Sublime
An inspiration engine for ideas
The purpose of walking the spiritual path, from the nondual Tantrik perspective, is simply to undermine your misidentification and directly reveal within the immediacy of your awareness the fact that the divine Powers of Consciousness, Bliss, Willing, Knowing, and Acting comprise the totality of your individual experience as well—thereby triggering
... See moreChristopher D Wallis • Tantra Illuminated: The Philosophy, History, and Practice of a Timeless Tradition
The boys daily practice their spiritual exercises, engage in Gita chanting, and are taught by precept and example the virtues of simplicity, self-sacrifice, honor, and truth. Evil is pointed out to them as being that which produces misery; good as those actions which result in true happiness. Evil may be compared to poisoned honey, tempting but lad
... See moreParamahansa Yogananda • Autobiography of a Yogi (Self-Realization Fellowship)
The Lord is the operator; we are But his innumerable instruments. May we realize him in our consciousness And find the bliss he alone can give us.
Eknath Easwaran • The Upanishads (Easwaran's Classics of Indian Spirituality Book 2)
Instead of reading this prayer as describing a being in the sky, why not understand it as a nondualist affirmation that God is everything and everything is one?
Sarah Hurwitz • Here All Along: Finding Meaning, Spirituality, and a Deeper Connection to Life--in Judaism (After Finally Choosing to Look There)
Le mantra le plus ancien, le plus fréquent et le plus sacré est Om. Dans les écrits védiques, on donne de multiples interprétations à ce son, qui vont de la connaissance infinie à l’essence de tout ce qui existe, en passant par tous les Veda. Le son Om est également appelé pranava, signifiant « le son par lequel le Seigneur est loué ». On récite le
... See moreJay Shetty • Penser comme un moine (French Edition)
One of the Shiva mantrams is called pancakshara, the ‘five-lettered’ mantram, and for me the five pebbles that David was carrying were a five-lettered mantram with which he was able to defeat his own ego.
Eknath Easwaran • The Bhagavad Gita for Daily Living: A Verse-by-Verse Commentary: Vols 1–3 (The End of Sorrow, Like a Thousand Suns, To Love Is to Know Me) (The Bhagavad Gita for Daily Living, 1)
The purpose of life is to find God. Under no circumstances allow yourself to become buried in the debris of mortal habits and limitations and all the other humiliating experiences of delusion. Use your determination to wrench your will free, and attain mastery over your body and the universe.