Sunday, 21 April 2013

PARABLES OF RAMAKRISHNA PARAMAHAMSA - PART 2


SRI RAMAKRISHNA PARAMAHAMSA ALWAYS USED
MAKE HIS POINT BY NARRATING SIMPLE PARABLES
FROM HIS LIFE, SCRIPTURES, PURANAS, VISIONS
HE GOT FROM KALI MATA ETC.

SPIRITUALLY HIS  EXPERIENCE IS ADVAITHA 
PHILOSOPHY LIKE THAT OF BHGAVATPADA  
SRI SHANKARACHARYA

FOR THOSE WHO ARE INTERESTED TO READ
MORE PARABLES OF SRI RAMAKRISHNA 
PARAMAHAMSA PL. VISIT --
https://www.scribd.com/doc/229352368/41/SUCH-INDEED-IS-MAYA




SRI RAMAKRISHNA PARAMAHAMSA

MAA KALI


ENMESHED IN MAYA, BRAHMAN WEEPS!

VISHNU incarnated Himself as a sow in order to 
kill the demon Hiranynksha. After killing the 
demon, sow remained quite happy with her young 
ones. Forgetting her real nature, she was suckling 
them very contentedly. The gods in heaven could 
not persuade Vishnu to relinquish His sow's body 
and return to the celestial regions. He was 
absorbed in the happiness of His beast form. After 
consulting among themselves, the gods sent Siva to 
the sow. Siva asked the sow "Why have you 
forgotten yourself?" Vishnu replied through the 
sow's body, "Why, I am quite happy here." 
Thereupon with a stroke of his trident Siva 
destroyed the sow's body and Vishnu went back to 
heaven.
Everyone is under the authority of the Divine 
Mother, Mahamaya, the Primal Energy. Even the 
Incarnations of God accept the help of Maya to 
fulfil their mission on earth. Therefore they 
worship the Primal Energy.

HOW IS MAYA ?

A CERTAIN sadhu lived for some time in the
room above the nahavat-khana (concert-room) of
the temple of Dakshineswar. He did not speak with
anybody and spent his whole time in the
meditation of God. One day, all of a sudden, a 
cloud darkened the sky and shortly afterwards a 
high wind blew away the cloud. The holy man now 
came out of his room and began to laugh and
dance in the veranda in front of the concert room. 
Upon this I asked him, "How is it that you, 
who spend your days so quietly in your room, are 
dancing in joy and feel so jolly today?" 
The holy man replied, "Such is Maya that envelops
the life!"

At first there is clear sky, all of a sudden a cloud

darkens it and presently everything is as before 
once more. 



MAYA VANISHES THE MOMENT IT IS KNOWN

A PRIEST was once going to the village of a 
disciple of his. He had no servant with him. Seeing 
a cobbler on the way, he addressed him, saying: 
"Hulloa! Good man, will you accompany me as a 
servant? You will be fed well and taken good care 
of, if you come with me." The cobbler replied: "Sir, 
I am of the lowest caste. How can I come as your 
servant?" The priest said, "Never mind. Do not tell 
anybody what you are. Do not also speak to 
anyone, or make anybody's acquaintance. The 
cobbler agreed. At twilight, while the priest was 
sitting at prayers in the house of his disciple, 
another brahmana came and said to the priest's 
servant, "Go and bring my shoes from there." True 
to the behest of his master, he made no response. 
The brahmana repeated his order a second time, 
but even then the servant remained silent. The 
brahmana repeated it again and again, but the 
cobbler did not move an inch. At last, getting 
annoyed, the brahmana angrily said: "Sirrah; how 
dare you disobey a brahmana's command? What is 
your name? Are you indeed a cobbler?" 
Cobbler, hearing this, began to tremble with fear, 
and looking piteously at the priest, said: "0 
venerable sir, I am found out. I dare not stay here 
any longer. Let me flee." So saying, he took to his 
heels.
Just so, as soon as Maya is recognised, she flies
away.

