Showing posts with label sri yantra. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sri yantra. Show all posts

Sunday, July 21, 2024

Boating, camping in New York City (video)


Overnight on NYC's tiniest island
Could we recreate Wes' travels on an inflatable in Central Park or would thugs stop us?
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Waterways of Manhattan, NY
(Wes Wherever) June 28, 2024: Wes is crossing New York's "East River" (which is not a river but actually an inlet of the Atlantic Ocean) for a solo camping mission to the city’s smallest island, U Thant Island as dubbed by Sri Chinmoy, where rats and fish go to die and cormorants to roost. Rooms average $300-400 a night in the Big Apple, and they don’t even have a view!

HELP SUPPORT THE ADVENTURES As an Amazon Associate, Wes gets a small commission with no extra cost to buyers if they purchase from some of these gear links. Thanks for the support. 🙏 Music: Mo Green (buy@mogreen.store, mogreen.store).

Who was Sri Chinmoy?
Indian Guru Sri Chinmoy
Chinmoy Kumar Ghose (Aug. 27, 1931–Oct. 11, 2007), better known as "Sri Chinmoy" [2], was an Indian spiritual guru who taught meditation in the United States after moving to New York City in 1964 [3]. Sri Chinmoy established his first meditation center in Queens, New York, and eventually had 7,000 students in 60 countries [4, 5]. He was an author, artist, poet, and musician; he also held public events such as concerts and meditations on the theme of inner peace [5, 6]. Sri Chinmoy advocated a [Hindu] spiritual path to God [Great Brahma or the Ultimate Brahman] through prayer and meditation. He advocated athleticism including distance running, swimming, and weightlifting. He organized marathons and other races and was an active runner. Following a knee injury, he became a weightlifter [5, 6]. Some ex-members have accused Sri Chinmoy of running a cult [7, 8]. More

Sunday, November 27, 2022

Yoga Class w/ Sri K. Pattabhi Jois (video)

Yoga Works Productions, 1993, Adam Wade, March 4th, 2012; Seven, Ananda, Wisdom Quarterly

Primary Series Ashtanga Yoga Class with Sri K. Pattabhi Jois
Wolf in saint's clothing?
(Adam Wade) The Ashtanga (Vinyasa) Yoga Primary Series led by the great Sri K. Pattabhi Joi. In the class are students:
I might be molesting one of these students.
Check out many of these teachers every year in San Diego at ashtangayogaconfluence.com. This video can be purchased at kpjashtanga.com. Other instructional videos can be purchased at kpjayi.org/resources/dvds.

Tuesday, February 19, 2013

TANTRA to tansmute the base to the sublime

Dhr. Seven and Yogini Ashley Wells, Wisdom Quarterly
If only tantric sex could lead to more than a momentary epiphany. Yogic union and Oneness are not Buddhist enlightenment, which is final liberation (cartoonstock.com).

Sex is nice. Sex is soothing. Sex is sexy. But sex is not the way to enlightenment (bodhi). So can it help?
  
There was an entire movement in Vedic India that came to be known as tantra -- sublimating a base practice into something worthy of a temple or monastic (disciplined self-development) complex.
  
Indian temple depicts tantric sex (uglypeople.se)
When we approach any ordinary activity -- sitting, walking, eating, answering the call of nature -- with mindfulness, we begin to imbue it with a higher purpose.
Any beneficial action becomes a parami (a perfection, super profitable karma, high merit, punya) when the motivation behind it is gaining nirvana. So we can eat to indulge our desire to enjoy sweets and savories. Or one can do it to survive and energetically persist in support of gaining enlightenment (bodhi) and complete freedom (nirvana).

Enlightenment and nirvana happen when the causes and conditions for their realization are present. They will not come into being by themselves. But they can be "brought into being" (bhavana). It takes serenity, mindfulness, purification, focus, persistence, and insight. All we learn about meditating -- that is, bringing things into being -- may not do it if the foundation is not established.

