॥ Shri Hari ॥
God is
Waiting for Us
Tvameva Maata Cha
Pita Tvameva
Tvameva Bandhusha Sakhaa Tvameva
Tvameva Vidyaa Dravinam Tvameva
Tvameva
Sarvam Mama Deva Deva
Swami Ramsukhdas
God is Waiting for Us
The curtain that is seen between God and us, the distance
that is seen, the separation that is perceived, is in fact our own creation,
not God’s doing, as God is Omnipresent and is present at all times. Not only that, He is closer than our assumed sense of
My-ness. He is
present As-is even in the most fallen and degraded
ones as well. Therefore spiritual
aspirants must want that they should accept their Beloved within themselves,
and become free from all anxiety or worries “nischint”. When besides God there is acceptance of no
other entity, then an aspirant will attain his Beloved within himself. However, as long as there remains within the
assumption that - “I am the body,” till then he will attain nothing but the
world.
He who sees His Beloved in other individuals, in saints
and great souls, in scriptures etc, he will have to experience separation from
his Beloved. However, he who sees his
Beloved within himself, he does not have to suffer the separation with his
beloved. However close you may see your
Beloved when seen as separate, there will most definitely be feeling
of separation. However, when the Beloved is seen as inseparable (within us)
then an eternal relationship is established.
As long as there is existence of many, in the inner faculties of the
aspirant, till then he cannot experience an eternal relationship with his
Beloved, rather he wanders from place to place in this world to attain his beloved.
An aspirant should never feel a sense of hopelessness with
the real essence (tattva), because the
aspirant has complete eligibility, rights and potential for realization of the
supreme Truth. It is a rule that he who
can enjoy worldly pleasures, he can also turn away from the world and he can also
experience bliss. He who can develop
attachment and aversion in the world, he can also renounce
attachment and aversion and be able to love as well. He who can engage in sense pleasures, he can also
renounce pleasures and be able to attain “Yog”
(equanimity). He
who has the ability to adopt, also has the ability to denounce.
Beings endowed with desires can never love anyone. Therefore a man of desires cannot be a true
believer in God. Man becomes a true believer
in God, when in his eyes besides the one Beloved (God) –nothing else
remains. Such a true believer attains
Love by God’s grace. Although God’s
grace is showering equally on all beings, then too that grace is only
experienced when man entirely becomes only God’s. Not accepting the existence of anyone else,
is becoming God’s.
Besides the One God, there is no one else who is my Beloved
(Lover). When besides God when we love
anyone else, then that love destroys “sanhaar”
you and the other. This is not love, it is
attachment. It is the love for one’s
own country that is
the destruction “sanhaar” of other countries. Attachment to one’s own organization / group
is the destroying “sanhaar” of other
organizations. Attachment to one’s own
race, caste, type “jaati” is the destruction “sanhaar” of other “jaatis”
If besides the one God, if all other wants are renounced,
then God will come without our calling and the world will disappear for you
without trying. Hope of His attainment in the future is a
mistake. One must serve others. Let there not be the slightest bit of
affinity with the body and the world - this is true “renunciation” and
besides That One God, do not accept the existence of anyone else, not even the
slightest bit - this itself is Love.
He who is filled with desires, that person cannot love, as desires
are of the world and Love is of God. Man filled with
desires is a worshipper of worldly sense objects. Whereas a man filled with Love, is a
worshipper of God. The worshipper of the
world becomes dependent and the worshipper of God becomes independent.
Attainment of that existent and real essence (sat-tattva) is not by doing something (some activity). The reason is that all activity takes place
in the unreal and perishable, where-as “sat tattva” is realized from
renouncing the “asat” (unreal, perishable). When desires come to an end, the unreal is
also renounced and when the thirst for acquiring the real (sat tattva) is awakened, the past is not recollected, and in
the present, the thirst for attaining the real is awakened, and the expectation
in the future is concluded. The thirst for the real (sat tattva),
erases all desires and makes one realize the real, the Truth (sat tattva).
That which we call worldly pleasures is as such the
fatigue of the mind. The pleasures
derived due to the fatigue of the mind will come to an end, but the spiritual
bliss does not end. That bliss is our
true nature (swaroop). The fatigue of the mind is not our real
self.
When all worldly infatuations deriving pleasure come to
an end, then one experiences eternal
joy, that cannot be described.
“yam labdhvaa chaaparam
laabham manyate naadhikam tatah.” (Gita 6/22).
On
experiencing the eternal bliss, all desires come to an end, and there
is nothing lacking whatsoever. “Rasavarjam rasopyasya param drushtvaa nivartate” (Gita 2/59)
If man wants to be saved from sorrow, then he should give
up wishing for pleasure and happiness.
If we wants to be saved from disease, then give
up wanting sense pleasures. If he wants
to be saved from dis-honor, then give up wanting honor. If he wants to be saved from mourning, then wipe out
wanting exhilaration. The point is that
we our selves have constructed this sorrow, this pain. Without our will, no one can make us unhappy or
dependent.
There is one note-worthy and touching point and that is,
whatever are the essential needs of a man, the capability to attain that is
already present in him. The point is
that whatever a man can do,
his essential needs can be met with that work alone. The world also hopes only that much as a man is
capable of doing. God also gives the
same command with regards to that which a man can do. That which a man can do, but is not doing, is
itself undutiful “akartavya”. As long as man’s
real need is not fulfilled, till then this act of doing does not come to an
end, he will continue to do something or the other. The reason is that “to do” is a practice, it
is a discipline, it is not the goal (God). On
attaining the goal, the rest of the spiritual practice does not remain, in
other words, when
residual needs do not remain, the act of doing also does not remain, man becomes krutya-krutya,
i.e. he reaches a state where nothing remains to be done.
God’s infinite power is constantly pulling all beings
towards Him. Therefore no situation remains permanent. Man’s attachment too does not remain
permanent anywhere. There is constant
falling out of relationship with every object and person. This infinite power of the Supreme Spirit (Paramatma) is neither ruling over men, not is it
taking away their independence and making them dependent. It is a rule that the thing from which an
object is created, in the end it merges into that thing alone, then there
is fulfilment. Jeev (being)
has separated from Supreme Spirit (Paramatma);
therefore until it does not merge into Paramatma,
till then fulfilment will not come about, he will continue to wander
endlessly. Therefore leaving Paramatma, and getting trapped in sense of Mine-ness and desire for any thing, individual, action, state,
situation etc, is useless. Making an
effort to acquire those things is useless effort. Jeev’s (embodied soul’s) natural end will be to
merge in Paramatma (Supreme Spirit)
alone. When we distance ourselves from
our natural state, and turn towards various things, individuals, then by God’s
grace causes a separation from those things, individuals etc. As long as we will not be united with Paramatma, till then every union will have a
separation – this is a rule. The changes
that are happening in the world are teaching us that do not get trapped in me
(world). I am not your aim (goal). Your goal is Paramatma,
who is waiting for you at all times.
From "Sant Samaagam" in Hindi by Swami Ramsukhdasji
Books by
Swami Ramsukhdasji, can be purchased from the online
store at: http://www.swamiramsukhdasji.net/market.html
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