Archive for the ‘Enlightenment’ Category

Radical Non Duality subsumes “self”

Monday, May 11th, 2009

Sanskrit DaPost Ruchiradam Event; The Reality Way of Adidam emerges as completely uncompromising to “I”, no room for, or allowance of cries of “what about me” ?

No little “self” surfing in the Great Self here. No breaking it to “you” gently, no slow, stage by stage evolution into the Great One.

Plainly put– no separate “self” exists, never did, never will, always was fiction.

There are no egos in Reality Itself — none. It is not that Adidam is a Way in which you overcome egoity by a process of “wearing it down” — as if emptying water from a boat with a bucket, such that you eventually succeed in getting all of the water out of the boat.

There is no water in the boat. There is no ego in the body-mind. There is no ego in Reality Itself. The ego does not, in Reality, exist. There is no separate entity — and the preliminary “Perfect Knowledge” practice points to the non-existence of the presumed-to-be-separate self.

Adi Da Samraj

This is where Adidam (practice) post 2000 begins, it does not end there, it merely begins there.

It ends in absolute translation into unbroken light, Only Love Bliss itself, no forms or difference at all.

There need be no evolution of self, since “self” is literally (not metaphorically) fiction, does not exist.

Even many friends and readers of Adi Da Samraj have not yet had a chance to absorb this, He pulled the rug from under all of us. All that is necessary is a touch of equanimity, a little discipline, a serious approach, quite within the capacity of anyone, then Reality (both the who and the what of) itself does the rest.

The Atheleon Volumes spells it out.
What is relevant now:

  • The Preliminary Perfect Knowledge Practice
  • Study of post 2000 texts
  • Darshan & Recognition Responsive Practice
  • Practice Retreats on Empowered Sanctuaries
  • Company of devotees involved in the above

Still No Cure Found For The Dreaded Gomboo!

Saturday, March 14th, 2009

I have an old beaten up version of The Dreaded Gomboo, the cover and sides are very knocked about, but the content is still pristine, as it was when I first read it, perhaps now, with even more appreciation and understanding I am re-reading it

The Dreaded Gom-Boo, or The Impossible Three-Day Thumb-and-Finger Problem

September 9, 1982

MASTER DA: Have you all heard about the Dreaded Gom-Boo? Or the impossible Three-Day Thumb-and-Finger Problem? Ah ha! You see? Nobody tells you about these things except me.

A myth has been circulating for many centuries now that mankind is diseased, that all beings are suffering from what I call the Dreaded Gom-Boo, also called sin, maya, ego, suffering, separated individuality, illusion, delusion, confusion, and indifference. We are all supposed to accept this diagnosis, realize how diseased we are, and submit ourselves to the local religious hospital, where a father or mother doctor will confirm our disease and require us to submit for the rest of our lives to various regimes for our own healing and ultimate cure. This is the basic proposition of traditional religion, and it begins with the diagnosis of the dreaded disease.

Tradition has it that we are all, by birth, by virtue of our very existence, even now diseased, sinful, separated from the Great One. What a horror! Yes! What an obscenity has been laid upon us through the traditions of society, which, merely because of the impulse to survive as the body-mind, have for centuries required human beings to invest themselves with the belief in this disease and to suppress their own life-motion, which comes only from the Great One, in order to fulfill the presumed needs of our chaotic society.

I come to tell you, as I stand in the midst of the priests of this horror, that not even one of you is suffering from this disease. It is an imaginary disease, a terrible disease, but altogether imaginary. No one has ever actually had this disease. Not one single being has ever had the Dreaded Gom-Boo, or the impossible Three-Day Thumb-and-Finger Problem. It has never happened! It does not exist!

What is the Truth? We are Happy. We live in God. The Great One is our very Being. We inhere in the Blissful, Forceful Being of the Starry God, the Wonder, the Mystery, the Person of Love. This is our Situation and our Destiny. I am only one among many voices, but this is my Message to you: There is no disease. There is nothing to cure. We are not patients and we are not parented. We are not children. No dreadful destiny lies before us. There is nothing whatsoever to cure.

Tell Me True – Have You Got the Gom-Boo?

