Sri M said...
When you want to start studying spiritual things, begin when you have enough fuel in you. Not when everything is exhausted. You can get into understanding spiritual matters, even as early as your t...
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When you want to start studying spiritual things, begin when you have enough fuel in you. Not when everything is exhausted. You can get into understanding spiritual matters, even as early as your t...
If you seriously look into spiritual exploration, what clothes you wear and what language you speak is not important.
If you are deeply inclined spiritually and you want only spiritual development, not any fancy trimmings. You want to find your true self and figure out why we are human beings, what is our true ide...
Devotion is a deep ‘bhava’ feeling that wells up in the heart when one finds one’s limitations and is looking for divinity which is without definitions!
The Satsang Foundation is delighted to inform you of the upcoming residential Satsang with Sri M. Location: Near Mahabalipuram, Chennai, Tamil Nadu, India. Dates : 11th to 14th August 2022 As a pre...
The Satsang Foundation is pleased to invite sponsorships for Cottages in Sadhak Niwas at The Sacred Grove; Centre for Exploring Consciousness at Chowdepalle, Andhra Pradesh. The Sacred Grove, Chowd...
If that Supreme Reality can be turned into devotion for the teacher who expresses that divinity, then the seed is sown, it sprouts, a beautiful tree comes up, it flowers. Then you realize that who ...
The whole of sadhana, the whole of our devotion, bhakti or bhava is the clearing of the rust on the piece of iron. When the rust goes, the iron behaves like a magnet.
You can study the Upanishads, practice yoga, sit and breathe up and down, but if the heart has not melted, nothing has happened.
Music is an intrinsic part of bhava and bhakti, and that music goes beyond all words. You don’t need to know any words.
In the Mundaka Upanishad, the rishis said such learned pandits who have only acquired knowledge from learning and not from within, when they begin to guide, it’s like andhenaiva nīyamānā yathāndhāḥ...
What Vedanta tries to do, in its essence, is attempt to use the intellect and find out the limitations of the intellect.