Try practicing vipassana ("insight" meditation) without sufficient samadhi (absorption or jhana), and it will not produce the promised results. That can be so frustrating that one abandons the Path as ineffective. What can we expect when we pick and choose what we like about Buddhism as if it were a buffet table? The Buddha's teachings are actually a gradual path of development that lead us up to and into the final goal.

A yantra (instrument) is a meditation tool, a kind of visual-mantra (wiki).
  
Enlightenment is not the ultimate goal; nirvana is. They are very related but not the same. The stages of enlightenment lead from stream-entry, which glimpses nirvana, to arhatship, final liberation, safety, the release from all bonds, utter emancipation here and now in this very life.

NOT the Buddha: Tantrika on yogi.
Sex binds us to thirst (tanha) or sensual craving. We want more and more until our senses are fried. But tantric sex tries to use this dangerous fire to avoid the pit, the abyss of craving, and make it useful -- leading to a sense of union with the breath, with each other, with the world(s) we inhabit.

Of course, most people fool themselves and attempt to fool other, looking for the first in the guise of the second. What can be done? The fire turns around and certainly burns one. Let go. There is a better approach to sex, to eating, to "striving," to meditating.

Greek worshiped Eros (Kama)
The bliss available to the Buddhist shamatha-meditator goes from serene to sublime, from unfamiliar joy (piti) to happiness/bliss (sukha).
  
It is certainly better than sensual enjoyment, but it is not the goal. For the sake of it or the freedom beyond, one withdraws the senses, secludes and guards the mind/heart, pulls the body away from distractions and debasements.
  
This is very natural, for one wishes to preserve this very subtle pleasure that suffuses the body and gladdens the heart.
 
Make Love Not War (Spookychild/Deviantart)
What is the body's greatest distraction? Of all the five strands of sense pleasure, sex tends to be the strongest for most people. Of course, some stuff themselves with food/tastes, others with sounds, sights, and even cerebral pleasures. But the draw of sex is very powerful. It is most amenable to sublimation, a psychological term that means transmuting or transforming from dense to subtle, from base to elevated.

We can hit it, hit it, and quit it. Or another possibility is romance and a denouement, a skillful build up to a crescendo. Sex with someone for the sake of love (closeness, caring, recognizing) can actually be more fulfilling than sex for the sake of impulsive lust (objectifying, avoiding intimacy and vulnerability).

As men we say, LUST all the way! As women we smile and wink but feel we must speak up for LOVE. We all experience lust, males and females; we can all come to enjoy love. And we can even go beyond that! Sex is not the way to enlightenment. But sex can be better than the way we usually treat it.

Friday, March 9, 2012

Sri Yantra: Goddess (LA Yoga Magazine)

L.A. Yoga Magazine (LAYogaOnline.com, Nov. 2011 issue); Wisdom Quarterly review

CLICK TO ENLARGE

A beautiful recurrent feature of LA Yoga magazine is the last page. It features a yantra (meditation focusing device), seed mantra (sacred sound), and an explanation of the symbol. The magazine is free around Los Angeles, but back issues are also available from layogaonline.com. It covers yoga poses, healthy living, Ayurveda (the ancient Vedic knowledge for restoring and maintaining optimal health), diet suggestions, events, astrology by Tamiko Fischer, yoga studio listings, consciousness raising, and social issues. Some of it is in Spanish. And there is a wonderful yogic comic called "Lady Yoga Superhero," a superheroine living the ancient Vedic dharma in the modern world.

Monday, July 4, 2011

Sacred Yantra Temple Tattoos ("sak yant")

The all faiths yantra (lotus.org)

Sacred (sak) geometry (yant or yantra) tattooing refers to protective symbols embedded in the skin in Southeast Asia, particularly Thailand, Cambodia, and Laos. It is the ancient magical practice of using sacred geometry along with Buddhist, Brahminical (proto-Hindu), and animist imagery as well as magical incantations (kata or mantras), written in Khom (an ancient script used to write Pali-Sanskrit or Prakrit, which does not have a unique script).

