Featured Post

Question & Answers - 4 - Why can I not feel the God within

Q4a: If God is within why do I not feel the presence? Q4b: I can feel that there is more to me than the body, mind, intellect, but...

Thursday, April 30, 2020

Society classification in Hinduism


            Every society in every age sees some stratification and classification. It may be tribes or classes in some, clans and others. In India everyone believes it as the caste. The modern caste system was made rigid due to politicians and vote banks, whilst it was never about the birth. The hinduphobic forces coupled with the inherent tamas in the society not to learn about its roots have worsened the case as they believe the western prism more than their own traditional wisdom. While the caste system of today has numerous problems, no one wishes to give up their privileges and continue to perpetuate a false narrative that feeds more hinduphobia, conversion, digestion and sends the society on a downward spiral.

            If one were to believe the distorians or AIT believers, the largest sections of Indian society was oppressed for millennia. The Independence followed by overhyped politicians brought equality. The only danger to this hallucinatory idea is, if we question why we have caste based vote banks. Why don’t people rise above the caste mindset now that the government encourages one to get over it? Why does the government even recognize the hundreds of caste groups? While these may be valid questions for researching the current socio-political framework, our exercise is to understand the early Hindu model.

            Let us cast aside our strong prejudice and open our minds to the numerous literature of ancient times, spanning millennia. The exercise is neither to aggrandize the past nor to reclaim some lost glory, but to study the human psyche, to understand the wisdom of the past and absorb whatever is practical and translatable to the times we live.

Key Hindu concepts

            To understand the societal stratification we need to understand four key ideas – Varnas, ashramas, gunas and Purushartha. Krishna informs us that the universe (could be even multiverse, which will make it ironic), better called as prapancha, a combination of the five mahabhutas. They exhibit a combination of the three gunassattva, rajas and tamas. They are constantly in flux both at the cosmic level and at the individual level. They are usually confused as three properties or characteristics of nature. To understand in the best explanation by Swami Krishnananda – These properties are the very constituent elements of prakriti. They are not qualities like the whiteness of a cloth, which is different from the cloth, and the blueness of a flower, which is different from the flower. That is not the way in which we have to understand the qualities of prakriti. The gunas are qualities of prakriti in the same way as the three strands of a rope are qualities of the rope. We cannot say that the strands are qualities; they are the very substance of the rope. These qualities, these properties, are the very substance, the very stuff, of prakriti; and they cause bondage to the individual—nibadhnanti. Dehe dehinam avyayam: They bind us.
 
            It is crucial to note that the gunas have different significance depending on the scale at which it operates. Here we limit our focus on human level. Sattva is purity, transparency. It gives clarity of thought and lets us reflect the true nature of the Self, Atman, as it reflects it. It brings happiness, brilliance, sharpness of understanding, knowledge and rationality. Sattva makes us calm and content, satisfied with ourselves. Rajas has inherent dissatisfaction and makes us restless. It pushes one into toiling after desires. There is an insatiable thirst, trishna. This brings in distraction, passion and attachment. Tamas brings idiocy, lethargy, ignorance and a desire to do nothing. Most of us know as habitual proscrastinators the first hand effects of Tamas. It pushes one into illusion and delusion, making one prone to mistakes. In a nutshell, Sattva leads to happiness and satisfaction, Rajas to nonstop activity and restlessness and Tamas to ignorance, inability to decide or act or even discern what is proper and improper.  No person is made of only one guna and their ratio keeps changing all the time. The 14th chapter of Bhagavad Gita explores in depth and will be a good place to gain some deeper insights.

            Let us look at the next idea – Varnas, which we have dealt it at length in Varnas – a journey to its roots. The society was stratified based on the gunas and karma into Brahmana, Kshatriya, Vaishya and Shudra. On numerous occasions I have emphasized that birth alone does not constitute the varna, though it definitely acts as a factor. The fallacy that the Brahmana and Kshatriya are superior in society to make them as more desirable creation is a mischievous and erroneous one. In Hindu societies of the past, there was no special privileged work, but suffice to say that the work is a choice based on gunas. In “How anyone can become a BrahmanaBhagwan Krishna’s insight” and ”How anyone can become a BrahmanaYudhishtra’s insight” we learnt that by cultivating certain traits, anyone can become a Brahmana. There are many examples in the past from Aitreya Rishi to Jabala of the Upanishads or Viswamitra of Itihasas or even many who were initiated to SriVaishnava during Ramanujacharya times. We see this echo even in ISKCON of modern era. In “Kshatriya – do you exist?” we pondered along the same lines which assure us the birth is not the primary qualification to be a Kshatriya, it is one’s gunakarmas.

