Swamiji TV

Other links



Video details

Dissolve your mental pollution

Modern life has lost essential spiritual symbols and the sacred daily timetable. Real education comes from elders and satsang, not merely institutions for earning a living. Listen to parents-in-law with wisdom; their guidance generally stems from love. Devotion manifests the divine, as when Gaṅgā appeared in a pot for a devoted daughter-in-law. Hanumān demonstrated that God resides within the heart. A young girl’s pure love made Kṛṣṇa accept her simple offering. Gaṇeśa, representing wisdom, honored Mother Earth as the ultimate source, teaching that respect for family and nature is fundamental. We have forgotten the spiritual meaning of days and planets, leading to the abuse of nature. The primary pollution is mental, born from desire, anger, greed, delusion, arrogance, and ego. This inner pollution destroys spirituality and the outer world. Purify it through love, forgiveness, and humility. Temptation is a slippery road requiring mastery. A yogī, despite decades of austerity, fell to pride and desire through gradual temptation, showing that mental pollution begins subtly and sweetly. You must master your desires, not be enslaved by them. Surrender your ego and negative qualities at the divine feet.

"Where there is love, there is no passion. Where there is humbleness, there is no anger."

"If in your mind there is devotion, confidence, and love, then Gaṅgā will appear to you in this world too."

