Friday, March 27

THREE TYPES FOOD

silver-nine-compartment-plate Sattwic food

Men of sattwa like foods which increase their vital force, energy, strength and health. Such foods add to the pleasure of physical and mental life. They are juicy, soothing, fresh and agreeable.” (Bhagavad Gita 17:8) Sivananda: “Foods which increase life, purity, strength, health, joy and cheerfulness, which are oleaginous and savoury, substantial and agreeable, are dear to the Sattwic people.” Since we are seeking to become increasingly sattwic, we should look at each point of this verse so we can improve our diet and increase our sattwa, remembering that food becomes mind according to the Chandogya Upanishad.

  1. Ayus–food that actually increases the span of life. In other words, truly healthy food that protects the body and fosters it. The problem is that everybody has their own idea about what kind of food is healthy. I recommend that you read Dr. Neal Barnard’s books on diet, starting with Food For Life. Most people are slowly killing themselves with wrong diet. If they do not shorten their life, they make sure that they are sick for years at the end of their life. Ayus also means what increases life force.
  2. Sattwa–food that increases the quality of sattwa, which also implies food that promotes virtue–both in the sense of strength and in the sense of goodness. It is food that lightens and promotes health of body and mind, food that is actually spiritual in its effect. This is purely vegetarian food, free of both animal and chemical elements. It is fresh raw food which has all its natural enzymes intact and moderately cooked food, as well.
  3. Bala–food that imparts strength to the body and mind.
  4. Arogya–food that strengthens the immune system so the body can resist or rid itself of disease.
  5. Sukha–food which is easy for the body to digest and which produces ease and comfort in the body.
  6. Priti–food that truly satisfies the body nutritionally, and therefore the mind. It need not be eaten like medicine. In fact, priti is that which gives actual pleasure in the eating.
  7. Rasyas–food which has abundant good flavor, that has plenty of taste.
  8. Snigdhas–food which contains sufficient oil, which is smooth and pleasant to eat.
  9. Sthiras–food which is substantial.
  10. Hridyas–food which is “hearty” and pleasant-feeling in the stomach.

This is a valuable checklist to help us eat truly pure food.

Rajasic food

“But men of rajas prefer foods which are violently bitter, sour, salty, hot, pungent, acid and burning. These cause ill-health, and distemper of the mind and body.” (Bhagavad Gita 17:9) Sivananda: “The foods that are bitter, sour, saline, excessively hot, dry, pungent and burning, are liked by the Rajasic and are productive of pain, grief and disease.”

  1. Kata–food that is extremely acrid, pungent, or sharp–that is virtually caustic to the mouth.
  2. Amla–food that is very acidic, sour, or vinegary.
  3. Lavana–food that is very salty or briny (containing pickle-type fluid). This is hard on the kidneys and raises the blood pressure.
  4. Atyushna–food that is excessively hot. The problem here is deciding what is excessive, for the more people eat hot food the more tolerance they develop until what will be painfully, burning hot to others will be mild to their taste. I knew a man who would sit and eat jalapeño peppers whole like a snack. When I asked if they were hot, he said No. So I bit into one. Volcano!
  5. Tikshna–food that is harsh, fiery, and acid–especially in the stomach.
  6. Raksha–food that is astringent, and also rough and dry, the kind of things that cut the roof of your mouth or even your esophagus as it goes down.
  7. Vidahinas–food that is burning and scorching.

This kind of food is productive of:

  1. Duhkha–pain and misery.
  2. Shoka–grief–that regret so many feel and which makes anti-acid manufacturers rich–and which contributes to ulcers.
  3. Amaya–sickness in the sense of malfunction and disease produced by the harming it does to the body.

Next to its harmful effects, the more unfortunate aspect of this kind of food is its addicting nature. For example, people will eat hot food that makes them cry–and love every painful moment of it. This is because hot food contains elements that affect the brain–as does the mere experience of hot food. So rajasic food is the most difficult to give up.