August 30, 1982

MASTER DA: If you want to “get religious” in our time, you must first decide that you have the Dreaded Gom-Boo. Then you go to a Doctor Pope, Doctor Church, Doctor Jesus, Doctor Mahatma, Doctor Mahatmaboo, Doctor Gombooananda, Doctor Gomananda-Booharaj. As soon as you get the feeling that you have the disease, you start looking for religious answers. Ask most of the people around here how they got involved with this Way of life, and they will describe some symptom or other of the Dreaded Gom-Boo. The Dreaded Gom-Boo led you all here because you were looking to be cured of the heebie-jeebies, the hopeless Three-Day Thumb-and-Finger Problem, the terrible jiggly meatedness! (Laughter.)

Are you telling me that you think God and Truth are supposed to be interested in curing you of the Dreaded Gom-Boo? Is that it? It is about time you realized that there is no cure for the Dreaded Gom-Boo! The Gom is terrible! The Boo is terminal! And this is why everyone dreads it, the terrible, terminal incurableness. That is what youve got, right? I thought so! I could see the symptoms as soon as you came in here. Have you got the Boo? The Dreaded? The terrible Gom? Have you? Thats what I thought! Tell me true-have you got the Gom-Boo?

From The Dreaded Gomboo or The Imaginary Disease Religion Seeks To Cure

Listen to this wonderful ecstatic uncut talk compliments of Beezone

(24:24 mins)

Nirvilkalpa Samadhi by Grace

Friday, March 13th, 2009

A long time devotee of Adi Da speaks of his remarkable but temporary spiritual experiences given by the blessing power or Guru Shaktipat of Adi Da Samraj

“The Power Foot”

Sunday, February 1st, 2009

This article is meant to give people a realistic, rather than idealistic account of how things could be around Adi Da Samraj when he was embodied, and to dispel some common misconceptions, which I carried myself, prior to this retreat. It makes note of an overlooked and often misunderstood direct function of the Guru. The Guru’s Demand or Testing Requirement, Adi Da’s own Guru’s, Baba Muktananda (for an example scroll down page), Swami Rudrananda  and  Baba Nityananda functioned in this manner in their own characteristic ways, as a demand to their disciples (It is reported for instance that the Great Siddha, Baba Nityananda tested Baba Muktananda relentlessly for several years prior to his becoming a surrendered disciple)

The first level of sadhana or spiritual discipline that I had to endure with a human teacher wasn’t any sort of otherworldly yoga, nor did it involve love and acknowledgment from the Guru, or even kind words. I spent about two minutes with Rudi when I first met him. He told me to get a job and come back in one year! But I was perfectly willing to do that. As it happened, within a month or two later, my spiritual work with him did begin. It wasn’t in fact necessary for me to be away a year, but I was perfectly willing for it to be so I was ecstatically happy to have made this contact, to have a beginning, to have become capable of spiritual life. It was a profound joy to me to have found someone who was obviously capable of drawing me into a condition at least more profound than the one I was living. From that moment it was one demand on top of the other. It was work. Work was the sadhana, work was the spiritual life. There was no “Come to me and sit and chat.” It was “Take out the garbage, sweep out this place.” If I came to sit and talk with Rudi, I was most often told “Scrub the floor,” or “There is a new shipment in the warehouse, so go and unload my truck.” I worked constantly, day and night, for four years. On top of the heavy physical labor, Rudi had me going to seminaries, where I studied Christian theology, masses of historical literature, ancient languages, all kinds of things in which I had no fundamental interest. I had to live in Protestant and Orthodox seminaries, but I was not a Christian. My sadhana was continuous work and self-transcendence. There was no ending of it. Even in sleep and dreams, there was no ending of it.

Adi Da talking about his time with Rudi ( Swami Rudrananda)

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On a recent service retreat to Naitauba Island the principle Hermitage Ashram of Adidam I had the great good fortune to serve for a few weeks in the gardens surrounding the area called “The Matrix”, this is where Bhagavan Adi Da Samraj would most often reside on a daily basis.I felt this to be a blessing and a happy service position for me. The first thing that came to my attention was a sense of great stress, surrounding anything remotely to do with service in the area. Everyone was stressful, all communications were tense and gave the tacit sense of pressure.

