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#1103 From: John Zavrel <zavrel@...>
Date: Fri Dec 11, 2009 1:12 am
Subject: SWAMI RAMA - The Mystery of Life
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The Mystery of Life
A book review by B. John Zavrel
 

"There is a belief that after a man departs from the world he is gone forever. There is another viewpoint that he is born again, that even after death man does not die in the real sense but remains on a subtle plane with his subtle body, and only the outer physical garment is discarded; and that is called death. Which is true? What exists after death?"

So we read in 'Kathopanishad' the story of the spiritual seeker Nachiketa, as he addresses Yama, the Lord of Death.

"When all desires and passions are removed, when perfect stillness prevails, the mortal becomes immortal." That is the key, which Yama eventually gives to Nachiketa.

The fear of death is linked with attachment to the passing world of names and forms. People seek objects and relationships in the world in a way to deny death, to comfort the reality that their worldly lives are temporary. Instead of comforting their owners, these charming, decaying, and dying objects remind people of the death they fear--death of their attachments to their bodies, thoughts, habits, objects, and relationships.

The key to freedom from misery and fright lies with undoing the attachments.

The purpose of life is to grow, expand, and completely realize one's own true identity. The real Self is the treasure of human life, and can be found only within.

The inner world is described in the Upanishads, and the goal of life is peace, happiness and bliss.

 

Indian philosophy describes the mind as a group of four faculties:

1) ahamkara (ego)

2) buddhi (intellect) - which discriminates, knows, decides, judges

3) manas (lower mind) - which produces and processes data through sense perceptions

4) chitta (subconscious mind) - storehouse of impressions, emotions, and memories.

These four faculties are meant to work together in harmony, with each faculty doing its particular job. When poorly coordinated and untrained, they are a formidable obstacle on the spiritual path.

So the first thing is to know the different aspects of one's mere self, to train those aspects, and to know they are not the real Self.

 

Four basic urges determine personal emotions and their effects on the mind. Shared by all living beings, these urges are for food, sleep, sex and self-preservation. If the faculties of mind are not working in harmony, these four basic urges will express themselves in dysfunctional, unbalanced ways. Eating disorders, addictions, and sexual excesses affect a person's physical and emotional health. The fear of death, which is the central issue of self-preservation, leads to a wide variety of fears, including fear of loss of belongings, possessiveness in relationships, or fear of flying and other phobias.

After establishing an individual philosophy, reorganizing your life, and finding your dharma and spiritual path, there is another step to take on your spiritual journey.

You are to take responsibility for your own life.

So many people are in the habit of blaming someone else for their unfortunate situations. Whatever is wrong in a person's life is blamed on unfair sibling relationships, uncaring spouses, needy children, taxes, imperfect schools, or having been born at the wrong time.

Understand your relationships, but let go of blaming. There is nothing in your life that is not your choice, your doing, your karma. It may sound harsh, but it is liberating.

The word 'karma' has come into mainstream usage in western culture, but regrettably its meaning is often twisted. In modern western society's lexicon, the word karma has come to be used very casually and incorrectly to mean fatalism, something utterly out of one's hands.

Implied in this interpretation of the word karma is the belief that whatever happens is not a person's doing. It's all due to fateful karma.

This is not what karma means. Karma places responsibility for your circumstances and experiences with you. Karma means that you are responsible, you determine your circumstances. You are the architect of your present situation, and past, and future.

To accept responsibility for your life gives you the power to move, change, and grow. It means you are independent. Your life is not dependent on what others do or think. You are not a victim of circumstances, parents, selfish spouses, inconsiderate children, tyrannical bosses, economic depression, or world politics.

Every thought, word and deed carry a specific outcome. Whatever actions we have performed in the past produce their fruits in the present and future, and that is the real cause of our pains and sorrows. Once an arrow is shot it must go to its destination.

As long as the arrow is in our hands, we can choose its course. All wrong deeds that we have committed in ignorance in the past produce their adverse effects. We should be careful not to commit the same mistakes again.

When a person dies, he carries the seeds of the law of karma with him. Death does not change it. The finer substance of the human being--thoughts and feelings, and karma--continue.

All the thoughts and feelings and the karma of a person are stored within the subtle mind. The impressions that find their way from actions and thoughts into the bed of chitta are called samskaras. The actions which these samskaras in turn provoke, the personality characteristics they shape, and the habits and likes with which each person finds himself or herself, are called vasanas.

We are speaking now of the wheel of karma, the ongoing movement of the individual from lifetime to lifetime. We act, we think, or we desire and a groove is etched in the mind as a particular sort of memory. The groove is a samskara. The more we act a certain way, think, or desire, the deeper is the groove etched.

Karma is not God's doing. Karma is performed by each individual. Karma is the product of each person's own actions, thoughts, and desires. No one else is responsible for it.

 
 

The foregoing are selected excerpts from "Sacred Journey" by Swami Rama of the Himalayas.

Swami Rama, brought up in the ancient cave monasteries, was not only a rare yogi but also a scientist and a social reformer. He was the author of numerous books, a poet, painter, master architect, musician, and an expert in many sciences and systems of philosophy. He founded the Himalayan International Institute of Yoga Science and Philosophy and the Himalayan Institute Hospital Trust and Medical College.

 
 

Copyright 2003 West-Art, Prometheus 88/2003

 

#1102 From: John Zavrel <zavrel@...>
Date: Mon Dec 7, 2009 12:12 pm
Subject: SWAMI VEDA: When is the best age to meet your Master
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Question:  When is the best age to meet your Master, Swamiji?



Swami Veda Bharati Answer: 
I’ll give three brief answers. 


First answer 
is 3 years before you are conceived because he would give instructions to your parents.  This happens in rare cases – 3-years before, 10-years before. 

Like in the case of my Master’s parents, the Master came in their very, very old age and said, You will have a child”. 
And they said, “What we are 70, 80-,90 years old”...i can’t remember what age...and they said, “we can’t have a child.” 
“You will have a child and then i will come and claim that child.” 
So, that is a similar story in the bible of Abraham and his wife. So this story is universal.


The second answer 
is that sometimes in the case of those who are to be born with a spiritual or social mission, or spiritually-inspired and socially-guided mission, sometimes the Tradition goes into the generations.  You will have one child, and another child...a boy and a girl independently.  In separate family.  And their family will come in touch with a teacher, a great teacher or some guide and these two will marry and they are like-minded and they will bring up a child.  First they prepare themselves. So then they bring up the child who will sometime meet the Master or whose birth is guided like i have just described.  And then he grows up and another girl grows up and they marry.  And then the third generation is the real person for which that generation were preparing. 

It is not necessary that each time they become socially active, they may have some very private mission, but that is how it goes—at least 3 generations.  But as you know in all the cultures of the world, they talk of 7 generations past and 7 generations future.  When a great disciple comes into a family and becomes a Master, after him, for up to 7 generations some effect lasts.  And it may even show up in the same family many centuries later. 

For example, people who are physically related to me--I met them recently, i had never met them in my life...I had never met a relative of mine and 3 years ago my first cousin came into the Ashram...and they think--they think...that I am reincarnation of founder of the family from 400 years ago who was a great Master.  In the case of those, they don’t cremate in India, they bury them and it becomes a sacred spot.   And that sacred spot is still there and my children have visited that. 
So it is not a simple question.


The third answer: 
Even if from the very childhood you have not reached the highest state that you are capable of in this life because you have past karma.  So you finish that karma, then the Master will come. 
My father was initiated.  My mother received Gayatri mantra in dream.  And my father received also.  And so on--it is a long story and you know about my childhood, but my Master did not come until 1969 when i was 36 years old.
Because when i had settled down, married, taken my degrees, gotten a job, bought my first house, okay. 
Three months after i bought my first house, then the Master came. 
And I asked him one day, “My children are so lucky they have seen you in their childhood, why did you make me wait for 36 years.”  And he said, “Ah ha, come earlier and suffer your karma for you!  I came at the right time.”
Although i had known of him 19 years before he came. So he had already come in my life.  And he and his Master were guiding me all the way through the years.  Because without that guidance, I would not have been able to do at that age what i had been able to accomplish but they were guiding in a disembodied way and now they were guiding in an embodied way and now they have gone back to the same disembodied way.
So that is my brief answer. 
So pay off as much of your karma as you can and be concerned with that.
And wait.  That’s 

#1101 From: John Zavrel <zavrel@...>
Date: Mon Dec 7, 2009 12:21 am
Subject: from ART MUSEUM & ALEXANDER SCULPTURE GARDEN
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 THE MUSEUM OF EUROPEAN ART

10545 Main Street, Clarence, New York 14031 (U.S.A.)

Telephone (716) 759-6078, e-mail: zavrel@...

 

Friends in Art,

We hope that you have enjoyed visiting our web site. Come back again from time to time, in order to keep informed about new events. If you live in Western New York or are visiting the area, do visit our Museum and Alexander Sculpture Garden!

The Museum is located 20 minutes by car from the Albright-Knox Art Gallery in Buffalo, New York, and about 35 minutes south from Niagara Falls. We located in the historical heart of Clarence, surrounded by many antique shops.

The Museum has a growing collection of 20th and 21st century of the classical-realistic tradition. Since most other art museums and galleries show mostly "modern abstract art", our collection sets us apart. Visitors tell us again and again how impressed they are to find such a fine collection in Buffalo. The Museum has been open since 1994, and is becoming known and respected also in Europe.

We have a fine collection of bronze and marble sculptures and reliefs, portrait-busts, lithographs, woodcuts, etchings, and paintings by prominent European artists. Among them are Kurt Arentz, Salvador Dalí, Arno Breker, Ernst Fuchs, Jean Cocteau, Henry Moore, Marc Chagall, Charles Despiau, Paul Belmondo, and others.

In 2008 we opened our Alexander Sculpture Garden, with the installation of the first 15 sculptures. The include portraits of Salvador and Gala Dali, Ronald Reagan, George Bush, Bill Clinton, Wilson Greatbatch, Swami Rama of the Himalayas, as well as several unique bronze sculptures by prominent European artists. Our long-term plan envisions the installation of several new sculptures and reliefs every year.

 

To be able to maintain and expand the Museum, we need help from the public.

We have several options for our potential sponsors. Please consider your financial possibilities and your inclinations, and let us know if you can make a donation to support our work.

To accomplish something great and worthwhile is not easy. It requires not only the initial enthusiasm, but the strength and energy to continue for an extended time. Our achievements to date prove that we have laid the foundations to a valuable cultural institution in Western New York. Please become involved in our work by becoming a donor or a patron of the Museum!

 

Sincerely,

 

B. John Zavrel

Director



WHAT CAN I DO TO HELP?
 

For most people, a donation of CASH is the most familiar and most frequently used method of charitable giving.

Since the Museum of European Art is a tax-exempt, non-profit organization, deductions are tax-deductible to the donors in the year in which they make them.

 

But there are other ways in which one can make a donation at this time to the Museum:

1) Make a donation of stocks

2) Make a donation of property (real estate, personal property, etc.)

3) Make a donation of a works of art, rare art books, coin or stamp collections or other collectibles.

The donor gets a tax-deduction for the CURRENT MARKET VALUE of the item donated. In the case of highly appreciated property (such as stocks, land, buildings or works of art) this can result in a substantial tax saving to the donor.

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

DONATIONS 

B. John Zavrel, Director
MUSEUM OF EUROPEAN ART
10545 Main Street
Clarence, NY 14031

 

Enclosed is my tax-deductible donation of $ ________

 

If you would like to make a tax-deductible donation of artworks, stocks, real estate or collectibles, please contact John Zavrel, Director at Museum of European Art, 10545 Main Street, Clarence, NY 14031. Tel. (716) 759-6078, e-mail zavrel@...

 
DONOR INFORMATION:
 

Name _____________________________________

Street ____________________________________

City _________________State ______ZIP _______

Telephone _________________

e-mail _____________________________________

 

#1100 From: John Zavrel <zavrel@...>
Date: Fri Dec 4, 2009 12:17 pm
Subject: HOLIDAY ART SALE at Museum of European Art
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Friends,

the Museum of European Art will have its FIRST Christmas ART SALE,
starting on Saturday, December 5th at 10 am.

For more information, see our link on FACEBOOK at

http://www.facebook.com/event.php?eid=335556790639&index=1


best regards,
John Zavrel
Museum of European Art
zavrel@...

#1099 From: John Zavrel <zavrel@...>
Date: Wed Dec 2, 2009 1:36 pm
Subject: SWAMI VEDA: FULL MOON TONIGHT
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Noble friends on the spiritual path,

if you enjoyed the past full moon meditations with the Himalayan
sage Swami Veda, the NEXT one is coming up TODAY, Wednesday, DECEMBER 2 at the
usual times in your area.

