“It is no true measure of one’s health to be well-adjusted to a profoundly sick society.” J. Krishnamurti
“An indescribable state is attained by the sage whose mind has melted away and who is free from mind-display, delusion, dream or dullness.” Ashtavakra Gita.
Sometimes a man can meet his destiny on the road he took to avoid it.
Sometimes the hardest thing in life is to know which bridge to cross and which to burn.
To live the best possible life, you must discover and experience your own unshakable truth.You have to do your own inner work: no one else can do it for you.It takes as long as it’s supposed to take: there are no shortcuts to ripeness.
The Buddha saw that life is marked by four qualities: impermanence, suffering, selflessness, peace. Accepting the impermanence and ultimate selflessness of our existence, we will stop suffering and realize peace.
You have to die before the body dies: this is the secret of immortality.
In your journey to the source, you must burn all your sheaths, your forms, your concepts: everything that changes must be offered to the sacrificial flame.
Anchor yourself deeply and permanently in the “I am “, pure Being: stay connected there in waking or dreaming or sleep. This is the eternal center, the unshakable, the true. All else will flow naturally and perfectly from this root.
The deeper you dive, the less there is that you can say about what you discover. Once you become that Silence, there is nothing to say.
Any attempt to describe it with words brings back the mind-world, the very illusion that you struggled so hard to destroy.
In this sweet Silence where the Guru shines in the heart, Being is all there is.
Here in this vast and perfect space of consciousness,there is no body, no mind, no person, no world, no God;
there is only blissful, ecstatic and infinite peace.
“The radiance of consciousness-bliss in the form of one awareness shining equally within and without is the supreme and blissful primal reality whose form is Silence and which is declared by Jnanis to be the final and un-obstructable state of true knowledge.” Ramana Maharishi
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