This really perplexed me, why the tension? (I had also noticed this on the face of a devotee who was running with a unmistakable look of profound distress, at the Mountain of Attention Sanctuary in 2005 when Adi Da was in residence) Surely Adidam is about finding equanimity in life and practice. I mentioned this underlying and constant pressure to another devotee who had spent many years in Bhagavan’s company, he agreed that this was the case or more exactly, “its only half of the equation” –the other half is called “The Beauty Foot” which makes the “Demand”  of the Guru, tolerable.

The more time I spent serving around The Matrix, the more obvious it became that Bhagavan Adi Da Samraj, was the center and cause of this constant stress, it was deliberately though not strategically generated and intrinsic to close proximity to the Guru, the closer the proximity, the more the sense of a distinctive “Demand” was palpable,  it was hard to relax there, there could be moments of lightness and humour with other Gurubai and these were quite common, quiet restrained humour was constant and happy communication was not absent. However a distinct tension and sense of pressure was always near the surface.

One effect of this constant “Demand” was there was little room for unconsciousness in service, what I mean by that is a person had to be constantly alert, no room for day-dreaming or making mistakes. Everything was “Sadhana” ( conscious spiritual practice), never quite comfortable, always with an edge to it. The most trivial thing had to be taken into account, lest it created a disturbance of some kind or other.

At the same time I found  an older book called “Ishta” quite gracefully, it is mainly a series of spoken discourses given on Naitauba to devotees in the early 1990’s Upon reading several chapters it became very clear to me that Adi Da Samraj always acted in this way.

He called it “Kicking Ass!” and stated “If your Guru does not Kick your Ass enough, he does not love you (enough)” So what he created was a sacred “Ass Kicking” machine, that went on night and day, most directly in his close proximity but outward from there. “Ishta” explained this paradoxical  effect, and I became certain I found the book for this very reason.

Bhagavan Adi Da constantly “turned up the heat” both hourly and daily, that was clearly one of his functions as Living Spiritual Master It was a primary form of his service to devotees and he looked for any and every occasion to do this. It was a very tangible, benign form of his love or sacrifice as Guru.

I began to really consider this each time I went to The Matrix, often the sacred conch would sound and Bhagavan would be seen walking, even this happy event would have stong protocols attached to it. A friend once made the sharp observation “Adidam is never,never, quite a holiday” or no matter how outwardly positive the circumstance there is always an edge of stress attached to it. This is exactly how Bhagavan wanted it to be. For one reason only, to constantly generate circumstance that required his student devotees to always go passed (or transcend ) themselves.

In the living company of Adi Da Samraj, there was acknowledged to be only 2 “moods”, the “Power Foot” and the “Beauty Foot”. These 2 qualities were very real, they were not any sort of imagined event, they would be “in your face”, self evident, undeniable.The Power Foot is the Guru’s “Demand” (male form) and the Beauty Foot is the Guru’s “Sweetness” (female form) they could also be together in the same moment, but this rapidly changing dynamic was Adi Da’s constant gift and prasad to devotees.

****

Baba Muktananda’s “power foot”

Below are quotes from an unpublished book by a 30 year disciple of Baba Muktananda from this website (copyright to those who own this material)

A Siddha Master has very special ways of working on the student. Everyone of his gestures is a teaching, and each piece of teaching goes to the deepest level of the disciple’s consciousness with utmost directness. It is amazing to watch a perfect Guru work on the soul level. Swami Muktananda’s teachings were extremely sober and concise: not a word, not a gesture that was superfluous. His teachings were without repetition, unforeseeable and ever new, because in total harmony with the ever-new constellations formed by Life herself.

Baba, as he was called affectionately, loved to go on rampages and to let his Shakti (his spiritual energy) burst out in unique ways. One morning Baba came to the Guru Gita (the early morning chant) carrying his long stick. That stick was quite famous. He told everyone to look only at the Guru Gita text which we would usually chant in the early morning. No one was to look at him. That triggered vigilance. It created a dense atmosphere, a mixture of awe and fear. If he so much as saw you even glance at him, the stick came swirling toward you. In the perspective of the Tyrant Benefactor, this is an example of how a great teacher can destroy fixed ideas of what “yoga” is supposed to be. In the Western world, many people have concepts of what a Guru is, or should be. I saw Baba continuously wipe out these mental representations so as to free people for the direct experience of the Guru’s spiritual energy. In the evening of that day, Baba spoke of the people who worship the Guru’s form, emphasizing the uselessness of such attachments to his human appearance.