IF YOU ARE NEW to our worldwide family of meditators, these are the times:

1) IN NORTH AMERICA:
10 pm Eastern
9 pm Central
8 pm Mountain
7 pm Pacific
other countries and regions in the Americas adjust sitting times
accordingly.

2) IN EUROPE:
8 PM London GMT
other European countries adjust the sitting time to coincide with 8 pm
London GMT

3) IN EAST ASIA:
8 PM Singapore time.
other countries in this area-Australia, China, hong Kong, Indinesia, Japan,
Korea, Malaysia, Taiwan, Thailand, etc. adjust their times to coincide with
8 pm Singapore time.

4) IN INDIA
7 am in India (IST)
other countries in this area should adjust their time to coincide with 7 am
India time (e.g.
5 am in Iran)

5) Future FULL MOON dates in 2009:
December 30


6) For our page with various information about Swami Veda, selected
articles, etc., please visit


Yours, in service of Gurudeva,
John Zavrel


#1098 From: John Zavrel <zavrel@...>
Date: Tue Dec 1, 2009 12:48 pm
Subject: SWAMI VEDA - FULL MOON ON WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 2
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logo

AHYMSIN
Association of Himalayan Yoga Meditation Societies International

 
 
Important: If you are unable to see the pictures in this message please turn on "Display images" by clicking on the "Always display images from ahymsin@gmail.com" at the top.


Swami Veda invites you to join him for the
Full Moon Meditation Wednesday, December 2nd
 
 
 
 HIMALAYAN  TRADITION  OF  YOGA  MEDITATION 


-- 
Association of Himalayan Yoga Meditation Societies International
Spiritual Director: Swami Veda Bharati
C/o Swami Rama Sadhaka Grama
Virbhadra Road, P.O. Pashulok
Uttarakhand, India 249 203
Tel: 0135-2455091 Fax: 0135-2450831
Email: ahymsin@gmail.com



#1097 From: John Zavrel <zavrel@...>
Date: Mon Nov 30, 2009 7:55 pm
Subject: SWAMI HARI: A NEW BOOK PUBLISHED
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Noble friends on the spiritual path,


it is a pleasure to inform you about a new book about our guru-brother, the late Swami Hari.

The book was published as part of a fundraising project to support Swami Hari's vocational school & related projects in the Himalayas.
It is located in the town of Malethi, near the birthplace of HH Swami Rama of the Himalayas.

You are sincerely invited to help support this project, according to your possibilities and inclinations.


 
Here is a website link for the new Swami Hari book:

 

Also attached are the electronic versions of the fundraising letters, in case you know of someone else who is interested.  
All proceeds from the book go to SRIVERM.
 






In service,
John Zavrel


3 of 3 File(s)


#1096 From: John Zavrel <zavrel@...>
Date: Sun Nov 29, 2009 3:00 pm
Subject: PROMETHEUS # 150 - DECEMBER 2009
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Friends,


the DECEMBER issue of Prometheus is now available at

http://meaus.com/00-2009-prometheus-150.htm


In November, we had over 160,000 visitors to our website.
We now have in our archives some 4,000 articles and photographs which
are looked up by visitors from all around the world.

New articles and photos are added every week, so do come back from
time to time to see what is new.

Also, we always look for new articles, news on art, culture and
interesting new books.
You are welcome to submit your article for consideration.

Best regards,
John Zavrel
Museum of European Art
zavrel@...

#1095 From: John Zavrel <zavrel@...>
Date: Fri Nov 27, 2009 6:13 pm
Subject: 2010 FULL MOON MEDITATION CALENDAR - INVITATION
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Friends on the spiritual path,

those of you who take part in our Full Moon Meditations with the
Himalayan sage Swami Veda, might be interested to get our '2010 Full
Moon Meditations Calendar'.

It has 12 great photographs of full moons, inspiring quotes from
Swami Veda and some useful dates regarding Swami Rama, Swami Veda and
Swami Hari.

They would also make a great gift for family or friends.

Quantities are limited, so if you are interested, this is the time to
order ...

For ordering info, see http://meaus.com/00-149-2010-calendar.htm


in service,
John Zavrel
zavrel@...

#1094 From: John Zavrel <zavrel@...>
Date: Sun Nov 22, 2009 3:39 pm
Subject: A DALI CHRISTMAS - ART SALE IN BUFFALO/NIAGARA FALLS AREA
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 Dalí Christmas 2009
Art sale of surrealist works by Salvador Dalí

 



Portrait-bust of Salvador Dalí. Available at the Museum of European Art in Clarence, New York.

 

For the 2009 holiday season, we offer a rich selection of lithographs, color woodcuts, ceramic plates, art catalogs and other art objects by the great Salvador Dalí.

Also works by other European artists of the 20th century: Cocteau, Chagall, Arentz, Stendar, Donst, Tiemann, Hundertwasser, Carzou, Fuchs, and others.

 
Museum of European Art

10545 Main Street, Clarence, New York 14031

Monday - Friday, 9 am to 5 pm.

Also evenings and weekends by appointment, Tel. 716-759-6078, e-mail zavrel@...

 
 

© PROMETHEUS 150/2009

PROMETHEUS, Internet Bulletin - News, Politics, Art and Science. Nr. 150, December 2009

 

#1093 From: John Zavrel <zavrel@...>
Date: Fri Nov 20, 2009 10:05 pm
Subject: SWAMI VEDA: 2010 FULL MOON CALENDAR
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2010 Full Moon Meditation Calendar
With Sayings of the Himalayan sage Swami Veda Bharati

 



"Saumya, the quality of imparting moonlike coolness to anyone looking at you, develops when you practice mental asceticism".

 

The Himalayan sage Swami Veda Bharati invites you to meditate with him on the full moon dates, according to the time zone in which you live. This is what he says:

'When all sit together at the same time even in different parts of the world, we connect and generate a strong field, like so many magnets being joined together and forming a much stronger magnet; the strength of each then equals the combined strength of all. I have set special times on all Full Moon Days to sit in meditation with you. Please join me."

 

The 2010 Full Moon Meditation Calendar with 12 color illustrations and selected inspiring sayings of the Himalayan sage Swami Veda Bharati can be ordered from:

Museum of European Art, 10545 Main Street, Clarence, NY 14031. Payments by check or money order. Price $ 15, postage included. Shipped only in the United States.

For more information, contact zavrel@...

 
 
The Full Moon meditation times are:

10 pm in New York. Surrounding states and countries of North, Central and South America and the Caribbean should adjust to coincide with the New York time.

8 pm in Great Britain (GMT). Countries in Europe, and African time zones should adjust their sitting times to coincide with Great Britain.

7 am in India, which is 5 am in Iran.

8 pm in East Asia, Singapore time. Countries like Australia, China, Hong Kong, Indonesia, Japan, Korea, Malaysia, Taiwan, Thailand adjust their time to coincide with the Singapore time.

For further guidance you may contact Ahymsin@...

or: The Meditation Center, 631 University Avenue NE, Minneapolis, MN 55493. Tel. (612) 379-2386

 

#1092 From: John Zavrel <zavrel@...>
Date: Wed Nov 11, 2009 7:14 pm
Subject: SWAMI VEDA - AHYMSIN Newsletter for November 2009
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From: "Assoc. Himalayan Yoga Meditation" <ahymsin@...>
Date: November 11, 2009 4:51:04 AM EST
To: AHYMSIN office <ahymsin@...>
Subject: AHYMSIN Newsletter for October - November 2009

 

logo

AHYMSIN
Association of Himalayan Yoga Meditation Societies International

 
 

Important: If you are unable to see the pictures in this message please turn on "Display images" by clicking on the "Always display images from ahymsin@..." at the top.

 

Dear AHYMSIN Newsletter Readers,

Namaste

Please click here for your AHYMSIN October - November 2009 Newsletter.

The topics this month are:

 
 

We hope you enjoy this month's edition.
Yours in service,
AHYMSIN Office

 
  HIMALAYAN  TRADITION  OF  YOGA  MEDITATION  


--
Association of Himalayan Yoga Meditation Societies International
Spiritual Director: Swami Veda Bharati
C/o Swami Rama Sadhaka Grama
Virbhadra Road, P.O. Pashulok
Uttarakhand, India 249 203
Tel: 0135-2455091 Fax: 0135-2450831
Email: ahymsin@...


#1091 From: John Zavrel <zavrel@...>
Date: Mon Nov 2, 2009 10:30 am
Subject: PROMETHEUS - NOVEMBER 2009 ISSUE
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Friends of art,

1) the November issue of Prometheus is now available at
http://meaus.com/00-2009-prometheus-149.htm


2) In the future, we would like to report a bit more about
interesting art exhibitions around the world.
You are invited to inform us about such events, or submit articles on
art and culture.
http://www.meaus.com

Last month we had over 150,000 visitors to our website (over
8,500,000 visitors since we started the website in 1996).
We have nearly 4,000 articles and interesting photos on our website.

Articles are added weekly, so come back from time to time to see what
is new.

John Zavrel
Museum of European Art
http://www.meaus.com

#1090 From: John Zavrel <zavrel@...>
Date: Sat Oct 31, 2009 11:15 am
Subject: FULL MOON - SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 1
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Noble friends on the spiritual path,

if you enjoyed the past full moon meditations with the Himalayan
sage Swami Veda, the NEXT one is coming up on SUNDAY, November 1, 2009 at the
usual times in your area.

IF YOU ARE NEW to our worldwide family of meditators, these are the times:

1) IN NORTH AMERICA:
10 pm Eastern
9 pm Central
8 pm Mountain
7 pm Pacific
other countries and regions in the Americas adjust sitting times
accordingly.

2) IN EUROPE:
8 PM London GMT
other European countries adjust the sitting time to coincide with 8 pm
London GMT

3) IN EAST ASIA:
8 PM Singapore time.
other countries in this area-Australia, China, hong Kong, Indinesia, Japan,
Korea, Malaysia, Taiwan, Thailand, etc. adjust their times to coincide with
8 pm Singapore time.

4) IN INDIA
7 am in India (IST)
other countries in this area should adjust their time to coincide with 7 am
India time (e.g.
5 am in Iran)

5) Future FULL MOON dates in 2009:

December 2
December 30

6) For our page with various information about Swami Veda, selected
articles, etc., please visit

http://www.meaus.com/friends-of-gurukulam.htm

Yours, in service of Gurudeva,
John Zavrel
zavrel@...


#1089 From: John Zavrel <zavrel@...>
Date: Sat Oct 17, 2009 12:18 pm
Subject: DIWALI BLESSINGS from Pujya Swamiji
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Begin forwarded message:

From: <info@...>
Date: October 17, 2009 3:24:06 AM EDT
Subject: Diwali Blessings from Pujya Swamiji

Dear Divine Souls,

I hope that -- by God's grace -- this finds you and all your loved ones in the best of health and happiness. At this divine time of Diwali we line our homes, our rooms, our offices and our streets with brightly shining dias. The brightly lit lamps signified the people of Ayodhyas love for Bhagwan Rama and their joy at his return. On this day, we must pray that Bhagwan Rama returns to our own hearts and our own lives. In our lives, our greatest welcome to Him can be light not only in the oil lamp, but light in our hearts. If we light the lamp of love, of selflessness, of purity and piety in our own hearts then He will surely return to our lives! 

There was once a king who was reaching old age. He had three sons and he was trying to decide which of his sons would be the heir to the throne. In order to test his sons and to determine which was the most worthy, he gave them each one palace and 100 rupees. He told them, In the next month I want you each to fill a palace using the 100 rupees. I will return in one month, on the day of Diwali, and see how well you have filled your palaces, and then I will decide who will be my heir. 

The first son thought, One hundred rupees is too small of a sum to fill a palace with anything. Therefore, I will take the hundred rupees to the casino and turn it into one million rupees. Then my father will be very happy when I fill the palace with gold and silver. So, he took the money to a casino, and in the beginning he kept winning more and more money. However, rather than saving the money he thought, I still have so much time left until my father returns. I will enjoy myself with this money and keep making more. Unfortunately, after spending his winnings on enjoyments, his luck turned and he lost even the original 100 rupees. 

The second son thought, My father must be joking. One hundred rupees is nothing. There is nothing I can buy to fill the palace. I could not even fill it with rice for 100 rupees! Therefore he must be tricking us somehow or joking with us. I will fill the palace with garbage, up to the ceiling. Then he will see that I understood his joke and he will be happy. So the son paid 50 rupees to the garbage collector to bring all of the garbage to the palace, and he filled the entire palace with rotting garbage. 