Tamasic food

“And men of tamas take a perverse pleasure in foods which are stale, tasteless, rotten and impure. They like to eat the leavings of others.” (Bhagavad Gita 17:10) Sivananda: “That which is stale, tasteless, putrid, rotten and impure refuse, is the food liked by the Tamasic.” Note this:

  1. Yatayamam–food that is leftover, stale, and even spoiled. A lot of people eat this kind of food just from laziness or lack of initiative–both traits of tamas. Most restaurant food is unfit for human consumption, what to say about the “deli” food from big grocery stores. No one knows how old that is. Fast food chains pack their food–especially meat–in bags of formaldehyde and other horrors. Some will cook a large amount of food and then eat it for a week or more. I have known people that would scrape off the mold and eat away. Canned food is another offense to humanity. Now that we can refrigerate and even freeze food, the eating of leftovers is not always detrimental. The willingness to eat stale food–and sometimes the inability to tell it is stale–is more psychological than physical, and we must not let misapplied thrift get us into the habit of eating this devitalized food.
  2. Gatarasam–food that is tasteless, devoid of flavor. This applies to a lot of oriental food, and used to be the main trait of English cooking. And it really applies to a lot of fake “sattwic” food cooked by those that think they are spiritual or even yogis. Notice how flavorless and insubstantial it is, and what a disgusting color and texture. And on top of it all they give people a little dab, commenting: “This is really pretty rich [or heavy] and you mustn’t eat too much.” Some chance! The last time I had to eat in the home of dedicated spiritual (in other words grim and rote) people the amount served for eight people would only have sufficed for three normal human beings. Their tasteless and insufficient food reflected their philosophy and their minds. Do not buy into it.
  3. Puti–food that is putrid, stinking, and fetid. How many times have you seen restaurant signs or ads boasting that they serve “aged steaks”? It is the custom of “gourmets” to “hang birds” and let them decay a bit before cooking them. (I read of one restaurant that would “hang” grouse until they bred maggots, which they would wash off before cooking. One evening a group of customers called for the chef and rhapsodized over the delicious “stuffing” that had been in the grouse. At first the chef was bewildered, and then realized that the maggots had not been removed, but had been baked in the grouse! This is a clear example of how tamasic food perverts the palate.) Meat itself is rotting flesh. And what of the moldy and “stinky” cheese so beloved to many? Think of the awful smell fish and seafood emit when being cooked, what to say of the stench in oriental markets that stock them dried? Delight in such things is distinctly abnormal. Do I need to mention such ghastly things as “hundred year old” eggs and suchlike?
  4. Uchchistam–food that has been eaten on by another person. This is a favorite of many. They grab off the plates of others, plop things from their plates on others’ plates, say: “Give me a taste of that” and take a bite off whatever someone has been eating–often a body part of an animal. Eating another’s spit! In modern times when we know about germs and communicable diseases, it makes no difference to them. “Give me a sip of that…tear off a hunk of that for me…let me have a little bite of yours….” This is the way they feed.

Wednesday, March 25

Ten Commandments

sri sri gnanananda giri swamigal

Be active; but Not impatient

Be patient; but Not indolent

Be economic; but Not stingy

Be loving ; but Not slavish

Be merciful ; but Wakeful; do not be deceived

Give liberally; but Do not become a pauper

Be a hero; but Not a (Nero) villain

Seek the good ; but Do not hate others

Live in the family; but Be not infatuated with lust

Be unattached ; but Do not run to the forest

-- SATHGURU GNANANANDA GIRI SWAMIGAL

Saranaagathi

Saranaagathi

Saranaagathi means “Surrender Unto the Lord”. Surrender is also called as “आत्मनिवेदन or AtmaNivedana” is the highest form of Bhakti or Devotion, where the Self is surrendered to God in entirety. This Surrender is the culmination of the sadhana of Bhakti and Jnana.

Saranaagathi in its true sense is the ultimate aim of all branches of yoga – Karma, Jnana and Bhakti. In Saranaagathi, the devotee is just like a small child, barely months old, which surrenders itself completely and exclusively to the mother’s care, because the child is innately assured of mother’s caring for it. The child does not depend on its self even for a small work. The devotee also becomes completely child-like, entrusting everything into the hands of God.

Swami SivanandaIn most of our day-to-day lives and actions, we have very little “ Saranaagathi” to the Divine. We act as independent beings, and perform all actions of grown-up adults, with the feeling that we have enough mental and physical capabilities to take care of ourselves. But, there is also a “Surrender” that we do here, but in the reverse direction. We surrender to the world around us. We surrender to our temptations, to our sensual pleasures, relationships, emotions, what to speak of big things, even to the smallest thing like “taste buds”, we surrender ourselves. We bend our inner nature for the outer-world. We take the first step towards “Saranaagathi”, in one Swamiji’s words, only when we bend the outer to the inner.

Lord Krishna in the Bhagavad-Gita Himself gives the gist of Saranaagathi or self-surrender in “Moksha Sannyasa Yoga or The Yoga of Liberation by Renunciation”. (Chapter – 18, Sloka: 66).

