27/03/2024
This conversation explores the nature of desires, action, self-knowledge, and the realization of one's true nature. Maharaj addresses the questioner's quest for the fulfilment of desires, emphasizing that desires require energy and effort for their fulfilment. He notes that the intensity and clarity of desire, along with the effort invested, determine whether a desire will be fulfilled. Maharaj points out that personal desires have limited energy, whereas desires for the common good can harness the collective energy of the world.
The dialogue then shifts to the distinction between right and wrong desires, with Maharaj suggesting that desires leading to happiness are right, provided they consider the happiness of others as well. He advises using observation, memory, and reflection to understand the potential outcomes of desires, stressing the importance of knowing oneself to transcend personal limitations.
Maharaj explains that self-knowledge involves recognizing what one is not, thereby remaining in one's natural state of pure awareness. This realization comes spontaneously and without effort. He challenges the questioner's fixed ideas about identity, suggesting that such notions obstruct true understanding.
The conversation delves into faith, self-inquiry, and the practice of self-awareness. Maharaj encourages trust in his teachings or self-inquiry as paths to realization. He also emphasizes the importance of a disciplined life for clearing one's vision and understanding one's mind.
Renunciation, Maharaj clarifies, is not about physically abandoning one's life but about understanding and detaching from mental attachments. He reiterates that self-realization involves discovering all that one is not, including physical, emotional, and conceptual identities. This process of witnessing and separating the self from the not-self is crucial, though Maharaj acknowledges the paradox of duality in the act of witnessing. He concludes by encouraging the questioner to go beyond concepts and directly experience the self by discovering what is not the self, underscoring that this experiential understanding is the essence of spiritual practice.
This conversation explores the nature of desires, action, self-knowledge, and the realization of one's true nature. Maharaj addresses the questioner's quest ...