            The next aspect of classification is Ashrama, based on the focus area of the life. They are again four – Brahmacharya (Student), Grihasta (Householder), Vanaprastha (Detached or recluse) and Sannyasa (Renunciation). This was not specified only for any one Varna but all. We dived a little deeper in Fourfold Hinduism. In Purusharthas – a simplified insight” we studied the four aspects of the Purushartha as Dharma, Artha, Kama and Moksha.

Interplay of the Guna-Varnashrama-Purushartha

            Varna literally means color. The rishis attributed a color to each gunasattva as white, rajas as red and tamas as black. In the modern society we do ascribe colors like in traffic signals, symbols like skull with bones to warn something as dangerous. It is a human way to communicate ideas. From the Varnas, the nonexisting caste was given birth by mixing it with Jati. The word caste is Portuguese in origin (casta). From caste, it further degraded into casteism and secured firmly by Indian politicians as vote banks. To ensure their death grip, they have unleashed secularism and blatant hinduphobia to abuse anything and everything connected with Hinduism with justification.

            Perverted and mischievous minds have twisted the very idea of Krishna’s Gita sloka (4-13) to say Krishna created caste, when the word used is clearly varna.

चातुर्वर्ण्यं मया सृष्टं गुणकर्मविभागशः। तस्य कर्तारमपि मां विद्ध्यकर्तारमव्ययम्।।4.13।।
chātur-varṇyaṁ mayā sṛiṣhṭaṁ guṇa-karma-vibhāgaśhaḥ tasya kartāram api māṁ viddhyakartāram avyayam ।।

            Krishna emphatically states that based on the Gunas and Karmas, He has created the fourfold Varna model. If we study the logical possibilities, a person can be dominated by Sattva or Sattva with little Rajas. Such individuals are naturally more contented, immersed in atma vichara. They were called Brahmanas. Their mind was centered on the Moksha. Naturally their goal is to educate themselves and others which became their profession. Rajas dominated people with Sattva inclination were rooted in preserving order in themselves and society. Such individuals were Kshatriyas and gravitated towards Dharma. All the ancient texts highlight the importance of the Kings and rulers of India to be rooted in dharmashastras as they helped maintain order and harmony for all in the society to prosper.

            It may be possible for a person to be predominantly Rajas, yet have a strong streak of Tamas. These individuals work hard but they aspire to relax or enjoy the fruits of their labor. Such individuals were Vaishyas who preferred trade, agriculture and farming. As their aspirations are centered on Artha, it merely expressed as their profession. There is another group which is either mostly tamasic or Tamas mixed with Rajas as secondary. Such a group preferred to give helping hand to the above three groups which showed some direction. They were called Shudras.

            Note neither gunakarma nor profession make one community superior or inferior. Nor did it ever imply that certain privileges were reserved only for certain groups. For instance, the first three groups were given mandatory yajnopavita and rites and rituals, the last one was given the option. Also in any societal endeavor, it was the combination of all the groups that enabled the success of any projects. Valmiki Ramayana quotes elaborately on the broad participation of all the varnas in Ayodhya’s grandeur.

            When we overlay ashrama dharma over Purushartha, we get an interesting picture.  There seems to be a focus on certain aspect of Purushartha to guide the human evolution. The Brahmachari is most prone to lack of discipline due to lack of information. To create a structure in life there was an extra emphasis on dharma. A Grihasta on the other hand is not only in an earning situation, but also one that supports the other three varnas (in the past) or saves for future (in today’s world). Hence he needs to master Artha, not just money, but all resources. This one may be surprising thing as most of us model after Dhritarashtra, who was stuck to his symbolic throne and kingdom for years, despite the death of all his children and Pandavas taking over the rule. In today’s world we celebrate it as retired life. Instead of taming Kama, it becomes a great idea to relive the unfulfilled life. This must have been Vanaprastha, where the mastery of Kama is crucial. The last stage is Sannyasa, though there is no age to enter into it. It is merely a state of mind, where Moksha is the primary driver. 