The third son thought, Diwali is coming. My father will be here for Diwali. I cannot buy him any expensive gifts with this 100 rupees but at least I can decorate the palace and fill it with light. So the third son bought incense, candles and oil lamps. He decorated the palace beautifully with candles and oil lamps. 

On Diwali day when the King returned to each of his sons, he asked the first son, My son, tell me. What have you filled the palace with?" 

His first son replied, My father, I am ashamed to tell you that I gambled the money. In the end I lost even the hundred rupees you gave us. I have filled the palace with nothing but loss. 

When the King went to his second sons palace, the son replied, My father, you will see that I have filled every inch of this palace and I still have 50 rupees left over. He smugly handed his father the remaining money and opened the doors. As soon as the doors opened, the stench from the garbage came wafting out, and the King immediately ordered, close those doors. He scolded his second son for having made a mockery of the test and also for having ruined the palace by filling it with rotting garbage. 

Finally, the King went to the third sons palace. As the doors opened, the King saw the Palace filled with light. The son explained, My father. There was nothing material I could purchase with 100 rupees to fill the house, but as it is the time of Diwali I thought you would be happy to see a palace filled with light. The King was pleased and he explained to his sons as follows, I wanted to see not so much what you each would do with the money but rather what your tendencies are for life. I wanted to test how you each will live your life in order to determine who will be best suited to rule the kingdom. 

The palace in this story represents our lives, and the 100 rupees represents our time and energy. According to the scriptures, we are given 100 years to spend on this Earth. However, in modern times we live even fewer years. The question is how we each will spend those years and how we will fill our lives. Some will spend their lives as the first son has done. They will squander much of their time and energy in the futile pursuit of enjoyment and pleasures. They end up with nothing. 

Then there are those who fill their lives with garbage. They may save money but their lives are not livable; their time and energy go to waste. 

Then, there are those who use their time, their resources and their energy to bring light to others. They fill their lives and the lives of others with light, joy and peace. Theirs are the lives which are truly worth living. Theirs are the hearts filled with light, signifying the welcome of Bhagwan Rama. 

At this beautiful time of time of Diwali when we line our homes, our offices and our streets with rows and rows of brightly burning dias, let us ask ourselves whether our lives are filled with light. Are we using our time and our resources to bring light and life to others? Or are we squandering our time and resources? 

On this holy day of Diwali, I pray that you will take this opportunity to examine the balance sheets of your own lives and that you will take a pledge to fill your lives every word, every thought and every action -- with light, thereby bringing light and life to others. 

May God bless you all. 

With love and blessings, 

Swami Chidanand Saraswati 

** To read Pujya Swamiji's full article on the actual meaning and significance of Diwali please click here or go tohttp://www.parmarth.com/updates/octnov05/diwali.html 

Upcoming Events at Parmarth Niketan:

October 23-31: Divine Shri Rama Katha by Pujya Sant Shri Rameshbhai Oza

March 1-7, 2010:  International Yoga Festival 2010! Save the date now for the annual event of top international teachers from across the world sharing their wisdom and experience in a wide variety of forms of asana, pranayama, meditation. Also come and have the darshan and hear the divine wisdom of revered saints and spiritual masters.
 
 
 


#1088 From: John Zavrel <zavrel@...>
Date: Fri Oct 16, 2009 1:11 pm
Subject: SWAMI VEDA: DIWALI BLESSING
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AHYMSIN
Association of Himalayan Yoga Meditation Societies International

 
 

Important: If you are unable to see the pictures in this message please turn on "Display images" by clicking on the "Always display images from ahymsin@..." at the top.

 
swamiji's original writings here
 
  HIMALAYAN  TRADITION  OF  YOGA  MEDITATION  


--
Association of Himalayan Yoga Meditation Societies International
Spiritual Director: Swami Veda Bharati
C/o Swami Rama Sadhaka Grama
Virbhadra Road, P.O. Pashulok
Uttarakhand, India 249 203
Tel: 0135-2455091 Fax: 0135-2450831
Email: ahymsin@...


#1087 From: John Zavrel <zavrel@...>
Date: Thu Oct 15, 2009 1:04 pm
Subject: INVITATION FROM MUSEM OF EUROPEAN ART
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Friends of the Museum of European Art,

we would like to invite you to join the Circle of Friends of our Museum and Alexander Sculpture Garden.
We receive no government support, and this new initiative is meant to bring us additional support from the wider public.

Currently, our Dali exhibition and ART METROPOLIS 2009 are on display until November 30.
If you live in the driving range of Buffalo, or are planing a trip to our area, do stop by and see a nice collection of art.

with the best regards to all our friends,
John Zavrel 
Museum of European Art


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MUSEUM OF EUROPEAN ART
10545 Main Street, Clarence, New York 14031

www.meaus.com *** E-mail: zavrel@... *** Tel. (716) 759-6078

 
Membership Application
CIRCLE OF FRIENDS
 
Membership Benefits

Free admission to the Museum

Art Shop: 20% discount on books, 5% discount on artworks

Invitation to our annual exhibition ART METROPOLIS 2010

Occassional lectures and workshops

Free subscription to our internet journal PROMETHEUS

 

Personal Information

Name ____________________________________________________________

Street ____________________________________________________________

City ________________________________State________ ZIP ______________

E-mail: ____________________________ Phone _________________________

 

2010 Dues: $ 25

 

Mail to: John Zavrel, Director, Museum of European Art, 10545 Main Street, Clarence, NY 14031

E-mail: zavrel@...

 
 

#1086 From: John Zavrel <zavrel@...>
Date: Fri Oct 2, 2009 12:31 pm
Subject: FULL MOON - SUNDAY, OCTOBER 4
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Noble friends on the spiritual path,

if you enjoyed the past full moon meditations with the Himalayan
sage Swami Veda, the NEXT one is coming up on SUNDAY, October 4 at the
usual times in your area.

IF YOU ARE NEW to our worldwide family of meditators, these are the times:

1) IN NORTH AMERICA:
10 pm Eastern
9 pm Central
8 pm Mountain
7 pm Pacific
other countries and regions in the Americas adjust sitting times
accordingly.

2) IN EUROPE:
8 PM London GMT
other European countries adjust the sitting time to coincide with 8 pm
London GMT

3) IN EAST ASIA:
8 PM Singapore time.
other countries in this area-Australia, China, hong Kong, Indinesia, Japan,
Korea, Malaysia, Taiwan, Thailand, etc. adjust their times to coincide with
8 pm Singapore time.

4) IN INDIA
7 am in India (IST)
other countries in this area should adjust their time to coincide with 7 am
India time (e.g.
5 am in Iran)

5) Future FULL MOON dates in 2009:

October 4
November 1
December 2
December 30

6) For our page with various information about Swami Veda, selected
articles, etc., please visit

http://www.meaus.com/friends-of-gurukulam.htm

Yours, in service of Gurudeva,
John Zavrel
zavrel@...


#1085 From: John Zavrel <zavrel@...>
Date: Thu Sep 24, 2009 12:59 pm
Subject: NEWS ABOUT SWAMI VEDA
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Friends, we would like to share this report from Rishikesh ...

in service,
John Zavrel




--- On Mon, 9/7/09, Bharti Pant <bharti.pant@...> wrote:

From: Bharti Pant <bharti.pant@...>
Subject: pranam to Swami veda Bharati
To: tadit369@...
Date: Monday, September 7, 2009, 6:27 AM

Akand mandalakaram vyaptam ye na characharam, Tat padam darshitem ye na tasmai shri Gurve namah.

It was the 25th of March 09 and the tenth day of my stay at Swami Ram Sadhaka Gram, Rishikesh (the Ashram). Early in the morning, at 3.45 am, Swami Ram entered my room and gave me instructions to observe silence. I could not accept or understand this incident. I heard myself saying…Swami Ram, Swami Ram?? I have heard that Swami Ram left his corporeal body twelve years ago. I have only seen two videos of Swami Ram while staying in this Ashram.  At that time I did not know any other thing about Swami Ram. I was perplexed and mystified. Was it a dream? Was I asleep at the time? How could Swami Ram enter my room and give me instructions? His body passed away twelve years ago!! My room was locked from inside. For the whole of the next day, I was not myself - I was baffled and confused. In the evening, I went to Maa Radha and shared my intention of going on a silent retreat, without sharing with her my puzzling dream.

I take up silent fasting for nine days twice each year during the Navratras.  I started my silent fast this year as I have done for the past eight years. However, this year my nine days silence extended to forty days. As I began my silent fast, I started getting more guidance from the unknown. I don’t know where those instructions came from but I was inspired to reduce and alter my diet pattern. I started feeling light in my body and my spirit. To this day, I continue to get this guidance for many different aspects of my life.

Even today, when I think about Swami Ram’s appearance in my room to bless me, I find myself floating in the vast ocean of existence and I wonder about the nature of that experience.

One day during my silent fast, while I was meditating, I suddenly felt a moment of clarity where I could understand the universal mind. However, this was a fleeting experience. I have heard and read many times about this universal mind, but I never understood its real meaning. Fifteen minutes before the meditation time was over, I suddenly saw big waves of ocean, in many layers coming towards me from the picture of Swami Ram. I felt wonderful and felt that Swami Ram was blessing me. For a brief moment, I understood how one can connect to others with a single mind. These two incidents are very memorable within my life.

After Swami Veda Bharati’s arrival in the Ashram, I joined a one week course, conducted for the people, who speak Hindi. I enjoyed that a lot. After the course was over, Swami Veda gave nine days of silent meditation to all the Ashram residents. During those nine days I felt like my body was in heaven. I had many other worldly experiences during those nine days. I experienced things that I have only read and heard from the Hindu mythology…the stories about Indra, the king of Devas, feeling jealous at the spiritual progress of others. I could feel how the five enemies of spiritual progress, Kama (desire), Krodha (anger), Mad (ego) Moha (attachment), and Lobh (greed) try their best to derail the seeker’s from his/her path of  spiritual progress.  I could not understand two such experiences which I had during this silent meditation. I was a little disappointed that I could not make sense of my experience and wondered how I can clear my doubts. I didn’t have courage to go to Swami Veda and clear my doubts.

On the eighth day, it was announced that silent meditation period was over. I was preparing myself to go to Delhi. I had already booked my train ticket for that day. Although I had so many good experiences during the silent mediation, I was still a little confused about those two experiences. On the ninth day after breakfast, I saw that Swami Veda has called us for silent mediation again. I was very happy when I read this as my train was to leave in the evening the same day. To my considerable surprise, Swami Veda asked us to wait after the meditation and then he proceeded to clarify one of the doubts I had by drawing the thing on the board. My doubt had been cleared without me ever speaking of it. I was deeply moved by this experience.

There still remains one experience that was not clear to me.  Here is how it goes…during one of my meditation sessions, I heard someone whispering a MANTRA in my ear. I could not understand the words. A few minutes later, those words were whispered again in my ears. Once again, I could not understand them. Both the times I felt that someone was standing next to me on my right side and whispering the Mantra. I opened my eyes to see who it was, but no one was there. Everyone in the room was sitting with their eyes closed. I am looking forward to understand the words of that Mantra which was whispered in my right ear during my silent meditation.

When I reached Delhi, all my friends asked me where I had been. They all expressed the desire to visit that place. I stayed in Delhi for my visa process for almost a month. When I reached Melbourne (Australia), my family could see my inner bliss.

I am very much grateful to SRSG for its loving and kind atmosphere and the facilities given to me during my stay over there and looking forward to stay in The Ashram again.

With lots of thanks.

Bharti Pant

 

Swami Veda Bharati,

Pranam.

MEIN AAPKE CHARANO ME APNE ANUBHAV SAMARPIT KARNE KI DHRISHTA KAR RAHI HOO. MERE TRUTIYON KE LIYE KSAMA KIJIYEGA.

PRANAM.

Bharti Pant

 
 


#1084 From: John Zavrel <zavrel@...>
Date: Sat Sep 19, 2009 1:45 pm
Subject: NEWS ABOUT SWAMI VEDA AND MORE
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Friends,

the latest AHYMSIN newsletter with news about Swami Veda's recent activities around the world.

in service,
John Zavrel


Begin forwarded message:

From: "Assoc. Himalayan Yoga Meditation" <ahymsin@...>
Date: September 19, 2009 7:08:10 AM EDT
To: AHYMSIN office <ahymsin@...>
Subject: AHYMSIN Newsletter for August/September 2009

 AHYMSIN
Association of Himalayan Yoga Meditation Societies International
 
   
 

Dear AHYMSIN Newsletter Readers,

Namaste

Please click here for your AHYMSIN August - September 2009 Newsletter.

The topics this month are:



We hope you enjoy this month's edition.

