When asked about the characteristics of a jnani,
Bhagavan said, “They are described in books, such as the
Bhagavad Gita, but we must bear in mind that the jnani’s
state is one which transcends the mind. It cannot be described
by the mind. Only Silence can correctly describe this state
and its characteristics. Silence is more effective than speech.
From Silence came the ego, from the ego came thought, and
from thought came speech. So if speech is effective, how much
more effective must be its original source!” Then, in this
connection Sri Bhagavan related the following story.
TATTVARAYA COMPOSED A bharani (a kind of poetic
composition in Tamil) in honour of his Guru Swarupananda
and convened an assembly of learned pandits to hear the work
and assess its value. The pandits raised the objection that a bharani
was only composed in honour of great heroes capable of killing a
thousand elephants, and that it was not in order to compose such
a work in honour of an ascetic. Thereupon the author said, “Let
us all go to my guru and we shall have this matter settled there.”
They went to the guru and, after all had taken their seats, the
author told his guru the purpose of their coming there. The guru
sat silent and all the others also remained in mauna. The whole
day passed, night came, and some more days and nights, and yet
all sat there silently, no thought at all occurring to any of them
and nobody asked why they had come there. After three or four
days like this, the guru moved his mind a bit, and thereupon the
assembly regained their thought activity. They then declared,
“Conquering a thousand elephants is nothing compared to the
guru’s power to conquer the rutting elephants of all our egos put
together. So certainly he deserves the bharani in his honour!”
Tuesday, July 10, 2007
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1 comment:
Nice story giving us a valuable lesson. Thanks!
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