            The Rishis have thus perfected human society based on guna, karma and their orientation to the predominant Purushartha one tries to tackle. One must note though Purushartha appears fourfold, a careful analysis reveals they are four aspects of the same idea. Kama tempered within Artha’s limits and when both abide within Dharma lead to Moksha. Therefore it is very much possible to simultaneously work on all the aspects of Purushartha while leading normal lives, by constantly working on our gunas and Karmas.

            These patterns also seem to be guided over large spans of time. When Sattva dominates as the primary character of the society, it is called as Satya Yuga or Krita Yuga. In time, this is replaced by Rajas with Sattva as secondary and eventually by only Rajas. Such a period is called Treta Yuga. Slowly Rajas increasingly infiltrated by tamas. This period is known as Dwapara Yuga, which gets slowly replaced by only Tamas. This is the times we live in and it is referred as Kali Yuga. We saw how even in the worst Kali Yuga, by doing Purushartha we can ward off its evil effects.

Usual Hinduphobia, but necessary to clarify

            Most Hinduphobes usually quote selectively some lines from Purusha Suktam found in the RigVeda as evidence of ancient abusive way to segregate into castes (note even there a mistake, varna is not same as modern caste) . Purusha Suktam is also found in the samhita portions of Shukla Yajurveda and Atharva Veda. Purusha Suktam is the veneration of the Cosmic being. It is definitely not treated as a person like Abrahamic Father in Heaven or Allah. But definite anthromorphism is applied to bring this abstract idea into the realm of understandable.

            The criticism stems from highly selective parroting of this line.

ब्रा॒ह्म॒णो᳚ऽस्य॒ मुख॑मासीत् बा॒हू रा॑ज॒न्यः॑ कृ॒तः । ऊ॒रू तद॑स्य॒ यद्वैश्यः॑ प॒द्भ्याꣳ शू॒द्रो अ॑जायत १३
brāhmaṇo'sya mukhamāsīd bāhū rājanyaḥ kṛtaḥ, ūrū tadasya yad vaiśyaḥ padbhyāgï śūdro ajāyata.
      The Brahmana (spiritual wisdom and splendour) was His mouth; the Kshatriya (administrative and military prowess) His arms became. His thighs were the Vaisya (commercial and business enterprise); of His feet the Sudra (productive and sustaining force) was born. – Swami Krishnanada

            Note: In the Hindu civilization, the feet of Bhagawan is the holiest of all. One surrenders to HIS feet, not to his mouth or arms or thighs. Secondly in the visualization of different gunas, different parts of a generic human are assigned to convey that everything came from HIM. 

            What the hinduphobes and critics forgot to do is read the next line and apply the same logic.

नाभ्या॑ आसीद॒न्तरि॑क्षम्  शी॒र्ष्णो द्यौः सम॑वर्तत । प॒द्भ्यां भूमि॒र्दिशः॒ श्रोत्रा᳚त्  तथा॑ लो॒काꣳ अ॑कल्पयन्  १५
nābhyā āsīdantarikśam śīrṣṇo dyauḥ samavartata, padbhyāṁ bhūmirdiśaḥ śrotrātathā lokāṁ akalpayan.
(In that Universal Meditation as Sacrifice) the firmament came from His navel; the heavens were produced from His head; the earth from His feet; from His ears the quarters of space—so they constituted the worlds. – Swami Krishnanada

            By the critic’s logic, the earth came from HIS feet and must be treated with contempt. On the contrary the earth is adored and worshipped as divine, as a Mother. 

            Shallow critic’s logic works only in a polluted secular hinduphobic environment. The only option to counter is to gain depth in our ancient wisdom. This won’t happen without regular reading of scriptures and Sadhana. As we focus on gaining more Sattvic thoughts, our understanding centered on dharmic actions is the only antidote available, even if an avatara is sitting beside to guide us. The Vedic prayer sums it succinctly, “tamasoma jyotirgamaya”, Lead us from darkness to light, in other words from tamas to Sattva. We need to imbibe this as our motto, attitude and mantra.


तत् सत्

Friday, April 24, 2020

Kali Yuga - Parikshit's confrontation with Kali


            Every age has its characteristic on the civilization. We have seen common patterns around the globe due to the Bronze Age, Iron Age and even in today’s parlance, radio age, television age and cell phone era amongst others. The western prism sought these patterns only in terms of technology available or implements used. But, the Indian wisdom saw the same through social patterns, character of human beings and trends due to large scale observance of such ideas.