Yours in service,

AHYMSIN Office

 
   
 
HIMALAYAN  TRADITION  OF  YOGA  MEDITATION
 



--
Association of Himalayan Yoga Meditation Societies International
Spiritual Director: Swami Veda Bharati
C/o Swami Rama Sadhaka Grama
Virbhadra Road, P.O. Pashulok
Uttarakhand, India 249 203
Tel: 0135-2455091 Fax: 0135-2450831
Email: ahymsin@...


#1083 From: John Zavrel <zavrel@...>
Date: Mon Sep 14, 2009 11:54 am
Subject: SWAMI RAMA BUST IN CLARENCE, NEW YORK
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Dear friends of art,


A week ago, we had the opening of our annual exhibition ART METROPOLIS - HOMAGE TO DALI.
With 12 artists from Buffalo, California and Canada, the visitors were impressed not only by the 50+ works by Dal´, but also by the interesting works of the present art generation.


We also had many good comments by the visitors on our Alexander Sculpture Garden.
A number of new visitors who knew our gurudev, Swami Rama of the Himalayas, and were surprised and pleased to see his larger-than-life bronze bust in our 'Meditation Corner', next to the gazebo. It was created by the famous 'Sculptor of Presidents', Kurt Arentz from Leverkusen, Germany.
Several new sculptures were added since last year's opening.
The bushes, plants and flowers planted last year by one of our artist-friends make the garden look even more attractive.


Also, the Museum received donations of several  fine artworks from our artist-friends to enlarge our collection. 
To them, our sincere thanks.


The Museum is not supported financially by the governments, nor by big corporate donors. All work is done by the help of 'ordinary people' and a few friends and artist-friends.

We would like to invite you to join our CIRCLE OF FRIENDS.
The dues for 2010 are modest, and it would help us a bit to complete some very urgent work that needs to be done in the Sculpture Garden.

This is the link to the application form:




We look forward to hear from you, and also -- if you live in the driving range -- to your visit of our exhibition, which runs to November 30.


best regards,
John Zavrel

#1082 From: John Zavrel <zavrel@...>
Date: Sat Sep 12, 2009 3:52 pm
Subject: SWAMI VEDA -] Trinidad Visit [2 Attachments]
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Begin forwarded message:

From: "Michael" <mstmc108@...>
Date: September 11, 2009 9:18:22 PM EDT
Subject: [ihyta] Trinidad Visit [2 Attachments]

[Attachment(s) from Michael included below]



 
Dear Friends,
 
Please see the report of Swami Veda's, Linda and Savitri's trip to Trinidad
and the link to wonderful photos by Priya Naraine.
 
Namaste!
 




#1081 From: John Zavrel <zavrel@...>
Date: Mon Sep 7, 2009 11:44 am
Subject: PHOTOS FROM TARKESHWAR TEMPLE IN HIMALAYAS
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Friends,

one of Swami Rama's students posted some great photos from a recent
visit to the Tarkeshwar temple in the Himalayas, where HH Swami Rama
of the Himalayas attained enlightenment.

You can see them at

http://www.flickr.com/photos/edenstarr/sets/72157622280130848


in service,
John Zavrel
zavrel@...

#1080 From: John Zavrel <zavrel@...>
Date: Thu Sep 3, 2009 11:10 am
Subject: FULL MOON - FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 4
szavrel
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Noble friends on the spiritual path,

if you enjoyed the past full moon meditations with the Himalayan
sage Swami Veda, the NEXT one is coming up on FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 4 at the
usual times in your area.


IF YOU ARE NEW to our worldwide family of meditators, these are the times:

1) IN NORTH AMERICA:
10 pm Eastern
9 pm Central
8 pm Mountain
7 pm Pacific
other countries and regions in the Americas adjust sitting times
accordingly.

2) IN EUROPE:
8 PM London GMT
other European countries adjust the sitting time to coincide with 8 pm
London GMT

3) IN EAST ASIA:
8 PM Singapore time.
other countries in this area-Australia, China, hong Kong, Indinesia, Japan,
Korea, Malaysia, Taiwan, Thailand, etc. adjust their times to coincide with
8 pm Singapore time.

4) IN INDIA
7 am in India (IST)
other countries in this area should adjust their time to coincide with 7 am
India time (e.g.
5 am in Iran)

5) Future FULL MOON dates in 2009:

October 4
November 1
December 2
December 30


6) For our page with various information about Swami Veda, selected
articles, etc., please visit



Yours, in service of Gurudeva,
John Zavrel





#1079 From: John Zavrel <zavrel@...>
Date: Fri Aug 28, 2009 2:49 pm
Subject: INVENTOR WILSON GREATBATCH
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Home | Alexander Order 


The Inventor Wilson Greatbatch

Student at Cornell - $ 2,000 capital - first pacemakers built in his barn - history changed three times - lithium batteries for pacemakers - the Millennium Project - what is He-3 - let us colonize the Moon (before we go to Mars) - an example for the young generation.

 
By B. John Zavrel

 



Dr. Wilson Greatbatch speaking in Buffalo, New York.

 

'Each worthwhile thing that I have ever done took about ten years to do. It involved living the project all my waking hours, often with no pay for what I did. The doing was the reward. Being paid, asking for success, and peer approval were all insignificant. At the time I thought such an attitude was crazy. I think now that it is the right way. The good Lord doesn't really care whether you succeed or fail. My most abject failure may be a part of some grand success in His sight that may never take place until long after I'm gone. Thus, I shouldn't fear failure or crave success. To ask for a successful experiment, for professional stature, for financial reward, or for peer approval is asking to be paid for what should be an act of love. I do believe He wants me to try and to try hard, but the reward is in the doing, not in the results. So, I'll never get a swelled head over success or shoot myself over failure because I really don't care. I'll be happy however things go, just for the opportunity to try.'

These are the concluding words of the new book written by the American inventor Wilson Greatbatch. His book with the deceptively scientific-sounding title 'The Making of the Pacemaker' and visions of mathematical formulas, complex diagrams and technical vocabulary is actually a very readable and fascinating story of one of the most remarkable Americans of the 20th century.

His story begins with recollections of the early times. 'I have five children. My four sons are all mechanically inclined. They handle metal well, and three of them work beautifully with wood. None of them has the slightest interest in electronics. I have always wondered why. Electricity and electronics have always fascinated me. I think it was the mystery of it. Something was happening that you couldn't see, or feel, or hear. You needed a meter or an oscilloscope or at least a neon bulb to detect it, and then you had to interpret what the reading meant. I know I was thoroughly hooked early in my teens when I built my first two-tube short-wave receiver and listened to London, England, on a coil I had wound myself."

In 1940 the international situation was deteriorating and the navy reserve unit in which he was active was called up for one year of active duty, which however stretched into five years. During this time the young man was repairing electronic equipment on a destroyer tender, "pounding brass" as a navy radio operator on merchant ships in convoys to Iceland, teaching in a navy radar school and finally flying in combat as a rear gunner off the aircraft carrier USS Monterey, where the former President Ford was his deck officer. After the end of World War II, he returned to Buffalo with his new bride Eleanor and worked for a year as an installer-repairman for the New York Telephone Company. Then he decided to register in the School of Electrical Engineering at Cornell University in Ithaca, New York. 'They wouldn't admit me at Cornell. There was room in the school, but no housing for nonresidential students. So I went out to Danby, six miles south of Ithaca, and bought a farm. Then I came back and presented myself as a "resident student." I got in,' he recalls his university beginnings.

'Cornell was wonderful! After all that time in the dive-bombers, it was such a joy to wander around the campus, to go to class and to learn something, to be a part of the great tradition of all that had gone before. I was so grateful. I have repeatedly and vainly tried to imbue my children with the kind of appreciation that I had, just the opportunity to sit, and hear, and learn. I don't think I ever got this across to them. Maybe you have to come straight down two miles with the "ack-ack" of gunfire bursting all around you to appreciate the change.

Cornell has always stressed breadth of background. Thus we got enough math to qualify us as high school teachers, and more physics and chemistry than most other schools ever provide. I still remember and use some of the lectures we heard on patent law and on being an expert witness. My work since then has been mostly outside of my specific training as an electronic circuit designer. The breadth of background Cornell gave me has enabled me to branch out when necessary into nuclear physics, electrochemical polarization of physiological electrodes, battery chemistry, the physics of welding, and the countless other things I have had to do in the past decades to keep our corporate heads above water.'

During the summer of 1951, a pair of New England surgeons spent their summer sabbatical at a research farm doing experimental brain surgery on the hypothalamus of goats. They were investigating the influence of the hypothalamus on behavior. The surgeons carried their lunches in brown bags, as he did, and noontimes they would sit on the grass in the bright Ithaca sun and talk shop. He learned much practical physiology from them. At times the subject of heat block came up. When they described it, Wilson knew he could fix it, but not with the vacuum tubes and storage batteries they had then.

After completion of his studies at Cornell, he went into aerospace work at Cornell Aeronautical Laboratory in Buffalo. In 1953 he saw the first transistors and he built some amplifiers with them. In 1956, the first really commercial silicon transistors became available and he began using them. In Buffalo he belonged to the first local chapter in the world of the 'Institute of Radio Engineers, Professional Group in Medical Electronics' -- a group of doctors and engineers that met for a technical program every month. They had a standing offer to send an engineering team to assist any doctor who had an instrumentation problem. He went with one team to visit Dr. Chardack on a problem dealing with a blood oximeter. He recalls, 'imagine my surprise to find that his assistant was my old high school classmate, Dr. Andrew Gage. We couldn't help Dr. Chardack much with his oximeter problem, but when I broached my pacemaker idea to him, he walked up and down the lab a couple of times, looked at me strangely, and said, "If you can do that, you can save ten thousand lives a year." Three weeks later we had our first model implanted in a dog.'

 

50 pacemakers built for $ 2,000 in a barn

And his story continues; 'I had $ 2,000 in cash and enough set aside to feed my family for two years. I put it to the Lord in prayer and felt led to quit my jobs and devote my time to the pacemaker. I gave the family money to my wife. I then took the $ 2,000 and went into my wood-heated barn workshop. In two years I build fifty pacemakers, forty of which went into animals and ten into patients. We had no grant funding and asked for none. The program was successful. We got fifty pacemakers for $ 2,000. Today, you can't buy one for that.'

In 1961 he worked out a license agreement with Medtronic from Minneapolis to let them produce the Chardack-Greatbatch implantable cardiac pacemaker, which dominated the field for the next decade. The license agreement was a very tight one. He assumed design control for all Medtronic implantable pacemakers. He signed every drawing, every change, and had to approve every procurement document. Medtronic had been in a precarious financial situation in 1960, but substantially recovered within two years and became number one in pacemakers. Today, in 2000, Medtronic is still number one.

About these early days the inventor likes to tell the following anecdote: 'Many of the early Medtronic programs were first worked out in Clarence, New York, and then taken to Minneapolis. I had two ovens set up in my bedroom. My wife did much of the testing. The shock test consisted of striking the transistor with a wooden pencil while measuring beta (current gain). We found that a metal pencil could wreck the transistor, but a wooden pencil could not. Many mornings I would awake to the cadence of my wife Eleanor tap, tap, tapping the transistors with her calibrated pencil. For some months every transistor that was used worldwide in Medtronic pacemakers got tapped in my bedroom.'

In 1958, they foresaw an optimistic annual usage of about 10,000 pacemakers per year. In a remarkably shot time, the implantable pacemaker became the treatment of choice for complete heart block with Stokes-Adams syndrome. Today, more than forty years later, pacemakers have assumed forms and functions that were never dreamed of, and the world pacemaker market is well over 600,000 units per year.

This was the first of the three instances when the work of Bill Greatbatch changed history.

 

Lithium batteries for pacemakers

The second history-changing invention was the development of clinically implantable lithium battery for pacemakers. Nearly all of the early implantable pacemakers were powered by zinc mercury batteries. However, by 1970 the average life of the pulse generator was only two years, with about 80 percent of the removals necessitated by failed batteries. In 1968, he began a search for an improved power source.

After several years of experimenting with various kinds of batteries, including nuclear batteries and rechargeable batteries, and finally developing the lithium batteries. The first lithium battery to appear in pacemakers and by far the most used today is the lithium iodine system, invented by James Moser and first introduced into pacemaker work by Greatbatch. The new battery had a life of ten years compared to only two years of the old mercury-zinc battery; this further greatly advanced the use and acceptance of the implantable pacemakers.

The Millennium Project

The third history-changing project of Wilson Greatbatch is the one he is currently working on: he calls it the 'Millennium Project.' This is how he explains it:

'The twentieth century was the century of aviation and the century of globalization. The next century will be the century of space, and in the next millennium globalization will explode into the far reaches of our galaxy. For this I coin the word "Galaxian," with apologies and due credit to Isaac Asimov.