सर्व धर्मान्परित्यज्य मामेकं शरणं व्रज ।

अहं त्वा सर्वपापेभ्यो मोक्षयिष्यामि मा शुचः ।।

“Abandoning all duties, take refuge in Me alone; I will liberate thee from all sins. Grieve not.”

With the inspiration of our Revered Gurudev Sri Swami Sivananda Maharaj, we have named this effort of ours on the internet as “Saranaagathi – Surrender to the Divine”. We pray to God and Gurudev to bless us with his Grace in our journey towards “Saranaagathi”.

“Work ceaselessly for the Lord but surrender the fruits of all actions to the Lord. Take the Lord as your sole refuge. Live for Him. Work for Him. Serve Him in all forms. Think of Him only. Meditate on Him alone. See Him everywhere. Worship Him in your heart. Consecrate your life, all your action, feelings and thoughts to the Lord. You will rest in Him. You will attain union with Him. You will attain immortal supreme peace and eternal bliss.”

“True and sincere surrender unto the Lord is the essence of Bhakti (God-love). ‘I am Thine, All is Thine. Thy will be done, my Lord’ – This is the best Saranaagathi Mantra or prayer of self-surrender. Seek His will. Do His will. Surrender to His will. You will become one with the cosmic will.”

- Swami Sivananda

Rules in Temple Worship

Temple Worship is an important feature of the Hindu Faith. There are so many different temples and so many different rules governing temple worship. Below, we present a few salient points that need to be followed when worshipping in temples. These rules are meant to be suggestive rather than prescriptive.
1.  As far as possible one should visit the Temple alone, or with one’s family only.
2. It is best to go in the company of Sadhus or one’s Guru. One should not visit the Temple gossiping with a friend: or, with others who go with the idea of entertainment.meenakshi temple
3. should not chit chat inside the Temple precincts.
4. should not sleep inside the Temple precincts.
5. should not eat from the food packets carried along.
6. visitors should not cook food inside.
7. should never step inside the Temple without bathing.
8. should not visit the Temple if one has rested on bed during day time.
9. should not carry the footwear inside the Temple.
10. should not speak over the cell or telephone inside the Temple.
11. should not spit, urinate inside. Littering should be avoided.
12. Restrooms should not be built inside the Temple precincts.
13. Female devotees should not visit Temples during their menstrual cycle and those who have touched them should also not step into the Temple.
14. should not visit the Temple during the time of mourning; as, also when there has been birth in the family.
15. should not visit the Temple without bathing after a visit to a death house or a visit to the home of a newly born infant.
16. should not visit the Temple without bathing after a visit to a hospital.
17. should maintain silence inside the Temple or chant the Divine Names of the Lord or hymns (slokas).
18. should remove litters scattered around.
19. should remove any growth in Temple towers or in ‘praakaara’ (corridors running around the Sanctum Sanctorum).
20. on stepping inside the Temple one should not bother if others are observing him.
21. even playfully should one not give his promise inside the Temple.
22. should walk slowly and not take hurried steps.
23. except the sick, differently abled, old people or on some other genuine ground, all should enter through ordinary queue (‘dharma darshan’) and not get entry through the ‘special fee’ queue (‘special darshan’).
24. should not prostrate anywhere except in front of the ‘dwajastamba’.
25. should take some offering like sugar candy, oil, wick, flower, etc.
26. when going to the Temple in a vehicle, it should be stopped a little distance away from where one should walk to the Temple; never should one go up to the Temple entrance in the vehicle.
27. should clean the hands and legs well before entering the Temple.
28. should wear clean, traditional clothes.
29. while visiting Temples on top of Hills, Mountains, one should climb by foot (the sick, differently abled, old people may go in a vehicle).
30. should not close your eyes while standing in front of the Deity.
31. should, through proper teachers, teach hymns on the Deity (of the particular Temple), in the local language.
32. should never gain entry for darshan by paying cash to any acquaintance there.
33. should circumambulate more than once.
34. should not perform ‘akshada archana’ (raw rice mixed with kumkum and turmeric) for Lord Vishnu; this will lead to poverty.
35. should never take any thing from the Temple for home use – be it a leaf or a flower.
36. should not bow down to anyone other than Sadhus inside the Temple.
37. should not touch the Deities inside the Temple, even if permitted.