            They viewed the Yuga, unit of time, as four types – Krita Yuga, Treta Yuga, Dwapara Yuga and Kali Yuga. The four yugas form one unit called ChaturYuga which translates to 12000 Deva vatsara or 4,320,000 human years (360 days/year). 71 chaturyugas comprise the lifespan of one Manu or one manvantara.  14 such Manvantara constitute one day of Brahma. While the calculation is not relevant to our discussion, the characteristic of each Yuga does.

            Krita Yuga is dominated by Sattva, hence it is also called Satya Yuga, which is followed by Rajas filled Treta Yuga. Dwapara Yuga is filled with Rajas and Tamas, while Kali has only Tamas. This is the dominant outlook of the time and does not imply if the other gunas people will not be there.

Storytime
            After a long illustrious life of restoring dharma everywhere, SriKrishna departed the earthly abode, which also resulted in the fratricidal destruction of Yadus. The same day, Kali, the darkness that augments the degenerate tendencies of indiscriminating minds put its roots. The Pandavas made their grandson Parikshit as the ruler of Hastinapur and Vajra, the grandson of Krishna, the ruler of Mathura.

            As Kali progressed to occupy vast areas, Parikshit took a huge army and established his sway on the neighboring regions, whose rulers paid tributes to his prowess. During his travel, he confronted Dharma, which appeared as a single legged bull and Mother Earth as a cow. The bull asked the weeping cow on the source of its sorrow. It wondered if the cow was pitiful of its situation or at the loss of Krishna or due to the multiplying apathy and falling standards of mankind. Interestingly the bull was preoccupied at resolving the cow’s problems, though it was suffering on one leg. 

            Mother Earth, Dhara, responded, that Dharma was standing on its four legs till Krishna was present in the physical body. With the advent of Kali, the three legs were robbed. All the good qualities like truth, kindness etc has all but vanished. She was feeling depressed at the plight of not just herself and Dharma, but also at the Devas, Pitris, sadhus, all the varnas and ashramas

            As Dharma and Prithvi were conversing so on the banks of Saraswati, at Kurukshetra, a person with shudra characteristics (only implies that someone who is not dedicating time for spiritual evolution) wearing princely clothes (relying on deception) started hitting the bull with his staff. The bull was trembling in fear at the torture and the defenseless cow also got kicked. Parikshit commanded the man to stop, even as he aimed an arrow from his well strung bow. He asked about their true identities. He declared immediately that he will protect the bull and the cow at any cost even if had to battle a Deva

            Dharma commended Parikshit’s action was worthy of his lineage and as a follower of Krishna. The bull said even it had found no definite cause for its plight. He could not ascertain if it was due to his destiny or his karma or was it due to Ishwara. The bull sought Parikshit’s intellect to decipher this conundrum, as he was a Rajarishi.
            Parikshit pondered deep and declared that such deep secrets of dharma cannot be uttered by anyone but Dharma, who is in the form of an ox. The four legs of dharma are tapas (austerity), shaucha (cleanliness), daya (compassion) and satya(truth). The forces of Adharma have cut the first three feet of the bull. Egotism destroys austerity, purity is lost by attachments and compassion dies due to blinding passions. Only the last leg Truth is upholding Dharma, which is also under the onslaught of Kali. Parikshit found that people who were committed to tamasic values plundering as ruling class with the least respect for ideals were degrading Mother Earth and pushing her to a pitiable plight.
            Parikshit having comforted Dharma and Earth drew a sword and was determined to kill Kali, who surrendered to him immediately and sought his refuge. Being an honorable Kshatriya, he offered protection even to the surrendering enemy. Kali sought few places where he can stay confined. Parikshit granted him four places to stay – places of gambling, drinking/intake of intoxicants, debauchery and slaughter. To the pleading Kali he granted gold as a fifth seat. These five sources either single or in combination can be the entry point of adharma to anyone. Parikshit thus restored the missing three legs to Dharma and comforted Earth and made her prosperous.
Practical applications

  • Truth is the last hope we have. This is not the same as not speaking untruth as the western secular mindset can comprehend. Truth and the pursuit of the ultimate truth are ingrained in each one of us. If mostly due to laziness or apathy we refuse to stay focused on seeking Truth, the grasp of dharma understanding slips that much further. Metaphorically, we are chopping the last leg of dharma that is left and perhaps doing the job for Kali, more efficiently than him.

