Podcast details
Why we can't get self realisation?
The obstacle to Self-realization is within you, due to a lack of dispassion, renunciation, and austerity. Trying to do everything leads to losing everything, just as watering every leaf with a leaky basket kills the tree, while watering the roots nourishes the whole. Running between masters shows inner conflict, a lack of discipline, and doubt. A seeker spent decades with many masters, gaining nothing, and grew opposed to the path. He returned to his first master to criticize him. The master assigned him to dig a well, but changed the location each day for nine days, ruining the garden with no result. On the tenth day, the frustrated seeker protested the wasted effort. The master revealed this mirrored his own life: digging many holes in his heart by constantly shifting his focus, destroying his field of confidence and achieving nothing. Had he stayed in one place with one practice, he would have attained wisdom.
"If you perfect one thing, you perfect everything. Conversely, if you try to do everything, you will lose everything."
"For thirty-six years, forty years, you wasted time running here and there. You made so many holes in your heart. You destroyed your field of confidence."
Filming location: Vép, Hungary
This text is transcribed and grammar corrected by AI. If in doubt what was actually said in the recording, use the transcript to double click the desired cue. This will position the recording in most cases just before the sentence is uttered.
The text contains hyperlinks in bold to three authoritative books on yoga, written by humans, to clarify the context of the lecture:
- Yoga in Daily Life - The System
Paramhans Swami Maheshwarananda. Ibera Verlag, Vienna, 2000. ISBN 978-3-85052-000-3 - The Hidden Power in Humans - Chakras and Kundalini
Paramhans Swami Maheshwarananda. Ibera Verlag, Vienna, 2004. ISBN 978-3-85052-197-0 - Lila Amrit - The Divine Life of Sri Mahaprabhuji
Paramhans Swami Madhavananda. Int. Sri Deep Madhavananda Ashram Fellowship, Vienna, 1998. ISBN 3-85052-104-4
