pirmdiena, 2013. gada 21. janvāris
pirmdiena, 2013. gada 14. janvāris
otrdiena, 2013. gada 8. janvāris
( Insights ) Niranjana Swami:
To accept one’s imminent death as good news takes realization.
My
mother was ninety and had no interested in hearing the word “death.” As
far as she was concerned, she would live another hundred years.
Although there were signs that things would not improve, she did not
take them seriously. Five months before she passed away she was in a
rehabilitation hospital and she told me, “I do not belong here. This
place is only for old and sick people.” Life is meant for learn how to
deal with the unavoidable event of death, but our present society is not
dealing with this. My aunt got notice she was going to die within a
week, and my sister invited me to visit her. My aunt said about me,
“Look at him. Look at his eyes. Look at how peaceful he is! He looks
like he knows the purpose of life.” Then she addressed me directly, “I
can tell that you can accept whatever happens to you in life. Can you
teach me to be like that?” People detected that something was going to
happen and so they left, not for a long time as it turned out. I
explained that soul exists beyond the body, and takes up another body
according to one’s karma. Then an old friend came in and our
conversation ended, but at least she could understand her situation and
try to deal with it.
As
it turned out I was with my mother alone in the room as she was dying. I
saw her breathing was slowing down, and I decided to stop reading and
chant Hare Krishna kirtana.
And so I was chanting Hare Krishna for five minutes when my mother
left her body. When I messaged Devamrita Swami, he replied that
Prabhupada told Giriraja that parents of devotees at the time they leave
their bodies will realize their good fortune of having a child who
became a devotee. When my sister came in the room she said to me, “Your
face is glowing. As soon as I saw your face. I knew everything was
alright.”
We have to feel as a result of our devotional service that Krishna is there making arrangements in our life.
Bali
Maharaja was cheated by the Lord, to whom He had offered three steps of
land, but who had taken everything in two. But Bali was so elevated, he
was not disturbed.
Voluntary repentance is the way to get the Lord’s attention, not to blame others.
Pariksit
Maharaja saw the curse as an opportunity to become detached from all
his material possessions and to become attached to Krishna.
The
devotees have the greatest asset and the greatest benediction—to
remember the Lord. The Lord minimizes other things in a devotee’s life
to facilitate that.
We should practice developing this consciousness throughout our life, not just at the time of death.
http://krishnamonk.blogspot.com/2013/01/travel-journal823-north-florida-and-new.html
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