Filming location: Vép, Hungary

DVD 196B

Part 1: The Lost Timetable and the Wisdom of the Heart It is a great pity that we have lost many things in modern life. We have lost many symbols. We have lost the timetable of our day, the dinacharyā, the day's schedule, the program for the day. As humans, we should know that God has given us intellect. This intellect should be developed for the benefit of all creatures, the environment, and humanity. To learn something is never too late. And there is no end to wisdom. In the last minutes, or with the last breath of our life, we can learn many new things. Real education comes from your parents, wise people, elderly people, and in satsaṅg. School, college, and university education is only for your existence, for learning how to earn money or bread. That education will not lead you to the fulfillment of your human life. This type of education will not lead you to the summit of your life. No grandmother will be angry with a young daughter-in-law unless the daughter-in-law knows nothing and constantly makes mistakes. Every household has two sets of parents: the parents who gave you birth, and the parents of your partner, with whom you share life. You become part of their life, part of their family. Therefore, one should not take it negatively if a mother-in-law is strict. Except for some individual cases, generally, your parents-in-law love you like their own child. To listen to them is a great wisdom. In certain things, of course, they can be wrong. But do not become immediately angry; afterward, explain to them what is incorrect. They are also human; they can make mistakes and have limited experience and knowledge. There is a story. A lady told her daughter-in-law not to go out and to stay home. The daughter-in-law was cooking bread, chapatis, for her mother-in-law and herself while the rest of the family went to the Gaṅgā, which was nearly two thousand kilometers away. After cooking, she was washing the pots. She had such great love, devotion, and longing for the Gaṅgā. In the big pot where she had made the chapati dough, she was washing with water and thinking of Gaṅgā. Suddenly, Gaṅgā appeared in her pot. A great fountain came out from it. Where there had been only half a liter of water for washing, such a huge fountain emerged that thousands of liters of water flowed, and both she and her mother-in-law bathed in it. So Gaṅgā came to them. The others who went to the river were very tired, exhausted, and fell ill. So in India, we say, "Man change taka chauti me Gaṅgā." If in your mind there is devotion, confidence, and love, then Gaṅgā will appear to you in this world too. There is a story about God Rāma and Hanumānjī. You know Hanumānjī was a great devotee of God Rāma. When God Rāma left this world, everyone went with Him to Vaikuṇṭha, to Svargaloka. But God Rāma told Hanumānjī, "You will stay here on this planet and take care of the bhaktas." You know Hanumānjī was the incarnation of Lord Śiva. So Hanumānjī stayed. Some people said, "Well, Rāma left; He didn't take you with Him." Hanumānjī said, "No, He didn't leave. He is here; He is in my heart." He always said, "My God, my Lord, my Rāma is in my heart." You know, all people are not equal. Some accept, some do not; some believe, some do not; some try to abuse the beliefs of others. There was someone who did not believe and said to Hanumānjī, "Hanumānjī, it is very easy to say God is in my heart. How should we know if He is in your heart? We cannot see that. We only know the heart contains blood and muscles, that is all." Hanumānjī said, "Rāma and Sītā are both in my heart." They said, "Then show us." So Hanumānjī tore open his chest with his strong nails, opening it about 20-30 centimeters. What people saw inside were Rāma and Sītā sitting and blessing them. Then they all surrendered, and the chest closed automatically. So you will see many pictures and paintings in India of Hanumānjī opening his chest, and you see the Lord inside. Rāmāyaṇa Siddha Siddhi. So we say, please believe me, I am your devotee, but I am not that Hanumān who can open my chest and show you that you are within me. But Hanumān was such a devotee that he offered his heart to all; he opened it. This symbol is described in the Bible, with Jesus giving the Sacred Heart. So this is from Hanumānjī. There is another beautiful story. There was a little village with a small temple dedicated to Lord Kṛṣṇa. This story is from Rajasthan. In that village, there were mostly old farmers. One day, the priest, the pūjārī, had to go somewhere and could not find anyone to perform the pūjā, the temple worship. Every day, a young girl of about 10 to 12 years came for prayer. The priest asked this girl if she could do the pūjā. She said, "Yes, I will do it." He told her she must offer food to Kṛṣṇa three times—what we call Bhog Laghana. For God, the Divine, we offer only very sattvic nourishment: flowers, milk, honey, nuts. Blood, meat, bones, alcohol are for negative forces. The Pandit used to make very good halwa, nice parathas, puris, kachoris, and samosas to offer to Kṛṣṇa. He would place it before the statue, close the curtain, say prayers inviting the Lord to accept the food prepared with love and devotion, and a few minutes later, open the curtain, take the plate, and eat it himself as prasāda. The girl observed this daily. The temple was very small, the altar was small, and the priest left. The girl came to Kṛṣṇa's temple, brought some soup and rice, sang a bhajan, but Kṛṣṇa did not