Monday, 8 June 2026

GRS

 Here is the English translation of the Hindi text you provided — clear, faithful, and readable:


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šŸ•‰️ Teaching on Maya (Illusion)


9 May 1996 — Bengaluru Ashram, India

48. Maya


Question: Why do the seer and the wise call the world an illusion?


Answer:

Illusion is simply a misunderstanding. And recognizing illusion as illusion — that is knowledge.


Our experience of the world is based on a perception that is incorrect; therefore, our experience of the world is an illusion.


Every experience leaves an impression that clouds the intellect.

The experiencer alone is the truth.


Seek the experiencer and the seer behind all experiences.


Awaken this very moment. Empty your mind of all past experiences. See that pure Self which is what I am, and what you are.


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Question: How do we distinguish between the experience and the experiencer?


Gurudev:

Are you all really here? Are you all listening?

Now close your eyes and see — who is listening, who is asking the question, who is sitting, and who wants what?

Who is confused?

You may not get an answer to every question.

It’s alright, don’t worry.


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If you want, I can also give you:


• a simplified explanation of the philosophy

• a modern interpretation

• a summary

• or a comparison with Advaita Vedanta or Buddhism



Which direction would you like to explore: simple explanation, modern interpretation, or summary?

Covid 19. Teacher of the year

 Taught us simplicity. Spirituality 

BG 13.24

 Bhagavad Gita Chapter 13, Verse 24 (13.24) is commonly translated as:

“Some perceive the Self within themselves through meditation, others through the path of knowledge, and still others through selfless action (karma yoga).”

A widely used Sanskrit transliteration:

dhyānenātmani paśyanti kecid ātmānam ātmanā
anye sāṅkhyena yogena karma-yogena cāpare

Meaning in context:
Chapter 13 discusses the distinction between the field (kį¹£etra — body/matter) and the knower of the field (kį¹£etrajƱa — consciousness/Self). Verse 13.24 says people realize the Self through different disciplines:

  • Meditation (Dhyāna Yoga) — inward contemplation and direct experience.
  • Knowledge / Analysis (Sāṅkhya or JƱāna Yoga) — discriminating between the eternal Self and changing matter.
  • Selfless action (Karma Yoga) — acting without attachment to outcomes.

The verse emphasizes that there are multiple valid paths to realization, suited to different temperaments.

If you want, I can also give  Åšaį¹…kara’s, Ramanuja’s, or ISKCON’s commentary on 13.24.


Radha. Yogmaya

 Absolutely — and thank you for the clear instruction. No images will be included.


Here is a clean, text‑only, deeply structured explanation of Radha as the Yogamāyā energy of Krishna, drawing from Vaishnava theology, especially Gaudiya Vaishnavism.


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Core Idea: Radha is Krishna’s Yogamāyā-śakti


The concise takeaway:


Radha is understood as Krishna’s own internal spiritual energy (Yogamāyā), the power that reveals Him, enables His divine pastimes, and embodies pure divine love.


This means Radha is not a separate being in the ordinary sense — she is Krishna’s śakti, His potency, appearing in a personal form.


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1. What is Yogamāyā?


Yogamāyā is Krishna’s internal, spiritual energy.

It performs three key functions:


• Reveals Krishna to devotees

• Arranges His divine pastimes (lÄ«lās)

• Protects the spiritual world from material illusion



Yogamāyā is the opposite of Mahāmāyā.


• Mahāmāyā binds souls in material illusion.

• Yogamāyā liberates souls by revealing Krishna.



Radha is identified with this Yogamāyā.


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2. Radha as Hlādinī-śakti (the bliss potency)


Gaudiya Vaishnavism describes Krishna’s internal energy in three aspects:


• SandhinÄ« — existence

• Samvit — knowledge

• HlādinÄ« — bliss, love



Radha is the complete embodiment of Hlādinī-śakti.


This means:


• She is the source of all spiritual love

• She is the power through which Krishna experiences bliss

• She is the energy that awakens devotion in the hearts of devotees



Thus, Radha is not merely a devotee — she is the very essence of divine love.


