Monday, 20 April 2026

Dth. CGON x C gone

TTMJ

 Here’s the Bengali bhajan “Tumi To Maribe Jare” (তুমি তো মারিবে যারে), written by Bhaktivinoda Thakur. 


First lines (lyrics):

তুমি তো মারিবে যারে, কে তারে রাখিতে পারে,

ইচ্ছা-বশ ত্রিভুবন।

ব্রহ্মা-আদি দেব-গণ, তব দাস অগণন,

করে তব আজ্ঞার পালন॥ 


This is a devotional Vaishnava song about surrender—meaning: if God decides something, nobody can change it; and if He protects someone, nobody can harm them. 


Want:


  •  full lyrics
  •  translation
  •  similar Bengali bhajans



Tell me.


B. No mind school

 The phrase “no-mind school” usually refers to the Zen idea of “no-mind” — in Japanese Mushin, in Chinese Wúxīn. It’s not that Buddhists believe you literally have no mind; it means a mind not stuck, not clinging, not constantly narrating.



What “no-mind” actually means



In Zen/Chan Buddhism, “no-mind” describes:


  • Acting without overthinking
  • Perceiving without mental commentary
  • Responding spontaneously and clearly
  • No attachment to ego, fear, or desire



Think of it like:


  • When you catch a ball instinctively — no thinking, just action
  • When you’re fully absorbed in music — awareness without self-talk
  • When a skilled artist paints fluidly — no deliberate calculation



That effortless clarity is “no-mind.”



Why it’s called a “school”



The term is often linked to the Zen tradition stemming from Bodhidharma and later teachings attributed to Huineng. Some texts describe their approach as:


  • Direct pointing to the mind
  • No reliance on scriptures
  • Sudden insight
  • “No-thought” / “no-mind” practice



So outsiders sometimes nickname this style “the no-mind school” because its central teaching is empty, non-grasping awareness.



The key misunderstanding



“No-mind” does not mean:


  • blank mind
  • unconsciousness
  • suppression of thoughts



It means:


  • thoughts arise, but you don’t cling to them
  • mind is clear, fluid, open



Zen teachers often compare it to:


  • a mirror reflecting things without holding them
  • water flowing around obstacles
  • sky with clouds passing through



If you want, I can also explain:


  •  how “no-mind” differs from mindfulness
  •  how to practice it
  •  why it’s big in martial arts (samurai, etc.)


Neurobiology of Bhakti

 The neurobiology of bhakti—devotional love toward a deity—looks surprisingly similar to the brain states involved in attachment, love, awe, and meaning. Bhakti isn’t just belief; it’s a bond, and the brain treats it like a relationship with a deeply trusted presence.



1. Attachment system: God as an attachment figure



Bhakti activates the same circuits used for close relationships:


  • Anterior cingulate cortex (ACC) — emotional bonding, trust
  • Insula — felt presence, emotional warmth
  • Ventromedial prefrontal cortex (vmPFC) — safety, reassurance



When someone feels “Krishna is with me” or “I surrender to Shiva,” the brain is using caregiver attachment circuitry. The deity becomes a secure base.


This produces:


  • emotional safety
  • reduced loneliness
  • surrender/letting go
  • trust during uncertainty






2. Dopamine & reward: devotion feels intrinsically rewarding



Chanting, singing, or remembering a deity activates:


  • Ventral tegmental area (VTA)
  • Nucleus accumbens (reward anticipation)
  • Striatum (habit + repetition)



This explains:


  • joy in chanting
  • craving kirtan or prayer
  • bliss during darshan
  • repetitive mantra becoming pleasurable



Bhakti becomes self-reinforcing — the more you engage, the more rewarding it feels.





3. Oxytocin: devotional love resembles interpersonal love



Devotional practices increase oxytocin, the bonding hormone.


Triggered by:


  • singing together (kirtan/bhajan)
  • visualizing deity
  • surrender prayer
  • ritual touch (folded hands, prostration)



Effects:


  • warmth in chest
  • tears during devotion
  • feeling “held”
  • compassion toward others



This is why bhakti often feels tender, not just intense.





4. Awe network: sense of the sacred



Bhakti also activates “awe” processing:


  • Default mode network (DMN) decreases (less self-focus)
  • Parietal cortex quiets (self-boundary softening)
  • Prefrontal cortex shifts to meaning processing



Subjectively:


  • ego softens
  • “I am small” feeling
  • vastness
  • sacred presence



This is the neuroscience behind darshan, deep prayer, or temple experiences.





5. Tears in bhakti (why they happen)



Devotional crying involves:


  • parasympathetic activation (calming)
  • oxytocin release (bonding)
  • limbic discharge (emotion release)



This is different from stress crying. Bhakti tears often feel:


  • warm
  • relieving
  • meaningful
  • peaceful afterward



The brain is combining love + surrender + safety.





6. Mantra repetition and neural entrainment



Repetitive chanting:


  • stabilizes breathing
  • synchronizes neural oscillations
  • reduces amygdala activity
  • increases vagal tone



This produces:


  • calm focus
  • trance-like devotion
  • timeless feeling
  • emotional absorption



Over time, the mantra becomes neurologically linked to peace + presence.





7. Surrender reduces prefrontal overcontrol



Bhakti emphasizes letting go.


Neurally:


  • reduced dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (effortful control)
  • increased limbic-emotional integration
  • enhanced trust circuits



Subjective effect:


  • “I don’t have to control everything”
  • relief from anxiety
  • faith-based calm






8. Bhakti vs meditation (neuro difference)



Meditation (non-dual / mindfulness):


  • decreases emotion intensity
  • increases meta-awareness
  • quiets limbic system



Bhakti:


  • increases emotion
  • strengthens attachment circuits
  • intensifies love and longing



So:


  • meditation → stillness
  • bhakti → emotional union



Both reduce stress, but through different neural paths.





In one sentence



Bhakti is the brain forming a loving attachment bond with a sacred presence, engaging reward, bonding, awe, and surrender circuits simultaneously.


If you’re curious, I can also explain:


  •  why bhakti can feel like romantic love
  •  why longing (viraha) is central to bhakti
  •  why music amplifies devotion
  •  why saints describe “union” experiences