come to eat. For two or three hours she tried; the food remained on the plate. At lunchtime, she brought new food, but Kṛṣṇa, the stone statue, did not eat. In the evening, she offered again, and Kṛṣṇa did not eat. Then she also did not eat. She thought, "My God, He must be very hungry. I made a big mistake. What will I tell the priest when he comes? He will complain. Kṛṣṇa will complain to him." The next day, she brought very simple food again. She forgot there was no curtain; she had no cloth to make one. She was sad and angry. She said, "That is why you didn't eat, Kṛṣṇa." She had no cloth with her. She said, "If you eat only behind a curtain, then I make my skirt for you as a curtain. Eat now." After ten minutes, she saw that nothing was left on the plate. Only a little Mahāprasāda remained for her. She was so happy, full of tears. But she said, "I think you must be very hungry; yesterday you didn't eat." She brought more food and again made a curtain from her skirt, and Kṛṣṇa ate. In the evening, the priest returned. She said, "Here is your key to the temple and your pūjā things. Do not give me such a duty again. Kṛṣṇa gave me such a hard task. He was so offended, He didn't eat. But after two days, He was so hungry, and I had no curtain, so I hung my skirt in front of Him, and then He ate everything." The priest looked at her face. "What? He ate?" And she looked at him: "What? What do you mean He doesn't eat? You give to Him every day and He doesn't eat? And now He ate from me?" Her name was Karmā, Karmābhāī. There is a beautiful bhajan about her. So, where there is love, God appears. There was a meeting, a cosmic parliament. All deities came together to decide one thing: which God should be first celebrated or remembered? In a big conference, there is a problem: who should be the first speaker? Who should perform the opening ceremony? It is a big question. Similarly, among the deities, there was a big question: who should be first? Viṣṇu wanted to be first, Śiva wanted to be first, Śakti wanted to be first, Brahmā wanted to be first, Jesus wanted to be first, Kṛṣṇa wanted to be first. So they made a task, an examination, a competition: they should run around the Earth. Whoever returned first to the starting point would always be the first god. There was a long queue of many deities, from small to big. The marathon began. They all ran. Gaṇeśa was also among them. Gaṇeśa is the symbol of buddhi, intellect, wisdom, vivekā. Gaṇeśjī had a heavy body, a big stomach, and a long trunk. He tucked his trunk in so it would not swing. Then all began to run. Gaṇeśa did not go. He went with folded hands. He went around his mother. He made a circle around his mother and stood there. Some came, they were the last. Gaṇeśa was standing there, blessing them with his trunk. They said, "Gaṇeśjī, you are here?" He said, "Yes, I have been here for a long time." "Did you run around the Earth?" He said, "Yes. I did not need to run; I went comfortably. Mother is the Earth, and I made a parikramā around my mother. I made a prayer circle around my mother." From that time on, in every nation, we call her Mother Earth. Mother Earth is Śakti. We come from this Earth, and we will return to this Earth. So we do not know what our mother means. We should respect her as holy. So you have two mothers: your real mother and your mother-in-law. It depends on you how you behave. If you have a good relationship with your mother-in-law, it is you who creates it. If you do not have a good relationship, it is you who creates it. Otherwise, mostly, mothers are afraid that some girl will come and take my boy away, and mostly, mothers are afraid that some boy will come and take my daughter away. This separation is not easy for parents, and it is natural. We have to accept it. But if we give proper education to both sides, then both families can be happy. As a person gets older, they have more attachment to their children because they know that in hard times, their children will be there. We have forgotten many things, the meanings of the days: Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, and so on. These planets have an effect on our consciousness and on our nature. Also, the moon days, from the first new moon until the full moon, and from the full moon until the dark moon and again the full moon—every day has its particular spiritual meaning on our planet. Our great saints, the ṛṣis, who brought the science of astrology and astronomy, performed experiments to determine which planet creates what kind of constellation at a particular time, and that is individual. Therefore, whenever we begin new things, even a journey, we should respect this cosmic law. This is a cosmic principle. Every creature, including the human and the Divine Incarnation, even God Himself, is within these constellations. He is also waiting to incarnate for that particular constellation so that His life will be easier among these humans. These feelings have been lost in modern education. We have lost the feeling for such things. Rivers, mountains, lakes, deserts, stars, moon, sun, sky, clouds, lightning, trees—all have very great meaning. And that is a part of our life. Since we lost this spiritual meaning towards nature, we began to abuse nature. We destroyed nature, and now we are standing here. The biggest problem throughout the world is pollution. The most dangerous pollution is the human mind. The first pollution is created in the mind. When your mind is polluted, you will pollute the outer world. When