Many times I heard him recommend that everyone just follow the general discipline and leave him alone in his old age, to enjoy the divine silence. Often he even scolded the whole crowd of students, telling us how we weighed on him with our lethargy and lack of understanding, forcing him to repeat a thousand times that we were god, and most often to no avail, because we did not listen with the ears of the heart. . . .

I will attempt to describe in detail some of the fascinating ways a great Siddha Master used to teach his disciples and how he embodied the Tyrant with full compassion for our sake, when this seemed beneficial for the seeker’s evolution.

There were several buildings with dormitories around what was called ‘the older buildings.’ The kitchen was located there. One early morning—it must have been around three o’clock—everybody’s attention was aroused by mighty noises. Lights were on, which was not unusual. The noises were frightening. Suddenly pans were flying out the window, a voice in the air was saying, “Baba is in the kitchen.” The setting had a breath-cutting quality. Our minds got incredibly sharp. Everybody was listening, stunned. Then the noises subsided. Meanwhile, by now dressed, we rushed down, to do what Ashram discipline required. This meant many gathered in a big hall for tea in utter silence, followed by chant. . . .

Events of this nature shook everybody up. They were perfect mirrors. Facing the irrational, the unexplainable, our minds strained to make sense. These events had a direct impact on the deepest level of consciousness; they were energy transmitters, and whatever discussions they triggered, they were always beyond all our speculation in their effects. We could simply assume that what we were seeing and commenting on was a perfect reflection of our own reality. We could listen to other people’s interpretations. Could look at such events as “dreams” and go into dream interpretation. Whatever the choice, the wealth of their symbolic value drew everyone to magic inner spaces. . . .

Each time something so sudden, shocking and beyond reason happened in the community the whole field was shaken. Our usual patterns were broken. The awakening from mechanization opened space for new vitality.

Another fascinating aspect is the a-rational (beyond-reason) nature of the Siddha teachings, as we got them from Baba Muktananda. The incident with the flying pans could not be absorbed and classified by the rational mind, as e.g., the consequence of some negligence. Here was a man endowed with the highest Siddhis (spiritual powers), from whom we continuously experienced love, and this same man was triggering something like a thunderstorm in the middle of the quiet night. With such natural forces in action, all concepts, all ideas of what a Guru should be, of what the relationship to him should be, all rational analysis, was cut through. This created a formidable opening in consciousness. Also, these events remain recorded forever in the mind, unforgettable.

Rudi

Friday, January 30th, 2009

Rudi was Adi Da’s first human Teacher, he spoke of his time with him and its utility here

The first level of sadhana or spiritual discipline that I had to endure with a human teacher wasn’t any sort of otherworldly yoga, nor did it involve love and acknowledgment from the Guru, or even kind words. I spent about two minutes with Rudi when I first met him. He told me to get a job and come back in one year! But I was perfectly willing to do that. As it happened, within a month or two later, my spiritual work with him did begin. It wasn’t in fact necessary for me to be away a year, but I was perfectly willing for it to be so I was ecstatically happy to have made this contact, to have a beginning, to have become capable of spiritual life. It was a profound joy to me to have found someone who was obviously capable of drawing me into a condition at least more profound than the one I was living. From that moment it was one demand on top of the other. It was work. Work was the sadhana, work was the spiritual life. There was no “Come to me and sit and chat.” It was “Take out the garbage, sweep out this place.” If I came to sit and talk with Rudi, I was most often told “Scrub the floor,” or “There is a new shipment in the warehouse, so go and unload my truck.” I worked constantly, day and night, for four years. On top of the heavy physical labor, Rudi had me going to seminaries, where I studied Christian theology, masses of historical literature, ancient languages, all kinds of things in which I had no fundamental interest. I had to live in Protestant and Orthodox seminaries, but I was not a Christian. My sadhana was continuous work and self-transcendence. There was no ending of it. Even in sleep and dreams, there was no ending of it.