Thai Buddhist monk receiving sak yant or sacred tattoos (peaceloveandtea/devishakti)

Sacred geometry tattoos are made by Buddhist monks, brahmins, and Ruesi ascetics. Where they are made is called a Samnak Sak Yant (if a temple or a large establishment) or Dtamnak (if a smaller establishment with one master). Sak-yant.com presents a compendium of knowledge, information, and galleries about Thai Buddhist/animist temple tattoos, Saiyasart (Thai occultism), Buddha magic, kata (mantras), and sacred magic amulets. More

Monday, September 22, 2008

Last Jews of India

Ancient Hindu symbol/Star of David, Janardhana Temple, India.

To the extent that Jews gave birth to Christianity, Judaism seems to have borrowed a great deal from ancient Hinduism and more recently continues to borrow from Vajrayana Buddhism, just as Jesus Christ and St. John seem to have. The lines of evidence are obscured by history and obfuscated by vested interests. Nevertheless, Jews not only owe significant portions of their spiritual heritage to ancient Vedic lore and the subcontinent, their presence is ongoing.
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(Interestingly, even the Sri Yantra or Star of David, symbol of the Jewish faith, is pulled from esoteric Hindu teachings symbolizing the union of higher and lower chakras merging at the heart center; likewise the swastika and other Nazi symbolism was appropriated from esoteric Theosophical and Buddhist references to Aryans and the "setting in motion the Wheel of Dharma" by a "world monarch").

Dutch palace wall painting replete wtih ancient esoteric symbolism including star.
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Last Jews of Calcutta have one last guardian
Sam Dolnick (AP, 9/20/08)

CALCUTTA, India -- The stooped man in the yarmulke fights his way through this chaotic city, the weight of generations heavy upon his shoulders. He squeezes past tea stalls and sidewalk electricians, past idle rickshaws, and honking cars. He edges through rows of vendors selling sparkly hair clips and, finally, pushes open a rusty gate hidden from the street.

Today is the Sabbath, and Shalom Israel, one of the last Jews of Calcutta, has reached a cobwebbed synagogue, a once-grand building with imposing doors that nearly always stay shuttered, and spires that soar up toward the monsoon clouds. Israel comes every Friday to light a candle, say a prayer, and check on the three synagogues still standing, however precariously, as relics of a passed era of plenty. Most weeks, he is the only visitor.

There were once 5,000 Jews living in this teeming port city, but today, as the Jewish New Year approaches, there are fewer than 35. Israel, 38 with a thin beard, is the youngest by nearly 25 years. Israel lives inside the only place left where Jews aren't a minority — the Jewish cemetery. He cares for the graves of his father, his great-grandparents, his uncles and his aunts, along with more than 2,000 other Jewish tombs. He also tends to the two dozen Jewish elders still living, handles the last rites when they die, and, to stay kosher, butchers his own meat.

It's not easy being the last of your people.

"It's only a matter of time before people die or leave," said Israel. "There is no future...The inevitable, I can't fight." Indeed, repopulating the community would be tough. There aren't many unmarried Jewish women in Calcutta — Israel is single and doesn't know any women younger than 60. His sister married a Hindu, for which the elders shunned her. The last Jewish wedding anyone can remember was in 1982.

He is weary from Calcutta's midsummer heat, and from the responsibility of caring for his ancestors' legacy. He's well aware that a centuries-old community will likely die with him, but he sees nothing to do but tend to its remnants and blow on the fading embers.

"I've seen what the community was. To see the way it is now..." He trails off mid-sentence.

Israel survives on a combination of odd jobs, but his health is poor, his nerves frayed by his multiple responsibilities. He usually keeps his skullcap in his pocket because he tires of explaining its significance, but at the end of the day, when he's in a taxi heading back to his solitary shed inside the cemetery, he takes it out and puts it on, exhaling for what seems like the first time all day.