you are angry, jealous, greedy, or selfish, you are polluting your mind. Through your anger, greed, and jealousy, you will pollute the outer world. One who is jealous is a machine of pollution. One who is angry is a volcano of pollution. One who is greedy is a flood of pollution. One who is angry and jealous is a hurricane of pollution. That hurricane, after a while, also destroys itself. So, how can we think that in this situation our spirituality will improve? It cannot be, because it is polluted. So, Kāma, Krodha, Madha, Lobha, Moha, and Ahaṃkāra—these are the mental pollutions. Kāma is passion, desire. Krodha is anger. Lobha is greed, attachment. Moha is delusion, attachment full of ignorance. Madha is arrogance, ego, ahaṃkāra. This has polluted the human mind. So whatever you do in your life, you should think, "Now which qualities are involved in it?" This pollution is created, and it will be created by this. You can purify this pollution through love, forgiveness, understanding, kindness, and humbleness. Where there is love, there is no kāma, no passion. Where there is humbleness, there is no krodha. So you should try to neutralize your inner qualities with positive qualities. Neutralize them with these positive qualities. No one can do it for you; only you yourself can. Part 2: The Slippery Road of Temptation Our problem is that we do not ask anyone if something is good or not. We only go to someone when we are in trouble and do not know how to get out. To be a yogī means to master life's circumstances. It means steering your life through slippery roads, as if on snow. When the road is slippery, windy, dark, and going up and down, the best driver can carefully bring you to safety. Temptation is that slippery condition. And when temptation is there, certain possibilities also appear. Seeing a possibility means the path is slippery and you could go upside down. When temptation is present, you can become so greedy that your brakes fail. Can you imagine going downhill on a slippery heel with failed brakes? Of course, there is still a chance to survive. Especially in that situation, there is one mantra which helps you 100,000 percent: Mahāprabhujī Karatā Mahāprabhujī Karatā He Kevalam... Mahāprabhujī Karatā He Kevalam, Mahāprabhujī Karatā He Kevalam... When you are caught by temptations, it is very hard to come out. There is a very old story. There was a ṛṣi. He had vowed, "My whole life I will be a brahmacārī." It is not easy to be a brahmacārī. Brahmacarya means not only abstaining from sexual life, but also guarding your energy mentally, in speech, and in many other ways. He was living in a forest—a very nice forest, unlike today where there are none. Throughout the year, there was something good to eat in that forest: so many dried fruits and many things—jīvalcak, bodhok, yeṣmik. He began his tapasyā. First, he ate only once a day. Then, slowly, once a week. Then slowly, once a month. Then only liquid, then only water. Eventually, he used to eat only once by biting on some bark of a tree. With one bite, whatever came, he chewed slowly and drank water—that was all. His body became very penetrated, transparent. You could see through it. No desires. From where should desire come? There was nothing. But desires are in the mind, not in the body. So mentally, he was finished with all desires; only God remained. When he began to meditate, his body began to levitate one and a half meters from the earth. One day in meditation, he opened his eyes and said, "Oh my God, I’m one and a half meters fluttering." This was a siddhi. And this siddhi is a temptation. If he becomes proud of it now, then it will go away. A desire would arise—the desire of pride—and his brahmacarya would be gone. Indra thought, "Now this yogī will take my place." What to do? Indra couldn’t sleep. When someone else wants to become president, the present president does his very best to become president again... This is also an addiction. Like a workaholic, alcoholic, opium, or hashish, politics is also addictive. You can’t go forward, you can’t go backward, you can’t go left, you can’t go right. So Indra was very afraid. Indra sent him a second siddhi. When he was walking, he walked above the ground by one meter. Again, he became proud of himself. He wanted to come to Slovenia and Croatia to go on television to show he could levitate—to show the siddhi. Indra was still very powerful, but he was not so proud; he was very afraid. So Indra called Kāmadeva, the god of passion. Kāmadeva said to Indra, "Yes, my Lord, what can I do?" Indra said, "You see, there is someone sitting, torturing himself. Go, give him a lesson; enter his body." Kāmadeva said, "Yes, Lord, it will be like this." The Lord of Heaven, King Indra, said, "Kāmadeva, you must be successful." So Kāmadeva went to the hut of that yogī, that sādhu. There was no door, nothing for knocking. So he was making noise on the grass like this. The yogī was meditating one and a half meters above the ground. The yogī asked, "Who are you?" "I am Kāmadeva." "What are you doing here?" He said, "I want to be with you." The yogī said, "Disappear. Otherwise, if I look with both my eyes, you will burn. Go to someone who is doing bodybuilding, every day looking at the figure. Minda Napo Forma Jat, Viṣagha Gaccha, and eating many creams, nīta." Kāmadeva went back. While going away, Kāmadeva said, "Mister, be careful. I have ridden many people like you. I have ridden them like a horse." Kamde vissavonul, de azt mondta neki, hogy uram