WHAT OCCULT POWERS ARE LIKE

HRIDAY asked me—I was then under his control 
to pray to the Divine Mother for (occult) powers. I 
went to the temple. In a vision I saw a widow thirty 
or thirty five years old, covered with filth. 

It was revealed to me that occult powers are like that 
filth.
I became angry with Hriday because he had asked
me to pray for powers.


THE PROLONGED DREAM THAT WE CALL

 LIFE


THERE was a farmer who lived in the countryside
He was a real jnani. He earned his living by
farming, He was married, and after many years a
son was born to him, whom he named Haru. The
parents loved the boy dearly. This was natural,
since he was the one precious gem of the family.
On account of his religious nature the farmer was
loved by the villagers. One day he was working in
the field when a neighbour came and told him that
Haru had an attack of cholera. The farmer at once
returned home and arranged for treatment for the
boy. But Haru died. The other members of the
family were grief-stricken, but the farmer acted as
if nothing had happened. He consoled his family
and told them that grieving was futile. Then he
went back to his field. On returning home he
found his wife weeping even more bitterly. She
said to him: “How heartless you are! You haven’t
shed one tear for the child.” The farmer replied
quietly: “Shall I tell you why I haven’t wept? I had a
very vivid dream last night. I dreamt I had become
a king; I was the father of eight sons and was very
happy with them. Then I woke up. Now I am
greatly perplexed. Should I weep for those eight
sons or for this one Hani?”

The farmer was a jnani; therefore he realized that
the waking state is as unreal as the dream state.
There is only one eternal substance, and that is the
Atman.


Brahman

FOUR FRIENDS LOOKED BEYOND

ONCE four friends, in the course of a walk, saw a 
place enclosed by a wall. The wall was very high. 
They all became eager to know what was inside. 
One of them climbed to the top of the wall. What 
he saw on looking inside made him speechless with 
wonder. He only cried, 'Ah! Ah!' and dropped in. 
He could not give any information about what he 
saw. The others too climbed the wall, uttered the 
same cry, 'Ah! Ah!' and jumped in. Now who 
could tell what was inside!

What Brahman is cannot be described. Even he
who knows it cannot talk about it.


WHERE SILENCE IS ELOQUENT 
AND SPEECH DOTH FALTER

A MAN had two sons. The father sent them to a 
preceptor to learn the knowledge of Brahman. 
After a few years they returned from their 
preceptor's house and bowed low before their 
father. Wanting to measure the depth of their 
knowledge of Brahman, he first questioned the
older of the two boys. "My child," he said "you 
have studied all the scriptures. Now, tell me, what 
is the nature of Brahman?" The boy began to 
explain Brahman by reciting various texts from the 
Vedas. The father did not say anything. Then he 
asked the younger son the same question. But the 
boy remained silent and stood with eyes cast down. 
No word escaped his lips. The father was pleased 
and said to him: "My child, you have understood a 
little of Brahman. 

What It is cannot be expressed in words."

NEITHER 'YES' NOR 'NO'!


THE husband of a young girl has come to his 
father-in-law's house and is seated in the drawingroom 
with other young men of his age. The girl 
and her friends are looking at them through the 
window. Her friends do not know her husband 
and ask her, pointing to one young man, "Is that 
your husband?" "No," she answers, smiling. They 
point to another young man and ask if he is her 
husband. Again she answers, "No." They repeat 
the question, referring to a third, and she gives the 
same answer. At last they point to her husband and 
ask, "Is he the one?" She says neither yes nor no 
but only smiles and keeps quiet. Her friends realize 
that he is her husband.

One becomes silent on realising the true nature of
Brahman.

THE KING AND THE MAGICIAN


As you go nearer to God you see less and less of 
His upadhis, His attributes. A devotee at first may 
see the Deity as the ten-armed Divine Mother; 
when he goes nearer, he sees her possessed of six 
arms; still nearer, he sees the Deity as the two 
armed Gopala. The nearer he comes to the Deity, 
the fewer attributes he sees. At last, when he 
comes into the presence of the Deity, he sees only 
Light without any attribute, Listen a little to the 
Vedantic reasoning. A magician came to a king to 
show his magic. When the magician moved away a 
little, the king saw a rider on horse-back
approaching him. He was brilliantly arrayed and 
had various weapons in his hands. The king and 
the audience began to reason out what was real in 
the phenomenon before them. Evidently the horse 
was not real, nor the robes nor the armours. At last 
they found out beyond the shadow of a doubt that 
the rider alone was there. 