We will be driven by the need for new energy sources. By the year 2050 we will have run out of all the economically recoverable fossil fuels like oil, coal, and natural gas. We will also have run out of places to put the toxic residues of our present nuclear fission reactors. Worse yet, in 2050 all the alternate sources of energy, like hydroelectric, wind, wood, tidal, geothermal, and solar, will not supply even 25 percent of the energy we will need to feed the 10 billion people that will populate Earth by that time. We will have no place to go but nuclear fusion.

Nearly all of our existing power sources are generators that use a heat cycle. This includes our coal, oil, and gas-fired utilities, our automobiles, trucks, and trains, and even our nuclear fission utility power plants. All are "heat engines" and thus are confined to a theoretical efficiency of about 40 percent. Did you know that when you buy a gallon of gas, over 60 percent of the energy you pay for goes out the radiator in the form of waste heat? In fact, that's why you have a radiator in your car in the first place. This is a basic law of physics and there is absolutely nothing you can do about it. This is also why our fossil-fueled power utility plants are built by rivers.

But He-3 nuclear fusion reactors are not heat engines. They generate electricity directly and are not limited by the "Carnot cycle" efficiency. More importantly, the He-3 nuclear fusion reactor doesn't generate carbon dioxide or any of the other "greenhouse" gasses. By going to future global He-3 power generation, we can wipe out much of global warming in one fell swoop.'

And he continues: 'Does this sound too good to be true? Yes, there are a couple of caveats. The first is that the reaction takes place at a temperature much hotter than the surface of the Sun. But we engineers can handle that. The other is that there is practically no He-3 on Earth. But I tell my engineering students that these are just minor engineering challenges. He-3 comes to us from the Sun in an ionized form on the solar wind. The ions hit the Earth's magnetic field and get diverted sway. They cannot land on Earth, so they drift around and eventually land on the Moon. They have been landing there for four billion years. There is more He-3 energy on the Moon that we have ever had in the from of fossil fuels on Earth. All we have to do is go there and get it.

The cost of He-3, including the shuttle, the Moon colony, and the ilmenite refinery, amortized over a suitable number of decades, has been calculated to be equivalent to an oil cost of about $ 8 per barrel of oil. We now pay about $ 22. The whole project is not only technically feasible, it is economically feasible. In fact, in the opinion of many, including me, it is inevitable. There is no reasonable alternative. But if we want to get there by 2050, we had better start now.

 

Let America colonize the Moon--then on to Mars!

So, the challenge of the Moon is clear. The rewards are manifest. But, who should do it?

Only one nation has the equipment, the know-how, and the need for energy to drive this idea forward. That nation is obviously the United States. It needs the same kind of unwavering dedication and the kinds of people that got us the first nuclear submarine and the first man on the moon. We need the kind of leadership exemplified by President Kennedy who ignored the negatives relating to a "man-on-the-moon" and convinced us to "just do it." But we must do it as good stewards, aggressively (but not forcefully) exerting control over the Moon. We can best do this by going there. We are the only nation that has the capability to do it. However, we must exert our stewardship in a generous and altruistic way, making the completed facilities available to all comers, especially including the have-nots nations, on an equitable basis compatible with their economies. Also, we must do it soon, while we still have the technological lead to accomplish it, and while the energy shortage is not yet so severe as to encourage terrorist elements (and even out friends) to take extreme steps to block us. Our objective must be not only to alleviate our own energy needs, but also a strong altruism that recognizes that helping to alleviate the world's needs would deter them from extreme and desperate acts if they find themselves with the immediate prospect of no energy. In the coming years we must get used to evaluating national and business (and Galaxial) options on a one-hundred year basis, rather than on a quarterly basis. Procrastination on this item will prove prohibitively expensive in the long run.

It is clear that the nation that assumes stewardship of the Moon now will inherit stewardship of the galaxy in the coming millennium. I think the United States is ready for that challenge. I know I am,' concludes the 81-year old inventor.

The book is much more than a history of the making of the pacemaker. It is a story which will inspire the young people to follow the example of a man whose genius, perseverance, dedicated work, humility, strength of character and service to mankind are an ideal for which we all can strive. A copy of this book should be in all school libraries in America.

 

(The Making of the Pacemaker by Wilson Greatbatch. Published by Prometheus Books, ISBN 1-57392-806-2. Hard cover, 260 pages, with photo of the author with a young pacemaker patient at Royal Children's Hospital in Melbourne, Australia. Price $ 26.40).

 
 

© PROMETHEUS 110/2006

PROMETHEUS, Internet Bulletin - News, Politics, Art and Science. Nr. 110, AUGUST 2006



#1078 From: John Zavrel <zavrel@...>
Date: Fri Aug 28, 2009 11:45 am
Subject: SWAMI VEDA 2009-2010 TRAVELS - AGAIN
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Friends,

we received several notes that people could not open the file.
Here is the information on Swami Veda's 2009/2010 travel plans again.

best regards,
b.j.z.



Where is SVB

Swami Veda Bharati’s recent programmes have been as follows:

 

Year 2009

·      Departure from Sadhaka Grama Rishikesh, 19th May

·      Till 10th June Delhi and London catching up on mails and writings.

·      11th -14th June Yoga Meditation Retreat at St. Andrews University, Scotland. 

·      17th - 23rd June Ahymsin Retreat with Swami Ritavan at Rostov-on-Don, Russia.

·      26th - 30th June Ahymsin lectures, Budapest, Hungary

·      3rd – 31st July Meditation Center Minneapolis.  Seminars on Yoga Nidra, Prana Vidya, Teachers Training and Interfaith Conference. 

·      1st – 14th August, Daily Meditations and Lectures at Rancho la Puerta, Mexico.

·      15th – 31st August, hide away to catch up on health, mails and writings at San Diego, California.

 

Swami Veda’s forthcoming programmes:

 

·      2nd – 3rd September, Organised by Power of One 101010, Dialogue with Professor Amit Goswami, Harriet Fulbright and Congressman Dennis Kuchinich.

 
 
 

·      5th – 14th September, Trinidad, West Indies.

-   Public lectures

-   Teachers training programme by Savitri Jugdeo

-   Release of the book WANAM Africa and India through the University of the West Indies. 

·      15th Sep - 2nd Oct.  Hide away to Catch up on mails and writings

·      4th Oct.  Arrive Delhi

·      8th Oct.  Sadhaka Grama, Rishikesh.   Will be in residence till end of May 2010. 

 

May attend conferences as follows:

·      7-13 December, Copenhagen, Conference of Religious Leaders in conjunction with United Nations Conference on Environment.

·      8-10 January, Ramakrishna Mission, Kolkatta.  Conference on Scientific Studies of Consciousness. 



2010 Year 2010


·      28th January – 1st February, Auroville, Pondicherry.  International – Sufi Dialogue.

·      1st – 14th February 3 year completion, fire offerings of Ityukta Mantra at Sadhaka Grama.

·      7th February AHYMSIN 3 year meeting and elections.

·      1 June leave Sadhaka Grama, Rishikesh.

·      1-20 June hide away to catch up on work, mails and writings.

·      24-30 June AHYMSIN European Retreat, Florence, Italy. 

Contact : Christina Nobile  cnobilec@...

·      2-8 July AHYMSIN programmes, Budapest, Hungary. 

Contact : Papp József   p.jozsi@...

·      12-18 July Toronto, Canada.

Contact : Chander Khanna   ckhanna1@...

·      22-23 July (? Yoga Alliance) conference in Washington DC

·      24 July – 17 August, Meditation Center, Minneapolis

-       26 July, Guru Purnima

-       For full programmes in Minneapolis please visit   

             www.themeditationcenter.org

·      18-23 August, Chicago

·      24 Aug – 29 Sep Hide away to catch up on health, work, mails   

and writings.

·      1st – 8th Oct Rancho la Puerta, Mexico.  Contact:  Dr. Mehrad

Nazari  drnazari@...,  www.rancholapuerta.com

·      10th Oct Washington to be finalized re gathering on Washington  

Mall organized by Powerofone 101010. 

·      15 Oct onwards, in Residence at Sadhaka Grama Ashram.

 
 
 
 




#1077 From: John Zavrel <zavrel@...>
Date: Thu Aug 27, 2009 5:38 pm
Subject: SWAMI VEDA 2009-2010 TRAVELS
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Dear friends,


attached are Swami Veda's travel plans for 2009-2010.


in service,
John Zavrel






1 of 1 File(s)


#1076 From: John Zavrel <zavrel@...>
Date: Tue Aug 25, 2009 12:50 pm
Subject: ON SILENCE
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On Silence

Swami Veda Bharati
 

There is a principle about all your angers and emotions and sadnesses and depressions. I'd like you to remember that principle. That it's seldom about the object present. You think you are being angry with your husband, or with your teacher at school, or with a professor, or with your boss, or an employee, or a friend, the daughter, son, daughter-in-law, mother-in-law.

That's not true. The anger is not about that immediate person. The anger is not about that immediate situation. Anger is. That's all. In you, a conflict, in the mind, something you have not been able to resolve, from your childhood, from your youth, from the person you have been in love with who betrayed you, or with whom things did not quite work out, and unsatisfied cravings, unsatisfied desires, have remained there lodged in you. And wherever they find a hook, they jump out and they catch the object in the hook, because you are very dependent on the person you're angry with.

Anger is the worst dependence, as aversion is the worst attachment. Anger is the worst dependence and aversion is the worst attachment.

Things you're averse to, persons you're averse to, that's who you are thinking of all the time. You are not thinking of persons you love, you are thinking of the people you're averse to.

A woman comes to me, says, "Swamiji, oh my husband is so unreasonable. He says: whole day at the office, he is cursing me in his mind."

I say, "You lucky woman. He's thinking of you whole day."

And that's not meant to be a joke. You're thinking of the person whole day. It's your choice whether you want to think right, or you want to think wrong; you want to think lovingly or you want to think hatefully, but you can't stop thinking of the person, so very attached to that person. And the same thing is with your anger, sign of dependence. You're dependent on that person and you resent that dependency in you. Inside you, you're resenting that dependence.And that's where your anger is.

There are many other areas. There are some beautiful books about anger. I always recommend Marcus Aurelius, the Emperor. His "Meditations" is a very nice essay. There is one by the Dalai Lama. In the one by the Dalai Lama there is not one word on anger but the title is On Anger [ed. note: Healing Anger]. The title of the book is On Anger; there's not one word about anger. It is his translation and paraphrase of an eighth century Buddhist text, "Bodhicaryavatara", "The Way of One Who is Walking on the Path to Enlightenment," by a great Buddhist saint named, Santideva. My favorite story about Santideva is that--you know the Buddhist concept of shunya, null? It's not as simple as it's made out to be. Similarly when the Christian theologist speaks about being [ex nihilo?], out of nil, it's not quite as simple as that. In the vast texts in the Buddhist philosophy explaining that concept of original nihil--but I'll not go into that right now. For that you have to come to my Gurukulam and study for three to five years and then you'll begin to understand, who ever wants to come. So, the word shunya here, sign of zero, comes from that. So he was teaching his disciples the meaning of shunya, the meaning of null, the meaning of void, and after the discourse he said, "I will now demonstrate."

Sitting there right from in front of the disciples' eyes, he disappeared. There are two beautiful inspiring works by him, eightht century AD, Santideva, and one is Bodhicaryavatara, the descent, descent, into the person, of the way of enlightenment. In the sixth chapter of it, Dalai Lama has done a beautiful paraphrase and explanation of it and he's titled it as On Anger.

And he hasn't said a word about anger. He put a word or two here and there. Because it is not what it appears to be.

There is also a book on anger by Thich Nhat Hanh. These three you should read.

So, in these silence retreats, a lot of your unresolved emotions come up because they don't have the outlet, the expression, you have all the time. So we don't normally recommend long silence retreats for people who are naturally emotional. It doesn't work out for them. They begin to cry and they begin to jump, and they want to pick up and pack up and go away, or keep boiling inside, or what have you. If you see any signs of this in yourself, or if you see any signs of this in someone around you, bring it to our attention, because either we will force them to break the silence, or we know how to handle it, okay? Especially for those who have never done deep meditation practice, or who have never done deep silence before.

I've said enough about silence and it's healing and rejuvenating power. But if you are practicing silence for 10 days or 5 days--by the way next year's dates are between June 16-30, 2004. There's a 10-day and there's a 5-day, and better to just get it registered now so we don't have to waste postage, you know. Just look up in your calendar and organize your year accordingly.