vigyázzon, mert sok emberen lovagoltam én már, mint lovakon. "Lord, disturb my meditation." He went back to Indra, and Indra was angry with Kāmadeva. "I will kick you out of my kingdom." "How is it possible?" Kāmadeva said, "Please give me a little time." So Kāmadeva began making a big, nice story, a theatre. He observed on which tree the yogī was biting the bark to eat every day. So now, what does he do? He puts nice halvā on the tree bark. All desires begin from your tongue, from your mouth. All problems are eating, the tasting senses... So Kāmadeva said, "Now I got the technique." The yogī went there to bite on the bark and came back with nice, sweet halvā. After 50 years... The next day, there was kachorī. But he was surprised. "What is a miracle? Is this my siddhi that produces halvā, and cakes, and biscuits, and chocolates, and this?" He was very surprised. "What is this? Is this my siddhi that produces halvā and cakes and biscuits and chocolates and this?" Now he begins to bite twice, and then twice a day, and then three times a day—a big bite. He thought, "Someone must be putting this here." So today he didn’t meditate. He was looking from the hut, meditating on mantras and looking to see if someone was going there. And Kāmadeva said, "Oh, I am already in his blood." So Kāmadeva made a form of a nice young girl. She carefully ran, putting halvā and everything there, and ran away. Now the yogī thought, "Who is this girl? Why is she doing this?" He thought, "I should tell her why she puts it there. It becomes cold. It is good to do it warm and fresh." So when she came there, he ran to ask her, but she ran away. This is a nice movie, a nice film, a documentary you can see. He told her, "I will do nothing to you, but please tell me, let me have your eating fresh, don’t put it on the tree." So, the diet increased. Well, instead of one bite, it became several bites. Then he asked her, "Why do you bring food here? Where are you coming from? Who are you?" She said, "I live with my mother, a few kilometers away from here, and my mother wants me to bring you food every day. I live a few kilometers away from my mother, and she wanted me to bring you food every day." His weight had been about 48 kilos and now became 60 kilos. So he asked her, "Are you married?" She said no and went away. Now he thought, "Enough, finish with my sādhanā; I have achieved everything." And he asked her if she wanted to marry. She said, "I cannot tell you; I must ask my mother." So all the time he was sitting there waiting, thinking she would not come and put food and run away, because how would he get the answer? He couldn’t meditate; only she was in his mind all the time. A beautiful sādhanā place, a beautiful meditation place, beautiful tapasyā, divine thoughts—everything is polluted now. Sādī bilo zagađeno to prekrasno mjesto za meditaciju, gdje prekrasne misli i sveta sādhanā bilo zagađeno. Az egész gyönyörű meditáció, sādhanā, tapasyā, mind-mind besenjezöldött. Yoga Braṣṭha—it means now fallen from the path of yoga. She came the next day late, five or six hours late. And he was nervous, walking between the hut and the tree and the water and the hut and the tree, looking for when she would come. He was nervous all the time. He walked around the house, to the river, to the trees, looking for something to eat. Then she came. He said, "Sorry to be late." He said, "It doesn’t matter, but what is the answer? What did your mother say?" "My mother finally came and told me that she had come. Later on, he asked me what my answer was. She said, 'My mother said yes.'" He said, "How great! So, when should we marry?" She said there must be some ceremonies. There are some traditions, some rules. He said, "I don’t know any tradition, any rules." "I will tell you. Tomorrow we go to my house. There will be nobody, and we will make two colors: green and black. Then you have to make your whole face totally black. And legs and hands should be green. After the ceremony, you can wash with a good shampoo, no problem. Yes. And then, what to do? Then, you have to stand like a horse in Marjārī, you know. And I have to put sugar in your mouth, like a horse. And sit on you. Take a belt in hand. Take a stick, a chabuk. And symbolically, you have to walk around the whole village. I will guide you. This means that the whole village is the witness that you are a good husband, and we can marry." He said, "This is a little bit hard. Should we walk around the whole village, or just in one street and come back?" "My dear, life is not easy. Life is hard. I am sorry, but this is a ceremony, tradition, or we are not married. Finished?" "No, no, I will survive." So he made his mouth black. And when your black mouth is on your face—I mean your whole face—it is shame. It means shame, it is shame, it is... shame. And green color on your legs and hands means more shame than anything. That’s called a Patañjali. You know what’s a Patañjali. Now, from the Uttān, he came to the Patan. So they went into one house, yard, garden of the house, and he himself took the black color to put on his face, completely black, and green color. And he is ready for riding. And she put the horse, chugal, chugal... What do you call it? Chugal? In English? Rinse? And she sat on him and held tightly. And with a chabuk on his buttocks a few times. And then she pulled his face so strongly that his neck turned like that. And what he sees on his back is not a girl, but Kāmadeva—the Kāmadeva who was coming for the first time to his