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3. Why Radha is called Yogamāyā


Radha is called Yogamāyā because:


• She orchestrates Krishna’s pastimes, especially the intimate ones of Vraja

• She controls who can approach Krishna

• She reveals Krishna’s sweetness (mādhurya)

• She binds Krishna with love, something no one else can do

• She is the gateway to Krishna — one cannot reach Him without her grace



In many Vaishnava texts, Krishna Himself says He is controlled by Radha’s love.


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4. Radha and Krishna: Śakti and Śaktimān


The relationship is described as:


• Śaktimān — the possessor of energy (Krishna)

• Śakti — the energy itself (Radha)



They are one reality appearing as two for the sake of divine love.


A classic Gaudiya statement:


“Radha and Krishna are one soul in two forms.”


Radha is Krishna’s energy; Krishna is the energetic source.


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5. Scriptural and theological support


Different traditions express this idea in different ways:


• Nārada PaƱcharātra and Vaishnava commentaries describe Yogamāyā as Krishna’s internal potency.

• Gaudiya Acharyas like Rupa Goswami and Jiva Goswami explicitly identify Radha with Yogamāyā and HlādinÄ«-śakti.

• Bhāgavata Purāṇa describes Yogamāyā arranging Krishna’s birth and pastimes — Gaudiya tradition interprets this as Radha’s energy.



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6. The practical meaning for devotees


Understanding Radha as Yogamāyā means:


• Devotion to Krishna flows through Radha

• Krishna is approached by her mercy

• Her love is the highest spiritual state

• She is the personification of bhakti itself



This is why Gaudiya Vaishnavas chant:


“Jaya Radhe — Radhe Govinda.”


Radha is the doorway to Krishna.


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If you want to go deeper, choose one:


• Radha as HlādinÄ«-śakti in Gaudiya theology

• Difference between Yogamāyā and Mahāmāyā

• How Radha orchestrates Krishna’s Vraja-lÄ«lā



If you prefer, I can also explain this from Advaita, Nimbarka, or Vallabha perspectives.

M2B

 Your answer to that question has the clarity of someone who has lived long enough to see through most of the illusions people cling to. And the core of what you’re saying is simple, sharp, and honestly refreshing:


Life is happening now.

Worrying about its ending ruins the part we actually get to live.


Your perspective carries weight because it’s not theoretical — it’s lived experience. Ninety‑one years of it.


Here’s a distilled, polished version of your message that keeps your tone intact while giving it a bit more structure and resonance:


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A Refined Version of Your Insight


We live the life we have — not the one we imagine, not the one we fear, and certainly not the one we think we’re owed.

Obsessing over when or how it will end only spoils the part we’re standing in right now.


Enjoy the now.


If you want a practical tip: to truly enjoy the present, keep your distance from anything that tries to make you afraid of the future — especially rigid religious dogma. Life isn’t a dress rehearsal. This is the show. This is all we get.


I’ve lived that way for 91 years, and I’ve enjoyed almost every minute of it.


So why do people act as if life will last forever, even though they know it won’t?

Because it’s easier to pretend than to face the truth. But the truth, once accepted, is liberating.


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Why Your Answer Works


• It’s grounded in experience, not philosophy.

• It avoids fear and leans into presence.

• It challenges the assumption that thinking about death makes life meaningful — you argue the opposite.

• It’s honest without being cynical.



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If you’d like, I can help you turn this into a more polished essay, a short quote, or even a response suitable for a public forum.

Mantra Hinam. Kriya Hinam

 Here is the English narrative-style summary of Purushottam Maas Mahatmya – Chapter 21, based on the Hindi text you shared:


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✨ Chapter 21 — Story Summary (Narrative Form)


Valmiki Muni said, “O King, now I shall tell you a sacred and mysterious story of Purushottam Maas, a story that sanctifies the life of anyone who hears it.”


In ancient times, a curious king once asked the sages, “O great sages, what is the true form of worship? What kind of worship truly pleases the Lord?”


Valmiki smiled and replied, “O King, merely installing an idol is not enough. Unless the deity is properly consecrated through prāṇa-pratiṣṭhā, the idol remains nothing more than metal.”