So, this five days or ten days is for letting it seep through into our personality. So that you begin to enjoy it. When I take a few days silence I begin to feel as if I will never, ever, ever again want to speak but I don't have the luxury you have. I have to take care of the people. I've known Swamis who have not spoken a word for twenty-five years. There are, in the Western traditions, the Trappist monks, the Carmelites, the monks on the Mount Athos. You know the rules of Saint Benedict? When I read them, to me they read like paraphrases of the vows both the Swamis and the Buddhist monks take. You know our monastic orders go back 4000 years.

Buddhist orders go back 26 centuries. Rules of confession and all of that, they are common traditions. So also the practice of silence. Ten days is not anything. Forty days should be the practice. How many would like to take forty days? Wonderful. All right! That forty days I recommend at the Rishikesh ashram. In the right setting. I am proud. And I'm sure they'll be others.

This forty days is a strange tradition. Forty days: Jesus on the mountain. In the case of the Buddha, it's forty-nine days under the Bodhi tree in enlightenment. And I've talked to people from [Dyak?] and [Cortecon?] traditions of Borneo, their teachers, their spiritual leaders in their so called tribal traditions. You know what is a tribal tradition? If you can speak English, you're a nation. If you don't speak English, you're tribal.

It's like religion and myth. You know the difference between religion and myth? What I believe in is religion. What you believe in is a myth.

And so that's how it is between the nations and the tribes. If you speak French, you are a king; if you don't speak French, you are a tribal chief. And they are conditioned to thinking in those terms. So since the [Dyak? and the Cotecon? ] and the others did not speak English they are tribal people. I've spoken to their wise men, because I go to Borneo every year. We have a center in [?].

I say "What do you do?"

And they say "Oh we just go out into the forest. We eat fruits and berries and sleep under the trees for forty days."

"Forty days, hum."

The great masters of music in India, some of those you hear in these countries sometimes, they work under their masters and you may not know, they don't have music degrees from some academy, certificates hanging on the walls. They work under masters. As individuals in a Gurukulam, in the guru's family. The master feeds them. The master's wife takes care of them. And they study and they practice and then some of them have gone through what is known as a forty day [chilla?]. When for forty days, the music disciple is to do nothing but keep singing, non-stop, even if he has to hum. He may dose off, but he is not allowed to sleep.

Then you create a master.

I was living in New Delhi. New Delhi has expanded widely, from the time I was a child to now, and has taken over the villages. So some pockets of the village culture remain in the middle of that, you know. You people go to Delhi and you see all this smoke, and noise, and unruly traffic and everything. But many people do not know that it's also a holy city. And there are people who know it; they even do holy circumambulation of its sites. And any point--noisy, and smoky, and auto-fume-filled point in Delhi, from any point--I can take you to within five minutes, I can take you to a place of absolute stillness, quietude and sanctity. I wish I could just have you come for a tour of Delhi with me. Right in the middle of all that confusion and you won't know you are in a capital of a country of one billion people.

So, I was living in Delhi for some time. The water supply is very short. Sometimes the water just doesn't flow, you know, in those countries. The amount of water you people waste here! I can't. I never open the tap full, just enough, you know. So some mornings there is no water in the pipes. We used to have these village wells. You know, village wells like you used to have in Europe? Sometimes these wells used to be in the houses. They are still there in old Delhi, in the mansions, old mansions. And the beauty of those wells is its water is warm in winter and cool in summer.

So I said, "In this area we were living, in this old area, there used to be villages. There aught to be some wells."

I drove around some old wells. They had all become garbage dumps. And I said, "This can't be."

Fortunately in a country like India, anything works if it is sacred; nothing works if it is secular. (For forty days of Kumba Mela, if you have seen the video, seventy-million people in a space ten miles by ten miles. Up to twenty million taking a dip, holy dip, everyone in prayer and song.

Immaculately organized. Hygiene, hospitals, clinics, even internet, five thousand ashrams were represented.)

So I said, "There has to be some place."

So one person told me there is one holy place near here, just five minutes drive from where I'm living. Of course in Delhi, that's very natural. Five minutes drive from anywhere there's one holy place. Went in to it--simply a patch of forest. Forest of some thorny trees, about one acre, preserved, because it's sacred, nobody can cut those trees down for fuel or anything. Just behind the Old Fort that was demolished in the tenth century, just behind that. And the [?], the [gaa's?] are graves of Muslim saints. But all the Hindus, Jains, Buddhists, everybody goes to seek blessing in these holy places. There's no distinction. And I told the [gaa] of a disciple of Baba [? Fahrid?] a twelfth century great Sufi saint. It has a cave, a cave in Delhi, a meditation cave. You don't need to climb Himalayas. And you go into that cave. I have a habit, if I go to a Buddhist place, I behave as a Buddhist. If I go to a Christian place, I am a Christian.

I go to a Muslim place, I am Muslim. So I went in, and I did the [sista] the way you go in bowing in prayer, in that tradition, in the [vudharashina?]. I tell you, my forehead touches the ground in the cave the spot where the great Sufi used to sit, mystic energy flows into you. There are places like that. I had the same experience at the grave of Saint Francis of Assisi. And there are other places like that, on the earth. There are pockets of special, special power. And here was the village; there was the well. So I used to go there and bathe. You know you just have a system, you just have two poles with a little bar and a wheel and the rope goes over the wheel and the bucket is tied to it. You throw the bucket down, and you fill it up, and you pull it up, and you pour the water over yourself. There is nothing more refreshing in the open air.

And Baba [Fahrid?] the great Sufi, had done this forty day [chilla?] that's a Muslim Sufi tradition, of prayer, nonstop prayer hanging upside-down in that well. So it was not a well, it was a monastic cell. Forty days and nights. So, there is a forty-day tradition, many places all completely culturally, historically unconnected places. Forty days of Lent, forty days from [?] to Holi, the sacred periods in India.

So these days are baby stuff. Waiting for you to get ambitious. Come to the Rishikesh ashram and do a forty days. You'll see all your accumulations oozing out.

"The place is too cold; the food is horrible; the Swami doesn't pay enough attention."

I just sit there. That's the whole tradition. I sit there watch the process the person goes through; then subsides, calms down.

Then another assimilation occurs. You know, depends on what your grounding is, you know when the desert fathers went out in the desert, they had visions of Satan and the demons tempting, and testing, and frightening. The Buddha, in his last moments before enlightenment, had all the fairies and all the furies. Depends on what pictures and what visions have been filled in your heart and mind. You know that is the thing that religious people who report near death experiences, returning from dying or whatever. The Christians have seen the St. Paul or St. Peter or Jesus; the Buddhists have seen the Buddha; the Muslims have seen the Angel Gabriel [Gibral?]; and Hindus have seen Krishna and Brahma, or their own Guru.

So your visions and fantasies all come from what is stored in you. They're not coming from outside somewhere. You are the storehouse of consciousness. And you're linked to the universal mind and you pick out whatever is the image you're conditioned to picking out. And in period of Silence you go through these purges of emotions. And then below that, underneath that, there is utmost serenity, a stream, and you have to learn to go and deep, deep, deep dive into that stream. And you will come out of that, and your worldview will have changed.

Unfortunately, when you will come back into this society, your family, and your friends, and your professional colleges, they will think something abnormal has happened to you. They will take you to a psychiatrist. When my guru, Gurudeva Swami Rama put me in a cave in Gangotri for a forty days' practice, those caves are, you know when you're isolated and all the feed you receive from your world.--Now those places are gone, actually. To find real mystic caves in the Himalayas you have to really search.

Tell you a story: One day I was sitting meditating and I feel a throb here. I say ah, now my seventh chakra is opening. It's going to burst open! Just now, my skull is going to part. When I look at myself and I say hum, no, it's something coming from somewhere outside. So I opened my eyes, broke my meditation. I felt--you know these caves are all pure rock. There's hollows in the rock. Its dry inside, you can stay in the winter, the meditation caves of the yogis.

(You know these caves that the Taliban occupied? Where they demolished the world's largest Buddha [the Bamyan Buddhas in the Bamyan Valley], the huge old complex that they used?

They were actually built by the Buddhist monks. They were monastic cells, vast networks and many of them were Greek Buddhist monks. People don't know, the Taliban, the Buddha that they destroyed, was built by the Greeks. It's a whole different history. So, these cave cells are a very ancient tradition for meditation because they are dry, completely insulated and isolated.)

It's pure rock, so I thought somebody was hammering the rock over the roof of the cave--the huge rock, hammering from there, and I was getting the echo. I came out . . . there was nothing there! It was an echo from across the Ganga River where they were doing road building. I thought my seventh chakra was opening, courtesy of the roadways department of the government of India! And when I left that cave forty days later and came down to the plains. I was a householder, married person. My guru, Swami Rama, would call Mrs. Arya and Angiras would joke, "Now let me introduce you to these people, this is my daughter, Lalita, and this is your son, Angiras. Your whole world changes. And all the transient and the temporary, just vanishes. But you have to know what to do in those forty days, and teacher has to know when you're reaching a break-down point and says, "No more."

"Oh no, I'm not! I came here for forty days. I cancelled my programs! I took leave! Why are you breaking my silence?!"

You assimilate that silence. And walking, talking, eating--and if I may tell you, if you are a householder and married person, even while making love--your interior silence remains and makes you more efficient in whatever you do. It makes you steadier in whatever you do. It digs into subtleties of whatever you do. It helps you go into perfection of whatever you do. And the world's actions do not evoke a reaction from you. As the text says: "As all the rivers flowing are absorbed into the ocean, so is the mind of a yogin, that all the world may pour it's troubles into you, and the ocean remains the same." And you walk like that deep vast ocean, both of knowledge, and of love.

I want to see in my teachers that love pouring out of the voice when you teach meditation. If you teach only a technique, it is no meditation. No, only if the grace flows through you then it is meditation. Otherwise what, somebody should write the book on--you know there are all kind of how-to books? Somebody should write a book titled, "How to Smile". If you want to ensure that all the smiles should vanish from the face of the earth, write a book called How to Smile. And "How to Meditate". How! There is something that natural in you: it's your own inner self. Just taking a dip in there, remaining there. Even while you carry out your communications even more effectively, more lovingly. So, silence of meditation, silence of isolation, silence of the monastic cell, silence of the ashram, that is one aspect, but silence maintained through daily, effect and loving communication that is your personal secret.

I take two kinds of sleep. In one sleep I'm completely unaware. [Yomitro?], my Japanese disciple who was traveling with me. She was in Rishikesh and I have this thing I always need my foot massage every day. It's necessary for me. So somebody comes at eight o'clock in the morning. I'm sleeping and I wake and I have my foot massage. And sometimes I'm so deeply asleep I'll wake up later on.

I say "How come you didn't do my foot massage?"

"I did it!"

I feel my foot after waking up sometimes, if there is a trace of oil on it. I sleep that deeply. And one day she says, "Swamiji I couldn't because your ankle was crossed over like that, and I needed to lift our foot. And I couldn't lift your foot! It was so heavy, that I couldn't lift your foot."

You know? Just so relaxed.

Then my other kind of sleep, is sleeping: this level of the mind is sleeping, this level of the mind is meditating. I never come out of sleep without going through that phase. Because it is such a busy life, fifty e-mails a day. And write articles, and travel and think of my travel and financing the affairs of two ashrams, and communication and everything. I have time to meditate while I am sleeping. I've had to perfect that art; otherwise what would I teach you?

I've had to learn the art of mediating while talking to you. Do you not feel it? Because the lesser part, the surface part of the mind, speaks and it depends entirely on what depth I want to speak.

[Swami's voice lowers and becomes more resonant] And now, I go a little deeper and meditate with a little deeper layer of the mind and I speak from there.

[Swami's voice rises] I come up a little bit more, to a shallower surface, and I speak to you this way. The mind has depths, within depths, within depths. Till it reaches infinity, and you have to learn to link with that infinity.

So silencing your senses, not just your mouth. Replacing your disturbances with that interior silence. Remaining attuned with that interior presence: while working in your office, while working on your computer. In old days, when there were no computers and I wanted test whether one of my disciples, students, was making spiritual progress or not, I'd ask them take me for a drive.

Just so, "Come on. I'll let you take me for a drive."

"Okay."

Then we would go drive. I would watch how person changes gears. Then I would know whether you are making progress or not, that you are making spiritual progress or not. You're grinding the gears of life. And it shows. Now I put them on my computer, this carpal syndrome and god knows what and pains here and pains there because you have to work so much . . . .