The significance of this is that Brahman alone is real 
and the world unreal. 

Nothing whatsoever remains if you analyse. 

WHEN FACE TO FACE


WHERE the mind attains peace by practising the 
discipline of 'Neti, neti', there Brahman is.
The king dwells in the inmost room of the palace, 
which has seven gates. The visitor comes to the 
first gate. There he sees a lordly person with a large 
retinue, , surrounded on all sides by pomp and 
grandeur. The visitor asks his companion, "Is he 
the king?" "No", says his friend with a smile.
At the second and other gates he repeats the same
question to his friend. He finds that the nearer he
comes to the inmost part of the palace, the greater 
is the glory, pomp, and grandeur. When he passes 
the seventh gate he does not ask his companion 
whether it is the king; he stands speechless at the 
king's immeasurable glory. 

He realizes that he is face to face with the king(GOD).

He hasn't the slightest doubt about it.

'BEHOLD, O KING! BEHOLD'

ONCE, a king asked a yogi to impart Knowledge 
to him in one word. The yogi said, "All right; you 
will get knowledge in one word." After a while a 
magician came to the king. The king saw the 
magician moving two of his lingers rapidly and 
heard him exclaim, "Behold, O king, Behold." The 
king looked at him amazed when, after a few 
minutes, he saw the two lingers becoming one. The 
magician moved that one finger rapidly and said, 
"Behold, O king! Behold."

The implication of the story is that Brahman and
the Primal Energy at first appear to be two. But 
after attaining knowledge of Brahman one does not 
see the two. 

Then there is no differentiation; it is One, without a 
second—Advaita—non-duality.

AN ANT WENT TO A SUGAR HILL

MEN often think they have understood Brahman 
fully.
Once, an ant went to a sugar hill. One grain filled 
its stomach. Taking another grain in its mouth it 
started homeward. On its way it thought, "Next 
time I shall carry home the whole hill."

That is the way shallow minds think. They don't
know that Brahman is beyond one's words and 
thought, However great a man may be, how much 
can he know of Brahman? 

Sukadeva and sages like him may have been 
big ants; but even they at the utmost could carry 
eight or ten grains of sugar!

HE EATS, YET EATS NOT

ONCE Vyasadeva was about to cross the Jamuna. 
The gopis also were there. They wanted to go to 
the other side of the river to sell curd, milk, and 
cream. But there was no ferry at that time. They 
were all worried about how to cross the river, 
when Vyasa said to them, "I am very hungry." The 
milkmaids fed him with milk and cream. He 
finished almost all their food. Then Vyasa said to 
the river, "O Jamuna, if I have not eaten anything, 
then your waters will part and we shall walk 
through." It so happened. The river parted and a 
pathway was formed between the waters. 
Following that path, the gopis and Vyasa crossed 
the river.
Vyasa had said, "If I have not eaten anything.

"That means, the real man is Pure Atman. Atman is
unattached and beyond Prakriti. It has neither 
hunger nor thirst; It knows neither birth nor death; 
It does not age, nor does It die. It is immutable as 
Mount Sumeru.

ALL PURE SPIRIT

ALL doubts disappear when one sees God. It is 
one thing to hear of God, but quite a different 
thing to see Him. A man cannot have one hundred 
per cent conviction through mere hearing. But if 
he beholds God face to face, then he is wholly 
convinced.
Formal worship drops away after the vision of 
God. It was thus that my worship in the temple 
came to an end. I used to worship the deity in the 
Kali Temple.
 It was suddenly revealed to me that everything is 
Pure Spirit. The utensils of worship, 
the altar, the door-frame - all Pure Spirit. Then like 
a mad man I began to shower flowers in all 
directions. Whatever I saw I worshipped.







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