-- Sri Sri Muralidhara Swamiji

One Name for all Gods

Generally people can be divided into two broad categories: the Shaivites, who worship Lord Shiva as the supreme, and the Vaishnavites, who worship Lord Vishnu and His forms as the the supreme Being. The most significant Mantra for any Vaishnavite is the 'Ashtakshari' (it contains eight letters in sanskrit) mantra 'Om Namo Narayana' .

The chief among the Mantras for the Shaivites is the Panchakshari (5 lettered) mantra, 'Om Nama Shivaya'. Without the letter ‘ra’, ‘Narayana’ would read as ‘Nayana’ that means one without a way (‘gati’); without the letter ‘ma’, ‘Namasivaya’ would read as ‘Nasivaya’ that means inauspicious.

So the jiva akshara (life giving letters) 'Ra' and 'Ma' of these two Mantras are put together to form the Rama Nama!
Anyone chanting this Divine Name thus worships both Shiva and Vishnu at the same time.

The greatness of Mahamantra

மஹாமந்திர மாஹாத்ம்யம்

எப்பேர்ப்பட்ட தீயவனாக ஒருவன் இருந்தாலும், பகவானுடைய நாமா036 (பெயர்) அவனைக் காப்பாற்றிவிடும். நெருப்பு என்று தெரிந்து கையை வைத்தாலும் , நெருப்பு கையை எரித்துவிடத்தான் செய்யும். அதேபோல் பகவான் நாமாவின் ஸ்வபாவம் என்னவென்றால், எவர் பகவானின் நாமத்தைச் சொல்வாரோ, அவருடைய பாவத்தை அந்த நாமா நாசம் செய்துவிடும். ஆகையால், நாம் எந்தக் காரியத்தை எப்போது செய்து கொண்டிருந்தாலும் மனதால் மட்டும் பகவான் நாமாவை எப்போதும் சொல்லிக் கொண்டிருக்க வேண்டும்.

எல்லோருக்கும் தாம் ஏதாவது ஒரு மந்திரத்தை- ஜபத்தைச் செய்து கொண்டு வந்தால் நல்லது என்ற ஆசை ஏற்படுகிறது. இதற்காக மந்திரம் ஒன்று இருக்கிறது. எப்படி வேண்டுமோ அப்படி இம்ம்ந்திரத்தைச் சொல்லலாம். ஒரு புனிதமானவனானாலும், அவ்வாறு இல்லாவிட்டாலும், ஆச்சார சீலனாயிருந்தாலும், இல்லாவிட்டாலும், அவன் அந்த மந்திரத்தைச் சொல்ல்லாம் என்று சொல்லியிருக்கிறது. அது என்ன மந்திரம்?

“ஹரே ராம ஹரே ராம ராம ராம ஹரே ஹரே |
ஹரே க்ருஷ்ண ஹரே க்ருஷ்ண க்ருஷ்ண க்ருஷ்ண ஹரே ஹரே ||”

என்ற மந்திரமேயாகும். இந்த மந்திரத்தை எல்லோரும் சொல்லலாம். அப்படிச் சொல்லிக்கொண்டு வந்தால், நாம் பகவானின் அருள் பெற்று புனிதமடைந்து ஜன்ம ஸாபல்யம் அடைவோம். ஆனால் சாமான்யமாக மனிதர்கள் என்ன செய்வார்கள்? சாப்பிடுவார்கள், தூங்குவார்கள், எங்கேயாவது சுற்றிக் கொண்டிருப்பார்கள். பிறகு ஒரு நாள் செத்துப்போய்விடுவார்கள்.இவ்வாறு தான் பிராணிகள் வாழ்கின்றன. நாமும் அப்படியே வாழ்ந்தால் நமக்கும் பிராணிகளுக்கும் என்ன வித்தியாஸம்? ஆகவே, எப்போதும் பகவான் நாமாவை நாம் சொல்லிக்கொண்டே இருக்க வேண்டும்.

-ஸ்ரீ அபிநவ வித்யா தீர்த்த ஸ்வாமிகள்

Nine Modes of Devotion

According to Swami the nine modes of devotion are:

  1. Sravanam
    Listening to the Lord's stories, Leelas and Mahimas.
  2. Kirtanam
    Singing the glories of the Lord's Name.
  3. Smaranam
    Remembrance of Lord's Name.
  4. Pada Sevanam
    Service to the Lotus Feet of the Lord.
  5. Archanam
    Worship of the Lord.
  6. Vandanam
    Salutation of the Lord.
  7. Dasyam
    Master and Servant Relationship like the one between Sri Rama and Hanuman.
  8. Sakhyam
    Companionship of the Lord.
  9. Atma Nivedanam
    Offering oneself to the Lord in complete self-surrender.

