All About Books

We've talked a lot about books on the blog: Gary talked about finding the book Dialogue with Death, Sagar shared how he uses spiritual reading for inspiration, Nikhil reflected on how Easwaran's books helped him integrate his Indian heritage into his day-to-day life, and Chanel, Lisa, and Mira shared how they formed a book club for satsang. This week we want to highlight two books:  Easwaran's translation of the Bhagavad Gita, and With My Love & Blessings.

YA-Books

 In his introduction to his translation of the Bhagavad Gita, Easwaran writes:

The Gita does not present a system of philosophy. It offers something to every seeker after God, of whatever temperament, by whatever path. The reason for this universal appeal is that it is basically practical: it is a handbook for Self-realization and a guide to action.

Some scholars will find practicality a tall claim, because the Gita is full of lofty and even abstruse philosophy. Yet even its philosophy is not there to satisfy intellectual curiosity; it is meant to explain to spiritual aspirants why they are asked to undergo certain disciplines. Like any handbook, the Gita makes most sense when it is practiced.

Whenever we return to Easwaran's translation of the Gita, we are always reminded of the poetry of the text itself, and are struck by the narrative aspect – after all, it's part of one of India's great epics. This month, Easwaran's translation of the Bhagavad Gita is available at a special low price as an e-book as part of Amazon's monthly deals. Especially for YAs on a budget, this is a great opportunity!

Another book which is a special favorite of ours is With My Love & Blessings, a book that chronicles Easwaran's teaching years (1966–1999) through pictures and excerpts of Easwaran's writings. We particularly love the photos and stories of the YAs who joined Easwaran in his early days, and it also contains one of our favorite Easwaran excerpts which always leaves us eager and inspired:

Just as there was a cultural renaissance in the West several centuries ago, the world needs a spiritual renaissance today. Just as there was an industrial revolution two hundred years ago, the world needs a spiritual revolution here and now. And the wonderful feature of a spiritual revolution is that it cannot be accomplished by governments or multilateral corporations. It can be brought about only by little people like us: every man, every woman, every child, changing their personality from selfish to selfless, from human to divine.

For this we need, first and foremost, a higher image of the human being. So far the human being has essentially been looked upon as a separate, physical creature that enters life through one door at birth and disappears through another at death. Every mystic in every great religion, on the basis of personal experience, has rightly called this an utterly superficial and distorted view. So the first step in a spiritual revolution is for the parents and teachers to practice spiritual disciplines that replace this low image with a lofty one. This is where our mode of meditation excels, for the passages we meditate on exalt the human being to the stars. What we meditate on, we become. What parents and teachers practice, children will absorb.

Since its publication, With My Love & Blessings has only been available as a more expensive, large hardbound book. Just recently, the BMCM released an affordable e-book version and though we're obviously quite fond of our hardbound versions, we're thrilled that there's a more mobile version of the book, and are pleased at the increase in access!

We'd love to hear from you! Share your thoughts in the comments below:

  • Which Easwaran books have you been reading recently?
  • Do you have any favorite excerpts from the Gita translation or With My Love & Blessings?

A Passage for December

With December upon us, here in California the days are getting short and, whether seasonal or simply practical, we've begun to notice the lights which reminded us of this Easwaran quote:

YA-Lights

Every year as Christmas approaches, I like to see how people are celebrating. Each season seems to bring more lights strung over homes and fences. But putting up hundreds of lights does not mean we are celebrating Christmas. One light is enough: one light, right inside, dispelling the darkness of anger, fear, and greed.

India has a great festival called Dipavali, from dipa, light, and avali, rows. Homes all over India will be lit by rows of lights. It’s a beautiful sight, but in every religion the real festival of lights is the display within: patience, sympathy, good will, security, selflessness, love, wisdom. What a long row! We can go in the midst of people and they will receive the benefit of this light. One person being patient brightens everything around. Being patient with those who differ from us, with those who oppose us, with those who aren’t patient with us – this is the real meaning of spiritual growth.

This quote of Easwaran's inspired us to share the passage "The Shining Essence" by Fakhruddin Araqi, a Sufi poet and mystic. It contains beautiful imagery of light, and we hope you'll join us in meditating on it this month.

We'd love to hear your thoughts on this remarkable passage. Share with us in the comments below:

  • Is there a line in this passage that speaks to you?
  • What qualities do you think you might get by meditating on this passage? 

The Shining Essence – Fakhruddin Araqi

I look into the mirror and see my own beauty;
I see the truth of the universe revealing itself as me.
I rise in the sky as the morning Sun, do not be surprised,
Every particle of creation is me alone.
What are the holy spirits? my essence revealed.
And the human body? the vessel of my own form.
What is the ocean that encircles the world?
A drop of my abundant Grace;
And the purest light that fills every soul?
A spark of my own illumination.
I am Light itself, reflected in the heart of everyone;
I am the treasure of the Divine Name,
the shining Essence of all things.
I am every light that shines,
Every ray that illumines the world.
From the highest heavens to the bedrock of the earth
All is but a shadow of my splendor.
If I dropped the veil covering my true essence
The world would be gone – lost in a brilliant light.
What is the water that gives eternal life?
A drop of my divine nectar.
And the breath that brings the dead back to life?
A puff of my breath, the breath of all life.

A Thought for the Week

Here at YA Blog HQ this week is a bit busy with holidays and travel, but we wanted to take a moment to share this gem from Monday's Thought for the Day (a daily excerpt from Easwaran's book Words to Live By.) We found the quote from Henry David Thoreau so lovely, and were amazed by the lift of inspiration we got from just a short paragraph of Easwaran's commentary.

We hope you have a wonderful week!


Thought for the Day – November 24

Goodness is the only investment which never fails.
– HENRY DAVID THOREAU

Discrimination is the precious capacity to see the difference between what is pleasant for the moment and what is fulfilling always. Today we are surrounded by a bewildering array of glittering lifestyles and models of behavior, most of which deliver just the opposite of what they promise. We need to make wise choices every moment just to keep from being swept away. For a long time, these choices are not easy. Often they go against the grain of our conditioning. It takes real courage and endurance to go on making such choices day in and day out. But once you begin to taste the freedom it brings, you will find a fierce joy in choosing something of lasting benefit.