  • Restoring the missing legs of dharma: The three missing legs can be restored through our individual efforts. As more such people exist, dharma can be restored to its pristine glory.  तप: शौचं दया सत्यमिति पादा: कृते कृता:। अधर्मांशैस्त्रयो भग्ना: स्मयसङ्गमदैस्तव (SB – 1-17-24) In Satya Yuga, your (dharma) four well established legs were – austerity, cleanliness (at every level, not just physical), compassion and Truth. But three of them have been completely broken due to pride/egoism, lust and intoxication. Austerity is destroyed by ego, cleanliness by wrongful association or attachments and intoxication (not necessarily by alcohol or drugs) due to anger, jealousy, passion etc can wipe out compassion. A person who is not well established in Truth will be unable to perceive this subtle fact. Unless the last leg Truth is saved, the other three cannot be. Just like Parikshit, established in truth was able to restore the other three, we can also do the same at an individual level. When enough of such Truth seekers influence, the society will restore dharma.
  • Dharma in its entire glory: Mother Earth gives the recipe of all the ingredients needed to restore her former glory, just as SriKrishna had.  (SB 1-16-26-30)

सत्यं शौचं दया क्षान्तिस्त्याग: सन्तोष आर्जवम् । शमो दमस्तप: साम्यं तितिक्षोपरति: श्रुतम् २६
ज्ञानं विरक्तिरैश्वर्यं शौर्यं तेजो बलं स्मृति: । स्वातन्त्र्यं कौशलं कान्तिर्धैर्यं मार्दवमेव २७
प्रागल्भ्यं प्रश्रय: शीलं सह ओजो बलं भग: । गाम्भीर्यं स्थैर्यमास्तिक्यं कीर्तिर्मानोऽनहङ्कृति: २८
एते चान्ये भगवन्नित्या यत्र महागुणा: । प्रार्थ्या महत्त्वमिच्छद्भिर्न वियन्ति स्म कर्हिचित् २९
तेनाहं गुणपात्रेण श्रीनिवासेन साम्प्रतम् । शोचामि रहितं लोकं पाप्मना कलिनेक्षितम् ३०
These divine characteristics or dimensions of virtues are extolled which SriKrishna had restored on earth. These traits are the difference between Heaven on earth and Hell. The absence of such good traits automatically implies their opposite, Kali as dominating, just as the absence of light implies darkness. The corollary is if these characteristics are abundant in every individual, then Kali loses its grip even if it is the peak of Kali Yuga, thereby entailing that each person can create or destroy Kali Yuga effects in their own life.
(1)Truthfulness, (2) Cleanliness (purity), (3) Compassion / inability to tolerate others suffering, (4) Patience / forgiveness, 5) Magnanimity / generosity / detachment, (6) Contentment (self-satisfaction), (7) Straightforwardness, (8) Controlling the mind, (9) Controlling the senses, (10) austerity / sticking to the purity of purpose / responsibility, (11) Treating friend and foe alike (in a good way), (12) forbearance  (patiently enduring), (13) Self- withdrawal or remaining aloof from a worldly mindset, (14) Following scriptures (Vedas, Upanishads), (15) Knowledge of the Self, (16) detachment to worldly objects, (17) Leadership (Lordliness), (18) chivalry, (19) Brilliance (energy) / influence, (20) Memory, (21) Not dependant on others, (22) Skillfulness / dexterity in actions, (23) Beauty / attractiveness, (24) Heroism / bravery, (25) sensitiveness of heart, (26) Ingenuity (applied intellect), (27) Modesty / gentility, (28) Good traits, virtues, (29) determination (strength of mind), (30) vigor, vitality, (31) six divine qualities of bhaga – (full strength, full fame, wealth, knowledge, beauty and renunciation), (32) Profoundness, (33) Steadfastness, (34) Faith (in Ishwara, Vedas, Paramatma) , (35) fame,  (36) worthy of worship, (37) absence of pride (egoism)
We see a lot of these parallels in the virtues that make us endearing to Paramatma in Bhagavad Gita. For a detailed insight, please refer the three parts – Whom does God Love – Part 1, Part 2 and Part 3. As more people acquire these character traits, they naturally become positive influencers thus restoring dharma.

  • How to identify Kali’s presence? -  (SB 1-17-32) gives a clear picture of how to identify Kali’s presence. The primary location is to look within.