It's because you people don't type with fingers, you type with shoulders. Why do you type with shoulders, like it's a nineteenth century typewriter? It's not. Even the term in the language, "Hit the key." Why hit the key? Just touch the key. Just touch the key--it will work. You don't need to hit the key. Poor key what has it done to you, you have to hit it? And that's where I see whether silence is working or not working. If you hit the key, first you cause pain to all your systems, and then a symptom, you hit other people with your words. You don't communicate.

You hit other people with your words, with your tones, with your sounds. You don't look, you throw/stare stones. Change all of that, then you have silence.

So learning to keep that silent stream flowing while operating in the world is the art of living skillfully. And you'll find that the world resists you the less. The world will not place so many obstacles in your way. The life will become easy flowing. Whatever you would suggest, people will say yes. It would not occur to them to say no to you.

"Sitting here, saying all these things, we have to operate in the world out there." And, "It's such an aggressive world, and so on, and so on, we can't survive without this and that and all the rest."

If something has been mismanaged by my bank, some check, something, this thing, that thing, I call the bank. I ask the receptionist, [softly] "Can I speak to the manager please?"

"Can I help you?"

"No, I'd like to speak to the manager, it's something important."

I don't say, [shouts] "Can I speak to the manager!"

You've already evoked a no response. You've already invoked a no response.

[Curtly,] "No, sorry, he's very busy! Why don't you send him an e-mail?"

"Look, those people at the bank don't even want to talk to the customer. I think I'm going to change my account."

Because you didn't know how to evoke the yes response.

They pick up the phone, "May I help you?"

[Very low and softly,] "Sir, I'm calling in a very angry and loud voice to protest over something." I speak like that ... and I get what I want.

And you don't get it because inside you, you have resistance. Did not Jesus say, "Resist ye not evil."? And the four Brahmaviharas, the four "frolics in God" in the Yoga Sutras, the last one, Upeksha, indifference to evil. So don't come to silence just to take a holiday from the turmoils of the world, but to assimilate, go out and let it do your work for you. And your silence will do your work for you. I assure you of that. Not if it is merely a silence of speech and words. But if it shows in your person, in your voice, in your presence, okay? Always be aware of that place within you. Walk from there. Talk from there.

I don't sing: "He walks with me. He talks with me. He tells me I am his very own."

I say: "He walks in me. He talks in me. And He tells me I am your very own." Then the joys you share as you tarry there, none other has ever known. It's available. It's not far.

So silence during speech. An interior silence in the middle of a feast. So you don't get yourself sick or extra fat from that extra piece of the pie. Interior silence. A feeling of fullness, mental, spiritual fullness will not make you to fill your mental emptiness by filling a cavity in the body. If you have an interior fullness, then you will not use exterior objects to feel a sense of fullness by filling a cavity of your body with extra pieces of the pie. Otherwise you can take all kinds of operations, and you can pop all kinds of pills, and you can go on all the different kinds of diets, and you can lose ten pounds a week. Six months later you've got twenty more, because the mental emptiness was not filled by any of those diets. No? Very simple thing. You've heard it all before. And I repeat that. I remind you, that's all. The saints have said it. The sages have said it much better. The prophets have spoken of it, written of it, sung of it. A friend's duty is just to remind a friend. That's all. I keep reminding you.

We've talked of contemplative walking. I hope you've had a chance to read through the booklet. I recently walked the labyrinth in the Cathedral of Chartres in France. I was there in the end of May. The labyrinth is drawn on the floor of the cathedral hall. I don't remember the exact dimensions. It is twenty meters at the most, maybe less. And I saw people going in there walking around in five minutes, ten minutes. It took me one hour and forty minutes. And because of my certain physical condition I cannot do more. So I did not walk back the same trace, otherwise it would be three and a half hours to complete that. That's why I am not agreeing to walk with people and what you have planned, because we are having something at the Grace Cathedral in San Francisco, the courtesy of Amy and John and other friends and they have a replica of the Chartres labyrinth. I don't have the physical energy to take the full three and a half hours that it would take to walk the labyrinth my way.

What we have written in the booklet is for your daily walks and so on. The monastic, contemplative walk is not quite that way. The monastic, contemplative walk has its own special technique. First of all: interior silence. Interior silence. Along with that, naturally relaxed musculature. One reason you people suffer so much is because part of your body, the part of your organs, limbs, your nervous system, your neuro-musculature, your sensory and motor nerves, your left and the right hemisphere of the brain you tire it unnecessarily by using those parts which are not necessary to use for a given task. As I said, you type with your shoulders instead of with your fingers. I don't type with my shoulders; I just type with my fingertips. Just that, just touch, let your fingers do the tensing. So my shoulders are not tired. I sit on the computer all night. Most days I lie down for a few hours of rest in the morning, 8:00, 9:00, because so much work to do. As people know. So I have to conserve every ounce of my energy and not waste it, in tension. When you people walk the forehead is walking, the shoulders are walking, the stomach is walking, the foot is going this way, the eyes are going that way. There is no coordination in your neuro-musculature, in your senses, in your experience of being. That's not walking, I don't know what it is. It is some making erratic graphs with your mind. What do the scriptures do?

"I have no peace of mind, Swami. Do something for me."

I have a magic wand? Nobody has a magic wand. No.

Some of these labyrinths, and so on, were made so that the monks could take their walks in their monastic cells. In a small space they could take, one, two, three miles walk. For a contemplative walk in a sacred sense, you can do circumambulation of a church, sacred spot, temples in India. Nobody in India went into a temple without doing the [pricrama?] doing the holy circumambulation once, twice, three times. Some of those temple campuses, the walls are several miles, you know, and people do first circumambulation and then the second wall around and then the third. How many walls are there? Seven [pricramas?] And so on. But if you are practicing silence in a monastary what do you do? We have a tradition along with silence, in our tradition, monastic tradition, we call it [stalsanyasa?]. Heard of [stalsanyasa?]. [Stalsanyasa] is when you say to yourself, "Okay, I will not leave my ashram for three years."

Or, "I will not leave my monastic cell for three years."

The very first retreat in the Tibetan Buddhist tradition--you don't reach that state for quite a while, first you have to prepare. When they first initiate you, in the old Tibetan monasteries, you have to do 125,000 prostrations, with your mantra. (I've seen people do it in temples in Korea. The poor people, there is no one to guide them so they are "hah-ah," huffing and puffing. I sometimes wish I could just stay there and tell them how to do it.) 125,000 prostrations to the divinity, with the recitation, mental recitation, of the prayer.

Total purification after that. And after they have gone through that, they are given the first retreat. You're given a box, in which you cannot stretch out fully. You don't sleep for the sake of laziness. You sleep slightly curled. And for three years, three months, three days, three hours and perhaps, three something, the minute is not their count; you stay there, except for toiletry. Remain. The whole world is forgotten, and you are totally interiorized. When I go stay in places, like here and the last retreat in Koinonia, you all will see, I am not in the position to take that type of [stalsanyasa?].

People sometimes ask me, "Swami, where do you live?"

I say, "Look out from here, thirty-five thousand feet straight up, there's a place called aeroplane. That's my ashram!" [laughter]

So I cannot take that [stalsanyasa?] which I would very much like to. But those who come to the ashram they know I seldom, from my seat, ever walk down to the ashram gate, no desire.

Whatever is to happen, happens by itself. If I have steadiness and balance everything around just goes on right, just happens. I don't ever run around the whole ground, no. I don't. And when I come to a hotel, or a retreat place, or somebody's house you know they spread a little two, three blankets on the floor, a wooden board behind to support my back because my back is not in a good position, all my books are on the floor along side me. If I don't have those low tables I am used to in my ashram, I pull out one of the chest of drawers and turn it over. And I use it for my computer table and my dining table. And you will see me there twenty-four hours.

I leave my seat just to come here. I eat on that seat. I sleep there. I meditate there. I study there. I do my computer work there. I meet people there. I don't move. No inclination. So I practice my [stalasinyasa?] in this way. So external conditions are no excuse, if you have the inclination. It's only your restlessness, which makes you accuse the external conditions and other people. I'm telling you, believe me: it's only your restlessness. Your lack of inner calm, makes you restless, makes your voice restless, makes your body restless. Practice of silence gives you an interior restfulness.

So the monastic walking technique is very different. Okay? Remember your deity, your prayer, your mantra, your guide. Your spine in the same position in which it is when you are meditating. Stand with your spine in that position. Your shoulders relaxed. Your facial muscles relaxed. You have no anxiety, no fear, no resistance.

Then your walk begins. Your hands can be in this position, the meditation position. They can be at your side. If you are really on a more difficult pilgrimage, you might want to keep it that way. For a certain part of the walk you might want to do it that way. But I find, personally, this position with relaxed shoulders, with right hand holding the left hand and the thumbs joined, relaxed, not tight. This time, for Guru Purnima, I send everybody a gift, just a picture of my hand. Everybody keeps asking for a picture of me, so I send them a picture of my hand. Hand in meditation. And make sure that you've relaxed all parts. Your feet are parallel only the parts of your mind, your motor nerves, your musculature, your skeleton, that are necessary for walking are to be used. Please remember that formula, the rest should be in a state of interior stillness.

When you're assured that your breath is flowing gently slowly and smoothly,

Lift your heal of the right foot, your prayer is going on, and you place the toes right in front of the other foot, toes first,

Then put the heal down, kind of swivel from the waist, you can see from the waist here and you lift the heal, and while doing so, remember your prayer and remember your breathing, and remember your mantra, your prayer word.

Again the toes down, your heals you balance on both feet, kind of lift yourself from the waist up again this way.

Watch your mind, how it is walking.

 

Maintain your prayer.

At each step make sure that you have not picked up tension, that your mind has not wandered off.

Now your eye, there are two ways, actually, three ways:

A fixed gaze, on the horizon. If you're balanced, you will not slip and fall. Just there, your eyes fixed straight, and you walk, and you keep your prayer.

The other way, you keep your eyes, let us say, about one yard from you on the ground, and you keep it there all the way through, so you are not being distracted. Your mind is concentrated.

 

The other is keeping the eye on the hand. See? When you are very, very interiorized keep it that way, okay?

Each step is contemplative. It is awareness. Okay.

 

When I do the walk, I stop. I don't just put my foot down and lift the other foot. I stop for a second. Relax, meditate, breath, just for a second, and so on. So it's not a walk like this. It's a walk like this, one foot in front of the other, spine straight. Decide whether your gaze is to be at the horizon or one yard from you on the ground, or on your hand. Okay? Your prayer, your mantra. Body relaxed, total awareness of being, breath flowing smoothly, gently slowly. After awhile it will become enjoyable. It will not be a strain. It will not be an effort. It will be the most relaxing thing you do through the day. But at each step, stop for a second to recoup, to relax, to remember. Each step, you've taken this step: always put the toes down, then put the heals, then lift the heal from the other foot, hold, relax, remember your prayer, slide the foot, slide the foot forward, see? Slide the foot forward. Toes down, balance, hold for a second, relax, meditate, watch your breath lift the heal, then lift the toe, then put the toe down, then the heal down, balance, hold.

 

Try it. Try it in your room, as though it were your monastic cell. And walk for fifteen minutes in your room. In the limited spaces, where people live in very, very crowded conditions in Asia, all over India, we have flat roofs. There are no parks. There are no green spaces. What is the density in those places? How many thousand people per square mile? Hot. People go to the roof in the evening and they walk around, a whole family walks. Single file. Whole family walks single file, on the rooftop. That is the only resource they have for some fresh air.

So remember these steps, from now until the rest of the retreat. Practice this contemplative walking, even when you walk to the dining room. Try it, for a part of the way. For an evening walk, try it part of the way. Walk fifteen minutes in your room, to and fro. But follow the steps that I've given for each step:

 

Straight spine.

Relaxed shoulders, and body, and face.

Awareness of your prayer and mantra.

Fixing the gaze.

Lifting the heal of one foot, and putting the toe of that foot down.

Balancing on the two feet in that position.

And during that time remembering to relax, becoming aware of yourself again.

In one second, remembering your prayer.

Lifting the heal of your back foot.

Sliding the foot forward.

Placing the toes.

Then placing the heals.

There are twelve steps in each step. Keep a book titled: "How to Do Contemplative Walking". Keep your notes. If you don't want to do contemplative walking, read your notes on how to do contemplative walking. Share recipe.

 

All this how-to about mystical experiences, and how to open your chakras. And how to go into silence. I don't know why it has not occurred to anybody to do research on smile. How many centimeters to the left and to the right; how many micro-inches open; how much of the tooth showing for what social effect, no? What happens when your smile is only one eighth of an inch wide; what kind of hormones are flowing; what level of endorphins are being released.

