Wednesday, 9 April 2025

CGON Q DOUBTS

 A

Here’s a summary in bullet quotes form of your reflection on the easiest path to enlightenment:


  • “God is far away, maybe not even there.”
    Doubt in traditional religious belief.

  • “Yoga, kundalini, dhyana… maybe overrated and hypermarketed.”
    Skepticism about spiritual practices being commercialized.

  • “Gurus are too inaccessible or maybe fakes too.”
    Distrust in spiritual teachers and systems.

  • “Can’t rely on God, can’t rely on systems, can’t rely on gurus.”
    All external paths appear shaky and unreliable.

  • “Maybe the whole enlightenment thing is a scam… maybe all of them were schizophrenic.”
    Radical questioning of the validity of spiritual traditions and figures.

  • “I don’t know and I have no way to know.”
    Honest acknowledgment of uncertainty.

  • “Enlightenment is risky. I may lose everything I have.”
    Fear of losing worldly attachments in pursuit of the unknown.

  • “All paths are tough, insecure, unreliable.”
    General disillusionment with conventional routes.

  • “But wait… there’s one path left.”
    A turning point in reflection.

  • “Who is closest, easiest to access, totally reliable?”
    The answer: You.

  • “Reflect on yourself. Seek within.”
    Turning inward as the only stable approach.

  • “Aham Brahmasmi — I am Brahman.”
    “Tat Tvam Asi — You are THAT.”
    Ancient Vedic affirmations pointing to inner divinity.

  • “Who wants this enlightenment?”
    “What is this ‘me’ that wants this?”
    Begin with deep self-inquiry.

  • “If enlightenment is ‘knowing and being yourself’…”
    Then “probing and discovering yourself” is the most direct route.

  • “Ramana Maharishi calls it Atma Vichara — Self-inquiry.”
    The direct and easiest path: turning awareness onto itself.

  • “If this direct path is difficult, only then consider the others.”
    Start from self; adjust later if needed.

  • “Begin from ‘you’ — the sanest, easiest way.”
    The final affirmation: You are the path.


Want this formatted as a poster, quote card, or in a specific style (like Zen, poetic, minimal, etc.)?


A


No comments:

Post a Comment