from The Method of The Siddhas (My “Bright” Word)

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This video communicates  something of what Rudi (Swami Rudrananda) was teaching and how he taught

Leela : The Cave at Arunachala

Friday, January 23rd, 2009

The year following the Mahasamadhi of The Master is said be to be one of celebration of His Life and recounting Leelas ( Divine sport or Instructive play) associated with The Realizers time amongst us. This is an oral Leela which I don’t think has ever been published, I have heard it recounted twice in detail but not directly to me, so some details may be in error or in need of correction, so take it as a reasonably accurate account.

“In 1977 Adi Da, then Bubba Free John suddenly decided to go on an Indian Yajna or pilgrimage taking one devotee with him, named William. It turned out to be a very short trip. Adi Da spent most of his time in and  around the area of Ramana Maharshi’s Ashram at the foot of Arunachala Hill in Southern India

He stayed some days in a Cave (more like a small dwelling) which had been frequented by Ramana Maharshi, with William, an Ashram priest serving this area, upon seeing Adi Da, began to perform ceremonial worship on Him as if He was a “Shiva Lingam”  In response to this  Adi Da went into an ecstatic state, losing consciousness of His surroundings.

About the same time a group of pilgrims were circumnambulating  Arunachala as was the custom, upon seeing the Great Adept they also began offering their praise and worship but to the Divine Form manifest as the Hindu Godhead aspect Vishnu.

Also arriving on the scene or perhaps on hearing of Adi Da’s appearance, 2 or 3 rather wild looking sadhus also came for Darshan.

At some point the situation was getting a bit crazy,and causing a disturbance, Adi Da Samraj decided to leave with William, the Sadhus began to follow and Adi Da blessed them with a fierce hissing look, called the “scowl of renunciation” and they received this as Diksha (blessing) and did not follow.”

I love this Leela which clearly expresses what Adi Da has called the  Ancient Walk About Way or the tradition of spontaneous Response and Heart Recognition of the Master’s Form wherever it appears. I also did not want this story to be lost, since to my knowledge it has never been published, if any one can add to, or clarify it further please leave a comment

The pictures are of Adi Da ( Bubba Free John) on this trip in !977, complements of Beezone and copyright Adidam.org more detail from the Vision Mound Magazine 1977

The “problem” of no enlightened devotees?

Saturday, January 10th, 2009

In the early 1980’s several devotees of Adi Da Samraj came forward to confess their enlightened condition, I remember the thrill that went through me — My God—Enlightenment is possible – From memory a well known yoga scholar, a formal devotee at the time, wrote a booklet on this astounding development, which upon testing by the Great Adept, Adi Da,  ultimately was shown to be a false alarm and the lesson used to further self understanding in his students.

While it is true, it would have been a marvelous event for humanity (I for one would dance with joy), if a fully enlightened devotee had arisen  during Bhagavan Adi Da’s lifetime (or at any time). There is more to it than that. Adi Da set the bar very, very high in his teaching and transmission work (while alive). Most formal devotees of Adi Da Samraj can confess to degrees of enlightenment with a small “e”. Taking different form in each case, perceived perhaps as gifts and insights received. That small “e” should not be sneezed at, it would always be hard won, by a combination of Grace and Sadhana. The seed of this potential is in the community.

Something great may emerge from all this or not, there is a massively powerful spiritual and physical infrastructure built tirelessly by Adi Da Samraj while alive, its quite astounding what he accomplished and so much remains unknown in the public domain.

Most commonly, what happens with the passing of a great Guru or Teacher in the past, has been a mediocre continuation of what he or she set in motion.  Adidam has the potential to be different to this. Its up to current and future devotees to create the difference.

Thus, my true devotees will be a new human order that will serve to “create” a new age of sanity and joy. But that age will not be the age of the occult, the religious, or the scientific or the technological evolution of mankind. It will be the fundamental age of Real Existence, wherein life will be radically realized, entirely apart for the adventure that was mankind’s great search.

from The Heart’s Shout