You can have wonderful charts and several Ph.D. theses. You will be an expert on smile. Only you will have forgotten how to smile. No? That is what we have nowadays on How to Be a Mystic. Okay? I don't know which school the infant, the baby, the fetus went to learn: How to Smile Effectively at Your Mother. Okay. Enough.

 

When you go home. . . . Okay, let me put it this way: I've observed this with very keen perception. Everybody has a kind of a ground-level, baseline emotion. I've been saying it for a long time, now it's been proved, by measuring the activity of different parts of the cortex and so on. And wherever people are, they use that as a baseline to see whether there is a change in their emotional make-up through the practice of meditation, or breathing, or relaxation, or what have you. There are a lot of studies. I have a list, a bibliography, of about 2500 articles in medical and scientific journals on meditation. If I had some kind of a research grant, I could sift them and really summarize them in some sequence.

 

So everybody carries some kind of baseline emotion through life. It changes. It may change from year to year, but it becomes your baseline emotion, a kind of baseline in which you remain, constantly. You're not aware of it, the level of your anger, or the level of your assimilated sadness. The level of your interior joy, a mixture of all of these--without showing it in a graph--is there, as a baseline. You may call that the zero point. And then, the graph rises or falls. Now anger, now joy, now happiness, now unhappiness, now sadness, now depression, now insecurity, now fear. It all arises from that baseline. And what you have to learn to do is change that baseline. So that your basic, mental frame changes.

 

And when your interior silence becomes your baseline, you speak from there--you'll come back to that. You'll play from there--you'll come back to that. You'll smile from there--you'll come back to that. You may guffaw from there--come back to that. You'll walk from there--you'll came back to that. See. It's a sort of monitor, your over-eating, your over-reacting, and what have you. Next thing that will come to you is that you will become a perceptive observer.

You know I have never red a book on psychology in my life, and I see psychological problems and I diagnose them and a psychologist said, "How do you know that? This is how we do it actually in the clinical set-ups."

I am a keen observer of mind, first my own mind. That's the book you need to read. You want to study psychology? Read the book titled, Your Mind. Everyone wants to be a mind reader but they can't read their own minds.

 

My favorite joke is that I knew one expert on gastric diseases. Knew everything about stomach and digestion and colon and food and all the digestive juices, you know, world famous expert.

He had a belly about this large. For all his expertise, he never knew, in his own mind, when his stomach was full. He hadn't read his own stomach. He read all the books. So be a mind reader. Read your own mind. Watch its vagaries, its movements, how it shifts ground, what it does, what effects it brings, first in your body, then in your surroundings, then in the persons you are communication with.

 

What I do when I am sitting and talking with someone:

First of all when someone walks in I say, "Hum, you're very upset, angry, frustrated, troubled, all right."

I make sure to calm him. My professional instrument is something always by my side and that is a box of tissues. People have no one to cry to, so I make sure within five minutes of coming, sitting with me, they cry. Because they feel the love, they feel the compassion they've never had before, they start crying. So there is my box of tissues. Here . . . I wipe their tears with my own hand, somewhere in my course on Counselor and Therapist Training Program I said, "Counselor, do not counsel; console."

So then I see, talking to someone, sometimes this shadow passes over people's faces, as they are communicating. I've become a very keen observer of those shadows that pass over people's faces. If you're dwelling in your interior silence, your mind does not create the noise that befogs your vision. If you're in interior silence, your mind does not create the noises that befog your perceptive vision. Most married people have never looked at their wives and their husbands, I'm telling you. Thirty-five years married, forty years married!

"Swami, we are having a Fiftieth Anniversary of our wedding!"

How very nice. But they have never learned to look at each other's face and that is where all the friction comes from. That's where all the friction comes from.

A person comes, I watch the shadow passing over the face, and I normally always have a yes response to whatever I'm saying. When I see a shadow, and I see the person is, in the mind, resisting a bit, you want to say no. What do I do? I check. I scan my last sentence. Where did I fail? What was my tone? What was the emotional feeling in my mind, at that time? And I change it. Then the negative shadow disappears. The person goes away happy. You can do that with your boss. You can do that with your employee. You can do that with your manager.

You can do that with everywhere. Be a person who has learned to call evoke a "yes" response.

 

You know, in the lectures of mine, I keep saying the same thing, because people don't learn. They hear.

"Yeah, what a nice lecture."

What good is a nice lecture? If it didn't help you, if you didn't help yourself to it, it was of no use.

 

Copyright 2003 Swami Veda


#1075 From: John Zavrel <zavrel@...>
Date: Sat Aug 15, 2009 10:55 am
Subject: PROMETHEUS - AUGUST 2009 ISSUE
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PROMETHEUS
Internet Bulletin - News, Politics, Art and Science


Number 146 ............................................................................................................................. August 2009

 


The Himalayan sage Swami Veda lectured on the subject of Yoga Nidra (yogic sleep) in St. Paul, MN in July, 2009. For our article, see Yoga Nidra Seminar ...




THIS WEEK'S NEW ARTICLES:


Noervenich Castle as Residence for the Alexander Order

B. John Zavrel on his 60th birthday: „…ask, what can you do for your country"

Salvador Dali Exhibition at Anderson Gallery

New Book on Space Visionary Krafft Ehricke

New Mozart Works Discovered 

 
 

BOULEVARD NEWS & EYEWITNESS REPORTS ...

**** Germay before elections: more and more unemployed, by B. John Zavrel

***** B. John Zavrel on his 60th birthday: „…ask, what can you do for your country", by Joe F. Bodenstein

**** Noervenich Castle as Residence for the Alexander Order

**** B. John Zavrel zum 60. Geburtstag: „…frage, was Du für Dein Land tun kannst", von Joe F. Bodenstein

    

NEWS FROM MUSEUM OF EUROPEAN ART ...

Exhibition HOMAGE TO SALVADOR DALI. Reception with artists, September 5

Invitation to visit Alexander Sculpture Garden

INVITATION TO ARTISTS: Fall 2009 Exhibition

 

General information about the MUSEUM OF EUROPEAN ART

Membership Application--ARTISTS' CIRCLE at Museum of European Art

Donations to the ALEXANDER SCULPTURE GARDEN

 



Exhibition HOMAGE TO DALI will open at the Museum of European Art in Clarence, New York on September 5, 2009. For more information, see Exhibition HOMAGE TO SALVADOR DALI ...

Photo Copyright: Susan M. Ludwig Ferry

 

SCULPTURE AND ARCHITECTURE ...

Creation's Song of Songs

Bodenstein Castle: A Place of Art in Europe, by Consul B. John Zavrel

 

FILM AND THEATER ...

 

LITERATURE & POETRY ...

**** New Book on Space Visionary Krafft Ehricke

**** Sadeq Hedayat: Iran's foremost modern writer

"Secret Friendships" illustrated for the first time in USA, by Joe F. Bodenstein

 

 



The Noervenich Castle near Cologne, Germany is the location of the Alexander Dinners 2010. The photo was taken in July, 2009. It shows the central building of the historical complex. The Hall of Knights is connected to it on the right. For our article, see Noervenich Castle as Residence for the Alexander Order ...

Copyright Foto Marco, Ullmann

 

NEWS FROM THE ORDER OF ALEXANDER THE GREAT ...

What is the Order of Alexander the Great?

Alexander Order and Princess Victoria Luise of Prussia

THE ORDER OF ALEXANDER THE GREAT ( selected articles ) 

**** Membership Application - NOVICE MEMBER of Alexander Order

      

MUSIC AND DANCE ...

**** New Mozart Works Discovered 

 



Original artworks by Salvador Dali from the collection of Edmund Klein will be on exhibition at the Anderson Gallery in Buffalo, New York. For our article, see Salvador Dali Exhibition at Anderson Gallery ...

 

PAINTING & PHOTOGRAPHY ...

**** Salvador Dali Exhibition at Anderson Gallery

**** Upcoming Exhibition "Picasso: Peace and Freedom"

 

ART FOR COLLECTORS ...

Books from Museum of European Art

Arno Breker - A Life for the Beautiful, by Thomas Blumann

 


The German space travel scientist Krafft Ehricke. He was one of the German space pioneers who came to the United States with the legendary Wernher von Braun after World War II. This was the beginning of the US space program. For our article, see New Book on Space Visionary Krafft Ehricke ...

 

SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY ...

Mankind's technological tasks for the future, by Hermann Oberth

The inventor Wilson Greatbatch, by B. John Zavrel

A Russian Space Pioneer Chronicles the Life of Oberth

 

ART HISTORY IN FACTS & RARE PHOTOS ...

One element of Arno Breker's art, by Prof. Arcadi Nebolsine

   

HUMAN RIGHTS ...

An ideal world, by Hermann Oberth

Ruth Zucker on assignment for Israel: MY LIFE AS A SPY

Politics: The price of freedom ?, by B. John Zavrel

 


"THE ENLIGHTENED DANTE", woodcut # 67 by Salvador Dalí, for stanza # 33. A surrealistic angel commands this picture, which concludes the Purgatorio. The artist depicts the enlightenment by using the image of both a window and a passageway. The angel is facing the poet (just like the viewer). The poet walks toward us. We see him through the angel, whose intensive, heavenly blue fills most of the rest of the picture. For our article, see Dante and Beatrice in the Earthly Paradise ...

 

SALVADOR DALI & HIS ILLUSTRATIONS TO DANTE'S PURGATORIO ...

Dante, Dalí and the Divine Comedy, by B. John Zavrel

Dante Climbs from Sin to Repentance, by B. John Zavrel (Part 1 of 6) 

Dante's passage through the Needle's Eye, by B. John Zavrel (Part 2 of 6)

Dante and the Whip of Wrath, by B. John Zavrel (Part 3 of 6)

Dante and the Rein of Avarice, by B. John Zavrel (Part 4 of 6)

Dante and the Lustful (Part 5 of 6)

Dante and Beatrice in the Earthly Paradise (Part 6 of 6)

    

SPIRITUALITY AND PHILOSOPHY ...

**** Yoga Nidra Seminar, by Randall Krause

Swami Rama of the Himalayas: Prayer, Meditation & Contemplation (Part 1) ... (video clip)

 

YOGA SCIENCE & PHILOSOPHY ...

Friends of Gurukulam. A selection of articles by and about Swami Veda 

 

ESSAYS ON ART, CULTURE & SOCIETY ...

Creation's Song of Songs, by Arno Breker

  


The Austrian composer Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart. For our article, see New Mozart Works Discovered ...

 

 

  Previous recent issues of the PROMETHEUS Journal:


PROMETHEUS 144 (JUNE, 2009)

PROMETHEUS 143 (MAY, 2009)

PROMETHEUS 142 (APRIL, 2009)

PROMETHEUS 141 (MARCH, 2009)

PROMETHEUS 140 (FEBRUARY, 2009)

PROMETHEUS 139 (JANUARY, 2009)

 

INDEX to all previous issues of PROMETHEUS

 

 

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PROMETHEUS, The Bulletin of Art for: Museum of European Art (USA), Museum Europäische Kunst (Germany), Forum Europa (Germany, Belgium), Order of Alexander the Great (France), Artists for Ecology (United States, Germany), and European Art Foundation (Berlin).

Published for these organizations by: West-Art Publishers, 10545 Main Street, Clarence, New York 14031 (USA). Tel.: 716-759-6078 Fax 716-759-1983. e-mail: zavrel@...

Editor-in-Chief: Joe F. Bodenstein

Publisher: B. John Zavrel

 
 

Copyright 2009 Museum of European Art

PROMETHEUS, Internet Bulletin - News, Politics, Art and Science. Nr. 146, August 2009


#1074 From: John Zavrel <zavrel@...>
Date: Thu Aug 13, 2009 12:13 pm
Subject: REMEMBERING SWAMI HARI FROM TARKESHWAR
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TARKESHWAR TEMPLE
in the Himalayas, India

By B. John Zavrel

 




The ancient TARKESHWAR TEMPLE in the Himalayas, where Swami Rama of the Himalayas attained enlightenment. His birthplace was in the nearby village of TOLI. Swami Hariharananda (Swami Hari) spent seven years in this temple.

 




A close-up view of the temple from the back, surrounded by majestic pine trees. From the top of the mountain, one can see the vast Himalayan range with the highest peaks.

 


 



Swami Rama of the Himalayas (right) initiates Swami Hariharananda into his tradition. Swami Rama arrived with a group of his students the preceeding night, and the next day, on October 23, 1992 performed the initiation.

 

 



A walking distance from the Tarkeshwar Temple is the village of TOLI, the birthplace of Swami Rama. Recently, a Computer School was establised by the initiative and efforts of Swami Hariharananda (Swami Hari) in Toli. In front of the building is the bronze portrait bust of Swami Rama by the European sculptor Kurt Arentz.

 




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