-- Sri Sathya Sai Baba

Tuesday, March 24

Twenty Important Spiritual Instructions

These twenty instructions contain the very essence of all Yoga Sadhana.big (2) Karma, Bhakti, Jnana, and Raja Yoga will all come to one who follows them whole-heartedly. They are the unfailing keys to quick and effective development and culture of the physical, mental, moral and spiritual self of man. 

1. BRAHMAMUHURTA

Get up at 4 a.m. daily. This is Brahmamuhurta which is extremely favourable for Sadhana. Do all your morning spiritual Sadhana during this period from 4 a.m. to 6:30 or 7 a.m. Such Sadhana gives quick and maximum progress. 

2. ASANA

Sit on Padmasana (lotus pose), Siddhasana (adept's pose) or Sukhasana (any pose you like) for your Japa and meditation for half an hour, facing east or north. Increase the period gradually to three hours. Practice Sirshasana (headstand) and Sarvangasana (shoulderstand) for maintenance of health and Brahmacharya. Take light physical exercises as walking, etc., regularly. Do twenty rounds of easy, comfortable Pranayama (breathing exercises). Do not strain yourself while doing Pranayama. 

3. JAPA

You can repeat any Mantra (sacred syllable), such as pure Om or Om Namo Narayanaya, Sri Ram, Sita Ram, Sri Ram Jaya Ram Jaya Jaya Ram, Om Namah Sivaya, Om Namo Bhagavate Vasudevaya, Om Saravanabhavaya Namah, Hari Om, or Gayatri (a sacred Vedic Mantra), according to your taste or inclination, from 108 times to 21,600 times daily. Devotees of Christ may repeat the name Jesus or Hail Mary, Mother of Jesus. Parsis, Sikhs and Muslims may select a name or Mantra from the Zend Avesta, Granth Sahib or Koran respectively.

4. DIETETIC DISCIPLINE

Take Sattvic food. Give up chillies, tamarind, garlic, onion, sour articles, oil, mustard, asafoetida. Observe moderation in diet (Mitahara). Do not overload the stomach. Give up those things which the mind likes best for a fortnight once or twice in a year. Eat simple food. Milk and fruits help concentration. Take food as medicine to keep the life going. Eating for enjoyment is a sin. Give up salt and sugar for a week or a fortnight. You must be able to live on rice, dhal and bread without any pickle. Do not ask for extra salt for dhal, and sugar for tea, coffee and milk. People taking a non-vegetaraian diet should try their best to gradually give up flesh-eating as completely as possible. They will be immensely benefited. 

5. MEDITATION

Have a separate meditation room under lock and key. If this is not possible then a corner of the room should be set apart with a small cloth screen or curtain drawn across. Keep the room spotlessly clean. 

6. SVADHYAYA

Study systematically the Gita, Ramayana, Bhagavatam, Vishnu-Sahasranama, Lalita-Sahasranama, Adityahridaya, Upanishads, Yoga Vasishta, Bible, Imitation of Christ, Zend Quran, the Tripitakas, the Granth Sahib and other religious books from half an hour to one hour daily, and have Suddha Vichara (pure thoughts). 

7. ELEVATE THE MIND

Learn by heart some prayer - Slokas (prayer verses), Stotras (hymns) and repeat them as soon as you sit in the Asana before starting Japa or meditation. This will elevate the mind quickly. 

8. BRAHMACHARYA

Preserve the vital force (Veerya (seminal energy)) very, very carefully. Veerya is God in motion or manifestation (Vibhuti). Veerya is all power. Veerya is all money. Veerya is the essence of life, thought and intelligence. This instruction is not for bachelors only. Householders also must follow it as far as possible. They must be extremely moderate in their marital connections with their spouse. This is very important. 

9. CHARITY

Do charity regularly, every month, or even daily according to your means. Never fail in this item. If necessary forego some personal wants but keep up this charity regularly.

10. HAVE SATSANG

Give up bad company, smoking, meat and alcoholic liquors entirely. Have constant Satsang (association with holy people). Do not develop any evil habits. Deliberately exert to develop positive virtuous qualities.

11. FAST

Fast on Ekadasi (11th day of the Hindu lunar fortnight) or live on milk and fruits only. Christians must fast on alternate Sundays, Muslims on alternate Fridays, and Parsis on a suitable day every fortnight.