In this country of 1.1 billion people, there are believed to be roughly 5,000 Jews — not enough to be counted as a distinct group in the Indian census. Jews first came to India as traders some 250 years ago, and today their largest community is in Mumbai [Bombay], the country's most cosmopolitan city.

Calcutta's first Jews are thought to have come in the late 18th century, descendants of the Baghdad Jews who came from Syria, Iran and Iraq. They thrived as diamond traders, real estate dealers, exporters, spice wholesalers, and bakers — one Jewish bakery famous for its plum cakes still stands, run by the founder's octogenarian grandson. Rickshaws and taxis still ply Synagogue Street and other roads named for prominent Jews.

The Jewish community built at least five synagogues and two schools. Today, there are 700 students at the Elias Meyer Free School and Talmud Torah. Not one is Jewish, and nothing particularly Jewish is taught there. In the 1930s and 1940s, Calcutta was a bustling, raucous hub, and Jews formed a solid minority, their wedding parties and religious feasts flowing down the temple steps. Jews were players at the popular horse track — Israel remembers his father's racehorses, Onslaught, War Dance and Black Toy — and they were regulars at the fashionable restaurants. Jews rarely faced discrimination, mainly because "no one knew who we were," said Ian Zackariah, 64.

As a community, "We were too small to bully," he said. "There were so many other people to beat up — Hindus vs. Muslims, high castes vs. lower castes. Who's going to pick on us?"

The birth of independent India in 1947, and the creation of Israel the following year, marked the beginning of the end for Calcutta's Jews. Many left for the new Jewish state; others moved to Europe or the United States in search of better business opportunities.

Some stayed behind, but life was different. During services, women left the temple balcony, where they used to sit in keeping with Jewish custom, and sat with the men in the main hall — the synagogue felt too empty otherwise. Slowly, the Jewish butchers put away their knives, the bakers turned off their ovens, the teachers boxed up their Hebrew books.

The stalwarts stayed to care for their aging parents, to raise their children or simply because Calcutta was home.

Aline Cohen, 62 was born after the community's heyday, but she still remembers rowdy festivals and packed synagogues. Now, there aren't enough absle-bodied men to form a minyan, the quorum necessary for services, and no one but Israel regularly visits the temples. The Jews rarely get together except at funerals, and sometimes not even then.

"It is lonely," said Cohen, whose three children were raised in Calcutta but have since left. "We all have non-Jewish friends, but ... there's a spiritual loneliness. You miss Sabbath services... You miss the feeling of community."
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Shalom Israel, one of the last Jews of Calcutta, India, lights candles and prays in three existing Synagogues every Friday, shown 8/8/08. In the 1930's and 1940's, Calcutta was a bustling, raucous hub, and Jews formed a solid minority, their wedding parties and religious feasts flowing down the temple steps. There were once 5,000 Jews living in this teeming port city, but now there are fewer than 35 (AP Photo/Bikas Das).

Shalom Israel never really knew what it was to be part of a community. His only Jewish peers are his younger brother, who is preparing to move to Israel, and his younger sister. Israel lives in a small, cluttered shed inside the Jewish cemetery, just steps from his father's grave. Visitors may find the arrangement macabre, but he says it offers him peace inside a frenzied city.

"I find the living more dangerous to deal with than the dead," he jokes. "I have very easy neighbors." Cohen worries about Shalom Israel and what will happen to him after the elders are gone. She says he should move to Israel, but he won't.

"If I go to Israel when I'm 40 or 50, what's the point?" he said.

Besides, he says, the Jews of Calcutta need him. He ticks off his to-do list: take several elders to the doctor, take others to the dentist, take another to a hearing test; check on the temples, trim the overgrown cemetery foliage, visit the infirm living alone. He gets paid by the community for all this, but he says the work is important not because of the money but because "it gives me meaning, a matter of belonging."

"The community is dwindling to almost nothing," he said. "I am trying to keep it surviving as much as I can."