He continued, “When a devotee invokes the Lord’s presence with Vedic mantras and seed mantras, the idol becomes alive with divine presence. Then the Lord Himself resides in it.”


The king, amazed, asked, “What should be done after that?”


Valmiki Muni said, “After consecration, the devotee must meditate on Lord Purushottam—dark-complexioned, marked with the ŚrÄ«vatsa symbol, standing in the graceful tribhaį¹…ga posture, accompanied by ŚrÄ« Rādhā.”


He explained further, “With a pure mind and firm resolve, the devotee should perform the į¹£oįøaśopacāra—the sixteenfold worship. He offers a seat, washes the Lord’s feet, gives arghya, ācamana, bathes the deity with water and paƱcāmį¹›ta, and then offers clothes, sandal paste, flowers, incense, lamp, and food.”


“When the devotee lovingly worships each limb of the Lord while chanting His various names, his heart becomes completely immersed in devotion. Afterward, he performs ārati, circumambulation, and praises the Lord.”


The king humbly asked, “What if mistakes occur during worship?”


Valmiki replied, “Mistakes are natural for humans. Therefore, at the end one should pray, ‘mantra-hÄ«naṁ kriyā-hÄ«naṁ’—‘O Lord, forgive any shortcomings in my mantras or actions.’ The Lord accepts only sincere devotion, for He is hungry for love, not perfection.”


He added, “In Purushottam Maas, the devotee who performs daily oblations with sesame seeds and keeps a continuous ghee lamp burning receives special grace from the Lord.”


Finally, Valmiki Muni said, “O King, one who worships Lord Krishna with faith, discipline, and devotion during this sacred month enjoys all happiness in this world and ultimately attains the supreme abode.”


Hearing this, the king’s heart overflowed with devotion, and he resolved to worship the Lord properly during Purushottam Maas.


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🌼 Essence of the Chapter


• True worship requires prāṇa-pratiṣṭhā, devotion, and purity.

• The Lord accepts love over ritual perfection.

• Worship in Purushottam Maas grants worldly joy and eternal liberation.



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If you want, I can also create a shorter summary, a children’s version, or a poetic retelling.

Sukdev X Parikshit

 Here are 20 key dialogue points between Sukadeva Goswami and Parikshit based on the Srimad Bhagavatam narrative. These points summarize the essence of their seven‑day spiritual conversation.


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20 Dialogue Points (Sukdev × Parikshit)


1. Parikshit asks the ultimate question — “What is the duty of a man about to die?”  blogspot.com

2. Sukdev replies — The highest duty is to hear and chant the glories of the Supreme.  blogspot.com

3. Parikshit seeks liberation — He asks how to attain the supreme destination in seven days.  jkyog.org

4. Sukdev teaches fearlessness — Fear comes from attachment; detachment brings peace.  jkyog.org

5. Parikshit asks about death — How should one face death with equanimity?

6. Sukdev explains time — Everyone has “seven days” because death is always near.  jkyog.org

7. Parikshit asks about meditation — What is the best form of meditation?

8. Sukdev teaches devotion — Bhakti is the most powerful path in limited time.  jkyog.org

9. Parikshit asks about the soul — What is the nature of the self?

10. Sukdev explains cosmic levels — Humans belong to all levels of existence simultaneously.  blogspot.com

11. Parikshit asks about creation — How does the universe originate?

12. Sukdev narrates avatars — He describes the incarnations of Vishnu.

13. Parikshit asks about dharma — What is true righteousness?

14. Sukdev explains karma — Actions bind unless offered to the Supreme.

15. Parikshit asks about suffering — Why do beings suffer?

16. Sukdev teaches detachment — Material life is temporary; cling to the eternal.

17. Parikshit asks about the mind — How to control the restless mind?

18. Sukdev gives the Bhagavata path — Hear, chant, remember God constantly.

19. Parikshit listens silently — He absorbs the teachings without distraction.

20. Sukdev grants liberation — Through hearing Bhagavatam, Parikshit attains liberation at death.



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If you want, I can also create:


• A 20‑dialogue script

• A short drama scene

• A poetic version



Which one would you like next?