12. JAPA MALA

Have a Japa Mala (rosary) around your neck or in your pocket or underneath your pillow at night. This will remind you of God. Twirl the beads during your leisure. You should repeat the Name at all times, whatever task you may be engaged in.

13. OBSERVE MOUNA

Observe Mouna (vow of silence) for a couple of hours daily. Do not make gestures and inarticulate noises during the period of silence.

14. DISCIPLINE OF SPEECH

Speak the truth at all cost. Speak a little. Speak sweetly. Always utter encouraging words. Never condemn, criticize or discourage. Do not raise your voice and shout at little children or subordinates.

15. BE CONTENT

Reduce your wants. If you have four shirts, reduce the number to three or two. Lead a happy, contented life. Avoid unnecessary worry. Be mentally detached. Have plain living and high thinking. Think of those who do not possess even one-tenth of what you have. Share with others. 

16. PRACTICE LOVE

Never hurt anybody. Ahimsa Paramo Dharmah (Non-injury is the highest virtue). Control anger by love, Kshama (forgiveness) and Daya (compassion). Serve the sick and the poor with love and affection. This is service of God. 

17. BE SELF RELIANT

Do not depend upon servants. Self-reliance is the highest of all virtues. 

18. HAVE SELF-ANALYSIS

Think of the mistakes you have committed during the course of the day, just before retiring to bed (self-analysis). Keep a daily spiritual diary and self-correction register as Benjamin Franklin did. Maintain a daily routine and resolve-form. Do not brood over past mistakes. 

19. DO YOUR DUTY

Remember that death is awaiting you at every moment. Never fail to fulfil your duties. Have pure conduct (Sadachara). 

20. REMEMBER GOD

Think of God as soon as you wake up and just before you go to sleep, and at all other times whether engaged in any work or not. Repeat His Name always. Surrender yourself completely to God (Saranagati).

 This is the essence of all spiritual Sadhana. It will lead you to liberation. All these spiritual canons must be rigidly observed. You must not give any leniency to the mind.

- Sri Swami Sivananda

HUMAN VALUES

What is the main reason for the well being of the society? Our actions are the very cause. What is the reason for our actions? Actions result from our thoughts. What is the reason for action? The mind. What is the cause of the mind? Sankalpa - thought is the cause of the mind. If the thoughts are pure, the country will also become pure. We have to inculcate ideas, which are pure and good. These are human values.

What are these values? These are "Truth(sathya), Right Action (dharma), Peace (shanti), Love (prema) and Non-violence (ahimsa)". These five human values should be deemed as the fivefold life breaths or Pancha Pranas (PranaApanaUdhanaSamanaVyaana - the incoming, outgoing, upward flow, even and circulating breaths). Since the values constitute the life breath, one who does not radiate the values in his actions is deemed to be lifeless!

What is this truth? Those words, which you speak with love, are truth. That which comes from the heart filled with love is truth. All that you do from a heart filled with love is dharma - righteousness. The heart, which is full of love in whatever it thinks, is peace. Then whatever actions you do with a heart filled with love is ahimsa - non-violence. So love is the foundation for all these. There is no life whatsoever without love. So one has to foster this love.

Start the Day with Love;
Spend the Day with Love;
Fill the Day with Love;
End the Day with Love;
This is the way to God

When the impulses arising from the heart are expressed in words, that is Truth (Sathya). To put into action your words is Right Action (Dharma). For all these Love is primary. Love in action is righteousness. Love in speech is truth. Love in thought is peace. Love in understanding is non-violence. When you realize that God is in everyone, you will practice non-violence.

Love in Thought is Truth.
Love in Action is Right Conduct.
Love in Understanding is Peace.
Love in Feeling is Non-violence.

Truth is man's nature; to be untrue is to be false to one's nature. Dharma is the practical application in real life of the ideal of Truth. Shanthi is the result of Dharma and Prema is the effulgence of Shanthi. Truth in words and truth and love in the heart is Dharma.

Prema is the manner of speaking; Truth is the substance; Dharma is the language; Santhi is the result aimed at.

Sathya is what I teach;
Dharma is the way I live;
Shanti is the mark of My personality;
Prema is my very Nature.

Sadhana leads to Truth
Satkarma leads to Dharma
Bhakti
 leads to Peace
Upasana leads to Love.

-Bhagavan Sri Sathya Sai Baba

Offering my pranams at my Guru & God Sri Sathya Sai Baba

Guru Brahma Gurur Vishnu
Guru Devo Maheshwaraha
Guru Saakshat Para Brahma
Tasmai Sree Gurave Namaha
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