त्वां वर्तमानं नरदेवदेहे- ष्वनुप्रवृत्तोऽयमधर्मपूग: । लोभोऽनृतं चौर्यमनार्यमंहो ज्येष्ठा माया कलहश्च दम्भ:
tvāṁ vartamānaṁ nara-deva-deheṣv anupravṛtto ’yam adharma-pūgaḥ
lobho ’nṛtaṁ cauryam anāryam aṁho jyeṣṭhā ca māyā kalahaś ca dambhaḥ
In the presence of Kali, adharma embodies itself in the masses as lobha (greed), anrtam (untruth), chouryam (stealing), anaryam (vulgarity / incivility), amhah (treachery / undutifulness), jyestha (inauspiciousness – opposite of Sri), maya (cheating / deceit), kalaha (quarrel), damba (vanity). These are virtually the opposite of the above mentioned virtues, yet their dominating presence has to be forcibly countered to make a dent in their vice like grip. The darker these forces are the stronger is their influence. We may see it obvious in many politicians and leaders of influence, yet we refuse to identify these darker shadows in our personality. We may not be as bad as some we know, yet if we do not focus on eradicating even the traces of these negative traits, they slowly alter us over time; just like disease getting its toehold can wreck the health. Combating Kali is everyone’s personal responsibility, not left to some avatara like Kalki. Are we worth saving; only our true character can answer that question?

  • Kali’s seat of rule: As a part of the surrender bargain, Kali pleads to spare few locations.

द्यूतं पानं स्त्रिय: सूना यत्राधर्मश्चतुर्विध: dyūtaṁ pānaṁ striyaḥ sūnā yatrādharmaś catur-vidhaḥ (SB 1-17-38)
The four primary kinds of adharma attractions are dyutam (gambling), panam (drinking intoxicants), striyah (debauchery) and suna (slaughterhouse). To the repeated desperate pleading, Parikshit gave one more seat – jatarupam (gold). SB 1-17-39)
पुनश्च याचमानाय जातरूपमदात्प्रभु: । ततोऽनृतं मदं कामं रजो वैरं पञ्चमम्
punaś ca yācamānāya jāta-rūpam adāt prabhuḥ tato ’nṛtaṁ madaṁ kāmaṁ rajo vairaṁ ca pañcamam
The clever Parikshit gave gold as the fifth seat, as it is the source of adharmaanrtam (untruth), madam (pride/egoism), kamam (lust), rajah (passion, cruelty), vairam (enemity).
Even a cursory glance at these Adharma sources is sufficient to tell the numerous negatives hidden in each. Let us take paanam for example, in age where even youngsters seem to find easy access, with ads promoting it as part of the elite culture everywhere and the outlook that a teetotaler is almost a lunatic, unfit for this planet. Apart from the known issues from the effects on liver to brain and everything in between, the biggest pushback will come from the most informed. They will lecture how certain studies indicate specific good aspects. Now ponder truthfully. Does it promote untruth within us, including the deception that one is in control of the drink or a tendency to justify? Does it push towards lust and incivility, when not in control? Does it have the potential to initiate quarrel or vanity? Does it promote inauspiciousness? Does it promote deception and cheating? The most accepted social practice is a veritable door with invitation for Kali, not to speak of others. One can verily understand how gambling, porn, prostitution, illicit affairs or even increasingly the world’s medical knowledge on the bad effects of meat in diet.  Kali capitalizes on the small toehold and expands itself to consume the entire mindspace. This does not mean we ascribe labels on those who do as mean people.
As we realize the mere absence of bad traits is not the same as the presence of good virtues, while the opposite is true. The effects of Kali are like an avalanche, start small, but quickly gathers momentum. While we can learn the effects of Kali by looking at others’ lives, it is crucial to understand that it can be combated only within. The war has to be fought within and it is only a personal victory or defeat, though the fruits may be for the entire society. Constantly examining our fortress for potential weakspots in the constant battle with Kali can be exhausting if we do not study scriptures and have good satsang. These weapons have no counters from the adharma forces. Slip as many times as an honest mistake. Do not let guilt overpower you as your true nature is satchitananda. Guilt is the backdoor under the full control of Kali. Commit yourself to at least protecting Truth, as the other legs of dharma can be restored once we have Truth as our core character. Fear not the long dark shadows of Kali, as the Truth that shines inside each one of us can put out a universe of darkness. Hence it is said Satyameva jayate.


तत् सत्