakes are steps, not stains.

Learn and move—do not linger.

Do not carry the weight of pleasing all.

It is an impossible task.

Pleasing truth is enough.

Do not carry borrowed beliefs blindly.

Examine, understand, then accept.

Blind weight is still weight.

Do not carry every responsibility.

Some things are not yours to fix.

Wisdom lies in discernment.

Carry what is yours—leave the rest.

Do not carry silent grudges.

They grow unnoticed.

Release them before they take root.

Do not carry self-doubt endlessly.

Doubt questions—do not let it define.

Confidence grows in quiet action.

Do not carry attachment to outcomes.

Attachment breeds restlessness.

Offer action—accept results.

Do not carry labels about yourself.

You are more than any label.

Identity is fluid, not fixed.

Do not carry mental noise.

Simplicity is inner strength.

A quiet mind sees clearly.

Do not carry what drains you daily.

Recognize and release.

Do not carry negativity as habit.

Habits can be changed gently.

Awareness is the first step.

Do not carry fear of loss constantly.

Nothing was ever fully owned.

Life is a passage, not possession.

Do not carry heaviness into every moment.

Lightness is a choice.

Choose it often.

Do not carry impatience.

Growth has its own timing.

Trust the unfolding.

Do not carry inner resistance.

Acceptance softens everything.

What you resist persists.

What you accept transforms.

Do not carry the illusion of control.

Flow with life, not against it.

Do not carry discontent endlessly.

Gratitude lightens the heart.

Notice what is already present.

Peace is not far—it is uncovered.

Drop what is not yours—and you will feel it.

The teaching of the Bhagavad Gita quietly echoes through all these reflections:

“Let go, and you shall become light enough to realize who you truly are.”