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Subrat SaurabhAuthor of Kuch Woh PalMr. C S Moorthy was born in the year 1938 in Kanchipuram, Tamil Nadu, India. He grew up in Mumbai where he did his schooling. He obtained his Master’s Degree in English from Mysore University. He was elected as a Member of Chartered Institute of Management Accountants, UK in May 1978. He retired as Chief Manager Finance at Southern Petrochemical Industries Corporation in 1998. He came into close association with Late Swami Chinmayananda and was his ardent follower between the years 1959 and 1969. He was mentored by Swami Chinmayananda’s then principle disciple Sri. BrahmacharRead More...
Mr. C S Moorthy was born in the year 1938 in Kanchipuram, Tamil Nadu, India. He grew up in Mumbai where he did his schooling. He obtained his Master’s Degree in English from Mysore University. He was elected as a Member of Chartered Institute of Management Accountants, UK in May 1978. He retired as Chief Manager Finance at Southern Petrochemical Industries Corporation in 1998.
He came into close association with Late Swami Chinmayananda and was his ardent follower between the years 1959 and 1969. He was mentored by Swami Chinmayananda’s then principle disciple Sri. Brahmachari Natarajan, who later on became Late Swami Dayananda Saraswati on his own right. He encouraged Sri C S Moorthy to read books by Late J. Krishamurti in 1970.
Since then Mr. Moorthy attended all the lectures (in Mumbai) of J. Krishamurti and became his great admirer till his death in 1986. Mr. Moorthy commenced his independent research on scientific and spiritual aspects of ancient scriptures. He published his first book “Gleanings from Rig Veda--When Science was Religion in 2011, a concentrated extract of many years of avid thoughts, readings and his deep understanding of sacred scriptures compiled by Rishis.
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Dynamic Balancing
Who is Ganesha? (In Tamil: Pullayar)
- He is formless and everywhere, being energy or life force.
- He has been provided a form by humans, who are objective in outlook.
- Objectively, nature comprises five elements: sky (akash); vayu (air); fire (agni); water (apas); and earth (prithvi). These five elements are injected into his form. Thus, he has broad ears: deep nostrils at the end of his trunk; sharp eyes; a
Dynamic Balancing
Who is Ganesha? (In Tamil: Pullayar)
- He is formless and everywhere, being energy or life force.
- He has been provided a form by humans, who are objective in outlook.
- Objectively, nature comprises five elements: sky (akash); vayu (air); fire (agni); water (apas); and earth (prithvi). These five elements are injected into his form. Thus, he has broad ears: deep nostrils at the end of his trunk; sharp eyes; a wide mouth; and a long trunk. The five elements mentioned above devolve into subtle elements known as the tanmatras.
- His ears pick up sounds in space; his nostrils can manage breath; his eyes shine like fire; his wide mouth is for taste; and his long trunk is for smell.
- Ganesha has his abode at both ends of our body. At the top is the pivotal point known as brahmarandra, the gateway to eternity (see name 2.940), and at muladara chakra, the foundation (see name 2.637).
- Eternity is always in a perfect state of balance, but humans are not so fortunate. We are constantly imbalanced due to the pushes and pulls if life, and we need correction. If we do not correct ourselves, we are bound to lives of agony.
- Lord Ganesha alone can restore equilibrium in us, through controlled breathing and choiceless awareness.
Modern Science has only recently stumbled upon the truth that the underlying cause for existence is the realisation of Universal Consciousness. Whether it is the contribution of physics, biology, medicine, neurobiology, psychology or other branches of science, the ongoing efforts are entirely an attempt to understand this universal consciousness.
However, these ideas are not new: and they have their roots in the Rig Veda, the world’s first book. It dea
Modern Science has only recently stumbled upon the truth that the underlying cause for existence is the realisation of Universal Consciousness. Whether it is the contribution of physics, biology, medicine, neurobiology, psychology or other branches of science, the ongoing efforts are entirely an attempt to understand this universal consciousness.
However, these ideas are not new: and they have their roots in the Rig Veda, the world’s first book. It deals with Consciousness in entirety. Compiled by the Angirasa Rishis, the Rig Veda is an exposition of the route one can follow to successfully merge the Individual Consciousness and the Universal Consciousness.
Gleanings from Rig Veda are an attempt to cull out these transient understandings from centuries ago.
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