hut. "Mister, I told you, I have been riding many like you. Go into the forest and do your prayers." So these are the desires, longing for anything. This is a calm day. Kāmadeva, ego, pride, greed, selfishness, anger—khaṁna ati sarvatra varjayet—when it is too much, then it becomes dangerous. Therefore, know thy limitation. You can do everything, but this should not ride you. You should not become dependent. You should not be the slave of your desires. If something is gone, be happy. So, pollution in the mind can destroy everything. Zagađenost u umu može sve uništiti. Kamo ste došli kod Indre, gospodara neba? Rekao je, Gospode, eno tamo tvoje žrtve. Indra, rekao, odlično. You will get nice coffee. Therefore, mental pollution is bad. The things, when you begin to think, "Yes, now I have, only I and I will," then the pollution begins. This is pollution. And this kind of pollution in the beginning is so pleasant, so sweet. Like biting, eating on the tree, just the bark of the tree, which came a little bit, was chewing and drinking water and living. And now came the halvā, and this, and pudding, and cakes, and all this apple strudel and strudel, and they made you already strudel. It made you dull out of strudel. So, achievement is not easy. It is hard not to be open. It’s so easy, it’s not. Therefore, it is said, you have to... It is said in the teachings, in the Upaniṣads, you have to die, you have to die in order to live. First, you have to die in order to live. And this means that Kāma, Krodha, Madha, Lobha, Moha should die in you. They should not ride you. You ride them. They were very holy. Three children, holy, very great. And unfortunately, their parents died when they were very young, only a few years old. But they were, especially one boy, who was so wise, so holy; he became very famous. Especially one of them was so great, so famous, that he became very famous. And these were three: Muktāmāṇḍ, it was her name; Jñāneśvar, that was another one, brother; and Jñāndev. They were three of them. At that time, there was living a yogī, a very great Siddha yogī. And he used to ride only tigers or lions, that’s all. For a chabuk, he used to have a few snakes hanging around his neck. So when he heard that Jñāneśvar is so wise, so holy, he thought, "I want to see who can be greater than me." So he went with some of the disciples, riding on the tiger, sitting on the tiger, and going. A few tigers were following him. And these three, these brothers and sisters, were sitting on the wall, on the fence. Three of them were sitting on the wall, talking about something and playing. And when they saw that one yogī is coming, riding on a tiger... Riding on the tiger. So Jñāneśvar said to his sister and his brother, "Look, he is riding some living creature. We will ride our dead wall." So he said to the wall, "Let’s go to welcome him." And the whole wall moved. So the whole wall moved, you know, and then that yogī brought out the tiger and came and greeted that. He said, "I believe you are a great divine." He came, bowed down, and said, "Now I know how great you are. Godly." And he gave the commentary on the Bhagavad Gītā. One of the best Bhagavad Gītā commentaries is called Jñāneśvarī Gītā. In English, you can also get it. He was in Maharashtra. He was incarnate in Maharashtra. Like this, there were thousands of great saints, countless ṛṣis, munis, yogīs, sādhus, miraculous beings. Where are they now in Kali Yuga? Maybe some of them are incarnated in you. Who knows? Don’t hide. But it’s better that you are hiding, you know, otherwise you will not be able to live peacefully. So, there is one beautiful bhajana of Kabīr Dās. This is a house of love, not a house of playing, a club. First, you have to cut your head to put it at the Holy Feet of the Lord, and then you can enter into the house. It means ego. You have to cut off the ego. Doubts, desires, anger, jealousy—these you surrender. This means that you have to give up your ego, your desires, your desires,... your desires,... your desires. Śūradevī Śiṣa Arpañjankārī, only rare heroes can give their head.... Parimka Marag Bankarai, the path of love is very peculiar, very different.... That love is like Mahāprabhujī said in one of his bhajans. How dear to me are the words, only I know. Only I know. What can I explain to you? Therefore, pollution, the mental pollution, will destroy humanity. Destroy the human itself, and it will destroy all. Not only the humans, but the entire creatures and the whole planet. Human mental pollution. You are unhappy, you have problems, and you are discomforted. Nothing else than your mental pollution. But not only to filter the mental pollution, but to dissolve it forever; the pollution is gone. That’s what I told you this morning in meditation, these points about thinking: what am I thinking, what did I think, what should I think, why should I think, what am I thinking. And think before you think about that thing: what I think, how people will think about what I did out of my thinking. So before you think anything, you should first think: what will be the effect on others and on me? What will be the reaction? That’s it. Before action, clearly and transparently, you should see the reaction.

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:

Email Notifications

You are welcome to subscribe to the Swamiji.tv Live Webcast announcements.

Contact Us

If you have any comments or technical problems with swamiji.tv website, please send us an email.

Download App

YouTube Channel